i »<«^^ri^ } X .^. -I jC^ jA S'^P'*^ '''?*5'' -^jsoiw iitnw ^ < ,'"% 1 «\ 3tt!ara, Went ^ork LIBRARY OF LEWIS BINGLEY WYNNE A.B..A.N1;. COLUMBIAN COLLEGE,'71 . '73 WASHINGTON. D. C. THE GIFT OF MRS. MARY A. WYNNE AND JOHN H. WYNNE CORNELL '98 1922 Cornell University Library BX6333.M41 T8 Truth unfolded : sermons and essays of R olin 3 1924 029 452 525 6333 re Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/cletails/cu31924029452525 J\ /a, c/l^azttO' Crut)^ anfoiueu* SERMONS AND ESSAYS REV. SUMNER R. MASON, D. D. SELECTED AND EDITED BY REV. ALVAH HOVEY, D. D., PEESIDENT OP THE NEWTON THEOLOGIOAI. INSTITUTE. WITH A SKETCH Of THE LIEE AND CHAEACTER OF DE. MASON, Rev. O. S. STEARNS, D. D., PROF. OF BEBLICAI. INTERPRETATION O. T. IN NEWTON THEOL. INST. CAMBRIDGE: JlrtnteB at tije MibftHiae l&vem, AND PUBLISHED BT MRS. SUMNER R. MASON. 1874. A1 H^ I ^ S^ /9^^SV040 Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1874, by Mrs. Somnek K. Mason, in the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. Ml rights reserved. EIVEfiSlDE, CAMBRIDGE! STEREOTYPED AND PRINTED BT H. O. HOUGHTON AND COMPANY. ' I COE-TEI^^TS. — '■ — ♦ BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH . Tii SEEMONS. SERMON L The PliKMAKENCE OF THE WOED 1 SERMON n. The Once Delivered Faith 11 SERMON in. COKTEXDING FOB THE OnCE DelITEEED FaITH 17 SERMON IV. The Ouedient able to KNOiy the Will op God .... 27 SERMON V. God the Same in the Old Testament as He is in the New . . 36 SERMON VI. The Old Testament eeveals Salvation 46 SERMON VII. The Woeth op Man 55 SERMON VIII. Sin necessaet in a Moeal System 65 SERMON IX. The Imputation op Adam's Sin 72 SERMON X. The Law op Peovidence towaeds the Weath op Men ... 82 SERMON XI. The DnTT op Sinnees to make them a New Heaet .... 94 SERMON XII. The Sinnee's Inability to come to Cheist 103 SERMON Xin. Chrtst in the Old Testament HE IV Contents. SERMON XIV. Christ the Object of Wokship 123 SERMON XV. Chkist the Object of Wokship 134 SERMON XVI. Only the Name of Jesus saving 14G SERMON XVII. HoTV Jesus spake '. 153 SERMON XVIII. The Resubeection or Jesus Chkist the Ground op Hope . .168 SERMON XIX. No Condemnation to Believers 176 SERMON XX. The Trial -of Eaith 185 SERMON XXI. The Service of Chkist not hard . 195 SERMON XXII. Christ's Sympathy tvith his People 205 SERMON XXIII. The Truth the Instrument of Sanotification 215 SERMON XXIV. The Fact of Regeneration 223 SERMON XXV. The Nature of Regeneration 230 SERMON XXVI. The Fruits of Regeneration 239 SERMON XXVII. What is the Holy Spirit "i 247 SERMON XXVin. The Convincing of the Holy Spirit 257 SERMON XXIX. Resisting the Holy Ghost 267 SERMON XXX. On Grieving the Holy Spirit 276 SERMON XXXT. Danger of Falling 288 Contents. v SERMON XXXII. The Two Gbevt Cektainties of the Gospel 298 SERMON XXXIII. The Parable of the Pounds 308 SERMON XXXIV. The Lost Condition of the Heathen and God's Method of sav- ing THEM .... 320 SERMON XXXV. What is that to thee ? - 366 SERMON XXXVI. Mansions in Heaven 346 SERMON XXXVII. The PiSHPETUiTT of the Sabbath 357 ESSAYS. Thl Penalty op Sin 369 Griffin on Divine Efficiency 385 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH. Sumner Rbdway Mason was bom in Cheshire, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, June 14, 1819. His ancestry was English. Three families of the original stock, representing three distinct religious tendencies, immigrated to America, at three different times. John Mason, the Puritan, came to this coimtry in 1630. He settled at first in Massachusetts, and sub- sequently in Connecticut. George Mason, or, as he was better known. Colonel George Mason, was a member of the English Parliament ; but after the battle of Worcester in 1651, when Cromwell defeated the royal army, he escaped in disguise, came to this country, and settled in Virginia. From him sprang the southern Masons. " None of them," says Hon. John M. Ma- son, " ever settled north of Mason and Dixon's line." Samson Mason, the direct lineal ancestor of our sketch, left England for America about 1650. He was an officer in Cromwell's army, a radical and a Baptist. He settled in Dorchester, Mass., then removed to Rehoboth, and ultimately, for " conscience' sake," to Swansea. According to Baylies, he was one of the original settlers of that town, but Backus puts his settlement there at a later period. Before his removal from Rehoboth, he had as- sisted in buUding the Baptist meeting-house in Swansea, for which he was summoned before the authorities of Plymouth Colony, fined fifteen shillings, and warned to leave the jurisdic- tion of the colony. So far as these families were concerned, the old issues of Roundhead and Cavalier brought by George and Samson to the country of their adoption, continued to exist in their descendants. Two hundred years passed away, with the moulding and modifying influence of republican institutions, but in the recent struggle between freedom and slavery, the seeds sown in Norfolk and Rehoboth bore their legitimate fruit in the antagonisms of the South and the North. viii Biographical Sketch. The family of which Samson Mason was the head, was quibe eminent in the early history of the Baptists in New England. Of his sons, Isaac was a deacon of the second Baptist Church in Swansea ; Joseph, during his ministerial life, was its pastor, and three of his grandsons, sons of Pelatiah Mason, were pas- tors of the same church at different times. " When aU North America," says Backus, " was ceded to Great Britain, a church was formed out of this church, with Nathan Mason as their pastor, and they went and settled at the head of the Bay of Fundy, but after some years they removed back to New Eng- land, and most of them went and settled in Berkshire, in the Massachusetts." It is here we find Pelatiah Mason, the imme- diate ancestor of the subject of this sketch, and the head of the clerical branch of the family. In the quaint and scriptural family record, the line of descent runs thus : " Sumner Redway Mason was the son of Eddy Mason, the son of Brooks, the son of Russel, the son of Pelatiah, the son of Samson." His father, Eddy Mason, was a deacon of the Baptist church in Cheshire, a church formed from Elder Jolm Leland's church, "principally on account of his open communion views." He was a farmer, with a good general education, a close student of the Bible, and a man of decided convictions. While pos- sessing a large measure of that charity which " suJfereth long and is kind," no consideration of expediency could turn him aside from principle. He was always ready to avow and to defend. He was an exemplary Christian, and commanded the esteem of the church and of his fellow-citizens. He married Matilda Red- way, daughter of Deacon Joel Redway of Lanesboro', a man who himself suffered much for conscience' sake. She was a woman of earnest piety from her youth, but being exceedingly perplexed vdth doubts and f e ars, she did not publicly profess Christ until the meridian of her life. The issue of this mar- riage was ten children : five sons and five daughters. Freeman E., now dead, became a physician and a Professor of Anatomy and Surgery in the Medical College of Ohio. Jane, now Mrs. James M. Haswell, has been for many years a beloved mission- ary in Burmah. Alanson P., now District Secretary of the American Baptist Home Mission Society, and Sumner R., Biographical Sketch. ix entered the ministry. Of the ten, Alanson P. and Mrs. Has well alone survive. For a memoir of the early life of Mr. Mason, the material is very scanty. In April, 1826, his parents removed from Chesh- ire to Penfield in the western part of New York. In August 1828, his father died, leaving a widow with a large family in a land of strangers. Her purpose was to keep the family to- gether and train them up under her own care. " From this pur- pose," writes her son Alanson P., " she could not be turned, though it cost her many a severe struggle. In 1830 it pleased God to bring four of the children into his kingdom, thus adding helps to our mother's religious influence. But unforeseen changes followed this happy event. I felt it my duty to leave home and study for the ministry. My oldest brother who had been studying medicine for a number of years, settled in Cin- cinnati, and Sumner, who was much given to re'ading and study, decided to secure a liberal education. His oldest brother in- vited him to make his home in his family, and push forward his studies as best he could. He accordingly taught in Cincinnati some years, and pursued his classical studies under Rev. Prof. Asa Drury, as a private teacher. His brother, the physician, being skeptical in his tendencies, exerted at this period an influ- ence upon Sumner, which in respect to religion was anything but favorable." Having made the requisite preparation, Mr. Mason entered Yale College in 1838, and pursued the studies of his class about two years, leaving New Haven in 1840. This sudden break in his collegiate course was caused by the change in his life- purpose, which occurred at this time. Hitherto, he had been aided pecuniarily by his brother, the physician, but in the year 1840 he became a new creature in Christ Jesus, and decided to give himself to the ministry, in consequence of which the support of his brother was withdrawn. The circumstances at- tending this change are exceedingly suggestive, as an index to the character of the man he became. He had been accustomed to worship with the Baptist church in New Haven. The pul- pit of that church, at that time, did not please his taste, nor satisfy his intellectual cravings. He was poor ; and the sHght- K Biographical Sketch. est pressure upon his purse could be used as an excuse for chang ing his place of worship. He accordingly wrote to his elder brother Alanson, a brother to whom his soul was ever knit like that of Jonathan to David, for advice in the matter. He said, " If I go to the Congregationahst meeting, I can have a free sit- ting and hear sound sense from the pulpiit. If I attend the Bap- tist meeting, I must hear the brawling Roberts. I have no money to spend thus." This Mr. Roberts had been his pastor at Penfield, N. Y., and was an earnest, successful revivalist. His brother wrote back a kind letter, advising him to remain where he was, and promised to defray the expense. A few weeks elapsed, when he wrote to the same brother, " I have followed your advice, and the ' brawling Baptist ' has led me down into the water." He united with the First Baptist Church in New Haven, March 1, 1840. " While with us," says the clerk of that church, " he was active in the church and in the Sunday- school, and our recollection of him is that of a brother beloved by all who enjoyed his acquaintance." The act, however, and the decision in the act, all his friends' will recognize as charac- teristic of the man. Nevertheless, it was an act which involved a sacrifice which none can appreciate except those who have been suddenly dashed in their intellectual aspirations. He was obliged to leave college, and supply the deficiencies in his edu- cation as best he could. He accordingly taught a year or more in Cincinnati, and six years in Nashville, Tenn., pursuing at the same time, so far as possible, the studies of his class. How hard he wrought in this direction, is well explained in his own lan- guage. In a letter to his sister, Mrs. Haswell, referring to a period shortly after his marriage, he says, " You ask me what I am doing ? I reply that I am a teacher of Greek and Latin, have two schools, male and female. Yet I preach, or rather talk occasionally. Mj ideas of a teacher, especially of ad- vanced pupils in the classics, are such, that he who discharges them faithfully, has but httle time for anything else. I now have classes in Nepos, Virgil, Ovid, Cicero's Philosophical Works, Homer, Xenophon, etc. Add to these, classes from Col- burn's Mental Arithmetic to Conic Sections, and you will see that I must prove recreant to my trust, not to be all the time Biographical Sketch. xi laboring for my school, directly or indirectly. This has increased my desire to throw oil every trammel, and give myself wholly to the ministry ; and now I have this end in view, and the prospect of its speedy accomplishment." The letter from which we have quoted has no date, but it seems to have been written from Huntsville, Alabama, where he went to teach after leaving Nashville, and after the greatest crisis in his life was passed, — his determination to enter the ministry. He had previously been married to Miss Mary Jane Dibble of Buffalo, N. Y. This event occurred November 10, 1844. She was the daughter of Colonel O. H. Dibble, a native of Bennington, Vt., an enter- prising, energetic citizen of Buffalo, who amassed an immense fortune prior to the financial crisis of 1837, when he suffered, with so many others, a terrible reverse. In 1852, leaving his family in Buffalo, he went to California, where he spent the re- mainder of his days, dying at the age of 77. " He died in the fullness of time, and not unprepared for the great change. He was no ordinary man. His long life was illustrated by many high evidences of ability, and his talents were rewarded with distinctions of which any man might be proud." He occupied many prominent positions in civil and political life. He was specially interested in the Theological Institution at Hamilton, N. Y., giving it a fund, the interest of which has aided many poor students who are now preaching the gospel, or have been " called up higher." His wife, the mother of Mrs. Mason, was born in New Brunswick, N. J., and was " a woman of strong practical sense and of ardent love for her children." To his wife Mr. Mason owed, not only the happiness of a Christian home during the years of their wedded life, but very emphatically the decision he reached at this critical juncture of his history. "When the question of devoting himself entirely to the ministry pressed itself upon his conscience, his early skepticism returned with unwonted energy. Doubts respecting the reality of his piety, doubts as to the divine authority of the Scriptures, doubts tending to materialism, plunged him into their miry pit, and brought him to the verge of despair. The body could not resist the mental agony. He was seized with a dangerous fever, and came down to the border of the grave. But God, through the ministry of his wife, " cured him," as x.ii Biographical Sketch. he was wont to say, " entirely cured him." " To her," he says. " I owe my restoration from the toils of infidelity." " Who knows," he writes to her some years afterwards, "what might have been the result of my reckless skepticism, but for the gen- tle yet firm remonstrance of such a wife ; for her guardian watch- fulness and prayerful entreaties during that dark, dark night of bitterness and woe which surprised me in Huntsville ! I was already on an awful precipice, ready to stumble headlong to destruction at any moment. Recklessness, skepticisms, and an utter isolation from every human being in interest and sympa- thy, were driving me with fearful rapidity over the most fearful breaker of hfe's ocean. I thank God for my wife." Such is the furnace out of which the pure gold comes. His determination was now fixed. The ministry became his joy and delight. He had been licensed to preach by the Baptist church in Nashville, of which Rev. R. B. C. Howell, D. D., was pas- tor, September 7, 1844. The conflict, of which we have spoken, came after that approval. Now he pursued his work as a teacher and gave himself also to theological studies under the direction of Dr. Howell, mingling with his teaching and studies an occa- sional supply of neighboring pulpits. Having completed his preparations, he spent parts of the years 1848-49 in different places in New York, as a supply and as a candidate, but being from the South, he was looked upon suspiciously, and the open door did not present itself, until June 24, 1849, when he re- ceived a call to become the pastor of the First Baptist Church in Lockport, N. Y., which he accepted. He was ordained over that church, August 22, 1849. The sermon was preached by Rev. V. R. Hotchkiss, D. D., now of Buffalo.^ The charge was given by his brother-in-law. Rev. J. j\I. Haswell, D. D., now of Burmah, the right hand of fellowship by Rev. S. M. Stimson, and the prayer of ordination by Rev. Mr. Sawyer. He undertook this new labor kmid grave difficulties. The former pastor of the church. Rev. Elon Galusha, for a long time a marked and influential man in the Baptist denomination, be- came a " Millerite," and drew off from the First Baptist Church a section composed of " fully one half of the membership," tc ^ His brother, Alanson P. Mason, D. D., was to preach the ordination sermon but was taken sick on the way, and was not able to be present. Biographical Sketch. xiii which he was preaching when Mr. Mason assumed the pastoral office. The church was in a demoralized condition. It was divided, disheartened, and disposed to lean solidly upon the wisdom and influence of the new pastor. The church was found to be so weak, — a weakness resulting from differences of opinion and the lack of discipline, — that a coup d'etat in Baptist policy became necessary. The members of the church decided to disband, and a new church was formed and recog- nized, composed of more homogeneous elements. Mr. Mason became their pastor. He healed dissensions. He guided the affairs of the church with discretion. The divine blessing ac- companied his labors. And when he resigned he left a thriv- ing, vigorous church. One who was a prominent and intel- ligent actor in these scenes, referring to Mr. Mason's executive ability, says : " I have very distinct and abiding impressions of the trying circumstances through which we passed at Lockport. The dignified Christian spirit which he manifested under these trials, and the rare common sense with which he met and mastered them, impressed me with the fact that he was no ordinary man." The esteem which he had secured from other denominations as well as in his ovm, during his residence in Lockport, is so beautifully expressed by the following letter, addressed to him when leaving for his new field of labor in Cambridgeport, -Mass., that we take pleasure in quoting it. Lockport, N. Y., Feb. 26, 1855. Kev. S. R. Mason, — Deak Brother : The near approach of the time of your intended removal from our village, and your consequent withdrawal from the immediate and close intimacy which we have enjoyed with you as min- isters of these churches, has prompted us, while reviewing and cherish- ing the memorials of our intercourse, to express to you in this delib- erate way the great satisfaction we have had in your society, our high appreciation of your unvarying courtesy and friendship, our regret that we are to be deprived of your presence, your assistance, and your coun- sel, and our earnest desire that you and yours may be blessed in all your ways, and that you may be abundantly successful in your efforts to preach the gospel of Christ, and to make full proof of your ministry. With the prayer that God may bless you in your work and bestow an you an abundant reward in heaven, we give you our parting saluta- xiv Biographical Sketch. tions and the right hand of fellowship, and subscribe ourselves, youi brethren in the ministry, William C. Wisner, Pastor ofPre.s. Church. H. L. Dox, Pastor of Lutheran Church. S. Stiles, Pastor of Methodist Episcopal Church. E. "W. Kellogg, Stated Supply, 2d Ward, Pres. Church. Edwakd "W". Gilman, Pastor of Congregational Church. He began his labors as pastor of the First Baptist Church in Cambridge, March 4, 1855. It was a large, intelligent, and in- fluential body. He at once found himself associated with min- isters of broad and refined culture. He measured himself with others, and determined to excel. How well he succeeded, let the body which grew and strengthened itself under his minis- trations, let his brethren in the ministry who universally respected and loved him, let the denominational societies which sought his counsel and confided to him their most sacred interests, let the city of his adoption, which honored him by intrusting to him her choicest educational institutions, testify. We could easily fill pages with resolutions of esteem passed by various organizations, civil and religious, when death snatched him away, had we space. He was a man who could not be hid ; a man whose very appearance expressed character, character which expressed power. The sixteen years of his faithful service in Cambridge were brought to a sudden and mysterious close. As if God in his own way was making him ready for a higher service, his last sermons to his own people, August 13, 1871, were upon themes pertaining to the heavenly home to which he aspired. In the morning of that day he preached upon " the characteristics of the heavenly world," from Rev. xxi. 23 : " And the city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon, to shine in it : for the glory of God did lighten it ; and the Lamb is the light thereof." In the afternoon he preached upon " the necessitj^ of being right in character to secure life's highest good," from Luke xi. 35 : " Take heed, therefore, that the light which is in thee be not darkness." The next Sabbath he spent with his friend Rev. Nelson J. "Wheeler, at Newport, R. I., when the subjects of his discourses, both morning and afternoon, and the topic on wliich Biographical Sketch. xv he spoke in the evening prayer-meeting, were a fitting summary of his public life-work. In the morning he preached from the fa- miliar text, " Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy la- den, and I wiU give you rest," enforcing clearly and emphatically the all-sufficiency of Christ for human salvation. In the afternoon he preached from the words, " It doth not yet appear what we shall be," drawing from the text the theme that " the future of the child of God is not revealed by his present," and showing that in his physical, intellectual, and moral nature, man's " highest possible conceptions must fall far below the reality." The way to eternal life and the bliss of eternal life, the sum and substance of all his preaching, were thus his last pulpit utterances. In the evening, at the close of the meeting, as was his custom, in a few well-chosen, terse sentences, he set forth the positiveness of God's Word. It is a revelation to be implicitly believed ; not to be explained to the satisfaction man's vain curiosity or man's proud reason. He noticed Paul's answer to the jailer, " Be- lieve on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved," and pressed upon the impenitent the positive command to believe oh Christ, with the equally positive assurance of salvation as the result of implicit faith. Then with great solemnity charging his hearers to remember these words as his last counsel to them should they never hear his voice again on earth, — a fact the more remarkable as he was careful to avoid all hackneyed expres- sions, — he closed the meeting with these words, " The positive- ness of the gospel." A fitting close to a spiritual ministry ! It was a halo of celestial radiance encircling the setting sun ! The next Sabbath he had entered upon the heavenly life, and was enjoying the results of a gracious positive revelation from God for the rescue of sinful man ! He did not deem it so then ; but an infinitely wise God had timed the occasion, the service, and the hour. For the next Sabbath, he had arranged an exchange of pulpits with Rev. J. C. Foster of Beverly. Singularly, he seemed to have some premonition as to the result of that exchange. Several times during the week previous, he remarked to his wife that he did not want to go. He appeared worried about it, and when the parting came on Saturday evening, August 26th, he xvi Biographical Sketch. literally tore himself away from his family, repeating the ex- pression, that he wished he had not agreed to go. It was, how- ever, to be so. He left Boston for Beverly, at twenty minutes to eight, ten minutes after the regular time, and at the Revere station, the train, being behind time, was run into by the ex- press train for Portland and Bangor, hurrying to death Dr. Ma- son and more than a score of others. It is not for us to dwell upon the horrors of the scene, nor upon the grief of his family and people, when the news reached them that he whom they loved was no more. His body was found on the top of the locomotive, apparently not much bruised. His watch had not stopped. He was not recognized by any one present, but was identijGLed by his name in his pocket-book. His remains were borne to his home the next Sabbath after- noon, and on the Thursday following, funeral services were held at his house and at his church, conducted by Revs. N. J. Wheeler of Newport, R. I., R. H. Neale, D. D., of Boston, J. Gr. "Warren, D. D., of Newton, and by Professors H. Lincoln and A. Hovey of the Newton Theological Institution. His body was entombed in the cemetery of Mt. Auburn. During the services the city of Cambridge honored him with the emblems of mourning. In fact the sea of upturned faces in the church, the large body of clergymen of various denominations, and the representatives of many public institutions then present, the flags of the city at half-mast, the tolling of the city bells, all emphasized the language of the prophet, " All ye that are about him bemoan him, and all ye that knew his name say, How is the strong staff broken and the beautiful rod." On the next Sabbath, a tribute to his memory was given to the church and congregation which had so long enjoyed his ministry, by the writer of this sketch. As writes a friend, " Untimely his death seems to us, but we know it was not. It was God's time. Whatever was the reck- lessness of man, and however criminal were the human agents in that disaster, and however just the public indignation toward them, the providence of God was over all, in all that scene of death and suffering. The servant of God is immortal until his work is done. It was the summons of his Master that called Biographical Sketch. xvii him home. It is affecting to know, that in his satchel was found after his death, a manuscript sermon on the text, " Thy will be done." He was intending to preach it the next day. The theme of his discourse was the duty of submission in all things to the will of God. May we not receive it as his farewell message to his family, to his church, to his friends everywhere ?'' At his death he left a widow and seven children, for whom his people at once made generous provision. A great man had fallen in Israel. They loved him as such ; and they affection- ately availed themselves of the privilege of caring for those so dear to him who had so earnestly and unselfishly cared for them. It is no easy task to delineate the characteristics of such a man as Dr. Mason was. By the foregoing sketch of his life, it will be seen that providential circumstances tended to beget in him self-reliance, independence of thought and action, and a hardihood of character, which, unless purified and modified by divine grace, would have made him as a man unlovely and un- attractive. His whole nature would have been granitic. A fatherless boy, thrown upon his own resources at a period of life when he needed the tenderest and most careful culture, subse- quently compelled to force his way through difloiCalties to secure an education and reach the goal of his ambition, we naturally expect him to become cold and unsympathetic. And yet, from the testimony of his sister, Mrs. Haswell, it appears that from his earliest childhood, while he was peculiarly shy and sensitive, his tenderness of heart was apparent to all. A bird's nest was in no danger from him. His choicest companions were his older sisters. " Healthy and active, and like most boys full of fun and mischief, he was not like some in delighting in cruel sports. He joined his sisters in their in-door amusements as heartily as they did him in out-door sports." " He was a dutiful son. Only once he attempted to resist his mother's will, after she became a widow, and then, as he related it himself years after- ward, ' she brought him to with the rod.' " In his intercourse with his brothers, he had a habit which his later friends will recognize, of putting the query, when any. bold assertion was made, " Well, how do you know ? " While, however, neither in his early life, nor in the culture of the " schools," was theie xviii Biographical Sketch. much to give delicacy and finish to his character, a study of the elements of his power and success, leads us back to his lineal inheritance, and causes us to see that in the catholic yet uncom- promising father and the self-distrusting yet conscientious mother, was that rare combination of strength and beauty, massiveness and tenderness, which made up the man. This was not indeed the first impression, either in private or in public. It was as the " strong staff," the emblem of power, — power to support or power to crush, — that he was at first recognized on the street or in the pulpit. He seemed born as one to command. He seemed as one who loved the arena of strife, as one of those who snuffed the battle from afar, and felt himself equal to his foe. There was something imperial in his very bearing, in his crisp remark, in his bold assertion, in his tenacity for the precise statement of a principle, in his deter- mined adherence to a position when once it had been taken. As the " beautiful rod," shooting out of the ground, with its buds clustering thickly upon it, welcoming the dew and the shower, rather than the thunder and the lightning, more sensitive to an east wind or an autumnal frost than to a cyclone or a tornado, none knew him, except those who experienced the wealth of his affections around the hearth-stone, the gentleness of his spirit in the sick-room or at the bed of death, and the few intimate friends to whom he sometimes opened his real nature and who were allowed to see him as he really was. An incident oc- curred when on a visit to his friend Rev. Mr. Wheeler, then resid- ing in Skowhegan, Me., which illustrates this side of his char- acter. " While walking along one of the streets," says Mr. W., " we met a little child who was crying. The neglected creature was anything but attractive in outward appearance. But the Doctor stopped and spoke some comforting words as we passed. We had not gone far, before the little one cried out ' Mother ! Mother ! ' As quickly as though he had been its mother, he turned back, went to the child, took it by the hand, inquired out its home, and refused to leave it until its friends appeared. Then, as we continued our walk, he said, ' Ah ! that word " Mother," when uttered by a child in trouble, touches a tender chord in my heart.' This may seem very simple when read. Biographical Sketch. XIX Dut it was most moving as witnessed." An item in the writer's own experience confirms him in • the opinion, that this element of kindness and loveliness, so generally thought to be deficient, was genuine and active. Years ago, when he first settled in Cambridge, my own pastorate at Newton commencing about the same time, I hesitated to exchange pulpits with him, because I had heard that he was stern and morose and forbidding, a critic of the critics, a preacher not easily satisfied with the pulpit efforts of any one. Through the intercession of a com- mon friend, there came a Sabbath when he stood in my place and I in his ; and at the close of the services of the day, in conversa- tion with my wife, it appeared that he was as afraid of me as I of him. And then I learned the fact, confirmed by many other proofs, that down deep in his soul was the tender shoot press- ing its way up to the surface, to be exposed to zephyrs and rough wiads and biting cold, exquisitely sensitive to the ameni- ties of life and to Christian courtesies. Then I learned that the strong shepherd's staff, ready to beat off foes, and to defend friends, was held by a hand which trembled lest the blow might do even an imaginary injury. He often lamented that his lack of self-demonstration prevented his being appreciated in his true character. Really he was as catholic as the air we breathe. He was bold to defend or to rescue. He was often timid and shrinking lest he should crush what he would foster. " In deeds and motives untold by the tongue, By cWsel uncarved, by poets unsung, The Beautiful Hves in the depths of the soul." This genial element of his nature is still further illustrated by his deportment in his autumnal vacations. During the later years of his life, he was accustomed to spend them with his friend Mr. Wheeler, among the forests of Maine, or the lakes and mountains of northern New York. " He had a natural taste," writes Mr. W., " amounting to a passion, for life in the forests. When worn down with work, his letters used to ex- press a longing for this favorite mode of recreation. And wheim autumn found him in the vnlderness, he entered with the spirit of a boy into its varied scenes of hunting, fishing, boating, and eight-seeing. Everythi^ interested Mm, even the unavoida- XX Biographical Sketch. ble hardships of such a life. No one enjoyed more keenly every ludicrous incident that enliyened the passing days. His hearty laugh over them was contagious. Our evenings in camp were spent in recounting the incidents of the day, and rehears- ing mirthful stories and witty sayings, when our rounds of merry laughter would wake the echoes from the neighboring cliffs. Our conversation would often take a more serious turn, and some theological question would be started or some topic of Christian experience would be discussed, when the Doctor was peculiarly happy, familiar, and suggestive. Never was he more instructive and interesting in his preaching than on his vacation Sabbaths with the groves for God's temple, and the sons of the for- est for his auditory. They are Sabbaths never to be forgotten." The same elements of character marked his piety. It could not be otherwise if they had distinguished the man, for the Christian is simply the unrenewed man set right. The old nature is started in a new and pure direction when it is " begot- ten again unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead." The spirit of God, the author of the new man, takes the man as he is, with his rough qualities and his amiable qualities, and moves him forward to the fuUness of Christ. This new man is to become Godlike. He is to be filled with all the fullness of God ; but this fullness, which in reality is nothing but purity of heart and life, technically called holiness, is sim- ply the development of the new life given him, which takes under its supervision the ruling characteristics of the old life, modifying and subduing the hurtful and self-destructive. To be a Christian, is to possess an enlarged and divinely directed man- hood. The ambition of the Christian is to attain the stature of a being in whom " mercy and truth have met together, righteous- ness and peace have kissed each other." Power and love, justice and benevolence, are the united elements in the being with whom he would enjoy perpetual companionship. A nature which would feel hypocrisy in himself and others, as sensitively as our Lord did that of the Pharisees; a nature which would respond as quickly to the look of need, as did our Lord to the diseased woman who touched the border of his garments ; a na- ture which would incorporate into itself the Sermon on tho Biographical Sketch. xxi Mount and bathe itself in the sweet influences of our Lord's intercessory prayer ; a nature which feared not man, but feared and loved God, because it was pervaded with and regulated by the Spirit of God, the great Helper of man ; a nature strong to do and tender to feel ; to do all good things and feel all pure things, — this is the ideal of the new man in Christ Jesus. It was this ideal which Dr. Mason sought to make actual in his piety. From early life he had been the child of conflicts over religious questions. At one time we find him skeptical, almost a stiff doubter ; at another a sincere inquirer and on the verge of belief. Now he throws off prayer; then he is earnest in his supplications. The crisis in New Haven, when he passed into the power of an endless Hfe, and the crisis at Huntsville, when he was lifted from the depths of despair to the firm rock of his ministerial purpose, both present the antag- onism of a stern will with an honest faith. And when faith won the victory, so strong was his conviction of sinfulness, so domi- nant seemed the old depraved heart, so crucifying was it at times to rule his spirit and possess his soul in patience, com- paring the actual with the ideal, the language of Paul was never too strong for him, " Not as though I had already attained, either were already perfect ; but I follow after, if that I may apprehend that for which also I am apprehended of Christ Jesus." While with bold Peter, he would say to himself, " Giv- ing all diligence, add to your faith, valor ; and to valor, knowl- edge ; and to knowledge, temperance ; and to temperance, pa- tience; and to patience, godliness ; and to godliness, brotherly- kindness ; and to brotherly-kindness, charity," he craved also with the humble Paul, " the fruit of the Spirit, love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temper- ance, against which there is no law." The manifestations of his piety strongly confirm us in the beUef that such was his ideal of the Christian life. No one ever heard him pray who did not feel that he honored God, and walked with Him ; that he stood in awe of Him ; and yet approached lovingly near to Him. He never prayed in ruts nor by forms. He had a petition to present, and it was offered in the meekness and'submissiveness of a child. The writer xxii Biographical Sketch^ once heard him utter but three sentences in a public prayer, and yet it was far from flippancy or iiTelevancy. It compre- hended all that needed to be said. It bore us to the throne of all mercy, for the reception of all mercy. Nor did any one ever hear him preach who did not feel that the Scriptures were his ultimate appeal, that to them he brought every emotion of his soul as the crucible which should remove the dross and clar- ify the gold. God Himself, with whom he loved to dwell alone in his study and in the woods, and God's Word, comprehensive in its scope, yet minute in its requirements, massive in its struct- ure, yet entering into the thoughts and intents of the heart ; God the great God, and yet the incarnate God, his law and his gospel just Uke Himself, was his conception of a true life which he would attain himself, and urge upon others. Hence his zeal for integrity in Christian conduct. Hence his anath- emas upon pubhc sins. Hence his tenacity for the minuter matters of hfe, and the avoidance of even the shadow of un- christian influence ; not to ride rough-shod over public opin- ion ; not for the sake of eccentricity ; not for the pleasure of having his own way ; not to present to the world, a puritanic type of character in the offensive sense ; but that through the strength and beauty of that God who works within us " both to will and to do," earth might resemble heaven, and man be holy and without blemish. The language of Job, with refer- ence to his own noble purposes, expresses Dr. Mason's deter- mination with reference to his Christian character ; " Till I die, I will not remove mine integrity from me : my heart shall not reproach me so long as I live." As was the man, so were his theological beliefs. Very few men whose theological training has not been secured in the schools ever systematize their religious convictions. Though the doctrines of Christianity may be cordially and confidently accepted by them, they generally lie in their minds as " dis- jecta membra," fragmentary truths, each a whole in itself. The result is, that they put forth each truth as the all of truth, push it to an extreme application, distort it, so that it loses much of its force as a divinely revealed trath. Their theology, if such it may be ealiled, is a one-sided, inconsistent Biographical Sketch. xxiii blieology, totally unlike the mind of God who is so emphat- ically one. Their utterances are mere dogmatisms. They are heart-explosions. What is said on one doctrine is es- sentially denied or contradicted in the discussion of a kindred doctrine. Their preaching and their writings resemble conglom- erate granite, solid it may be, but full of all kinds of pebbles and stones without beauty or order, rather than the homoge- neous Scotch granite, whose effect upon the eye is uniform and impressive as a whole. Their theology is an emotional theol- ogy, or an imperial theology, or a didactic theology. It catches the ear, warms for the moment the heart, but will not bear the light of reason, nor the comparison of truth with truth. It can never build up " the church of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth." Dr. Mason never allowed his heart to run away with his reason. His mind, eminently constructive and self-yoised, was ever searching for foundations, laying firmly the corner-stone, building out and up from that and from that alone. He spared neither toil nor" time to learn the whole of a subject, look at it from all sides, weigh it in the scale of opposing theories or modifying truths, and consider it as presented and expounded by those who held opposite opinions. He indorsed no human authority. He copied no distinguished divine. He loved the clear, practical Andrew Fuller, and the theoretical, specula- tive, uncompromising Griffin ; but he likewise appreciated the golden-mouthed Chrysostom and the imaginative Jeremy Taylor. He could learn something from the fierce, hirsute South, but he grew stouter under the sway of the princely Edwards. He repelled no wind of theological opinion, truthful or untruthful, yet standing firmly upon the revealed will of God, though, as we have seen, sometimes terribly shaken by its stern and sweeping requisitions, as all truth-searching minds are, he wrought out from it his own system of belief, solid as the hills, beautiful as the sculptured marble. So independent was he in his methods of investigation that he always believed that it was best for him that he never had received the dis- cipline and teachings of any theological school. Unquestion- ably, self-dependence begat self-reliance, gave freshness to his xxiv Biographical Sketch. pulpit utterances and an authoritative control over his people. But in almost any other mind, the tendency of such methods is to narrowness, positiveness, the attempt at impossibilities, especially in the practical application of the teachings of Chris- tianity. He mined into the deep heart of God, prayerfully, carefully, searchingly mmed, and out came the jewel worthy of his Master's crown. And how he gloried in showing it in its native brilliancy ! How he delighted in bringing out a truth in its precise form, in its exact statement, revehng in it as a truth of God, putting it in varied hghts, so that others might see it in its pure beauty, turning it about, side after side, and almost impatient because others did not see it just as it ap- peared to his own vision ! How the sermons of this volume reveal his enthusiasm in exhibiting God's greatness in God's goodness, God's sovereignty and man's freedom, God's redemp- tion for man's sinfulness, God's authority and man's obedience, God's promises with man's fidelity, God's incarnation and man's divine nature, God's throne in man's heaven, God's eter nity and man's destiny ! How those last sermons to his own people on heaven, and the stern fidelity requisite to reach it, his last remarks in his own prayer-meeting on unexpected death, and the sermon he intended to preach at Beverly on Christian submission, make a sort of summary of his theological opinions, so strong, yet so tender, the staff and the rod ! Like the stars in their courses, " they all stand together ; not one faileth." The same characteristics of power and fitness distinguished him as a preacher. With a theology angular, positive, precise in its phraseology, there was combined the richness of a ripe Christian experience, enabling him to give every man his por- tion of meat in due season. He was willing to work for the truth, but he longed to have others receive it just as he ex- pounded it. He stripped off all disguises. He hated shams. He despised cant. He laid the heart bare to the quick, but he had a better remedy for healing it than false emotions and fanatical ecstasy. He was satisfied with the results he had leached by searching the Scriptures, and comparing them with his own spiritual life, and he was therefore firm, bold, earnest in his pulpit utterances. Hence he magnified his pulpit, and Biographical Sketch. xxv relied upon his pulpit as the chief power for good. He did not ignore pastoral work, but his pulpit was to him God's throne, from which. Sabbath after Sabbath, God through him expressed his will. He believed in his pulpit as the divinely appointed agency to guide and form society, according to the principles symbolized in the cross. He wanted God to dwell among men, and sincerely believed that if they would listen to God's word and practice it as thus enunciated, their highest weal would be secured. He expected and demanded that men should search for God in the sanctuary, rather than be sought aftei? and taught in their homes. Perhaps he trusted to the power of his pulpit too much. But he deemed himself set apart as a preacher of the gospel and a defender of the gospel, and he would have men come to him, as they did to Moses, as the expounder of the law, rather than go out after them and constrain them to come to the house of God. He would have a magnetism in the pulpit, like that which Christ manifested in the synagogue of Nazareth when " the people were astonished at his doctrine : for his word was with power : " like that of Paul in Antioch of Pisidia, when the people besought him that " these words might be preached to them on the next Sabbath." The following note from Professor Edwards A. Park of Andover, shows by the impression which his pulpit efforts made even upon a stranger, how worthily he executed his purpose. " I spent a Sabbath," he says, at Cambridgeport, " and heard Dr. S. R. Mason preach in the year 1871. I shall not soon forget the im- pression made upon me by his services. I recognized in him at once a firm conscientiousness. He obviously spoke what he deemed himself bound to speak. His conscience made him bold. His sermon was like the voice of a trumpet. It was an instructive sermon, and all his services indeed were fitted to build up his church in sound doctrine. I was impressed by the solidity of his thoughts and words and ways. In these times of sensationalism it is refreshing to hear such a man. I inwardly resolved to hear him often." Dr. Mason's sermons, however, were not merely strong and convincing. They were fitted into the needs of his people. Among numerous instances so well known to his people, two as xxvi Biographical Sketch. apoken of by Mr. Wheeler will explain our meaning. " I re- member," he writes, " his relating to me the occasion of his two best sermons. While visiting a mother, who had just been bereft of a little child, he was trying to console her with the thought of Christ's sympathy ; that He not only felt for her, but also felt with her. Her reply was, ' How can He feel with me, when He never had a little child to lose ? ' This question sug- gested to him the sermon he preached the next Sabbatt from the text, ' For we have not a high-priest who cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities.' At another time, after preaching a sermon on the severity of the Christian conflict, as he was leaving the house, he overheard an impenitent person saying, ' Well, if the Christian life is so hard and trying in its experience, I think I will not try it.' The text immediately flashed upon him, ' Take my yoke upon y.ou and learn of me : for my yoke is easy and my burden is light. The next Sab- bath he preached from it." The writer heard Dr. Mason but a few times, but judging from what he has heard, the one domi- nant characteristic of his preaching was its immediate, decided jmpressiveness. Everything was sacrificed for an impression which would be felt and remembered. His people easily under- stood what he meant, knew that the theme was logically and scripturally sustained, and felt that it was designed for them, then and there. Few congregations were ever so elaborately indoctrinated. His pulpit was a critical place for a novice. Many among his listeners knew that they could teach him the way of God more perfectly. Dr. Mason's style was clear, his argument compact and well illustrated, and his appeals true and clinching. He did not enter a labyrinth, which may lead everywhere and end nowhere, but he went first himself into the temple of God, into the holy place through the veil, into the most holy place, where, filling his golden censer with celestial fir§ and receiving the incense from the great high-priest, all aglow himself with the beauty and glory of the place, he came forth with an offering worthy of the acceptance of all. His ministry was a ministry to bring manhood into kinship with Godhead. His ministry was for babes, only as babes under his nurture might attain to the stature of the fullness of Christ. Biographical Sketch. xxvii To develop such, he had thoughts suited to all. Sometimes they were a nugget of gold in the form of a costly promise, and he heaved it out for his hearers to trade upon many days. Sometimes it was a boulder of quartz rock, as a huge proph- ecy ; and he crushed it himself and taught others to become muscular by showing them how to crush out the choice ore. Sometimes he brought a Httle golddust, as a story or a parable, and put it into the hands of the child and told him how to make it pay in soul-wealth. And many times he brought the fine gold of a clarified doctrine, meeting the needs of all, and proving itself "profitable for instruction in righteousness." Whatever he brought was worth something. Myriad-sided was the gospel he proclaimed ; equally so was it in its applications. " Simple, grave, sincere, In doctrine uncorrupt ; in language plain, And plain in manner ; decent, solemn, chaste. And natural in gesture : mucli impressed Himself, as conscious of his awful charge, And anxious mainly that the flock he feeds May feel it too." , As a pastor Dr. Mason was a man of broad conceptions and noble aims. Gifted with unusual executive ability, he brought all his energies to bear upon the prime object of his pubUc life, namely, to "watch for souls." He could give himself to the culture of one soul, search out the secret of its special needs, and put his individual stamp upon that one, as was evident from his power over young men when entering business, and more especially over those who were being educated for the ministry. His influence upon such persons possessed the power of a fas- cination. They felt him in every decision of life. They rev- erenced him as a father. He engraved his own religious convictions upon them, and stirred them to an enthusiastic con- secration of their being to their high calling. He felt his responsibility ia this direction and wielded his influence with a passion. To train a man, to impress upon him the idea of the greatness of manhood, was his chief ambition. He loved to take hold of a man whom he could gaide and direct. This passion expressed itself, not only upon those of his own flock, but upon men wherever he found them. Says Mr. Wheeler, xxviii Biographical Sketch. from whom we have quoted so frequently, " One thing that was noticeable in his forest tours was the interest he felt in the leading men of the settlements we visited. In these remote settlements, there is usually one man whose will is the law of the community. He interested himself especially in such per- sons, and endeavored to impress them with a sense of their re- sponsibility, as the leaders of others. We once passed a Sab- bath in a settlement situated thirty miles in the wilderness, and nearly sixty miles from any church. As usual, we preached during the day. It was near midnight before the Doctor ap- peared in his bed-room ; and then he stated that he had been passing the evening with the landlord — the recognized leader of the settlement — and had tried to show him, not only his personal responsibility to God, but also his peculiar responsibility to those around him. And during a stay of several days, he be- came so deeply interested in this destitute community, that he offered to raise $200 or $300 annually towards the support of a suitable missionary among them." In all his movements for the spiritual thrift of his people, in their public enterprises, such as that of the erection of a new house of worship, and in the raising of funds for benevolent purposes, he laid his hand on men, exemplified what he sought by his personal sacrifice, and by a sort of magical influence carried out his designs. What the First Baptist Church of Cambridge is to-day, its noble posi- tion among the churches of the denomination, is due very largely to his personal power over its individual members, the wealthy and the strong. Nor did he neglect others, less influential than these. His letters to his wife when she was absent from home, and he remained at work, are filled with sketches of the condition and wants, temporal and spiritual, of- the poorer members of the church ; in some instances almost a full biography ; show- uig his perfect familiarity with their position, his thorough sympathy with them and his plans for their comfort and hap- piness. As an instance of his happy method of quenching jealousies among the less influential of his people, and as giv- ing a true insight into his soul, we quote his own language addressed to his wife, in the freedom of private correspondence Biographical Sketch, xxix We simply suppress names. He says, " I must give you an account of a good thing I got ofE on old Mr. . You know that they all think that I am as proud as Lucifer, and that I stand aloof from them («'. e., the family). Well, I met the old man on the sidewalk, and shook hands with him. Said I, ' I have not seen you often since you came back.' ' Haven't you,' said he, ' I have seen you.' ' Where ? ' said I. ' On the street,' said he, ' a half a dozen times.' This was so said as to imply that I was unwilling to speak to him. ' Have you ? ' said I, ' then you have treated me very badly, to pass me by without speaking to me.' You ought to have seen his face. ' Do you think so ? ' said he. ' Yes,' I replied, ' I don't like to have my friends pass me in that way on the street.' ' Well now,' said he, ' I didn't know that. I thought yjou did.' "■ But it was his church, as the body of Christ, to which he gave his strength. His ideal of a church of God was lofty and grand. He believed in her as the great missionary force for the weal of the world. Examination for admission to her membership was always searching and discriminating. The discipline of member's, when necessary, was prompt, decisive, and kind. It was his day-dream and his night-dream, " Oh ! that this people may be found walking in the truth and in love." He knew that much self-abnegation would be demanded from him and from them, to reach the realization of his concep- tion. He felt his own deficiencies. He prayed over them and wept over them. But a church which is an emblem of that glorious church, " without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing," was a reality which so dazzled him and ravished him, he could not repress his longings that for once he might see on earth a type of the heavenly antitype. He knew that manly natures, which are sternest when great emergencies arise, are usually endowed with the gentlest affections, as the softest down is found upon the eagle's breast. He knew that " soft piety enters at an iron gate." And though he sometimes failed, and none felt the failure so keenly as he, yet as the leader and guide of his people, their teacher and brother, his endeavor was to ■' feed his flock like a shepherd ; to gather the lambs with his XXX Biographical Sketch. arm and carry them in his bosom." How well he executed his purpose, was manifest in the pride with which he ever spoke of his people, and in their pride in him as one whom they gloried to praise and follow. What complete control over them he possessed, may be shown by a little incident he related to a friend during the latter part of his ministry. He was an enthusiast for congregational singing. He had labored persist- ently, to secure good singing and effective singing as an in- spiring part of public worship. At one time his organist did not seem to be of the same mind, and often perplexed him. On a given Sunday, when entering his pulpit, he found a young Congregationalist minister who had come there by mis- take. The young man seemed embarrassed, and Dr. Mason kindly offered to exchange with him, and let him remain where he was. The offer was accepted. Dr. Mason had selected his hymns, and left them for the young man to use if he chose. He returned to his own church just as the people were singing the last hymn. As the oi-ganist played the tune previous to singing, he noticed that a common metre tune was played while he knew that he had selected a long metre hymn. He supposed, at first, that the young man had selected another hymn, but as the singing went on, he found that the tune did not fit the hymn, and that they were all confused. During the interval between the first and second verses. Dr. Mason walked up into the pulpit, and said, " Now, let us sing the Doxology, in Old Hundred." They sang it with a will. The organist was conquered. Such was the resolute, ruling spirit of the man. Such is the power a pastor can wield over a people who love and reverence him. Dr. Mason deserved to be so regarded by his people. His labors in their behalf were untiring. His devotion to their highest interests was unselfish. To serve them, and to stimu- late them to secure a broad, full, completed Christian life was his constant ambition. " Calais, when I die, will be found written on my heart," said Queen Mary on her dying bed, when mourning the results of the capture of that ill-fated city. Cambridge, so distinguished for its social, intellectual, and religious culture, and especially the First Baptist Church in Biographical Sketch. xxxi Cambridge was on the heart of Dr. Mason, when, " in the twinkling of an eye," he passed from the cares and conquests of earth to the rest and joys of heaven. Dr. Mason was a sincere friend, an earnest, sympathetic Christian, a truth-searching tlieologian, an effective preacher, a wise and judicious pastor. To his family, he has bequeathed a life full of sunny memories. By his people, his name will always be honored. In his denomination, he will long be con- sidered one of its choicest ornaments. By all who knew him he will be esteemed as a Pkiitce in Israel. The Rev. Dr. Neale of Boston, who labored side by side with Dr. Mason, during his pastorate at Cambridge, has furnished the writer with personal reminiscences so unique and genial, that they would be mangled by quotations from them. They are therefore appended. DR. NEALE'S TRIBUTE. It was my privilege to know Dr. Mason quite intimately from the time he became a pastor in this vicinity. He was in every respect a strong man, — strong in body, mind, and heart. His personal presence was commanding. His erect manly form, the forward bent of his head, his thoughtful, earnest look, gave you at once the impression that he was a man of more than ordinary power. His bearing at first, and when his counte- nance was in repose, seemed somewhat haughty and cold, but those of us who knew him, can never forget the simphcity of his spirit, the warmth of his friendship, the tenderness of his heart. As a husband, father, brother, friend, he was one of the kindest of men, genial among his ministering brethren, and ever accessible and affectionate to the people of his charge. On aU occasions, however, he was dignified and courteous. It may be said of him, as of Dr. Sharp and the late Baron Stow, that he never said or did a foolish thing. Putting on no airs of saintship, it was yet natural with him to be serious, as con- scious of the grave responsibilities that rested upon him as a minister of God. Dr. Mason, though far from being morose or puritanic, waa x yy ji Biographical STcetch. yet strict in his morality. He avoided the very appearance of evil. The injunction of the Apostle, " Whatsoever things are true, -whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, what- soever things are of good report, if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things," was practically exemphfied in the life and teachings of our departed brother. He would not sanction any infringement upon the sacredness of the Sabbath, and refused to preach to a company of soldiers who proposed to attend his church, unless they would promise not to ride in the Sunday cars. Dr. Mason was a very sincere man. He could be sportive, and relished a joke, and certainly was at times capable of the keenest sarcasm, but he was careful not to exaggerate, or allow anything to escape his hps that should unnecessarily hurt a brother's feelings. He always meant exactly what he said. He hated deception in every form. He was no fawning sycophant. He never by word or act sought the good opinion of persons whom he thought un- worthy, and never appeared to be friendly unless he was so in reality. Dr. Mason had a high sense of his official duties. He was confided in as a man of sound judgment, and accordingly placed in many positions of public trust, not only in his own denomination, but in the community where he dwelt. These he filled with scrupulous care. As a member of the School Board at Cambridge, as well as of the Executive Committee in Boston, he was conscientiously present at the meetmgs, and acquainted with aU the questions that came before them, and felt himself individually responsible for whatever vote he gave. Our dear brother was emphatically strong in the grace that is in the Lord Jesus. His type of piety was characteristic. He made no mere show or pretense. His was no stereotyped ex- perience, nor a second-hand faith. He came to the original fountain and thought for himself. His doctrinal sentiments were decidedly evangelical. He was evidently converted by the grace of God, into the great and glorious truths of the New Testament. They were written on his heart by the Holy Spirit, and grasped by his strong intellect as the undoubted teaching of inspiration. V .. Biographical Sketch. xxxiii All these things combined made Mm decidedly one of our ablest preachers. It was good to see and hear him in the pulpit ; you were sure of being instructed. He understood the things whereof he aflSrmed, and never failed to bring forth beaten oil into the sanctuary. He believed, and therefore spoke. What, after all, gave the greatest impressiveness , to his preaching was the unselfish and lofty motive by which he was obviously influenced. There was no effort at display, no attempt to be eloquent, or even profound. He thought not of himself or what the people might think of him. He aimed only to communicate the message intrusted to him, as an am- bassador of Heaven. These are some of the things, deeply written on my memory and heart of the late Dr. Sumner R. Mason. He was a good man, and a good minister of the Lord Jesus, watching for souls as one that must give account. The day after the death of Dr. Mason, the Hon. Henry S. Washburn composed the following tribute to his memory, which we are allowed to insert in this sketch : — SUMNER R. MASON. 'TwAS at a golden wedding feast, Just one brief waning moon ago, I marked how lightly Time had touched, Thy manly form now laid so low. Age leaned upon thy strong right arm, And children prattled by thy knee, WhUe crowned w'ith benedictions came, Thy words of wisdom warm and free. And moving thus among thy flock, In all thy manhood's port and pride, I felt how greatly blessed were they Who shared the love of such a guide. Oh, vanity of human trust 1 When cloudless seemed thy favored sky, The gathering tempest hurled its blast, And all our hopes in ruin lie. e xxxiv Biographical Sketch. God shield the hearts which bear to-day The burden of so great a woe; Where but to Thee, O Love divine! Can they for help and succor go ? Yet, while 1 mourn, my early friend. That thou hast passed away so soon, 'T were well, among thy gathered sheaves, In Autumn's golden afternoon, — Thy work all finished and complete, To hear the Master bid thee come, And from the heights of Zion shout, The reaper's psean, Harvest home I So, casting all our grief on Hitti Who ever doeth all things well, We'll heap the turf upon thy breast, And breathe for thee our last fareweU. SERMONS. SERMON I. THE PERMANENCE OE THE WOKD. Is. xl. 8, end. — The Word of our God shall stand foreoer. HERE, as in several other places in the Bible, the per- manence of the " Word of God " is contrasted with the transitoriaess of men upon the earth : " All flesh is grass, and all the goodliness thereof is as the flower of the field : the grass withereth, the flower fadeth : because the Spirit of the Lord bloweth upon it : surely the people is grass. The grass withereth, the flower fadeth : but the Word of our God shall stand foreyer." The Apostle Peter refers to this, and kindred passages, when he says that the Word of God is that by the instrumen- tality of which the soul of man is regenerated ; and that it is this that is preached unto men for their salvation by the preaching of the gospel. The Apostle thus identifies the Word of God of which the Prophet speaks, with that word which is extolled in the Psalms as converting and purifying and saving the soul ; and with that of which our Saviour speaks when He prays, " Sanctify them through thy truth : thy Word is truth." The " Word of God " of which the Psalmist and the Prophet wrote, was that portion of the Old Testament which had been given up to that time. The " Word of God " of which our Saviour spoke, was all of the Old Testament, and so much of the New as He had given to his disciples. The " Word of God " of which the Apostle Peter spoke, embraced yet more. It took in all that holy men had spoken by the Holy Ghost, 2 The Permanence of the Word. [Sebm. I. not only in the Law and the Prophets, but in the New Testa- ment also. But the words of the prophet, though they had immediate reference to what had been already written in his day, were equally applicable to all that should be thereafter written by the inspiration of God. For it was as true of the Word of God that was yet to be written, that it should stand forever, as it was of that which had already been written. It was true of it all, that not one word of it should fail. It should stand forever, firm and unchanged. Each vanishing age, and each departing generation, should leave it as they found it. Each dawning age, and each coming generation, should find it as their predecessors left it. To one who reflects on the transitoriness of man, and all that pertains to him, on the earth, — and who does not thus reflect at this period of the year ? — and feels the sadness that such reflection is calcvilated to produce, there is relief and encouragement in this thought. Time will dissolve all human relationships, sweep away all human interests, and undermine all earthly human supports ; but it is not in time, nor in eternity, to destroy the Word of God ; nor to alienate man's inheritance in it ; nor to undermine it as the founda- tion of his hopes, and the pledge of his immortality. This thought, brought home to the mind, makes of man something higher and nobler than flesh ; makes him superior to all things earthly ; lifts him out of the sphere of change and de- cay, and imparts to his own being a permanence and enduring worth, in comparison with which the material universe sinks into insignificance. The thought, brought home in humility and faith, enables one to say : " Though all flesh is grass, and all the goodliness thereof as the flower of the field : and as the grass it withereth, and as the flower it fadeth ; yet be- cause the Word of our God shall stand forever, and all my hopes, and all the interests of my immortality, are assured by it, therefore I myself shall stand with it." Your attention is invited to some of the particulars that are involved in this general proposition : " The Word of our God shall stand forever." ^ 1. In the first place, every statement of fact which the Word of God makes will remain, and be found to be a true state- Is. xi. 8.] The Permanence of the Word. 3 meiit. The statement itself will never be modified n./ an- nulled ; and the thing declared will never be proved to be false. Each statement will, on the contrary, in the form in which it now stands, always convey a truth to the minds of men ; and increase by so much their store of real knowledge. From the present moment, and onward to the end of time, and then during all the ages of eternity, God will stand by aU that He has uttered, and maintain its verity against all that venture to call it in question ; and in vindication of all that accept it and rest upon it as true. This much, at least, is asserted by the words of the prophet. Nothing less than this is involved in the general declaration : " The Word of our God abideth forever." ' It follows, therefore, that the time will never come when it will be proved that the narratives of the Bible are only fables and myths. The past itself is, indeed, a guaranty for the future in regard to this matter. Not unfrequently, in the past, has this theory of myth and fable been set up against the narratives and historical statements of the Bible ; and especially against those that must, if they are true, have been written by men supernaturally and divinely enhghtened ; and more especially agajnst aU that relate to the working of mira- cles. Beginning with the narrative of the creation, and fol- lowing on down through all that is set forth as miraculous, and through most that is not common to both the Bible and profane history, the enemies of the revelation have, at one time or another, declared those portions of it to be mere in- ventions, and have brought all the resources of great learn- ing and great abilities to the task of demonstrating their declaration to be true. Almost every department of litera- ture and of science has been made to play its part in this grand enterprise. Almost every important discovery or the- ory in archaeology, in the structure of the earth, and in the movements of the stars, has been paraded as a witness against the simple statements of revelation. For a time those who have thus paraded these things have exulted, and proclaimed themselves the victors in the great controversy of the world against the Bible ; and for a time its timid friends have feared and trembled lest these boastings should turn out to be true. But in every instance, when the discovery that was put upon 4 The Permanence of the Word. [Sekm. i. the stand as a witness to convict reyelation of falsehood, has had any bearing whatever on the Bible, it has ended by con- firming its truth. Egypt, hoary with an antiquity dating back far beyond the earliest historic periods of the world ; Assyria, filled with the melancholy memorials of buried cities and forgotten nations; the earth's surface, and the vault of heaven, all have been invoked, and the response of each has been an unequivocal testimony against those who have called them forth. Like the evil spirit which turned upon the sons of Sceva the Jew, at Ephesus, when they attempted to exor- cise it by the name of Jesus, these witnesses that have been invoked to testify against the Bible, have answered : " God we know, and his Word we know, but who are ye ? " The Bible has remained unscathed. Its friends have been strength- ened in their faith. Their confidence in it as the Word of God has become firmer and more intelligent and more sus- taining. Its account of the creation, and of the beginning of human history, has become clearer and more satisfactory. All its histories, its miracles, and its revelations, have shown, in sharper outline and clearer impression, the seal of truth. It has become yet more manifest that the Bible is indeed the Word of God. From the fact that we are considering, it follows, further, that not alone the narratives of the past, but, if we may so speak, those of the future, also, will never fail. They will all be found ultimately to answer as exactly to the things that are yet to be, as does the narrative of the past answer to the things that have been. All prophecy will be found in the end, as so much of it has been found already, to be prewvitien history. All prophecies will yet be read as we now read those pertaining, e. g., to the captivity of the Jews in Babylon, to the destruction of Jerusalem, and the coming of the Messiah. The day will come when men wiU thus look back on all that is foretold of the triumph of the gospel in the world, of the destruction of Antichrist, and of the Messiah's final coming, and the day of judgment. But the same spirit that prompts men to attempt to falsify the testimony of the Word of God respecting the past, prompts them to deny also its declara- tions regarding the future. Hence the class of men that do the one, always do the other. They who deny the Scriptural Is. xl. 8.] The Permanence of the Word. 5 account of the creation of the world, e. g., sneer at the pre- dicted ending of it. They who deride the account of the be- ginning of human history, have no patience with the proph- ecy of its termination. They who are sure that God never has wrought a miracle on the earth, and that He never can, are equally sure that He will never interfere with the present order of material things, nor interpose to fulfill the predic- tions of his Word regarding them. There are now, as there were in the days of, the Apostles, "Scoffers, walking after their own lusts, and saying, Where is the promise of his coming ? For since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning of the creation," and wUl continue without ending. But if it is true that " the Word of our God shall stand forever," then that which is written in that Word as prophecy will yet come fully to pass, and " the day of the Lord wiU come as a thief in the night ; in the which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also, and the works that are therein shall be burned up ; " and all that is preliminary to this in the prophetic record will have its ful- fillment. All that has in the past indicated the truth of Scriptural history, has gone so far also towards the support of faith in the prophecies of the Bible. Hence it is that there never was a time when the friends of revelation rested with more confi- dence in the certainty that prophecy will be fulfilled than they do this day. Never was there a time when they were mani- festing their confidence with more firmness. This confidence lies indeed at the foundation, and is one of the main sources of support and inspiration in all the great missionary en- terprises of our age, and in many of the great social and governmental reforms that are pushing the world towards its millennium. It is because Christians believe that the world is to be evangelized, in accordance with the predictions of the Word of God, that they engage so heartily in these enter- prises, and go on in them from year to year with ever increas- ing earnestness, and more and more liberal devotion, notwith- standing the errors of rationalism and the cold-heartedness of multitudes who falsely bear the Christian name. It is true that they are moved in this matter by their loyalty to the 6 The Permanence of the Word. - [Sbrm. i. commands of Christ, and by their love of righteousness, and their intense desire for the salvation of souls ; but connected ■with all these, and supporting them, is the calm and settled conviction that the glorious day shall yet dawn on this world ■which is predicted by the Word of God, when the name of Jesus shall be known by every nation under heaven, and shall become the talisman of salvation to multitudes, from them all, that cannot be numbered. In other words, they believe that is to be -which God has predicted ; therefore they have energy and courage and hope, in labors and sacrifices, to bring it to pass. 2. In the second place, the general statement before us ia- volves the permanency of all the principles which the Word of God sets forth as true. The time will never come when any principle which the Word of God enunciates will have a char- acter different from that which is assumed for it, in its enun- ciation. That which is set forth as righteous will be found righteous ; and that which is set forth as wrong will be found wrong ; not only while the world shall stand, but so long as the throne of God endures. That which was a right moral principle for Adam, and Noah, and Abraham, and David, and Paul, and John, is a right moral principle for all men now, and will always remain so. Nothing can ever become intrin-- sically wrong for any man, which was intrinsically right for any one of these ; and, on the other hand, nothing can become intrinsically right for any man, that was intrinsically wrong for any one of these. Take, for example, the great fundamental principle of aU human intercourse, as our Saviour announced it : " Whatso- ever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them." This, He says, was the principle of human inter- course laid down in the law, and insisted on by the prophets. It cannot change. It never was wrong to act upon it ; it never was right to disregard it, in the dealings of men with men. It can never become a false principle of conduct. Through time and in eternity it will remain, and men will be righteous in their intercourse with each other just as they act upon it, and wicked just as they go contrary to it. Take again the principle of repentance as governing the conduct of the vn-ong-doer. It never was right for a wrong- Is- xi. 8.] The Permanence of the Word. 7 doer not to repent ; it never will be right for him not to re- pent. On earth, in heaven, in hell, it is, and always will con tinue to be, vrrong for him not to repent. He is under solemn obligations to repent. It is a principle inherent in his moral being, and required by the very nature of moral government. The Bible sets it forth in this light. Nothing will ever change its character. No modification of circumstances, no change of condition or state, will ever suspend its operation. Take once more the principle of faith as the Bible sets it forth, making it the grand and indispensable condition of acceptable service and of intercourse with God. It was right for Adam to have faith in God, and wrong for him not to have it. It was absolutely essential to his serving God acceptably, and to his remaining in communion with Him. It has been the same with all men since his day ; it is the same with all men now ; it will remain the same with all men through time and in eternity. The principle can never change. It wiU always remain true, that, " without faith it is impossible to please God ; " and, therefore, that " he that believeth not shall be damned ; and he that believeth shall be saved." Take once more the grand principle which the Bible enun- ciates in requiring all men to love God supremely. This re- quirement is based on the eternal fitness of things. God always has been, He is now, and He wiU forever remain, infi- nitely more worthy of love than any and all the creatures that are, or that ever will be made. However great in good- ness and worthiness any creature is or can become, his good- ness and worthiness are limited ; and, when compared with God, they are infinitely below Him. It is impossible that this difference between God and creatures should ever be done away with. God will ever remain worthy of infinitely more love than creatures, and therefore the command to love Him supremely, which underlies all moral obligations, will never cease to be binding ; never cease to be the fittest expression of the true relation of the creature to the Creator ; never cease to be the governing principle in the conduct of all holy beings. This fact of the permanence of moral principles, as they are taught by the Bible, has in it power to arouse, and to sustain in vigorous action, the best energies of the soul now ; and to 8 The Permanence of the Word. [Serm. I. fill it with the sublimest anticipations for the future. It is our confidence in the permanence of right that supports us in right courses of life, and in labors for the promotion of right- eous causes and ends, when everything else, without this, would give way, and our energies would become paralyzed. Because that which is inherently right will always be right, it is worth one's while to cling to it ; and because that which is right must ultimately triumph in the government of a right- eous God, that which is done for its promotion cannot be labor spent in vain. There are times in the lives of most earnest-minded men, who desire their energies to be rightly directed, when they can find almost nothing else but this principle to cling to. They would be instantly overwhelmed with despair if they were to lose their hold upon it. Within, and without, wick- edness seems to bear undisputed sway. All endeavors to sub- due it, or to advance the cause of truth and righteousness, seem to be like water spilt upon the sand. They vanish away, and no fruit appears. The temptation comes upon them to give over the seemingly unequal and useless struggle, and to fall in with the current that sets in against goodness with a force as irresistible as that of the tide when it rolls backward to their source all the streams that are striving to gain the sea. They would yield to the temptation, and make ship- wreck of all their hopes, and of all good enterprises, if they could not fall back on the eternal Tightness of right, and on the consequent certainty of its ultimate triumph. Though all that is done for the right seems as feeble, and aU. that labor for it as helpless, as the strugghngs of the streamlet to pursue its course to the sea against the might of the incom- ing tide, yet because they have learned that right remains as permanent in its character as the principle of gravity, and is ever pressing its way towards its goal, and as certain to reach it as are the waters of the rivers to reach the sea, they take heart, and nerve themselves anew for the struggle and the certain victory. No better illustration of this can be found than is furnished by the history of the cause of human rights against the cause of human slavery. Both in England and in this country, years of most earnest and self-sacrificing labors were expended, apparently in vain, before anything Is- xi. 8.] The Permanence of the Word. £ seemed to be accomplished. All the resources of powerful govermneuts, of trade and commerce, of social respectability and social degradation, were combined, now in silent and dig- nified contempt, now in fierce madness that raged like a tem- pest, against the feeble endeavors of a few earnest and hope- ful men, full of love for all that was good, but counted and treated as the ofEscouring of the earth. Personal violence, despoiling of goods, murder, every form of indignity, mis- representation, and abuse became their portion ; yet the huge iniquity against which they Ufted their puny arms and feeble voices, gloated on its prey, and seemed to be entrenched in eternal security. They toiled on through years of darkness, with no star to light up their way but the star of truth ; with no stimulant to their hope but a firm confidence in the perma- nence of right ; and even sooner than they had dared to hope, they saw the foundations of the system begin to give way, and its walls to totter to their fall. Before they could fairly adjust themselves to the opening of the new era that they themselves had inaugurated, the whole superstructure gave way, like the defenses of Jericho before the hosts of Israel. Wilberf orce, Clarkson, and a multitude of others — many gone to their reward, many others yet living — were seen not to have toiled in vain. Their confidence in right was not mis- placed. Their hopes did not make them ashamed. Take this as the precursor and promise of that which is to be in the contests of right with wrong, in all its forms on earth, and how grand and glorious the prospect ! The millennium is sure Take the confidence in the permanence and the triumph of right which these men manifested, and its vindication by the silent but mighty intervention of a righteous God, as a type of that confidence which is justified regarding all good in the government of the Almighty, and what a prospect opens before us, beyond the boimdaries of this world ! The hour will come when it shall be seen that no good deed, no holy aspiration, no righteous purpose and endeavor, has been in vain. Each one has been a seed, which, though it seemed to die and come to nought, has been instinct with eternal life, and is yielding a rich harvest for an eternal reward. It will be seen that the Word of the Lord has not returned to 10 The Permanence of the Word. [Seem. I. Him Yoid, but it has accomplished that which He has pleased, and prospered in the thing whereto He sent it. Nothing that it has revealed, as history past ; nothing that it has foretold, as history to come ; nothing that it has enunciated as principles of righteousness, — will cease to be true. All will endure, — revelations, as elements of real knowledge ; principles, as of eternal worth and unchanging certainty. In nothing, then, I remark in conclusion, can the Word of God be trusted in vain. 1. Its promises will never disappoint any hopes that are built upon them. They will all be fulfilled. 2. Its threatenings will never fail. A threatening is only a promise of evil. As every promise of good, so vdll every promise of evil have its exact fulfillment. 3. No encouragement to goodness, and no discouragement to evil, which the Bible holds out, will come to nought. To the end of time they will endure. Through eternity they will be real. Both alike rest on the assertions of the Almighty. All things else may fail. These cannot. " The Word of our God shall stand forever." SERMON II. THE ONCE DELIVERED FAITH. JuDE 3. — Ye should earnestly contend far the faith which was once delivered unto , the saints. SAINTS is a common designation for believers in Christ. The two terms are interchangeable in the New Testament. To be a believer in Christ was to be a holy person ; one sep- arated from his sins and consecrated to God and his service. The invariable effect of true belief in Christ is to bring about this separation of the believer from his sins, and this consecra- tion of his whole being to God. Hence the designation saints was strictly appropriate, and it remains appropriate, as a title for aU true beUevers. What Jude says in the verse before us, is, that it was need- ful, there was a necessity, that he should write to all such believers, and exhort them to contend earnestly for their faith. But if it was necessary for him to give this exhortation, it is, of course, necessary for them to give heed to it and obey it. And not only so ; not only is it necessary for them to obey it ; they are under solemn obligation to obey it. It is not a matter which they may do, or neglect to do at their pleasure. For an inspired exhortation is a divine command always. It takes the form of an exhortation because it is a fellow man who utters it. But because it comes directly from God, and is an expres- sion of his wUl, it is, in its substance, a divine precept. It is invested therefore with all the force and authority of a divine command. It is binding on the conscience, and must be obeyed. Let us then give our attention to this inspired exhortation, which is also a divine command, and consider what it involves : " Contend earnestly for the faith which was once delivered unto the saints." 12 The Once Delivered Faith. [Seem. ii. In the first place there is something for believers to contend for. There is a Faith. That is, there is something to be received, and trusted to, and rested in, and acted on, as unde- niable truth, and therefore a reality that can be contended for. For the word Faith has this meaning here, as it has also in other passages of the New Testament. It means that which has been revealed to faith, and which faith accepts and believes in. This includes, of course, all the truths of the gospel. All the doctrines, and revelations which God has been pleased to give us in his Word, and which men must accept, and have faith in, simply on God's authority, because God has spoken them, — these are the objects of faith. These then constitute The Faith. It is a system of revealed truth, by the hearty ac- ceptance and belief of which men can be delivered from sin, and prepared for the Kingdom of God. A few other passages will make this plainer. The word is used in this sense in the sixth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, where Luke says, " The word of God increased, and a great company of the priests were obedient to the faith." That is, they were obedient to the gospel ; to its truths, and its commands. Paul uses the word in this sense in the Epistle to the Galatians, when he says of the churches in Judsea, " But they had heard only, that he who persecuted us in times past now preacheth the faith which once he destroyed." That is, he preached the truths and doctrines of the religion of Jesns Christ. He uses it in the same sense again in the First Epistle to Timothy, when he says that " some professing science, falsely so called, have erred concerning the faith." That is, they had utterly mistaken and failed to ap- prehend and understand the truths of the gospel. They have not comprehended the gospel system. They are altogether in the dark regarding the gospel considered as an object of knowl- edge. A system of doctrines and facts revealed to be accepted on divine testimony, and on this testimony alone to be under- stood and believed. Again he says in this same epistle, " Now the Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doc- trines of devils." They would leave the gospel ; abandon its doctriaes ; deny its revelations ; disregard its precepts ; and, in place of them, receive for truth the sayings of seducing spirits ; and for doctrines the utterances of devils. JUDE3.] The Once Delivered Faith. 13 These passages show the meaning of the word before us. There are many others of a similar character, but there is no need of bringing them before you now. These all join with our text in asserting the fact, that there is a distinct and well known body of religious truth revealed in the New Testament. There is a well defined system of religious doctrines and facts. There are plainly uttered and inspired truths. These truths, these doctrines, these facts, are given by inspiration, delivered to the saints. God has spoken them. Because God has spoken them they are objects primarily for faith to deal with. God has delivered them, once for all, that they might be believed and acted on as certainties. In other words, they are not hu- man speculations to amuse men and to be admired by them, which may be something, which may be nothing ; which may be mere speculation and not realities ; and, therefore, if a man contend for them he may be contending for a thing that has no existence. They are not the results of human reasoning, to be criticised, and confirmed as true, or condemned as false, ac- cording as they may strike the fancy of those who study them. They are not a system of moral and religious philosophy, elab- orated by human thought, and human genius, to draw admir- ers and partisans ; or to awaken rivalries and stimulate to the elaboration of opposing systems. They are none of these ; but simply and purely, a revelation. Truths, not primarily to be reasoned about, but to be believed in; not to be speculated upon, but to be trusted and obeyed ; not abstract and barren dogmas for the . intellect to think about, but vital principles, and divine utterances, for tlie heart to love, and to be purified with ; for the whole soul to cherish and to be saved by. They are solemn and substantial realities divinely declared, and to be accepted on the authority alone of this declaration. God has not left the world to depend on itself alone for a knowledge of those things which men must know in order that they may obtain salvation ; but which they are powerless to obtain by their own wisdom. He has come forth in plain speech, the speech of men themselves, and made these things known. He has revealed his own being, i. e., and shown to men the relation which they sustain to Him. He has lifted the veil that hides the future from the unaided eye of man, and bidden him look beyond, and see a world of retribution ; and 14 The Once Delivered Faith. [Serm. n of eternal consequences, following the present life. He lias spoken to conscience by his law, and given certainty and defi- niteness to all those surmisings of guilt, and those vague but fearful apprehensions of rewards to ill deserving, which con- science, without the Word of God, always awakens in the soul. He has declared his unwillingness that men should be compelled to receive these rewards of sin : and He 1ms demonstrated his desire that they should be saved. He has pointed out with clearness and fullness and precision the provision which he has made that they may not perisli, but have eternal life. He has plainly declared to them the terms and conditions on which they may have remission of sins, and be restored to the divine favor, and made heirs of heaven. All this He has told them. He has made it fully known in the gospel. The doctrines, the facts, the threatenings, the commands, the promises, the proph- ecies and revelations, that reveal these things constitute a body or system of divine truth. They make known all that it is need- ful — in order to salvation — that we should know of God and his will ; and of the way to eternal life. And this, as it stands before us in the Scriptures, but especially in the New Testa- ment, is a system for faith. It is by faith alone that it can be appropriated ; by faith alone can it be known as truth. On this alone, as it is apprehended by faith, depend all our hopes and assurances both of the fact of a future state, and of the possibility and reality of happiness and bliss in that state. Hence this system is our Faith. It is the ultimate standard of faith in all questions as to what is truth, either in religion or in morals. It is the only ground of certainty, — the certainty of faith, — in respect to God, or his will, or his relations to men. Hence, again, it is the Faith. It is this system of truth, these truths of the gospel, for which, the sacred writer says, the saints should earnestly contend. 2. In the second place our text, in that it speaks of a once delivered faith, involves, that this sjj-stem of truth and doc- trines is complete in itself and sufficient for all time. It will always remain the only system for faith to receive and rest in and act upon. It will not be supplemented by additional rev- elations ; nor will it be set aside by new ones. It is a harmoni- ous whole, with nothing wanting, and nothing superfluous. It is therefore the faith, — the one system of faith, which, in JuDE 3.] The Once Delivered Faith. 15 being once given, was given once for all. There was to be no repetition of its giving, and no recalling of it after it was given. This is the meaning of that phrase which we so often over- look in quoting this passage, but which is full of significance, " Once delivered." The " Once delivered faith " are the writ- er's exact words. The writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews uses the same word to indicate the fullness and sufficiency of the sacrifice of Christ for the sins of the world ; and that the one offering was made at the same time, once for all men and once for all ages : " Nor yet that He should offer Himself often, as the High Priest entereth into the holy place every year with blood of others ; for then must He often have suffered since the foundation of the world ; but now once in the end of the world hath He appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself. And as it is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment ; so Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many." This once was enough. There would therefore be no supplemental appearing of Christ to put away sin. So men die once ; it is appointed unto them to die once for all, — and once only. There is no return to life again ; and therefore no supplemental death. The one death is complete in itself, and it is forever. Thus it is with the gospel. It has been delivered unto the saints once for all. As the expiation of Christ abides the one only, but all-sufficient expiation, never to be added to or taken from, so the truths of the gospel — its doctrines, its facts, its precepts, its terms of salvation, its promises, its threatenings — abide forever, the one only, but all-sufficient system of faith ; never to be added to, never to be taken from. These two truths lie at the foundation of all controversies for the Faith. They must be assumed or established before any progress can be made. Until they are established all conten- tion will be worse than useless. We shall only travel on a circle, or float at the mercy of whatever currents of influence may prevail around us. First of all we must have it settled in our mind that there is something to contend for, something real, something certain, something definite, something resting on an impregnable basis of truth. We must be sure that what we propose to contend for is not a fable, or fiction, or idle fancy. 16 The Once Delivered Faith. [Sekm. Ii. Then in the second place we must have it settled that this reality, this certainty, is a whole. It is not a part merely to be supplemented, perhaps, by the yery thing against which we contend. If the gospel is not a complete whole in itself, a system that cannot be added to nor taken from, then you can never know where you stand. If that which stands for a truth to-day may become no part of the system, and hence a false- hood to-morrow, then you may never be sure that when you contend for any part of the system you are not contending for a falsehood. And if any part which is to-day taken for a whole truth may to-morrow become only a half truth, by rea- son of some additional revelation, then you can never be cer- tain that the very principle or alleged fact against which you are contending, is not that additional revelation that was to take away the wholeness from the truth for which you con- tend ; and so by making it a half truth transforms it into a virtual untruth. No ; if we contend for the Faith, — a system of truth to be believed and acted upon, — let us be sure that we have such a system ; and let us be sure that we know what it is, and why it should be believed and acted on. This is precisely what the Apostle Peter enjoins upon every believer's conscience when he says, " Sanctify the Lord God in your hearts ; and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a rea- son of the hope that is in you." And that believers might do this, he, as well as the other sacred writers, has made provision that they may have these things always in remembrance ; and give them proof that they have not followed cunningly devised fables ; but that they have a sure word on which to rest, and for which to contend. The two forms of unbelief to-day are, — 1. That which saps the foundations of all faith by casting discredit on the inspiration and authority of the Scriptures. 2. That which does the same by pretending to supplement the Scriptures. SERMON III. CONTENDING FOR THE ONCE DELIVERED FAITH. JuDE 3. — Ye should earnestly contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the saints. TO contend does not mean to quarrel. It does not mean to wrangle and dispute ; nor to become angry and show tem- per ; nor to be pugnacious and denunciatory. It does not mean any of these things. But a man may quarrel when he contends. His contention may consist wholly of wrangling and disputing. He may contend pugnaciously, and with the bitter- est denunciations. And, on the contrary, he may, in some causes, contend most earnestly, and yet, the more earnestly he contends, the less of quarreling and wrangling will he do ; the less of anger and enmity will he have ; and the less of pug- nacity and denunciation. It is by no means necessary, because a man contends, that he should be anybody's enemy, or indeed that he should have an enemy in the world. His antagonists may be his best friends ; and even while he contends with them he may hold them in the highest esteem and love. The word here used by the sacred writer was employed, not primarily to set forth quarreling, wrangling, and pugnac- ity, but the intense efforts which were made by those who took part in the races and pubhc games. Those who contended in the races and games were compelled, if they accomplished any- thing, to put forth all their strength in intense and sustained efEort to win the prizes. Those who entered the lists with them were their competitors and antagonists ; but not by any means necessarily their enemies. So far from this they might be their best friends, their own brothers even. But the word is also employed to describe the struggles of contending armies, and of real enemies, engaged in deadly con- flict with each other. It is often employed in this manner. 18 Contending for the Once Delivered Faith. [Seem. m. But a moment's attention will show you that the idea of hos- tility and ill-feeling is not conveyed by the word itself, but by the connection in which it stands. It is the connection that suggests the enmity and fighting, if there is any. But the con- tention is all in the intensity and strenuousness of the efforts that are made, whatever may be their spirit or purpose. Hence you often say of a man that he contends earnestly, in some cause, or in the prosecution of some purpose, where you have no thought whatever of his being angry, or of his having en- emies arrayed against him. The circumstances in which he contends, the spirit that animates him, and the purpose he has in view, determine whether his contention is a quarrel, or sim- ply an earnest and determined endeavor to accomplish a de- sired result. The contention to which the sacred writer here exhorts be- lievers may be found in any class of circumstances ; and there- fore it may become, not only the strenuous putting forth of efforts, without the idea of conflict, but a contest with en- emies, — a hand to hand fight, as it were, for victory. One who conscientiouslj'^, and with loyalty to Christ, contends for " the faith," may find it necessary to contend in both of these ways. The circumstances in which he is placed may compel him to fight valiantly for the truth, in direct opposition to those who are opposing it. He may be compelled thus to take the attitude of one battling face to face with foes, — foes to the truth, and foes to himself because he is a friend of the truth. He may have to meet them on their own ground, and with their own weapons ; or, if not with their own weapons, yet with such weapons as will effectually parry their thrusts at the truth, and destroy their power to hinder it. The friends of the " Once delivered faith " have often been compelled, by fidelity to the truth, thus to meet its foes and contend for it in most serious and earnest conflict. But whatever may be the circumstances of the contention to which believers are here commanded, the fundamental elements of the contention are al- ways the same ; and the spirit in which it is to be carried on is always the same, namely, loyalty to the truth itself ; and a warm and loving desire that men may be saved from all the consequences of disobedience by receiving the truth into their hearts, and acting on it in their conduct. If we look into the JuDE 3.] Contending for the Once Delivered Faith. IP matter carefully we shall find, that earnestly contending for the faith involves three things, prominently ; and these three things are separately enjoined throughout the Scriptures. 1. In the first place they who contend earnestly for the faith, must earnestly, plainly., and fully declare the truths that con' stitute this faith, — that is, the fundamental facts and princi- ples and precepts of the gospel. Oftentimes the full, faithful, and earnest declaration of these constitute the whole burden of obedience to this divine command. Their very statement in this manner sometimes gives them such a triumph over ignorances and prejudices, that the gospel becomes at once enthroned in their place,, and its enemies are transformed into friends. This is always the case where ignorance alone is the foe against which the truth has to contend. Then the simple announcement of the gospel is like the rising of the sun upon the face of the world. Darkness is dissipated by his coming ; and all nature is flooded with his light. So, where the heart of a man is right, and he needs only to know the truth to fall in with it and obey it, it is enough that the truth is held up be- fore his mind. He grasps it ; is enlightened by it ; and sub- mits his whole soul and life to its influence. But few are they who are thus ready for the gospel. Few are they who have not, at least, seK-interest and prejudice acting as allies of their ignorance, and bracing them up in opposition to some portions of the divine word. This is true of vast numbers of the real disciples of Christ. There are influences working about them and upon them which hinder the claims of the gospel, its principles and its precepts, from gaining control of their minds. And then, outside the pale of discipleship, there are none who have not, in addition to preju- dice and interest, positive disrelish and enmity to the truths oi the gospel, as allies of their ignorance. They are " alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them." Something more is necessary besides a simple declaration of the truth to bring either of these classes to receive and obey it. The darkness is shut up within them, and the simple announce- ment of the truths of the gospel will no more dissipate it than the rising of the sun on the outside of your house will fill -with light a curtained and blinded room in that house. You must draw aside the curtains, and swing wide open the shutters, if 20 Contending for the Once Delivered Faith. [Sebm. m. 3'^ou would have your room bathed in the light that is flooding all the -world without. So some power must be brought to bear on prejudice, and pride, and interest in the mind of many a disciple of Christ ; some power that shall subdue them within him, before he will open his soul to the truth on many a sub- ject, although this truth is made to abound in plainest and fullest announcements to his intellect. And so the washing of regeneration must come in and carry away the enmity and car- nality of everj'- unrenewed man's soul before he will open his heart to that word of prophecy which is as a light shining in a dark place. Something more, I repeat it, than a simple an- nouncement of the truth is needed .in order to give it the victory over ignorance and error in such minds. Nevertheless, it remains true that no small part of the work of those who are called to contend earnestly for the faith, con- sists in declaring the faith to just these two classes of minds. It must be iterated, and reiterated, until their intellects, at least, shall be instructed. This must always be the first step in advancing the faith among men. The truth must be faith- fully and fully declared to them. Their intellects must be flooded with the knowledge of it as the preliminary step to- wards the reception of it by their hearts ; even as the world without must be flooded by the light of the sun, before you can hope to welcome his brightness within, into your opened room. In order to this there must, of course, be constant and faithful assertions of the truth, in plain and unequivocal announce- ments, and in full and accurate statements. This must pre- cede and accompany all other methods of contending for the faith. Hence it was that preaching and teaching were made so prom- inent by our Saviour when He sent his disciples forth to their great work. " Go teach all nations," He said. " Go ye into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature." That is, Go and declare it ; announce it ; proclaim it. This command took the precedence of all others in the great commission. Hence it was that the Apostle Paul, in writing his final letter to Timothy, charged him in that most solemn manner, " Before God, and the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge the living and the dead, preach the Word : " announce it, proclaim it, declare it ; " in season, out of season." And hence, too, this JuDE 3.] Contending for the Once Delivered Faith. 21 same Apostle, writing to the Corinthians declares that it pleased God by that which some men think to be foolishness, namely, preaching the gospel, to save them that believe. That conten- tion for the faith which wins men to it, and saves them by it, must, therefore, consist largely in giving utterance to it in plain, full, and unambiguous speech. In season, and out of season, they must plainly declare it, who would earnestly con- tend for it. 2. Contending earnestly for the once delivered faith involves, again, an earnest and faithful defense of it against opposing errors. The gospel is aggressive. It must make inroads upon the ignorances and prejudices and superstitions of the world, and triumph over them. Aggression is both its spirit and its destiny. When John the Baptist said of Christ, " He must increase, but I must decrease," he spake primarily of Christ and himself as religious teachers ; and what he said was not only a condensation of centuries of prophecy regarding the gospel, but a recognition of its inherent aggressiveness. But ignorance and error and self-interest wiU not yield their ground without a struggle in any man's mind. They will always array their forces for battle, and resist the truth. Every community, even the most enlightened, and which knows the most of the gospel, cherishes in this manner a vast amount of error and false doctrine as real truth. Nay, it can hardly be doubted that every man in such a community, even of those who love the truth, and intend to conform their thinking and feeling and acting wholly to its claims, is in this manner under the influence of many a false sentiment and principle which he will discover some day or other, and be amazed to discover to be utterly opposed to the gospel of Christ. These false doctrines and sentiments and principles generally em- body themselves into forms of direct antagonism to the teach- ings of the gospel ; and nowadays entrench themselves in nom- inally Christian systems and societies. Thus embodied, they enter into open warfare against the truth. They assail it as false, and demand their own enthronement in men's minds and hearts in its stead. The enemies of the faith thus meet the simple announcements of those who are contending for the faith, and by denouncing them as false, devolve on those who have made the first announcement, the necessity of standing 22 Contending for the Once Delivered Faith. [Sbrm. hi by what they have declared, and vindicating its truth and the consequent falseness of that which has denied it. Herein is the justification of every friend of the gospel for contending for its doctrines or principles or precepts in the way of controversy, and holding up opposing errors and false teachings before the eyes of men, as errors and false teachings. Every_ false doc- trine or precept or principle that holds sway in the public mind, or in the mind of any individual, is to be met, first of all, by a plain announcement of the opposite truth. If the false doctrine or principle or precept gives way before this simple and non-controversial setting forth of the truth, it is well. But if it holds its place still, and still demands the allegiance of men's hearts, and the obedience of their lives, then no champion of the truth is faithful to his trust, nor to the souls of men, if he does not attack the error, expose its ' falseness, and do his utmost to destroy its hold upon the pubhc, or the individual mind. AU this is to be done, of course, in the spirit of the gospel itself. The contest must not be a personal one. It must not be conducted for personal triumph or personal gains. It must be for the truth. It must be with a sincere desire to save men from the baleful effects of error, and bring them into the bless- edness of the truth, by bringing them into obedience to Christ. While, therefore, this kind of contention for the faith may often call for strong language ; and awaken deep feeling ; and prompt the utterance of bitter denimciation and keen invective, it can never be one of personal hatred and ill-^vill. It is im- possible for it to be otherwise than earnest, positive, even in- tense, if carried on by one who loves the faith and appreciates the vastness of the issues involved in its acceptance or rejection. As he loves the truth he cannot but be deeply in earnest. And since love of the truth is hatred of error and falsehood, the ex- pression of his earnestness will certainly take the form of positiveness, of severe condemnation, and utter rejection. As he loves the souls of men, and desires their salvation by the truth, he cannot but hold in abhorrence anything that imperils their salvation by exalting itself against that truth. Great plainness of speech, therefore, will inevitably characterize his defense of the truth against error. He will be pretty sure to call things by their right names, even though it may have tho JuDE 3.] Contending for the Once Delivered Faith. 23 seeming of severity, and be very unpalatable to all such as are blinded by the error, and are taking it for truth. And if at any time he has to deal with those who show clearly that their defense of error, and resistance to the truth, is willful, and from bad motives, and with wrong and selfish ends in view, his words will doubtless become stinging and full of indignation. It will be hardly possible for him, however, to be justi- fied in going, with his imperfect knowledge and his but par- tially sanctified heart, as far as the omniscient and holy Redeemer went in this direction. It will be rare indeed that any one who contends for the faith against its enemies can have any right to say to them, as the Saviour said to the Pharisees and Scribes : " Hypocrites ! For ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men ; for ye neither go in your- selves, neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in. Woe unto you : for ye compass sea and land to make one proselyte, and when he is made, ye make him twofold more the child of hell than yourselves." " Ye fools and blind ! ye make clean the outside of the cup and of the platter, but within they are full of extortion and excess. Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers ! How can ye escape the damnatioil of hell ! " It will rarely be becoming in any uninspired defender of the faith to go as far as an inspired apostle could sometimes safely go in personal rebuke and denunciation. Paul could say with holy indignation against one who was withstanding the Gospel, and endeavoring to turn men away from it, — " Oh full of aU subtilty and all mischief, thou child of the devil, thou enemy of all righteousness, wilt thou not cease to pervert the right ways of the Lord ? " But we are specially told that Paul was then " filled with the Holy Ghost," as an infalhble spirit of inspiration ; and it was not so much Paul that uttered these terrible words, as it was the Holy Ghost who was in him, and showing him the sorcerer's true character, and guiding him to deal righteously with that character. These examples are given to show us that indignation against the willful enemies of truth and righteousness, and corrupt upholders of error and wickedness, may be a holy indignation ; and that it is not wrong but right to denounce them. At the same time these examples are given us in the omniscient and holy Redeemer, and in his inspired Apostle 24 Contending for the Once Delivered Faith. [Seem. m. when acting under a special and full possession by the Holy Spirit, that we might not presume, in our ignorance and sin- fulness and uninspiration, to go at all beyond the bounds of the clearest knowledge and the purest charity. Within these limits, censure and rebute of error, and condemnation of those who uphold it against the truth, are legitimate. Nay, they are required of the faithful disciple of Christ. He may not withhold them. Loyalty to his Master, and faithfulness to the souls of men, demand them at his hands. 3. One thing further is involved in earnestly contending for the Once Delivered Faith : It must he lived up to. A gospel proclaimed, and a gospel defended against false doc- trines, can never be sustained before the world, nor made the aggressive power that it was intended to be, unless it be a gospel carried out in the conduct of those who contend for it. And I do not mean only what is commonly meant by this trite and almost commonplace remark, " it must be lived up to," or " carried out in the conduct." Ordinarily it means no more, when it has any definite meaning whatever, — for often it is used without any such meaning, — than that those who profess the religion* of Christ should live good moral lives and keep up the forms of their religion. They must not shock the public mind by any glaringly inconsistent conduct against the commonly received maxims and customs of social morality, nor against those that pertain to a religious life. They must be honest in their dealings in business ; truth telling, and, in a measure, courteous in their intercourse with society ; fair- minded and kind-hearted in their domestic relations ; good church-goers, and passable covenant-keepers. Beyond these conventionalities and decencies of a Christian civilization, the words which I have used seldom are supposed to extend. But as I use them now they mean vastly more than this. They mean the rigid adherence to the teachings of the gospel, and the fearless and consistent carrying out of these teachings in the life. They mean a constant abiding in its revelations as truths ; in its commands as duties, and in its principles as the only sure guides in the formation of character and the ordering of the conduct. Nothing short of this is a living up to the gospel. As a matter of fact, as things are now ordered, in almost any nominally Christian community, one may live JcDE 3.] Contending for the Once Delivered Faith. 25 ■what passes for a good moral life, and meet the popular de- mands of a Christian profession, and yet by his whole spirit, and much of his life, go flatly against many of the plainest commands of the New Testament ; flatly against some of its fundamental principles, and flatly against its whole spirit. Indeed it has come about, in many such communities, that " standing by the gospel," living up to it, in many of its com- mands and principles, will surely bring upon him the charge of " narrowness ; " of " bigotry ; " of " one-sidedness ; " of be- ing a " hobby rider ; " of " carrying things to extremes ; " of " running things into the ground ; " and a multitude of other similarly genteel phrases. Your own thoughts will supply you with specific examples of these general statements ; and I need not dwell very long on them. I need not call your attention very much to the absurd- ity and uselessness, for example, of contending earnestly in words for the Lord's Day as a Christian Sabbath, and then con- sulting one's own convenience and pleasure alone in the use he makes of this day. I need not dwell long on the fruitlessness of contending earnestly for the gospel that claims that " it is more blessed to give than to receive," and that makes it the glory of the disciple to be as his Lord, " who, though He was rich, for our sakes became poor, that we, through his poverty, might be made rich," if one shuts up the bowels of his compas- sion, is selfish, grasping, illiberal. I need not linger to tell you how absurd it makes one, and how it degrades the gospel and gives it over into the hands of its enemies, to contend earnestly in words for its teachings, — for example, regarding love to one's enemies, and forgiveness of those who have injured him ; and yet to seek for revenge and retaliation ; to hold grudges ; to cherish roots of bitterness ; and hardness and unfriendliness of heart towards an offender. Nor to act the hypocrite by pre- tending to believe one to be better than you know him to be, — need not trust a thief as though you believed him honest ; nor a liar as though you believed him truthful ; yet may be kind, courteous, etc. I need not take your time now to say much of the destructive influence of that earnest contending for the faith which, for example, commends its doctrines and revelations in general terms, and yet ignores them, or denies them, in partic- ulars ; that, for further example, seeks the salvation of men, 26 Contending for the Once Delivered Faith. [Sebm. m. and yet finds nothing from which salvation is to deliver them ; that calls on men to repent, and yet, by practical treatment, denies that their sins are such as to need repentance, denies that except they repent they must surely perish ; that proclaims "ye must be born again," and yet, by levity and carelessness and utter lack of discrimination, in dealing with their souls, with their hopes, and their claims of discipleship with Christ, teaches them that " being born again is only an empty phrase, having nothing whatever to do with one's prospects for heaven and eternal life. I need not linger to say how absurd a man makes himself by professing to love a gospel which has saved his own soul from death, and without which those who are desti- tute of it can never be saved, — a gospel which the Lord Him- self has commanded all his disciples to give to all the world, — and yet takes no interest in missions, and does nothing for their support. I need not stay long to rehearse the folly of contend- ing earnestly for a gospel that demands implicit obedience to all Christ's words on the part of those who love Him and hope in his mercy, and yet in conduct, refusing to submit to those words ; whether it be in adhering to great moral principles, or in obeying positive precepts. May the Lord grant us all grace to contend earnestly for the once delivered faith by faithfully declaring it in all ways within our reach ; by faithfully defending it against all the en- croachments of error and falsehood ; and then, to make all this effective, and to give the gospel power, to contend for it by standing faithfully up to it, and living it out before God and men. SERMON IV. THE OBEDIENT ABLE TO KNOW THE WHiL OF GOD. John vii. 17. — If any man will do his will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or whether I speak of myself. *' rr^HE doctrine " is that which is spoken of in the preceding -'- verse. In the midst of one of the great Jewish festivals Jesus went into the temple and began to teach. Some of those who heard Him were greatly astonished at the knowledge of which He showed Himself possessed, and asked whence he could have acquired it; since He had never studied in the schools, nor been taught by any of their learned men. In response to this inquiry, Jesus answered, that what He taught was not the re- sult of study, nor the fruit of human learning, but a divine revelation. For this is the meaning of his reply, " My doctrine is not mine, but his that sent me." It was of this doctrine that He then added, " If any man wiU do his will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or whether I speak of myself." The word will has here an independent force. Our Lord did not use it as an auxiliary of the word do. Unless we re- member this when we read the passage, we shall take will do to be simply the future of do, and quite miss our Saviour's meaning. Will is an independent word. It is, moreover, the principal word in the sentence, and expresses the main thought. What the verse asserts is, that if any one wills, desires, is dis- posed to do the wiU of God, he shall know regarding the teachings of Jesus, whether they are of God, or merely human assertions, reasonings, and speculations. There is no reference to outward and special acts of doing the will of God ; but to the disposition of the*mind in respect of doing that wiU. The general principle involved is, that if the mind is rightly disposed towards God, and wants to do his will, it will 28 The Obedient [Sekm. iv. distinguisli between that which is divine and that which is only human in religious teaching. The doctrine of the text, then, broadly stated, is, that one who is rightly disposed to- wards the will of God and wants to do it, will easily under- stand what the will of God is when He reveals it. Let me invite your attention to a few reflections on these words of our Saviour thus explained. 1. In the first place, I remark that our Lord gives us here a test, not so much of his teachings as of our own characters. As his words are sometimes, but wrongly, taken, they are made a test with which men may experiment on what Jesus taught ; and so, by experimenting, come to a decision in their own minds regarding its character, whether it is divine, or only human; and regarding its claims, whether it is to be held worthy of acceptance and obedience, or to be rejected. But this was not his method of dealing with men. From first to last He bore Himself as one who spake by authority, and who was to be heard as an authority. His words were final. He did not submit the question, whether or not they were divine or true, to any human tribunal. The only question regarding his min- istry that He ever submitted to the judgment of men, was a very different one from this, and had reference solely to his own character, and to the fact that He was a divine messenger. He often pointed to his works as proofs of these ; and that He was, therefore, worthy of confidence as a teacher and revealer of religious truth. But this truth itself He did not submit to men for them to test ; and, by testing, to decide whether or not it was divine or human, true or false. In the nature of the case a divine revelation must rest pri- marily on the authority of him who makes it. His own char- acter and claims to confidence must be sustained by evidence submitted to the judgment of those to whom he is sent ; and this evidence must be such as will carry conviction to candid minds that he is a messenger from God. This evidence, what- ever it is, they ought to consider and decide upon : it is their prerogative, as well as their duty, to do it. They are qualified to do it, if they have intelligence enough to make them ac- countable, and are candid. But when they come to the revela- tion itself, the case is very different. This pertains, of course, to matters of which they are ignorant; concerning which they joHNvii. 17.] Able to know the Will of Cfod. 26 need information, but which, for the most part, they could not, or would not, discoTer by the use of their own faculties. They have no fitness, therefore, to sit in judgment on it. On the contrary, they are fit only to be learners ; and a divine revela- tion always regards them in just this light. It is God speaking to them that they may hear, and by hearing know truths of which they are ignorant, but which He wishes to communicate to them ; not that they may put themselves in the attitude of experimenters, and judges, to discover and decide whether or not his words are truth. Our Lord told his disciples plainly that some men would receive his doctrines, and that others would not receive them ; and that in both cases their action would depend, not on ex- periment and the sifting of evidence marshaled for and against the divinity of his words, but on the state of their hearts towards God. If their hearts were rightly affected towards God they would receive his doctrines, otherwise they would reject them. Hence He said to the caviling Jews, " He that is of God heareth God's words. Ye therefore hear them not, because ye are not of God." " I know you, that ye have nofrthe love of God in you. I am come in my Father's name and ye receive me not. If another shall come in his ovm name him ye will receive. How ca,n ye believe, who receive honor one of another, and seek not the honor that cometh from God only ? " 2. I remark, again, that the truth here declared by our Saviour is often brought out in other parts of the Scriptures. They everywhere teach that a correct apprehension of divine truth depends on the state of the heart, and not on the mere exercise of the intellect. They unequivocally declare that if there is unfriendliness towards God, and an aversion to doing his will, men will not comprehend what He reveals regarding Himself and his will, nor will they receive it. Thus the Apostle John says, in his First Epistle, " He that knoweth God heareth us ; he that is not of God heareth not us. Hereby know we the spirit of truth and the spirit of error." The Apostle Paul, in his First Epistle to the Corinthians, says to believers, " Now we have received, not the spirit of the world, but the spirit which is of God, that we might know the things that are freely given to us of God. Which things also we speak, not in the words which man's wisdom teacheth, but which the Holy 30 The Obedient [Seem. iv. Ghost teacheth, comparing spiritual things with spiritual. But the natural man receive th not the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness unto him : neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned. But he that is spiritual discerneth all things." The same idea precisely underlies the Apostle's exhortation to believers in the twelfth chapter of his Epistle to the Romans, " Be ye transformed by the renewal of your mind, that ye may learn by experience what is the will of God, what is good, well-pleasing, and perfect." To the same efEect the Psalmist also says, " The secret of the Lord is with them tlaat fear Him, and He will show them his covenant." And again, " Unto the upright there ariseth light in the darkness." It is, therefore, the doctrine, not of our text alone, but of the whole Bible, that divine truth is a test of character. When men come in contact with it it reveals the state of their hearts towards God, and towards the doing of his will. It is as the writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews has said, " The Word of God is quick and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discoverer of the thoughts and intents of the heart." 3. I remark, in the third place, that what our Saviour here declares regarding divine revelations is in perfect harmony with what we observe in the communication and comprehen- sion of human thoughts. Any man who has thoughts to com- municate is most readily and most freely understood by those who are friendly towards him, and earnestly desirous of receiv- ing his instructions, and being governed by them. On the other hand, he is almost sure to be misapprehended, and to be, at the best, but partially understood by those who are ill-dis- posed towards him personally, and especially disinclined to yield to the requirements that he has a right to make of them. If you were away from home, and wished to have certain things attended to about your house and grounds, concerning which you had very peculiar, but very fond, notions, to which of your family would you communicate your wishes — to those of them who had never manifested any interest in your peculiar plans, nor any wish to comply with ' your will regarding them, but, on the contrary, had set themselves, as a rule, against joHNvii. 17.] Able to Jsnoio the Will of God. 31 your wishes and authority ; or to that one among them all who had always taken a deep and tender interest in your ideas and plans, because of his interest in and regard for yoii, and had always shown himself disposed to carry out your wishes, and to be obedient to your will in all things ? You would say, " It will do no good to write to the others. They have no sym- pathy with my notions, and no disposition to do what I want them to. If I write to them, and require them to attend to these matters, they will get only a confused idea of what I want. Their indifference regarding my wishes, and hostility to my authority, will be sure to prevent their entering into the spirit of my plans, and understanding my purpose. I must write to that one who alone can understand me, because he alone has sufficient regard for me, and enough of the spirit of obedience to enter fully into my ideas, and know precisely what I want done, and how I want it done. He will be sure to understand my wishes in this matter, because of his honest and loving desire to carry out my wishes in all things. Every thoughtful teacher understands this principle. He learns among his first experiences that the pupils who are well disposed towards him, and desirous of receiving instruction from him, are the ones who most readily catch 4iis exact thought, whatever maybe the subject on which he is speaking ; while those pupils that are hostile to him, and have their wills constantly set against his authority, will receive almost no ben- efit from his instructions. Which of your clerks, or those iu your employ, do you de- pend on to interpret or to carry out your most cherished and most pecuhar ideas ? Is it not that one whose earnest and un- selfish disposition to please you in all things has made him capable of anticipating many of your wishes ; and has so thoroughly identified him with your peculiar methods of busi- ness and habits of thought, that a single word, a look, a mere hint will reveal more of your mind to him, than the fullest and most accurate statements could reveal to others. His thorough readiness to do your will, and his manly devotion to your in- terests, make him instantly master of your thought, when you speak to him of matters in which he has a responsibility to you. I say that this is in harmony with what our Saviour teaches 32 The Obedient [Seem. iv. us regarding our comprehending diviae revelations. The main principle in both cases is the same. The willing and obedi- ent and sympathizing are able to understand ; the unwilling, the disobedient, the unsympathizing, will either misapprehend altogether, or get but indistinct, partial, and confused ideas from those who are in authority over them, and speak to them from a superior intelligence for their instruction and govern- ment. But the cases are not wholly parallel. There is vastly more in the inability of a sinner to understand the revelations of truth which God makes, than there is in the inability of an unfriendly and unsympathizing subject in human relationships to understand those with whom he is connected in these rela- tionships. There is a fixedness of vsdll against the law of God, ia the mind of every impenitent sinner, and a deep-seated moral aversion to holiness, that blind the intellect and prevent the understanding, far beyond anything that happens in the relations of any one human being to another. Sin enlists the whole being against God. It arrays aU the forces of the soul against his authority, by enthroning self in the heart in deadly hostility to his will and government. The whole being is thus brought ifeto subjection to the single principle of opposition to the will of God. A fearful moral inability to know God and understand what He reveals is the inevitable result. In this respect the effect of sin on the powers of the soul is analogous to that which the violations of the laws of one's physical being bring on the powers of his body. The habitual drunkard and debauchee soon destroys these powers, and he becomes unable to do with them that for the doing of which they were given to him. In hke manner sin against God destroys the powers of the soul, and makes it unable to do with them that for the doing of which God endowed it with them. It ceases, that is, to be able to apprehend divine truth and to know God. This is the reason why our Saviour declares so emphatically that a renewal of these faculties is necessary to a right apprehension of spiritual things. As , the bodily powers of the drunkard and debauchee would have to be renewed before they could again rightly perform their functions, so must the moral and spirit- ual forces of the soul be renewed before they can perform their functions. Hence our Lord declares, " Except a man be born JoHNvii. 17.] Able to know the Will of God. 33 again he cannot see the kingdom of God." Unless this re- newal of the soul takes place, that kingdom will remain for- ever hidden from his sight. The things of that kingdom are the very doctrines, revelations, of which our Lord is speaking in the text ; and it was of these that the Apostle was writing in the words which we have already quoted : " The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness unto him ; neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned." Nothing, therefore, but that vtdUing mind and obedient spirit which are wrought in the soul by the Holy Ghost, brings a sinner into a moral condition fitted to understand divine truth. Nothing else brings him into friendship with God, and into harmony with his will. This does bring him into this condition, and as soon as he is in it, enmity and re- bellion are gone, and the permanent condition of the soul is one of submission and obedience and love. It desires to do God's vnll. It is steadily disposed to do it. It has therefore the very fitness of which the Saviour speaks, to understand divine things, and the ability to know of his doctrines. In view of this declaration of our Saviour we see, — 1. That the failure to apprehend a divine revelation in the teachings of Christ is the proof, not of a superior intellect, but of a sinful heart. It has always been the fashion for those who denied the inspiration and authority of the teachings of Jesus, to assume an intellectual superiority to those who receive these teachings as divine. They claim that it is because they are more gifted, have a higher culture, and keener penetration, and more independence of thought, that they are skeptics and unbelievers, and do not see the divinity of Christian truth. But if Christ is true, their claim is utterly false. What they do is not the result of an intellect of superior powers to that of others, but of a heart of superior wickedness. Of those who make this claim there are two classes; One class is composed of those who have some acquaintance with the teachings of Christ from actual study of them, and deny their claim because of an assumed superiority to Him in actual knowledge and grasp of thought. These, however, are few in all the world. Few indeed are they who have ever hstened attentively to the words of Christ, and not been constrained to 34 The Obedient [Sekm. it. say, " Never man spake like this man." For the most part those who really study the teachings of Christ become conscious of his authority, and of the divinity of his words, and are hum- bled before Him. They are very few who can, in his pres- ence, assume to be his superiors and sit in judgment on Him. But these few have given the cue to a vast crowd who con- stitute the other class of nominal skeptics. It is from these few that the great mass of unbelievers who never gave an hour's serious thought to the words of Christ, have learned to count it a mark of superiority of mind to profess to regard the teachings of Jesus as, at least, only human, and certainly far from authoritative. Knowing almost nothing of what the doc- trines of Christianity are, having only the most vague and in- definite idea of what Christ really said and did, they are wont to put on the seeming of great learning, and of great intellect- ual acumen, and claim that their learning and their acumen have made them skeptics. But few, however, are deceived by their claim ! Most men see through the thin covering with which both classes seek to give their skepticism a respectable parentage. It is easily seen that vanity is in fact the stimulus that sustains the profession of skepticism ; while it is clearly known to all who really understand what the doctrines of our Saviour are, that all the skepticism there is in either class, is the fruit of enmity to God, and a determined unwillingness to do his will. 2. The indispensable preparation for the right study of di- vine truth is a spirit wholly obedient to the divine will. With- out this men may get at the letter that killeth,- but never at the spirit of the divine word that maketh alive. No amount of intellectual study will do that which it belongs to an obedi- ent heart to do. Great learning will not make one acquainted with a God whom he hates. An obedient spirit will bring one so into harmony and sympathy with God's will and thoughts that he is prepared to learn by study. 3. There is the best of reason for the first and great require- ment of the gospel, namely, that men shall begin the work of seeking God by repentance for sin, and reconciliation with God. While they cherish sin, and remain at enmity with God, they will never rightly discern spiritual things. Their love of sin, and opposition to the will of God, unfit them to understand JoHNvii. 17.] Aide to know the Will of Crod. 35 God's character or word. Besides the deadening influence of sin itself on the faculties of the soul, there is all the influence of prejudice and self-will and aversion to the truth which are alone enough to shut up every avenue to the mind against the truth. Every religious teacher ought to be thoroughly im- pressed with this thought whenever he attempts to impart a knowledge of divine things to the impenitent, " Except they repent they must perish ! " Until they are disposed to do the will of God they will never know of the doctrine. UntU they break off their sins, by a repentance that hates them and sor- rows over them, and turn unto the Lord with a faith that works by love to Him, they will never see the kingdom of God, or know the truth that is able to save their souls. SERMON V. GOD THE SAME IN THE OLD TESTAMENT AS HE IS IN THE NEW. 1 COKINTHIANS viii. 6. — But to us there is but one God, the Father, of whom are all ■ things, and loe in Him : and one Lord Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we by Him. YOU who look at the text in a reference Bible will find m the margin " and we /or Him," instead of "and we in Him." The meaning is that our existence, our whole being, is intended to be subservient to God's pleasure, and to fulfill the purpose He had in view in creating us. The same form of ex- pression is found in the thirty-sixth verse of the eleventh chap- ter of Romans, " For of Him, and through Him, and /or Him are all things." . It occurs also in the sixteenth verse of the first chapter of the Epistle to the Colossians, " All things were created by Him, and for Him." It is from such passages as these that the great general truth is elicited which has been so admirably expressed by the Shorter Catechism in answering the question, " What is the chief end of man ? " The text, taken as a whole, is an emphatic statement of the unity of God and the relation of believers to Him the source of all things ; and of the Lordship of Jesus Christ, and his rela- tion to all created things in general, and to believers in par- ticular : " For though there be that are called gods, whether in heaven or in earth (as there be gods many, and lords many), yet to us there is but one God, the Father, of whom are all things, and we /or Him: and one Lord Jesus Christ, hy whom are all things, and we by Him." The contrast is between the faith of Christ's disciples, on the one hand, and the notions that prevailed in the world around them, on the other. To these there are many objects, real or imaginary, which stand for gods ; but to us there is but one God ; and He is, first of all, in our apprehension of Him, our Father. Not the Father as 1 CoE. viii. 6.] Grod in Old Testament and in New. 37 the first person in the Trinity, but as God, the self-existent and Eternal One, who is indeed Father, — and who becomes Father in the thought of all who apprehend God as He is re- vealed by Jesus Christ, the brightness of God's glory, the express image of God's person. This one God, is, in the second place, the source of all things, to a Christian's appre- hension. All created things had their origin in Him alone ; and did not, as others thought, owe their beginning to chance, or to a multitude of divine originators. Then, in the third place, God, as the Christians apprehended Him, was the end and aim of all their being. Not only was their existence in- tended to be for the doing of God's will, and glorifying Him, but it was devoted to this, and consciously. They were con- scious that they Hved not for themselves, but for God. But there was something more than this in the Christians' apprehension of God. Not only was God — the eternal and self-existent One — their Father, the source and fountain of all things, and the end of their whole being, but there was a personal revelation of this God; a revelation made to his creatures in the act of creation, and still maintained in the Lordship of all created things, and in the redemption of those who call him Lord with believing hearts. God, the invisible, the unapproachable, the incomprehensible, is the source and fountain of all created things. But the creating act was per- formed by Jesus Christ, the personal manifestation of God ; and the rule and government of all created things are in the hands of this same Jesus Christ, the Supreme Lord ; and all who call God their Father in truth, that is, all who are Chris- tians indeed, have become the children of God in his absolute- ness by the same Almighty agent by whom creation itself was accomplished. As in creation He brought all things forth into actual being from God as their source and fountain, so in redemption He brought grace and salvation and sonship from the same God as their source and fountain, and made them the portion of all who received Him. It is thus that Christians are by Jesus Christ. By Him as all created things are ; by him m their sonship with God. The doctrine of the text, therefore is, first that there is but one God in the apprehension of all true believers ; and that He, as God, is the source of all created things ; the Father of all 38 Crod in Old Testament and in New. ISerm. v. who rightly know Him ; and the end and aim of all their being ; and secondly, that this God revealed Himself to the apprehen- sion of men as Creator ; and actually created the universe, in the person of Jesus Christ, who is sole Lord of the creation which came from his omnipotent hand ; and also the Redeemer of such as are saved, and the author of their sonship with God. The latter clause of the text conveys, therefore, the same idea that is conveyed by the noted passage in the third verse of the first chapter of Hebrews : " The Son, by whom God made the worlds, is the brightness of God's glory, the express image of his person, and upholds all things by the word of his power." Such, the Apostle says in our text, are the ideas of God which are entertained by the believers in Jesus Christ, in opposition to all the notions of the heathen pertaining to their gods and their ruling deities. It is not my purpose, in this sermon, to treat of all this grand lesson, but to take one small part of it, and dwell upon that with a special practical aim. The notion is very largely enter- tained, and very industriously circulated, and dwelt upon in certain quarters, that the character of God as it is revealed in the Old Testament, and the relation which He sustains to man, are very unlike his character and relations as they are revealed in the New Testament. This notion is so often asserted, and asserted so boldly by those who entertain it, that many minds become imbued with the idea that this must be true, notwith- standing they still hold, in theory and profession at least, that both the Old Testament and the New are alike a revelation of the one only living and true God. Our text involves a denial of this notion. The One God who created the world, as He is revealed in the Old Testament, is the One God whom the Christians find revealed and spoken of as the Creator in the New Testament. They are one and the same Being. The methods of manifestation are the same in both Testaments. The character ascribed to Him, and the relation which He sustains to the created universe, and to all those who know Him, are the same in the New Testament that they are in the Old. BeUevers whose light was derived wholly from the Old Testament, worshipped the same God, and saw in Him the same attributes, and the same relations to themselves and to the world, as do those who have received the fuller light of the New Testament. 1 CoK. viii. 6.] Q-od in Old Testament and in Neiv. 39 Let me now call your attention to a few of the representa- tions wMch the Scriptures give us of the character of God, and of his relations to men. These representations will cover the ground that is taken by those vrho entertain the notions to which we have referred, and will demonstrate that they are not well founded. 1. In the first place God is represented as a Father. He is 80 represented in both the Old Testament and the New ; and both Testaments represent Him to be the Father of precisely the same class of men. In regard to this truth two fundamentally false assertions are constantly made, and easily believed by those who are thoughtless, or who are ignorant as to what the Scriptures do really teach. In the first place it is asserted that the New Tes- tament alone reveals the fatherhood of God, and in the second place, that the Old Testament does not teach it. Indeed it is often said that the revelation of this, and of what is claimed to be its necessary implication, the brotherhood of man, was the grand and only distinctive doctrine which Jesus Christ taught the world. But as a matter of fact Jesus Christ never taught any such general fatherhood of God as it is claimed that He taught, namely that He is in the highest sense the Father of all men ; nor did He ever recognize any participation of all men, without distinction of moral character and of relations to him- self, in such a brotherhood as is involved in such teaching. He never taught that God is the Father of man as man, nor does the New Testament anywhere teach it. The New Testa- ment does teach that God is the Father, in a high and special sense, of all who are in Jesus Christ by a true and living faith. He is the Father of all who are born, not of the flesh, but of the Spirit. It does teach that all those who have been born again, and been delivered from their sins by redemption, are the children of God in a high and special sense, and that they are consequently brethren in a high and special sense ; in a sense in which no other men are children of God, or brethren with those who are his children. This doctrine comes prom- inently before us throughout the New Testament. Beginning with the Sermon on the Mount, when Jesus called his disciples to Him and taught them to say, " Our Father who art in heaven ; " with a peculiar and tender emphasis on " Our ; " 40 Crod in Old Testament and in New. [Sekm. v. and assured them that ^s his disciples they were counted chil- dren of God, and so tenderly cared for by Him, as their Father, that the very hairs of their head were all numbered ; beginning thus, with the direct teaching of the Lord Himself, and going onward to the end of the New Testament, the doctrine that God is indeed the Father of all who are in his Son Jesus Christ, is one of the plainest and most precious that is revealed. But this limitation is everywhere apparent. Of all those who reject the Son of God, Jesus Christ solemnly declares that God is not their Father. So He said to the unbelieving Jews. This is the teaching of all New Testament writers. The doctrine of the whole New Testament conforms to that statement found in the first chapter of the Gospel of John : " To as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name." Hence the Apostle Paul says to Christians, addressing them as such dis- tinctively, " Ye all are the children of God, by faith in Jesus Christ." 1 And again, in his Epistle to the Romans, he says, " As many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God ; " they have received the spirit of adoption whereby they cry from their hearts, " Our Father ; " and " The Spirit Himself beareth witness with their spirits that they are the children of God." In the Epistle to the Galatians he says that the grand object for which God sent his Son into this world was to redeem them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons. This is the doctrine of the New Testament : God is the Father of all the redeemed. AH those who know Him, love Him, trust in Him, and obey Him, are his children. This truth is involved in regeneration, in adoption, in heirship. But this is equally the doctrine of the Old Testament. It is as unequivocally taught in the Old Testament as it is in the New. Thus Moses, speaking to the Israelites distinctively as the redeemed people of God, says to them, in the sixth verse of the thirty-second chapter of Deuteronomy, " Do ye thus requite the Lord, O foolish people and unwise ? Is He not thy Father that hath bought [or redeemed] thee ? " In the verse preceding, speaking of the rejecters of God, Moses says, " They have corrupted themselves; their spot is not the spot of his 1 Gal. iii. 26. 1 Cor. viii. 6.] Crod in Old Testament and in New. 41 children ; they are a perverse and crooked generation." In later times we find the same doctrine, and the same limitation of it, still recognized and appealed to a,s the well-established doctrine of the Old Testament. Thus the Prophet Isaiah appeals to God in the name of his peculiar people, when they had sunken into great distress and obscurity, " Look down from heaven, and behold from the habitation of thy holiness and of thy glory : where is thy zeal and thy strength, the sounding of thy bowels and of thy mercies toward me? are they restrained? Doubtless thou art our Father, though Abraham be ignorant of us, and Israel acknowledge us not ; thou, O Lord, art our Father, our Redeemer; thy name is from everlasting." ^ The same appeal is made, and same rela- tionship claimed again, in the following chapter. And this is everywhere the teaching of the Old Testament, that God sus- tains a peculiar relation to those whom He has redeemed, — a relation which He sustains to no other class of men, — and this relation is that of a Father to them ; and their relation to Him is specially and emphatically that of children. The author -of our text sums up, in another part of this same epistle, the exhortations of God to his people of old, and makes his great promise to them to be t'ais : " And I will be a Father imto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty." Both the Old Testament and the New, there- fore, alike teach the fatherhood of God ; but, at the same time, they alike teach that this fatherhood in its high and peculiar sense — the only sense in which the Scriptures ascribe father- hood to Him as a distinctive characteristic of his relation to men — is limited strictly to those whom He has saved from sin and made his people by redemption. They both alike teach the sonship of men with God, but at the same time they limit that sonship to those who receive the Son of God as their Lord and Redeemer, even to those who believe on his name. 2. In the second place, every essential attribute of God, as He is revealed in the New Testament, is clearly and unequivo- cally ascribed to Him in the Old Testament. He is not, as is so often asserted, a being of any different character in the one case from what. He is in the other. He is no more a being of justice in the Old Testament than He is in the New. He is ' Isaiah Ixiii. 15, 16. 42 Giod in Old Testament and in New. [Seem. V. no more a being of love in the New Testament than He is in the Old. He is a being of no more sternness and severity in his feelings and conduct towards the wicked in the Old Testa- ment than He is in the New. He is endowed with no more mercy, with no more pity, with no more long-suffering, with no more desire for the good of men, with no greater unwilling- ness that they should perish, with no greater readiness to save the penitent and believing and obedient in the New Testa- ment than He is in the Old. Look at a few of the passages in which the New Testament sets forth the sterner qiialities of the divine character, and show his hatred of sin, and his disposition to punish it, and you will be convinced. " The wra,th of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men." .... " God will render to every man according to his deeds, unto them that are contentious and do not obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness, indignation and wrath, tribu- lation and anguish upon every soul of man that doeth evil. .... For there is no respect of persons with God. For as many as have sinned without law shall also perish without law ; and as many as have sinned in the law shall be judged by the law, in the day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my gospel." The Apostles all speak in this same strain. Nothing can be found in the Old Testa- ment that exceeds the fearful severity of their language when they are speaking of the justice of God, and the effect of that justice on the impenitent and the rejecters of the gospel. Of all such the unvarying testimony of the Apostles is that they must sink before the severity of divine justice. They all declare of God, that vengeance — avenging justice — is his, and He will repay for transgression and sin. This quality of avenging justice, and its destructive power on the wicked, are nowhere in the Old Testament more pointedly declared. Nor is the language of our Saviour less emphatic, nor less terrible, when He speaks of God's justice and of its effects on the wicked and the rejecters of the salvation which He offers them. Nay, there is no language in the whole compass of the Bible so terrible in the exhibition of God's severity as is that which was used by our Saviour Himself. There is a sadness and tenderness ever in his tones as He speaks of the 1 CoK. viii. 6.] G-od in Old Testament and in New. 43 punishment of the ^finally guilty ; but oh, how fearfuhy plain and pungent and faithful his words are ! The man who hears divine commandments and does not obey them, is like the foolish man who built his house on the sand, and all his hopes are swept away by a fearful destruction in the hour of trial. " The day is coming when the doers of evil shaU come forth unto the resurrection of damnation," and these shall go away into everlasting punishment. In the final day He will say to the wicked, " Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared — not for men — not for men — but for the devil and his angels." Is there anything in the Old Testament that can surpass these terrific words of the Man of Sorrows and of Love ? Is there anything that can compare with them ? The God of the Jews never uttered sentences to them in all their history so full of awfulness in setting forth the severity of his justice towards those who will live in sin and reject his offers of mercy. The character of God is, therefore, no different as respects its justice and severity as it is revealed in the New Testament from what it is in the Old. There is no discrep- ancy in the two revelations. The New Testament as clearly reveals justice and severity as does the Old. But on the other hand the Old Testament reveals, as clearly as does the New, the mercy and loving kindness and compas- sion and long suffering of God towards men. There is not the difference in these respects in the character of God as it is set forth in the two Testaments that is often asserted ; and as, not unlikely, multitudes of otherwise well instructed Chris- tians firmly believe. Let m^ reverse the process and give a few of the many passages in which the Old Testament declares the love and mercy and tenderness of God ; and you will see that its language is not surpassed by anything in the New Testament in this direction. The New Testament has new phases of these qualities of the divine character ; and shows them more fully in their direct bearing on the great work of human redemption through the death of the Son of God ; but it does not reveal them any more clearly, nor any more em- phatically, as the distinctive attributes of God. You will not fail to call to mind that wonderful passage in khe thirty-fourth chapter of Exodus, where God spake to Moses in the Mount : " And the Lord descended in the cloud, 44 Q-od in Old Testament and in New. [Serm. v. and stood with him there, and proclaimed the name of the Lord. And the Lord passed by before him, and proclaimed. The Lord, The Lord God, merciful and gracious, long suffer- ing, and abundant in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin." This at the very beginning of the national life of Israel ; and it was this God who stood before the faith, and in whom rested the hope of every believing sinner who learned the character of God from the Old Testament. Prophets, Psalmists, and all who were commissioned to reveal the character of God to men, spoke in the same strain, and revealed the same merciful, long suffering, gracious, and forgiving God. Nothing can be more tender and touching than some of the passages written by the prophets when they were setting forth these features of the character of Jehovah. Isaiah especially dwells upon them with peculiar fondness : " Ho, every one that thirsteth," etc. ; " Let the wicked forsake his way," etc. And even the sterner and more denunciatory Ezekiel often comes back to them, and insists with great earnestness on the fact that if men will per- ish it is from no lack of mercy and compassion in God, but only because they will persist in rebelUon against him, and in trampling his mercy under their feet. It was through this prophet, ^you will remember, that Jehovah pleaded with Israel in those memorable words, " Cast away from you all your transgressions, whereby ye have transgressed ; and make you a new heart and a new spirit : for why will ye die, O house of Israel ?" For I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth, saith the Lord God." Again, xxxiii. 11 : " Say unto them. As I Hve saith the Lord God, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked ; but that the wicked turn from his way and live." We need not multiply passages of this kind. They abound in every part of the Old Testament.- And it was only saying what all who knew the teachings of the Old Testament knew, when the Psalmist declared in that crown- ing passage in the one hundred and third Psalm : " The Lord is merciful and gracious, slow to anger and plenteous in mercy. Like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear him." We repeat, there is nothing in the New Testament more clear, nothing more tender, nothing more emphatic on this 1 CoK. viii. 6.] God in Old Testament and in New. 45 point, than large portions of the Old Testament. They who read the words of Jesus of NazaretH, and of his disciples, in telling us what the character of God is, read simply repetitions and confirmations of the descriptions of that character as given in what Moses in the Law, and the Prophets and the Psalmists • did write. The God of Moses and Israel, and the God of all the holy men in the Old Dispensation, and the God of Apostles and all who worship God under the light of the New Dispensa- tion, are one and the same ; one and the same in the rela- tion which He sustains to men in general, and to his people in particular ; one and the same in aU the elements of his char- acter, and in all the attributes of his being. In the Old Testa- ment and in the New, his strange work is judgment, — his fond work is mercy. When it must be — as often in Old Testa- ment historj^, when wickedness became rampant and hope- less He visited in wrath ; when it must be — and the circum- stances demand it now, and at the final day — He will still visit with wrath. Such is the character of God. Against such a God have we all sinned. To the mercy and compassion and forgiveness and sonship of such a God the gospel invites us to-day. From the just anger, and the long delayed wrath of such a God does the gospel to-day invite us with words of warning and loving entreaty. God grant its hearts to refuse not Him that speaketh. SERMOIN^ yi. THE OLD TESTAMENT REVEALS SALVATION. LtfKE xvi. 29. — Abraham said unto him, They have Moses and the Prophets ; let them hear them. IT is common to speak of this portion of our Lord's teachings as " the parable of the rich man and Lazarus." It may be seriously questioned, however, whether it would not be more accurate to call it " the narrative of the rich man and Lazarus." There is no intimation that it is a parable. It has few, if any, of the characteristic marks of a parable. It has all the charac- teristics of a narrative. There is no intimation, either in the words themselves or in the circumstances in which they were spoken, or in their evident purpose, that our Lord was not giv- ing an account of actual persons and scenes and transactions. So far as anything can be made out from the record itseK, the rich man was a real person, who once lived in this world, and fared sumptuously every day ; and, after a life of seK-indul- gence and worldliuess, died, and was buried ; and in hell lifted up his eyes, being m torments. And Lazarus, so far as we can make out the case from our Lord's own words, was another real person, who lived on this earth at the same time that the rich man did ; and after a life of extreme poverty and great sufferings, died, and was carried to Paradise, — the " Abra- ham's bosom " of the Jews. And if we take our Lord's words just as they are recorded, — and we dare not take them other- wise, — the conversation, which He says took place between Abraham and the rich man, was a real conversation, and not one that our Lord invented. The sufferings of the rich man, and the happiness of Lazarus, were real sufferings and real happiness, and not invented sufferings and invented happiness. The flame that tormented the rich man was as real a flame aa any that can touch and torment a disembodied spirit. Tho Luke xvi. 29.] The Old Testament reveals Salvation. 47 flame that can reach and burn a spirit after it is separated from the body is not a material flame, indeed, but a spiritual one ; yet none the less real because spiritual, but it may be far more terrible than any material flame can be to the soul. No one can say, therefore, that the words before us are not a part of genuine narrative. No one has a right to affirm that they are a part of a fictitious story. But if it were granted that our Lord uttered this account of the rich man and Lazarus as a parable, yet the meaning and purpose of it were the same as though He had uttered it as a narrative. The truths conveyed, and the lessons taught, are precisely the same in either case. In either case our Lord teaches us that there is an indissoluble connection between the life that now is and that which is to come ; and that the des- tiny of eacli man in the world to come is determined by the life he leads and the character he forms, in the life that now is. A worldly, self-indulgent, easy, self-pampering life here leads with unerring certainty to woe and torments and un- availing regrets in the world that is to come. This is the solemn truth, the grand lesson of the narrative, if it be a nar- rative. It is the solemn truth, the grand lesson of the parable, if it be a parable. Bearing this truth and this lesson in mind, let us now give our attention to that portion of our Lord's words which we have read for our text : " Abraham said, They have Moses and the Prophets ; let them hear them." This was said as an answer to the rich man's request that Abraham would send Lazarus to testify to the rich man's five brothers, lest they also should come unto his place of torment By testifying the rich man meant bearing witness to the fact that there is a hereafter ; to the reality and fearfulness of the sufferings of the lost, and to the certainty that such a life as the rich man had lived would end in such torments as the rich man was now suffering. He vainly thought, just as multitudes now think, that all that his five worldly-minded, easy-Hving, self- pampering brothers needed to turn them from such a course of living, and set them earnestly upon the great work of repent- ance and holy living and preparing for heaven, was the testi- mony of one who should rise from -the dead and speak to them. But Abraham told him plainly that they already had all the 48 The Old Testament reveals Salvation. [Seem. vi. testimony that they needed ; all that could be of any avail to them. The writings of Moses and the Prophets were enough. These contained the very testimony, and uttered the very truths that the rich man wanted Lazarus to go and declare. And not only so, but when the rich man urged the case and insisted, that if one should go to them from the dead they Avould repent, Abraham declared emphatically that if they heard not Moses and the Prophets, they would not be per- suaded even though one rose from the dead and warned them. By Moses and the Prophets are meant the Scriptares of the Old Testament. What Abraham declared was that these Scriptures clearly taught the great fact of a future state of existence ; the great fact that that existence would be to every man an existence in happiness or in misery ; and the great fact that this happiness and this misery depended wholly on the character and life that each man lived in this world. Such were the truths that Abraham announced to this lost soul ; and these are the truths that are clearly involved in the words be- fore us. Our Saviour, by quoting, indorsed the language of Abra- ham. He showed that he accounted the reply of Abraham to the rich man just and sufficient. By this indorsement of Abraham's words He made them his own, and thus taught lis a lesson of great importance regardmg the Old Testament, namely, that the Old Testament contained all that was nec- essary in order to the salvation of those who would heed its teachings. Let us look at a few of these teachings, and we shall see how fully they involve this truth. 1. Li the first place, they teach the moral government of God over men, and, by teaching this, they set forth clearly the accountability of men to God. This is the meaning of moral government in its bearing on men, or any other moral agents. It' means that they are responsible to God for their conduct and characters, and that God will hold them rigidly to this responsibility. It means, also, that God has so constituted men, and so ordained consequences of conduct and character, that men cannot but reap the fruit of their own doings, either as rewards or as punishments. Because a righteous God rules over men, therefore they will reap what they sow. They are LuKExvi. 29.] Tha Old Testament reveals Salvation. 49 answerable to God for what they do, and He exacts the account through the operation of those very principles of retribution by which He has bound consequences to conduct, in the moral and spiritual world, as closely as He has bound effects to causes in the material world. All this was plainly taught in the Old Testament. It is one of the most prominent of its doctrines. Every one of its readers became familiar with it, and had it constantly im- pressed upon his attention. He read again and again the sentiment which the Psalmist uttered in the words, " Thou renderest to every man according to his work ; " and which the Prophet uttered when he said, " Ah, Lord God, behold thou hast made the heaven and the earth, by thy great power and stretched-out arm, and there is nothing too hard for thee ; thou showest loving kindness unto thousands, and recompen- sest the iniquity of the fathers into the bosom of their children after them ; the Great, the Mighty God, the Lord of Hosts is his name, great in counsel and mighty in work ; for thine eyes are open' upon all the ways of the sons of men ; to give every one according to his ways, and according to the fruit of his doings." Often must the rich man have heard, even in the midst of his life of feasting and seH-indulgence, the words of the vrise preacher, " Know thou, that for all these things God vnE bring thee into judgment For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it be evil." By such language as this, — and it prevails all through the Old Testament, — those who read it were fully taught the moral government of God over men, and their accountability to Him. They were made, therefore, to know that their fu- ture destiny was placed in their own hands ; and that they could not escape the legitimate consequences of their conduct and method of life. They had hght enough, if they would heed it, to guide them in choosing a right course of life ; and to persuade them, if mere knowledge would persuade them, to turn away from wrong courses. The fact of the moral gov- ernment of God over men made the wretchedness of the future as certain to an evil doer, or a rejecter of God's authority, as it could be made by any testimony that could be given, even though one were sent from the dead to give it. 50 The Old Testament reveals Salvation. [Sekm. VI. 2. But, secondly, not only were the readers o^ tbe Old Testament taught the moral government of God over men, and hence their accountability, and the certainty of reaping the consequences of their conduct either as rewards or as pun- ishments, but they were assured of this by the plainest and most positive declarations that inspired men could utter. The matter was not left to inference. The inference from tlje fact of moral government was, indeed, so necessary that they would have been without excuse for not seeing it, and acting on it. But in this, as in almost everything else involving the well- being of men, God added line upon line, and precept upon precept; and made the way of life so plain that a wayfaring man, though a fool, need not miss it. I know that it has often been asserted that the Old Testa- ment did not reveal a future state, nor deal with any rewards and punishments, saving such as were temporal and material. But this assertion cannot be maintained. Every attentive reader of the Old Testament knows, that it is not true. Those who lived under its light were taught the existence of a future state, and the dependence of its conditions on the life and con- duct and character of the present. Look at the case as it stands. Even the earliest of all the Old Testament books con- tains a clear and confident assertion of such a state. Job com- forted himself in view of this future, which would be one of vindication, for him, against the false charges of his enemies ; and one of redemption from the sins of which he was really guilty. The latest and ripest scholarship is emphatic in de- claring that Job"s words " refer to an existence beyond the grave ; " and that " the view which restricts his language to an earthly hope is opposed to the proper force of the words, to the connection of thought, and to the spirit and tenor of the wliole book." " I know," said the afflicted patriarch, " that my Re- deemer lives, and in after time will stand upon the earth ; and after this my skin is destroyed, and Avithout my flesh, sliall I see God." i David, in like manner, looked forward into a future state to find his sweetest anticipations and fullest ]ojs : " Thou wilt not leave my life in the grave, neither wilt thou suffer thy Holy One to see corruption. Thou wilt show me the path of life: in thy presence is fullness of joy: at thy ' Bible Union's translations and notes. Luke xvi. 29:] The Old Testament reveals Salvation. 51 right hand there are pleasures for evermore." ....," As for me, I will behold thy face in righteousness : I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness." Such was the language of faith and hope and joyous expectancy, as the friends of God and righteousness looked forward into the future. Their future was not one that was bounded by the grave, and came to its end there. It rather began there, and stretched away into the unending years of God's eternity. The language, too, is that of established belief. It indicates a settled habit of mind ; as though those who used it were accustomed to solace themselves with such hopes and anticipations, and to offset the ills of this life with thoughts and assurances of promised joys in the world to come. And this is just what the writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews says regarding those ancient worthies who lived and served God and were saved by the light of the Old Testament only : " They all died in faith, not having received the prom- ises, but having seen them afar off, and were persuaded of them, and embraced them, and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth They looked for a city which hath foundations, whose Maker and Builder is God." Thus also our Saviour interpreted the Old Testa- ment. Taking even the earliest of Moses' writings, he said that they taught the future life. ." I am the God of Abra- ham," etc. God is not God of the dead, but of the living ; this silences the Sadducees. A future of bliss for the righteous was thus clearly taught by the Old Testament. A future of misery for the wicked was as clearly taught- The passages that we have quoted, affirming a judgment to come, in which God will bring all deeds before Him for award, are, like the passages in which the righteous comfort themselves by thoughts and hopes of a future of happiness, the expression of settled and well-understood beliefs. The facts of judgment and retribution upon the whole of life were treated as items of a common and familiar faith. And then, to exclude the pos- sibility of supposing that this judgment and retribution could have sole reference to the temporal consequences of conduct, we have, in the book of the Prophet Daniel, an announcement of the resurrection, and of eternal retribution, almost as clear as they were announced by otir Saviour, and in almost the precise words : " The multitude of them that sleep in the dust 52 The Old Testament reveals Salvation. [Sekm. vi. of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt." Our Saviour's own words were but little plainer, and a little fuller of detail : " The hour is coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall hear the voice of the Son of Man, and shall come forth ; they that have done good, unto the resurrection of life ; and thej"- that have done evil, unto the resurrection of damnation." When we read the announcements which the Old Testament makes of judgment and retribution upon every work of man, and upon every secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it be evil, we do not read them as those read them who lived in Old Testament times, unless we read them in the light of these clear assertions of a future of bliss for the righteous, and these announcements of judgment and retribution following a resur- rection of all the dead. The rich man, and his five brothers, read all these revelations of a future of happiness or of misei-y in just this light. The resvirrection and eternal life, or the everlasting shame and contempt, revealed by the Prophet Daniel, stood side by side with the " judgment," and the " rendering unto every man according to his deeds," of all the prophets, of the wise Preacher, and of the Psalmist. If, therefore, those who had the Old Testament went down to death, they went down fully and faithfully warned and in- structed. Moses and the Prophets had testified to them as plainly as one could have testified to them if he had been sent to them from the dead. They were warned, they were in- structed, they were remonstrated with ; they were invited and entreated to choose the way of life ; and they had it plainly pointed out to them. God most solemnly assured them that " the soul that sinned, it should die ; " and that, though hand joined in hand, sin should not go unpunished. If they went down to de^th they were without excuse. The way to have escaped it was clearly pointed out to them. 3. This brings me to say, thirdly, that the Old Testament plainly taught the way of a sinner's salvation. It did not teach it as fully as the New Testament teaches it ; but it taught it plainly ; and therefore was sufficient for the salvation of those who gave heed to it. What we have been dwelling upon has had reference more to the clearly announced consequences of evil conduct, and of Luke xvi. 29.] The Old Testament reveals Salvation. 53 wrong methods of living, than to the possibility and way of sal- vation from evil consequences already incurred. Very much of the Old Testament, as well as of the New Testament, is taken up with declarations regarding the punishments and evil points of sin,. to deter man from committing it. If revelation stopped here, there would be little hope or comfort in it for the sinner who has already ruined himself by transgression. There would then remain nothing for him but " a fearful looking for of judg- ment and fiery indignation." But the revelation of the Old Testament does not stop here. It both fully recognizes the wants of such a sinner and provides for them. It recognizes the fact ' that every human being is such a sinner, and yet recognizes the fact that there is hope for him. And this, not- withstanding its pointed and sweeping declarations regarding the fixedness of the law that binds consequences to conduct ; the harvest to the sowing. It recognizes a provision of mercy in the divine government ; and clearly teaches the fact that God can " be just and justify the guilty ; " though it does not fully show how this can be done. It remained for " the Lamb of God " to come and take away the sin of the world by the the offering of that blood which cleanseth from all sin ; and is " a propitiation for our sins ; and not for ours only, but for the sins of the whole world," before the method of divine forgive- ness and mercy could be clearly understood. But that Lamb was typified ; that propitiating blood was foretold, and pointed to ; and in view of it the fullest invitations were given to sin- ners to return unto God; and the fullest and most earnest assurances were made to them, that returning, they should find favor and be saved. " There is forgiveness with God that He may be feared," was the declaration of all the sacrifices of the Old Testament dispensation, and of large portions of Old Testament language. " Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts; and let him return unto the Lord, and He wiU have mercy upon him, and to our God for He will abundantly pardon," is the burden of all pro- phetic utterances, after they have charged home the guilt of sinners upon them, and warned them of the evils and punish- ments that are in store for them. " Repent, and turn your- selves from all your transgressions ; so iniquity shall not be your ruin. Cast away from you all your transgressions, where- 54 The Old Testament reveals Salvation. [Seem. VI by ye have transgressed ; and make you a new heart and a new spii-it ; for why will ye die, O house of Israel ? For I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth, saith the Lord God ; wherefore turn yourselves, and live ye." This is the burden of all God's addresses to the guilty and ruined throughout the Old Testament. Nothing further was needed, therefore, in the way of testi- mony regarding either the fact of a future world, or of the consequences of sin and false Hving, or of the possibility and way of salvation, to make the readers of the Old Testament understand their accountability, their exposure to the fearful consequences of sin in the world to come, or the necessity of repentance and a return to God in order to salvation. The consequences of sin, the reality of a future world, the depend- ence of the destiny of that world on the conduct and charac- ter of men in this world, and yet the possibiHty and way of salvation by the mercy and forgiveness of God, these were all revealed in the Old Testament. They were so plainly revealed that men could not fail to find them who would give heed to the words that revealed them. The revelation was therefore abundantly clear, and abundantly full, to have saved from death every soul that perished under their light. The reve- lation was so clear, and so full, that Dives need not, after death, have lifted up his eyes in hell, being in torments. He might have been carried by angels, as Lazarus was, to Abra- ham's bosom ; and he would have been carried there had he given due heed to Moses and the Prophets. The revelation is so clear, and so full, that the rich man's five brothers had no need that one should go from the dead, and testify to them of sin, and of righteousness, and of future retribution. The testi- mony which they had was so full and so clear that no further testimony could have added to its strength. But you and I, my hearers, have not only all this, but we have all of the New Testament besides. We have not only all that the rich man and his five brothers had, and having which they had no excuse for living false lives, and went down to death with all their blood on their own head ; but we have the testimony of one who did rise from the dead. They had the dawning of the day ; we have the noon-day shining of the sun. SERMON VII. THE WORTH OF MAN. Ps. viii. 4. — What is man, that thou art mindful of him? and the son of man, thcd thou visitest him ? nnHESE questions express amazement on the part of the -"- Psalmist. He was considering the glory of God as it is manifested in the material creation, and exclaimed, " O Lord our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all the earth ! who hast set thy glory above the heavens." At this point his thoughts turned to the works of God among men. Here also his glory was revealed : " Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength," or, as our Saviour rendered it, " hast thou perfected praise," " because of thine enemies, that thou mightest still the enemy and the avenger." It was at this point that his amazement began. It was astonishing to him that this great and glorious God should make any account whatever of men, and condescend to heed either their praises or their evil dispositions toward Him. He therefore exclaimed, " When I consider the heavens the work of thy fingers, the moon and the stars which thou hast or- dained ; what is man that thou art mindful of him ? and the son of man, that thou visitest him ? " It was true, and the Psalmist could not shut his eyes to the fact, that this great and glorious God did concern Himself with men ; that his mind was affected by their enmities and evil dis- positions, and that He did take pleasure in their subjection to his will, and seek to honor Himself by the praises of even the weakest and obscurest of the race. He did, as a matter of fact, take cognizance of men in all the variety of their condi- tions, and was tenderly regardful of them and interested in them. This was a matter of wonder to the Psalmist whenever 56 The Worth of Man. [Serm. vii. lie looked at the grandeur and magnificence ot the visible crear tion, and thought of the insignificance of man considered as a part of that creation. This has been a standing wonder among men from that time till the present. Some of the most specious, if not the ablest arguments against the fact of a written revelation from God have been drawn from this very source ; as have also those against the great central truth declared in. this revelation — THE Atonement. It has seemed to multitudes of men incred- ible that the Creator and Sustainer of worlds of such untold number, and such inconceivable magnitude as compared with the earth, should make choice of this inconsiderable globe, this mere speck in his creation, and its handful of inhabitants, a handful compared with the unnumbered millions of beings that are supposed to exist in other and grander worlds, for such momentous transactions. Many men have gone to the length of discarding the Scriptures, and counting the plan of salvation through the intervention of the Son of God an absurdity, sim- ply on the ground that this earth is so insignificant a part of the material universe, and that its inhabitants are so few and worthy of so little supposed consideration compared with other created intelligences. But the fact remains to us as it did to the Psalmist, that God is " mindful of man, and that He has visited him." To our minds the mission of the Son of God to this world is a great and unquestionable truth, and such a demonstration of the love and condescension of God as cannot be brought into doubt in the smallest measure by any of the discoveries of science, or by any of the inferences that can be drawn from these discoveries. This we know, of whatever else we are ignorant, and however strange it may seem to us when we think of it, — this we know, that God has in this manner manifested the deepest in- terest in the well-being of man, and the highest appreciation of his worth and importance among creatures. The history of the world abounds moreover with instances of his interposition in their behalf of sufficient number and magnitude to establish the fact of a constant oversight and interested government among men, and for their welfare ; and the cross of Christ is a proof that will stand through eternity, and carry conviction to all who duly consider it, that God counts man to be of greater Ps- viii. 4.] The Worth of Man. 57 worth, and of more importance than all material things. He gave his only begotten Son, the Creator of the universe, for man's redemption. This gift is God's measure of man's worth. It shows that He counts him as much more important than the material universe, as the Creator of the material universe is more important than the universe itself. Let us now give our attention to some things that we learn from the Scriptures on this subject. Why is it that God shows such great consideration for man ? Why does He count him of so much importance, that He is even mindful of him, and has visited him with such love and condescension ? 1. In the light of the Bible we know that it is not because of his body. Man's body is important : it is of great worth : it honors God by the perfection and adaptation of its members. No one can contemplate it, thoughtfully and rightly, in its struct- ure and uses, and not feel constrained to exclaim with David, " I will praise thee ; for I am fearfully and wonderfully made." It was on man's body as a part of the creation that God looked and saw everything that He had made, and behold it was very good. Its capacities are immensely greater, its adaptations im- mensely more numerous, than are those of any other earthly bodies. The body of the highest creature below man is but a clumsy machine compared with his, though marvelous in its structure and its adaptations to the purposes for which it was made. But even man's body is, at best, only an instrument, and, in its present form, is intended only for temporary uses. Soon it is to be taken to pieces and resolved into the general mass of unorganized matter out of which it was formed. " Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou retui-n," is the divine ap- pointment for it ; and in this appointment God has mani- fested his estimate of its value. It is of immense value be- cause it has received so much of its Maker's care and skiU in its structure ; but its value is all subservient and temporary, and all destined to come to naught when it has been made use of to accomplish a specific end. Beyond this it has no worth as a body, and ceases to be. In the resurrection, even, it has no being or recognition as an organization like the present one of flesh and blood. The body of the resurrection will be a spiritual body. And even that body will be of value, not for 58 The Worth df Man. [Serm. vii. itself alone, but, like the body of the present state, its worth will be subservient — useless in itseK — of value only as the instrument of the soul. 2. Again, in the light of the Scriptures we know that the high estimate that God puts on man is not on account of his moral character or deeds. If there is any one thing more plainly revealed in the Scriptures than anything else, it is that the moral character of men, considered as men, is fearfully depraved, and their lives sinful. The race as a whole, and every individual member of it, is, in his unregenerate state, unholy, and morally unlovely in the sight of God. There is a something in him that taints all his moral acts, all the ele- ments of his moral character, to such a degree that he cannot, in this condition, please God. For the plain assertion is, " They that are in the flesh cannot please Him." When we look at the law of God and consider its claims, it is not difficu.lt to discover what a part, at least, of this something is. The laAv of God is the expression of what a moral agent's character ought to be, and what ought to be his acts, and the habit and aim of his life. A perfect moral char- acter, judged by this law, — and this is the law by which God judges, — a perfect moral character, one that God can take pleasure in, is a character that spontaneously, and without ceas- ing, prompts one to " love the Lord his God with all his heart, and with all his soul, and vnth all his strength, and with all his mind ; and his neighbor as himself." And a perfect life is one that carries out, by spontaneous and uninterrupted choice, all the promptings of such a character in all the conduct and in all the relations which one sustains to God or men. Noth- ing short of this is moral perfection. Nothing short of this is obedience to God and conformity to his will. But coming short of this is positive disobedience and transgression of the divine law. A character that prompts anything short of this is depraved. It prompts acts of disobedience and disregard of God. Any man with this character is therefore living in hostility to the will and government of God ; and if the law of God requires only that which is right, and if moral goodness consists only in the carrying out of the spirit of this law, and if moral goodness of character consists alone in its conformity to this law Ps. viii. 4.] The Worth of Man. 59 ill all its desires and motives and promptings, then of course moral goodness caiinot be affirmed of any life that falls short of absolute and entire consecration to God's will ; nor of any char- acter that embodies any element of selfishness and transgression. This was evidently the ground that our Saviour took with the man who " came running and kneeling to Him, and asked him, Good Master, what shall I do that I may inherit eternal life ? " "And Jesus said unto him, Why callest thou me good ? there is none good but one — God." This young man was, and had been from his youth, a pattern of amiability and fair dealing with all his fellow-men. He solemnly declared that he had from his earliest years kept faithfully each of the com- mandments that the Saviour repeated to him, " Do not commit adultery ; do not kill ; do not steal ; do not bear false witness ; defraud not; honor thy father and mother." Our Lord did not question that the young man was sincere in this declara- tion, nor did He deny its truth. On the contrary, it is evident from the verse that follows it that He admitted that the young man was sincere in his declaration, and that the declaration was true, judged by the common standard of moral action ; for it is immediately added, " Then Jesus, beholding him, loved him." There was much to love in such a life and character. No one who was right-minded could help loving it. But, at the same time, our Saviour did not take back what he had just said, " There is none good but one — God ; " but, on the contrary, he went on to say, in all tenderness and fidelity, " One thing thou lackest." There was one fatal hinderance to his having the favor and approval of God on his character and life, notwithstanding there was that in him which God Himself loved. One thing thou lackest in order to the possession or enjoyment of eternal life. One thing, therefore, stood between him and the favor of God. What that thing was is plainly enough indicated in the direction that follows, " Go thy way; sell whatsoever thou hast and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven ; and come, take up the cross, and follow me." This tore off the covering from the young man's heart ; for it is added : " And he was sad at that saying, and went away grieved; for he had great possessions." All his fancied goodness was earthly, and not heavenly ; and all was subservient to a supreme regard for his worldly interests. 60 The Worth of Man. [Serm. vii. These held sway in his ^soul, and were the object of his strongest love and intensest devotion. He did not love God " with all his heart, and soul, and mind ; " but he loved these interests, and lived for them, and therefore lived in constant rejection of God, in the constant setting at naught of his authority, in the constant transgression of his law, and in the constant indulgence of sin. Was not his moral character de- formed and unlovely then ? Was it not depraved ? Was not his life such that God must be displeased with it ? But if this was the character and life of one so eminent in what is called goodness, and if in him they were so offensive to God that they stood between the young man and eternal life, then it cannot certainly be the character and life of men gener- ally, the vast majority of whom are so immeasurably inferior to this young man in what passes for moral goodness ; it cannot be the moral character and hfe of men, I say, that moves God to think so highly of them, and to count them so valuable. 3. But, thirdly, we learn from the Bible that it is for what men are in themselves, in their mental and spiritual being, that He estimates their value at so high a price. That it is for that which they are in themselves, as distin- guished from their moral character and deeds, is evident, first', because all his manifestations of regard for them have been made towards them while they were possessing a character that was offensive to Him while thus living in sin against Him. " For God commendeth his love towards us in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us." And, secondly, because it was for men as they were, in spite of the unloveliness and depravity of their moral characters and lives, and to save them from this unloveliness and depravity, that God gave the life of his only begotten Son as the price of their redemption ; for " we were redeemed, not by silver and gold, but by the precious blood of Christ." This distinction between what men are in their own natures, and what they are in moral character, is too often lost sight of by us, and we are led into much confusion by losing sight of it. But the sacred writers never overlooked it. They always looked at man — when they spoke of him as the object of God's love and high estimation — as something distinct from his charactf^r ; and they looked on his character as something good Ps- vui. 4.] The Worth of Man. 61 or bad pertaining to man in his essential being, and determin- ing his destiny. Hence they always look on man himself as the creation of God. His essential being is that which God pronounced good at the beginning, and which He has ever counted the most valuable thing on earth. But man's moral character they look upon as something not of God's creating, but of man's own making. They therefore look on the former, or man himself, — his essential being, — as that which was worthy of God's love, and which He did so love that He gave his only begotten Son to save it from the ruin into which sin had plunged it. The latter, man's moral character, they look upon as that on account of which God is angry with him every day that it ]:emains unchanged ; which holds him in ruin ; and which, unless it is changed, will make his ruin eternal. In the former they see that which the Son of God took upon Himself, and in which He now appears as our Intercessor in heaven. In the latter they see that from which He sought, by taking their nature on Himself, to deliver them, and, by securing for them another character, to make them fit, themselves also, to appear and forever dwell in heaven. When the Psalmist asked the questions before us, he was thinking of man as he is in himself, in his essential being, in some measure at least, for he immediately adds, " For thou hast made him a little lower than the angels, and hast crowned him with glory and honor. Thou madest him to have domin- ion over the works of thy hands." He recognized the true dignity of man as a creation of God. He declared his great elevation and his importance by reason of the inherent and essential elements of being with which God had endowed him. The moral degradation into which he had fallen in his aliena- tion from God, his devotion to sin, the guilt and ruin he had brought on himself by his transgression of the law of God and departure from Him, — all this the Psalmist often confessed, as all who are guided by the Scriptures, or by careful observation of men in the light of the Scriptures, must confess ; but he did not forget, and we have no right to forget, that man himself, in the faculties of his soul, the essential elements of his being, remains unchanged. Could he be changed in these he would not be man, but would become something else. It is with man in this respect as it is with the fallen angels. In them- 62 The Worth of Man. [Seem, vil selves, in their essential being, they are the same that they were in heaven. They are endowed with the same faculties that made them capable of a heavenly service. If you deprive them of these faculties they cease to be the beings they were, and become something else. But their moral character was changed by their sin. This was no longer what it had been, but it became something else' — something very different. In the essential elements of their being they remain the same. Angelic nature in them is still good, as the creation of God ; and its capabilities in them are the same that they are in the angels that have kept their first estate. But the moral char- acter that was righteous in the sight of God, and that made them fit for heavenly service and companionship — this exists in them no longer. In their moral character there is not one trace of resemblance with that which they once had, nor with that which holy angels now possess. In moral character they are an offense to God, and by it made worthy of the severest visitation of his wrath. It is the same with man. In the essential elements of his being, he is just what he was when he was first formed in Adam, and had his home in the garden of Eden. But the moral character which man had in Adam, and which made him fit for that garden and for communion with a holy God, is gone, and in its place is a character that is displeasing to God, and deserving of his wrath in punishment. It is man himself, therefore, irrespective of any present character, man in his inherent capabilities, man having a be- ing such that, with a holy character, he is a fit companion of the angels in heaven, man with such a nature that the Son of God chose to take it upon Himself, not only to accomplish the great work of human redemption, but to bear it and to appear in it through the ages in heaven ; man with such a being as, with a holy character, fits him to be a child of God and a joint heir with Jesus Christ in the inheritance of God ; it is man thus considered whom God esteems so highty, and counts so valuable. It is man thus considered of whom God is ever mindful, and whom He visits in his condescension. We see in the light of this subject, — 1. What is meant by human depravity. Not human fac- ulties, but human character is wrong. The elements of man's Ps. viii. 4.] The Worth of Man. 63 being are still what God made them. Human character is sinful. Its depravity is such that no word but total adequately expresses the true state of the case. This distinction must always be kept in mind if we would form just judgments of men. If we count the essential ele- ments of their souls, — their souls considered as a creature of God, — depraved and worthless, we shall despair of them ut- terly, and never have any faith in them. But what is more, if. we confound their essential being with the moral character superinduced on that being, we shall have little or no stimulus to seek their salvation. The distinction becomes vital at this point. We must recognize the inherent worth of the^ soul underneath aU its depravity, and in spite of it, or we shall never become workers together with God in seeking to save it. We do not seek the salvation of beasts, because we do not see this inherent value in them. The true worker with God in the gospel, commends his love for the lost in seeking them in their sin. 2. We, see secondly, what is meant by the regeneration or renewal of the soul ; and the absolute necessity of its renewal in order that it should have the favor of God and dwell in heaven. The regeneration or renewal of the soul is the renovation of its moral character. Regeneration pertains solely to the moral character, and not at all directly to the substance of the soul. Its spirit or temper is changed, not its faculties. Its capacity to love, e. g., remains unchanged by regeneration, but the object of its love becomes different, and so the char- acter or moral quality of its love itself is different. Its ca- pacity for obedience to the behests of a higher power remains unchanged ; but the authority to which obedience is given becomes different ; and the character of the obedience ren- dered is therefore different. The love of the soul must go out and rest in God or it can never please Him. The obedience of the soul must recognize and honor the authority of God or it will forever remain in rebellion against Him, and call forth his displeasure and deserve punishment. 3. We see in the light of this subject how full of hope the gospel is for sinners. Its grand announcement is that God so loved the world, etc. He loved a world in its ruin and guilt. What He loved He was not willing to let perish. It 64 The Worth of Man. [Sekm. vii- was that which was in ruin and under guilt that He wished to save. Hence his name, Jesus., because He saves his people from their sins. His people, their very selves, not from the essential elements of their being, but from the sins that had brought this being into ruin. It is therefore only that which is ruining you that God asks you to give up by repentance. If He can see you separated from this, his love for you will draw you into his presence, and fill you with his peace and cover you with his glory. It is that you may be saved from this, that you ai-e commanded to come to Jesus Christ. You cannot deliver yourself. He alone can deliver you. " To as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God, even to them that beheved on his name." SERMON VIII. Sm NECESSARY IN A MORAL SYSTEM. Mait. xviii. 7. — It must needs he that offenses come ; but woe to that man by whom the offense cometh. THERE is no darker problem, nor one that is a severer trial to faith, than the existence of moral evil in the government of a holy and almighty God. How it came ; for what reason it was permitted ; why it is suffered to continue ; are questions to which no thoughtful mind is a stranger, and at which the faith of but few intelligent believers has not, at times, been staggered. In the words of the text, our Lord recognizes the prevalence of moral evil in the world, and enunciates a great and impor- tant fact pertaining to it ; a fact which, though it does not an- swer all of the mind's merely speculative inquiries, yet throws light upon some of them and furnishes an important aid to its faith. He declares, that even in the government of a holy and almighty God, there is a stem necessity that there should be sin, as his words are recorded by Luke : " It is impossible but that offenses should come " ; as his words are recorded by Mat- thew : "It must needs be that they come." That is, as we understand his words, carrjdng them back to the great principle that underlies them and gives them their greatest significance, sin is necessarily involved in a moral system ; it was impossible, in the nature of things, that it should not be committed. Thus much at least is revealed by the word of our Saviour ; and though it does not enable us, as we have said, to know all the reasons why evil is permitted, yet it is much that we hear the voice of divine authority assert that it was impossible but that it should come ; and it is a relief to faith to be assured by One in whom it trusts that there was a necessity that it should come. 66 Sin Necessary in a Moral System. [Si^km. vril. Nor are we altogether in the dark regarding the reasons of this impossibility. We cannot sound them to their lowest depths, but there is hght thrown upon them from two sources suggested by the text, and to these I first invite your attention. 1. In the first place, we see in the character of moral agency itself why moral evil must be possible in a moral government, and in this possibility perhaps a necessity for it, or at least an impossibility that it should not be. It is impossible that a moral agent should not be able to sin. For a moral agent, be it re- membered, is one who has, and he is a moral agent only as he has, the ability to do either right or wrong, in any given case. He is one who acts voluntarily in all his accountable conduct ; always choosing freely, either to do or not to do, the act that lies before his mind as one that is possible to him. The act, be it right or wrong, of which his mind conceives as thus possible, he freely chooses, or as freely refuses to commit. If he com- mits it, it is only because he chooses to commit it ; if he does not commit it, it is only because he chooses not to commit it. Without this power and freedom of choice there could be no moral agency, no accountability. And without beings endowed with this power and freedom there could be no moral govern- ment. God would then bp only a physical ruler ; and creatures would be only machines, or, like animals, merely irrespoiasible agents, without moral character or dignity or worthiness. Every right act, therefore, of a moral agent, involves an oppo- site wrong act as possible, and that might have been done in its stead ; and the power to do right involves necessarily the power to do the opposite wrong. Such is moral agency. It is constituted by the possession of the ability to do wrong, not less than the ability to do right ; and no power can be brought to bear upon the former to destroy it, and make sin impossible, that would not destroy also the latter, and make holiness impossible ; nor can we conceive of the possibility of an agent being created with the latter with- out also the former. When, therefore, the creation of moral agents was determined upon, it was with this possibility in view, and involved. They must be created with this possibility, or not created at all ; and if a moral system was to be inaugurated in the universe, it must be with the fearful liabihty wrought into its existence, Matt, xviii. r.] Sin Necessary in a Moral System. 67 that its subjects miglit, if they should so choose, use till the powers with which they should be endowed for righteous and holy uses and most glorious ends, for sinful and unholy uses and most ignominious ends. Such a system would necessarily be one of motives. Motives would be the power by which alone such beings could be gov- erned. The moment they were controlled by other inJ9luences than those coming from motives, and leaving the mind free to yield to them or to resist them, that moment the government of them would become something higher or lower than moral government ; and they would become, to that extent, not agents actmg, but objects acted upon. The great and control- ling power of moral government must be in its motives. The strength of such a gqvernment would, therefore, depend upon the amount of motive power that it could bring to bear upon the minds of its subjects to influence them to do right. Its weakness, if it had any, would be in the fact that motives to wrong-doing would avaU, in some instances, to induce the com- mitting of sin. The only way of removing this weakness would be, not the making of moral agents unable to yield to them or feel their power, for this would destroy their character, but multiplying the number and increasing the power of motives to right action. At this point we come in sight, I think, of what may consti- tute the necessity of which our Saviour speaks ; or the impos- sibility mentioned in his words as recorded by Matthew. The. necessity may be in this : that the number and power of mo- tives to holiness must be increased by an exhibition of the con- sequences of sin. But for this exhibition, rightly and timely made, the whole moral universe might be seduced into rebel- lion, and work thus its entire ruin. It certainly could not but strengthen the power of all motives to holiness, and weaken that of all motives to sin, to have the fearful consequences of sin fully exhibited to the view. Let its legitimate fruit be clearly seen and seen as certain, and it is shorn of much of its power to allure. Besides, there is much in the consequences of sin clearly seen, to open the eyes of those who look upon them to its real character. They will judge of the tree by the fruit that it bears, and their judgment will be more accurate and trust- 68 Sin Necessary in a Moral System. [Sekm. viir. worthy than it could be without such a sight. When the holy- angels saw those who had transgressed and fallen, hurled from heaven and consigned in hopelessness and misery to the great prison house of the universe in the world of woe, by their sin, and this as its legitimate consequence and deserved punish- ment, its true character could not but be far better understood than it had been before. Its heinousness and malignity would be more clearly apprehended. So also when the unfallen in- habitants of heaven as well as those who have been saved, look down upon the unfolding of sin into its consequences in this world, or from this world in hell, the same result can but fol- low. And when they saw the crowning act of sin in this world, that which revealed its whole character, showing, in the murder of the Son of God, that its only stopping place, if it could have full sway, would be in the dethronement of God and the destruction of everything that is holy and lovely in the universe, then, as never before, they must have understood its nature and been filled with holy detestation of it. Then all its motives must have become weakened, and its power to draw them from their allegiance to God forever broken. It may also have been impossible for moral beings to have obtained the fullest knowledge of the character of God, and so to have felt the fullest power of motives for allegiance to Him, unless they had been permitted to see Him in his relations to sinners, and in his dealings with them. His attributes would be more clearly seen and better understood by such a sight than they could be without it. His justice as a fact, and as to its nature, would be more vividly imprinted upon their minds, and more fully understood by them after they had seen it thus displayed, — and certainly his mercy and love would be seen in' a new light, when they came to look upon Him in the gift of his only begotten Son, delivered up for sinners that they might be saved, and then looked upon a just God, just stiU, but showing mercy, and forgiving them and adopting them as his children and making them heirs of eternal glory, through the merits, intercession, and atonement of the Redeemer. Every exhibition of the love and compassion and mercy of God that was made consistently with his justice, and without infringing upon his holiness, would be a clearer revelation of Himself, and thus an augmenting of motives to love and trust Him. Matt, xviii. 7.] Sin Necessary in a Moral System. 69 But in order to this exhibition, there must needs be sinners toward whom it could be made. Pardoning mercy and com- passion and grace cannot be shown except to the guilty. If, therefore, the full force of motives derived from the character of God were to have sway over holy minds, and lend their in- fluence toward strengthening and making secure the interesjbs of the moral universe, it was impossible but that offenses should come. Sin was, in this respect and to this extent, necessary. Malignant as it is in its character, fearful as it is in its fruits, and without excuse as is its commission on the part of any moral agent, yet in dealing with it, in checking its sway, and undoing its consequences, through the atonement of Christ, God has so revealed the glories of his character, and so multi- plied and strengthened the motives to holiness, that not only, his government over moral beings has been made more secure, but those very beings, all that are holy, are lifted into the sphere of permanent and unendangered allegiance to their God. Motives for them to commit sin have been so weakened and destroyed that they have ceased to be felt, while motives to holiness have been so multiplied and increased in strength, that they never can lose. their sway. Thus "where sin abounded grace did much more abound." This was the view of the Apostle Paul. And to those who would pervert the truth thus developed, and say that in so teaching he said, " Let us do evil that good may come," his only but all-sufficient reply was, " their damnation is just." They cannot, without deep and damning guilt, make this use of the doctrine. 2. The second source of light to which I invited your at- tention, respecting the necessity that there should be sin in the world, is found in the fact itself, that sin exists in the world. If it had not been necessary, the character of God is a guaranty that it would never have been permitted. If it had been possible, consistently with the perfection of a moral system, and the best interest of the universe, for Him to have prevented it, his character makes it certain that He would laave prevented it. He has no pleasure in sin. It is the abom- inable thing that He hates. It is always, arid in all circum- 3tances, and everywhere, offensive to Him. " He is of purer eyes than to behold evil, and cannot look on iniquity." For ■'the righteous Lord loveth righteousness; his countenance 70 Sin Necessary in a Moral System. [Sekm. viil. doth behold the upright." " As I live, saith the Lord God. I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth, but that ho turn and live." He not only, i. e., has no pleasure in sin, but He has none in its legitimate and necessary result, the death of the sinner. Sin itself, and its consequences, are all odious to Him. But for a must needs be, therefore, sin could never have found a place in any of his creatures. This introduces us to the second clause of our text : " Woe unto him through whom they come." From this clause we learn two great lessons, each of them serving to check and refute the objection which we have already noticed to the doc- trine of the first clause. The spirit of the passage, as an answer to this objection is. Let no one take refuge in the doctrine of the impossibility but that sin should be, and be encouraged himself to become a sinner ; for " Woe unto him through whom the offense cometh." For, — 1. There is nothing in this or in any circumstances of a wrong-doer that can lessen his responsibihty or take away the guilt of his wrong-doing. If he commits sin it is because he chooses to do it. He desires to sin more than he does to do right, and he follows the prompting of this desire against the dictates of his conscience, and often against both his conscience and his judgment. The very fact that the sinner's conscience condemns him for wrong-doing puts it beyond question that he was without excuse for doing it, and makes it certain that he was fully responsible in the doing of it, and that he is guilty. No man's conscience condemns him for a thing for which he does not know himself to have been responsible ; nor for that for which he does not know himself to have been guilty. His conscience would cease at once to condemn if he could know that another was the responsible author of his sin, or even if he could look upon himself as other than the free and voluntary agent of its commission. If he could come to count God the author, or in any sense the doer of his evil deeds, conscience would become sUent. He would not be, nor would he apprehend himself to be guilty. 2. The other great lesson which we learn from the second clause of our. text is, that the fruit of wrong-doing is evil and only evil to him who commits it. He cannot but eat that fruit. No consequences for good which God will bring out Matt, xviii. 7.] Sin Necessary in a Moral System. 71 of his sin, will lessen in the least his punishment. He meant it for evil, and as he meant it so shall it be to him. This is the teaching of all the Scriptures : " Whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap." " Though hand join in hand, the wicked shall not be unpunished." " Behold ye have sinned against the Lord : and be sure your sin will find you out." " Though a sinner do evil a hundred times, and his days be prolonged, yet surely I know that it shall be well with them that fear God, which fear before Him : but it shall not be well with the wicked." It is true that because sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily, therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil. But delay to punish is not re- mission of penalty. The long suffering and patience of God, with sinners, is not forgetfulness of their sins, or a ceasing to hold them in abhorrence. The laws of his government are often left, in mercy, to work slowly ; but they are never re- pealed, never suspended. SERMON IX. THE IMPUTATION OP ADAM'S SIN.i Romans t. 18, part. — By the offense of one, judgment came upon all men to condem- nation, rr^HE Association of last year saw fit — in my absence, and -■- without my consent — to assign to me " The Doctrine of the Imputation of Adam's Sin," as the subject of a sermon to be preached on this occasion. Imputation to whom, the minutes do not state. I have taken it for granted, however, that the meaning was," to Adam's posterity. Inasmuch, also, as the subject was referred to me for a ser- mon, it is to be presumed that the Association desired a Scrip- tural, rather than a metaphysical or historical discussion of it. The doctrine which I am thus to treat I find plainly taught in the words which I have read to you as my text : " By the offense of one, judgment came upon all men to condemnation." This, if I understand the subject, is the exact, as it is the Scriptural statement of the doctrine in question. Sentence of condemnation came upon all men by the offense of one. All men were, by the appointment of God, made subject to the penalty of this one man's one offense. In other words, when Adam sinned, he, by that sin, brought upon all his posterity the doom with which he himself was threatened, and which he himself suffered as a penal consequence of his transgression. This is the doctrine of the imputation of Adam's sin to his posterity. To judicially subject a child to the punishment, or penal consequences, of his father's sin, is to impute the father's sin to his child. The sin is so set to the child's account that he is made liable to the penalty, and is therefore judicially counted and treated a sinner because of his father's sin. Thus, also, 1 Prepared and preached for the Boston North Baptist Association, by ap])oiiit- ment, as the second in a series of doctrinal sermons, September, 1858. EoM. V. 18.] The Imputation of AdanCs Sin. 73 wlien the posterity of Adam are, by the appointment of God, subjected to the penal consequences of the sin by which he fell away from holiness. This sin is so set to their account that they are judicially counted and treated as sinners because of it. Before we proceed to the direct Scriptural argument by which we shall attempt to show that this doctrine is true, let me call your attention to the fact that the principle — that is, the subjecting of certain individuals to the consequences, even the penal consequences of another's acts — has ever pervaded both the natural and providential government of God over this world. No law of nature — that is, no appointment of God in nature — is more clearly established than that by which the physical condition, and oftentimes the moral condition, of a child is determined by some act of his parent in which he had no direct participation. Whole families are not unfrequently made to eat the bitter fruit of a parent's misdeeds which were committed perhaps long before one of the family was born. Sometimes by one deed of guilty license, sometimes by a course of conduct that has been in violation of the laws of his phys- ical system, a parent has brought upon himseK and entailed upon his posterity a diseased constitution, that is to them an inalienable inheritance of misery. The glow of health never mantles in beauty over the face of his children, nor can they ever know the thrill of ecstasy with which pure health inspires and elevates and nerves to energy and action the soul that dwells with it in the same body. The father has sinned, and the children inherit the curse. The poison which was taken into the root has spread itself through all the branches of the tree. The same is true also respecting the moral health of families. Guilty unfaithfulness on the part of parents in the training and education of their children, brings forth its bitter fruit in moral disease and death in the children's history. If we turn to the Scriptures we find that they again and again declare that this principle is that upon which God has acted in his providential dealings with men. He Himself often placed his treatment of individuals and families and nations on this very ground. He inflicted punishments or bestowed bless- ings on them because of the action of others. The curse of Ham was, by special providential appointment, made to rest 74 The Imputation of AdarrCs Sin. [Serm. ix. upon his children, and they became servants of servants to their brethren. God assured Abraham that even Sodom should ba spared its fearful visitation for the sake of ten righteous per- sons if they could be found in it. All Israel fell under the dis- pleasure of God, and his anger vras kindled against them at Ai, because of Achan's sin. He " took of the accursed thing," and all the people were in consequence counted and treated as transgressors. Eli sinned against God by parental unfaithful- ness. His sons in consequence made themselves vile, and the punishment of Eli's sin fell upon all his posterity. " I will judge his house forever," said God, " for the iniquity which he knoweth." " There shall not be an old man in thine house forever ; and all the increase of thine house shall die in the flower of their age." David sinned in numbering the people of Israel and Judah. By that sin he brought the pestilence upon seventy thousand men and laid them low in death. Look also at the scene which filled the prophet's eye when he " saw beforehand the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow." More than seven hundred years of the future was opened to his vision, and he beheld at that distance. One despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and ac- quainted with grief. He had done no violence, neither was any deceit in his mouth. Yet it pleased the Lord to bruise Him : He put Him to grief. He was taken from prison and from ju^dgment, and brought as a lamb to the slaughter. He was stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted. Why ? Because the Lord laid on Him the iniquity of us all. Therefore " He was wounded for our transgressions. He was bruised for our iniqui- ties ; the chastisement of our peace was upon Him ; and with his stripes we are healed." The principle here announced — the subjecting of some to the consequences, even the penal consequences of another's con- duct — is therefore not unknown, but, on the contrary, it per- vades, and fever has pervaded, all the natural and providential government of God over this world. From this preliminary and general view let us come directly to the doctrine of our text, " The imputation of Adam's sin to his posterity." Let the explanation of the doctrine which we have given be borne in mind continually as we proceed : namely, that we mean by the imputation of Adam's sin to his posterity, Rom. V. 18.] The Imputation of Adam's Sin. lb their subjection, by the righteous appointment of God, to the penalty of his sin. He stood as the constituted representative of all his descendants. He acted for them ; and the whole race had its probation in him. If he should pass the probation and come forth righteous, he would secure a righteous inheritance for all his children. If he should fail in the probation and come forth a sinner, all the race should be counted as having sinned in him, and a judgment of condemnation should rest upon them. His sin should be counted their sin, and his pun- ishment should be visited upon them also. • Perhaps this principle may be made more clear by a simple illustration. An absolute monarch, suppose, has in his gift an office and its accompanying honors, which he determines to make hereditary. He calls a serf or a peasant into his pres- ence, and formally invests him with the office and its honors, and makes them hereditary in the peasant and the family that shall be bom of him. He imposes, however, one condition, upon faithful compliance with which all shall depend. If he keep the condition for a certain time then the honor is legally the inheritance of his family. If he fail in the condition, the inheritance is forever forfeited, both for himself and all his family to the latest generation. If now the peasant is faith- ful in his probation, he is faithful for those "whom he thus rep- resents. If he fails in his probation, he fails for them. The penalty of his sin is judicially inflicted on them. 1. That this doctrine is true is evident, first, from the fact that the Word of God explicitly declares it. It would be diffi- cult, if not impossible, to state the doctrine more plainly than it is stated by our text and several passages in its immediate connection. Look at a few of these passages : Ver. 12 : " By one man sin entered into the world and death by sin ; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned." Ver. 15 : " Through the offense of [the] one [the] many are dead." Ver. 16 : " The judgment was by one to condemnation,"' i. «., " By one offense was the sentence of condemnation." Ver. 17 : " By one man's offense death reigned by one." Ver. 19 : " By one man's disobedience many were made [constituted] sinners." Our text : " By the offense of one, judgment came upon aU men to condemnation " [sentence of condemnation]. It should be borne in mind that all these passages are used 76 The Imputation of -AdarrCs Sin. [Seem, ix by the Apostle as parallel to, but in contrast with othera in which he sets forth the doctrine of the imputed righteous- ness of Christ to believers. This is the doctrine which he had been stating and which he is now illustrating. In the last verse of the fourth chapter he had taken up the very thought which is expressed in the language of Isaiah, which we a few moments ago quoted, and declared that " Christ was delivered up to death for our offenses ; " and in the fifth chapter he goes on enlarging upon the tliought and repeating it in new forms and with new emphasis ; saying that Christ died for us ; that we are justified by his blood ; and that we are reconciled to God by the death of his Son. Then, by way of further illustration and enlargement, he lays hold of what he regarded, and what was held among the Jews to be an admitted and clearly taught truth respecting the head- ship and representative character of Adam in his probation, and respecting the participation of the race in the penalty of his sin. Laying hold of this truth, he makes it throw light upon the great truth he was enforcing; showing that as bj' one man's disobedience the many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one, many — even all who receive the gift of righteousness — shall be made righteous. In other words, Paul here in these passages illustrates and magnifies the doctrine of justification of believers by the obedience of Christ, by con- trasting it with the admitted and understood doctrine of the condemnation of the race by the disobedience of Adam. The common doctrine of that day, and for centuries afterward, among those who held to the teaching of the Scriptures, re- garding the effect of Adam's first, i. e., his representative sin, was this, — using the language which is common in Jewish writ- ings, — " Adam was a head to all the children of men ; when he sinned, all the world sinned, and his sin we bear; through Adam's eating of the fruit of the tree, all the inhabitants of the earth became subject to the penalty of death." ^ Paul, in the passages before us, takes up these common sentiments which were supposed to be clearly taught in the first chapters of Genesis, and by asserting them in his character of an in- spired Apostle, has fixed upon them the stamp of divine in- dorsement and authority. So closely does he view the paral- 1 Quoted by Gill on Eom. v. 12. See also Prin. Theo. Ess. 1st Series. EoM. T. 18.] The Imputation of Adam's Sin. 77 lei in the statement of the two doctrines, that if one l3 set aside both must be. If Adam's sin is not passed over to his posterity, then the righteousness of Christ is not reckoned to believers, who are Christ's seed as the race is the seed of Adam. But if Christ's righteousness does not answer the claims of the law on behevers, so that by that righteousness put to their account they may be treated as just or justified ; then if they are justified at all it must be by their own personal and inherent righteousness ; and the whole scheme of redemption is a nullity, and Christ died in vain so far as all the purposes of an atonement are concerned. But it is by the obedience of Christ that the believing sinner is counted righteous ; and therefore it is by the disobedience of Adam that his race are counted sinners. This is the very point of the comparison and the contrast ; and in this one particular it is that Adam is here said to be the figure or type of Him that was to come. Let these passages speak their own language, and there is no mistaking their meaning. It is not till men feel themselves called upon by some theory, or by an unauthorized sense of re- sponsibility to defend the character of God, or shield it from the plain statements of his own word, that passages so clear in themselves become perplexing and obscure. Ever since the days of Pelagius volumes upon volumes have been written in the exercise of this mistaken care for God's character, or for other reasons, on these passages, with the hope of softening down their rugged plainness. But there they stand as rugged and as plain as ever ; like a huge mountain of granite that rears its head to heaven in testimony of some fearful convulsion and upheaving of the earth. The winds, and rain and snows, and thunder and Hghtning have for centuries spent their fury upon it, in vain. It still stands, and still testifies. So these texts will continue to say and re- iterate the saying that, " By the offense of one, judgment came upon aU men to condemnation ; that through the offense of the one, the many are dead." No criticisms, nor critical emendations ; no apologetic explanations for the Apostle ; no rhetoric; no mistaken and unauthorized tenderness for the character of God ; nor sentimental tenderness for the charac- ter of man ; no processes of " explaining away," will lessen one iota the stern plainness by which they assert the great and 78 The Imputation of AdarrCs Sin. [Serm. ix. solemn truth that sentence of condemnation has passed upon all men because of the one great sin by which Adam, and the race in him, were plunged into ruin. Our view of the mean- ing of these passages is confirmed by what we advance as a second argument. 2. The truth of our doctrine is proved by the fact that the Scriptures uniformly represent all the descendants of Adam as being born into the penalty with which he himself was threat- ened, and which he suffered for his first or representative sin. The penalty with which Adam was threatened was death. " In the day that thou eatest thereof," said Jehovah to him, " thou shalt surely die." In the very day that Adam eat of the forbidden fruit, he died. Lust conceived in him and brought forth sin ; and his sin, when it was finished, brought forth death. That which fell upon him, on that dat/'as the pen- alty of his sin, was death. He existed on earth for seven hun- dred years after he sinned, but if we receive the Word of God as true, he existed a dead man, unless and until he was re- generated by the Spirit of God. Let it be remembered that the dissolution of the body was not once mentioned or recog- nized in all this transaction as being death. Death, the penalty of his sin, was something wholly independent of bodily exist- ence. What then is death, we are compelled to inquire, when it is, according to the Word of God, the portion of a man yet in the full enjoyment of bodily existence ? The Scriptures fur- nish an unequivocal answer. " He that heareth my word, and believeth on Him that sent me," says our Saviour, " hath ever- lasting life, and shall not come into condemnation ; but is passed from death unto life." Faith is the instrumentality by which a sinner passes from death unto life. But faith is that by which the grace of God removes a sinner from under con- demnation, displeasure, and wrath, and brings him into the favor of God and the enjoyment of pardon. For " He that be- ieveth on the Son of God is not condemned, but he that be- lieveth not is condemned already, and he shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him." To be condemned of God, then, as a sinner, and to be under his displeasure, is to be dead. Again, the Scriptures declare, " We know that we have passed from death unto life, because we love the brethren. He that EoM. V. 18.] The Imputation of Adam's iSin. 79 lovetli not Ms brother abidetli in death." But in another pas- sage we are told that " Every one that loveth is born of God." To be born of God, then, is " to pass from deatli unto life." An unregenerate man is a dead man. He has no love to God. This is death. This was Adam's condition the moment he sinned. He was under condemnation, he was under displeasure. The favor of God was lost. He had no love to God remaining. His heart was wicked. He had chosen himself before God, and God abandoned him to himself. And thus he existed a dead man, unless — again we say — and until he was regenerated by the Spirit of God, and brought out from condemnation into justification and pardon and favor, by faith in Him who was promised as a Deliverer. That death, then, which rests iipon a man though he exists and moves, and acts and sins, and suffers and enjoys, is com- posed, according to the Scriptures, of these two elements : en- tire estrangement and alienation of heart from God on the one hand, and on the other abandonment of God, the loss of his favor. God rejects him, condemns him, and is displeased with him. This is death ; and this was Adam's condition the day he sinned. This was his penalty for that one sin. Now what we say is, that the Scriptures uniformly represent all the descendants of Adam as being horn into this penalty. The penalty is upon them before they have committed actual personal sin. To be of Adam born is to be under the displeas- ure and abandonment of God. " That which is born of the flesh is flesh," says our Lord. And, adds the Apostle, " they that are in the flesh cannot please God." To be " of Adam born " is to be in the flesh. To be of Adam bom, therefore, is to be under displeasure of God. Again, Paul, writing to the Christian Ephesians, and placing himself on the same level with them, says, " We were hy na- ture the children of wrath, even as others." By natural descent from Adam, then, we are abandoned of God and condemned. It would be impossible to state in clearer or stronger language the fact that men are born into penalty. By their very nature they are inheritors of wrath, and are therefore dead as Adam was the daj"^ that he sinned. Sin took his life away and left him with nothing but a carnal 80 The Imputation of Adam's Sin. [Sekm. ix. existence. His nature was from that moment carnal and not spiritual. This nature he sent down to all his offspring ; and with the nature the curse that was resting upon it. To be bom in this nature is to be a sinner ; because none but sinners can be children of wrath. But whence comes this wrath ? "Why this condemnation ? The nature was never on probation, so far as the Scriptures instruct us, but in JV