Page images
PDF
EPUB
[ocr errors]

ions. Nay, more, he would establish the character to which he aspires, if it were necessary, by marching cheerfully to the stake, and dying a martyr in the cause of his God. He is afraid of incurring the suspicion of lukewarmness, and would change any situation in life, if he could open a wider field for the exercise of his zeal. But take care that you are not too impatient to burst the limited sphere in which God has placed you. Your zeal, if it had all the scope you wish, might break out into passion; your deep sense of the value of religious opinions might tread on the brink of uncharitableness, and your ardor for reform, might, if your station would admit of it, lead you to reform by persecution, instead of persuasion. No, my friend, trust the shaping of your character in the hands of Providence. He has placed you in circumstances where you are obliged to love men with whom you differ, and to cooperate with men, whom you burn to reform. Sometimes God cools your ardor in his own cause by disappointments, for which you cannot account; sometimes he places you in situations which you find it difficult to accommodate to your principles of conduct, and opens to you views which make you doubt the infallibility of your own conclusions. In short, God, by the circumstances and connexions in which you have been placed, has made you truly useful, whereas you might have been only zealous ; he has kept you candid, when you might have been uncharitable; he has given you influence on

ly, where you wanted power, and has preserved you a mild example of the excellence of his religion, when your own enthusiasm might have dishonored the cause you had espoused, or your passions have led you to the stake, a vain and unprofitable martyr.

Indulge me, my friends, with one supposition more on this subject, and I have done.

Here is a man, whose ruling passion is honor. If he were allowed to fashion his own reputation, he would be distinguished for an excessive sensibility which feels a stain as it would a wound. Influenced by the contemplation of imaginary characters, he endeavours to form himself after the model of heroes he has admired in history, or characters that he has contemplated in the lustre of romance. But as soon as this man enters into the world of actual existences, he finds that he has been preparing himself for a different sphere. He finds that the every day virtues of sober and industrious citizens meet with a better reception, than all the refinements of superior spirits, with the light of which he hoped to encircle his character. He begins to suspect that he has fashioned his feelings for a state of society which it is the amusement of romancers only to pourtray, and of enthusiasts to imagine, and that he has lost much of the happiness which he might have found in this mixed world, merely by seeking for beings which do not yet exist, and cherishing expectations, which the ordinary race of his companions will delight to disap

point. He will wish in vain, that he had been cast from his youth among the roughnesses and disappointments of life, that he might have acquired a disposition adapted to the world in which he is to bustle; and if God should once more allow this child of refinement to choose the character he would sustain in life, you would find him seeking for happiness in the customary track of human virtues.

You will recollect, my friends, that in the beginning of this discourse we hoped to establish two conclusions. First, that God alone disposes of our lot in life; and secondly, that his arrangements are made with the kindest intentions toward every individual. These conclusions are most interesting, most important, and most consolitory.

Let us bow at the feet of the Omniscient Being who orders our circumstances in life, and say, O God! I am ashamed of my pride, my discontent, and my vain expectations. I have been disappointed in life, but it was thou who didst disappoint me, and I murmur not. I have been fortunate, but it was thy blessing which gave this unexpected success to my projects, and I am humble. If my plans had always succeeded, they would have interfered with the wise arrangements of thy providence, and merely for my partial good, disconcerted the profound and extensive operations of thy wisdom and beneficence. When I look back upon my life, I see that thou hast trained me up in the sure and progressive order of thy

providence, to the character and the hopes, which I now possess. When I have thought myself abandoned, thou hast been watching me with paternal care; when I supposed myself most miserable, I have found myself nearer to the acquisition of the only permanent good. The The very circumstances of my life, which I thought the most inauspicious, I find the most favorable, and the very trials, which I thought would terminate in my misery or death, I now find had the most benevolent tendency, the most cheerful conclusion. My expectations have been often defeated, and my views altered, but I still find myself crowned with loving kindness, and surrounded with opportunities for virtue and happiness. In all the events of life, then, I will bless thee. Though the figtree should not blossom, and there should be no fruit in the budding vine of my hopes, yet will I bless the Lord, and joy in the God of my salvation. I have trusted thee for this life, and with sentiments like these, in continual exercise, may I not trust thee, O God, for eternity?

SERMON III.

ON THE EVIDENCES OF A RETRIBUTION FOR SIN.

ROMANS, II, 16.

IN THE DAY WHEN GOD SHALL JUDGE THE SECRETS OF MEN BY JESUS CHRIST, ACCORDING TO MY GOSPEL.

[ocr errors]

THE doctrine of a future judgment and consequent retribution after death, is the first principle of all religion, and the foundation of all religious obedience. It supposes a power above us, which observes, while it upholds; a being from whom nothing in our character, or conduct, or destiny is hidden, and to whom it will be as easy to assign with equity our future condition, as it was to appoint our present lot. It supposes that we are here on trial for eternity, that we know our obligations and our powers, and that we must hereafter render an account of our conduct. It it were true that the revelations which God has given us, had not expressly declared that there would be a day of judgment for every moral agent, it would not be the less probable; for the whole system of Christianity and the whole language of

« PreviousContinue »