^^^KRV OF PfflWCf^ MS Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2015 https://archive.org/details/sermonspreachedbOOIidd_0 SERMONS PREACHED BEFORE Cfie Qnit)er0itp of SDrforD (FIRST SERIES) 1859—1868 ISg ti^e game ^ut{)ot. Crown 8vo, ^s. SERMONS PREACHED BEFORE THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD. SECOND SERIES. 1868—1879. C 0 N 7'E NTS. Prejudice and Experience — Humility and Truth — Import of Faith in a Creator — Worth of Faith in a Life to Come — Influences of the Holy Spirit — Growth in the Apprehension of Truth — The Life of Faith and the Athanasian Creed — Christ's Service and Public Opinion — Christ in the Storm — SacerdotaHsm — The Prophecy of the Magnificat — The Fall of Jericho — The Courage of Faith — The Curse on Meroz — The Gospel and the Poor — Christ and Human Law. [B— 499I S E R M O N S PREACHED BEFORE BY H. p/lIDDON, d.d. CANON' RESIDENTIARY OF ST. PAUL's, AXD IRELAND PROFESSOR FIRST SERIES 1859—1868 / SIXTH EDITION. RI VINGTONS Honbon, ©ifortJ, anti Cam!iritige JAMES PARKER & CO. ©xforti 1876 Das eigentliche, einzige unci tiefste Thenia der Welt- tmd Menschengeschichte, deiii alle iibrigen tintcrgeordnet sind, bleiht der Conjlict des Unglaubens tmd Glaicbens. — Goethe. Dies venii, dies Tua In qua rejiorent omnia : LcBtcmur et nos in viam Tiid redncti dexierd.—YiYU.^, S/EC. X^"- TO The Rev. WILLIAM BRIGHT, M.A. SENiOR FELLOW AND TUTOR OF UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, OXFORD, IN AFFECTIONATE ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF THE MANY BLESSINGS WHICH ARE INSEPARABLY CONNECTED WITH ITIS FRIENDSHIP AND EXA:\IPLE. PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITIOy. ^HE Sermons contained in tins volume liave little in common ^tli each other beyond a certain apologetic character, such as is suggested by the title At one time the Tvi^iter had intended to employ the opportunities afforded to him during the course of the last t^vo years, in an attempt to show that some prominent ideas, which, in their apphcation to secular and material interests, form the strength and staple of the system or com- plexion of thought vaguely described as " Liberal- ism," are originally traceable, directly or indirectly, to a Christian source, and are realized by none so completely as by the faithful children of the Church. This intention is here alluded to, in the hope that some one else may be led to consider the subject, and, if expedient, to discuss it in the University pulpit or elsewhere. The Sermons which stand as second and thii^d in this pubhca- a " Some Words for God/' prefixed to the First Edition. viii lion are a partial, but only a partial attempt to follow it out. The plan of attempting any thing like a course of Sermons was abandoned in de- ference to what seemed to be a higher duty in a Christian Preacher, that, namely, of dealing as well as he can with such misapprehensions re- specting truths of faith or morals as he knows to be actually cu.rrent among those whom he has to address. The reader will bear in mind that this is a volume of Sermons. It makes no pretension to be a volume of Essays. An Essay belongs to general literature : a Sermon is the language of the Church. A Sermon is confined within narrow limits ; and its necessarily rhetorical character renders an economical use of its scanty oppor- tunities impossible. Each Sermon must suggest many topics which it cannot afford to discuss. And so far are any Sermons in this volume from professing to deal exhaustively with the subjects of which they treat, that they are purposely restricted to those particular points which hap- pened at the time of their deUvery to excite interest or to cause difficulties among persons with whom the Preacher was more or less ac- quainted. Some great omissions will at once occur to every reader. For instance, the real office and capacity of the Moral Sense — as on the Preface to the First Edition. one hand predisposing ns to faith in Our Lord, from its perception of the Beauty of His Charac- ter, and as being, on the other, itself educated and controlled by the truths which He authorita- tively discloses to it — is not entered upon in those Sermons which insist upon the claims of dogmatic truth. Again, the connexion between the Atonement and the Eucharist is not men- tioned in the Sermon for Good Friday : although the text of that Sermon might naturally have suggested it, and so precious a truth was by no means forgotten. Among sources to which the writer owes ideas or illustrations, for which his obligations are not already acknowledged, he desires to mention the Bishop of Oxford, two or three volumes of Felix's Conferences^ and Schleiermacher's Precligten. Of the Sermons themselves two have already ap- peared in a separate form ; and the few alterations which have been made in them before repubhca- tion are confined to points of taste or expression. One indeed of these was not, strictly speaking, ''preached before the University''." Moreover, it repeats, to a certain extent, considerations which are urged more fully in two others. But, as it was addressed to an audience consisting for the most part of University men, it may be allowed to ^ Sermon VII. X Preface to the First Edition. appear in this volume. Of the opportunities for preaching those Sermons which did not fall to the writer's turn as Select Preacher, two are due to the kindness of the present Vice- Chancellor of Oxford, and three to that of the Dean of Christ Church. It only remains for the writer to express his fervent hope that by God's grace this volume may be of service to those who have desired its publi- cation, and that, whatever its crudities or minor errors, it may be found to contain nothing incon- sistent with simple submission to the mind of Holy Scripture as set forth in the teaching of the Church Cueist Church, Michaelmas. i86f. PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION, fJlHIS volume was originally published under tlie title Some Words for God/^ In the present Edition that title is dropped^ as being open to misconstruction_, and in deference to the opinion of critics for whose advice and indulgence the writer has every reason to be gratefiiJ. Christ Chtjech, Easter, 1866. PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION. rpHB present Edition contains three additional Sermons which have been preached within the last two years, and published separately. The subjects appear to suggest that one should be inserted as third in the series, and the two others at the end. Cheist Chttech, Advent, i8t>Ji. CONTENTS. SERMON 1. GOD AND THE SOUL. I'SALM Ixiii, I. p 0 God, TTion art my God lPaari)fli at Sbt. ^rg's en rijc liunits^Srst SunUag aftnr aTrinitj, ©tt 25. SERMON n. THE LAW OF PROGKESS. Phil. iii. 13, 14, Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended : but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus ^warijtf at St. iHarg's on ^luinqtiagcsima S'uuir.g, JJ.i. 7, 1864. SERMON III. THE HONOUR OF HUMANITY. I St. Petee ii. 17. Honour ail men . 33«att«U at St. ifiarji's on tf)£ JFirgt Suniag in lUnt, 1868. XIV Contents. ^ SEEMON lY. THE FREEDOM OF THE SPIRIT. 2 CoE. iii. 17. PAGE Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty .... 79 ?3wac?)£lJ at St. fHsrs's on ^SSijitsun Dag, i^lag 15, 1864. SERMON V. IMMORTALITY. Psalm Ixxiii. 26. My flesh and, my heart faileth: hut God is the strength of my heart, and my portion for ever ... .... 107 ^preacljcli at St. iHarg's on tije S£Conti Suuljag aftfr (EDipIjang, San. 15, 1865. SERMON YI. HUMILITY AND ACTION. Peov. iii. 6. In all thy ways acknowledge Sim, and He shall direct thy paths . 139 ^rcad)cl3 at St. fHarg's on iSumquas^stma Suntiag, Sth. 26, 1865. SERMON YII. THE CONFLICT OF FAITH AVITH UNDUE EXALTATION OF INTELLECT. 2 COE. X. 5. Casting down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ . . . . . .165 ^rcactcU at St. fHarg's tin tijz ©xforU fLentcn Sctus) on JlTibag Grfacnins, i^arcij 17, 1865- Contents. XV SERMOX Yin. LESSONS OF THE UOLY MANGER. St. Luke ii. 12. PAGE And this shall he a sign unto you ; Ye shall find the Bahe wrapped in swaddling-clothes, a7id lying in a manger . . . . 1S9 ^rcactfi at Christ Cburrlj on Ctiristmas Dag. 1863. SERMOX IX. THE DIVINE VICTIM Gax. ii. ao. 2'he Son of Gcri, Wlio loved me, and gave Simselffor me . . 220 i^rtadjrO at Cljrist Cfjurrf) on ©ooi JJriUag, Sfpril 22, 1859. SERMOX X. THE EISEN LIFE. Col. iii. I. If ye then he risen icith Christ, seek those things that are above . 250 i3rcaii)c5 at St. fEarg's on tfje Saonli Sunliag after CFastcr, Spril 30, 1865. SERMOX XI. OUR LORD'S ASCENSION THE CHURCH'S GAIN. St. Joh>' xvi. 7. It is expedient for you that I go away 283 iZifacteU at Cbrist Cturcfj on ascension Dag, iflag 17, 1S60. xvi Contents, SEEMON XII. FAITH IN A HOLY GHOST. Acts xix. i, 2. PAGE Paul having passed through the upper coasts came to JEphesiis : and finding certain disciples, he said unto them. Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed ? And they said unto him, We have not so much as heard tvhether there he any Holy Ghost , . 306 ^uadjca at St. iflarg's on Wi\jHsun Dag, 1867. SERMON XIII. « THE DIVINE INDWELLING A MOTIVE TO HOLINESS. I COE. iii. 16. Knoto ye not that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirii nf God dwelleth in you ....... -329 ^rcacbfti at S>t. iiflatg'si on iiatttsun ©ap., i863. SERMON 1. GOD AND THE SOUL. Psalm Ixiii. i. 0 God, Thou art my God. IN this short sentence we may study a feature of tlie soul^s liiglier life_, common in a measure to all of God's true servants, but distinguishing some of them beyond the restj and, among these, in particular, King David. Ewald% indeed, would exclude this Psalm from that small number of sixteen in which his arbitrary criticism still consents to recognize the thought and style of the son of Jesse. But scholars, Hke Delitzsch^, deem this estimate nothing short of a literary Vandalism which would sacrifice even the certainties of Biblical science to its own morbid di-ead of a traditional position. The title, '^A Psalm of David when he was in the wilderness of Judah,'' is in the strictest harmony with the contents of the Psalm itself. The poet is a king, and a fugitive : enemies are on his track, and are bent on his destruc- tion He is in " a dry and weary land without water ^,'' amidst the wild beasts who will, as he predicts, prey a Dichter der A. B. ii. 152. ^ " Die Ueberschreibung, so gefasst, liclitet den ganzen Ps., dessen David. Abfassung zu laugnen der unwissenschatllichste iiberlieferungsfeindiiclie Vandalismus ist." — Delitzsch, Psalmen, i. 465. c ver. II. 9. a yer. 1. ft 0 God a7id the Soid. [Serm. on his conquered foes®. He longs after communion with God in Sion_, where in past years he has enjoyed revelations of the Divine Presence^. All this is suit- able to David's circumstances^ immediately after the outbreak of Absalom's rebellion; when the king, in his flight from the capital_, passed over the brook Kidron towards the way of the wilderness ^Z' And it may be added_, that no other period, either in David's life, or in any other life, that no other set of general circumstances, recorded in the history of Israel, so fully satisfies all the 3onditions under which the Psalmist writes. Moreover, the style and turns of the language, and especially the phy- siognomy and order of the thought, seem to connect this Psalm with those which are universally ascribed to David. In some expressions, as in that translated, ^^I will seek Thee," the ideas are remarkably condensed ^ after David's manner. In others, such as ^^lips of jubilee there .sparkles a vivid beauty which is very characteristic of David, We may observe, too, in this Psalm a connexion of thought rather than a connexion of expression and form. The thoughts succeed each other so rapidly, as almost to produce the effect of a single thought which steadily underlies and interpenetrates the successive variations of language. And the sharp contrast between the last end of the good and' of the bad, is here asserted in a tone of intuitive certainty, which seems to rise higher than the faith, strong as it was, of later Psalmists. Here, too, are sentences full of a spii^itual light and force which is peculiarly observable in David's Psalms. Mark, as one instance, the extraordinary beauty of the Hne, " Thy lovingkindness is better than life Considerations, such as these, might help to form a decisive impression in favour of the Davidic origin of ^ ver. lo, f ver. 2. fc' 2 Sam. xv. 23. God and the Soul. 3 this Psalm. Even if sucli considerations did not cany full conviction^ it would be obviously unwarrantable to erect a few Psalms^ whicb have mucii in common, into absolute tests of the style and mind of an author who lived many years, and who wrote under very various circumstances. The constant tradition of the Synagogue and of the Church cannot reasonably be overlooked. And those who beheve that the writers of Holy Scripture were supernaturally inspired to write, will be prepared to find in their writings a greater variety and resource of thought and language than would naturally be looked for in a merely human author. Sixteen Psalms can be sup- posed to represent the spiritual legacy which the Church has inherited from David with as much justice as four of his Epistles can be imagined to contain all that is left to us of the thoughts and words of the great Apostle of the Gentiles. The text might form a motto for what is termed, in the modern phrase, personal religion.^^ No religion, of course, can deserve its name, if it be not personal at bottom, if it do not recognize as its basis the case of the personal soul face to face with the personal God. But, even with a view to the perfection of the individual himself, rehgion may, nay, it must, embrace other interests besides his own. Each time that, in the earliest creed, we formally profess our belief in God, we also profess our behef in the Catholic Church and the Communion of Saints. For a well-balanced Christian mind, there can be • as little danger of a strong sense of his personal relation to the Source of all life issuing in a selfish forgetfulness of others, as there can be of his forgetting what is due to the needs and culture of his own soul, while he "walks about Sion, and marks well her bulwarks, and tells the towers thereof^^' A man need not lose sight of his ' Ps. cxlviii. 12. God and the Soul. [Serm. solitary spiritual bearing towards God, because he is interested in tlie progress_, the organization, the imperial majesty of the Eealm of Christ. It would be as untrue to say that the writer of the Imitation was insensible ™ to the needs, whether of the Church, or of humanity at large, as to argue that the authors of the De Civitate Dei^' or the "Ecclesiastical Polity" must have over- looked the sorrows and aspirations of the human soul. This does not pi-cclude the admission that the undue pre- dominance sometimes of public and corporate interests, and sometimes of interests exclusively personal and sub- jective, may create dangers for individuals, or for par- ticular ages or portions of the Chm'ch, against which it is necessary to take precautions. But at least in David we have a notable example of u sensitive, tender, self-analyzing soul, living in sustained communion with God, while yet deeply sensible of the claims of the civil and religious polity of Israel. David^s years, it is needless to say, were spent in devotion to a large and exacting round of public duties. And in this Psalm public misfortunes do but force him back upon the central strength of the life of his spirit. For the time his crown, his palace, his honours, the hearts of his people, the love of his child, whom he loved, as we know, with such passing tenderness, all are forfeited. The Psalmist is alone with God. In his hour of desolation, he looks up from the desert to heaven. 0 God,^' he cries, " Thou art my God." In the original language he does not repeat the word which is translated ' God."* In Elohim ^, the ^ true idea of the root is that of awe, while the adjectival Dean Milmau's well-known estimate of this work almost seems to lose sight of its real object, which is, not to insist upon the whole cycle of (Christian duties, but to strengthen and intensify, in view of our Lord'n example, the sense of our individual relationship to the Father of Spirits. Lat. Christ, vi. p. 484. God and the SoicL form implies permanency. In Eli °, the second word em- ployed^ the etymological idea is that of might,, strength. We might paraphrase, " 0 Thou Ever-awful One, m_y Strength, or my Strong-God art Thou.-'^ But the second word Elij is in itself nothing less than a separate revela- tion of an entire aspect of the Being of God. It is indeed used as a proper and distinct Name of God. The pronominal suffixes for the second and third persons are, as Gesenius has remarked, never once found ^dth this name El ; whereas Eli, the first person, occurs very fre- quently in the Psalter alone. Every one will rememtar it in the words actually uttered by our Lord upon the cross, and which He took from a Syriacized version of Ps. xxii.P The word unveils a truth unknown beyond the precincts of revelation. It teaches us that the Almighty and Eternal gives Himself in the fulness of His Being to the soul that seeks Him. Heathenism indeed in its cultns of domestic and local deities, of its Penates, of its Oeol e'7Tij((opLOL, bore witness by these superstitions to the deep yearning of the human heart for the individualizing love of a higher power. To know the true God was to know tha-t such a craving was satisfied. ^^My God." The word does not represent a human impression, or desire, or conceit, but an aspect, a truth, a necessity of the Divine JsTature. Man can indeed give himself by halves ; he can bestow a little of his thought, of his heart, of his endeavour, upon his brother man. In other words, man can be imperfect in his acts, as he is imperfect and finite in his nature. But when God, the Perfect Being, loves the creature of His Hand, He cannot thus divide His love. He must perforce love with the whole directness, and strength, and intensity of His Being ; for He is God, and therefore incapable of partial and imperfect action. He must give Himself to the 6 God and the Soul. [Serm. single soul with, as absolute a completeness as if there were no other being besides the soul which He loves. And, on his side_, man knows that this gift of Himself by God is thus entire ; and in no narrow spirit of ambitious egotism, but as grasping and representing the literal fact, he cries, '^''My God/' Therefore does this single word enter so largely into the composition of Hebrew names. Men loved to dwell upon that wondrous relation of the Creator to their personal life which it so vividly expressed. Therefore when God had so loved the world that He gave His only-begotten Son, that whosoever believed in Him should not peris'h but have everlasting life,'' we find St. Paul writing to the Galatians as if his own soul, in its solitary anguish, had alone been redeemed by the sacrifice of Calvary ; He loved me, and gave Himself for me But here let us observe that there are two causes within the soul which might indispose us for looking more truly and closely at the truth before us. Of these causes, the first is moral : it is the state of unrepented wilful sin. The gravest mischief of sin does not lie in the outward material act, especially when estimated from a merely legal or social point of view. It consists rather in the introduction of a permanent habit or attitude of the will. Of this attitude each outward act of sin is at once the symptom and the aggravation. The foul eruption is less serious in itself than as evidencing the hold which has been laid upon the moral constitution by the invisible disease. The principle and spirit of rebellion has its seat in the will. Thence it penetrates, as the case may be, either into the sphere of thought, or into that of outward actions. But whether it be weakened, or warped, or enslaved, the will which is deliberately tolerant of the presence of sin is necessarily hostile to a sincere assertion