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transmit the thoughts of one generation of many of your Sunday-school boys at to another? I need hardly say that they home, with all their advantages. You received the Gospel gladly, and many of would see old men listening to the inthem have now lived and died in the struction to their yuothful teachers with faith, examples of Christian virtue. the most profound attention. The zeal, Amidst persecutions which only barbari- knowledge, and discretion of the native ans could inflict, they so weak on every missionaries is most praiseworthy. Many other point stood manfully by their of them possess a sound knowledge of faith. Their present state is most en- the Bible, far superior to what I have couraging. With very few exceptions often met in our Dio. School at home. indeed, the conduct of the Christian Qualah, whom I mentioned before, shortly Karen amongst temptations and degrad- after his conversion was offered by the ing associations of every kind is such, as commissioner, a very high situation as to warrant us in believing that the sav- the headman of a district; he refused it, ing doctrines of the Gospel have taken saying, "That as his own soul was saved, a real hold on their hearts; they are in he felt called upon to endeavour to save deed an example to us all. I may say the souls of his brethren." He has now the whole race of Karens are now Chris- for years faithfully discharged the duties tians; they want only to be instructed. of a minister of the Gospel. He paid me No persuasion is necessary to induce a visit a short time ago. This mission these simple-hearted people to embrace promises fairly to be soon self-supportthe Gospel. Qualah, a native missionary, ing. Though in the greatest poverty, lately returned from a tour through the they already bear the expence of a large villages in this neighbourhood. Though number of native ordained missionaries; the Gospel has never been regularly and have chapels built in most of their preached, he found in every village a villages. At Kermendine, near Rangoon, place of worship erected, and prepara- they have erected a most creditable tions made for the reception of a teacher. ecclesiastical-looking brick-building, caEvery place he went, he was actually be-pable of accommodating some 300 or sieged with people asking to be baptized 400, with very good schools under it. and instructed. It is a rule not to bap- One of my servants is a Christian Karen tize any who are not really well in-boy, and I place the greatest confidence structed, and whose conduct does not in him. afford a fair presumption of their Christian principles: but, nevertheless, he baptized 94, 106, 104, &c., at different places. Nothing can exceed the enthusiasm of the people, when a teacher makes his appearance among them: their constant demand is for teachers. They say to the missionaries, "You have spoken to us of a free salvation; of a book that will teach us the way of life. We have built chapels and houses for you; all is ready, and we are ready to hear you, and you will not come to us; we are perishing; we will go to hell, and be lost; and you will not come and teach us." This is a common remonstrance, but it is impossible to supply all their wants. Mr. Whittaker, the Missionary here, formed a school during the rains, composed of two intelligent boys from each of the villages round about. These he taught to read, and instructed carefully; and he has now sent them back as pioneers to their several villages. It is astonishing the amount of knowledge possessed by many of these boys. They would bring the blush to the face

I hope these few unconnected remarks will show you that even here, at the very outskirts of the world, Christianity is being fast planted, where before it was unknown. I will (D.V) some other time endeavour to give you some account of the Burman superstition, a close likeness of which you have at home. The likeness has been a great safeguard to the missionaries here. To the arguments of the Roman Catholic Priests, the Karen answers, "It will be better for us to join the Burmans;" while the Burmans themselves reply, "Why should we change? both are the same, and surely our images are as good as yours." They are indeed wonderfully alike: they have candleburning, bell-ringing, relics, &c., just the same. I forgot to say the Burman mission is carried on by the American Baptists; while the people are taught the great truths of the Gospel. This is a matter of very slight importance. I know several of the missionaries, and they are indeed most excellent men. Yours, &c.,

L. S. D.

66

SERMONS BY THE OLD PILGRIM," OF BIRMINGHAM.

(Continued from page 24).
SERMON IV.

"Because thou hast been my help, therefore in the shadow of thy wings will I rejoice."-Psalm lxiii. 7.

all yea, and amen in Christ Jesus." He
feels" My God shall supply all your
need according to his riches in glory by
Christ Jesus." All your happiness, my
fellow believer, is in Christ, secured by
covenant-love, covenant-oath, covenant-
blood, covenant-promises. Oh, how
safely may you rest day and night, who
have received what no man can take
away-" God's love in Christ."
We have here three things.-
1st. Thankful remembrance.
2nd. Thankful confidence.
3rd. Thankful joy.

WHY is God my God? This is one of the most important questions a man can ask himself. What will the man of the world, the unbeliever answer? The general reply is, that God being the God of all men, therefore He also is my God! But is this the meaning of the Psalmist ? Was it thus that Christ, when a inan of sorrow upon earth, looked upon God as his God? Oh no! the Christian feels it is true; with holy thankfulness the common mercies in which he shares with all mankind; but he feels them, and enjoys them doubly; receiving them as common mercies, but sanctified to him 1st. Thankful remembrance-" Beby the covenant of everlasting love. He cause thou hast been my help." An looks upon God as my God, because by unthankful being among man, is consibeing united in Christ he has special dered one of the worst of characters interest in God; an interest which free and truly if a man's heart be not moved and undeserved love decreed and re- by kindness, it is hard to say what will solved to give in Christ; a favour re- do it; for force aud harshness, literally ceived by the blood of the righteous speaking, do not move, but bend the Jesus, in whom, and in whom alone heart. If it be so, and justly so consihe receives every covenant-favour; a dered among men-ingratitude-looked favour brought home to his soul by the upon as the blackest of crimes. blessed Spirit, He working in the heart, Lord! what are we in thy most holy giving the blessed witness of the Spirit. sight? thou who art loading thy people The Spirit's work is visible; it makes with blessings, with favours, daily, a man alive, who was dead; causes him | to pant after God, after endeared communion with the Jehovah, he pants after the Lord, as a man who is athirst pants after water; his soul at times cannot rest without some token of God's love! And does this panting, this thirsting remain unsatisfied? No-no. The soul will, in God's own time, receive it! and finds God the Sanctuary of his soul, the Rest, the Hiding-place of his heart, there he is safe.

Ah,

hourly, for time and for eternity. O, my God! what a monster of unthankfulness am I! and must I appear in thy sight? upheld by thy hand ever since I had existence; even ere I was born? Through helpless infancy, thoughtless childhood. giddy youth, careful manhood, declining age; in prosperity, and in adversity; in sickness and in health; when sinfully, wilfully wandering downward the road to everlasting destruction; when convinced of sin, righteousness, and judg ment; yet often sinning against light and The storms may roar, yea, thunders roll, Lightnings dazzle, rocks may move; conscience; oft forgetting the Lord that All on earth, yea, all in heaven, saved me, and upheld me, and led me May give way! yet God is Love! until this day; who raised me from the He experiences in the precious Re- brink of everlasting damnation, and deemer, that God's mercies of salvation placed me among the heirs of everlasting are better than life! Blessing! He glory! And yet, O my Father, Helper, praises! holy confidence has a seat in God, yet I wandered, yet I do wander, the heart: the promise become the forgetful of thy daily, yea, hourly and Christian's anchor, because "they are everlasting mercies! My poor flesh,

and more: the whole head is sick, and the whole heart faint. From the sole of the foot even unto the head there is no soundness in it, but wounds, and bruises, and putrifying sores." And ah! is this our state by nature? If so be, that ye have been taught by God the Holy Ghost, your answer will be, Yes indeed: but whilst such I am by nature, I thank my Lord that I feel holy gratitude arising within me; I feel his love precious, who, from the pit and the miry clay, drew me, and set my feet upon the Rock

this body of death, stirred up by Satan, tempted by the world and lusts, oft is unthankfully murmuring. But shall all this cast us down? No-it will-if truly felt-cause the tear of sorrow to flow, the bosom will heave high, for grieving so merciful a God. But the soul that is taught of God, will, at the recollection of past mercies, be enabled by the Almighty Spirit to call forth holy thankfulness. On whatever occasion this song may have been written, it is a sweet one, teaching us that as our dear Lord, Heb. v. 7, In the days of the Rock Christ Jesus-there, there I his flesh, when He had offered up prayers stand! I desire to live upom Him alone! and supplications, with strong crying "For me to live is Christ." Did I seek and tears unto Him that was able to save Him? Oh no! When I was in my Him from death, and was heard in that blood, sin, guilt, and shame covering me, He feared. Though He were a Son, yet it was then that his powerful voice learned He obedience." So we, through reached my heart; it was then that untrials, troubles, and temptations, learn sought, unasked, nay, when I was as igobedient thankfulness. The Psalmist norant as a brute as to my state for sets forth the experience of one taught eternity, it was then that the Lord by Jehovah, following the steps of Him called me, and led me to see the awfullywho did help, the believer looks with corrupted state of body, and of soul, and holy thankfulness to Jesus; God had that He granted me faith to trust upon been his Help in his trial, before his my precious Lord our Righteousness, judges, in the awful sufferings in the gar- feeling the Spirit's work within, witden and on the cross, looking back to all nessing that I am a child of God, if a his former dealings, recollecting former child, then an heir, fellow-heir with Christ support, the Saviour cried out, "My Jesus, leading me by his own secret God, my God, why hast thou forsaken power (John iii. 8); teaching me simply me ?" but soon added with holy power, to believe on Christ, to live upon Christ, "It is finished." Yes, dear Lord, in all know all in Christ, draw all from Christ, things thou wert obedient; and we lean- feed on the unknown riches of Christ, ing upon thy love, upon thy righteous- believe I shall eternally be with Christ, ness, would look back with thankful feel- then trace up all these mercies to the ings upon thy sufferings; taught by the ever-blessed Jehovah, take a view of Holy Spirit, we are enabled to say, He our own wretched, depraved heart; bedied for me! We are farther led with hold the pit from whence saved; and holy gratitude, to look back at all the surely you cannot (if the Spirit has enway the Lord has led us through the lightened you), you cannot but exclaim, wilderness, to review from our first re- "Because thou hast been my help, therecollections the warnings of conscience; fore in the shadow of thy wings will I for many of God's children have, with rejoice." It is under these feelings that me declared, that when very young, they you recollect and enjoy all God's provisometimes felt strong convictions. Idential mercies, all his favours, his prothink I recollect them as far back as my 8th or 9th year. I have no doubt but they were the strivings of the Holy Spirit! Did we listen? No-but went on in sin; drowned our feelings in greater sin. And yet the Lord did bear with us, so that we have to say with the prophet, Lam. iii. 22, "It is of the Lord's mercies that we are not consumed, because his compassions fail not." Of the Lord's mercies indeed! What else could have preserved us? Any thing in our selves? I know not what others may feel-but for myself I know the truth of Isaiah, i. 5, 6, "Ye will revolt more

tecting care, boundless tokens of his love; holy thankfulness, fills thy soul with holy joy and confidence, in encouraging you to look alone to the Great JEHOVAH, from whom every blessing floweth; to hate sin more, and see it more exceeding sinful; looking forward midst all the trials and troubles of this life, and through this checkered scene, to the blissful moment, when your God and my "God shall wipe away tears from all faces," taking us unto Himself for ever and ever.

(To be continued.)

OLD JONATHAN AT SCHOOL.

No, the lessons are not easier, nor does astonishing. Take, for example, Jonapractice or habit make School-work less than's last word. KINDNESS. He had toilsome or laborious. There is a reality been for weeks and weeks poring over about it. The burden cannot be shifted, this; and, as usual, could make nothing nor the drudgery avoided. Jonathan of it. There were moments, it is true, must be brought to the test. There when there appeared to be a little inmust be a coming up to the mark; and sight into it, and Jonathan felt as though the sooner his stubbornness is subdued, ready to be questioned upon the point; the sooner Old Jonathan knows what but speedily this would pass off, and calmness, and peace, and quiet are. There there was again a struggling in the dark. is a sentence in his school-book which Yet he knew withal there must be a climax. Jonathan now and then meets with, which His Master is a "God of order ;" and, he longs to know more about, "Thou however patient and enduring, the leswilt keep him in perfect peace whose son given, sooner or later, must be learnt. mind is stayed on thee, because he trust-Moreover, the acquirement of that lesson eth in thee;" but Jonathan finds there must be tested. The Master never goes is a great deal to pass through before he by hearsay, nor teaches nor tries by subcan come to this. There are times-and stitute. Every scholar must pass under these for most part after seasons of his own eye, and every lesson undergo dread, if not dismay-when he knows his own revisión. Never did Master and feels the sweetness of this position. have so clear and comprehensive a knowHe would fain linger there. When his ledge of his every pupil. Their disposiMaster thus smiles, he has not the slight- tions-their qualifications-their attainest wish for School hours to be over, or to ments, are ever before Him in the clearclose his studies. There is no such attrac-est and most vivid way. Aud the Master's tions elsewhere; no outward drawing, exact adaptation of subjects to character no deeming lessons a bore! But there is and capacity is marvellous; and to a an interest in the work, and a love to and thoughtful student must, sooner or later, delight in the Teacher. It was upon excite both admiration and gratitude. this ground that Jonathan was pleased The one great principle that is so desirwith his last lesson. It was about JE-able with respect to the labours of this SUS! It was music to the ear, and touched a chord of the heart, which, though so hard and cold and thankless, was for the time overcome, and, in its enmity, rendered powerless. Selfish as he is, and so prone to seek his own way, Jonathan is never so happy as when he can forget himself in thoughts about his Lord and Master. And as none "teacheth like Him,” even Old Jonathan is often struck with the wonderful wisdom as well as the astonishing patience and tenderness which He exercises. He opens the book-points out the lessons-and tells his old and troublesome pupil to go and get it off. With reluctant handknitted brow-pouting lip, the crabbed old creature takes the book; and, completely overlooking the past, with all the love, and the grace and the mercy, that were hidden below the surface of what at first sight seemed dark and forbidding, he takes for granted that there is more of severity than sympathy in the lesson about to be submitted. This is so uniformly the case, that really the patience and the forbearance of the Master are

School, is patience; and it is in this principle with regard to Old Jonathan that there is almost an absolute lack. Hence the nature of his lessons, and "the line upon line, and precept upon precept" course to which it is essentially necessary he should be submitted. Jonathan has sufficient insight into his own disposition to be conscious of this, and yet it does not render him the less impatient, fretful, and thankless. But to his lesson-KINDNESS. The course his Master was taking seemed anything but kind; and it was in vain that Jonathan entreated Him-yea, "with strong crying and tears"-that He would change his mode of procedure. He fell at his feet, and, like one desperate, besought Him to hear. If ever cries and entreaties seemed to burst from the heart, it was then. Every plea-every argumentthe strongest implorings, that could be broached, were brought forward; but no, all was a blank. The answer as far as appearances went, was a complete negative. He "shutteth out my prayer." was at least the mental conclusion. The

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and glory, and peace, and joy, bursting in and scattering to the winds of heaven the previous mists and darkness. There was a braving all dangers-a smiling at all difficulties--and a falling at the feet of one's Lord and Master in adoring wonder, love, and admiration. Even that miracle of mercy-that astounding instance of

crisis must come. To the ordeal Old utterable KINDNESS! Ah, Jonathan unJonathan must submit. The Master derstood the word feelingly, experimenmust have His way, come what would totally, unmistakably then. It was light, Jonathan. This was clear. There was no help for it. Stepping aside, shifting the weight throwing off the yoke, were all out of the question. There was a must in the case. There was a covenant "I will" and "Thou shalt." Well, the crisis came nearer and nearer, until at length the otherwise proud, self-willed, haughty Jonathan "fell down, and there was none to help." Oh, how true was that, Again they are minished and brought low, through affliction, oppression, and sorrow; then they cried unto the Lord in their trouble, and He delivered them out of their distresses." It were next to impossible that greater weakness Icould have been felt. There was not the strength of an infant. There was not the courage of a child. There was that want of "power" which only "the faint" know, and that entire lack of strength" which only those that have no might" can understand. It was a state of absolute nothingness; that crushed condition which would make the least glimpse of sympathy, or the veriest finger of help, unutterably welcome and endearing. The day-the hour-the moment came; but oh with it what condescension-what mercy-what tenderness-what unmerited, unmingled, un

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Sovereign grace o'er sin abounding, -even the old and rebellious Jonathan was, as it were, absorbed in love, and blood, and salvation. He was wrapped up in the Divine embraces. He "kissed him with the kisses of his mouth, and his love was better than wine." Under-otherwise the most dreaded of circumstances-Jonathan was "taken into the banqueting-house, and the banner over him was love." And, amid those precious communings, the question was put, "Shall I take thee home? Shall I break up School, and give thee to commence holydays indeed?" No, no, was the answer; but here let me stay, to see more, and speak more of that which

-For such love

Let rocks and hills their lasting silence break,
And all harmonious human tongues
My Saviour's praises speak.

SERMONS BY THE LATE JOB HUPTON.

"The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me; because the Lord hath anointed me to preach good tidings unto the meek; He hath sent me to bind up the broken-hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that are bound."-Isaiah lxi. 1.

THIS is the language of king Messiah. It is the Son of God, His equal, and the brightness of His glory; the express image of his person, and His utmost delight, who thus addresses us poor mortals. That I am not mistaken in this view of the words before me, you will see if you refer to the New Testament; Jesus went into the place where God was worshipped in Judea, and taking up the Book, the Bible without doubt, He rehearsed in the ears of the people, the words of the text, in substance, and plied them to Himself: "This day is this scripture fulfilled in your ears.' God the Father, is by this same Prophet represented as calling our attention to his Son, in the following language, "Be

hold my servant whom I uphold, mine elect, in whom my soul delighteth; I have put my spirit upon Him, He shall bring forth judgment to the Gentiles." Thus we see, both the Father and the Son testifying of the anointing of the Lord Jesus. It is from this anointing, He bears in the Old Testament the name Messiah; in the New Testament, that of Christ, Jesus Christ signifies, the Saviour anointed. God, in asserting the anointing of his Son, declares salvation, ap- He shall bring forth judgment to the Gentiles," or, as in another place, "unto "truth," the substance of this promise is, He shall fulfil my designs, as to bring salvation to the Gentile world. In the text Messiah asserts his own anointing,

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