— -^^.c^ ^, _ ' ^-^ i 1 lam nr.. " ■ mi ^"'^ Pastoral IIOMILETICS AND PASTORAL THEOLOGY. V WILLIAM G. T. SHEDD, D. D., BALDWIN PKOFKSSOB, IN UNION TUKOLOGIOAL 8EM1NART, NEW YORK CITT. EIGHTH EDITION. NEW YORK: SCKIBNER, ARMSTRONG & CO., StrCCESSORS TO CHARLES SCPtlBNER & CO., G54 BROADWAY. 1872. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1867, By CU miles SCRIBNER & CO., In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of Kcw York. PREFATORY NOTE Most of the materials of this treatise were origi- nally composed, in the form of Lectures, in the years 1852 and 1853, when the author held the Professorship of Sacred Rhetoric and Pastoral The- ology, in Auburn Theological Seminary. Upon entering on other lines of study and instruction, they were thrown aside. Several of them, within the last two years, have appeared in the Ameri- can Theological Review, and the interest which they seemed to awaken has led to the revision of the whole series, and to their combination (with two or three other Essays, upon kindred topics), into the form of a book. Although con- structed in this manner, the author believes that IV PEEFACE. one "increasing purpose" runs through the vol- ume, and hopes that it may serve to promote, what is now the great need of the Church, a mas- culine and vigorous Rhetoric, wedded with an earnest and active Pastoral zeal. New York, February 16, 1867. COJN'TENTS HOMILETICS. CHAPTER I. PAQB Relatiou of Sacred Eloquence to Biblical Exegesis . . 1 CHAPTER ir. Distinctive Nature of Homiletics and Reasons for its Cultivation 38 CHAPTER Ii:. Fundamental Properties of Style .... 59 CHAPTER IV General Maxims for Sermonizing . . . , 100 CHAPTER V. Special Maxims for Sermonizing .... 127 CHAPTER YI. The different Species of Sermons .... 144 CHAPTER Vn. The Nature and Choice of a Text ... .159 CHAPTER YHI. The Plan of a Sermon . . . . . .179 CHAPTER IX. Extemporaneous Preaching ..... 218 Vi CONTENTS. CHAPTER X. PAOB The Matter, Manner, and Spirit of Preaching . . .245 CHAPTER XI. Reciprocal Relations of Preacher and Hearer . . 258 CHAPTER XII. Liturgical Cultivation of the Preacher . . . .296 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. CHAPTER I. Definition of Pastoral Theology . . . . 319 CHAPTER II. Religious Character and Habits of the Clergyman . . 323 CHAPTER III. Intellectual Character and Habits of the Clergyman . 345 CHAPTER ly. Social and Professional Character of the Clergyman . . 871 CHAPTER V. Pastoral Visiting ..,,•. 889 CHAPTER VI. Catechising ....... 407 HOMILETICS CHAPTEE I. RELATION" OF SACRED ELOQUENCE TO BIBLICAL EXEGESIS, The sources of Sacred Eloquence, it is evident, must lie deeper than those of secular oratory. That address fi'om the Christian pulpit which, in its ulti- mate results, has given origin to all that is best in human civilization and hopeful in human destiny, must have sprung out of an intuition totally different from that which is the secret of secular and civil oratory. It is conceded by all, that elo- quence is the product of ideas ; and therefore, in endeavoring to determine what is the real and solid foundation of pulpit oratory, we must, in the outset, indicate the rano;e of ideas and the class of truths from which it derives both its subject-matter and its inspiration. These we shall find in Divine reve- lation, as distinguished from human literature. The Scriptures of the Christian Church, and not the wri 2 HOMILETICS. tings of the great masters of secular letters, are the fans et origo of sacred eloquence. It will therefore be the aim of this introductory chapter in a treatise upon Homiletics, to consider the influence, in (^m- torical respects, upon the preacher, of the thorough exegesis and mastery of the Word of God. And in order to perform this task with most success and convincing power, it will be necessary to make some preliminary observations upon the nature of the written revelation itself, and pai-ticularly upon the relation in which the human mind stands to it. The opening of one of the most sagacious and suggestive of modern treatises in philosophy reads as follows : " Man, as the minister and interpreter of nature, does and understands as much as his observa- tions on the order of nature, either with regard to matter or to mind, permit him, and neither knows nor is capable of more."^ In this dictum of Lord Bacon, which he lays down as the corner-stone of his philosophical system, reflecting and speculating man is represented to be an interpreter. The function of the philosopher is not to originate truth, but to explain it. He is to stand up before a universe of matter, and a universe of mind, and his office is to interrogate them, and hear what they say. He is not to attempt an exertion of his own power upon them in order to reconstruct them, and thereby put a meaning into them. He is not to distort them, * Bacon: Novum Organiim, Aph. 1. ELOQUENCE AND EXEGESIS. 3 by injecting into tliem liis own prejudices and pre- conceptions ; but simply going up to them with reve- rence and with freedom, he is to take them just as they are, and to question them just as they stand, until he gets tJieir answer. The spirit of a philoso- pher, then, according to this sagacious Englishman, is no other than the spirit of an interpreter. If we might employ his own proud phrase, " Francis Veru- 1am thought" that the great aim and office of phi- losophy is hermeneiitical. The result of all specula- tive inquiry into the world of matter and of mind, according t9 this wise and substantial thinker, should be an exegesis^ an explanation. Under the impulse and guidance of this theory, modern science, more particularly in the sphere of material nature, has made progress. That wise and prudeilt interroga- tion of nature which has been so characteristic of the last two centuries has yielded a clear and loud response. The world of matter has replied to many of the questions that have been put to it. The stone has cried out of the wall, and the beam out of the timber has answered. But if this is true and fruitful in philosophy, it is still more so in theology. The duty and function of the theologian is most certainly that of an inter- jn-eter, and that alone. With yet more positiveness may we adapt the phraseology of the opening sen- tence of the Novum Organum, and say : " Man, as the minister and interpreter of revelation, does and understands as much as his observations on the 4 . HOMILETICS. order and structure of revelation permit lilm, and neither knows nor is capable of more." For reve- lation is as mucli tlie product of the Divine intelli- gence as the worlds are the product of the Divine power. Man confessedly did not originate the world, and neither did man originate the Christian Scriptures. The ultimate authorship of each alike carries us back to the Infinite. For though in the propagation of the species, and the sustentation of animal life upon the planet, the creature oftentimes seems to have an agency analogous to that of the Creator himself, yet we well know that all things in the material universe are of God ultimately ; so, likewise, though in the production of those docu- ments which make up the canon of inspiration, many individual men were employed with a free- dom and spontaneousness that looks like original authorship, yet it was the infinite and all-knowing intelligence of God which is the head-spring, the fonsfontium of it all. The attitude, therefore, of the human mind toward revelation, should be precisely the same as toward nature. The naturalist does not attempt to mould the mountains to his patterns ; and the theo- logian must not strive to pre-configure the Scrip- tures to his private opinions. The mountain is an ohject^ positive, fixed, and entirely independent of the eye that looks upon it ; and that mass of truth which is contained in the Christian Scriptures is also an object^ positive, fixed, and entirely independ- ELOQUENCE AJ^B EXEGESIS. 5 ent of the individual mind that contemplates it. The crystalline humor of the eye is confessedly passive in relation to the mountain mass that looms up before it in majesty and in glory. It receives an impression and experiences a sensation, not mechanically or chemically indeed, as wax melts before iii-e, or as an alkali effervesces under an acid, yet inevitably, and in accordance with the real and independent natui'e of the mountain. And the moral mind of man, in relation to the moral trutK of Grod which is set over against it in his revela- tion, should in like manner be recipient, and take an impression that issues inevitably from the nature and qualities of fixed and eternal tnith. Neither in the instance of the eye nor of the mind, is the function that of authorship or origination; it is that of living recipiency and acquiescence. In the pres- ence of both nature and revelation, man, as Lord Bacon phrases it, is a minister and interpreter, and not a creator and lord. The talent, then, which comprehends the reve- lation of the Eternal Mind, is not creative but exegetical. The etymology of the term exegesis implies a leading forth {e^Yiyso^ai) into the light of a clear perception, of an idea that is shut up in human language. It supposes words, — words that are filled with thoughts that require to be con- ducted from behind the veil which covers them. Exegesis, therefore, implies a written word. It sup- poses a written revelation. There can be no inter* 6 HOMILETICS. pretation unless tliouglit Las been vocalized, and . fixed in outward symbols. An unwritten revela- tion, confined to the individual consciousness, never projected into language and never taking a literary form, could not be an object of critical examina- tion, and could not yield the rich fruits of analysis and contemplation. Those theorizers who combat the doctrine of a "book revelation," and contend for only an internal and subjective communication from the mind of God to the mind of man, present a theory which, if it were transferred to the sphere of human literature, would bring all intellectual investigation and stimulation to a dead stop. If all the thinking of man were confined to conscious- ness ; if his ideas were never expressed in language, and written down in a literature that is the out- standing monument of what he has felt and thought; if within the sphere of secular thinking man were limited to his isolated individualism, and were never permitted to fix his eye and mind upon the results to which fellow minds had come ; the most abso- lute stagnation would reign in the intellectual world. If, for illustration, we could conceive that the intellect of Newton had been able to go through those mathematical processes which are now em- bodied in his Principia, without expressing them in the symbols of mathematics and the propositions of human language; if we could conceive of the Principia as held in his individual consciousness merely, and never presented in an outward form to ELOQUENCE Al^D EXEGESIS. 7 become a xrri^a eg del for all generations ; it is plain tliat the name of Newton would not be, as it now is, one of the intellectual forces and influences of the human race. All that mass of pure science which has been the subject-matter of mathematical exe- gesis for two centuries, and which has been the living germ out of which, by the method of inter- pretation, the fine growths of modern mathematics have sprung, would have gone into eternity and invisibility with the spirit of Newton, and "left not a rack behind." I. Biblical Interpretation, therefore, postulates a written w^ord, and a sacred literature ; and in now proceeding to notice some of the oratorical influ- ences that issue from it, we mention, in the first place, the originality which it imparts to religious thinking and discourse. We shall maintain the position, that the sacred orator is quickened by the analytical study of the sacred volume into a freedom, freshness, and force, that are utterly beyond his reach without it. Originality is a term often employed, rarely defined, and very often misunderstood. It is fre- quently supposed to be equivalent to the creation of truth. An original mind, it is vulgarly imagined, is one that gives expression to ideas and truths that were never heard of before,— ideas and truths " of which the human mind never had even an intimation or presentiment, and which come into it by a mortal leap, abrupt and startling, without antecedents and 8 HOMILETICS. without premonitions." But no such originality as this is possible to a finite intelligence. Such ab- originality as this is the prerogative of the Creator alone, and the results of it are a revelation^ in the technical and strict sense of the term. Only God can create de nihilo^ and only God can make a com- munication of truth that is absolutely new. Ori- ginality in man is always relative, and never abso- lute. Select, for illustration, an original thinker within the province of philosophy, — select the con- templative, the profound, the ever fi'esh and living Plato. Thoughtfully peruse his weighty and his musical periods, and ask yourself whether all this wisdom is the sheer make of his intellectual energy, or whether it is not rather an emanation and efflux from a mental constitution which is as much yours as his. He did not absolutely originate these first truths of ethics, these necessary forms of logic, these fixed principles of physics. They were inlaid in his rational structure by a higher author, and by an absolute authorship ; and his originality consists solely in their exegesis and interpretation. And this is the reason that, on listening to his words, we do not seem to be hearing tones that are wholly unknown and wholly unheard of. We find an an- swering voice to them in our own mental and moral constitution. In no contemptuous, but in a reveren- tial and firm tone, every thinking person, even in the presence of the great thinkers of the race, may employ the language of Job^ in reference to self- ELOQUENCE AND EXEGESIS. 9 evident truths and propositions: "Lo, mine eye Lath seen all this, mine ear hath heard and under- stood it. What ye know, the same do I know also ; I am not inferior unto you." And these great thinkers themselves are the first to acknowl- edge this. Upon the fact of a community in reason, a partnership in the common ideas of humanity, Plato himself founded his famous arrament for the pre-existence of the soul. The very fact that every human creature recoonizes the first truths of science and of morals as no stnmge and surprising dogmas, but native and familiar, would imply, in his judg- ment, an earlier world, a golden time, when their acquaintance was made under brighter skies, and under happier omens, than here and now. ^ Originality, then, within the sphere of a creature and in reference to a finite intelligence, consists in the power of interpretation. In its last analysis it is exegesis, — the pure, genial, and accurate exposition of an idea or a truth already existing, already com- municated, already possessed. Plato interprets his own rational intelligence; but he was not the author of that intelligence. He expounds his owm mental and moral ideas; but those ideas are the handi- work of God. They are no more his than ours. We find what he found, no more and no less, if he has been a truthful exegete. The process, in his instance and that of Ms reader, is simply that of ^ Compare the Author's "Discourses and Essays," p. 125, sq. 10 HOMILETICS. education and eli citation. There lias been no cre- ation, but only a development ; no absolute author- sliip, but only an explication. And yet bow fresh and original has been the mental process ! The same substantially in Plato and in the thousands of his scholars ; and yet in every single instance there has been all the enthusiasm, all the stimulation, all the ebullient flow of life and feeling that attends the discovery of a new continent or a new star. " Then feels he like some watcher of the skies "When a new planet swims into his ken; Or like stout Cortez, when with eagle eyes He stared at the Pacific, and all his men Looked at each other with a wild surmise, Silent, upon a peak in Darien." Originality in man, then, is not the power of making a communication of truth, but of appre- hending one. Two great communications have been made to him, — the one in the book of nature, and the oth^^ in the book of revelation. If the truth has been conveyed through the mental and moral structure, if it has been wrought by the cre- ative hand into the fabric of human nature, then he is the most orio^inal thinker who is most sue- cessful in reading it just as it reads, and expound- ing it just as it stands. If the truth has been com- municated by miracle, by incarnation, and by the Holy Ghost; if it has been imparted by special inspiration, and lies before him an objective and written revelation ; then he ia the original thinker ELOQUENCE AND EXEGESIS. 11 who is most successful in its interpretation, — wiio is most accurate in analyzing its living elements, and is most genial and cordial in receiving tliem into his own mental and moral "being. These observations find their entorcement and illustration, the instant we apply them to the Chris- tian Scriptures and their interpretation. We have already noticed that, in respect to the problems of religion, man can originate nothing, but must take what he finds given to him from the skies. Even if revealed religion be rejected, man does not escape from the authority of fixed truth, unless he adopt atheism and an absolute licentiousness of thought and action. The doctrines of natural religion arc a Divine commiinication^ as really as those of re- vealed.^ They are as immutable in their nature, and as independent of man's will and prejudices, as those of Christianity itself. When we wake up to moral consciousness, and begin to reflect upon the principles of ethics that are wrought into our moral constitution, we discover that we are already under their domination and righteous despotism. We have no option. ISfeither can we alter them-; ' Hence, St. Paul employs the in tlie constitution of the human same word (■'nroKaXbTrreTai) to de- spirit. The bpyij ■&edv fearfully | note the ultimate source of the apprehended in paganism, and I truths of natural religion, that he the dcKacoavvrj ■deov known only in employs in reference to the plan Christendom, are both alike ' rev- of redemption itself. The intui- elation s,' the one being unwritten tive perception that God will pun- and the other written. — See Rom, ish sin is, in its last analysis, the i. 17, 18. product of the Creator Himself 13 HOMILETICS. we cannot make a hair of them white or black. We are compelled to take them exactly as they are given. We must be passive and submissive tc what Cud worth denominates the "immutable mo- rality" which antedates all finite existence, and which was in the beginning with God. And so likewise when we pass from the problems of natu ral religion to those of revealed; when we pass from the question concerning human duty to the awful question concerning human salvation, we discover that the principles upon which this salva- tion reposes, and the methods by which it is to be accomj)lished, are settled in the heavens. What is written is written, and man the sinner, like man the moralist, must be recipient and submissive to the communication that is made. For the promises of Christianity are more entirely dependent upon the Divine option and volition, than are the prin- ciples of ethics and natural religion. The Deity is necessitated to punish sin, but is under no necessity of pardoning it. When, therefore, the human mind passes from ethics to evangelism, it is still more closely shut up to the record which God has given. If it must take morality just as it is communicated in reason and conscience, it must most certainly take mercy on the terms upon which it is oifered in the written word; because these terms depend solely upon the will and decision of the pardoning power. In this wise and docile recipiency of that which ELOQUENCE AND EXEGESIS. 13 is fixed and eternal, we find tlie fountain of peren- nial youth and freshness for the sacred orator. For by it, he is placed in vital relations to all that uni- verse of truth which is contained in the Christian Scriptures. Think for a moment of their contents. Bring to mind the ideas and doctrines which hang like a constellation in these heavens. Think of the revelation made in them concerning the trinal unity of God, that infinite vortex of life, l.)eing, and bles- sedness, to which the meagre and narrow unit of deism presents such a feeble contrast. Think of the incarnation, in which all the plenitude of the divine uature blends, and harmonizes, with the win- ning helplessness and finiteness of a creature. Think of the ideas that are involved in the Biblical account of tne origin of man, his fall into the abyss of moral evil, and his recovery to innocence, to holiness, and to glory. Think of the kingdom of God, an idea wholly foreign to the best of the natural religions of the ^vorld, with its indwelling energy of the Divine Spirit, and its continual intercourse with the invisible and the eternal. Contemplate these new ideas that have been lodged in the conscious- ness of the human race by the Scriptures of the Old and New Dispensations; think of their sug- gestiveness, their logical connections, the new light which they flare upon the nature and destiny of man, the totally different coloring which they throw on the otherwise dark and terrible history of man on the globe ; weigh this immense mass of truth 14 HOMILETICS. and dogma in the scales of a dispassionate intelli- gence, and say if the mind of the preacher will not he filled with freshness, with force, and with origi- nality, in proportion as it absorbs it. For, to recur to our definition of originality, the human intellect is stuTcd into profound and genial action, only as it receives an impression from some- thing greater and grander than itself If it adopts the egotism of such a theory as that of Fichte, for example, and attempts to create from within itself, its action must be spasmodic and barren. To employ the often repeated comparison of Bacon, it is not the spider but the bee that is the truly origi- nal insect. Only as the sermonizer and orator, by a critical analysis of the Biblical words, and their connections, saturates his mind with the Biblical ele- ments (oroix^la), and feeds upon revelation as the insect feeds upon foliage until every cell and tissue is colored with its food, will he discourse with free- dom, suggestiveness, and energy. The influence of such familiarity with revelation is well illustrated by that of the great products of uninspired literature. The efi'ect of a continual and repeated perusal of Homer in animating the mind is well known. It starts the intellect into original action. The Greek fire glows in these poems, and kindles every thing it touches. Though the range of ideas in the Iliad and Odyssey is cabined, cribbed, and confined, compared with that of a Dante or a Shakspeare, whose intuition has been immensely ELOQUENCE AND EXEGESIS. 15 widene'd by the Cliristian revelation under which he lived and thought ; though the old epic in which the fall of Troy is sung cannot compare for a inoment in breadth, depth, and vastness, with the Christian epic in which the fall of man is told, yet every scholar knows that just in proportion as he imbibes the ideas and spirit of this single pagan poem, all tameness is banished from his own ideas, and all feebleness from his lano;uao;e. The reader of Gibbon's autobiography will notice in the abstract which the historian gives of his readings, that day after day the appointed task of perusing so many lines of the Iliad is recorded as having been faith- fully performed. And, moreover, he will observe that the study is done in the light of the Port Royal Greek Grammar ; in the light of a careful investi- gation and mastery of the Greek verb/ Now, we venture to affirm that what there is of energy in the monotonous style of Gibbon, and what there is of originality and freshness in his naturally phleg- matic and heavy understanding, is due, in no small deo^ree, to familiarity with the old bard of Chios. We have cited this as only one example of the impulse -to original action that is started in the ]nind, by the simple exegesis and interpretation of '3iie truly grand product of the human intellect. Think of a similar contact with the Italian Dante, •>r the English Chaucer, and say whether originality GiBBOX : Autobiography, p. 444, et passim. 16 HOJVaLETICS. is to be acquired by a dead lift, or by a genial pressure and influence. Returning now to the Cliristian Scriptures, we claim that they are the great and transcendent source of originality and j^ower, for the human intellect. The examples which we have cited from the range of uninspired literature fall far short of the reality, when we pass to the written revelation of God. Though grouped together in the most artless and unambitious manner; though the work of divers ages and different minds ; though showing a variety and inequality that passes through the whole scale of composition, from the mere catalogue in the Book of Chronicles, to the sublime ode in Isaiah or the Apocalypse ; though, so far as mere artistic form and labored attempt at impression are concerned, almost careless and indifferent, nevertheless the body of literature contained in the Hebrew and Greek Scriptures has moved upon the mind of man, in his generations, as the moon has moved upon the sea. The influence has been tidal. " Exegesis," says Niebuhr, " is the fruit oi finished study." This is^a remark which that great histo- rian makes in his letter to a young philologist, which deserves to be perused annually by every student, secular or sacred. " Do not read the great authors of classical antiquity," he remarks, " in order to make aesthetic reflections upon them, but in order to drink in their spirit, and fill your soul with their thoughts, — in order to gain that by read* ELOQUENCE AND EXEGESIS 17 ing wliich you would have gained by reverently listening to the discourses of great men. This is the philology which does the soul good; and learned investigations, even when we have got so far as to be able to make them, always occupy an inferior place. We must be fully masters of grammar (in the ancient sense); we must acquire every branch of antiquarian knowledge, as far as lies in our power; but even if we can make the most brilliant emen- dations, and explain the most difficult passages at sight, all this is nothing, and mere sleight-of-hand, if we do not acquire the wisdom and spiritual energy of the great men of antiquity, — think and feel like them."^ Precisely this is the aim and influence of Biblical philology and exegesis. The theologian and preacher, by his patient study of the written revelation, must gain that by reading which he would have gained by reverently listening to the discourses of the j^rophets, and apostles, and the incarnate Son of God. And this is the uniform effect of close linguistic investigation. The power of a grammarian is a vernacular power. Turn, for illustration, to the commentaries of some of the Greek Fathers, such as Theocloret and Chrysostom, for example, and observe the close and vivid contact which is brought about between their minds and those of the sacred writers, by reason of their home- bred knowledo:e of the Greek lano;uao:e. Tiiese com- * NiBDUHE : Life and Letters, pp. 426, 428. 18 HOMILETICS. mentators are not equal to some of the great Latin Fathers, in respect to the insight that issues from a profound dogmatical comprehension of Christian truth. So far as interpretation rests upon the ana- logy of faith and a comprehensive system, Chrysos- tom is inferior to Augustine. But in regard to every thing that depends upon the callida junctura verhorum^ upon the subtle nexus of verbs, nouns, and particles, these exegetes who were "native and to the manner born," must ever be the resort and the guide of the Biblical student.^ Now, such an exegesis as this, — an exegesis of the Scriptures that is the result of " finished" study, and that tills the soul with the very thoughts and spiritual energy of the holy men of old who spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost, — is a well- spring of originality. The influence of it is stri- kingly illustrated by a comparison of the English pulpit of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, with that of the eighteenth. The minds of Hooker and Howe, of Taylor and South, of Barrow and Bates, were thoroughly imbued with the substance and spirit of the written revelation. It was an age of belief, of profound religious convictions, of lin- guistic, reverent, and contemplative study, of the w^ord of God. Secular literature itself was tine- I tured and tinged with the supernaturalism of the ^ This remark holds true of Zigadenus, whom De Wette and that acute Greek commentator Meyer so often quote. of the 12th century, Euthymius ELOQUENCE AND EXEGESIS. 19 Bible. The plays of Sliakspeare, nay, tlie licentions plays of the old English stage, are full of tlie awful workings of conscience. If men sinned, they suffered foi' it; if they committed adultery, they were burned in hell-fire therefor. This was the ethics, and this ^^as tlie drama, of a period for which God was a living person, the Bible an inspired book, and tlie future life a solemn reality. The strong sense and healthy genius of England had not yet sophisticated itself into the denial of God's holiness, and God's revelation, and the authority of the human con- science. Men had not learned, as they have since, to rush into sin, and then adjust their creed to their passions. Look, now, into the sermonizing and elo- quence of these English divines, and feel the fresh- ness and freedom that stamp them instantaneously as original minds. They differ much in style. Some exhibit an involved and careless construction ; others a pellucid and rhythmical flow; and one of them, according to De Quincey, is the only rhetorician to whom, in company with Sir Thomas Brown (him- self a reverent and a Biblical mind), " it has been granted to open the trumpet-stop on the great organ of passion." But all alike are profound reli- gious thinkers, and all alike are suggestive and original discoursers. Pass, now, into the eighteenth century, and read the discourses of Alison and Blair. We have descended from the heights of inspired doctrine, towards the level of natural religion ; from the incar- 20 HOMILETICS. nation, tlie apostasy, the redemption, to the truth that virtue is rio;ht and vice is wrono^, that man must be virtuous, and all will be well. How tame and un suggestive are these smooth commonplaces. How destitute of any enlarging and elevating influence upon a thoughtful mind. How low the general range of ideas. And the secret of the tor- por and tameness lies in the fact, that these intel- lects had never worked their way into the deep mines of revelation, and found the ore in the matrix. It was an age in which Biblical exegesis had de- clined, and they had experienced only the more general influences of the written word. The living elements themselves, the evangelical dogmas, had never penetrated and moulded their thinking. And as we look out into this nineteenth century, we observe the same fact. The only originality in the Church or out of it, in sacred or in secular litera- ture, is founded in faith. We are well aware that the age is fertile, and that a rank growth of belles- lettres has sprung up dm'ing the last twenty-five years having its root in unbelief. But it is a crop of mushrooms. There is nothing in it all that will live one hundred years. Compare this collec- tion of skeptical poems, novels, and essays, these slender attempts of the modern naturalism to soar with a feeble wing: into the hi^rh heaven of inven- tion, with the unfaltering, sustained sweep of Dante, steeped in religion, and that, too, the religion of an intense supernaturalism ; or of Milton, whose ELOQUEIS-CE AND EXEGESIS. 21 blocd and hrain were tino^ecl tlirouo^li and throiio-h with Hebrew ideas and beliefs. Compare the light flutter of the current sentimentalism, w^ith " the pride and ample pinion That the Theban eagle bear, Sailing with supreme dominion Through the azure deep of air," and tell us where shall wisdom be found, and where is the place of understanding. II. We pass from this topic, to consider a second effect of the exegesis and apprehension of the Christian revelation, that bears yet more directly upon the office and functions of the pulpit. The thorough exegesis and comprehension of. the writ- ten Word of God, endows the human mind with autliority. " By what authority doest thou these things ? and who gave thee this authority to do these things V was a question which the chief priests, and the scribes, and the elders put to Jesus Christ. If it was a natural question for them to ask of the Son of God, it is certainly a natural question for the secular, and especially the unbelieving, world to ask of the Christian herald. By what right, does a mortal man rise upon the rostrum, and make posi- tive statements concernino- the orio;in of the human race, the dark mysterious beginnings of human his- tory, the purposes and plans of the Infinite Mind, and conclude with announcing the alternatives of eternal 22 HOMILETICS. sah'ation and eternal damnation ? With respect to these dark and difficult problems, all men stand upon a common level, if divine revelation is thrown out of the account. Apart from the light poured upon them by a communication from the Divine^ ^ Mind, Confucius and Socrates have as much right/ to speculate and dogmatize, as you or I. By what right, then, does that portion of the world which calls itself Christendom, undertake to inform that portion of the world which is called heathendom, concerning God and the future life ; concerning the soul, its needs, its sorrows, and its doom ? What authority has the Christian man above that of the pagan man, in regard to the whole subject of religion, and who gave him this authority ? W^hy does not Christendom, as it peers into the darkness beyond the tomb, look reverently to Mohammedan- ism for light ? Why does Christianity insist that Mohammed shall come to the mountain ; and why does the mountain refuse to go to Mohammed ? As matter of fact, the entire human race is now receiving its lessons in theology and religion, from only a portion of the race. In the outset, this portion which set itself up as the teachers of man- kind was only a mere fragment of the sum-total, a mere handful of men in a corner of Palestine. The proportion has indeed greatly altered, during the eighteen centuries that have elapsed since the death of Christ ; but the vast majority of mankind are still pagan. The pupils still immensely outnumber ELOQUENCE Al^B EXEGESIS. 23 the teachers. By what title, does a mere fraction, of the equally rational and equally immortal masses that crowd this planet, arrogate to itself the posi- tion of the tutor, and demand that the remaining majority take the attitude of the pupil ? And, to narrow the circle, by what title does a small class of men rise up in Christian pulpits, and profess to impart instruction to the large congregations of their fellows and their equals, upon the most mo mentous and the most mysterious of themes ? Unless Christendom possesses a superior knowl- edge, it has no right to instruct heathendom ; and unless the Christian clergy are endowed with the authority of a special I'evelation, and can bring cre- dentials therefor, they have no right to speak to their fellow-men upon the subjects of human duty and destiny. The first and indispensable requisite, consequently, in both speculative theology and practical homiletics, is autJioi^ity / and this authority must be found in a direct and special communica- tion from the mind of God, or it can be found nowhere. Throw the Scriptures out of the account, and the whole human race is upon a dead level. No one portion of it, no one age or generation of it, is entitled to teach another. That clear command- ing tone, without which the Christian herald has no right to speak, and without which the world will not erect its ears and hear, cannot issue from ethics and natural religion. It must be the impulse and the vibration of the gospel. " I am not ashamed," 24 HOMILETICS. says St. Paul, " of the gospel of Christ : for it is the "j power of God." Divine revelation, in his definition, is divine poioer ; and power is at the bottom of au- tliority. Power generally is not ashamed, and needs not to be. In an ag:e like this, when force is wor- shipped, when the hero and the titan are set up as di- vinities, it will surely not be disputed that where there is power there need be no hesitation or timidity ; and that vrhoever is really possessed of it, is entitled to speak out with a commanding and an authoritative intonation. By virtue, then, and only by virtue, of its possession of the living oracles of Grod, Christendom is entitled to sound a trumpet, and tell the w^orld in all its centuries, a^d all its grades of civilization, that he that believeth shall be saved, and he that believeth' not shall be damned. By virtue of his intuition and mastery of inspired ideas and doctrines, the CLidstian herald is entitled to attempt " the height of the great argument. And justify the ways of God to men." 1. In applying this topic more particularly to the position and duties of the sermonizer and preacher, v^e remark, in the first place, that the close exegetical study of the Scriptures imparts a calm and conscious authority, by reducing the w^hole body of Holy Writ to harmony. The influence of doubt in respect to the symmetrical agreemeiit, and self - consistence, of the Bible, is eloque:n'ce and exegesis. 25 weakening in the highest degree. No sacred orator can be bold and commanding in his tone, if he believes, or if he fears, that there are fatal contradictions and irreconcilable inconsistencies in the written revelation. It is for this reason, that infidelity is now applying its utmost acuteness and ingenuity, to detect intrinsic and absolute con- tradictions in the sacred records. The four Gos- pels, in particular, are the field of operations. If it can be shown, if it can be demonstrated, that these biographies of the God-man fatally conflict with each other, then the poi'traiture of that Per- sonage who fills all history as the sun fills the hemisphere, become- ; fancy sketch, and Chris- tianity disappears wii ;ts Founder. Now, we are certain and confident that the careful and minute study of the Evangelists, in the light of grammar, of philology, and of history, results in the unassailable conviction of their trust- worthiness. The process is one of those profound and unconscious ones which bring us to the goal Ijefore we are aware. The conviction that the four Gospels are organically connected, and consti- tute one living and j^erfect harmony, cannot be violently and quickly forced upon the mind At first sight, the objections and difficulties fill the foreground ; particularly, when protruded and pressed upon the notice by the dexterity of the biased and hostile critic. But, as when we look upon a grand painting, in which there is a great 26 HOMILETICS. variety, and complexity, and apparent contrariety, of elements, it requires some little time for the eye to settle gradually, and unconsciously, into the point from which the whole shapes itself into harmony and beauty, so it requires wise delay, and the slow penetration of scholarship and medi- tation, to reach that centre from which all the parts of the evangelical biography arrange them- selves harmoniously, and all contradiction disap- pears forever. And when this centre is once reached, and the intrinsic, natural, artless harmony is once perceived, there is repose, and there is boldness, and there is authority. He who speaks of Christ out of this intuition, speaks w^ith free- dom, with enthusiasm, with love, and with power. Objections which at first seemed acute now look puerile. The piece-meal criticism, which like the fly' scans only the edge of a plinth in the great edifice upon which it crawls, disappears under a criticism that is all-comprehending and all-sur- veying. 2. And similar to this, in the second place, is tbe influence of a clear understanding of the dog- matic matter of revelation. This results in a self- consistent theological system, and this endows the mind with authority. Say what men may, it is doctrine that moves the world. He who takes 1 " Why has not man a microscopic eye ? For this plain reason, man is not a fly." Pope : Essay on Man, I. 6. ELOQUEN"CE AXD EXEGESIS. 27 no position will not sway the human intellect. Logical men, dogmatic men rule the world. Aris- totle, Kant, Augustine, Calvin, — these are names that instantaneously suggest systems ; and systems that are exact, solid, and maintain their place from century to century. And when the system is not a mere product of the human mind, like a scheme of philosophy or a theory of art, but is really the scheme and system of God himself imparted to his creatures, and certified to them by miracle, by incarnation, and by the. Holy Ghost, — when the body of doctrine has a celestial origin, — it endo^\^s the humlde and docile recipient of it with a pre- ternatural authority. That which is finite can never inspire and embolden the human soul like that which is infinite. The human mind is indeed a grand and noble intelligeace, and we are the last to disparage or vilify its products. We look with respect and veneration upon the great names in all the literatures. We exclaim, with Hamlet, " How noble in reason ! in apprehension how like a god I" But when we are brought face to face with the problems of religion ; when the unknown issues of this existence press heavily upon the apprehensive soul ; when the vortex of eternity threatens to ingulf the feeble immortal; how destitute of authority, and certainty, are all the utterances and communications of these heroes ot human literature. When I rise into this plane oi thought, and propose this class of questions, I 18 HOlVilLETICS. need a voice from the open sky to assure me. I cemand an autboiity tiiat issues from God him- self, before I can be certain and assured in my cwn mind, and still more before I can affirm with positiveness and power to the minds of others. It is here that we observe the difference be- tween the dogmatism of a philosopher, and that of a theologian ; between the positiveness of the secular, and that of the Christian mind. Compafe Immanuel Kant with John Calvin. No human beins: has been more successful than the sagre of Konigsberg, in giving an exact and transparent expression to what he himself denominates '' pure reason." The crystal under his chemistry acquires a second crystallization. The rational intelligence of man, as developed and expressed by him, answei's to the description of wisdom in the apocryphal book : " She is more mobile than any motion ; she penetrates and passes through all things by reason of her pureness."^ But it is finite reason ; it is human intelligence only. The questions that are raised, and the answers that are given, pertain to a limited province. Within this province, the philosopher is clear as the sun, positive, and dogmatic of right. He knows whereof he affirms, and speaks with a corre- sponding authority. But when I pass these limits, and invite him to pass them, I hear another tone. ^ "Wisdom, vii. 24. ELOQUENCE AND EXEGESIS. 29 The positiveness and the certainty disappear, andj^ we are both alike left to querying and vague con- jecture. What can he tell me, with confidence and certainty, concerning the interior and al)Solute essence of God? Does the trinal unity dawn within the hemisphere of his " pure reason f Does he know the name of the first man ? Can he describe to me the origin of that dark ground of evil which, by his own confession, inheres in every human will ? Can he tell me, with authority and certainty, when the decaying body is being lowered to its resting-place in the heart of the earth, that "all that dust shall rise?" Does he know that there is pity in those stern and ethical heavens which shut down like brass over a guilty and terrified human conscience ? The authority and dogmatic certainty of the philosopher stop at the limits of his domain ; and it is here that the authority and certainty of the theologian begin. Turn to the Institutes of the man of Geneva, and observe the boldness and high certainty of that naturally cautious and careful understanding, upon these very themes which make the man of Konigs- berg to hesitate and waver. Read those words with which Calvin closes, as with a clarion peal, nis great argument for the necessity of the Reform- ation, and say whence come the sublime confidence, and overcoming energy : " We know and are verily persuaded that what we preach is the eternal truth of God. It is our wish, and a very natural one, 30 HOMILETICS. that our ministry might prove beneficial and salu- tary to the world ; but the measure of success is for Grod to give, not for us to demand. If this is what we have deserved at the hands of men whom we have struggled to benefit, to be loaded with calumny, and stung with ingratitude, that men should abandon success in despair, and hurry along with the current to utter destruction, then this is my voice (I utter words worthy of the Christian man, and let all who are willing to take their stand by this holy profession subscribe to the response), ^Ply your fagots.' But we warn you, that even in death we shall become the conquerors ; not simply because we shall find, even through the fagots, a sure passage to that upper and better life, but because our blood will germinate like precious seed, and propagate that eternal truth of God which is now so scornfully rejected by the world."^ This is the positiveness, this is the high celestial dogmatism, that is necessitated by the reception of Divine Kevelation. There is no option. There may be natural timidity ; there may be the shrink- ing nature of the weeping prophet ; but the instant the mind perceives that the Eternal Intelli- gence has originated and communicated a series of revelations^ the instant the ear hears the ^'Thus saith the Lord," a transformation takes place, and human w Cii^L jss becomes immortal strength. * Cai.Vv>» Jfecessitj of tlie Reformation, sub Jine. ELOQUENCE Aim EXEGESIS 81 We have thus considered, in a rapid manner, two oratorical influences and effects of the aj^pre- hension of revealed truth. Originality and author- ity issue from this source as from no other. If Sacred Eloquence is to maintain its past command- ing position in human history, and is to exert a paramount influence upon human destiny, it must breathe in, and breathe out from every pore and particle, the living afflatus of inspiration. By this breath of life it must live. If the utterances of the pulpit are to be fresh, spiritual, and com- manding, the sacred orator must be an exegete. Every discourse must be but the elongation of a text. And certainly there never was greater need of originality and authority within the province of religion, than now. The cultivated unbeliever is fast settling down upon the low commonplaces of ethics and natural religion, or else is on his way to the arid sands of atheism, and all the freshness of his mind is being dried up. Rejecting all mystery, which is confessedly the parent and nurse of high thinking and loffcy feeling ; rejecting all supernatu- ralism, by which alone God comes into quickening and personal contact with his creatures ; throwing out of his creed all those truths upon which Chris- tendom rests, and without which a Christendom is impossible, and reducing the whole credenda and ageiida of man to the merest and most meagre minimum, — what can he do toward the impregna- 32 HOMILETICS, tion and fertilizing of the human mind? Look at the two or three religious dogmas, starved and hunger-bitten, which are left to the human in- telligence after his manipulations, and tell us if literature, and art, and philosophy, will be cha- racterized by originality if his methods prevail. Tell us if pantheism will produce another Shak- speare ; if anti-supernaturalism will produce another Milton ; if a nerveless, voluptuous naturalism will produce another Dante. Unless the coming lit- erature of Eng^land and America shall receive a fresh impulse and inspiration, from the old Chris- tian ideas which penetrated and enlivened it in the days of its glory, the future will witness the utter decline and decay of one of the noblest literatures of the world. The age of sophistry, the age of pedants, the age of critics, the age of elegant lan- guor, will come in, and the Anglo-Norman mind, like the Greek and the Roman before it, will give place to the bolder and more original intelligence of a more believing and solemn race. The same remark is even more true, when wo pass from the wide domain of general literature, to a particular province in it, like Sacred Eloquence. The Christian pulpit, in this age, is in danger of losing its originality, because it is tempted to leave the written revelation, and betake itself to lower and uninspired sources of thought. Listen to those who neglect the constituent and organific ideas of Christianity, — the doctrines of sin and guilt, of ELOQUEJN^CE AND EXEGESIS. 33 grace and redemption, — and who find tlieir themes in that range of trnths which every student sees scattered over the images of Plato and Cicero, of Antoninus and Seneca, and tell us if they are orio^inal and stirrino; homiletes. The doctrhies of natural relio-ion are differentiated from those of revealed, by the fact that they will not bear ever- lasting repetition, and constant expansion and illus- tration. You cannot preach year after year upon the immortality of the soul, and the nature of vir- tue, and preserve the theme ever fresh and new. There is a limit in this direction that cannot be passed with safety. But it is not so with the dis- tinctively Christian truths. Even the dark, solemn theme of human corruption, expounded by one who has been instructed out of the written revelation, and the thronging, bursting consciousness of his own soul, — even this sorrowful and abstractly repel- lant theme, when enunciated in a genuinely Biblical manner, fascinates the natural man himself like the serpent's eye. Such a preacher is always felt to be oriofinal. Men never charore him with tameness and feeldeness. And still more is this true of that other, and antithetic, doctrine of the divine mercy in the blood of the God-man. This string may be struck with the plectrum year after year, century after century, and its vibration is ever resonant and thrilling, yet sweet and seolian. And certainly the age requires in its religious heralds and teachers that other characteristic of 3 34 HOMILETICS. authority. If a man speak at all, lie must speak as the oracles of God ; he must speak oracularly and positively. For the intellect aal world is now an arena of contending ideas and systems. Think you that all the dogmatism of the time is within the precincts of theology and the Church ? Think you that skepticism stands meek and hesitating, like the ass which Sterne describes, who seemed to invite abuse, and to say to every passer-by : " Don't kick me, but if you will you may ?" No ! all ideas, the false as well as the true, all systems, the heretical as well as the orthodox, are positive and assertory. It is no time, therefore, for Christianity, — the only sys- tem that has a right to say to the world, " Thou shalt," and ^'Thou shalt not"; the only system that has a right to utter its high and authoritative, '' He that believeth shall be saved, and he that believeth not shall be damned", — it is no time for that absolute and ultimate religion, in and by which this misera- ble and ruined race must live or bear no life, to be deprecatory, and " borrow leave to be." If such, tlien, be the relation existing between Sacred Eloquence and Biblical Exegesis, the Chris- tian ministry ought to lay deep the foundations of its address to the popular mind, in the understanding and interpretation of the Word of God. The proper function of the preacher is to put strictly revealed doctrine into oratorical forms for popular impression, and to imbue all discourse in the sanc- tuary, and upon the Sabbath, with a strictly Bibli- ELOQUENCE AND EXEGESIS. 35 cal spirit. For after all, it is tlie spirit of a book, the spirit of an author, wliicli is of chief import- ance. Pascal has left an instructive and quickening fragment upon the " geometrical spirit." It is the spirit of demonstration, — that bent and tendency in an intellectual person which spontaneously inclines him to define accurately whatever is capable of defi- nition, and to prove irrefragably whatever is capa- ble of proof Whoever possesses this spirit takes geometry with him w^herever he goes. Of such a human mind, — the mind of a Pascal, — it may be said, as Plato said of the Eternal Mind, it perpetu- ally geometrizes. And the same is true of the Bib- deal spirit. He who has imbibed it from the close and penetrating study of the words, clauses, sen- tences, paragraphs, sections of the sacred volume, puts the seal of the Eternal Spirit upon every thing that he writes, and every thing that he utters. The written word of God is not only filled with a dis- tinctive spirit, but it is also dictated by an Eternal Spirit. It has a Spirit for its author, and it has a spirit as its inward characteristic. It is a wheel within a wheel ; it is a sea within a sea ; it is an atmosphere within an atmosphere. Spiritual in its origin, spiritual in its contents, and spiritual in all its influences and efi*ects, well may it be the sole great aim of the pulpit orator to reach and acquire the spirit of the Scriptures. There is no danger of mysticism in such a striving ; and no false spiritual- ism will result from it. Such an endeavor to drink 36 HOMILETICS. in the pure essence of a merely "human product miglat result in dreaminess of thought and feeling. The undue and. constant musing; of the New Plato- nists upon the Platonic speculations finally destroyed all clear thinking and healthy mental action. The effect was like that of the forbidden fruit upon Adam and Eve. They " fancy that they feel Divinity within them breeding wings, Wherewith to scorn the earth." But the written revelation is a marvellous combina- tion of the divine with the human, of the spiritual with the material, of the reason with the under- standing, of the heavenly with the earthly. All the antitheses are blended, and counterpoise each other, with wonderful harmony ; so that no human mind will ever become exorbitant and exaggerated by an exclusive and absorbing study of it. Like the ocean, while it has its undulations, and an un- fathomed swell which no human power can level, it never has the everlasting mountains and valleys; it never exhibits or produces extremes. He, then, whose public discourse is pervaded with the spirit of revelation, and who speaks as the oracles of God, will be eloquent in the high- est style. Truth will impart weight, and sincerity will impart earnestness, and feeling will impart glow, and at times devout enthusiasm will im- part color and beauty, to his oratory, and he will ELOQUENCE AND EXEGESIS. 37 verify the affirmation whicli the most highly edu- cated and the loftiest of English poets puts into the mouth of the Son of God, in his reply to Satan, who pleaded the cause of secular letters against that of inspiration : "Their orators thou then extolPst as those Tlie top of eloquence : But lierein to our prophets far beneath, As men divinely taught, and better teaching, In their majestic unaffected style, Than all the oratory of Greece and Rome." CHAPTEE II. DISTmCTIYE NATURE OF HOMTLETICS, AND REASONS FOR ITS CULTIVATION. HoMiLETics is tlie term tliat has been chosen to denote the application of the principles of rhetoric to preaching. It is synonymous, conse- quently, with Sacred Rhetoric. The derivation of the word from the Greek verb ofiiXslv shows that the primary purpose of the homily or sermon was instruction. The first sermons were, luidoubtedly, much more didactic than rhetorical in their form and substance. This must have been so for several reasons. In the first j)lace, the assemblies to which the sermon was first addressed were more private and social in their character, than the modern congregation. Christianity was in its infancy, and had not become an acknowledged and public religion ; and hence its ordinances and instructions were isolated from those of society at large. It was one of the principal charges brought against Christianity by ifcs first opponents, that it was unsocial, exclusive, and sectarian. The Roman JS"ATURE OF HOMILETICS. 39 complained tliat the Christian, so far as religion was concerned, was not au integral part of the state, but was a morose, solitary, and unpatriotic man/ The first Christian cono-reo-ation beino; thus small, thus isolated and private, it was natural that the style of address upon the part of the preacher should be more familiar than it can be before a large audience, and upon a strictly public occasion. Hence the sermon in the early history of the Church was much more homiletical, that is, con- versational^ than rhetorical in its character. Like those free and •familiar lectures which the modern preacher delivers to a limited audience, on the evening of a secular day, the first sermons possessed fewer of those oratorical elements which enter so largely into the discourses that are now prepared for the great congregation in the house of public worship, and on the Sabbath, the great public day of Christendom. In the second place, the first sermons were natu- rally and properly more didactic than rhetorical, because the principal work to which the first preachers of Christianity were summoned was instruction. The cardinal doctrines of Christianity were not, as they are now, matters of general knowledge. The public mind was preoccupied ^Taoitfs: Annalium, XV. 44. quam od.io humam gencrvi coii Christianorum multitudo iiigens victi sunt, baud jiroitide in criniine incendii 40 H0MILETIC8. witli the views and notions of polytlieism, and. witli altogether false conceptions of the nature and principles of the Christian religion ; and hence there was unusual need, during the first centuries of the Church, to indoctrinate the Grreek and Roman world. Expository instruction was, consequently, the first great business of the Christian herald, coupled with an effort to disabuse the human mind of those errors to which it was enslaved by a false religious system. Christianity at first was compelled to address itself to the understand- ings of men, in order to prepare the way for an address to their hearts and wills ; and hence its first discoui'ses w^ere rather didactic than oratorical. And the same remark holds true of missionary preaching in the modern world. The missionary repeats the process of the primitive preacher. His audiences are not public, but private. His addresses are more conversational than oratorical ; more for purposes of instruction than of persuasion. From these two causes, the sermon was originally an instructive conversation (p^iikia) rather than an oration. But althoug^h the relations of the modern preacher are considerably different from those of the ancient ; although the Christian preacher is much more a public man than he was at first, because Christianity is the public religion of the modern world, and the Christian sabbath is its public holy day, and the Christian congregation is its public NATURE OF HOMILETICS. 41 religions assembly ; althoiigli Homiletics has neces- sarily become more strictly rhetorical in its char- acter because the sermon has become more oratori- cal in its form and style ; we must recognize and acknowledo:e the fact that Sacred Rhetoric is in its own nature more didactic than Secular. With all the change in the relations of Christianity to society and to the state, and with all the corre- sj)onding change in the circumstances and position of the preacher, it is still true that one very important part of his duty is that of exegetical instruction. Though the modern world is, gen- erally speaking, speculatively acquainted with the Christian system, and does not need that minute instruction, and that deliverance from the errors of polytheism, which the pagan world re- quires, still the natural man everywhere and in all ages needs indoctrination. The sermon must be a preceptive discourse, and the information of the mind must be one of the chief ends of Sacred Eloquence. This brings us to the principal difference be- tween Secular and Sacred Rhetoric. The latter is more didactic than the former. We are speak- ing comparatively, it will be remembered. We would not be understood as granting the position of some writers upon Homiletics, that there is a distinction in hind between Secular and Sacred Rhetoric, — that the didactic element enters so largely into the sermon that the properly rhetorical ele- 42 HOMILETICS. ments are expeUed fi-om it, and it tlius loses the oratorical character altoo^ether. The sermon is not an essay or a treatise. It is an address to an audience, like a secular oration. Its purpose, like that of the secular oration, is to influence the will and conduct of the auditor. Like the secular oration, it is a product of all the powers of the human mind in the unity of their action, and not of the imagination alone, or of the understanding: alone ; and like the secular oration it addresses all the faculties of the hearer, ending with a movement of his will. The distinction be- tween Secular and Sacred Rhetoric is not one of kind, but of degree. In the sermon, . there is less of the purely oratorical element than in secular orations, because of the greater need of exposition and instruction. The sermon calls for more argu- mentation, more narration, more doctrinal informa- tion, than secular discourses contain, and hence, speaking comparatively, Secular Rhetoric is more purely and highly rhetorical than Homiletics. Hence, as matter of fact, the sermon is more solid and weighty in its contents, more serious and earnest in its tone, and more sober in its coloring, than the deliberative, or judicial, or panegyrical oration of Secular Eloquence. It is a graver pro- duction, less dazzlinor in its hues, less strikino: in its style, less oratorical in its general character. Recurring to the distinction between the formal and the real sciences, we might say that Secular NATURE OF IIOMILETICS. 43 Eloquence partakes more of tlie former, and Sacred Eloquence moi*e of the latter.^ With this brief elucidation of the distinctive nature of Homiletics. we proceed now to consider a few reasons for its cultivation. 1. The first reason is derived from the intrinsic dignity and importance of the sermon as a species of literature. For if we have regard to the subject matter and the end in view, the sacred oration is the most grave and weighty of all intellectual productions. The eternal salvation of the human soul, through the presentation of divine truth, is the end of preaching. The created mind is never employed so loftily and so worthily, as when it is l)enrling all its powers, and co-working with God himself, to the attainment of this great purpose. A discourse that accomplishes this aim is second to no species of authorship, in intrinsic dignity and importance. Other species of literature may decline in interest and value as the redemption of the human race advances, but this species will steadily tend to its culmination. As the human intellect shall come more and more under the influence of those great ideas which relate to God and eternity, public religious discourse will gain in power and impress! veness, because of the immortal ends which it has in view. Like the Christian grace of charity, which will outlive prophecies, and tongues, and * Theeemin's Rhetoric (Introductory Essay, p. 35, sq.). 44 HOMILETICS. knowledge Sacred Eloquence will outlive, oi rather trai. sform into its o^.vn likeness, all other forms of literature. Not that philosophy, and poetry, and history will cease to exist as departments of intellectual effort so long as the human race continues in this mode of being, but they will all take on a more solemn character, and assume a more serious and lofty end, whereby they wall approximate more and more, in spirit and influence, to the literature proper of the Christian Church, — to the parables of our Lord, the epistles of his apostles, the sermons of his ministers. "For it is written: I will destroy the wisdom of the wnse, and will bring to nothing the understanding of the prudent." In this way, the superior dignity and importance of the sermon will appear, inasmuch as through the influence which it will have exerted upon the thinking of the race, the literature of the world will have become spirit- ualized and sanctified. Through the preaching of the Gospel, and the leavening of the mind with divine truth, we may expect to see the same great end, the glory of God in the eternal well-being of man, set up as the goal of universal letters. Whether, then, there be poetry it may fail, whether there be philosophy it may cease, whether there be literature it may vanish away; but the word of God liveth and abideth forever. There will be an ever-enduring dignity and value in that species of intellectual productions w^hose great end is the ]SrATUEE OF nO]\nLETICS. 45 indoctrination of the human mind in the truths of divine revelation. We find, thei-efore, in the gravity and impor- tance of the sacred oration, a strong reason why the homiletic art should be most assiduously cultivated. The philosopher is urged up to deep and laborious study, by the weight and solidity of his department. He feels that it is worthy of his best intellectual efforts, and he is willing to dedicate his whole life to it. The poet adores his art for its intrinsic nobleness and beauty, and like Milton is and^itious to glority it by some product that shall l)e the most '' consummate act of its author's fidelity and ri])eness ; the result of all his considerate diligence, all his midnight watchings, and expense of palladian oiL" The. historian spends long years in building up, from the solid foundation to the light and airy pin- nacle, a structure that shall render his own name historic and associate it with the dignity of history. And shall the sacred orator be less influenced than these intellectual workmen, by the nobleness and worth of his vocation ? Ought he not, like the greatest of the apostolic preachers, to magnify his vocation, and feel all the importance of the depart- ment, in which he has been called to labor with his l>rain and with his heart? 2. A second reason for cultivating Homiletics is derived from the intrinsic difficulty of producing an excellent sermon. In the first place, there is the difficulty which pertains to the department of 46 HOMILETICS. rhetoric generally, arising from the f^ict, that in order to the production of elovquence all the facul- ties of the mind must be in operation together, and concurring to an outward practical end. In the production of a work of art, the imagination, as a single faculty, is allowed to do its perfect Avork unembarrassed by other faculties. The idea of the Beautiful is not confused or obscured by a refer- ence to other ideas, such as the True, the Useful, and the Good. The productive agency in this case is single, uncomplex, and exerted in one straight unhindered course. In the production of a purely logical or speculative product, again, the theoretic reason, as a single faculty, is allowed to do its rigorous work, unembarrassed by either the imagi- nation or the moral sense. The philosDphic essay is a product which contains but one element, and that the speculative, and hence is far easier to originate, than one in which many dissimilar ele- ments, — speculative and practical, imaginative and moral, — are mingled, and which must, moreover, be made to amalgamate with each other. The oration, on the other hand, whether secular or sacred, has a far more difficult origin than either of the above-mentioned productions. All the fac- ulties of understanding, imagination, and feeling, must be in exercise together; while above, and beneath, and around, and through them all, must be the agency of that highest and most important of all the human faculties, the will, the character NATUEE OF HOSIILETICS 47 the moral force of the man. In the origination of the oration, there must be not only the co-agency of all the cognitive, imaginative and pathetic powers, but the presence and the presidency in and through them all of that deepest and most central power in which, as the seat of personality and of character, they are all rooted and grounded. The oration, in this view, is not so much a product of the man, as it is the man himself, — an emhodimerit of all his faculties and all his processes.^ From the general character of the department of rhetoric, then, and the general nature of its products, the origina- tion of an excellent sacred oration is exceedingly difficult, and hence the need of a profound and philo- sophic study of Homiletics, or the art of Sei'monizing. In the second place, the production of the sermon is a difficult work, because of the nature and extent of the influence which it aims to exert. The sermon is designed to produce an effect upon human character ; and this, not upon its mere superficies, but its inmost principles. Unlike secu- lar discourse, the sacred oration is not content with influencing men in regard to some particular or particulars of conduct, but aims at the whole nature of the man. The political orator is con- tent, if by his eftort he secures an individual vote for a single measure. The judicial orator is con- tent, if he can obtain a favorable verdict respecting * Le style, c'est rhommo. — Buffon. 48 HOMILETICS. the case in hand. The sacred orator, on the other hand, aims at the formation of an entire char „cter, — at laying a foundation for an innumerable series of particular actions, — or else he endeavors to mould and develop fi'om the centre a character which is already in existence, as when he addresses' the Church in distinction from the congregation. If we have regard to the renewal of human nature, the formation within the human soul of entirely new principles of action, it is plain that the con- struction of a discourse adapted to produce this great effect involves many and great difficulties. It is true, that the first and efficient cause of this effect must be sought in the special and direct operation upon the individual soul of a higher Being than man. Yet it is equally true, that the secondary instrumental cause of this renewal is divine truth presented by the preacher. There must, therefore, be an adaptation between the cause and the effect, in this case as much as in any other. Second causes must be adapted to the effi3ct as much as first causes. There is a mode of presenting divine truth which is suited to produce conversion ; and there is a mode which is not suited to this end. There is a method of sermonizing which is adapted to develop the Christian character, and there is a method which is not at all adapted to this. Now, to produce a discourse which, in all its parts and properties, shall fall in with the operations of the Holy NATURE OF HOMILETICS. 49 Spirit, and of the liuman spirit when under divine influence, — which shall not Mind the mind, nor impede the flow of the feelings, but shall concur with all that higher influence which is bearing upon the sinner in the work of regenera- tion, or upon the Christian in the hour and pro- cess of sanctification, — to produce an excellent ser- mon is one of the most arduous attempts of the human intellect. To assert that the attempt can be a successful one without study and training upon the part of the preacher, is to deal difter- ently with the department of Sacred Rhetoric, from what we do with other departments of intellectual effort. It is to treat the higher and eternal interests of men, with more thoughtless- ness and indifference than we do their lower and secular interests. None, — unless it be those half-educated persons who do not recognize the distinction between science and practice, between a profession and a trade, and who would anni- hilate all professional study and training, — none, unless it be such as these, deny the importance of a thorough discipline on the part of the jurist and the civilian. It is acknowledged, generally, that learning and culture are requisite to the production of successful pleading in court, and successful debating in the senate. And no one who seriously considers the depth and compre- hensiveness of the aim of a sermon, and takes into account that sermonizing is not an intermit- 4 go HOMILETICS. tent effort, but a steady, uniform process, week after week, and year after year, will be disposed to disparage or undervalue homiletic discipline or the homiletic art. Says one of the earliest and pithiest English writers upon Homiletics : " Preach- ers have enougli to do, and it will take up their whole time to do it well. This is not an art that is soon learnt, this is not an accomplishment that is easily gained. He that thinks otherwise, is as weak and foolisli as the man that married Tully's widow (saith Dio) to be master of his eloquence." ^ The difficulty, in the third place, of construct- ing an excellent sermon is clearly apparent, when we consider the nature of the impression which is souo;lit to be made. Without takino; into account such characteristics as distinctness and depth of impression, and many others that would suggest themselves, let us seize upon a single one, — nsanelj, 2?e?'ma7ien€e of impression, — and by a close examination perceive tke need of under- standing, both tbeoretically and practically, tke art of Sermonizing. The test of excellence in a sermon is continu- ance of influence. By this, it is not meant that an excellent sermon produces no more impression at the time of its first delivery than afterwards. Often the vividness of a discourse is most appa- ^ John Edwaeds : The Preacher, Pt. I., p. 274. ISTATURE OF IIOMILETICS. 51 rent at tlie time of its origin, because it was partly the fruit of temporary circumstances,- and derived sometliing of its force from time and place. Yet, after this is said, it is still true, that no sermon is truly excellent which does not con- tain something of permanent value for the human head and heart. It must have such an idea or proposition at the bottom of it, and be arranged on such a method, and be filled up with such reflections, and inspired with such a spirit, as will make it an object of interest for any thought- ful mind in all time. It is true, that tried by this test, many sermons would be found want- ing, — and far more of such sermons as draw mis- cellaneous crowds, and are fit only to be printed in a newspaper, than of such as are preached to attentive audiences, and are unknown save by the solid Christian character which they help to origi- nate, or to cultivate, — it is true, that tried by the test of permanency of impression, the sacred, as Avell as the secular oration would often be found defective, and yet every such discourse ought to be subjected to it. One of the first questions to be asked, for purposes of criticism, is this question : Is there in this discourse a solidity, and thoughtful- ness, which gives it more or less of permanent value for the human mind ? Now it is impossible that this weighty intel- lectual character, conjoined as it must be in tho oration with a lively and rhetorical tone, should 52 HOMILETICS. be attained witlioiit a very thorough discipline on the part of the preacher. The union of such sterling, and yet opposite, qualities as thoughtful- ness and energy, is the fruit of no sujDerficial education, the result of no mere desultory efforts. The sacred orator needs not only a general cul- ture, but a special culture in his own art. It is not enough that he be acquainted with those leading departments in which every educated, and especially every professional man, is interested ; he must also be master of that specific art and department, upon which the clerical profession is more immediately founded. He must be well versed in the principles and practice of Homiletics. Otherwise, his sermonizing^ will be destitute of both a present and a permanent interest. If he be a man of learning and of reflective habits, but of no rhetorical spirit, although his discourses may be weighty in matter, and, as theological dis- quisitions, very meritorious, they will not produce the proper immediate effects of sacred eloquence, and neither will they exert the j^ermanent influence of theological treatises. They will fail altogether as intellectual productions. The studious, thoughtful mind especially needs the influence of homiletical discipline, in order to prepare it for the work of addressing and influencing the popular audi- ence. There is a method of so organizing the materials in the mind, of so aiTanging, and expand- ing, and illustrating truth, as to exert the imme* - NATUEE OF HOMILETICS. 53 diate impression of rhetoric, united with the per- manent impression of logic and philosophy. This method can be acquired only by the study and the practice of the art of Sermonizing. 3. A third reason for cultivatino^ Homiletics is found, in the increasingly higher demands made by the popular mind, upon its public religious teachers. It is more difficult to make a permanent popu- lar impression now, than it was fifty years ago. The public mind is more distracted, than it was then. It is addressed more frequently, and by a greater variety, both of subjects and of speakers. It is more critical and fastidious than formerly. It is possessed, we will not say of a more thorough and useful knowledge on a few subjects, but of a more extensive and various information on many subjects. The man of the present day knows more of men and things in general, than his fore- fathers did, though probably not more of man and of some things in particular. There is more call, consequently, in the present age, for a sermonizing that shall cover the whole field of human nature and human acquirements, that shall contain a greater variety and exhibit a greater compass, and that shall be adapted to more grades and capacities. The preacher of the present day needs to be a man of wider culture than his j)redecessor, because the boundaries of human knowledge have been greatly enlarged, and because his auditors have come to be acquainted, some of 54 HOMILETICS. tliem thoroughly and some of them superficially, but all of them iu some degree, with this new and constantly widening field. Consider a single sec- tion of rhetoiic like that of metaphor and illus- tration, and see how much greater is the stock of materials now, than it was previous to the modern discoveries in natural science, and how even the popular mind has become possessed of sufficient knowledge in these departments, not merely to understand the orator's allusions and representa- tions, but to demand them of him. A modern audience, though it may not possess a very exact knowledge of what has been accomplished in mod- ern science, is yet possessed of sufficient informa- tion to detect any such ignorance in a public speaker, and especially in the preacher, as shows him to be inferior to the educated class to which he belongs, and behind the present condition of human culture and knowledge. It was urged not many years since, by the classes of a teacher who had been distinguished in his day, and whose instructions still exhibited a solid and real excel- lence that ought to have overruled the objection in this instance, that he had not kept up with the lit- erary and scientific movement of the modern mind ; that his style of presenting, establishing, and illus- trating truth had become obsolete, although the truth itself which he taught was unobjectionable. In proof of this, it was affirmed that certain illustrations which were taken from the astron- NATUEE OF IIOlinLETICS. 55 omy that existed a century ago, but wliicli had been rendered not only incorrect but absurd by more recent discoveries, were still allowed to stand. It was complained that rhetoric, in this instance, had been vitiated by the telescope. The popular mind, also, is nice and fastidious, and will imme- diately detect any aj^pearance of deficiency in literary and scientific culture in the preacher, espe- cially if it affects his style and diction, and will give it far more weight than it is really entitled to. But to take a more important part of Sacred Rhetoric than style, or diction, or illustration, con- sider for a moment the metJiod and arrangement of a sermon, and see what a difficult task the popular mind of the present day imposes upon its public religious teachers. The greatest difference between the men of the present day and their forefathers consists in the greater distinctness, and rapidity, of their mental processes. They are not more serious and thought- ful than their ancestors, but they are more vivid, animated, and direct in their thinking than they were. They are more impatient of prolixity, of a loose method of arrangement, and of a heavy drag- ging movement in the exhibition of truth. Audi- ences a century ago would patiently listen to dis- courses of two hours in length, and would follow the sermonizer through a series of divisions and subdivisions that would be intolerable to a modern hearer. The human intellect seems to have shared 56 HOMILETICS. in that increased rapidity of motion which has been imparted to matter, by the modern improvements in machinery. The human body is now carried through space at the rate of a mile a minute, and the human mind seemg to have learned to keep pace with this increase of speed. Mental operations are on straight lines, like the railroad and telegraph, and are far more rapid than they once were. The public audience now craves a short method, a dis- tinct sharp statement, and a rapid and accelerating movement, upon the part of its teachers. Now the preacher can meet this demand suc- cessfully, only by and through a strong methodizing power. He cannot meet it by mere brevity. The popular mind still needs and craves instruction, and, impatient as it is of dullness, will listen with more pleasure to a discourse that possesses solid excel- lence, though it be tedious in its method and some- what dull in style, than to a discourse which has no merit but that of shortness. The task, therefore, which the sacred orator of the present day has to perform, is to compress the greatest possible amount of matter into the smallest possible form, and in the most energetic possible manner Multum in jparvo is now the popular maxim. Phtrimum in minimo must now be the preacher's maxim. Hence he must possess the power of seizing instantaneously the strong points of a subject, of fixing them immo- vably in a rigorous logical order, and of filling them up into a full rhetorical form, by such subordinate NATURE OF IIOMILETICS. 5l thoughts, and trains of reflection, as will carry the hearer along with the greatest possible rapidity, together with the greatest possible impression/ This power of organizing united with the other principal power of the orator, that of amplifying to the due extent, is imperatively demanded of the preacher, by the active, clear, driving mind of the present age ; and whoever shall acquire it will w^ield an influence over the public, either for good or for evil, greater probably than could be exerted by an individual in an age characterized by slower mental processes. But is such an ability as this a thing of spon- taneous origin ? Will it be likely to be possessed by an indolent, or an uneducated mind ? Any one, who will reflect a moment, will j^ei-ceive that even a fine poetic or artistic talent would be far more likely " to come by nature," and without culture, than this fundamental ability of the orator. In these first instances, much depends upon the im- pulses and gifts of genius. There is much of spon- taneity in the poetic and artistic processes. But a powerful methodizing ability implies severe tasking of the intellect, a severe exercise of its faculties. * "Eeason and argument must care tliat he always speak good be made use of by the preacher, sense, and argue closely. Nothing and the more of these the better, that comes from him is to be raw But the closer this powder is and indigested, but all must be rammed, the greater execution it well-ripened by judgment."— icill do. The sum of this head is Johx Edwards. The Preacher, this : that a preacher is to take Pt. I., p. 127. 58 HOMILETICS. whereby it acquires the power of seizing the mair points of a subject with the certainty of an instinct, and then of holding them with the strength of a vice, — and all this too, while the feelings and the imagination, the rhetorical powers of the soul, are filling out and clothing the structure with the vitality, and warmth, and beauty of a living thing. This power of quickly and densely methodizing can be attained only by diligent, and persevering disci- pline ; and hence it should be kept constantly before the eye of the preacher as an aim, from the begin- ning to the end of his educational and professional career. He cannot meet the demands which the public will make upon him as its religious teacher, unless he acquires something of this talent ; and he may be certain that in projDortion as he does acquire and employ it, he will be able to convey the greatest possible amount of instruction in the short- est possible space, and, what is of equal imj^ortance for the orator's purpose, he will be able to produce the strongest possible impression in the shortest possible amount of time. CHAPTEE III. FUNDAMENTAL PROPERTIES OF STYLE. The fundamental properties of good dis^.ourse are as distinct, and distinguishable, as those of matter. Many secondary qualities enter into it, but its primary and indispensable characteristics are reducible to three: viz., plainness^ force, and beauty. We propose, in this chapter, to define and illustrate these essential properties of style; and while the analysis will be founded in the general principles of rhetoric and oratoiy, it will also have a special reference to sacred eloquence, and the wants of the pulpit. 1. It is agreed among all writers upon rhetoric, that the first property in style is that by virtue of which it is intelli2:ible. The understandinoj is the "ill.. Ill " — — ^ ^ avenue to the man. No one is aflfected by truth who does not apprehend it. Discourse must, there- f fore, first of all be plain. This property was termed persp}icuitas, by the Latin rhetoricians. It is trans- pu^eS^ ' in discourse, as the etymology denotes. The word hd^yeLa, which the Greek rhetoricians 60 HOMILETICS. employed to mark this same characteristic, signifies distinctness of outline. The adjective eva^yyig is applied by Homer to the gods, when actually ap- pearing to human vision in their own bright forms ; when, like Apollo, they broke through the dim ether that ordinarily veiled them from mortal eyes, and stood out on the edge of the horizon dis- tinctly defined, radiant, and splendid.^ Vividness seems to have been the ruling conception for the Greek, in this property of style, and transparency for the Latin. The English and French rhetori- cians have transferred the Latin ^ers^picuitas^ to designate this quality of intelligibility in discourse. The Germans have not transferred the Latin word, because the remarkable flexibility of their language relieves them from the necessity of transferring words from other languages, but they have coined one (Durchsichtigkeit) in their own mint, which agrees in signification precisely with the Latin j^^r- spicuitas. These facts evince that the Modern mind is inclined, with the Latin, to compare the property of intelligibility in style to a clear pellucid medium ; to' crystal, or glass, that permits the rays of light to go through, and thus permits the human eye to see through. While, however, the attention is fixed upon this conception of transparency, and the property * 'Ai£4 yap TO Trdpog ye Oeoi (palvovrai. kvapyelg 'H/zZv, evT' ipdoftev ayaKleiTaQ eKaTdfijSag. Odys. vii. 201, 202. PEOPEKTIES OF STYLE. 61 under consideration is denominated perspicuity, in the rhetorical nomenclature, it is important not to lose sight of that other conception of distinctness, or vividness, which was the leading one for the Greek mind. Style is not only a medium ; it is also a form . It is not only transtuceht and trans parent, like the undefined and all-pervading atmos- phere; it also has definite outlines, like a single objecj. Style is not only clear like the light; it is rotund like the sun. While, therefore, the concep- tion of perspicuity of medium is retained, there should also be combined with it the conception of fulness of outline, and vividness of impression, so as to secure a comprehensive, and all-including idea of that first fundamental property of style which renders it intelligible. Inasmuch as modern writers upon rhetoric have generally followed the Latin rhetoricians, and have discussed the subject almost exclusively under the conception of transparency, and the title of perspi- cuity, there is special reason for solicitude, lest the Greek conception of fulness of form and definite- ness of outline be lost out of sight. Moreover, close reflection upon the nature of the case will show, that the Greek mind in this, as in most other in- stances, was more philosophical than the Latin. It seized upon a very profound and essential charac- teristic. It is not enough that thoughts be seen through a clear medium ; they must be seen in a distinct shape. It is not enough that truth be 62 HOMILETICS. visible in a dear pure air ; it must also stand out in tliat air, a single, well-defined object. The at- mosphere must not only be crystalline and spark- lino:, but the thinos in it must be bounded and de- fined by s harply-cut lines. There may be perspi tl.^«?efi^k|^ithout distinctne ss ; especially, without that vivid distinctness which is implied in the Grreek evdoyeia, A style may be as transparent as water, and yet the thoughts be destitute of bol dness and indiyiduali ty. Such a style cannot be charged with obscurity, and yet it does not set truth before the mind of the reader or hearer, in a striking and impressive manner. Mere isolated perspicuity is a negative quality ; it furnishes^ a good medium of yision, but it does not present any distinctobject of yi sion. Distinctness of (Hitline, on the other hand, is a ppsitive quality. It implies a vigorous action of the mind upon the truth, whereby it is moulded and shaped ; whereby it is cut and chiseled like a statue ; whereby it is made to assume a sub- stantial and well-defined form which smites upon the eye, and which the eye can take in. Without discussing these two conceptions fur- ther, — a discussion which, we would remark in passing, is most interesting, leading as it does to a consideration of the differences between the mental constitution of different nations, as dis- played in their languages, — we proceed to a more particular examination of that fundamental prop- erty in style which renders it intelligible. We PROPERTIES OE STYLE. 63 denoDiinate it plamness. A thing is plain (planus), when it is hiid out open and smooth, upon a level surface. An object is in plain sight, when the form and shape of it are distinctly visible. Chau- cer, in his Canterbury Tales, makes the franldin, the English freeholder of his day, to say, when called upon for his story, " I lerned never rlietorike certain. Thing that I speke, it mote be bare and plain." This quotation shows that in Chaucer's time rhetoric was the opposite of a lucid and distinct presenta- tion of truth. In his age, it had become exces- sively artificial in its principles, and altogether mechanical in its applications. Hence the plain, clear-headed Englishman, whose story turns out to be told with a simplicity, and perspicuity, and i-aciness, that renders it truly eloquent, supposed that it must necessarily be faulty in style ; because his own good sense, and keen eye, made it impos- sible for him to discourse in the affected and false rhetoric of the schools of that day. For this plainness of style is the product of sagacity, and keenness. A sagacious understanding always speaks in plain terms. A keen vision describes like an eye-witness. ^ '"""~" """" There is no characteristic more important to the preacher than this, and none which ought to be more earnestly coveted by him. Sermons should be plain. The thoughts which the religious teacher 64 HOMILETICS presents to the common mind should go straight to the understanding. Every thing that covers up and envelopes the truth should be stripped off from it, so that the bare reality may be seen. There is prodigious power in this plainness of presentation. It is the j)ower of actual contact. A plain writer, or speaker, makes the truth and the mind impinge upon each other. When the style is plain, the mind of the hearer experiences the sensation of being touched ; and this sensation is always impressive, for a man starts when he is touched. Fine examples of this property are found in the style of John Locke, and Thomas Hobbs. We mention these writers, because plainness is their dominant characteristic. They were both of them philosoi^hers of the senses, rather than of the rea- son and the spirit. Hence their excellencies, and hence their defects. They are not to be especially recommended for those otker properties of style which spring out of a more profound, and spiritual way of thinking, — such as living energy, and ingrained beauty, — but for pure perspicuous address to the understanding, they liave never been excelled. Trying to find every thing in the senses, to convert all tke mental processes ulti- mately into sensation, it is " not surprising that whatever is exhibited by them stands out palpable, and tangible. Thought seems to have become material, and to strike upon the understanding like PROPERTIES OF STYLE. 65 matter itself. "Yon Scotchmen," said Edward Irving to Chalmers, " wonld handle an idea as a bntcher handles an ox."^ Whether this is true of the Scotch mind we will not affirm, but it is certainly true of writers like Locke and Hobbs. Their thoughts can be seen, handled, and felt. The writings of archdeacon Paley, also, furnish fine examples of the property we are considering. His w^as one of the most sao-acious minds in Eno^lish literary history ; eminently characterized by what Locke denominates "large round-about sense.*" There was no mysticism in his intellectual charac- ter. Indeed, his affinities for the spiritual, in either philosophy or religion, were not so strong as they ous-ht to have been. The defects in his ethical and theological systems are traceable to this. Still, upon subjects that did not call for a highly pro- found and spiritual mode of contemplation, upon subjects that fall properly within the range of the senses and the understanding, he was perfectly at home, and always discourses with a . significant plainness that renders him a model for the preacher, so far as this characteristic is concerned. Consider the following paragraph from his Natural Theology, in which he disposes of the theory of creation by development, as a specimen of pure plainness in presenting thoughts. " Anoth- er system which has lately been brought forward, » Hanna : Life of Chalmers, III. 168. 66 HOMILETICS. and with much ingenuity, is that of appetencies. The principle, and the short account, of the theory, is this. Pieces of soft, ductile matter, being endued with propensities or appetencies for particular actions, would, by continual endeavors carried on through a long series of generations, work them- selves gradually into suitable forms ; and at length acquire, though perhaps by obscure and almost imperceptible improvements, an organization fitted to the action which their respective propensities led them to exert. A piece of animated matter, for example, that was endued with a propensity to fly, though ever so shapeless, though no other we will suppose than a round ball to begin with, would, in a course of ages, if not in a million of years per- haps in a hundred million of years (for our theo- rists, having eternity to dispose of, are never sparing in time), acquire wings. The same tendency to locomotion, in an aquatic animal, or rather in an animated lump which might happen to be sur- rounded by water, would end in the production of Jl7is ; in a living substance confined to the solid earth, would put out legs and feet / or, if it took a different turn, would break the body into ringlets, and conclude by crawling upon the ground."^ What plainness and pertinency in style and phrase- j ology are here. How easy of comprehension are the thoughts, and yet with what directness and * Paley : Natural Theology, Ch. xxiii. PEOPEETIES OF STYLE. 67 effect do they strike the understanding. The truth comes into actual contact with the mind. The statement of the false theory is so thorough, and so plain because it is thorough, that it becomes the refutation. The mind that reads, or hears, such discourse is affected with the sensation of weight, density, and solidity ; as w^e have said before, it is impinged upon. The preacher should toil after this property of style, as he would toil after virtue itself He should constantly strive, first of all, to exhibit his thoughts plainly. Whether he shall add force to plainness, and beauty to force, are matters to be considered afterwards. Let him in the first place begin at the beginning, and do the first thing. Endeavors after force, elegance, and beauty, will be likely to succeed, provided this first fundamental in discourse is attained, and they will be sure to fail if it is not. The preacher, at the present time, is liable to temptation in respect to the property of style under consideration, because it is not a showy prop- erty. The public is too eager after striking exter- nals, for its own good. It demands brilliancy l^efore plainness, without sufficient regard for that basis of strong sense which must ever support this quality, in order that it may have true value. The preacher is, consequently, tempted to yield to this false taste of the ill-educated, and to become like the public. The form soon outruns the substance. 68 HOMILETICS. He l)ays more and more attention to the expression, and less and less to the thought, and degenerates into a pretentious and glittering declaimer. Now, there is nothing that will prevent a preacher from falling into this false manner, but a determination to be plain ; a determination, whether he does any thing else or not, to bring the truth into contact with the human understanding. In the midst of all this clamor for fine writino; and florid style, the preacher should be a resolute maii, and dare to be a plain wi'iter. It is the doctrine of one of the best theorizers upon rhetoric, that elo- quence is a virtue.^ The theory is corroborated by the subject under discussion ; for it is easy to see that in respect to that fundamental property of style which renders it intelligible, a very strong?./;//^, a very high character^ is needed in the pulpit orator, in order to practise this self-denial, and also to bring the popular mind up to it. Again, the preacher must make this property of style a matter of theory, and a matter of conscience. He must distinctly perceive and acknowledge to his own mind, that plainness is t\iQ foundation of style; that the true theory of eloquence imposes this property upon the orator, as the very first one to be acquired. He must feel that he cannot conscien- tiously pass by, or neglect, this characteristic ; that the interests of truth, and of the human soul, * Theeemin : Eloquence a Virtue. PROPERTIES OF STYLE. 69 imperatively require of liinithnt he T)e plain-spoken, even if lie is nothing more. Under tlie pressure of these two, — a correct theory of eloquence and a sober conscience, — the preacher will be likely to determine to be plain. This determination wnll affect his whole sermonizing. It will appear in the structure of the plan, casting out of it every thing that does not belons: to a clear and clean method. It will appear in the composition and manner, in a stripping, flaying hatred of circumlocutions, and of all unnecessary ornament. The preacher whose head is right, and whose conscience is right, will soon come to possess a love for this plainness. He will not be a])le to read authors who do not under^ stand themselves. He will be impatient with a public speaker who does not distinctly know what he is saying. He will be interested in any book, and in any discourse, which sets forth plain truth. Still another means of acquiring this propei'ty of style is found in the cultivation of what is termed, in common parlance, common sense. Com- mon sense is that innate sascacitv of the understand- ing which detects truth by a sort of instinct, and which, for this very reason, is dissatisfied with any thing short of the truth. An instinct of any kind cannot be deceived, and it cannot be put off with appearances and' pretences. It is discontented and restless, until it meets its correlative object. The young swan is uneasy, until it finds the ele- ment it has never yet seen ; then 70 HOMILETICS. "with arched nect, Between her wliite wings mantling proudly, rows Her state with oary feet." Through all nature, and all mind, the existence of an instinctive intelligence presupposes a correspond- ing object, in respect to which the instinct cannot be deceived, and without which it is unsatisfied. Now this common sense of mankind is an instinctive appetency for truth, and it cannot be met with any thing short of the pure real- ity. Even a sophisticated mind is caught by plain utterances. The man who lias spoiled his tastes and sympathies, by an artificial and showy cultivation, is nevertheless struck by the vigor and raciness of plain sense. In the phrase of Horace, though he has driven nature out of his under- standing with a fork, she yet returns when truth appears. And this is the hold which a plain speaker has upon an audience of false tastes, and false refinement. There is an instinctive sagacity in man which needs this plainness of presentation, and which craves it, and is satisfied with it. It is by the cultivation of this common sense, this native sagaciousness of the human understanding, that the preacher is to acquire the property in style that corresponds to it. Let him always seek, first of all, an open and transparent view of a subject. Let him pass by all superficial qualities, and aim at the substance. Let him gratify and cultivate his common sense, by a knowledge that ia PEOPEETIES OF STYLE. 71 tliorouglh as far as it goes. Let him content liimself with no dim and obscure apprehensions. A fourth aid, in the acquisition of a plain style of discourse, is subtlety of mind. It is important to distinguish subtlety, from mere acuteness. A subtle mind perceives the interior connection or contradic- tion, while a merely acute mind perceives the exte- rior only. Hence, acuteness by itself leads to hair- splitting; than which nothing is moi-e abhorrent to the common sense of mankind. Subtlety is a profound talent which takes its distinctions in the very heart of a subject, and sees into its inner structure and fibre. Subtlety, therefore, is an ally to sagacity, and contributes greatly to that dis- tinctness and plainness, in thought, which results in plainness and vividness in language. This talent aids in separating the non-essentials from the essentials of truth, so that only the leading and impressive characteristics of a sul>ject may be exhibited to the common mind. In instancing Locke, Hobbs, and Paley, as ex- amples of plain n-ess in style, we directed attention to the philosophic ground of the property. We found it in the disposition to found all knowledge upon sensation, in distinction from conception. A mind which strongly desires to know every thing by the mode of sensation, is one whose statements are always perspicuous. A writer or speaker, there- fore, who incessantly strives to impart a conscious knowledge to his hearers or readers, must, of neces- 72 HOMILETICS. sity, be lucid, because consciousness is internal sensation. And the proj^erty tlius originating will contain both of the characteristics, to which we alluded in the opening of this chapter. It will combine the Latin perspicidtas^ with the Greek ivdpysLa. It will not only be transparent, but vivid. This quality in style, we have remarked, re- quires force of character in the orator. He must be determined to be so intellig^ible, that the mind of the hearer cannot fail to understand him. He must compel the hearer to understand. He must force his way into consciousness, by the most significant, the most direct, the very plainest address to his cognitive powers. The title of one of the philosophical tracts of Fichte reads thus : "An account clear as the sun, of the real nature of my philosophy ; or, an attempt to compel the reader to understand."^ The title corresponds to the contents ; for the tract is one of the plainest productions, of one of the clearest heads that ever lived. This is the temper for the orator, as well as for the philosopher. Let the preacher, whether he is master of any other properties of style, and before troubling himself about them, be clear as the sun in his presentation of truth, and then he will compel men to understand. 1 a Sonnenklarer Bericbt an ^'^n Pliilosophie, ein Versuch, die das groszere Publikum tiber ser zum Verstcben zu zwin- das eigentiicbe Wesen der neues- gen." PEOPERTIES OF STYLE. 73 2. The second property of style wliicli sliould receive attention is force. This characteristic in discourse renders it penetrative. Plainness is more external in its relations to the mind ; force is more internal. The former is of the nature of an exhibition ; the latter is of the nature of an inspiration, and a permeation. While, however, this is the general distinction between the two, it would not be proper to call plainness a super- ficial property, and neither should we confine force to the depths. No man is plain unless he sees the truth, and no man sees the truth who does not look beyond its exterior; neither is any man forci- ble w^hose contemplation never comes up to the surface, but who contents himself with a mystical intuition. Force is power manifested '^ power streaming out in all directions, and from every pore of the mind. And this brino;s us to the first source, and essential characteristic, of true force in style. It originates in truth itself, and partakes of its nature ; it does not spring ultimately from the energy of the human mind, but from the power of ideas and principles. We shall consider this fact, first in its more general aspects as pertaining to philoso- phy, and then in reference to the rhetorical topics under consideration. Speaking generally, then, power in the finite mind is derived, not from the mind itself, but from the objective world of truths and facts to which it 74 HOMILETICS. is correlated. For tlie finite mind is a created thing, and all created things are dependent. It is the prerogative of the Infinite alone, to derive its energy from the depths of its own being. God has power, as he has life, in himself, and therefore he does not sustain the relation of a dependent individual to an objective universe. He is self- sufficient, and independent of all objects. Man's power, on the contrary, is conditioned upon the relation which he sustains to that which is other than himself, greater than himself, and higher than himself. He cannot draw upon his own isolated being, as the ultimate source of power, because his own being is not self-sufficient. His power lies, therefore, in that objective world of truth and of beins:, over asrainst which he stands as a finite and dependent subject. In simple and common phrase- ology, which so often, however, contains the highest philosophic truth, man's strength is in God, and the mind's streno^th is in truth. The fact here stated, and the principle upon wliich it is based, are of general application, and the worst errors in theory and j^ractice have re- sulted from its being denied or forgotten. The efficient power of the human intellect results not from spinning out its own notions and figments, but from contemplating those objective and eternal ideas, to which it is pre-conformed by its rational structure. If the human mind, by a hard, convul- sive effort analogous to the dead lift in mechanics, PROPERTIES OF STYLE. 75 attempts to create tlought and feeling, ^vitliont any contemplation ; if it attempts to think and to feel, without beholding the proper objects of thought and feeling ; it fails of necessity. The mind cannot think successfully, without an object of thought, and the heart cannot feel strongly and truly, without an object of feeling. There can be no manifesta- tion of power therefore, and no force in the finite mind, except as it has been nourished, stimulated and strengthened by an object other than itself. The history of philosophical speculation teaches no truth more plain or important than this, namely, that insulation, isolation, and snhjective processes generally, are destructive of all energy and vitality in the created mind, Avhile communion with real and solid verities promotes both. Take, for ex- ample, the systems of idealism in philosophy. These proceed upon the hypothesis that the truth lies ultimately in the subject, and not in the object; that, in reality, there is no object except what the mind makes for itself; that we reach truth by isolating the intellect from all external realities, and simply creating from within. The mental processes, upon this theory, become speculative instead of contemplative. The mental products, upon this theory, are pure figments, the manufac- tures of the human mind, and have no more abso- lute reality than a brain-image. All such thinking is destitute of true force and vitality, because it is exercised by the mind in insulation, and isolation, Y6 HOMILETICS. from the world of outward trutli and beins:. There is mental action enough, but no intuition. The mind sees nothing, but images every tiling. The intellect spins with great intensity upon its own axis, but it makes no other movement. There is incessant motion, but no progress. This abstract discussion might be prolonged, but sufficient has been said to justify, and show the grounds of the jDOsition with which we started, namely, that the power of the human mind issues ultimately from the truth and reality Avhich it contemplates, and that no finite mind can be energetic in its manifestations, that does not first behold objective truth. All attempts to be force- ful by mere speculation, by an intellectual activity that falls short of a direct intuition of an objective reality, must fail. And this, because the human mind is rather a capacity than a self sufficient ful- ness. It was made to receive truth into itself, and not to originate it out of itself The human mind is recipient in its nature, and not creative; it be- holds truth, but it does not make it. What, now, is the application of these princi- ples to sacred eloquence? What connection has this philosophic theory with the matter of style in the preacher ? We shall be able to answer this question, by considering the fact that the written revelation stands in the same relation to the sacred orator, that the world of nature does to the philoso- pher. The Bible is something objective to the human PEOPERTIES OF STYLE. 77 mind, and not a mass of subjective thinking wMeli human reason has orighiated. Revelation is not a particular phase or development of the finite intel- lect, like the origination of a new form of govern- ment, or a new school of philosophy. It is not one fold of the varied unfolding of the human mind, and of the same piece with it. On the contrary, it is divine wisdom given to man, out and out, to be received by him, and taken up into his mental structure, for purposes of religious renovation and growth. Human reason, therefore, is the subject, or the knowing agent, and the Scriptures are the object, or the thing to be known. All true power, consequently, in the sacred ora- tor, springs from this body of objective verity. It is not by a speculative, but by a Biblical process, that he is to make a powerful impression upon the popular mind. The neglect of revelation, and an endeavor to spin out matter from his own brain, by processes of ratiocination, must result in feeble dis- course. The oratorical power of the preacher de- pends upon his recipiency ; upon his contemplation of those ideas and doctrines which the SujDreme Mind has communicated to the created and depen- dent spirit; upon his clearly beholding them, and receiving through this intuition a fund of knowledge, and of force, of which he is naturally destitute. Hence, the preacher's first duty, in respect to the property of style under consideration, is to render himself a Biblical student. The term is not employed 78 HOMILETICS. liere in its narrower signification, to denote one wlio is learned in the literary externals of the Bible, and nothing more. A genuine Biblical student is both an exegete, and a dogmatic theologian. He is one whose mind is continually receiving the whole body of Holy Writ into itself in a living and genial v/ay, and who, for this reason, is becoming more and more energetic in his methods of contemplation, and more and more forcible in his modes of presentation. A truly mighty sacred orator is "mighty in the Scriptures^ ^^ this, it is not meant that a preacher whose memory is tenacious, and holds a great num- ber of texts which he can repeat readily, is neces- sarily a powerful orator. Excessive quotation of Scripture is as injurious to true living force in a ser- mon, as pertinent and choice quotation is conducive to it. Scripture should not lie in the preacher's mind in the form of cono-res^ated atoms, but of liv- ing, salient energies. True Biblical knoAvledge is dynamic, and not atomic. There is no better word to denote its nature, than the word imbue. The mind, by long-continued contemplation of revela- tion, is steeped in Divine wisdom, and saturated with it. Now, such a knowledge of the Scriptures as this imparts power to the sacred orator, which manifests itself in force of style, for the following reasons. In the first place, revealed truth is not speculative, but intuitional and contemplative. There is not a sin- gle abstraction in the Scriptures. The Bible is a PEOPEETIES OF STYLE. 79 revelation of actual facts, and practical doctrines. When, consequently, tlie action of the preacher's mind is that of simply beholding facts, and simply contemplating doctrines, it strengthens instead of exhausting itself. If the sermonizing process were purely speculative ; if the preacher were called upon, as he is on the rationalistic theory, to make a reve- lation instead of proclaiming one ; the inherent in- sufficiency of the finite intellect would soon aj^pear. Rationalism, therefore, — the theory that all revela- tion must be subjective, the production of the hu- man reason, — is the worst of all theories for the sacred orator. It forces him to seek his materials where they cannot be found. More tyrannical than the Egyptian taskmaster, it compels him to make bricks, not only without straw, but without clay. The command of God is otherwise. " Preach the preaching that I bid thee ; behold these facts and these truths, which have an existence and reality independent of the individual mind ; look at them steadily and long, until their meaning is seen and their power felt ; and then simply proclaim them, simply preach them." The preacher is a herald^ and his function is proclamation. In this way, the ideas which he presents to his fellow-men augment, instead of diminishing his strength. He gives no faster than he receives. He simply suffers divine truth^ which is never feeble and never fails, to pass through his mind, as a medium of communication, to the minds of his fellow-men. 80 HOMILETICS. In the second place, this knowledge and recep- tion of the Bible as an objective revelation imparts power to the preacher's mind, and force to his style, because Biblical truth is more livino; and enero^etic than any other species. A full discussion of this position would carry us over an immense expanse. The field, moreover, has been of late so much ploughed and worked, that its fertility is somewhat impaired. During the last ten years, the ministry itself has been too much occupied with eulogizing the Scriptures. All mere panegyrics, as Swift has said, contain an infusion of poppy. It would be bet- ter, for a while at least, to cease these attempts to render the sun luminous. It would he better, if the ministry ^rould so imbue themselves with the Bible itself, and would so reproduce it in their preaching, that the endeavor to prove it to be a powerful book would be a palpable and tedious superfluity. While, however, there is little need of the preacher's proving to the popularmind, that revealed truth is highly energizing in its nature and influ- ence, there is perhaps all the more need that he prove it to his own mind. Even while he is for- mally establishing this position to his audience, he may be the greatest unbeliever of them all. Indeed, that preacher is most liable to degenerate into a mere eulogist of the Bible, who finds little interest for his mind, and his heart, in its distinguishing doctrines. The man whose whole soul is intensely Biblical, the man into whose intellectual and moral texture the PROPERTIES OE STYLE. 81 substance of revelation has been woven, tlie man in whom the written Word has become incarnate, — this man is not the one to hyj^erbolize and elocutionize about the Scriptures. It is the preacher who harps most upon this string, who most needs to understand the note he is sounding. While, therefore, he says little about it, the sacred orator should really know and feel, that revealed truth is the most profoundly energizing in- fluence which his mind can come under. He should iind the hiding-place of power, in the revealed ideas of God's personality and mercy, and man's res2:)orisibility and guilt. In proportion as his mind, becomes Bil)lical in its conceptions upon these two subjects, will he be an intense preacher, and a living preacher, and a powerful preacher. But if, instead of contemplating the view presented in the written Word, of the character of God and man, he attempts to reach the truth upon these themes by a merely speculative process, he will fall either into panthe- ism or deism. And 'neither of these schemes is compatible with any vital, and powerful, address to men upon religious subjects. Saying nothing of the influence of pantheistic and rationalizing methods upon moral and religious character, it is indisputa- ble that they are the death of eloquence. Neither naturalism nor rationalism has ever thrilled the common mind, from the rostrum. There cannot be, and as matter of fact there never has been, any vivid and electrical discourse in the Christian pulpit, 6 82 HOMILETICS. when tbe preacher has denied, or doubted, the truth of the revealed representations of God's nature and man's character. On the contrary, all the high and commanding eloquence of the Christian Church has sprung out of an intuition like that of Paul and Luther, — a mode of conceiving and speaking of God, and man, and their mutual relations, that resulted entirely from the study of the Hebrew and Greek Scriptures. Having directed attention to that theory of realism in philosophy which leads to the contem- plation of an actual object, and is opposed to all merely speculative and idealizing methods, and after showins; that, in the instance of the sacred orator, all his power and eloquence must take its origin in an objective revelation, and not in the operations of the unassisted and isolated human intellect, it will be appropriate to consider, very briefly, some characteristics oT that property of style which we are discussing. At the same time, how- ever, it should be observed, that in pointing out where power lies, and v/hat is the true method of coming into possession of it, we have to some extent exhibited its essential nature. Force, gene- rally, cannot be disconnected from its sources, and cannot easily be described. The orator can be directed to that sort of self-discipline, and that method of thinking, and those objects of thought, from wliich power springs of itself, but the living energy itself cannot be so pictured out to him that PEOPEKTIES OF STYLE. 83 he will be able to attain it from tlie mere descrip- tion. No drawing has yet been made of the force of gravitation. The best and only true definition of life is to show signs of life ; and the best and only definition of power is a manifestation of it. The principal quality in a forcible style, and that which first strikes our attention, \^ ijenetration. While listening to a speaker of whom this property is a characteristic, our minds seem to be pricked as with needles, and pierced as with javelins. His thoughts cut through the more dull and apathetic parts, into the quick, and produce a keen sensation. Force is electrical; it permeates and thrills. A speaker destitute of energy never produces such a peculiar sensation as this. He may please by the even flow of his descriptions and narrations, and by the elegance of his general method and style, but our feeling is merely that of complacency. We are conscious of a quiet satisfaction as we listen, and of a soft and tranquil mental pleasure as he closes, but of nothing more. He has not cut sharply into the heart of his subject, and consequently he has not cut sharply into the heart of his hearer. The principal, perhaps the sole cause, of the suc- cess of the radical orator of the j)resent day with his audience, is his force. He is a man of one lone idea, and if this happens to be a great and funda- mental one, as it sometimes does, it is apprehended upon one of its sides only. As a consequence, he IS an intense man, a forcible man. His utterances 84 HOMILETICS. penetrate. It is true tliat there are among this class some of less earnest spirit, and less energetic temper ; amateur reformers, who wish to make an impression upon the public mind from motives of mere vanity. Such men are exceedingly feeble, and soon desist from their undertaking. For while the common mind is ever ready, too ready, to listen to a really earnest and forcible man, even though his force pro- ceeds from a wrong source, and sets in an altogether wrong direction, it yet loathes a lukewarm earnest- ness, a counterfeited enthusiasm. One of the most telling characters, in one of the most brilliant English comedies, is Forcible Feeble. Take away from the man who goes now by the name of reformer, — the half-educated man who sees the truth but not the ^vhole .truthj — take away from him his force, and you take away his muscular system. He instanta neously collapses into a flabby pulp. It is this penetrating -quality, then, which ren- ders discourse effective. And the preacher is the man, above all men, who should be characterized by it, if the theory which we have laid down respect- ing the origin of power is the true one. The preacher who studies and ponders the Bible as a whole, will not be a half-educated man. He will not see great ideas on one side, but on all sides, because they are so exhibited in the Scri23tures. Whatever power he derives from the contemplation of inspired truth will be legitimate, and it will be regulated. His force will not be lawless and without an aim, like PEOPEETIES OF STYLE. 85 tliat of tlie man whose thoughts are mere specula- tions. His power will be like power in material nature. The forces of nature are denominated, indif ferently, forces or laws ; and the power of the Bibli cal mind is one with eternal law and eternal truth. A striking writer of the present age furnishes an example which, in the way of contrast, throws light upon the particular aspect of the subject we are considering. We allude to Thomas Carlyle. Force, intense penetration, and incisive keenness, is the secret of his influence over the younger class of educated men. Take these away from his thoughts, and there is not enough of depth, comprehensive- ness and originality in them, to account for the impression which he has made, as an author, upon his generation. But this force in Carlyle is, after all, wholly subjective, and therefore spasmodic. It does not originate from a living reception into his mind, of the great body of objective and revealed truth. Suppose that that intellect were truly con- templative ; suppose that it had brooded over those two single ideas of the Divine ^personality and human apostasy, with their immense implication ; what a difference there would be in the quantity and the quality of its force. How much broader and deeper would be its intuition ; how much more practical and influential would be its projects for amelioratino; the condition of man ; and how much more permanent would be its influence in literary history. 86 HOMILETICS. For the energy in this instance is convulsive, and of the nature of a spasm. It is the force of a fury, and not of an angel. The muscle is bravely kept tight-drawn by an intense volition, and for a while there is the appearance of self-sufficient power. But the creature is finite, and a slight tremor becomes visible, and the cord finally slack- ens. The human mind needs to repose upon some- thing greater, deeper, grander than itself * and when, either from a false theory, or from human pride, or from both, there is not this recumbency upon objec- tive and eternal truth, its inherent finiteness and feebleness sooner or later appear. The created mind may endeavor to make up for this want of inward power, by a stormy and passionate energy ; but time is long, and truth is infinite, and sooner or later tlie overtasked, because unassisted, intellect gives out, and its possessor, weary and broken by its struggles and convulsions, rushes to the other extreme of tired and hopeless scepticism, and cries with Macbeth : " Life's but a walking shadow ; a poor player That struts and frets his hour upon the stage, And then is heard no more : it is a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury Signifying nothing.'" * The defect in this unnatural do not here allude to the Ger- force displays itselfin the rhetoric, man English phraseology, which as well as the -pliilosophy, of the seems now to have become a writer in question. His style second nature with Carlyle. This corresponds to his thought. We characteristic is unduly magnified PROPERTIES OT^ STYLE. 87 Tlie Christian mind is preserved from this fault of unnatural and feeble forcefulness, because it has received into itself a comjylete system of truth and doctrine. Any mind that is Biblical, is comprehen- sive and all-surveying. Its power originates from a full view. Its intensity springs from an intuition that is both central and peripheral. And the times demand this quality in the pulpit orator. Rapidity is the characteristic of the mental processes of this generation. An age that is itself full of energy, craves an eloquence that is powerful. And this power must be pure and sustained. The energy must disj^lay itself through every fibre, and the whole fabric. The sermon should throb with a robust life. But it will not, until the preacher has inhaled, into his own intellect, the energy and inten- sity of revealed ideas, and then has dared to strip away from the matter in which this force is em- bodied, every thing that impedes its working. Pow- erful writers are plain. The fundamental properties of style are interlinked ; and he who has secured plainness will secure force, while a failure to attain by critics, and is by no means the forcible, without cahn inward principal fault in his manner. It power. It is the effort to cut can be endured in him, thou^^h and penetrate to the core, -with- unendurable in his imitators, out really doing so. His style We allude rather to the exaggera- wears the appearance of a desire tion, and spasmodic contortion, to be tremendously strong. The which appear in his style, espe- aspiration is infinite, but the per- rially in his later productions, formance is infinitesimal. It 13 tli£ tug and strain to be ■ 88 HOMLLETICS tile former carries with it tLe failure to attain the latter. 3. The third fundamental property of style is heauty. The best definition that has been given of l)eauty is that of the Roman school of painting, namely, il ;piu^ nelV uno^ multitude in unity. The essential principle of beauty is that, by which all the manifokhiess and variety in an object is moulded into unity and simplicity. Take a painting, for exam- ple. In this object, there are a great many partic- ular elements. There is color of many varieties, and many shades of the same variety. There is the blending and contrast of these colors, so as to pro- duce the varieties of lis^ht and shade. There is a general harmony of tints, and a pleasing texture in the objects exhibited in the picture. Again, there are, in this painting, a great many lines as well as colors, curved lines and right lines, indeed all the geometrical elements, intermingled and in every variety of relation to each other. Again, in this painting a great many different properties of matter are represented. Some of the objects in it are compressed and solid, others are diffuse and airy ; some are colossal and firm, others are slender and slight ; some are rigid and immovable, others are mobile and pliant. Again, there are, in this painting, a variety of more distinctively intellectual elements, such as proportion, symmetry, exactness, neatness, elegance, grace, dignity, sublimity. Here, then, if we have regard to number alone PEOPERTIES OF STYLE. 89 is a great sum of separate items or elements, in this painting. Eacli one is distinct from all the rest. But more than this, these items are also diverse from each other. The sensuous elements of color are different from the geometrical elements of lines ; and the more distinctively intellectual elements, such as proportion, exactness, and elegance, are dif- ferent from both. In short, the more closely we analyze this painting, the more clearly shall we see that it is composed of a great amount and variety of particulars. If we look at its items and elements, we shall perceive that as an object it is manifold. It is a " multitude " of items and elements. And yet, if it is a beautiful picture, it is a " unity " also. As we stand before a great painting like the Last Supper of Da Vinci, for example, we are conscious of receiving but one general impression. We do not receive a distinct, and separate impres- sion, from each one of these items and elements that constitute its manifoldness, but a general and total impression. We do not experience a hundred thou- sand impressions, from an hundred thousand parti culars. We see, and we feel, that the work is a unity It breathes one spirit, and is pervaded by one tone It is, according to the definition with which we began^ " multitude in unity," and hence it is beautiful. For it is to be observed, that while, and so long as, w^e are busy with the particulars alone, we per- ceive no beauty. That analytic process, while it is going on, prevents any sesthetic perception and 90 HOMILETICS. pleasure. So long as we are couDting up the items of this multitude, and before we have come to the intuition of the unity of the whole work, we are unconscious of its beauty. It is not until the analy- sis stops, and the synthesis begins ; it is not until we are aware that all this multitude of particulars has been moulded^ by the one idea of the artist's imagi- nation, into a single breathing unity, that we feel the beauty that is in the painting. If the mind of the beholder could never get beyond this analysis of particulars, and could never do any thing more than enumerate these items, it could never experience the feeling of beauty. If the eye of the beholder were merely a brute's eye, merely receiving the impres- sions made by the items and elements of the vision, it could never perceive the beautiful. The brute's eye is impressed by the manifoldness of the object, or the scene, but never by the unity. As it roves over the landscape spread out before it, the organ of the animal is undoubtedly subject to the same sensuous and particular impressions, as those of a Raphael ; and, perhaps, if the brute were capable of analyzing and enumerating, it might detect the greater portion of those elements that make up the manifoldness of the picture. But the modifying power is wanting. That unifying principle which can mould these elements into a unity, and bring simplicity into this diffusion and separation of par- ticulars, has not been given to the brute. We have thus briefly examined this definition PROPERTIES OF STYLE. 91 of beauty, not merely because it is tlie most philo- sophical of any that has been given, but because it is the most useful and safest definition for the pur- poses of the orator, and particularly of the sacred orator. It is too much the habit to regard beauty, as mere ornamentation ; as something that is added to other properties, instead of growing out of them. Hence, it is too much the habit to cultivate the beautiful in isolation ; to set it up before the mind, as an independent quality, and to make every other quality subservient to it. In no department is this more pernicious, and fatal to true success, than in rhetoric. This habit is founded, partly at least, upon a wrong conception of beauty. It is not defined in accordance with its essential j)rinciple, but rather in accordance with its more superficial characteristics. Beauty, with too many, is that which ornaments, which decks out and sets ofP, plainness and force, or whatever the other properties may be, with which it happens to be juxta-posed. But if the definition that has been given be the true one, beauty is rather an inevitable accompaniment, than a labored decoration. It has a spontaneous origin. It springs into existence, whenever the mind has succeeded in imparting the properties of unity and simplicity to a multitude of particulars which, taken by themselves, are desti- tute of these properties. But unity and simplicity are substantial properties; they have an intrinsic worth. True beauty, therefore, springs into exist- 92 HOMILETICS. ence at the very time that the mind is seeking to impart to the object of its attention its most ster- ling and necessary characteristics. It does not arise when the mind is neglecting essential and necessary characteristics, and is aiming at an isolated, and an independent decoration. Take the case of the sacred orator, and see how true this position is. Suppose that the preacher, in the composition of a sermon, altogether or in part neglects the necessary property of unity, and en- deavors to superinduce upon a heterogeneous mass oT materials, which he has gathered together, the element and property of beauty. By the supposi- tion, lie has not. moulded these materials in the least. There they lie, a great " multitude " of items and particulars, but the mind of the preacher has per- vaded them with no unifying, and no simplifying principle. There is multitude, manifold ness, vari- ety, but there is no unity. Now it is not possible, for him to compose a beautiful oration in this man- ner. He may decorate as much as he pleases ; he may cull words, and invent metaphors, and wire- draw metaphors into similes ; he may toil over his work until he is gray; but he cannot, upon this method, compose a truly beautiful work. So long as this sermon is destitute of a moulding and unify- ing principle which assimilates, and combines, this multitude of particulars into a whole, into a simple and pure unit, it cannot be made beautiful. So PROPERTIES OF STYLE. 93 long as tliis sermon is destitute of unity, it must be destitute of beauty. The course wliicli tlie sermonizer should take in this case is plain. He should cease this effort to ornament this aggregate of separate items and par- ticulars, and begin to reduce them into unity and simplicity of form. This is no time for him to be thinking about the beauty of his sermon. If he will cease altoo^ether to think about it, and will aim at those necessary and essential properties which his sermon as yet lacks, he will find in the end that a real and true beauty has spontaneously sprung into existence. He who finds beauty shall lose it, but he who loses beauty shall find it. He who is prematurely anxious to secure beauty will foil; but he whose anxiety has respect first to the neces- sary properties of style, will find beauty following in their train, as the shadow follows the substance. For it is plain, that just in proportion as tho sermon rounds into unity, does it swell into beauty. It pleases the taste and the sense for the beautiful, just in proportion as the unifying and simplifying process goes on. The eye, at first, sees no form or comeliness in the multitude of materials, because they are a mere multitude ; because they are ar- ranged upon no method, and moulded by no principle of unity. But, gradually, the logic of the preacher's mind penetrates, and pervades, the mass of particulars ; the homogeneous elements are assim- ilated, and the heterogeneous are sloughed off; the 94 HOMILETICS. Vital currents of a system, and a metliod, begin to play through the parts, and the work now takes on a rounded unity, and a chaste simplicity. And now, for the first time, beauty begins to appear. The ser- mon is seen to be a beautiful product because it is one, and simple, in its structure and impression. Thus it appears, that true beauty is not an orna- ment washed on from without, but an efflux from within. The effort to be methodical results in beaufcy. The endeavor after unity results in beauty The effort to be simple results in beauty. But method, unity, and simplicity, are essential proper- ties. True beauty in rhetoric, therefore, is the natural and necessary accompaniment of solid and substantial characteristics, both in the matter and in the form. It is found in every composition that is characterized by " unity in multitude," and by simplicity in complexity. . Having thus stated and explained this defini- tion, we proceed to notice some of its excel- lences and advantages. And, first, it is a saf6 definition for the orator. There' is no property in style so liable to be injured and spoiled by excess, as beauty. The orator cannot be too plain, or too forcible, but he may be too beautiful. The aesthetic nature, unlike the rational, or the moral, may be too much developed. The development of the taste and imagination must be a symmetrical one, in order to be a just and true one. If the sesthetic processes should exceed their true propor- PEOPERTEES OF STYLE. 95 tiorjj and absorb into themselves all the rational and moral processes of the human soul, so that it should become wholly imaginative, and merely aesthetic, this would be an illegitimate and false development. The true proportion, in this instance, is a subordination of the imagination, and the taste, to the purposes and aims of the rational and moral faculties. If, now, it be said in reply to this, that proportion is equally required in the rational and moral processes of the soul ; that the reason ought not to absorb the imagination, any more than the imagination the reason ; we answer, that this cannot ha2:)pen. For in the true and pure development of the rational and moral powers, a proper and subordinate development of the imaginative and aesthetic is necessitated. A true and pure unfold- ing of the rational'and moral nature of man would inevitaUy be a proportionate, and hence a beautiful one. Reason and rio'ht are the absolute, and in develoj)ing them, all things that rest upon them are developed also. The true and the good are necessarily beautiful. But although such is the fact, the human mind is too unwilling to trust to the simple, and chaste beauty of truth and reason. It lusts after a divorced, and an independent beauty. It tends to an excessive, disproportioned, unsubordinated development of the aesthetic sense. The influence of such a tendency, upon eloquence and oratory, is pernicious in the highest degree, and one great 96 HOMILETICS. aim of a true and high theory of eloquence is to counteract it. And, certainly, that definition of beauty which makes it to be more than mere decoration, — which regards it as the result of a unifying principle, moulding into one a great mul- titude of particulars, — is a safe one for the preacher, in the respects of which we are speaking. There is no danger of an excess of unity and method in the sermon. The closer and more compact the materials, the simpler and more symmetrical the plan, the better the sermon. These characteristics never can become exorbitant, and hence that beauty which springs out of them can never become an extrava2:ant and false ornamentation. The same is true of simplicity. This shows itself more in the style and diction of a sermon, than in the plan and its parts. But can there ever be too much of chaste and pure simplicity, in the language and style ? The moi'e there is of this property, the nearer does the work approach to that most purely beautiful of all the productions of Grecian art, the Ionic column. Compare the Ionic with the Co- rinthian column, and the difference between pure and excessive beauty is apparent. In the Ionic column, the unity completely pervades and masters the manifoldness. The eye is not distracted by complexity of parts, or a multitude of particulars, but rests with a tranquil complacency upon the simple oneness, the chaste pure beauty of the column. In the Corinthian column, there is not PEOPEETIES 0¥ STYLE. 9? this entire pervasion, and perfect domination, of the manifold by the unity. The variety of parts and particulars somewhat overflows the unity of the whole. There is too much decoration, the aesthetic sense is a little satiated, the appetite is a little palled, and the eye does not experience that entire satisfaction in taking in the column as a whole, which it feels on beholding the less deco- rated Ionic. As a work of art, it is not so clean, so nice, so elegant, so purely and simply beautiful. The definition which we are considering, then, is a safe one in its influence, because it insists upon the presence and the presidency of the idea of unity. This idea logically precludes over-orna- ment. It forbids an excess of materials, — too much variety, too much manifoldness, in the parts and particulars. And, supposing there is no excess in the amount of materials, supposing the manifold elements are in just proportion, then this idea and principle of unity precludes the isolation, the dis- connection, the independence of any of them. Tliere can be no excess, according to this definition. The beauty that results is a pure and a safe embel- lishment. In the second place, the definition under con- sideration is a useful one for the sacred orator. It is practically available for the purposes of preach- ing. For it teaches, not only that unity and sim- plicity are essential to the existence of beauty, but that the eflPort to obtain them is really an effort to 7 98 HOMILETICS. obtain beauty. The definition implies, that success in respect to unity, — to nnity that is thorough, and perfusive, and moulds the multitudes of materials, — is success in respect to beauty. The sacred orator, consequently, knows exactly v/hat he needs to do, in order to secure that prop- erty of style which we are considering. And this is of more importance tlian it might at first seem. For it is more difficult to proceed intelligently, in respect to the precept, '^ Be beautiful," than in respect to the precept, ^' Be plain," or, " Be forcible." Indeed, if that definition of beauty which we are recommending be rejected, it seems to us that the mind of the orator must be perplexed, when he is desirous of imparting this property to his work. Plow shall he begin to render his oration beautiful? and when shall he end the effort ? are questions that are answered, not only the most safely, but the most intelligently, by bidding him to impart the greatest possible unity to it. Certainly, there is no other property or characteristic in beauty, so prominent as this of unity, and there is no one that is so distinct and easily apprehensible. Let the preacher, then, adopt this defilnition, because it is a working definition. Let him see and believe, that all true beauty springs naturally from unity and simplicity, and then let him act accordingly. Let Mm, first of all, strive to make liis sermon a unit and a whole, so far as its method PROPERTIES OF STYLE. 99 is concerned. Just in proportion as lie succeeds in so doing, will lie construct a beautiful plan, — ■ a plan that will satisfy the .^esthetic sense, at the very time that it satisfies the logical under- standing. Let him seek to render this property of unity pervading and perfusive, so far as style and diction are concerned, and his style and diction will be beautiful. For, this unifying principle, working thoroughly and clear to the edge, like the principle of life in nature, will display itself in simplicity of style, and chastity, and purity of diction. And is not such a style and diction beautiful ? If style and diction, are not essentially simple, and pure, and chaste, can any possible amount* of ornamenta- tion ever make them beautiful ? Is not unity per- vading the manifoldness, in this instance as well as in that of tlie plan,tlie essence and basis of beauty ? In the third place, this definition recommends itself to the sacred orator, because it is comprehen' sive. We have seen in the first part of this chapter, that more comprehensive tern^s are desirable, than ^' perspicuity " and '' energy," and hence we have chosen the terms " plainness " and " force," to denote those properties of style which address the powers of cognition and feeling. A wider and more comprehensive term than " elegance," — the term that is usually associated with " perspicuity " and " energy," — is also needed, to denote that property of style w^hich addresses the imagination and aesthetic nature, and hence w^e have selected 100 HOMILETICS. the term " beauty." This term is sufficiently com- prehensive to include a number of particulars, each of which is ])leasing to the taste. First in order among these, is neatness. This property in style renders it clean and pure ; as the Latin verb niteo^ nitesco^ from which it comes, de- notes. This purity and niceness, as some of the meanings of these Latin verbs indicate, may become a very bright and splendid quality. The sculptor may cut the statue so very cleanly, and impart such a high neatness to it, that it shall actually shine and gleam like silver. This seems to be the ex- planation of the uses of the Latin root, and shows how a primarily plain property may be heightened into ornament and splendor. The passage from neatness to elegance is very easy and imperceptible, and, like elegance itself, neatness is a property that is aesthetic, and pleases the taste. And this conducts to the second particular, under the head of beauty: viz., elegance. The etymology of this word shows its meaning to be kindred to that of neatness. Elegant is from e 2iA lego. Elegance is a nice choice. The elegant is the elect. The elegant is the select. Out of a multitude of particulars, the most fitting is chosen. Under the influence of that princij)le and idea of unity, of which we have spoken, the orator selects the most apj)ropriate word, the word which pro- motes the simplicity of the statement, and thus his diction is elegant. Or, under the influence of this PEOPEETIES OF STYLE. 101 same idea of unity, he culls the most suitable metaphor out of a multitude, and thus his illustra- tion is elegant. The third particular under the head of beauty, is grace. This has been defined to be beauty in motion. When we have a still picture, a tranquil repose of beauty, there is no grace. But start this property into motion, and it takes on this aspect. We speak of a beautiful landscape, and a graceful figure; of a beautiful color, and a graceful curve. The color is still ; the curve is a line, and the line is a point in motion, according to the old geometry and its curved motion is graceful. Lastly, there is what we must denominate, for want of a better term, beauty proper^ or specifiG heaiity. We cannot here give a full definition of this element in the general conception of the beau- tiful. We mean by it more than neatness, and more than elegance. Perhaps that which goes under the name of ornament and embellishment, in style, is nearest to it. It is that flush of color, and that splendor of light, which are poured over the discourse of a highly imaginative mind, — ^like that of Jeremy Taylor, for example. Placing neatness as the lowest degree in the scale of general beauty, then sj)ecific beauty would be the last and highest degree, — elegance and grace being intermediate. In this way, the term beauty becomes comprehen- sive, and sufficient for all the purposes of rhetoric. For, every orator should exhibit something of this 102 HOMILETICS. fundamental property of style. Even the least imaginative preacher should discourse in a manner that possesses some of these elements of beauty ; that not only does not offend a cultivated taste, but satisfies and pleases it. No writer or speaker should be debarred from the beautiful. It is a legitimate property in style, and should appear in some of its qualities, and degrees, in every man's discourse. This brings us to the practical application of this discussion of the nature, and extent, of the beau- tiful ; and what we have to say will be contained in several rules or maxims. First, the preacher should always make beauty of style subservient to plain- ness and force. This third fundamental property should not overflow, and submerge, the first two. In all its degrees, from neatness up to beauty in the stricter specific sense, it should contribute to render discourse clear to the understanding, and in- fluential upon the feelings. The moment that this property, in any of its forms, oversteps this limit of subordination and subservience, it becomes a positive fault in style. Excessive beauty is as much a defect as positive deformity. Showy, gaudy over- ornament is as much a fault, as downright ugliness. But, in following the definition that has been given, beauty will inevitably be subordinated to plainness and force of style. For, no more of neatness, of elegance, of grace, and^f embellishment, will be admitted or employed, than the principles of unity PJROPEETIES OF STYLE. 103 and simplicity will permit. The endeavor to impart oneness to the sermon throughout and in eveiy particular, the effort to secure unity in logic, style, and diction, will keep out all extravagant ornamen- tation. The striving of the preacher after harmony and simplicity, which according to the definition are the inmost essence of beauty, will allow no decora- tion to characterize his sermon but that which is harmonious and simple. And such embellishment as this, is subservient to plainness and force. Secondly, the degree and amount of beauty in style should accord with the characteristics of the individual. The style of some preachers contains more of the beautiful than that of others, and oueht to. For there are differences in the mental structure. Some minds are more imaginative and poetic than others. Yet every mind possesses more or less of imagination. " Even the dullest wight," says Cole- ridge, " is a Shakspeare in his dreams." Hence, while the property of beauty, as we have already remarked, belongs to style generally, and should be seen in every man's manner of discourse, it is yet a thing of degree and amount. This degree and amount must be determined, by the amount of imagination that has been bestowed upon the indi- vidual. Some men are so constituted, that neatness is the utmost that is proper in them. If they attempt more than this lowest grade of the beauti- ful, they injure their style, and render it positively offensive to taste. Stopping with neatness, they 104 HOMILETICS. secure beauty. Others may be elegant, >tliers graceful, others, and these are the few, may be beautiful with the embellishment and ornament of Jeremy Taylor. In each and every instance, the grade of beauty should accord with the individual- ity. If it does not, it is, in reference to the indi- vidual, excessive and isolated beauty, which is offen- sive to the taste, and therefore really of the n.iture of the deform&d and the ugly. A j3roperty over- wrought, and carried to excess, turns into its own contrary ; just as frost, raised to its utmost intensity, produces the same sensation as fire. But in what other way, can this adjustment of the amount of beauty in style to the individuality of the preacher be secured, than by proceeding from the ideas of unity and simplicity ; than by adopting, and working upon, that definition which makes these the essentials and basis of the beauti- ful ? If the preacher sets up mere decoration as his aim, he will inevitably outrun his capacities. He will attempt to embellish his sermon, more than his mental peculiarities will warrant. There will not be a true harmony and accord, between the amount of imagination in his -soul, and the amount of ornament in his sermon. On the other hand, the endeavor to infuse unity, symmetry, and sim- plicity, through the whole sermon, through the mat- ter and the form, will secure a just proportion between the product of the preacher's mind, and the characteristics of the preacher's mind. The PEOPEETIES OF BTYLE. 105 orator will then exhibit his own grade of beauty, in his style, — no more, and no less, than his mental qualities justify. And this gi-ade is the truly and the highly Beautiful, for him^ and in Mm. CHAPTER IV. GENERAL MAXIMS FOR SERMONIZING. Maxims for the composition of sermons are of two classes, general and special, — those, namely, which relate to the fundamental discipline that pre- pares for the construction of a sermon, and those which are to he followed in the act of composition itself Before particular precepts can be given with profit, it is necessary to call attention to some gen- eral rules, the observance of which greatly facili- tates the process of writing a discourse. The ser- monizer often loses much time and labor, in the sea- son of immediate preparation for the pulpit, because he has made little general preparation for the work. As, in mechanics, the workman always seeks to increase the efilciency of a force, by applying it under all the advantages possible, so the intellectual workman should avail himself of all that can ren- der his direct, and immediate, efforts more effective and successful. A dead lift should be avoided by the mind, as well as by the body. Power, in both GENERAL MAXIMS. ' 107 the material and mental worlds, should be aided by what the mechanic terms a purchase. If the sermonizer goes to the construction of a sermon, after he has made preparation of a more general nature, he will be far more successful than if he ' begins abruj^tly, and by a violent or perhaps spas- modic application of his powers. 1. The first of these general maxims is this: Cultivate a liomiletic mental liahit. By this is meant, such an habitual training of the mind as will im- part a sermonizing tendency to it. The human understanding, by discipline and practice, may be made to work in any given direction, provided it is a legitimate one, with something of the uniform- ity and precision and rapidity of a machine. It can be so habituated to certain processes, that it shall go through them with very little effort, and yet with very great force. We shall, of course, not be understood as advocating a material philosophy, or as affirming that the operations of the mind are really mechanical. We are only directing attention to the fact acknowledged by all philosophers, that certain mental operations, — such as the logical, the imaginative, for fexample, — may be so fixed by exer- cise and habit, that the mind may perform them . with an ease, and a readiness, that resembles the ^ operations of an instinct, or a machine. Compare tlie activity of an intellect that has been habitu- ated to the processes of logic, with one that has had little or no exercise in this direction. With 108 HOMILETICS. what rapidity, and precision, does the former speed through the process; and how slowly and uneer-. tainly does the latter drag along. The former has acquired a logical tendency, and needs omy to fasten its grasp upon a subject that possesses a logical structure, that has logic in it, to untie it immediately, and untwist it entirely. 'Now, in relation to the purposes of his profes- sion and calling, the preacher ought to acquire and cultivate a homiletical habitude. Preaching^ is his business. For this he has educated himself, and tc this he has consecrated his whole life. It should, therefore, obtain undisputed possession of his mind and his culture.^ He ought not to pursue any other intellectual callino; than that of sermonizing:. He may, therefore, properly allow this species of authorship to monopolize all his discipline and acquisitions. It is as fitting that the preacher should be characterized by a homiletical tendency, as that the poet should be characterized by a poet- ical tendency. If it is proper that the poet should transmute every thing that he touches, into poetry, it is proper that the preacher should transmute every thing that he touches, into sermon. ^ " We are told of a Grecian how advance with greater secu- general who, when he travelled rity ; how retreat with least dan- and viewed the country around ger. Something similar to this, him, revolved in his itiind how an should be the practice and study army might be there drawn up of a public speaker." — Leland : to the greatest advantage; how Preface to the Orations of Demos- he could best defend himself, if thenes. attacked from such a quarter ; GENERAL MAXIMS. 109 This homiletic habit will appear in a disposition to skeletonize, to construct plans, to examine and criticise discourses with respect to their logical structure. The pi-eacher's mind becomes habitually orofanific. It is inclined to build. Whenever lead- ing thoughts are brought into the mind, they are straightway dis230sed and arranged into the unity of a pfan, instead of being allowed to lie here and there, like scattered bowlders on a field of drift. This homiletic habit will appear, again, in a dispo- sition to render all the arsrumentative, and illustra- tive, materials which pour in upon the educated man, from the various fields of science, literature, and art, subservient to the purposes of preaching. The sermonizer is, or should be, a student, and an industrious one, a reader, and a thoughtful one. He will, consequently, in the course of his studies, meet with a great variety of information that may be advantageously employed in sermonizing, either as proof or illustration, provided he possesses the jijroper power to elaborate it, and work it up. Now, if he has acquired this homiletic mental habit, this tendency to sermonize, all this material, which would pass through another mind without assimilation, will be instantaneously and constantly taken up, and wrought into the substance and form of ser- ^ These materials will readily into the preacher's Common overflow, in the form of skele- Place Book, tons, metaphors, illustrations, etc. 110 HOMILETICS. The possession of such an intellectual habitude as this, greatly facilitates immediate preparation for the pulpit. It is, virtually, a primary preparation, from which the secondary and more direct prepara- tion derives its precision, thoroughness, rapidity, and effectiveness. Without it, the preacher must be continually forced up to an unwelcome and unge- nial task, in the preparation of discourses, instead of finding in this process of composition, a grateful vent for the outflow and overflow of his resources. 2. The second general maxim for the sermonizer is this : Form a Mgh ideal of a sermon^ and con- stantly aim at its realization. There is little danger of setting a standard too high, pro\^ded the preach- er is kept earnestly at work in attempts to reach it. The influence of a very perfect conception of a thing is sometimes injurious, upon one whose men- tal processes are somewhat morbid, and unhealthy. An artist whose beau ideal is high, but who has little productive energy and vigor, will dream away his life over his ideal, and accomplish nothing ; or else fill up his career, as an artist, with a series of disappointed, baffled efforts. Such an one should content himself, in the outset at least, with a some- what lower idea of perfection, and rouse himself up to more vigor and energy of execution. In this way, he would take courage, and would gradually elevate Lis standard, and carry his power of per- formance up along with his ideal. But if there be a vigorous willingness to work, and a sincerely GET^^EEAL MAXlM» 111 good motive at the bottom of mental efforts, there is no danger of aiming too liigh. Though the per- fect idea in the mind will never be realized, — for a man's ideal, like his horizon, is constantly receding from him as he advances towards it, — yet the grade of excellence actually attained will be far higher, than if but an inferior, or even a moderate standard is assumed in the outset. The preacher's idea of a sermon must, therefore, be as full and perfect as possible. He must not be content with an inferior grade of sermonizing, but must aim to make his discourses as excellent in matter, and in manner, as his powers, natural and acquired, will possibly allow. And especially must he subject his efforts at sermonizing to the criticism and the discipline of a high ideal, while he is in the preparatory course of professional education. It is probably safe to say, that in all theological seminaries too many sermons are written, because the conception of a sermon is too inadequate. A higher standard would diminish the quantity, and improve the quality, in this department of author- ship. We are well aware of the frequent demands made by the churches upon the theological student, before he has entered the j^astoral office. These demands ought to be met, so far as is possible, in view of the lack of preachers in this great and growing country. And yet this very demand calls for great resolution, and great carefulness, on the part of the professional student. He should not 112 HOMILETICS. court, but discourage this premature draft upon his resources, so far as he can consistently with a wise regard to circumstances. He ought to insist upon the full time, in which to prepare for a life-long work, — a work that will task the best discipline, and the ripest culture to the utmost. He ought to keep his ideal of a sermon high and bright before his eye, and not allow his mind, by the frequency and insufficiency of its preparations, to become accustomed to inferior performances, because this is the next step to becoming satisfied with them. It is possible, as we have already remarked, that a high model may, in some instances, discourage efforts, and freeze the genial currents of the soul. But in this age of intense mental action, when all men are thinking, and Sj^eaking, and writing, there is little danger in recommending a high standard to the professional man. Where one mind will be injured by it, a thousand will be benefited. More- over, if there only be a vigorous and healthy state of mind, — a disposition to act, to think, and to write,— on the part of the clergyman, there is little danger of his becoming unduly fastidious, or mor- bidly nice. Add to this the fact, that as soon as the clergyman has once entered upon the active duties of his profession, necessity is laid upon him, and he must compose, nolens volens^ and we have still another reason why a high ideal is not liable, as it is sometimes in the case of the artist or poet, to impede and suppress his activity. All dispo- GENEEAL MAXIMS. 113 sition to brood morbidly over performances, because ■^hey are not close tip to the perfect model in the mind, will be broken np and driven to the four winds, by the consideration, that on next Lord's day two sermons must be preached, at the call of the bell, to that expecting and expectant congregation. We are also aware, that it is possible to expend too much time and labor upon an individual ser- mon. Some preachers, and some very celebrated in their dav, have had their " favorite sermons," as they are styled, — sermons upon which an undue amount of pains was expended, to the neglect and serious injury of the rest of their sermonizing. A certain American preacher is said to have rewritten one particular discourse, more than ninety times ! But this is not the true use of a hio;h ideal. A hi2:h conception ought to show its work, and its power, in every sermon. The discourses of a preacher ought ' uniformly to bear the marks of a lofty aim. Not that one sermon will be as excellent as another^ any more than one subject will be as fertile as an- other. But the course of sermonizing, year aftei year, ought to show that the preacher is satisfied with no hasty, jDerfunctory performance of his duties, — tliat there is constantly floating before him, and beckoning him on, a noble and high idea of what a sermon always should be. There is little danger, however, of excessive elaboration during the course of professional study. The theological student is more likely to under- 8 114 HOMILETICS. estimate the close study of his plans, and the ela- bora.te cultivation of his style and diction, than to overestimate them. He is apt to shrink from that persistent self-denial of the intellect, which confines it to long and laborious efforts upon a single dis- course, instead of allov^ing it to expatiate amid a greater variety of themes. The student, in his best estate, is too little inclined to that thorough elabo- ration, to which the Ancient orators accustomed themselves, in the production of their master-pieces, and which exhibits itself equally in the compactness and completeness of the organization, and in the hard finish of the style. " The prose of Demos- thenes," says an excellent critic, " is, in its kind, as perfect and finished as metrical composition. For example, the greatest attention is bestowed by Demosthenes, upon the sequence of long and short syllables, not in order to produce a regularly re- curring metre but, in order to express the most diverse emotions of the mind, by a suitable and ever-varying rhythm, or movement. And as this prose rhythm never passes over into a poetical metre, so the language, as to its elements, never loses itself in the sphere of poetry, but remains, as the language of oratory ever should, that of ordi- nary life and cultivated society. And the uncom- mon charm of this rhetorical prose lies precisely in this, — that these simple elements of speech are treated with the same care which, usually, only the poet is wont to devote to words. Demosthenes GENEEAL MAXIMS. 115 Idineelf was well aware of this study which he he stow^ed upon his style, and he required it iu the oi'ator. It is not enough, said he, that the orator, in order to prepare for delivery in public, write down his thoughts, — he must, as it were, scidjptitre tliem in brass. He must not content himself with that loose use of language which characterizes a thoughtless fluency, but his words must have a pre- cise and exact look, like newly minted coin, with sharply-cut edges and devices. This comparison of ])rose composition with sculpture, appears to have been a favorite one with the Ancient rhetoricians ; as Dionysius also remarks of Demosthenes, Plato, and Socrates, ^ their productions were not so much works of writing, as of carving and embossing.'"^ This high ideal, both in matter and style, should, tlierefore, float constantly before the eye of the student, during his whole preparatory course. la this way, he will habituate himself to intense and careful efforts in composition, so that when he goes out into active professional life, he may, when com- pelled to do so by the stress of circumstances, even relax something of this strain and tension of intel- lect, and yet throw off with rapidity sermons that will be highly methodical, and highly finished, be- cause this style of sermonizing has become natural to him. By this severe discijDline of himself in the beginning, he will have acquired the right to be * Theremin : Demosthenes und Massillon, p. 142. 116 HOMILETICS. daring, and careless, wlien compelled to be, by the stress of circumstances ; and what is more, he will have acquired the ability to be so, without disgrace to his calling, and with success in it. 3. A third general maxim for the sermonizer is this : 1)1 immediate preparation for the pulpit^ make no use of the immediate preparation of other minds j hut rely solely upf on personal resources. This maxim forbids the use of the skeletons and sermons of other sermonizers, in the process of composition. Such a general pre23aration as has been described, namely, a homiletic mental habit conjoined with a high ideal, renders this help unnecessary. Such a sermonizer is strong in himself, and needs no sup- ports or crutches ; such a preacher is rich in himself, and does not need to borrow. He prefers to follow the leadings of his own well disciplined and well informed mind,, rather than to adjust himself to the movements of another, however firm and consecu- tive they may be. In this day, when so many aids to sermonizing are being furnished, it is well to form a correct esti- mate of their real value. These collections of skele- tons and plans, more or less filled up, which seem to be multiplying along with the general multipli- cation of books, ought to be entirely neglected and rejected, by both the theological student and the preacher. As matter of fact, they are neglected by all vigorous and effective sermonizers. They are the resort of the indolent and unfaithful alone. GENERAL MAXmS. 117 The only plausible reason that can be urged for using them is, that they furnish material for the study of j)l"tns, — that they are necessary to the acquisition of the art of skeletonizing. But a good collection of sermons is of far more \vorth for this purpose. There is very little discipline, in looking over a plan that has been eliminated from a sermon, by another mind. But there is very great discipline, in takino; the sermon itself, and eliminating^ the plan for ourselves. In the first instance, the mind is passive, in the second it is active. The plan of a truly excellent discourse is so identified with the discourse, is so thoroughly organic and one with the filling up, that it requires great judgment and close examination to dissect it, and separate it from the mass of thought, in which it is lightly, yet strongly imbedded. Why then lose all the benefits of this examination, and exertion of judgment, by employing the collector of skeletons to do this work for us ? Why not take the living structure to pieces ourselves, and derive the same knowledge and skill thereby, which the anatomist acquires from a per- sonal dissection of a subject ? It is only by actual analysis, that actual synthesis becomes possible. It is only by an actual examination of the parts of an oration, and an actual disentanglement of them from the matter of the discourse, that we can ac- quire the ability of putting parts together, and building up a methodical structure ourselves. In stead, therefore, of buying a collection of skeletons, 118 HOMTLETICS. tlie stndent and preacher should buy a collection of sermons, and obtain tlie discipline whicli he needs, from a close and careful study of their logical struc- ture and rhetorical properties. For, in this way, he will acquire both a logical and a rhetorical discipline. If he studies a skeleton merely, logical discipline is the most he can obtain ; and this too, as we have seen, in only an inferior degree. If, on the other hand, he studies a sermon, while the effort to detect and take out the plan that is in it will go to impart a iine logical talent, a fine constructive ability, the attention which will at the same time be given to the style, illustration, and diction of the discourse as a whole, will go to impart a fine rhetorical talent also. The method of criticism will correspond to the method of j)roduction. As the sermon came into existence in a growth-like way, — plan and fill- ing up, skeleton and flesh, all together, — so it will be examined in the same natural method. The skele- ton will not be contemplated alone, and isolated from the thoughts which it supports ; neither will the thoughts be examined in a state of separation from the plan of the whole fabric. The method of criticism, like the method of authorship, will be the method of nature.^ But when these collections of plans are seri- ^ The careful analysis of such more valuable, than to read a sermons as those of South, Bar- hundred treatises upon rhetoric, row, and Saurin, would be a dis- without it. cipline for the young preacher aENEEAL MAXOIS. 119 ously offered to tlie preacher, as sources from which to derive the foundations of his sermons, nothing can be said in their recommendation, either on the score of literature or morality. An English treatise upon the art of sermonizing, which is filled up with very full plans of sermons by various dis- tinguished preachers, contains such remarks as the following ; " An immense number of examples, in which passages are laid out in logical order, are to be found in Burkitt on the N. T., and more espe- cially in Henry, and these may be often turned to good account. Some ministers are very cautious of using any of these plans, because the volumes of Burkitt and Henry are possessed by many fami- lies; but surely some new casting might easily be devised that would give the air of novelty, and please the fastidious, if they be thought worth the pleasing." Again, he says : " I do not wish to draw you from your independent study, and the resources of your own minds ; but if at any time you feel indisposed towards mental labor, or time will not allow you to enter upon it, regard it as perfectly lawful to avail yourselves of the materials furnished by such an author as Henry." Again, he observes : " As to Burkitt, he is full of both long and short skeletons, that is, skeletons upon long and short passages, which a little pains would so modernize, that when our knowing people saw their old friend with a new face, they certainly would not recognize him again. This is, I suppose, what 120 HOMILETICS. we wish, when we find ourselves out of condition for close study, or have not time for it." The author then goes on to say, with an innocent sim- plicity that is quite charming, that " it is necessary to obtain a knowledge of Burkitt's key-words, his ^Observe,' his ^ Note,' his 'Learn.' When he says ' Observe,' he is about to give you a head or divi- sion of the passage, in an expository view," cfec, &c} Now, such recommendations as these, are both illiterate and immoral. No scholar, no preacher who has even a becoming regard for the literary character, to say nothing of the edifying character, of his sermonizing, could possibly subject his intel- lect to such copying. A proper estimate of the sermon as a piece of authorship), if nothing more. ^ Sttjrtevaxt : Manual, pp. try to compose one every month." 57, 58, 59. — The views in the The English Churchman contains English Church are very indul- the following announcement: gent, in reference to preparations "A clergyman of experience and for the pulpit. Archdeacon Paley, moderate views, who distinguish- in a sermon to the young clergy ed himself during his university of Carlisle, addresses them as fol- course, in Divinity and English lows: " There is another resource, Composition, will furnish original by which your time may be occu- sermons, in strict accordance with pied, which you have forgot, in the Church of England, in a legi- urging that your time will hang ble hand, at 5s. Gd, each. Only heavy upon you. I mean the one copy will be given in any composition of sermons. I am diocese. A specimen will be far from refusing you the benefit sent, if wished for. Sermons of other men's labors ; I only re- made to order, on any required quire that they be called in, not subject, on reasonable terms, to flatter laziness, but to assist in- For further particulars apply, '^ dustry. You find yourself unable &c. to furnish a sermf:n every week ; GEIS^ERAL MAXTM3. 121 would lead the sacred orator to despise sucli servile firtiiices, from which nothing but an artificial pro- duct could result. Upon such a method as this, the whole department of Sacred Eloquence would lose all its freshness and originality, and would die out. " Dull as a sermon " would be a phrase more true, and more significant, than it is now. But upon the score of morality, this acfe of steal- ing sermons is utterly indefensible. A preacher ought to be an honest man throughout. Sincerity, godly sincerity, should characterize him intellectu- ally, as well as morally. His plans ought to be the genuine work of his own brain. Not that he may not, at times, present a plan and train of thought similar to those of other minds; but he ought not to know of it at the time. Such coinci- dences ought to be undesigned; the result of two minds working upou a similar or the same subject, each in an independent way, and with no inter- communication. Then the product belongs to both alike, and the coincidence results fi'om the common nature of truth, and the common structure of the human mind ; and not from a servile copy- ing of one mind by another. Beside this critical study of the best sermon- izers, in the several languages with which the preacher may be acquainted, he should be a dili- gent student of the standard theological treatises in them. There are, in each of the leading litera- tures of the modern world, and also in the patristic 122 HOMTLETICS. Greek and Latin, a few treatises wMcli are so thoroughly scriptural in their matter, and so systematic in their structure, that they cannot be outgrown by either the theologian or the ser- monizer. Upon these, in connection with a faithful study of the Scriptures themselves, the preacher ought to bestow his time. This method of prepa- ring for the process of composition, unlike that indolent method of having recourse to the plans and sermons of others, strengthens and enriches the intellect. The preacher daily becomes a more dis- criminating exegete, a more profound theologian, a more natural rhetorician ; and the end of his minis- terial career finds him as thoughtful, and as fertile a sermonizer as ever. The union of a close critical study of the Scriptures themselves, with a thorough and con- tinuous study of those sterling theological treatises which, because they have grown up out of the Scriptures, partake most of their root and fatness, cannot be too earnestly recommended to the ser- monizer, as the best general preparation for direct and particular preparation for the pulpit. The time and ability of the preacher, in this age of innumerable small books, upon innumerable small subjects, is too often expended upon inferior pro- ductions. Let him dare to be ignorant of this transitory literature, whether sacred or secular, that he may become acquainted with the Bible itself and those master-works of master-milids which con GENERAX MAXIMS. 123 tain tlie methodized substance of the Bible, and breathe its warmest, deepest inspiration. , Intimately connected with this stndy of the Bible, and of theological systems and treatises, is the study of philosophy. This point merits a fuller treatment than is possible within our limits. We would only briefly remark, that the study of philosophy, rightly pursued, is a great aid to the theologian and the preacher. If the department of philosophy be employed rather as a means of dis- ciplining the mind, and of furnishing a good method of developing and presenting truth, than as a source whence the truth itself is to be taken, it becomes the handmaid of theology and religion. If, on the contrary, it is regarded as the source of truth, and the theologian and preacher seeks his subject-matter from the finite reason of man, instead of from the Supreme Reason as it has revealed itself in the Scriptures, then the influence of philo- sophical studies is most injurious. But this is not the true idea of philosophy. Bacon called his philosophical system the "novum organum," the new organ, or instrument, by means of which truth was to be developed, established, and applied. He did not style it a new revelatiorb of truth, but a new medium of truth. If, now, the theologian and preacher adopts this true and rational view of the nature of philosopliy, if he regards it as a means whereby his mind obtains the best method of developing, and not of origina- 124 HOMILETICS. ting trutli, if he views it as a simple key to unlock the casket which contains the treasure, and not as the treasure itself, or even the casket, — if the theo- logian and preacher adopts this sober and rational view of the nature and uses of philosophy, he will find it of great assistance. All that part of rhetoric which treats of plan and invention, all the organ- izing part of rhetoric, is most intimately connected with philosophy. Moreover, a correct knowledge of the laws of the human mind, a correct idea of the relation of truth to the human mind, and a cor- rect method of enucleating and establishing truth, cannot be acquired with out the discipline that re- sults from philosophical studies ; and without such knowledge, the preacher can neither think pro- foundly and consecutively, nor discourse clearly and forcibly.^ 4. The fourth general direction for the sermon- izer is this : Maintain a spiritual mind. This direction is a practical one, and while it includes all that is implied in the common injunction for all Christians, to cultivate personal piety, it is more specific in reference to the necessities of the preacher. %Y ^ spiritual mind, in this connection, is meant ^ Says JoHK Edwaeds, in his cultivating of our thoughts, work on Preaching: ''As for Whence it is, that unthinking metaphysics, it cannot be denied persons, and those that never that they are useful to the help- study for accuracy of conceptions, ing us to a clear and distinct ap- hate this sort of learning, as much prehension of things, and to the as a deist doth creeds and cate- enlarging of our minds, and the chisms." — Preface to Pt. I. GEI^EEAL MAXIMS. 125 ttat solemn and serious mental frame wliicli is nat- urally, and constantly, occupied with eternal realities. Some Christians seem to be much more at home in the invisible realm of religion, than others. They are characterized by a uniformly earnest ' and un- earthly temper, as if their eye were fixed upon something beyond the horizon of this world ; as if they saw more, and saw further, than thoughtless and unspiritual men about them. Their eye is fixed upon something beyond time and sense, and they do see more, far more, of "the things unseen and eternal," than the average of Christians. Now, this mental temper is of great worth to the preacher. Aside from the fact that one who pos- sesses it, is always in the vein for writing or sj^eaking upon religious themes, such a one discourses with an earnest sincerity that is always impressive and effective. He speaks seriously, because he under- stands the nature of his subject. He speaks clearly and distinctly, because this spiritual-mindedness makes him substantially an eye-witness of eternal realities. He speaks convincingly, because he knows what he says, and whereof he affirms. Let the preacher, then, maintain a spiritual mind, — a mind that is not dazzled with the glare of earth, that is too solemn to be impressed by the vanities of time, and made habitually serious by seeing Him who is invisible. Dwelling among the things that are unseen and eternal, such an orator when he comes forth to address volatile and worldly 126 HOMILETIGS. men, will speak with a deptli and seriousness of view, and an energy and pungency of statement, that will leave them thoughtful and anxious. With- out this abiding sense of the reality and awfulness of eternal things, though the preacher may send men away entertained and dazzled, he cannot send them away thinking upon themselves, and u23on their prospects for eternity. And of what worth is a sermon that does not do this ? The 2:)rincipal lack in the current preaching is not so much in the matter, as in the manner. There is truth sufficient to save the soul, in most of the sermons that are delivered ; but it is not so fused with the speaker's personal con- victions, and presented in such living contact with the hearer's fears, hopes, and needs, as to make the impression of stern reality. The pulpit must be- come more intense in manner, or the " form of sound words " will lose its power. CHAPTER V. SPECIAL MAXIMS FOR SERMONIZINa. Having, in tlie preceding chapter, laid down some rules for tlie general prej^aration for sermon- izing, we proceed to give some maxims for the im- mediate preparation of sermons. If the preacher has fitted himself for the direct composition of dis- courses, by acquiring a homiletic mental habit, by forming a high ideal of a sermon, by training him- self to self-reliance, and by uniformly maintaining a serious and spiritual mind, he is ready to compose sermons always and everywhere. He is a workman that has learned his craft, and is in possession of a constructive talent which he can use whenever he is called upon. But these general maxims need to be supplemented by some particular rules, relating to the process of composition itself, and these we now proceed to specify. 1. Before beginning the composition of a sermon, h^ing hoik the intellect and tlie hearty into a fervid and awakened condition. Although this general preparation for sermonizing, of which we have 128 HOMILETICS. spoken, will naturally keep tlie mind and heart more or less active, still there will be need of more than this ordinary wakefulness, in order that the preacher may do his best work. Such a general preparation, it is true, will prevent the sermonizer fi^om being a dull and lethargic man, but he will need some more immediate stimulation than this, in order that he may compose with the utmost energy and vigor possible. As, in the chemical j^rocess of crystallization, a smart stroke upon the vessel, in which the solution has been slowly preparing for the mao-ical chano:e from a dull fluid to a brisrht and sparkling solid, v/ill accelerate the movement, and render the process seemingly an instantaneous one ; so, a sort of shock given to the mind, filled as it is with rich stores, and possessed as it is by a homi- letic habit, will contribute greatly to the rapid and vigorous construction of a sermon. Some agitation and concussion is requisite, in order to the most efficient exercise of the under- standing. The mental powers need to be in an aroused condition, — so to speak, in a state of exal- tation, — in order to work with thoroughness, and en- ergy. Hence, some very distinguished literary men have been wont to resort to the stimulus of drusrs, or of alcohol, to produce that inward excitement which is needed, in order to the original and power- ful action of the intellect. Poets and orators, in particular, feel theneed of this intellectual fermen- tation, and hence the instances of such artificial SPECIAL MAXIMS. 129 stimulation of tlie intellectual powers are most com- mon among these. The preacher is precluded by Christian principle, from the use of such means of rousins: and kindlino; his mind, even if the lower pi-udential motives should not prevail with him. For the mind, like the body, is fearfully injured by artificial and unnatural stimulation. Minds which have been accustomed to it, and have been forced up in this unnatural way to unnatural ejfforts, show the effects of such treatment, in premature debility, and commonly in final insanity or idiocy. The true and proper stimulant for the intellect is truth. There is no sin in being excited by truth. There is no mental injury in such excitement. The more thoroughly the intellect is roused and kindled by a living verity, the more intensely it is affected and energized by it, the better is it for the intellect, and the man. In order, therefore, that the sermonizer may produce w^ithin his mind that excitement which is needed in order to original and vigorous composition, let him possess it with some single truth adapted to this purpose. And this, from the nature of the case, should be that leading idea which he proposes to embody in his discourse. Every sermon ought to be characterized by unity, — a unity arising from the presence, and the presidency, within it of some one leading thought. The theme^ or proposition of the sermon should, therefore, be that particular truth by which the sacred orator should excite his intellect, and 9 130 HOMILETICS. awaken his j^owers to an intenser activity. If the preacher is not able to set his mind into a glow and fervor, by his subject, let him not seek other means of excitement, but let him ponder the fact of his apathy, until he is filled with shame and sorrow. Let him remember, that if he is not interested in the truth, if divine truth has no power to quicken and rouse his intellectual faculties, he lacks the first qualification for sermonizing. But the sermonizer who has made that great general preparation for his work, of which we have spoken, will find all the stimulation he needs, in his theme. It will be taken from the circle of truths in which he has become most interested, both by the habits of his mind, and by his- general culture. It will be suggested to him by his own spiritual wants, and those of his audience. It will have direct reference to the supply of these wants. Let the preacher, then, so far as intellectual excitement is concerned, so fill his mind with the particular idea of the discourse which he is about to prepare, that all inaction and lethargy shall be banished at OFice. Let him, before beginning the construction of a sermon, set all his mental powers into a living play, by the single leading truth he would embody in it. But, besides this intellectual awakening, some more than ordinary enlivenment of i\Q feelings and affections is needed, in order to vigorous and elo- quent composition. And this is especially true of SPECIAL MAXIMS. 131 the composition of sermons, — one main purpose of W'hicli is, to reach the affections and feelings of the human soul. Without that warm glow which comes from a warm heart, the purely intellectual excitement, of which we have spoken, will fail to ' influence the hearer, in the way of emotion and action. A purely intellectual force and energy may arrest and interest an audience, but taken by itself, it cannot persuade their wills, or melt their hearts. The best sermons of a preacher are gene- rally composed under the impulse of a lively state of religious feeling. If preachers should be called to testify, they would state that those discourses which were written when they were in their best mood as Christians, constitute the best portion of their authorship. The sermonizer, therefore, should seek for a more than ordinary quickening of his emotions and affections, as he begins the work of immediate pre- paration for the pulpit. It is difficult to lay down rules for the attainment of this state of feeling, that will be suited to every one. Each individual Christian is apt to know the best means of rousing his own mind and heart, and hence it is better to leave the person himself to make a choice, out of the variety that are at his command. Generally r speaking, however, any thing that contributes to awaken in the soul a livelier sense of the excellence of divine things, any thing that tends to stir and quicken the Christian affections, will furnish the lo2 HOMILETICS. preacher what he needs in order to vigorous com- position. Probably, therefore, no better advice can be given to the sacred orator, in the respect of which we are speaking, than that very same advice which he gives to the common Christian, when he asks for the best means and methods of quickening his religious affections. It has been said by one of the most profound, and devout minds in English literature, that " an hour of solitude passed in sin- cere and earnest prayer, or the conflict with, and conquest over, a single passion or subtle bosom sin, will teach us more of thought, will more effectually awaken the faculty and form the habit of reflection, than a year's study in the schools without them." If prayer and Christian self-discipline do this for the habits of thought, most certainly will they do the same for the habits of feeling. If an hour of serious self-examination and self-mortification, or an hour of devout meditation and earnest prayer, does not set the affections of the preacher into a glow, probably nothing in the way of means can. The greatest preachers have, consequently, been in the habit of preparing for composition by a season of prayer and meditation. The maxim of Luther, heiie orasse^ est bene studuisse^ is familiar to all. Augustine says : " Let our Christian orator who would be understood and heard with pleasure, pray before he speak. Let him lift up his thirsty soul to God, before he pronounce any thing." Erasmus, a man in whom the intellectual was more SPECIAL MAXIMS. 133 prominent than the spiritual and devotional, yet observes, that " it is incredible, hov\^ much light how much vigor, how much force and vitality, is imparted to the clergyman by deep earnest suppli- cation." And the pagan Pericles, according t^ Plutarch, " was accustomed, whenever he was to speak in public, previously to entreat the gods, that he might not utter against his will any word that should not belong to his subject " By filling his mind with his theme, and a^vahen- ing his religious afFectious by prayer and devout meditation, the sacred orator w^ill bring: his whole inner being into that awakened and exalted condi- tion, which prepares for direct and rapid composi- tion. He will become a roused man, and will find all his faculties of cognition and feeling, in free and living action. 2. And this brins^s us to the second maxim for facilitating the process of composition, which is : Compose contmuously. When the preacher has made all the preparation, general and particular, of which we have spoken, and his mind and heart are ready to work, he should proceed in the composition of a sermon without intermission. The intellect works with far the greatest intensity and energy, when it works continuously. It ac- quires strength by motion, and hence a stop in its action diminishes its force. When, therefore, a full preparation for its agency has been made, it ought to be allowed, or if need be, compelled, to work as 1 34 HOMILETICS. hard and as long as is compatible with the physi- cal structure of the individual. Some men are capable of much more protracted mental efforts, than others ; though, in this case, the mental pro- cesses themselves are apt to be much slower. "When the mind moves with rapidity, it is unable to continue in motion so long as when its move- ments are more dull and heavy. Each man should know himself in these respects, and understand how much his mind and body can endure without injury. Having this knowledge, he ought then to subject himself to as intense, and as long con- tinued composition, as is possible. Having seated himself at his writing-desk, he ought not to lay down his pen, until he has tired himself by the process of original composition. Then let him unbend in good earnest, and allow his mind and his tody a real genuine relaxation. Too many sermons are composed during an inter- mittent activity of the mind which does not draw upon its deepest resources, and its best power. The sermon is the product of a series of isolated efforts, instead of one long, strong application. It wears, consequently, a fragmentary character and appearance, as if it were written one sentence at a time, or each paragraph by itself. Even if there is a connection of the parts, there is no fusion of them. Even if the discourse has method, it has no glow. " Write with fury, and correct with phlegm,*' SPECIAL MAXEVIS. 135 is admirable advice for the sermonizer. But it is impossible to rouse this fury of the mind, except by a continuous application of its energies. If the composer stops for a season, his intellect begins to cool again, and much of the energy of his succeeding effort is absorbed in bringing it up to the same de2:ree of ardor, at which it stood at the close of the preceding effort. It is as if the smith should every moment withdraw his iron from the fire, instead of letting it stay until it has acquired a white heat. The same amount of mental applica- tion, condensed into a single continuous effort, will accomplish far more, than if it is scattered in por- tions over a long space of time. " Divide up the thunder," says Schiller, " into separate notes, and it becomes a lullaby for children, but pour it forth in one continuous peal, and its royal sound shall shake the heavens." One principal reason why the pulpit ministra tions of the clergy do not, as they should, exhibit .heir utmost possibility of effort, lies in the fact, that too many sermons are composed scatteringly all along through the week. They are the products of the desultory efforts of the clergyman. He allows him- self to be interrupted during the season of composi- tion, or else he has no fixed and stated season. The consequence is, that the sermon, instead of being produced by one uninterrupted gush of soul, or at least by a few gushes and outpourings that form a true connection with each other, and so are 136 HOMILETICS. virtually a single continuous effort, is tbe patched and fragmentary collection of odd hours, and of ungenial moods. The discourse, in this way, drags its slow length along through the whole week, and the entire mental labor expended upon it, though apparently so much, is not equal in true productive force, in real originant and influential power, to five hours of continuous glowing com- position. Let the sermonizer, then, proceed upon the maxim of writing continuously, when he writes at all. Let him have liis set season for composition. Let him ^x the tiir^e of writing, and the length of effort, in accordance with his physical strengtli, and then let him go through with the process of com- position, with all the abstraction, absorption, and devotednees of prayer itself. In this way, the very best power of the man, the theologian, and the Christian, will be evolved, and will appear in a dis- course that will be fi^esh, energetic, and impressive. In this way, the sermon would become a more uni- formly vivid production, and a more generally vital species of authorship, than it now. is. It must be remembered, however, that this injunction to write continuously, and furiously, is a maxim only for one who has obeyed the other max- ims, general and special, that have been laid down for sermonizing. It is no maxim for one who has not. It is one of a series, and pre-supposes obe- dience to what precedes, and also to what succeeds. SPECIAL MAXIMS. 137 If the preaclier lias formed a homiletic liabit of mind, if his ideal of a sermon is high, if he has trained himself to self-reliance, if he has acquired a spiritual way of thinking, and if he has roused his mind by his subject, and his heart by prayer, — if he has done all this, then what he does in the hour of composition, let him do quickly, and continu- ously. 3. The third maxim to be followed by the ser- monizer, in actual composition, is this : Avoid proliX' ity. By prolixity, is meant a tiresome length which arises from an excessive treatment of a subject, — as excessive explanation, or excessive illustration, or excessive aro;umentation. Theremin, in his trea- tise upon Rhetoric,^ enunciates the important dis- tinction between the philosophical, and the rhetor- ical presentation of truth. The former, is that exhaustive and detailed development of a subject which is proper in the scientific treatise. The latter, is that rapid and condensed, yet methodical, exhi- bition of thought \vhich is required of the orator, by the circumstances in which he is placed. Re- curring to this distinction, the maxim, " Avoid 23rolixity," is equivalent to the rule, " Exhibit truth rhetorically," in distinction from exhibiting it philo- sophically or poetically. The orator, of all men, should know when he is through, and should stop when he is through. The ^ Book I. chap, x, xi ; Book 11. cliap. iv. 138 HOMILETICS. preacher should perceive when he has subjected a subject, or a portion of a subject, to a treatment that is sufficient for the purposes of oratory, and should act accordingly. As soon as his presenta- tion has reached the due limits of rhetoric, he should bring it to an end, instantaneously, lest it pass over into a mode of representation that is for- eign to the orator, and is inimical to all the aims of an orator. Prolixity, or excessive treatment, arises when the sermonizer continues to dwell upon any part of his discourse, after he has already suffi- ciently developed it. A plan is prolix, when it is filled up with sub-divisions which are so evidently contained in the principal divisions, that the mind of the auditor feels itself undervalued by their formal enunciation. An argument is prolix, when, from the employment of the philosophical instead of the rhetorical mode of demonstration, it is made tedious by syllogisms instead of enthymemes, and by trains of ratiocination instead of bold and direct appeals to consciousness. An illustration is prolix, when the short and rapid metaphor is converted into the long and detailed simile, or allegory.^ ^ Figures are now the chief pJior is the orator's figure, and source of false rhetoric. The the simile is the poet's." The preacher talks trope, instead of metaphor is swift and glancing, I talking truth and sense. Aristo- flashing its light instantaneously, tie was not an orator, but he held and not impeding the flow of the kej to eloquence, by virtue thought and truth ; the simile is of his sagacious insight, and sci- the metaphor wire-drawn, de- entific analysis. One of his preg- tailed, and expanded, so as to fill nant remarks is, that " the metar the whole foreground of the dia SPECIAL MAXEVIS, 139 Without, however, entering upon these particu- lars of plan, proof, and illustration, we would briefly call attention to that j)rolixity, or excessive and tedious treatment of a subject, which arises from an imperfect mastery of it. Suppose tlmt the sermon- izer has not made that general and special prepara- tion for composition which we have described, and yet attempts the production of a sermon. In the ■first place, his manner of presentation will inevita- bly be confused ; in the second place, it will inevi- tably be prolix, because it is confused ; and in the third place, it will inevitably be tedious, because it is prolix and confused. Instead of handling his theme with that strong, yet easy, grasp, which is natural to a mind that is master of itself and of the truth, he handles it irresolutely, hesitatingly, and awkwardly. Instead of a clear, downright state- ment, because he knows whereof he affirms, he expresses hirnself obscurely and doubtfully, because he does not certainly and positively know. State- ment follows statement, and yet there is little or no progress towards a final statement. Conscious that he has not done justice to the topic, he dares not let it drop, and take up another. Conscious that he has not lodged the truth fairly and surely in the course \vith pictorial elements, in prolix poetical fustian, and moro which both speaker and hearer of genuine eloquence, in the dis- lose sight of the subject. If this courses of a certain class of dictum of the Stagirite were preachers. 140 ' HOMILETICS. mind of the auditor, lie does not leave it, but con- tinues to hover about it, and work at it, in hope of better success in the end. The result is, that instead of crowding the greatest possible amount of mattei', into the smallest possible form, the preacher spreads the least; possible amount of truth over the widest possible surface. He hammers out his lead very thin. For, in this process, the truth, itself suffers. Instead of appearing in the sermon, as it is in its own nature, bright, dense, and gem-like, under the manipulations of such a workman, it becomes dull and porous. The sacred oration, instead of being a swift, brief, and strong movement of thought, becomes a slow, long, and feeble one. But prolixity may arise, also, from another cause besides ignorance of the subject. There may be prolixity from too much information. The preacher may have stored his memory with a multifarious knowledge, and not having acquired that thoroughly or2:anizing habit of mind which, like life in nature, sloughs off all that is not needed, this knowledge inundates the sermon. It comes pouring in upon him by a merely passive effort of tlie memory, while the judgment is una wakened and unemployed, and, borne along upon this general deluge of materials, the preacher becomes the most prolix and tedious of mortals. Long after the topic under consideration has been sufficiently explained to the understanding, he continues to explain. Long after the topic has been sufficiently SPE.CIAL MAXBIS. 141 illustrated to the imagination, lie continues to illus- trate. Copiousness of information, unless it is under the regulation and guidance of a strongly methodizing ability, and true rhetorical talent, leads CO prolixity as inevitably as sheer ignorance. While the preacher is on his guard against this fault, he is at the same time to remember that he is dealing with the common mind, and must not be so brief as to be obscure. A certain degree of repeti- tion, even, is required in the sermon, esjDecially if it is highly doctrinal, in order to convey the truth completely. This trait should be managed with great care, however ; for, even the common mind is less offended at a nakedness of statement which leaves it something to do, even if it is in the way of supplying ellipses and deficiencies, than it is at an excessive repetition, which tires and tantalizes it. It is impossible to lay down a general rule for the length of a sermon. It will not do to say that it should be thirty minutes in length, or forty-five minutes, or one hour. The length of a discourse will vary with the nature of the theme, and the peculiarities of time and place. And no stiff rule is needed, provided the sermonizer possesses that good judgment, that tact, which discerns when the sub- ject, as a whole, or in its parts, has received a suffi- cient treatment. It is, in reality, a sort of instinct- ive feeling which conies in the course of a good rhetorical training and practice, rather than any outward rule, that must decide when the develop- 142 HOMILETICS. inent of trutli has reached that point where it must stop. Hence the remark so often made in praise of a skilful orator : " He knows when he is done." In fact, it is not the item of length, but the item of prolixity, which wearies an audience. An auditory will listen with increasing interest to a sermon of an hour's length, provided their attention is kept upon the stretch, by a sermonizer who says just enough, and no more, upon each point, and who passes from topic to topic with rapidity, and yet with a due treatment and exhaustion of each, while they will go to sleep under a sermon of a half-hour's length, in which there is none of the excitement that comes from a skilful management of the heads, and none of the exhilaration of a forward motion. There is less fatigue and jveariness, in shooting through two hundred miles of space, in a rail-car, than in lumbering over ten miles of space, in a slow coach. The importance of avoiding prolixity is very apparent, when we consider the relation of the ser- mon to the feelings and affections of the hearer. The feelings of the human soul are often very shy, and apparently capricious. The preacher sometimes succeeds in awakening a very deep feeling, — say that of conviction of sin, — but he is not satisfied with having said just enough, or perhaps he is des- titute of that tact of which we have spoken, and does not Icnow that he has, and continues to enlarge and amplify. The feeling of conviction in the hear V3PECIAL MAXIMS. 148 er, wliicli ought to have been left to itself, begins to be weakened by the unnecessary repetition or prolixity of the discourse, and perhaps is ultimately dissipated by it. If the preacher had stopped when he was really through, and had left the mind of the auditor to its own workings and those of the Holy Spirit in it, a work would have been done in the soul, which all this labor of supererogation on his part only serves to hinder and suppress. Let the preacher acquire this nice discernment, by acquiring a good rhetorical discipline, by mak- ing all the general and special preparation for ser- monizing, and by studying the capacities of his congregation, and then he will instinctively avoid all prolixity in the discussion of truth. Then, his sermons, whether they are longer or shorter, will all of them exhibit that just proportion, that round- ness of form and absence of all superfluity, which we see in the works of nature, and which appears in the productions of every wise and cunning work- man who imitates nature. CHAPTEE VI THE DIFFERENT SPECIES OF SERMONS. In classifying sermons, it is well to follow the example of tlie scientific man, and employ as ge- neric distinctions as possible. It is never desirable to distinguisli a great many particulars, and elevate them into an undue prominence, by converting them into generals. That classification, therefore, which would regard tlie " applicatory " sermon, the " obser- vational " sermon, and such like, as distinct classes, only contributes to the confusion and embarrassment of the inquirer. The three most generic species of sermons, are the topical, the textual^ and the exposi- tort/. 1. The Topical Sermon is one in which there is but a single leading idea. This idea sometimes finds a formal expression in a proposition, and some- times it pervades the discourse as a whole, without being distinctly j^re-announced. Topical sermons are occupied with one definite subject, which can be accurately and fully stated in a brief title. South preaches a discourse of this kiiid, from SPECIES OF SERMOJS^S. 145 Numbers, xxxii. 23: "Be sure your sin will find you out." The proposition of tlie sermon is this : " Concealment of sin is no security to tlie sinner." The leading idea of the discourse is, the concealment of sin ; and the particular idea in the hearer, to which this idea in the sermon is referred, is the idea of liapj^iness} The concealment of sin is affirmed to be incompatible with the soul's peace and enjoy- ment; and the positions by which the idea, or propo- sition, of the sermon is led back to this funda- mental idea in the mental constitution of the hearer, are these : 1. The sinner's very confidence of secrecy is the cause of his detection. 2. There is sometimes a providential concurrence of unexpected events, which leads to his detection. 3. One sin is some- times the means of discoverino; another. 4. The sinner may unwittingly discover hirnself, through frenzy and distraction. 5. The sinner may be forced to discover himself, by his own conscience. 6. The sinner may be suddenly smitten by some notable judgment that discloses his guilt, or, Y. His guilt will follow him into another world, if he should chance to escape in this. The topical sermon is more properly an oration than either of the other species. It is occupied with a single definite theme that can be completely enunciated in a brief statement. All of its parts are subservient to the theoretical establishment of ^ Theremin : Khetoric, pp. 72-75. 10 146 HOMILETICS. but one idea or proposition, in tlie mind of the hearer, and to the practical realization of it, in his conduct. In the case of the textual sermon, as we shall see when we come to examine it, there is less certainty of unity in the subject, and, consequently, in the structure of the discourse. And the exposi- tory sermon partakes least of any of the character- istics of oratory and eloquence. Inasmuch as the topical sermon approaches nearest to the unity, and symmetry, and conver- gence to a single point, of the oration proper, it is the model species for the preacher. By this is meant, that the sermon, ideally, should contain one leading thought, rather than several. It should be the embodiment of a single proposition, rather than a collection of several propositions. It should announce but one sino;le doctrine, in its isolation and independence, instead of exhibiting several doctrines, in their interconnection and mutual de- pendence. The sermon must preserve an oratorical character. It should never allow either the philo- sophical or the poetical element, to predominate over the rhetorical. The sermon should be eloquence, and not poetry or philosophy. It should be a dis- course that exhibits singleness of aim, and a con- verging progress towards an outward practical end. It is for this reason, therefore, that we lay down the position, that the topical sermon is the model species for the sermonizer. If he constructs a textual sermon, he ought to make it as topical as SPECIES OF SERMONS. 147 IS possible.^ He must aim to pervade it with but one leading idea, to embody in it but one doctrine, and to make it teach but one lesson. In construct- ing an expository sermon, also, the preacher should make the same endeavor ; and although he must in this instance be less successful, he may facilitate his aim, by selecting for exposition only such passages of Scripture as have but one general drift, and con- vey but one general sentiment. The importance of this maxim may be best seen, by considering the fact, that sermons are more defective in respect to unity of structure, and a constant progress towards a single end, than in any other respect. But these are strictly oratorical qualities, and can be secured only by attending to the nature and laws of eloquence, — to the rhetori- cal, as distinguished from the philosophical presenta- tion of truth. Too many sermons contain matter enough for two or three orations, and consequently are not themselves orations. This is true of the elder English sermonizers. In whom the matter is generally superior to the form. Take the following plan of a sermon of South (in oratorical respects, the best of the earlier English preachers) on Jer. vi. 15: "Were they ashamed when they had com- ^ Tliis is not to be attained, by and movement of the discourse making the plan a mixture of top- sliould be distinguished, so far as leal and textual, — by stating a possible, by unity, simplicity, and proposition, and following with a progressiveness, — that is, by ora* purely textual division. The plan torical or topical qualities, fihould be textual, but the style 148 HOMILETICS. mitted abomination ? Nay, tliey were not at all ashamed, neither could they blush : therefore they shall fall amono; them that fall : at the time that I visit them they shall be east down, saitli the Lord." It is a topical discourse. The theme or proposition is : " Shamelessness in sin is the certain forerunner of destruction." The sermon contains sixteen pages, of which only four and a half are filled with matter that, U23on strictly rhetorical principles, goes to establish the proposition. The first three-quarters of the sermon are occupied with, an analysis of the nature of " shamelessness in sin." The discourse is shaped too disproportionately by the category of truth, — a category that is subordi- nate, and should not be allowed so much influence in the structure and moulding of an oration. ^ The consequence is, that this sermon possesses less of that oratorical fire and force so generally charac- teristic of South. It is not throughout j)ervaded by its own fundamental proposition. It does not gather momentum as it proceeds. There is no greater energy of style and diction at the end, than at the beginning. It is clear, it is instructive, it has many and great excellencies ; but it lacks the excellence of being a true oration, — a rounded and symmetrical discourse, pervaded by one idea, breathing but one spirit, rushing forward with a uniformly accelerating motion, and ending with an ^ Theremin : Rhetoric, Book I. Chap. X. SPECIES OF seemo:n-s. 149 overpowering impression and influence upon the will. This discourse would be more truly topical, and thus more ti'uly oratorical, if the proportions had been just tlie reverse of what they now are ; if but one-fourth of it had been moulded by the metaphysical category of truth, and the remaining three-fourths by the practical idea of happiness; if the discussion of the nature of shamelessness in sin bad filled foi-rr pages, and tbe effects^ or reasons why it brings down destruction or unhaj)piness upon the sinner, had filled the remaining twelve. 2. The Textual Sermon is one in which the passage of Scripture is broken up, and either its leading words, or its leading clauses, become the heads of the discourse. For exanij^le, Kom. xiv. 12 : ''- So then every one of us shall give an account of himself to God," might be the foundation of a discourse upon human accountability. The divisions are formed by emphasizing the leading words, and thereby converting them into the divisions of the sermon, as follows : 1. An account is to be rendered. 2. This account is to be rendered to God, 3. Every one is to render this account, — mankind generally. 4. Every one of us is to render this account, — men as individuals. 5. Every one of us is to render an account of lihnself. It is not necessary that the words of the text should be employed, as in the example given above. The substance of the separate clauses may be made the divisions, and the sermon still be textual. 150 HOMILETICS. Barrow has a sermon founded on Epli. y. 20 : "Giv- ing thanks always, for all things, unto God." The plan is as follows : 1. The duty itself, — giving thanks. 2. The object to whom thanks are to be directed, — to God. 3. The time of performing the duty, — always. 4. The matter and extent of the duty, — for all things. What are sometimes termed "observational" sermons, are also textual. The , following taken from a plan of a sermon by Beddome, upon Acts ix. 4: "Saul, Saul, why j)ersecutest thou me?" will illustrate this. The observations upon this text are suggested, either by the text as a whole, or by some of its parts. 1. It is the general character of unconverted men to be of a persecuting spirit. This observation is suggested by the text as a whole. 2. Christ has his eye upon persecutors. This observation is also suggested by the text as a whole. 3. The injury done to Christ's people, Christ considers as done to himself This observa- tion is suggested by a part of the text, — by an em- phasized word in it, " why persecutest thou me ?" 4. The calls of Christ are particular. This obser- vation is suggested by a part of the text, — ''' Saul^ Sauir There are two things requisite to the production of a good textual sermon, viz. : a significant text, and a talent to discover its significance. The text must contain distinct and emphatic conceptions, to serve as the parts of the division. In the text given SPECIES OF SEEMONS. 151 above, Rom. xiv. 12, " So then every one of us shall give an account of himself to Grod," there are these distinct and emphatic ideas : An account ; a judge ; huaianity generally ; the individual in particular ; personal confession. These fertile conceptions are full of matter, and the skill of the sermonizer is seen in the thoroughness, and brevity, with which he ex- hausts them and their contents. Upon the number, variety, and richness of such distinct and emphatic ideas in a passage, depends its fitness for textual discourse. Again, the text, in case it does not contain a number of such conceptions, must contain a number of distinct positions, or affirmations, to serve as parts of the division. There may be no single conceptions in a text, suitable to constitute the plan of a sermon, while, there are several statements in it, direct or implied. Take, for example, Ps. xc. 10 : " The days of our years are threescore years and ten : and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years, yet is their strength labor and sorrow: for it is soon cut off, and we fly away." The single conceptions in this text are not weighty enough to constitute heads in a discourse, but the affirmations, the positions, and the statements implied in it, are. This text, treated in this way, would furnish the following divisions of a textual sermon : 1. Human life, how- ever lengthened out, must come to an end. 2. Hu- man life, at longest, is very short. 3 That which 152 HOMILETICS. is added to the ordinary duration, of human life is, after all, but little to be desired. The second requisite, in order to the production of a good textual sermon, is a talent to detect these emphatic conceptions, or these direct or indirect po- sitions, in a passage of Scripture. A preacher desti- tute of this talent will pass by many texts that, really, are full of the materials of textual sermon- izing. He has no eye to discover the rich veins that lie concealed just under the dull and uninter- esting surface. If a text is so plain that he needs only to cull out the leading words, — if the forma- tion of the plan is merely a verbalizing process,- — he can, perhaps, succeed in constructing a textual discourse that Vyall probably be common-place, be- cause its structure is so very evident and easy. But the number of such texts is small, and the ransre of such a sermonizer must be narrow. A tact is needed in the preacher, to discover the hidden skele- ton. This tact will be acquired gradually and surely, by every one who carefully cultivates himself in all homiletic respects. Like all nice discernment, it comes imperceptibly in the course of training and discipline, and, therefore, no single and particular rule for its acquisition can be laid down. It must be acquired, however, or the fundamental talent for textual sermonizins: will be wantinof. Moreover, this tact should be judicious. It is possible to find more meaning in a text, than it really contains. The Rabbinic notion that mountains of sense are con- SPECIES OF SERMONS. 153 tained in every letter of tlie inspired volume, may be adopted to sucli an extent, at least, as to lead the preacher into a fanciful method that is destruc- tive of all impressive and effective discourse. This talent, for detecting the significance of Scripture, must be confined to the gist of it, — to the evident and complete substance of it. 3. The Expository Sermon, as its name indicates, is an explanatory discourse. The purpose of it is, to unfold the meaning of a connected ]3aragraph or section of Scripture, in a more detailed manner, than is consistent with the structure of either the topical or the textual sermon. Some writers upon Homiletics would deny it a jjlace among sermons, and contend that it cannot legitimately contain enough of the oratorical structure, and character, to justify its being employed for purposes of persua- sion. They affirm that the expository discourse is 23urely and entirely didactic, and can no more be classified with the connected, and symmetrical pro- ductions of oratory and eloquence, than the com- mentary or the paraphrase can be. But while it is undoubtedly true, that the expository sermon is the farthest removed from the oration, both in its structure and in its move- ment, it is not necessary that it should be as totally unoratorical as commentary, or paraphrase. An expository discourse should have a logical structure, and be pervaded by a leading sentiment, as really as a topical sermon. And, certainly, it 154 HOMILETICS. ought to be free from tlie dilution of a mere paraphrase. It should have a beginning, middle, and end, and thus be more than a piece of com- mentary. In short, we lay down the same rule in relation to the expository sermon, that we did in relation to the textual, viz. : that it he assimilated to the topical model, as closely as the nature of the species permits. But in order to this assimilation, it is necessary to select for exposition, a passage or paragraph of Scripture, that is somewhat complete in itself The distinction between expository preach- ing and commentary, originates in the selection, in the former instance, of a rounded and self-included portion of inspiration, as the foundation of discourse, while in the latter instance, the mind is allowed to run on indefinitely, to the conclusion of the Gospel or the Epistle. The excellence of an exj)ository sermon, consequently, depends primarily upon the choice of such a portion of Scripture, as will not lead the preacher on and on, without allowing him to arrive at a proper termination. Unless a passage is taken, that finally comes round in a full circle, con- taining one leading sentiment, and teaching one grand lesson, — ^like a parable of our Lord, — ^the ex- pository sermon must either be commentary or paraphrase. And if it be either of these, it cannot be classed among sermons, because the utmost it can accomplish is information. Persuasion, the proper function and distinguishing characteristic SPECIES OF SERMOI^S. 155 of eloquence, forms no part of its effects upon au audience. Even wlien a suitable passage has been selected, the sermonizer will need to employ his strongest logical talent, and his best rhetorical ability, to im- part sufficient of the oratorical form and spirit, to the expository sermon. He will need to watch his mind, and his plan, with great care, lest the dis- course overflow its banks, and spread out in all directions, losing the current and the deep strong volume of eloquence. This species of sermonizing is very liable ^to be a dilution of divine truth, instead of an exposition. Perhaps, among modern preach- ers, Chalmers exhibits the best example of the ex- pository sermon. The oratorical structure and spirit of his mind enabled him to create a current, in almost every species of discourse which he under- took, and, through his Lectures on Romans, we find a strong unifying stream of eloquence constantly setting in, with an increasing and surging force, from the beginning to the end. The expository preaching of this distinguished sacred orator, is well Avorth studying in the respect of which we are speaking. Having thus briefly sketched the characteristics of the three species of sermons, the question natu- rally arises: To what extent is each to be em- ployed by the preacher ? The first general answer to this question is, that all the species should be employed, by every ser- 156 HOMILETICS. monizer without exception. No matter what the turn or temper of his mind may be, he should "build upon each and every one of these patterns. If he is highly oratorical in his bent and spirit, let him by no means neglect the expository sermon. If his mental temperament is j)hlegmatic, and his mental processes naturally cool and unimpassioned, let him by no means neglect the topical sermon. It is too generally the case, that the preacher follows his tendency, and preaches uniformly one kind of ser- mons. A more severe dealing with his own powers, and a wiser resrard for the wants of his audience, would lead to more variety in sermonizing. At times, the mind of the congregation needs the more stirring and imjiressive influence of a topical disr course, to urge it up to action. At others, it requires the instruction and indoctrination of the less rheto- rical, and more didactic expositions of Scripture. And this leads to the further remark, as a definite reply to the question above raised, that the preacher should employ all three of the species, in the order in which they have been discussed. Speaking generally, it is safe to say that the plural- ity of sermons should be topical, pervaded by a single idea or containing a single proposition, and converging by a constant progress to a single ]3oint. For this is the model species, as we have seen. The textual, and the expository sermon, must be as closely assimilated to this species, as is possible, by being founded upon a single portion of Scripture^ SPECIES OF SERMONS. 157 fcliat is complete in itself, and by teacLing one general lesson. Moreover, textual and expository sermons will not be likely to possess this oratorical structure, and to breathe this eloquent spirit, un- less the preacher is in the habit of constructing proper orations ; unless he understands the essential distinction between eloquence and philosophy, and makes his audience feel the difference between the sacred essay and the sacred oration. Next in order, follows the textual sermon ; and this species is next in value, for the purposes of persuasion. Easy and natural in its structure, — • its parts being either the repetition of Scripture phraseology, or else suggestions from it, — the textual sermon should be frequently employed by the preacher. And, lastly, the expository sermon should be occasionally employed. There is somewhat less call for this variety, than there was, befoi-e the establishment of Sabbath-Schools and Bible-Classes. Were it not that these have taken the exposition of Scripture into their own charge, one very con- siderable part of the modern preacher's duty, as it was of the Christian Fathers and the Reformers, would be to expound the Bible. Under the present arrangements of the Christian Church, how- ever, the ministry is relieved from this duty to a considerable extent. But it is not wholly relieved from it. It is the duty of the 23reacher, occasionally, to lay out his best strength, in the production of an 158 HOMILETICS elaborate expository sermon, whicli shall not only do the ordinary work of a sermon, which shall not only instruct, awaken, and move, but which shall also serve as a sort of guide and model, for the teacher of the Sabbath-School and the Bible-Class. Such sermonizing becomes an aid to the instructor, in getting at the substance of revelation, and in bringing it out before the minds of the young. Probably the preacher can take no course, so well adapted to elevate the standard of Sabbath-School and Bible-Class instruction in his congregation, as, occasionally, to deliver a well-constructed and care- fully elaborated expository discourse. By employing, in this manner, all three of the species, in their relative and proper proportions, the preacher will accomplish more for his people, and for his own mind, than by confining himself to one species only. As the years of his ministry roll on, he will bring the whole Bible into contact with the hearts and consciences of his audience. Divine Revelation, in this way, will become all that it is capa- ble of becoming for the mind of man, because all its elements will be wrought into the mass of society. The preacher himself will perform all his functions, and not a portion only. He will instruct and awa- ken, he will indoctrinate and enkindle, he will inform and move, he will rebuke, rej)rove, and exhort. In short, he will in this way minister to the greatest variety of wants, and build up the greatest variety and breadth of Christian character, in the Church. CHAPTEE VII. THE NATURE AND CHOICE OF A TEXl. The sermon is always founded upon a |)assage of Scripture, which is denominated a text This term is derived from the Latin textum^ which signi- fies woven. The text, therefore, etymologically de- notes, either a portion of inspiration that is woven into the whole web of Holy Writ, and which, there- fore, must be interpreted in its connection and rela- tions, or else a portion of inspiration that is woven into the whole fabric of the sermon. We need not confine ourselves to either meaning exclusively, but may combine both significations. A text, then, is a passage of inspiration which is woven, primarily, into the web of Holy Writ, and, secondarily, into the web of a discourse. By uniting both of the etymological meanings of the word, we are led to observe the two important facts, that the subject of a sermon is an organic part of Scripture, and there- fore must not be torn away alive and bleeding, from the body of which it is a vital part ; and, secondly, 160 HOMILETICS. tl^^.t tlie subject or text of a sermon should pervade the whole structure which it serves to oiiginate and organize. If this definition of the text be kept in mind, and practically acted upon, it will prevent the sermonizer from treating it out of its connection with the context, and the general tenor of revela- tion, and will lead him to resrard it as the formative principle and power of his sermon, and to make it such. The text, then, will not be tortured to teach a doctrine contrary to the general teach- ings of inspiration, and it will be something more than a motto for a series of observations drawn from a merely human source, the preacher's own mind. The custom of founding religious discourse upon a text, has prevailed ever since there has been a body of inspiration, from which to take a text. In the patriarclial age, religious teachers spoke as they were moved by the Holy Gho^t, without a passage from the Canon of inspiration, because the Canon was not yet formed. Noah was a " preacher of righteous- ness," and probably reasoned of righteousness, tem- perance, and judgment to come, much as Paul did before Felix, without any formal proposition derived from a body of Holy Writ. As early as the time of Ezra, however, we find tlie Sacred Canon, which dur ing the captivity had fallen into neglect, made the basis of religious instruction. Ezra, accompanied by the Levites, in a public congregation "read in the law of God distinctly, and gave the sense, and caused them THE TEXT. 161 to understand the reading."^ Onr Saviour, as his custom was (conforming, undoubtedly, to the gene- ral Jewish custom), went into the synagogue on the Sabbath day, and " stood up for to read" the Old Testament. He selected the first, and part of the second verse of the sixty-first chapter of Isaiah, for his text, and preached a sermon upon it, which fastened the eyes of every man in the synagogue upon him, in the very beginning, and which, not- withstanding its gracious words, finally developed their latent malignity, and filled them with wrath, so that they led him to the brow of the precipice on which their city was built, tbat they might cast him down headlong.^ The apostles, also, frequently dis- coursed from passages of Scripture. Peter, soon after the return of the disciples from the Mount of Ascension, preached a discourse from Psalm cix. 8, tlie object of which was, to induce the Church to choose an apostle in the place of Judas.^ And again, on tbe day of Pentecost, this same apostle preached a discourse, founded upon Joel ii. 28-32, which, was instrumental in the conversion of three thousand souls.^ Sometimes, again, the discourse, instead of being more properly homiletic, was an abstract of sacred history. The discourse of Ste- phen, when arraigned before tlie high priest, was of this kind.^ The dense and mighty oration of ^ Neliemiali viii. 6-8. * Acts ii. 14-36. ' Luke iv. 16-29. ^ Acts vii. 2-53. ^ Acts i. 15, sq. ' 11 162 HOMILETICS. Paul, on Mars Hill, if examined, will be found to be made up, in no small degree, of statements and phrases that imply a thorough acquaintance with the Old Testament. They are all fused and amalga- mated, it is true, with the thoughts that came fresh and new from Paul's own inspiration, and yet they are part and particle of the earlier inspiration under the Jewish economy. The homilies of the early Christian Church, in the post-apostolic age, were imitations of these dis- courses in the Jewish synagogue, and of these sermons of the apostles. They became more ela- borate and rhetorical, in proportion as audiences became more cultivated ; and, on the other hand, they became less excellent, both in matter and in form, in proportion as the Church became ignorant and suj^erstitious. But, during all the changes which the sermon underwent, it continued to be founded upon a passage of Scripture, and to contain more or less of Scripture matter and phraseology. Melancthon does indeed mention, as one of the inconsistencies and errors of Popery, that the Ethics of Aristotle were read in church, and that texts were taken from his writings. Still, as a general thing, the ministry, whether scriptural or unscrip- tural in its character, has, in all ages since there has been a collected Sacred Canon, gone to it for the foundation of its public discourse. That, at this time, there is less likelihood than ever before of this custom becoming antiquated, is one of the strongest THE TEXT. 163 grounds for believing that Christianity is to prevail throuo-hout the earth. We have nov^ the best reason for thinking that to the end of time, wherever there shall be the sermon, there will be the Bible ; and that wherever there shall be homiletic discourse, there will be a- Scriptural basis for it. The following reasons .may be assigned, for selecting a passage of Scripture as the foundation of the sermon : 1. First, the selection puts honor upon Revelation. It is a tacit and very impressive acknowledgment, that the Scriptures are the great source of religious knowledge. Every sermon that is preached, throughout Christendom, in its very beginning, and also through its whole structure, points significantly to the Divine E,evelation, and in this way its paramount authority over all other literature is affirmed. No sermonizer could now take his text from a human production, even though it should contain the very substance, and breathe the very spirit of the Bible, mthout shocking the taste, and the religious sensibilities of his audience. This fact shows, that the practice of which we are speaking fosters reverence for the Word of God, and that it is consequently a good one. 2. Secondly, the practice of selecting a text results in the ex; tended exposition of the Scriptures, to the general mind. Sermonizing, while it is truly oratorical, in this way becomes truly expository. The sermon is a regularly constructed discourse, and yet, when it is founded upon a text, and is pervaded by it, it 164 HOMILETICS. contains more or less of commentary. In tliis way, tlie general mind is made acquainted with tlie con- tents of Revelation. 3. Thirdly, the sermon, when based upon a text, is more likely to possess unity, and a methodical structure. If the preacher should give no one general direction to his mind, by a passage of inspiration, the sermon would degene- rate into a series of remarks, that would have little use, or apparent connection with each other. Like the observations of a person when called upon, without any premeditation, to speak in a public meeting, the sermon, though religious in its matter, would be more or less ramblino; in its manner. Without a text, the preacher would be likely to say what came uppei-most, provided only it had some reference to religion. And the ill effects of this course would not stop here. The sermon would become more and more ramblino;, and less and less religious in its character, until, owing to this neglect of the Scriptures, it would eventually become dis- severed from them, and the sacred oration would thus become secular. 4. Fourthly, tlie selection of a text aids the memory of the hearer. It furnishes him with a brief statement, which contains the whole substance of the sermon, and is a clue to lead him through its several parts. We all know that tjie hearer betakes himself to the text, first of all, when called u^Don to give an account of a dis- course. If he remembers the text, he is generally able to mention the proposition, and more or less THE TEXT. 165 of the trains of tliouglit. 5. Fifthly, the text imparts authority to the preacher's words. The sermon, when it is really founded upon a 23assage of inspiration, and is truly pervaded by it, possesses a sort of semi-inspiration itself. It is more than a merely human and secular product. The Holy Spirit acknowledges it as such, by employing it for purposes of conviction and conversion. A merely and wholly human production, properly secular eloquence, is not one of those things which the Holy Ghost " takes and shows unto the soul." A truly scriptural discourse, provided we do not strain the phraseology too far, has much of the authority of Scripture itself. The followino; are some of the rales, that should guide in the choice of a text : 1. First, a passage of Scripture should be selected, towards which the mind at the time spontaneously moves. Choose a text that attracts and strikes the mind. The best sermons are written upon such passages, because the preacher enters into them with vigor and heartiness. Yet, such texts are not always to be found. They do not present themselves at the veiy moment they are wanted. Hence, the sermonizer must aid nature by art, must cultivate spontaneity by prudence and forethought. He should keep a book of texts, in which he habitually and carefully writes down every text that strikes him, together ivith all of the skeleton that presents itself to him at the time. Let him by no means omit this last par* 166 HOMILETICS. ticular. In this way, the spontaneous movements of his mind will be on record. The fresh and genial texts that occur, together with the original and genial plans which they suggest, will all be within reach. A sermonizer who thus aids nature by art, will never be at a loss for subjects. He ynll be embarrassed more by his riches than hia poverty. 2. Secondly, a text should be complete in itself. By this, it is not meant that it should be short. No rule can be given for the length of a text. The most that is required is, that the passage of Scrip- ture, selected as the foundation of the sacred oration, should, like the oration itself, be single, full, and unsuperfluous in its character. It should be single, containing only one general theme. It should be full, not a meagre and partial statement of this theme. It should be unsuperfluous, not redundant in matter that would lead the sermonizer into trains of discussion, and reflection, foreign to the one definite end of an oration. Texts must vary in length, from the necessity of the case. As a gen- eral rule, however, they should be as brief as is compatible with completeness. Short texts are more easily remembered. They are more likely to result in concise, and effective sermons, — in sermons that are free from prolixity, and that converge constantly to a single end. Sermonizers like Latimer and South, who are distinguished for a rapid, driving method, affect short pithy texts, THE TEXT. 167 like the following : "Lying lips are an abomination to the Lord." "He that walketh surely, walketh uprightly." " The wisdom of this world is foolish- ness with God." " So that they are without excuse." " Be sure your sin will find you out." Again, preachers like Alison and Blair, who are distin- guished not so much for vigor and effectiveness, as for a clean, neat, and elegant method, select brief texts, like these: "Thou art the same; and thy years shall not fail." "In your patience, pos- sess ye your souls." " Can ye not discern the signs of the times ?" " Thou hast made summer and winter." " What I would, that I do not." " Unstable as water, thou shalt not excel." It will be found to be true generally, that in jjroportion as a preacher's mind is vivid and energetic, and the public mind is awake and active, texts become brief, and sermons become direct and convei'gent. The texts of the sermons preached by the German and English Reformers are short and pregnant. Besides being easily remembered, a short text allows of emphatic repetition. Some sermons become very effective, by the reiteration of the inspired declaration, at the conclusion of each head. In this instance, the text becomes a clincher. The :^fiirmations of the preacher are nailed^ to use a phrase of Burns, with Scripture.^ ' " Even ministers, they ha'e been kenned, In holy rapture, A rousing whid at times to vend, And nairt wi' Scripture." 168 HOMILETICS. 3. Thirdly, a text should be chosen, from which the proposition of the sermon is derived plainly, and naturally. Sometimes, a preacher desires to present a certain subject, which he has revolved in his mind, and upon which his trains of thought are full and consecutive, and merely pref^ices his ser- mon with a passage of Scripture which has only a remote connection with his theme. In this case, the relation of the sermon to the text is that of adjustment, rather than that of development. Hav- ing made selection of a passage from which his proposition, and trains of thought, do not naturally flow, he is compelled to torture the text into an apparent unity with the discourse. Rather than take this course, it would be better to make the text a mere motto, or title, and not pretend to an unfolding of a Scripture passage. But there is no need of this. The Bible is rich in texts for all legitimate sermons, for all propositions and trains of thought that properly arise within the province of sacred, as distinguished from secular eloquence. Let the preacher take pains, and find the very pas- sage he needs, and not content himself with one that has only an apparent connection with his subject. But when the passage selected is a true text, — that is, a portion of Scrij)ture out of which the proposition, trains of thought, and whole sub- stance of the discourse, are woven^ — let the preacher see to it, that he derives from it nothing that is not in it. His business is not to involve into the text, THE TEXT. 169 sonietliing that is extrinsic, but to evolve out of it, sometliiDOf that is iutriusic. Hence, a text should be of such a character, as evidently to furnish one plain and significant proposition, and to allow of a straight-forward, easy, and real development of it. 4. Fourthly, oddity and eccentricity should be avoided, in selectins; a text. There is more need of this rule, now, than foi'merly. The j^ublic mind is more ludicrous in its associations, and more fastidi- ous in its taste, than two centuries ago. In the older sermonizers, applications of Scripture are very frequent, that involuntarily provoke a smile in a modern reader, but which in their day were lis- tened to with the utmost gravity, by sober-minded men and women. The doctrine of a double sense, together w4th a strong allegorizing tendency, in both preacher and hearer, contributed to this use of Scripture, which seems to us fanciful, and often- times ludicrous. Illustrations of this trait are without number. Dr. Eachard, whose volume gives a very lively pic- ture of the condition of the English clergy at the close of the seventeenth, and the beginning of the eighteenth century, furnishes some curious examples of this eccentric spirit, both in the choice of texts, and in drawin<^ out doctrine from it. He tells us of a preacher, who selected Acts xvi. 30 : " Sirs, wdiat must I do to be saved," and preached upon, the divine right of Episcopacy. " For Paul and Silas are called ^Sirs,' and 'Sirs' being in the 170 HOMILETICS- Greek xvpioi, and fhis, in strict translation, meaning * Lords/ it is perfectly plain, tliat at tliat time Epis- copacy was not only the acknowledged government, but that bishops were peers of the realm, and so ou2:ht to sit in the House of Lords." Another preacher, in the time of Charles II, he says, selected for his text, the words : " Seek first the kingdom of Grod," and drew from them the proposition, that kingly government is most in accordance with the will of God. " For it is not said, seek the parlia- ment of God, the army of God, or the committee of safety of God ; but it is, seek the hingdom of God." Another preacher took Matthew i. 2 : " Abraham begat Isaac," and argued against pluralists, and non- residency, in the ministry : " For had Abraham not resided with Sarah his wife, he could not have be^ot Isaac." Another sermonizer selected Isaiah xli. 14, 15: "Fear not, thou worm Jacob, . . . thou shalt thresh mountains," and drew the infer- ence, that the worm Jacob was a threshing worm. In the same vein, another preacher takes for his text Isaiah Iviii. 5 : "Is it such a fast that I have chosen ? A day for a man to afflict his soul ? Is it to bow down his head as a bulrush V and deduces the proposition, that "repentance for an hour, or a day, is not worth a bulrush." Still another preacher selected his text from Psalm xciv. 19: "In the multitude of my thoughts within me, thy comforts delight my soul," and preached upon election and reprobation, deducing the proposition, 'Hhat amongst THE TEXT. 171 the multitude of thoughts, there was a great thought of election and reprobation."^ Similar examples of eccentricity, in the choice and treatment of a text have been handed down from other sources. An aged New England minister, during the colonial period, once preached before a very unpopular dep- uty governor, from Job xx. 6, 7 : " Though his Excellency mount up to the heavens, and his head reach unto the clouds, yet he shall perish forever like his own dung." Another preached to the newly married couples of his congregation, upon a part of Psalm Ixxii. 7 : '^ And abundance of j)eace so lono; as the moon endureth." Dean Swift is reported to have preached the annual sermon to the Associated Tailors of Dublin, upon the text : " A remnant shall be saved." Among his printed sermons, there is one upon Acts xx. 9 : " And there sat in the window a certain young man named Eutychus, having fallen into a deep sleep : and as Paul w^as long preaching, he sunk down with sleep, and fell down from the third loft, and was taken up dead," which thus begins : " I have chosen these words, with design, if possible, to disturb some part in this audience of half an hour's sleep, for the convenience and exercise whereof, this place, at this season of the day, is very much celebrated."^ Such instances as these, however, are very dif- ferent from that quaint humor, of preachers like ' Eaohard : * Works, p. Q>Q, " Swift : Works, Vol. XIV. et al. Sermon 10. 172 HOMILETICS. Hugb Latimer, and Matthew Henry, wliicli is so mingled with devout and holy sentiment, as to lose all triviality, and to make only a serious impression. The following from the commentary of Henry, while it raises a smile, only deepens the sense of the truth conveyed. Remarking upon the require- ment of the Mosaic law, that the green ears of corn, offered as a meat offering, must be dried by the fire, so that the corn might be beaten out, Henry observes, that " if those who are young do God's work as well as they can, they shall be accepted, though they cannot do it as well as those that are aged, and experienced. God makes the best of green ears of corn, and so must we."^ By far the most culpable contortion of passages of Scripture, out of their natural meaning and con- nection, is found in the history of those theological schools, whose pulpits, having rejected the doctrines of sin and grace, were forced to find substitutes for these, in semi-religious, or wholly secular themes. During the prevalence of Rationalism in Germany, " sermons were preached, everywhere, upon such subjects as the care of health, the necessity of indus try, the advantages of scientific tillage, the necessity of gaining a competence, the duties of servants, the ill-effects of law-suits, and the folly of superstitious opinions. It is said, that Christmas was taken advantage of, to connect the sad story of the child ^ IIenet : Com. on Leviticus iii. 14. THE TEXT. 173 born in a manger, with tlie most approved methods of feeding cattle ; and the appearance of Jesus walking in the garden, at the break of day on the Easter morning, with the benefit of rising early, and taking a walk before breakfast. Not a word was heard regarding atonement and faith, sin and the judgment, salvation, grace, and Christ's king- dom. A selfish love of pleasure, and a selfish the- ory of life, put a selfish system of morals in the place of a lofty religion. The old-fashioned system of religious service had to be modified, and adjusted to this new style of preaching, which was as clear as water, and as thin as water too."^ This descrip- tion, by a very candid writer, of a state of things in Germany, in the last century, mil apply to some phenomena of the present day, both in England and America. The pressure of the evangelical spirit, which is dominant in these countries, restrains the extreme workings of this tendency, in the pul- pit ; and yet it is plainly seen in what is called the " sensational " discourse, which is commonly found- ed upon a text torn entirely out of its exegetical nexus, and filled with matter drawn from the four winds, rather than from the Christian Kevela- tion. A disputed text should not be selected, as the basis of a discourse. This rule applies more par- ticularly to doctrinal preaching, yet it has its value * HAeENBAon : German Rationalism, p. 105. 174 HOMILETICS. for sermonizing generally. The preaclier should choose the very plainest, most significant and pointed passages of Scripture, as the support of his doctrinal discourses. He is then relieved from the necessity of first proving, that the doctrine in ques- tion is taught in the passage, and can devote his whole time, and strength, to its exposition and establishment. The less there is of polemics in sacred oratory, the better. The more there is of direct inculcation, without any regard to opposing theories and statements, the more efiicient, energetic, and oratorical, will be the sermon. The controver- sial tone is unfavorable to the bold, positive, unem- barrassed tone of Sacred Eloquence. Disputed texts should, therefore, be left to the philologist and the theologian. When these have settled their true meaning, so far as it can be settled, such texts may be employed to corroborate, and to illustrate, but not to build upon from the foundation. By this, it is not meant that the preacher has no concern with such passages of insj)iration. The preacher is, or should be, a philologist and a theo- logian, and in his study should examine such passages, and form a judgment in respect to them. But let him not do this work in the pulpit. The pulpit is the place for the delivery of eloquence, and not of philology, or philosophy, or technical theology. The rhetorical presentation of thought is the mode which the preacher is to employ, and nothing more interferes with this^ than the minute THE TEXT. 175 examinations of criticism, and the slow and cautions processes of pure science. This maxim is also valuable, not only in refer- ence to strictly doctrinal preaching, but to all preaching. The text is, or should be, the key-note to the whole sermon. The more bold, the more undoubted and undisj)uted, its tone, the better. A text of this character is like a premonitory blast of a trumpet. It challenges attention, and gets it. It startles and impresses, by its direct and authori- tative announcement of a great and solemn proposi- tion. Nothing remains then, but for the preacher to go out upon it, with his whole weight ; to unfold and apply its evident undoubted meaning, with all the moral confidence, and all the serious earnest- ness, of which he is capable. The inference to be drawn from these reasons for the selection of a j^assage of Scripture, as the foundation of a sermon, and these rules for making the selection, is, that tlie greatest possible labor , and care^ should be expended %ipon the choice of a text. As, in secular oratory, the selection of a subject is either vital, or fatal, to the whole performance ; so, in sacred oratory, the success of the preacher de- pends entirely upon the fitness of his choice of a text. I'he text is his subject. It is the germ of his whole discourse. Provided, therefore, he has found an apt and excellent one, he has found Ms sermon substantially. All labor therefore, that is expended upon a 176 HOMILETICS. text, is wisely and economically expended. Every jot and tittle of painstaking, in fixing upon paper a congenial passage of Scripture, and in setting up all of the skeleton that presents itself at tlie time ; every jot and tittle of painstaking, in examining the passage in the original Hebrew, or Greek, and in studying, in these same languages^ the context, and the parallel passages f every particle of care, in first obtaining an excellent text, and then getting at, and getting out, its real meaning and scope, goes to render the actual construction and composi- tion of the sermon, more easy and successful. Labor at this point, saves labor at all after l^oints. The preacher ought to make careful, and exten- sive, preparation in respect to pulpit themes. His common-place book of texts should be a large volume, in the outset, and if he is faithful to him- self, and his calling, he will find the volumes increasing. Instead of buying the volumes of skeletons that are so frequently offered at the present day, the preacher must make them for himself It W^s formerly the custom, in an age that was more theological than the present, for every jDreacher to draw up a " body of divinity," for himself, — the summing up, and result, of his studies and reflections. Every preacher knew ^ The rigid observance of tliis times, it is to be feared, even the one practice will prevent the Greek) from becoming a "lost Hebrew language, (and some- art," to the preacher. THE TEXT. 177 what his theological . system was, and could state it, and defend it. And, although, at first sight, we might suppose that this custom would lead to great diversities of opinion among the clergy, it is yet a fact, that there never was more substantial and sincere unity of belief, than among the Protes- tant clergy of England and the Continent, during those highly theological centuries, the sixteenth and seventeenth. There was no invention of new theories, but the old and established theory, the one orthodox faith of the Christian Church, w^as made to pass through each individual mind, and so come forth with all the freshness and fi'eedom of a new creation. " He who has been born," says Eichter, " has been a first man, and has had the old and common world lying about him, as new and as fresh, as it lay before the eyes of Adam himself" So, too, he who, in the providence and by the grace of God, has become a theologian and a preacher, has no other world of thought and of feeling, to move in, than that old world of Divine Revelation, in which the glorious company of the apostles, and the goodly fellowship of the prophets and preachers, thought and felt ; but if he wall open his eyes, and realize where he stands, and by Avhat he is surrounded, he will see it, as his predecessors saw it, in all the freshness of its real nature, and in all the mao-nificence of its actual infinitude. Whether or not, the preacher imitates this example of an earlier day, in regard to theologizing, he ought to, 12 178 " HOMILETICS. in regard to sermonizing. Let him not rely, at all, upon the texts and skeletons of other preachers, but let him cultivate this field by himself, and for himself, as if it had never been tilled before. Let him pursue this business of selecting, examining, decomposing, and recombining textual materials, with all the isolation and independence of the first preachers, and of all the great original orators of the Christian Church. CHAPTER VIII. THE PLAN OF A SERMON. In distinguishing the parts of a sermon, the same maxim ' applies, as in distinguishing the different species of sermons. The distinctions should be simple, generic, and as few as possible. We shall adopt the enumeration of Aristotle, in his Rhetoric,^ and regard the sacred oration as made up of the following parts, namely : the introduction^ ihe propo- sition^ the proofs and the conclusion, 1. The Introduction is that part of the sermon which precedes the proposition, and the proof. In common with the conclusion, it is a secondary part of an oration ; the primary parts being the proposi- tion and the proof. These latter, Aristotle denomi- nates " necessary " parts, " for," he says, " it is abso- lutely necessary that a discourse should state some- thing, Sindi prove it." And it is plain, that if a sermon could have but two parts, the proposition and the proof of it would possess some positive value, taken by themselves, while an introduction and a conclu- * Aeistoteles : De Ai-te Elietorioa, III. xiii. 180 HOMILETICS. •sion, taken by themselves, would be worthless Hence, the exceedingly logical and rigorous Aris- totle seems to hesitate, at first, whether he shall not regard the oration as consisting of but two parts, although he finally admits four.^ The introduction, in its nature, is preparatory It does not lay down any truth ; it does not establish any doctrine ; it simply prepares the Avay for the fundamental parts, and necessary matter, of the dis- course. In secular eloquence, one very important object of the exordium is, to conciliate the hearer towards the speaker ; to remove prejudices, and to awaken sympathy with him. There is not, ordina- rily, any need of an exordium for this purpose, in sacred eloquence. The preacher, unless he has been exceedingly unfaithful to himself and his calling, may presume upon the good- will and the respect of his auditory, and need not waste time or words, in endeavoring to secure a favorable attention to him- self, as a man. It is, however, sometimes necessary that the preacher, in his introduction, should con- ciliate his audience in respect to his subject. If his theme is a very solemn and awful one, if the proof and discussion of it lead to those very close and pungent trains of thought, which are apt to offend fallen human nature, it is well for the ser- monizer, to prepare the mind of his auditor for this ^'Avayicala apa ju6pia Trpodeatg koI Aeistoteles: De Arte Rbetorica, TTiOTcg- Idia jiev ovv ravra, to. 6e tzTCug- III. xiii. ra TzpooLfiLov irpodea/.g Ttiarig iTTiXoyog, PLAN OF A SERMO]^. 181 plain dealing witli his heart and conscience. 'The introduction, in this case, aifords an opportunity to remind the hearer, that preaching is for the soul's good and the soul's salvation ; that when the subject requires it, the plainest discourse is really the kind- est and most affectionate ; that the truth which is to be established and applied, is a part of God's reve- lation, and that, however severe it may seem, it is the severity of Divine wisdom and love. The ordinary office of the introduction, however, is to exhibit the text in its connections, and to ex- plain its less obvious meaning. Some writers upon Homiletics assign this work to a particular part of the discourse, which they denominate the explanation. It is better, to regard it as belonging to the introduc- tion. In Sacred Eloquence, as we have already ob- served, there is, generally, no need of that concilia- tory matter, either in respect to the speaker or his subject, which, according to these writers, constitutes the introduction proper. Hence, most sermons can have no introduction, except this explanatory one. Or, again, the sermon might need to be introduced by some conciliatory matter, and require no expla- nation of the text. Hence, it is better to define the introduction as consisting of all the niatter, be it conciliatory, or explanatory, or both, which prepares for the necessary and fundamental parts of the sermon, — the proposition and its proof The introduction should be short. Of course, it must be proportioned to the length, and general 182 HOMILETICS. t structure, of the discourse. Still, brevity should be a distinguishing characteristic of the exordium ; and where one sermon is faulty from being too abruptly introduced, one hundred are faulty from a too long and tiresome preface. It is easier to expand the common thoughts of the introduction, than to fill out full, and thoi^oughly elaborate, the argumentative parts of the discourse ; and hence we too often listen to sermons which remind us of that Galatian church which began in the spirit, but ended in the flesh. The sermon opens with a promising introduction, which attracts attention, conciliates the audience, and paves the way to a noble and fertile theme. But, instead of bringing the exordium to a close, and commencing with the development of a subject, or the proof of a proposition, the sermonizer repeats, or unduly expands, his introductory matter, as if he dreaded to take hold of his theme. The conse- quence is, that the theme itself is not handled with any strength or firmness of grasp, and the long and labored introduction only serves as a foil, to set off the brevity and inferiority of the body of the dis- course. Rather than take this course, it would be better for the sermonizer, to plunge into the middle and depths of his subject, at once. This latter method is allowable, occasionally. When the sub- ject is a very fruitful and important one, and the preacher can have but a single opportunity of presenting it, it is perfectly proper to dispense with every thing like a regular and oratorical PLAN OF A SEEMO]^. 183 exordium, and begin with tlie treatment of the theme itself. 2. The Proposition is the enunciation of the particular truth which is to be established, and applied, in the sermon. It is, therefore, of a posi- tive and affirmative nature. If, consequently, the truth or doctrine to be tauglit, and applied, has at first taken on a negative form, it is best to convert it into an affirmation. The demonstration of a position is more favorable to eloquence, than of a negation. The proposition should, also, be stated in the most concise manner possible. It is, or should be, the condensation and epitome of the whole discourse, and should, therefore, be characterized by the utmost density of meaning. The proposition should, also, be stated in the boldest manner possible. By this, it is not meant that the announcement of the subject of a sermon should be dogmatic, in the bad sense of this word. This should be guarded against. But, every teaching, or tenet, -of revelation, ought to be laid down with a strong confidence of its abso- lute truthfulness. We are told that a certain audi- tory, upon a certain occasion, were surprised at the doctrine of our Saviour, because he taught them as one having authority, and not as the scribes. Christ spake as never man spake, for he spake with the commanding dignity of a higher consciousness than belongs to a mere man. His doctrines carry a divine, weight, decisiveness, and authoritativeness, with them, which, when felt, admits no appeal and no 184 HOMILETICS. gainsaying, on the part of the human mincl. And, this authoritativeness pertains to inspiration as a whole. When, therefore, the proposition of a sermon is a legitimate derivative from a passage of Scripture, it ought to be expressed in such a manner as to preclude all hesitation, doubt, or timorousness, in the phraseology. A weighty conciseness, and a righteous boldness, ought to characterize the terms, and form of the proposition. But, in order that this may be the case, the utmost care nmst be expended upon its phraseology. A propositional sentence is very different from an ordinaiy sentence. It should be constructed much more elaborately. Its phraseology ought to be as near perfection as possible. The members, and clauses, of the sentence which is to enunciate the whole doctrine of the discourse, should be most exactly worded, and most cunningly jointed. The proposition of a sermon ought to be eminent for the nice exactness of its expression, and the hard finish of its diction. As a constituent part of the skeleton, it should be purest bone. We have thus far spoken ot the proposition of a sermon, as a definite and distinct statement which follows the introduction, and precedes the proof It is not necessary, however, that a discourse should contain a formal and verbal proposition, in order to its being a true topical sermon, a j)roper oration. The doctrine may be so inwoven into the proof, and discussion, as to render a formal statement unneces PLAIT OF A SEEMOIT. 185 sary. The proposition, in this instance, is implied in the body of the discourse. This is generally the case, with that large class of sermons which have been de- nominated subject-sermons. These contain no pro- position that is formally announced, although they contain one that is really, and organically inlaid. If a discourse does not embody a proposition, either expressly or by implication, it is not tojDical, in its nature. Subject-sermons, as the name denotes, take for their title, not a proposition established and applied in them, but the general theme with which they are occupied. From them, however, a propo- sition can be drawn, to the suj^port and enforcement of, which, the entire body of the discoui'se is sub- servient; and this j^roves the identity with the topical sermon. We will illustrate this, by reference to a sermon of Saurin, one of the very first of sermonizers, whether we consider the. soundness of his thought, the vigor and clearness of his method, or the plain elegance of his rhetoric. The discourse is founded upon 1 Cor. i. 21 : "After that in the wisdom of God, the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe." The title of the sermon is: "The advantages of revelation." The translator was, probably, led to give it this loose running title, because the author does not formally announce a proposition in the discourse. It contains one, how* ever; and, put into a distinct verbal statement, 186 HOMILETICS. would be this : " Eevealed religion is infinitely superior to natural religion." This proposition really pervades the whole sermon, and is established, by showing that revelation imparts a knowledge infinitely superior to that given by natural religion, in respect, 1. to the nature and attributes of God ; 2. to the nature and obligations of man ; 3. to the means of aj^peasing the remorse of conscience ; and, 4. to a future state. It is better to vary the structure of sermons, by adopting both modes, so far as the proposition is concerned. Invariably to state the proposition, though not so objectionable as invariably to leave it unannounced, imparts an air of stiffness, and formality, to sermonizing from Sabbath to Sabbath. Whenever, however, the proposition is not verbally stated, the treatment of the subject ought to be of such a character, as to leave no doubt in the mind of the hearer, respecting the real and positive doctrine of the sermon. The body of the discourse should be made up of such clear and evident matter, that when the hearer asks himself the ques- tion : '^ What is the proposition of this sermon ?" the answer is suggested by its trains of thought, and the general bearing of it as a whole. If, there- fore, a sermon contains no outward and formally [ announced proposition, it should contain an inward and organic one, all the more ; and the whole mass of its argumentative, and illustrative, matter, should liave even a plainer reference, and a stronger drift pla:n' or a sermon. 18 V in cue general direction, tlmn wlien the proposition has been verbally enunciated in the beginning. 3. The Proof is the substance of the sermon. It is the most impoitant part of the discourse, because it is that part, for the sake of which the discourse itself is composed. The introduction, the statement of the proposition, and the conclu- sion, exist only in order to the demonstration. Separated from that argumentative part of the ser- mon, which establishes some truth, and produces conviction, these other parts are worthless. A logic- al development of an idea, or a convincing demon- stration of a doctrine, always possesses an intrinsic worth. When we can read or hear but one part of a sermon, we always select the body of it, as it is termed. The proof divides into parts, which are some- times denominated ^' heads," and sometimes "divis- ions." These divisions should exhibit the following qualities. First, they must possess a true logical foi'ce. By this is meant, that they must one and all go to establish the proposition. It is not enough, that they bear some affinity to the theme of the discourse ; that they are not heterogeneous. They must be of the nature of demonstration, and carry conviction, as far as they extend, to the hearer's mind. At the conclusion of each head or division of proof, the auditor should feel that the proposi- tion has received an additional, and real support. Secondly, each head of the proof ought to exhibit 188 HOMILETICS. a distinctive character by itself. By this is meant, that it should not contain elements of proof that are found in other divisions. It must not be a mere modification of some other head, but a dis- tinct, and additional, item in the mass of argument. Hence, none but the leading arguments should appear in the sermon, for the support of a proposi- tion. There is no time in the oration for the numerous exhaustive demonstrations of philosophy, and in reality no need of them. The preacher should seize upon the few prime arguments, and exhibit to the popular audience only the capital proofs. A close attention to these two fundamental properties, in the heads of proof, is indispensable to good sermonizing. If a particular argument, in support of a proposition, is not genuinely demon- strative, and distinctively demonstrative, it should not constitute a part of the proof All ai'guments that do not, so far as they reach and relate, really evince, and afford new elements of conviction, ought to be energetically rejected. The observance of these maxims will secure a proper number of heads. If every thing of the nature of proof is employed, without regard to the intrinsic worth and strength of it,, the divisions will be too numerous for the nature of oratory. •' Some ministers," says an old homiletist, "do with their texts, as the Levite with his concubine, — cut, and carve it into so many several i^ieces." Some ser- PLAK OF A SEKMON. 189 mons exhibit a body of proof which , owing to the multitude of the divisions and sub-divisions, is wholly unsuited to the purposes of persuasive dis- course. They are good illustrations of the infinite divisibility of matter, but produce no conviction in the popular mind, because they employ the philo- sophical, instead of the rhetorical mode of demon- stration. This fault will be avoided, if the sermon- izer asks, in respect to each and every head or divis- ion : " Does this proj^osed head really tend to prove the proposition, and does it afford a positively new item of proof, that is not contained in any other head ?" These two questions, rigorously applied, will exclude from the sermon all second-rate argu- ments, and the pulpit will bring to bear upon the popular audience, only the strongest, plainest, and most cogent proofs. By this, it is not meant, that a division of the proof may not exhibit another phase of one and the same general argument. There may be but one general argument, in support of a proposition, and then the new element of proof, in the new division, must be simply a new aspect of this. But in this case, also, the spirit of the above-given maxim must be obeyed. The new head, or division, should exhibit a new aspect, so distinct and diverse from that of all pre- cediug or following heads, as to imj^art a marked, and distinguishing logical character to it. In respect to the number of heads, or divisions, in the proof, no stiff rule can be laid down. Some 1 90 HOMILETICS. rhetoricians say that they slioiild never exceed ^ve. Probably, the majority of modern sermons contain less than this number, and the majority of ancient sermons contain more. It is better to amplify one iirst-rate argument, than to present two mediocre ones, in the same space. It is more difficult to do this, because it requires closer and more continuous reflection ; but the sermon is 'the more excellent for it. When a ricli and fertile argument . has been discovered, the preacher should not leave it, until lie has made the common mind feel the whole sum of its force. The instant he has done this, he should drop it. It is not enough to barely state a proof. It should be fully unfolded. It should be revolved iu the preacher's mind, and before the hearer's mind, until all that is latent in it has been elicited. The maxim, then, in respect to the num- ber of heads or divisions is, " Amplify, rather than multiply." The effect of this maxim will coincide with what has been said, respecting the choice of arguments. The preacher, we have seen, is to choose genuinely demonstrative, and distinctively demonstrative proofs ; and these are the only ones that can be amplified, and cannot be multiplied. Fertile arguments are few iii number, but may be made to cover a wide extent of surface, and furnish a great amount of matter, for the body of the ser- mon. These same maxims will apply to the sub-divis- ions of proof. These, also, must possess a real, and PLAN OF A SERMON. 191 distinct demonstrative power. They should not repeat each other, in any degree. The choice and number of the sub-divisions, must, therefore, be determined by the same rules that apply to the principal divisions. As a general thing, sub-divis- ions need not be formally announced. They should be so forcible, and marked, in their character, as to announce themselves. Generally speaking, a subdi- vision that would not attract the attention of a hearer, by its own weight and worth, should l)e omitted. In announcing the divisions and subdivisions of the proof, the greatest pains should be taken with the phraseology. Each one ought to be expressed in the most exact, and concise language. The same care which we recommended in wording the propo- sition, should be expended upon the wording of its proofs. These are themselves a species of proposi- tion, and by the old sermonizers are so denominated. The elder Edwards frequently announces a gen- eral proposition, under the name of " doctrine,^' and follows with '^ proposition first," " proposition second," c%c., as the arguments that support it.^ It sometimes happens, that the matter in the proof is excellent, being both truly and distinctively demonstrative, but the style of expression is exceed- ingly defective. As an example of a loose and slovenly manner of wording the divisions, and sub- divisions, of the proof, take the following from John * Compare Sermon upon 1 Thess. ii. 16. Works, IV. 281 sq. 192 HOMILETICS. Howe, a preacher, wlio, in respect to tliought and matter, has no superior in the Ancient or the Mod- ern Church, but is excelled in respect to form and style, by many of inferior discipline, learning, and spirituality. In the forty-second of his Sermons, he describes the nature of the new birth.^ The divisions of the discussion are worded thus : " 1. As it is a birth, it signifies a real new product in the soul ; that there is somewhat really produced anew in it. 2. As this is a real production to be thus born, new Ijorn, so it is a sj)iritual production, in contradistinction to such productions as lie within the sphere of na- ture. 3. As this is a birth, so we must consider it to l)e a total production, such an one as carries an entireness with it ; for so it is with all such produc- tions that are properly called births. 4. This birth, as it is a birth, signifies a permanent ]3roduction ; an effect that is permanent, lasting, and continued." Instead of this loose, incompact phraseology, these divisions would be more forcibly stated, and easily rememl^ered, in the following form : To be born of God, (The text is, " Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ, is born of Grod) denotes : 1. A real true birth. 2. A supernatural, or spiritual birth. 3. A permanent birth.^ The awkwardness ^ John Howe : Works, II. 894 tually included in the first, and sq. New York Ed. therefore should be omitted in a ^ The third head, in Howe's truly rhetorical plan, distribution of the matter, is vir- PLAK OF A SEEMOK. - 193 of the statement, in this instance, arises from not cleanly separating the Lead, or division, from the matter under it, and from attempting some explana" tion or development of the head in the head itself. This should never be done. The preacher must re- serve the unfolding for its proper place. He should do one thins; at a time. When he announces either a proposition or a division, let it be a pure and simple annunciation, in the concisest, clearest, and bi'iefest phraseology. And when he unfolds, or developes, let him do this fully and exhaustively. Milton speaks of the close palm of logic, and the open palm of rhetoric. Now, the statement of a proposition, or of a head, is logical in its nature ; it should be the hard, knotty fist. The explanation, or development of a proposition, or of a head, is rhetorical in its nature ; it should be the open, ample hand. To attempt to unite the two in one sentence, is like attempting to open and shut the hand by a single volition, and by one set of muscles. The hand cannot be shut by the muscles that were made to open it. The state- ment of a proposition, or of a division of joroof, can- not be the development and amplification of it. Thus far, we have spoken of the body of the ser- mon, under the denomination of the proof. When discussing the nature of the proposition, we alluded to a class of sermons, called by some homiletists subject-sermons, which contain no formally an- nounced proposition, although they contain an in- ternal and implied one, and are, therefore, truly 13 194 HOMILETICS. topical in their nature. It is obvious, tliat when tlie proposition is thus inlaid, and implied, through the discourse as a whole, the proof takes on a differ- ent appearance, from that which it w^ears in a more formally constructed sermon. Sometimes, there are no distinctly announced heads. The preacher, from the rapidity of his movement, cannot stop to enu- merate, but supplies the lack of formality of state- ment by emphasizing leading words or clauses. In this case, there are subdivisions really, though not formally. Every sermon must contain subordinate thoughts, which flow out of each other, and yet are distinct from each other. Otherwise there is no development, no constant progress, and none of the elements of oratory. When the body of the sermon is of this informal character, it is termed by some writers the treatment^ by others the discussion. These terms are employed, not to denote that there is nothing of the nature of logic, or proof, in the body of the discourse, but that the logic, or proof, is less formal, and less formally announced, than in the other instance. The quali- ties which should characterize the discussion, or treatment, of a theme, are substantially like those of the proof proper. There must be the same accumu- lation of genuinely demonstrative material. As this less formal development of the theme goes on, it should acquire additional logical force, and produce a growing conviction in the understanding of the hearer. PLAIET OF A SERMON. 195 In concluding this account ' of tlie proof, the question arises, whether all the heads or divisions should be pre-announced, by the preacher, at the opening of his discourse. The decision of this question does not affect the structure of the dis- course itself, because this pre-announcement is not the addition of any new matter, but simply the repetition of the existing. Without laying down a stiff, undeviating rule, we are inclined to say, that rGGapitidation is better than pre-announcemeiit. And this, for the following reasons. First, the recapitulation of the pi'oofs, at the close of the argumentation, is more intelligible than the pre- announcement of them at the beo^inuins;. After the mind of the hearer has followed the preacher through his proofs, and has listened to their develop- ment, one by one, it sees their meanings and interconnection, much more readily and easily. The full import, and connection, of an argument, cannot be perceived, until it has been unfolded in its relations, and dependencies. Secondly, the re- .capitulation of the proofs is more impressive than the pre-announcement of them. The accurate and rapid repetition of the arguments of a sermon, after they have been clearly and connectedly exhibited, makes a very strong impression upon the hearer. It is a summing up of the demonstration, a group- ing and epitomizing of the entire logic of the discourse, which falls with massive, solid weight upon his understanding. This epitome of the 196 HOMILETICS. proof, read off to tlie audience before they have become interested in its contents by a course of aro-umentation, leaves the mind indifferent. It is like perusing the table of contents of a book, before reading the book itself. Lastly, the recapitulation of the proof is more easily rememhered than the pre- announ cement of it, for the reason that it is more intelligible, and more impressive. That which is most clearly understood, and most forcible and striking, is most easily retained in the memory.^ 4. The Conclusion is that part of the sermon which Vigorously applies the truth, which has been established in the proof, or developed in the treatment, or discussion. As the introduction is conciliatory and explanatory, the conclusion is apjDli- catory and hortatory. It should, therefore, be characterized by the utmost intensity, and energy. The highest vitality of the oration shows itself in the peroration. The onset upon the hearer is at this point. If the man's will is ever carried, if ^ "Our main work is to be their duty, which are the sum the people's remembrancers, to be and abstract of what we have constant monitors to them of dehvered. We should endeavor their dutj, to bring the contents to refresh their memories, con- of it close up to their minds, and sideringthat the preaching of the to fasten them upon them. To word was not instituted, only to which end, it may be sometimes inform men of what they were requisite, in the close of our dis- ignorant of before, but to remind courses, to recapitulate the most them of what they knew well important heads and particulars enough, but had forgot." John we have been treating of, that Edwards : The Preacher, Vi, I, our auditors may carry away with p. 281. them those brief memorials of PLAN OF A SEEMO]^. 197 this true effect of eloquence is ever produced, it is tlie work of this part of the sermon. By this, it is not meant that the other parts of the discourse may not be excellent, and produce some of their proper effects, even though the conclusion be im- perfect. But the crown and completion of the whole oratorical process, the actual persuasion of the auditor, will not ensue, if the conclusion is lame, and not equal to the preceding parts. It must be a true conclusion ; a vehement and powerful wind- ing up, and finishing. Hence, among the Ancients, the peroration received the utmost attention. The conclusions of the orations of Demosthenes, and Cicero, are constructed in the most elaborate manner, in order that there may be no falling off from the impression made by the preceding por- tions. At this point in the process of the orator, they seem to have exerted their utmost possibility of effort, like a leaper, who throws his whole brute force into that one leap which is to save his life from destruction. Indeed, the peroration seems to put the power to spring and smite, the very tendon of Achilles, into oratory. In sacred eloquence, there are two species of conclusions ; while, in secular eloquence, there is, strictly speaking, but one. The sermon may conclude, either by inferences^ or by direct address. The secular oration employs the latter only. This difference arises from the fact mentioned in the chapter upon the distinctive nature of Homiletics, 198 HOIHILETICS. namely, that sacred eloquence is more didactic than secular, and hence may vary more from the strict canons of oratory, if it can thereby produce a greater practical impression. The sermon should have an inferential conclu- sion, when the principal practical force of the pro- position, or the subject, is in the inferences from it. The real strength of some conceptions lies in that which follows from them. They make no very great moral impression of themselves, but they involve, or they imply, or they point to, certain truths that are highly important, and serious. Death, for example, is a theme that is much more solemn, and effective, in its inferences, and its impli- cations, than in itself. It is, indeed, fearful in itself, but it is the king of terrors, only through its concomitants, and consequents. The doctrine of the soul's immortality, again, is one that makes its strongest impression by virtue of its inferences, and deductions. The mere fact that the soul is to live forever, exerts but little influence upon a man, until he has been made to see, that he is utterly unfit and unprepared for such an endless existence ; until the doctrines of sin and guilt, of justice and judgment, have sharpened and enforced the doctrine of immortality. Secondly, the sermon should have an inferential conclusion, when the proposition and its proof, oi the subject and its discussion, are highly abstract in their nature. There are some doctrines presented in PLAIS^ OF A SEEMOlSr. 199 the Scriptures, so recondite and metaphysical that they can be made to bear upon the popular mind, only in their concrete and practical aspects. Inas- much as they are revealed truth, they must not be passed over, by the preacher. All Scripture is profit- able. Yet they are metaphysical in their*nature, and in their ultimate reach transcend the powders of the finite intellect. The preacher, therefore, must detect a popular element in them, that will make them proper themes for eloquence. He must discover in them, a practical quality, which will bring them home to the business, and bosoms of Christians. In order to this, the sacred orator must follow the method of Scripture itself. He is to content himself with a brief and succinct statement, which omits noth' ing essential to the doctrine, but which does not pre- tend to fully develope and explain it, and, from this, draw inferences and conclusions respecting the duties of his hearers. In this way, the high funda- mental dogma is brought down into the sphere of human conduct, and made a practical test of char- acter. It is not fully explained, it is true, because it cannot be by a finite mind ; but it is correctly, that is scripturally, stated. This accurate enuncia- tion of the truth, or doctrine, prepares the way for the inferences, — for that handling of it, which brings rt into living contact with the affections and will of the hearer. • In this way, the most abstract, and intrinsically metaphysical doctrine of Scrii3ture becomes eloquent, that is, persuasive, and influential 200 HOMELETICS. upon the human mind and heart. The revealed dogma of the trinity is an example. This is, undoubtedly, the most profound truth that has been presented to the human intelligence. Neither in Ancient nor in Modern philosophy, is there any doctrine that carries the mind down to such central depths. A perfect comprehension of this single truth, such as is possessed by the Divine intelli- gence, would involve a comprehension of all truth, and would solve at once, and forever, those standing problems of the human mind which have both stimu- lated and baffled its inquiries, ever since the dawn of j^hilosophic speculation. And yet, this transcen- dental truth is a Biblical truth, and must be preached to plain Christian men and women. A discourse upon the doctrine of the trinity, there- fore, should be strong in its inferences, rather than in its explanations, or developments. The relation, for example, which the three distinct Persons in the Godhead sustain to the believer, should be insisted upon. The peculiar feelings which he ought to cherish toward the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, should be inferred from the distinctive char- acter, and office, of each. The duty of an equal adoration and worship, in respect to each Person, the part which each performs in the Avork of human redemption, — such practical and edifying discussion as this must enter largely into a sermon upon the trinity, instead of a strictly metaphysical discussion of the doctrine. But such matter as this is Inferen PLAN OF A SEEMON. 201 tial, and should constitute the foundation of an address to the affections and will of the hearer. And it falls most properly into the conclusion, because it presupposes the statement and proof of the doctrine itself. In respect to the character of the inferences themselves, they should possess the following prop- erties. First, they must be legitimate. They must originate from the very heart, and substance, of the proposition or doctrine. Inferences should not be drawn from the accidental, or incidental, parts of a subject, but from its essentials, alone. Then, they are lawful inferences, and have the support of the whole fundamental truth, from which they spring. There is nothing to be subtracted from them. No allowance is to be made. They are entitled to their full weight. The hearer feels their legitimacy, and he cannot escape their force except by denying the proposition, or doctrine, of which they are the inevi- table consequences. Secondly, inferences must be Tio^nogeneous. They must all be of the same kind. A conflict in the inferences from a truth destroys their influence upon the mind of the hearer, and a direct contrariety absolutely annihilates them. Hence, the utmost agreement, and harmony, should appear in the practical inferential matter of a sermon. And this will be the case, provided they each, and all, possess the property of legitimacy. For truth is always self-consistent. It always agrees with itself. Hence, all matter that is really derived 202 HOMILETICS. from the very substance, and pitli, of a fundamental truth, ij^ homogeneous and harmonious. Nothing is then drawn out, that was not first inlaid. Thirdly, inferences must be intensely practical. The very purpose in employing them, as we have seen, is to popularize the abstract, to bring an intrinsically abstruse doctrine, or proposition, into warm and vital contact with the common mind and heart. Hence, inferences should be entirely free from a theoretic aspect, and from abstract elements. Neither is it enough, that they be practical in the moderate sense of the word. They should be intensely practical. By this is meant, that their address and appeal should be solely and entirely, to the most moral, earnest, and living part of man's nature, — that is, to his affections and will. The intellectual nature, by the supposition, has been addressed by the proposition, and the proof; and now it only remains, to press the doctrine home upon the conscience and feelings, in the most vivid and vital manner possible. This is done by legitimate and homogeneous inferences, coming directly, and inevi- tably, from the core of the subject, and containing its concentrated practical substance. Lastly, infe- rences must be cumulative. They should heap upon each other. Each succeeding one should not only be an addition to the preceding, but an advance upon it. The strongest inference should be the last inference. Unless this rule is observed, it is impossible to construct an excellent inferential con- PLAlf OF A SEEMON. 203 elusion. As we Lave previously seen, tlie perora- tion ought to be the most vivid, and impressive part of the sermon. But it cannot be, if the matter of which it is composed is all of equal value, and there is no progress. The peroration should be distinguished by vehemence, by the utmost intensity, energy, vividness, and motion. When, therefore, it consists of inferences, these should be of such a nature, and so arranged, as to press with more and more weight, to kindle with hotter and hotter heat, to enlighten with stronger and stronger light, to enliven with intenser and intenser life, and to move with a more and more irresistible force. Constructed in this manner, the conclusion of a sermon may be in the highest degree eloquent, even although an inferential conclusion, as we have re- marked, is not so strictly oratorical as the direct address. For this practical property in inferences, this intense vitality of the material, this constant progress in the arrangement, is the essential ele- ment in eloquence. Where these are, there is elo- quence ; and we see not why the preacher may not make an onset upon the heart and will, through inferences, that will be as vehement and successful, as that which is made by a more regularly con- structed peroration. At any rate, in the instance of such subjects as those which we have specified^ and having a proposition whose main practical force lies in its implications, or one which is highly abstract in its owe nature, he has no choice left him 204 , HOMILETICS. He must either pass by sucli subjects altogetber, or else bandle them in the manner we have described. But, he has no right to omit any truth of Scripture, in his sermonizing. He is obligated to employ even the most profound and metaphysical doctrines of Eevelation, for homiletic purposes, and must, there-' fore, treat them in the most concrete, popular, and eloquent manner possible, by dealing with their implications, and inferences. The sermon may, also, conclude with what we have termed the direct address. This is more strictly oratorical in its nature, than the inferential conclusion. It does not, like this latter, contribute to a further development of the subject of the discourse, while it is applying it to the hearer, but is simply and solely a^Dplicatory. The inference, as we have seen, is somewhat didactic. It imparts some further information, in respect to the theme of the discourse, while it addresses the affections and will. It is not so with the direct address, or the strictly oratorical peroration. This supposes that the proposition and its proof, or the theme and its treatment, have exhausted the subject, in both its theoretic and practical aspects ; and in this case, nothing remains but to apply it. As a consequence, this species of conclusion is much briefer than that by inferences. It ought not to be at all didactic. It should be purely oratorical, and highly hortatory. But such a species of discourse cannot continue long, and perhaps the art of the orator is nowhere PLAN OF A SEKMO]^. 205 more visible, than in the skill with which, in the eonchisioD, he presses his theme upon the afiections and will of the hearer. If this vehemence is too prolonged, it defeats itself. If this exhortation goes beyond the proper limits, it not only fatigues, but disgusts, the mind of the auditor. No preach* ers are more wearisome, than those who are styled hortatory preachers. Their direct address is un- supported by doctrine. Their whole oration is peroration. They omit the proposition and tlie proof, in their plan. It is safer to overdo the address to the understanding, than the address to the feelino's. The understandincr is a cool and sensible faculty, and good sense never tires or disgusts it. But the feelings are both shy, and excitable. Addressed too boisterously, they make their retreat. Addressed too continually, they lose their tone and sensibility, altogether. The direct address to the heai'er should be cha- racterized by the following qualities. First, it must be a/ppropriate. By this is meant, that the conclu- sion should enforce the one proposition, or the one lesson, of the sermon. Every part, and particle, of the peroration should be pertinent to the discourse as a whole. And this implies, secondly, that the conclusion by direct address be single. It cannot be appropriate, unless it is characterized by unity. Whatever the doctrine of the sermon may be, the conclusion must apply this, and this only. Says that eccentric preacher, Rowland Hill : ^^ The gos- 206 HOMILETTCS. pel is an excellent milch cow, which always gives plenty of milk, and of the best quality. 1 first pull at sanctifi cation, then give a plug at adoption, and afterwards a teat at sanctification ; and so on, until I have filled my pail with gospel milk." Now, if the body of the sermon has been constructed upon this plan, then an appropriate conclusion would not be one and single, in its character. A peroration pertinent to such a discourse would be double and twisted. But we have seen, that every sermon ought to be characterized by the utmost unity ; that it should approximate to the topical form, even when it does not employ it, and should always approach as nearly as possible to^he ora- tion, by containing but one proposition, or develoj)- ing but one general truth. Hence, the conclusion of the sermon is appropriate, only as it is single and incomplex, in its structure and spirit. It matters not what the proposition or subject may have been, let the direct concluding address be in entire har- mony with it. Some homiletists lay down the rule: " Always conclude with the gospel; always end with the hopes and promises." This, we think, is a false rule, both rhetorically and morally. If the law has been preached, then let the conclusion be legal, damnatory, terrible. If the gospel has been preached, let the conclusion be winning, encouraging, and hopeful. Then the sermon is a homogeneous composition, developing one theme, and making a single impression. A preacher PLAN OF A SEEMOIT. 207 bIiouIcI know, beforehand, the wants of his audi- ence, and deliberately make up his mind, in respect to the species of impression which it is desirable to produce. When this point is settled, then let him not be diverted from his purpose, but do what he has undertaken. If he judges that mercy and love are the appropriate themes for the hour, let him present them to the hearer's mind, and apply them to the hearer's heart, without any let or hindrance. And if he judges that Divine justice needs to be exhibited, and set home to the con- science, let him not temper or soften it, by a mixed peroration, in which, owing to iJie hrevity of the treatment to which he is now shut up, the two oppo- site ideas of love and wrath will inevitably neu- tralize each other, in the mind of the auditor. The rule above mentioned is also indefensible, on moral grounds. It is not upright in a preacher, either from fear of man, or from a false kindness, to shrink, in the peroration, from a plain and solemn application of the subject of his discourse. He is in duty bound, to make the truth which he has established bear with all its weight, and penetrate with all its sharpness. The spirit with which he should do this, should be Christian. Let him not dart the lightnings, or roll the thunders, except with the utmost solemnity, the utmost fear of God, the utmost love of the human soul, and the utmost solicitude lest he be actuated by human pride, oi human impatience. " Were you able to preach the 208 HOMILETICS. doctrine tenderly f " said McCheyne to a friend, wlio had spoken to him of a sermon which he had deliv- ered upon endless punishment. Perhaps the imper- fection of his own Christian character is never seen more clearly by the preacher, than in the manner in w^hich he constructs, and delivers, the perorations of his solemn discourses. He finds himself run- ning to extremes. Either he is afraid to he plain and pungent, in applying the truth, and thereby puts a sheath upon the sword of the Spirit, and muffles those tones which ousrht to sound startlino^ as a fire-bell at midnight, or else he is impatient with his drowsy auditors, or is puffed up with self- conceit, and thunders and lightens in his own strength, and, what is worse, for his own purposes. "Put the lust of .^^/fj^'says Coleridge, " in the forked lightning, and it becomes a spirit of Moloch." Self, in all its phases, must be banished from a solemn application of an awful doctrine. The feeling of the preacher should be that of the timid, shrinking, but obedient Jeremiah, when bending under the bur- den of the Lord. " Then said I, Ah ! Lord God ! behold I cannot speak : for I am a child. But the Lord said unto me. Say not, I am a child : for thou shalt go to all that I send thee, and whatsoever 1 command thee, thou shalt speak." ApiDropriateness and singleness, then, should characterize the concluding^ address of the sermon. Bringing all the teachings of. the discourse into a single burning focus, it should converge all the raya PL AX OF A see:mon. * 209 of trutli upon a single spot. That spot is tlie point in the hearers soul, where the feelings and the con- -science come too:ether. Anv auditor whose affec- tions are roused, and whose conscience is stirred, mav be left to himself, and the Soirit of God ; and any peroration which, accomplishes this work, is eloquent. The question arises at this point, whether the conclusion by direct address should refer to both classes of hearers, the regenerate and unregenerate. The answer depends upon the contents and charac- ter of the sermon. It is possible, that a discourse may establish a proposition that admits of a legiti- mate application, to both the regenerate and the un- regenerate ; though in this case, it will generally be found that the application is more easy, natural, and forcible, to one class than to the other. The doc- trine that man is an accountable being, for example, may be legitimately applied to the Christian, in or- der to stimulate him to greater fidelity ; and yet its strongest and most impressive application is to the impenitent man, who has made no preparation to meet the coming doom. In such an instance as this, good judgment would decide, that the address to that party to whom the subject had a less direct application, should be very brief, — a hint, rather than an application, — the intensity and energy of the peroration being aimed at that party most im mediately, and evidently, concerned with the subject. Hence, in laying down a general rule, we would 14: 210 HOMILETICS. «ay in answer to tlie question, that tlie conclusion should be directed to but one class in the. audience. If the proposition or subject applies most plainly to the church, then address the church in the close. If it applies most significantly to the congregation, tbeu address the congregation. Without, however, laying aown this rule as a stiff one, to which there are no exceptions, it is safest, in general practice, to allow that unity of aim and singleness of pursuit, which is unquestionably the constituent principle of eloquent discourse, a free operation. Let unity run clear through the sermon, and clear out. If there be other lessons to be tauo^ht from the text, teach them in other sermons. If there be other applica- tions of truth, make them in other discourses. It is not, as if the preacher had no other opportunity ; as if he must say every thing in one sermon, and ap- ply every thing in a single discourse. He has the year, and the years before him, in which to make full proof of his ministry ; in which to exhibit the truth upon all sides, and to apply it to all classes of men. Let him, therefore, make each sermon a round and simple unit, and trust to the whole series of his sermons, to impart a full and comprehensive knowledge of the Christian system, and to make a complete application of it to all grades and varieties of character. Having thus considered the two species of con- clusion, it may be asked, if it is proper to employ both in one and the same discourse. We answer, PLAT^ OF A SEKMO]^-. 211 that, althongli it may occasionally be allowable to draw inferences from a proposition, and afterwards end with a direct address to the hearer, yet this should be done very rarely. If the inferences do not possess sufficient self-applying power, and need the urgency of direct address to enforce them, this proves that they are defective. In this case, it is wiser to bestow more care upon the inferences, and to endeavor to construct a true and adequate infe- rential conclusion. If the inferences are intrinsi- cally feeble, no amount of earnest peroration can remedy this defect. Generally speaking, therefore, it is an indication of infenority in a sermon if it has a mixed conclusion, and yet there may be an excep- tion to this general rule. If, owing to the abstruse nature of the proposition, or the subject, the infe- rential matter in the sermon, though more practical and plain than the argumentative matter, is yet con- siderably recondite and abstract, the preacher may do the most he can towards impressing his subject upon the audience, by a direct address to them. In some such case as this, which should be a rare one, and must be, from the fact that but few themes of this highly abstruse nature come within the pro- vince of sermonizing, the preacher may employ both species of conclusion, not because it contributes to the greater perfection of the plan of a sermon, but because it is a choice of evils, and the best that can be done under the difficulties of the particular and rare case. 212 HOMILETICS. In closing this discussion of the plan and its seve- ral parts, the question naturally arises, whether a plan should invariably be formed before the process of composition begins. It is plain, from what has been said, that there will be a variety in the ser- mons of the same preacher, in respect to the dis- tinctness with which the plan, and its parts, show themselves in the discourse. Sometimes the skele- ton will appear through the flesh, so as to exhibit some angularity ; and sometimes it will be so clothed upon, as to render its presence more difficult of de- tection. Sometimes the plan will be prominent, and sometimes it will be known to exist, only by the general unity and compactness of the sermon. But although there will be this variety in the sermon itself, there should be no variation in the method of constructing it. The sermonizer should imiformly form a plan, before beginning to compose. The plan may sometimes be fuller, and more perfect, than at others ; but a plan of some sort, of more or less per- fection, should invariably be formed in the outset. By this, it is not meant, that in every particular the sermonizer must severely confine himself to his skeleton ; never modifying the plan, after he has begun to compose. It will sometimes occur, and this perhaps quite often, that the endeavor to fill out the plan will reveal faults, that were not seen while constructing it. These faults must be re- moved, and this leads to a modification of the plan itself, in and during the process of composition. PLAiq- or A SERMOIT. 213 Indeed, in some instances, the first attempt at com- position serves merely to introduce the mind into the heart of the subject, and to originate a truly organic method of developing it, — a second process of composition, a re- writing, being necessary to the completion and perfection of the discourse. Prob- ably, the master-pieces of eloquence were composed in this manner. The first, second, or even third draught served, principally, to elaborate a thorough and perfect plan, — to set the mind upon the true trail, and enable it, in the phrase of Bacon, to *' hound" the nature of the subject, and reach the inmost lurking-place of the truth. When this work was accomplished, the mind of the orator was then ready for that last draught, and elaboration, which resulted in the master-]3iece and model for all time. But, although the sermonizer may modify his plan after he has begun to compose, he may not begin to compose without any plan. He is to construct the best scheme possible, beforehand, and to work under it, as the miner works under his movable hurdle ; never disturbing the outside, or the main props, but frequently altering the interior and secondary frame-work, as the progress of his labor may require.^ ^ Skeletonizing is to sermon- sketching the human figure, and izing, what drawing is to painting, a knowledge of its anatomy. In The foundation of superior ex- this consisted, principally, the pre- cellence in this art, is talent in eminence of Da Vinci and Michae] 214 HOMILETICS. The evils of sermonizing, without skeleton- izing, are many and great. In the first place, the preacher's mind loses its logical and constructive ability. In a previous chapter, attention was directed to the excellent influence exerted by tlie analysis of sermons, and the effort to detect the plan contained in them. All that was there said in this reference, applies, with even greater force, to the actual construction of plans, for the preacher's .own purposes. ISTo mind can be methodical, that does not actually methodize. 'No mind can be constructive, that does not actually construct. If, therefore, the sermonizer neglects this practice of skeletonizing, and begins to compose without a settled scheme, writing down such thoughts and observations as spontaneously present themselves, his intellect will surely, and at no slow rate, lose all its logical ability and all its methodizing talent. The fundamental power of the rhetorician and orator, the organizing power, will disajDpear. And Angelo, both of whom possessed a of his art. An outline sketch wonderful anatomical knowledge, of Angelo is more full of meaning, and exhibited it in their figures, than a hundred paintings in The lack of this knowledge, and which there is no anatomy, skill, cannot be compensated for, Retzsch's " Outlines" are wonder- by other excellencies. Sir Joshua fully full of life, and meaning, Reynolds, owing to the defect of without any filling up from paint- his early artistic education in this ing, because of tlie knowledge of reference, confined himself to the human frame, and the conse- portrait painting ; knowing, that quent significance of attitudes, he could do nothing in historical which they display, painting, and the higher ranges PLAN OF A SEEMON. 215 if, as is apt to be the case, parallel with this disuse of the imderstanding and the reason, there is an exorbitant development of the fancy and imagina- tion, the very worst consequences ensue. The preacher becomes a florid and false rhetorician, composing and reciting mere extravaganzas. He degenerates into a rhapsodist, making a sensation, for the moment, in the sensibilities of a staring audience, but producing no eloquent impression, upon their higher faculties. There is no calculating beforehand, in respect to the issues of such a mind. Reversing the lines which the poet applied to his own composition, we may say of the discourse of a preacher of this character, " Perhaps 't will be a sermon, Perhaps 't will be a song." Secondly, even supposing that, owing to the fact that the preacher's mind is not imaginative, his pi'eaching does not become rhapsodical, and feeble, yet, if he neglects the practice of skeletonizing, he becomes rambling and diffuse. Having no leading idea, branching off into natural ramifications, by which to guide his mental processes, they run and ramble in every direction. The law of association is the sole law of his intellect. He follows wher- ever this leads him ; and the law of association, in an illogical, unreflecting mind, is the most whimsi- cal and capricious of laws. It associates the oddest and most heterogeneous things, and suggests the 216 HOMILETICS. strangest and most disconnected ideas. The course which trains of thought take in such a mind, re- sembles the trails, and tracks, of the myriads of worms that are brought up out of ground, by a warm June rain. Sometimes, such a mind real- ly attempts to be methodical, and then the dis- course reminds one of Burke's descri])tion of Lord Chatham's cabinet : " He made an administration so checkered and speckled ; he put together a piece of joinery so crossly indented, and whimsically dove-tailed ; a cabinet so variously inlaid ; such a piece of diversified mosaic ; such a tesselated pave- ment without cement ; here a bit of black stone,' and there a bit of white, that it was indeed a very curious show ; but utterly unsafe to touch, and unsure to stand on."^ Lastly, the neglect to form a plan, previous to composing, results in a declamatory and hortatory style of sermonizing. If an immethodical preacher does not fall into one or both of the faults last mentioned, he falls into this one. If he has no imagination, and no ideas, not even rambling and disconnected ones, then there is nothing left for him but to declaim, and exhort ; and this manner of preaching is, perhaps, the most ineffectual and worst of all. Certainly, such evils as the three we have men- tioned, constitute the strongest of reasons for not ^ BuEKE : Speech on American Taxation. PLAIT OF A SEEMON. 217 neglecting tlie plan of an oration ; for devoting the utmost attention, and uniform attention, to the logical organization of the sermon. It is a sin, for the j:reacher to be a mere rha|)sodist. It is a sin, if he is a mere rambling babbler. It is a sin, if he is a mere declamatory exhorter. He is solemnly bound to be an orator, — a man who speaks on a method, and by a plan. CHAPTER IX EXTEMPORANEOUS PREACHING. The discussion of the subject of Homiletics would be incomplete, if it did not include the topic of Extemporaneous Preaching. This species of Sacred Eloquence has always existed in the Church, and some of the best periods in the history of Christianity have been character- ized by its wide prevalence, and high excellence. The Apostolic age, the missionary periods in Patris- tic and Mediaeval history, the age of the Reforma- tion, the revival of evangelical religion in the Eng- lish Church in the eighteenth century, in connection with the preaching of Wesley and Whitefield, and the " Great Awakening,'' in this country, were marked by the free utterance of the extemporane- ous preacher. Being now too much neglected, by the clergy of those denominations which both fur- nish, and require, the highest professional education, — a clergy, therefore, who have the best right to employ this species of sermonizing, — there is reason for directing attention to it. In discussing thi& EXTEMPOEAIS-EOUS PEEACHIlSfG. 219 subject, we shall, first, speak of the nature of extemporaneous preaching, and, then, of some of the requisites in order to its ^ViCQQ^^i\A practice. I. The term " extemporaneous," as commonly employed, denotes something hurried, off-hand, and superficial, and general usage associates imperfec- tion, and inefficiency, with this adjective. There is nothing, however, in the etymology of the word, which necessarily requires that such a signification be put upon it. Extemporaneous preaching is preaching ex tempore^ from the time. This may mean either of two things, according to the sense in which the word tempus is taken. It may denote, that the sermon is the hasty, and careless, product of that one particular instant of time, in which the person speaks ; the rambling and prolix effort of t\i2ii punctum temporis, which is an infinitely small point, ^nd which can produce only an infinitely small result. This is the meaning too commonly assigned to the word in question, and hence, inferi- ority in all intellectual respects is too commonly associated with it, both in theory and in practice. For it is indisputable, that the human mind will work very inefficiently, if it works by the minute merely, and originates its products, under the spur and impulse of the single instant alone. But, the phrase " extemporaneous preaching " may and should mean, preaching from all the time, past as well as present. Behind every extempora- neous sermon, as really as behind every written 220 HOMILETICS. sermon, the whole dnratioii of the preacher's life, with all the culture and learning it has brought with it, should lie. The genuine extemporaneous discourse, as really as the most carefully written discourse, should be the result of a sum-total, — the exponent of the w^hole past life, the whole past dis- cipline, the whole past study and reflection of the man. Sir Joshua Reynolds was once asked, by a person for whom he had painted a small cabinet picture, how he could demand so much, for a work which had employed him only ^ve days. He replied : " Five days ! why, sir, I have expended the work of thiii;y-five years upon it." This was the truth. Behind that little picture, there lay the studies, the practice, and the toil, of a great genius, for more than three decades of years, in the paint- er's studio. It is not the mere immediate effort that must be considered, in estimating the nature and value of an intellectual product, but that far more important preparatory effort that went before it, and cost a lifetime of toil. The painter's reply holds good, in respect to every properly constructed extemporaneous oration. It is not the product of the mere instant of time in which it is uttered^ but involves, equally with the written oration^ the whole life, and entire culture of the orator. Taking this view of the nature of extempora- neous preaching, it is plain that there is not such a heaven- wide difference between it, and written preaching, as is often supposed There is no matC" EXTEMPOEAIS^EOUS PREACHma. 221 rial difference, between the two. The extempora- neous sermon must be constructed upon the same general principles of rhetoric and homiletics, with the written sermon, and must be the embodiment and result of the same literary, scientific, and pro- fessional culture. The difference between the two species of discourses is merely formal. And even this statement is too strong. There is not even a strictly formal difference, for the very same style and diction, the very same tecJinicall?/ formal proper- ties, are required in the one as in the other. The difference does not respect the form as distinguished from the matter of eloquence, but merely the form of the form. In extemporaneous preaching, the form is oral, while in other species it is written. There is, therefore, not only no material difference between the two, but there is not even a rigorously and strictly formal difference. Both are the results of the same study, the same reflection, the same experience. The same man is the author of both, and both alike will exhibit his learning or his igno- rance, his mental power or his mental feebleness, his spirituality his unspirituality. An ignorant, undisciplined, and unspiritual man cannot write a good sermon ; neither need a learned, thoroughly disciplined, and holy man, preach a bad extempora- neous sermon. For nothing but the want of pj^ac- tice would prevent a learned mind, a methodical mind, a holy mind, from doing itself justice and credit in extemporaneous oratory. 222 HOMILETICS. A moment's consideration of the nature and ope- rations of the human mind, of its powers by nature, and its attainments by study, is sufficient to show that the difference between written and unwritten discourse is merely formal, and less than strictly formal; is secondary, and highly secondary. The human intellect is full of living powers of vari- ous sorts, capable of an awakened and vigorous action, which expresses and embodies itself in lite- rary products, such as the essay, the oration, the poem. But, is there any thing in the nature of these, powers, which renders it necessary that they should manifest themselves in one, and only one, way ? Is there any thing in the constitution of the human mind, that compels it to exhibit the issues of its subtle and mysterious agency, uniformly, and in every instance, by means of the pen ? Is there any thing in the intrinsic nature of mental discipline, which forbids its utterance, its clear, full, and powerful utterance, by means of spoken words ? Must the contents of the heart, and intellect, be, of necessity, discharged only by means of the written symbol of thought? Certainly not. If there only be a mind well disciplined, and well stored with the materials of discourse, the chief thing is secured. The manner, whether written or oral, in which it shall deliver itself, is a secondary matter, and can readily be secured by practice. If the habit of delivering thought without pen in hand were taken up as early in life^ by the edu- EXTEMPOEANEOUS PEEACHmG. 223 cated clergy, and were as uniform and fixed^ as is the habit of delivering it with pen in hand, it would be just as easy a habit. If it be supposed, that unwritten discourse is incompatible with accuracy and finish, the history of literature disproves it. Some of the most . elaborate literary productions were orally delivered. The blind Homer extem- porized the Iliad and Odyssey. Milton, in his blindness, dictated to his dauo-hter the Paradise Lost. Walter Scott often employed an amanuensis, when weary of composing with the pen in hand. Caesar, it is said, w^as able to keej) several amanu- enses busy, each upon a distinct subject ; thus carrying on several processes of composition, with- out any aid from chirography. The private secre- tary of Webster remarks of him : " The amount of business which he sometimes transacted, durins; a single morning, may be guessed at, when it is men- tioned, that he not unfrequently kept two persons employed, waiting at his dictation, at the same time; for, as he usually walked the floor on such occasions, he would give his chief clerk in one room a sen- tence, to be incorporated in a diplomatic paper, and, marching to the room occupied by his private secre- tary, give him the skeleton, or perhaps the very lan- guage, of a private letter."^ A writer in the Quar- terly Review remarks, that " it was in the open air that Wordsworth found the materials for his poems ^ Lanman : Private Life of Webster, p. 84. 224: • HOMILETICS. and it was in tlie open air, according to the poet himself, that nine-tenths of them were shaped. A stranger asked permission of the servant, at Rydal, to see the study. ' This,' said she, as she showed the room, ' is my master's library, where he keeps his books, but his study is out of doors.' The poor neighbors, on catching the sound of his humming, in the act of verse-making, after some prolonged absence from home, were wont to exclaim, ^ There he is ; we are glad to hear him booing about again.' From the time of his settlement at Grasmere, he had a physical infirmity, which prevented his com- posing pen in hand. Before he had been five min- utes at his desk, his chest became oppressed, and a perspiration started out over his whole body ; to which was added, in subsequent years, incessant liability to inflammation in his eyes. Thus, when he had inwardly digested as many lines as his memory could carry, he usually had recourse to some of the inmates of his house, to commit them to paper."^ There is, therefore, nothing in the nature of extemporaneous preaching incompatible with tho- roughness of insight, clearness of presentation, or power of expression. Whether an unwritten sermon shall be profound, lucid, and impressive, or not, de- pends upon the preacher. If, after the due amount of immediate labor upon it, it fails to possess ^ London Quabteely Review : Vol. XCII, p. 212. EXTEMPORANEOUS PREACHING. 225 the qualities of good discourse, it is because the author himself lacks either learning, discipline, or practice, and not because there is any thing in the nature of the production in question, to preclude depth, clearness, and effectiveness. The truth of these remarks will be still more apparent, if we bear in mind, that the extemporane ous sermon has not had the due amount of work expended upon it. It has too often been resorted to, in idle and indolent moods, instead of being the object, upon which the diligent and studious preacher has expended the best of his power, and the choicest of his time. Again, the extempora- neous sermon has not been the product of perse- vering practice, and of the skill that comes from persevering practice. The preacher, in the tremor of his opening ministry, makes two or three attemi^ts to preach extempore, and then desists. Remember- ing the defects of these first attempts, and compa- ring: them w4th the more finished discourses which lie has been in the liabit^ and practice of writing, he draws the hasty and unfounded inference, that, from the nature of the case, oral discourse must be inferior to written discourse. But who can doubt, that with an equal amount of practice, of patient, persistent practice, this species of sermon might be made equal to the other, in those solid qualities m which, it must be confessed, it is too generally infe- rior ? "Who can doubt, that if the clergy would form the habit, and acquire the self-possession and 15 226 HOMILETICS. skill, of the lawyer, in respect to unwritten dis- course, and then would expend the same amount of labor upon the unwritten, that they do upon the written sermon, it would be as profound, as logical, as finished, and more effective? The fact is, that there is nothing in the oral, any more than in the written method of delivering thought, that is fitted to hamper the operations of the human mind. If an educated man has truth and eloquence within him, it needs nothing but constant practice^ to bring it out in either form he pleases, in written, or in extemporaneous language. Habit and practice will, in either case, impart both ability and facility. Take away the skill which is acquired by the habitual practice of composing with the pen in hand, and it would be as difficult for one to deliver his thoughts in writing, as it is for one who has acquired no skill by the practice of extemporaneous discourse, to deliver his thoughts orally. Nay, how often, when the thoughts flow thick and fast, is the slow pen found to impede the process of composi- tion. In such a case, the mind yearns to give itself vent in unwritten language, and would do so, if it had only acquired the confidence before an audience, and the skill, which are the result, not of mere nature but, of habit and practice. 11. The truth of these assertions, respecting the intrinsic nature of extemporaneous preaching, will be still more evident, by considering the chief requi- sites, in order to the attainment of the gift. It EXTEMPOEAIS^EOUS PREACHIIS'G. 22T will be found, that provided these exist, the unwritten sermon affords an opportunity, for the display of all those substantial qualities wHch are commonly supposed to belong to written sermons alone, and, in addition, of all those qualities w^hich co-exist only with the burning words, and free delivery, of the orator untrammeled by a manu- script, and the effort to read it. 1. The first requisite, in order to extemporane- ous preaching, is a heart glowing and heating with evangelical affections. The heart is the seat of life, the source of vigor, the spring of power. From this centre, vitality, energy, and impulse go out, and pervade the whole system. To the heart, whether in physiology or psychology, w^e must look for the central force. If profound feeling, the feel- ing that is grounded in reason and truth, pervade discourse, it will surely attain the end of eloquence, and produce deep movement in the hearer. That peculiar energy, issuing from the heart, whicli we designate by the word emotion, must mix and min- gle with tlie energy issuing from the intellect, in order to the highest power of speech. It was because, as Macaulay says, " his reason was pene- trated and made red-hot by his passion," that Fox was one of the most effective and overwhelming of orators. And the same truth will be evident, if, instead of looking at the discourse itself, we con- template the action of the discourser's mind. In order that the human faculties may work with the 228 HOMILETICS. /greatest energy and harmony, the heart must be in ^ the head, and the head in the heart. Never does the mind operate so powerfully, and with such truth and beauty of result, as when the faculty of cognition co-works wuth the faculty of feeling. If these two faculties become one and indivisible in action, the result is not merely truth, but living truth ; truth fused and glowing with all the feeling of the heart, and feeling mingled with, and made substantial by, all the truth of the head. The light is heat, and the heat is light. *" .These remarks respecting the function, and agency of the heart, are true in every province, but especially in that of religion. The inmost essence of religion itself has been placed by Schleiermacher, one of the profoundest of the Grerman theologians, solely in feeling. It is, probably, an error, to make either knowledge or feeling, hy itself ^ and apart from the other ^ the ultimate essence of religion. Reli2:ion is neither knowledsfe in isolation, nor feel- ing in isolation, but a most original and intimate synthesis of both. If either element by itself be regarded as the sole and single constituent, theol- ogy becomes either rationalistic and speculative, or else mystical and vague. And yet, even those theologians whose scientific spirit has led them to emphasize creeds, and made them shy of senti- mental religion, have always acknowledged that the heart is not only the seat of piety, but one impor- tant source of theological science itself. EXTEMPOKAI^EOUS PEEACIIING. 229 If this is true, in reference to tlie theologian, it is still more so, in reference to the preacher. He needs the strong stir and impulse of holy affections, in order to succeed in his vocation ; and, especially, when he has not the written discourse npon which to rely. A heart replete, and swelling, with the grand emotions of Christianity, is a well of water springing up into everlasting life and power, for it is fed from infinite fountains. With what force, vividness, and natural method, also, does the Chris- tian, destitute, it may be, of mental discij^line and culture, sometimes speak upon the subject of reli- gion, out of a full heart. Wliat wonderful insight, does he oftentimes display, into the very depths of religion and theology, thus proving the truth of the saying, " the heart sees further than the head." Or, to take another instance, with what power and fi'esh originality does the convicted sinner utter himself upon the doctrine of human guilt, when he is full of the awful feeling itself. Given, a heart filled with intelligent rational emotion respecting any subject, and the primal power by which effective discourse upon it is to be originated, is given also. Now, so far as this first requisite in order to the practice of extemporaneous preaching is concerned, it can most certainly be secured by every preacher. Nay, he is presumed to possess it, as that which, in a great degree, justifies him in entering the minis- try. Let him by prayer and meditation, first purify the feeling of his heart, and then render it more 230 HOMILETICS. deep and intense by the same . means, and he will be prepared to speak freely, and forcibly, to the human heart. Let him take heed that his feeling be spiritual^ an affection, in distinction from a pas- sion,^ the product of God's Word and Spirit, and not the mere excitement of the sensibilities, and he will preach with the demonstration of the spirit, and with power, as did Paul, " without notes,'' though it may be in weakness, and in fear, and in much trembling, and not with enticing words. 2. In the second place, a methodizing intellect is requisite, in order to successful extemporaneous preaching. By a methodizing intellect is meant, one which spontaneously works in a logical manuer. and to which consecutive reasoning has become natural. All truth is logical. It is logically con- nected and related, and that mind is methodical which detects this relation, and connection, as it were, by instinct. This natural logic, this sponta- neous method, is one great source of mental power. How readily do we listen to one who unfolds truth with a facile, and effortless precision, and how easily does his discourse win its way into us. We have said that truth is logical, in its essen- tial nature. But it is equally true, that the human mind is logical in its essential nature. For the truth and the mind are correlatives. One is set ^ See tlie account of this im- min: Rhetoric, p. 131, sq. portant distinction, by There- EXTEMPOEANEOUS PREACHIN'G. 231 over against the other. The truth is the object to be known, and the mind is the subject or agent to know it; and subject and object are antitheses, like hunger and food, like thirst and water. Conse- quently, in its idea, or, in other words, by its crear tion, the human intellect is as logical in its struc- ture, as the truth is in its nature. By its constitu- tion, the mind is designed to be methodical and consecutive in its working, and to apprehend logical truth logically. Now, by reason of discipline and practice, the human intellect works towards this true end of its creation, and acquires an instinctive ability to think methodically, and to unfold consecutively any sub- ject presented to it. The exhibition of truth by a methodizing intellect is exhaustive (to use a term of Mackintosh), and the whole truth is thus unfolded in its substance, its connections, and relations. This methodizing talent develo])es a subject, unrolling it to the centre, and showing^ the whole of it. Kant has a chapter upon the architectonic nature of the 13ure reason, — by which he means, that innate system of laws which reason follows, in building up architecturally its conclusions, — and shows, that when these laws are followed, a logical whole is as certainly and naturally produced, as is the honeycomb with its hexagonal cells, when the bee follows the architectonic laws of instinct. ^ Now, a ^ Kaxt : Kritik der reinen Yer- tonik der reiuen Vernunft.) nunft, p. 611 sq. (Die Architek- 232 HOMILETIOS. methodizing mind is one wliich, by discipline and practice, has reached that degree of philosophic culture, in which these systematizing laws work spontaneously^ by tlieir own exceeding laivfidness ^ and instinctively develope, in a systematic and con- secutive manner, the whole truth of a subject. The results of the operation of such a mind may well be called architecture ; for they are built up accord- ing to eternal law, in order, and beauty. There is no grander fabric, no fairer architectural structure, than a rational, logical system of truth. It is fairer, and more majestic than St. Peter's. A great system of thouij-ht rises like that cathedral with a o " Vastness which grows ; but grows to harmonize, All musical in its immensities." In speaking of the heart as the seat of feeling, we had occasion to allude to its influence, in modi- fying the operations of the mind considered as a whole. It was seen, that it imj^arts vitality to the total mental action, and infuses vigor through all the products of this action. A methodizing intellect exerts a very important influence in the same refer- ence. Feeling, though vivific and energizing, is not precise and clear in its own nature. The man of all feeling has a vague and mystic tendency. Hence, the need of logic, in order that the energy issuing from the heart may be prevented from diffusing itself over too wide a surface, and may be guided into channels, and flow along in them. When a EXTEMPORAl^EOUS PREACHn^G. 233 beating^ heart is allied witli a metliodizino: mind, CD O ' there is at once vigor and life, with clearness and precision. The warm emotions are kept from ex- haling, and becoming ^^aj)ory and obscure, by the systematizing tendency of the logical faculty, and the hard, dry forms of logic are softened, and en- livened, by the vernal breath of the emotions. It is evident, that if the sacred orator possesses such a discipline of head and heart as has been described, it will be easy for him to apply it to any theme he chooses, and speak upon it in any manner he may elect. The human mind, when highly trained, can labor with success in almost every direction. Education is, in truth, not a dead mass of accumulations, but the power to work with the brain. If this power be acquired, it is a matter of secondary consequence, what be the special topic upon which the work is expended, or the particular manner, oral or written, in which the result is em- bodied. In the ancient gymnasium, the first pur- pose was to produce a muscular man, an athlete. When this was accomplished, it mattered little whether he entered the lists of the wrestler, or of the boxer, or of the racer. Nay, if he were tho- roughbred, he might attempt the pancratium itself, and carry off the laurels. Assuming the existence of such a salient heart, and such a methodical head, nothing but habitual practice is needed, to permit their employment before any audience whatsoever, and without the aid of a manuscript. If the 234 HOMILETICS. preacher has attained this facility of methodizing, and is under the impulse of ebullient, swelling affections, awakened by the clear vision of divine truths and realities, he will be able to speak power- fully, in any presence, and extempore. The furnace is full, and the moulds are ready. Nothing is needed, but to draw off; and when this is done, a solid and symmetrical product is the result. 3. A third requisite, in order to the practice of extemporaneous preaching, is tlie power of amplijU cation} By this is meant, the ability to dwell upon an important point or principle, until the hearer shall feel the whole force of it. It is the tendency of a thoughtful, and especially of a method- izing mind, to be satisfied with the great leading principles of a theme, and not to tarry long upon any one idea, however capital it may be. Sucb a mind is able to pass over a subject with great rapi- dity, by touching only the prominent parts of it, as the fabled Titans stepped from mountain to moun- tain, without going up and down the intervening valleys. But the common hearer, the pojDular audi- ence, cannot follow, and hence the methodical and full mind must learn to enlarge, and illustrate, until the principle is perceived in all its length and breadth, and the idea is contemplated in all its height and depth. Just in proportion, as the methodizing mind acquires this amplifying talent, ^ Compare the AuTiioii's " Discourses and Essays," p. 96. EXTEMPOEAlJfEOUS PEEACHES^G. 235 does it become oratorical ; without it, thougli tliere may be philosophy, there cannot be eloquence. But this talent will be rapidly acquired, by careful pains and practice in regard to it. The speaker needs merely to stop his mind, in its on- ward logical movement, and let its energy head back upon the idea, or the jDrincijDle, which his feeling and his logic have brought out to view. Indeed, the tendency, after a little practice, will be to dwell too long, to amplify too much, when once the intellect has directed its whole power to a single topic. As matter of fact, the jDreacher will find, altogether contrary to his expectations, that his oral discourse is more expanded and diffuse than his written, that his extemporaneous sermon is longer than his manuscript. An undue amplification is the principal fault in the eloquence of Burke, who was one of the most methodical, and full minds in literary history. In the language of Goldsmith, he , " went on refining, And thought of convincing, while they thought of dining." Hence, although never unwelcome to his readers, his magnificent amplification was sometimes tedious to his hearers. Though the British House of Commons, at the close of the last century, was not a "fit audience" for Burke, because it had but small sympathy with that broad, and high political philosophy, out of which his masculine and thought- ful eloquence sprang like the British oak from the 236 HOMILETICS. strong black mould of ages, thougli Burke would not be the "dinner-bell" for the present British Parliament, still, his excessive amj)lification, un- doubtedly, somewhat imjDedes that rapid rush, and Demosthenean vehemence of movement, which, distinguishes eloquence from all other species of discourse. 4. A fourth requisite, in order to successful extemporaneous preaching, is a precise mode of expression, A methodical mind thinks clearly, and therefore the language should be select, and exact, that it may suit the mental action. If the orator's thoughts are distinct and lucid, he needs carefully to reject any and every word, that does not convey the precise meaning he would express. Indeed, rejection is the chief woik, in clothing the thoughts of a highly disciplined mind. It is an error tc suppose, that the main difficulty in extemporaneous preaching lies in the want of words, just as it is an error to suppose, that great natural fluency is an indispensable aid to it. Dr. Chalmers never acquired the al)ility to speak extempore, in a man- ner at all satisfactory to himself, or to kis auditors, when they remembered his written discourses. And the cause of this, according to his own statement, was, the unmastered and overmastering fluency of kis mind. Thoughts and words came in on him, like a flood. In extemporaneous utterance, they impeded each other, to use his own expression, like water attempted to be poured all at once out of a EXTET^IPORAJ^EOUS PEEACHXN'G. 2S7 narrow-mouthed jug. A more entire mastery of his resources, a power to repress this fluency, to control the coming deluge, which might have been acquired by patient practice, would have rendered Chalmers a most wonderful extemporaneous preach- .er, at the same time that it would have improved his written sermons, by rendering them less ple- thoric and tumid in style, and more exact and pre- cise in phraseology. Uncontrolled fluency is equally a hindrance to excellent poetical composition. Byron speaks of the " fatal facility " of the octo-syllabic verse. It runs too easily, to be favorable to the composition of thoughtful poetry. Some of Byron's own poe- try, and a great deal of Scott's, betrays this fatal facility, in a too abundant use of what Goldsmith humorously calls " the property of jinglimus." The melody is not subordinated to the harmony, the rhythm is monotonous, and the reader sighs after a more stirring and varied music. Natural fluency is a fatal facility in the orator also, unless he guards against it, by the cultivation of strict logic, and precise phraseology. Men gen- erally, even those who are reputed to be men of few words, are fluent when roused. When the feel- ings are awakened, and the intellect is working intensely, there are more thoughts and words than the unpractised speaker can take care of. What is needed is, coolness and entire self-mastery, in the midst of this animation and inspiration, so that it 238 HOMILETICS. may not interfere witli itself, and impede its own movement. What is needed is, the ability, in this glow of the heart, this tempest and whirlwind of feeling, to reject all thoughts that do not strictly belong to the subject, and all words that do not precisely convey the cool, clear thought of the cool, clear head. The orator must be able to check his thunder in mid volley. This is really the great art in extemporaneous discourse ; and it cannot be attained except by continual practice, and careful attention, with reference to it. The old and finished speaker always uses fewer and choicer words, than the young orator. The language of Webster during the last half of his public life was more select and precise, than it was jDreviously. He employed fewer words, to convey the same amount of meaning, by growing more nice, and careful, in the rejection of those vague words which come thick and thronging when the mind is roused. Hence, the language he did use is full of meaning ; as one said, " every word weighs a pound." We have thus discussed the principal requisites, in order to successful extemporaneous preaching. It will be evident, that the subject has not been placed upon a weak foundation, or that but little has been demanded of the extemporaneous preacher. A heart fall of devout and spiritual affections, a spontaneously methodizing intellect, the power of amplification, and a precise phraseology, are not small attainments. A great preparation has been EXTEMPOEANEOUS PEEACHmG. 239 required, on the part of liim who preaches unwrit- ten sermons ; but only because it is precisely the same that is required, in order to the production of excellent written discourse. If this preparation has actually been made, — if his heart is full, and his intellect spontaneously methodical in its working ; if he can dwell sufficiently long upon particular points, and can express himself with j^i'^cision, — then, with no more immediate preparation than is required to compose the written sermon, and no LESS, the preacher may speak as logically as he does when he writes, and even more freshly and impres- sively. But, as was remarked in the beginning of the chapter, the extemporaneous sermon will be the product, not of the particular instant but, of all the time of the speaker's life, — of all the knowledge and culture he has acquired, by the sedulous disci- j)line of his intellect, and the diligent keeping of his heart. Whether, then, all may preach unwrit- ten sermons, depends upon whether all may acquire the requisites that have been described ; and to assert that the clergy, generally, cannot acquire them, would be a libel upon them. There have been instances of men so thorough in their learning, and so spontaneously methodical in their mental habits, that, even with little or no immediate prepa- ration, they could speak most logically and eifect- ively. It is related of John Howe, that, "such were his stores of thought, and so thoroughly were they digested, he could preach as methodically 240 HOMILETICS. without preparation, as others after tlie closest 8tucly." Robert Hall composed his singularly fin- ished and elegant discourses, lying at full length upon chairs placed side by side, a device to relieve acute pain. It is true, that these were extraordinary men, but not a little of their ]30wer arose from the simple fact, that they felt strongly, thought patient- ly, and practised constantly. And this brings us to the last, but by no means least important point, in the discussion of this sub- ject ; and this, is the j^atient and persevering prao- tice of extemporaneous preaching. These requisites to unwritten discourse that have been mentioned, may all be attained, and, as matter of fact, are at- tained in a greater or less degree, by every preacher w^ho composes wTitten sermons, and yet there be no extemporaneous discourse. Many a preacher is con- scious of possessing these capabilities, and can and does exert them through the pen, who would be overwhelmed and struck dumb, if he should be de- prived of his manuscrij)t, and compelled to address an audience extemporaneously. These requisites must, therefore, achcally he put into requisition. The preacher must actually speak extemporane- ously, and be in the habit of so doing. And there is one single rule, and but one, the observance of which will secure that uniform practice, without which the finest capacities vnll lie dormant and un- used. At the very opening of his ministry, the preacher must begin to deliver one extemporanp/^i--- EXTEMPOEANEOUS PEEACHE^G. 241 sermon on tlie Sabbath, and do so, uniformly, to the close of it. A resolute, patient, and faithful observ- ance of this rule will secure all that is needed. The preacher must pay no regard to difficulties in the outset, must not be discouraged or chagrined by the bad logic, or bad grammar, of his earlier at- tempts, must not heed the remarks and still less the advice of fastidious hearers ; but must prepare as carefully as possible for the task as it comes round to him, and perform it as earnestly, seriously, and scrupulously, as he does his daily devotions/ In ^ The following was the method of Dr. Blackburn, a distinguished Southern preacher, in making the immediate preparation for un- written discourse, and we do not know of any better one. " In his studies and preparation for the pulpit, his plan was to fold a sheet of paper and lay it on his writing desk, and then commence walking backward and forward across the room, occasionally stopping to note down a head or leading sub- division of his thoughts, leaving considerable space under each note. Having thus arranged the plan of his discourse, which he called 'blazing his path,' borrow- ing a figure from backwoods life, he then proceeded to take up each head and subdivision sepa- rately, and amplify it in his mind, until he had thought his whole discourse -through and through, stopping occasionally, as before, 16 to jot down a word or thought, sometimes a sentence or an illus- tration, under each division, until he had finished. Then taking up the paper, he would usually con it over again and again, now blot- ting out, now adding something. Thus he continued, until every part of the discourse was satisfac- torily arranged in his mind. The notes thus prepared, he usually took with him into the pulpit, but he rarely had occasion even to glance at them. He used to remark, ' I try to get the thoughts fully into my mind, and leave the language, generally, to the oc- casion.' " — Peesbyteeian Quar- TEELY Eeview, March, 1853. The importance of an early heginning^ as well as of a constant practice, in order to extempo- raneous speaking, is illustrated by the following remark of Mr. Olay, to the students of a law 242 HOMILETICS. course of timej lie will find that it is becoming a pleasant process, and is exerting a most favorable influence upon his written sermons, and, indeed, upon his w^hole professional character. In each week, he should regularly preach one written sermon, and one unwritten sermon, to " the great congregation." If the preacher must be confined to but one kind of discourse, then he should write. No man could meet the wants of an intelligent audience, year after year, who should always deliver unwritten dis- courses. But the clergy would be a more able and influential body of public teachers, if the two species of sermonizing were fiiithfully employed by them. The vigor and force of the unwritten sermon would pass over into the written, and render it more impressive and powerful than it now is, while the strict method and finished style of the written discourse would pass over into the unwritten. If the young clergyman lays down this rule in the out- set, and proceeds upon it, it is safe to prophesy a successful career of extemporaneous preaching, in his case. But if he does not lay it down in the very school: " I owe my success in life, quently in some distant barn, to one single fact, namely, that at with the horse and the ox for my the age of twenty-seven, I com- auditors. It is to this early prac- menced, and continued for years, tice -of the great art of all arts, the practice of daily reading and that I am indebted for the pri- speaking upon the contents of mary and leading impulses that some historical or scientific book, stimulated me forward, and have These oif-hand efforts were made shaped my entire subsequent his- Bometimes in a corn-field, at oth- tory." ers in the forest, and not unfre- EXTEMPOSAI^EOUS PKEACHHSTG. 243 mitsetj if he delays until a more convenient season occurs for going up into tlie pulpit, and speaking without a manuscript, then it is almost absolutely certain, that, like the majority of his associates in the ministry, he will go through life, never deliver- ing a really excellent extem23oraneous sermon. We are confident, that extemporaneous preach- ing should engage, far more than it does, the labor and study of the clergy. The more we think of it, the more clearly shall we see, that, as a species, it comes nearest to ideal perfection. It is a living utterance, out of a living heart and intellect, to liv- ing excited men, through no medium but the free ajr. It was the preaching of Christ and his apos- tles, of many of the early Fathers, of Luther and the Reformers. And whenever any great movement has been produced, either in Church or State, it has commonly taken its rise, so far as human agency is concerned, from the unwritten words of some man of sound knowledge, and thorough discipline, im- pelled to speak by strong feeling in his hear^. If the clergy would study the Bible with a closer and more penetrating exegesis,^ and that theological system which has in it most of the solid substance of the Bible, with a more patient and ^ The relation of exegetical tlie revealed Word. He who is stady to extemporaneous speak- accustomed to read a Gospel, or ing deserves a separate discus- an Epistle, over^ and over^ and sion. Nothing is more certain to omr again^ in the original Greek, make a fluent and ready speaker, becomes so saturated with its than the analytic examination of revelations, that he is as full of 244 HOMILETTCS. scientific spirit ; if they would habituate their intel- lects to long and connected trains of thought, and to a precise use of language ; then, under the im- pulse of even no higher degree of piety than they now possess, greater results would follow from their preaching. When the clergy shall pursue theologi- cal studies, as Melancthon says he did, for personal spiritual benefit ; when theological science shall be wrought into the very soul, inducing a theological mood ; when thorough learning, and diligent self- discipline, shall go hand-in-hand with deep love for God and souls ; and when the clergy shall dare to speak to the jDeople, with extemporaneous bold- ness, out of a fall heart, full head, and clear mind, we may expect, under the Divine blessing, to see some of those great movements which characterized the ages of extempore preaching, — the age of the Apostles, the age of the Reformers, the age of John Knox in Scotland, the age of Wesley and Whitefield in England and America. matter as Elihu the friend of Job, perusal will not have this effect, and must speak that he may be . but ten or twenty will, refreshed. A single philological CHAPTER X. THE MATTER, MANNER, AND SPIRIT OF PREACHINa. The exposition of tlie methods, and maxims, by whicli homiletical discipline may best be acquired, demands, at its conclusion, some consideration of their practical application, in the actual work of the clerical profession. With what spirit ought the preacher to deliver his message? what should be its main drift, and lesson ? how should the manner of his utterance compare with that of other pro- fessions ? These are some of the questions, upon the right answer to which, depends very greatly the success of the clergyman. For, though his theory of Sacred Eloquence may be high, and true, yet a false spirit carried into his work, will vitiate all his science, and bring him short of his ideals. His great work, is to speak to the popular mind, upon the subject of religion, with a view to influence it, and, therefore, his oratorical efforts ought to be marked by that practical, and, so to speak, business-like manner, which is seen in the children of this world, who, in their generation, are oftentimes wiser than 246 HOMILETICS. the children of light. The preacher has much to learn, from the legal profession. A lawyer goes into the court-room, in order to establish certain facts, and impress certain legal truths upon twelve men in the jury-box. He is, generally, an earnest and direct man. He may be somewhat diffuse and circuitous in his representations, but it will be found, that, in the end, he comes round to his case, and makes every thing bear upon the verdict which he desires. In like manner, the Christian ministei is to go into the pulpit, in order to establish certain facts in regard to God and man, and to impress cer- tain religious truths upon all who come to hear him. He, too, ought to be marked by great energy and simplicity of aim. He should start upon his professional career, with a true and positive concep- tion of the work before him. The theme, then, is a wide one, and in order to convey the particular thoughts which we would present, in the briefest and most concise manner possible, we propose to speak of the matter , the manner^ and the spirit of preaching. 1. In respect to' the matter, the ideas and truths, which the preacher shall bring before the popular mind, during the ten, twenty, or forty years in which lie may address it, we affirm that he ought to con- fine himself to evangelical doctrine. If he is to err in regard to the range of subjects, let him err upon the safe side. It is undesirable, and unwise, for the pulpit to comprehend any thing more in its instruc* MATTER AND MAN"NEE OF PREACHmG. 247 tions, than that range of inspired truth which has for its object the salvation of the human soul. It is true, that Christianity has a connection with all truth; and so has astronomy. But it no more follows, that the Christian minister should go be- yond the fundamental principles of the gospel, and discuss all of their relations to science, art, and government, in his Sabbath discourses, than that the astronomer should leave his appropriate field of observation, and attempt to be equally perfect in all that can be logically connected with astronomy. Life is short, and art is long. In the secular sphere, it is conceded that the powerful minds are those who rigorously confine themselves to one depart- ment of thought. Newton cultivated science, and neglected literature. Kant wrought in the quick- silver mines of metaphysics for fifty years, and was happy and mighty in his one work. These men made epochs, because they did not career over the whole encyclopedia. And the same is true in the sphere of religion. The giants in theology have dared to let many books go unread, that they might be profoundly versed in Revelation. And the mighty men in practical religion, the reformers, the missionaries, the preachers, Jiave found in the dis- tinctively evangelical elements of Christianity, and their application to the individual soul, enough, and more than enough, to employ all their powers and enthusiasm. The Christian minister is not obligated to run 248 HOMILETICS. out Cliristianity into all its connections and rela- tions. Neither he, nor the Church, is bound to watch over all the special interests of social, literary, political, and economical life. Something should he left to other men, and other professions; and something should be left to the providence of God. The Christian preacher can do more towards promoting the earthly and temporal interests of mankind, by indirection, than by direct efforts. That minister who limits himself, in his Sabbath discourses, to the exhibition and enforcement of the doctrines of sin and grace, and whose preaching results in the actual conversion of human beings, contributes far more, in the long run, to the progress of society, literature, art, science, and civilization, than he does, who, neglecting these themes of sin and grace, mates a direct effort from the pulpit to " elevate society." In respect to the secular and temporal benefits of the Christian religion, it is emi- nently true, that he that finds his life shall lose it. "When the ministry sink all other themes in the one theme of the Cross, they are rewarded in a twofold manner : they see the soul of man born into the kingdom of God ; and then, as an inevitable conse* quence, with which they had little to do directly^ but which is taken care of by the providence of God, and the laws by which He administers his government in the earth, they also see ai*ts, sciences, trade, commerce, and political prosperity, flowing in of themselves. They are willing to seek first the MATTER AND MANNER OF PREACHING. 249 kingdom of God and liis righteousness, and find all fcliese minor things, — infinitely minor things, wher compared with the eternal destiny of man, — added to them by the operation, not of the pulpit, or of the ministry, but of Divine laws and Divine provi- dence. But, whenever the ministry sink the Cross, wholly or in part, in semi-religious themes, they are rewarded with nothing. They see, as the fruit of their labors, neither the conversion of the individual nor the prosperity of society. That unearthly ser- monizing of Baxter, and Howe, so abstracted from all the temporal and secular interests of man, so rigorously confined to human guilt and human re- demption, — that preaching which, upon the face of it, does not seem even to recognize that man has any relations to this little ball of earth ; which takes him off the planet entirely, and contemplates him simply as a sinner in the presence of God, — that preaching, so destitute of all literary, scientific, economical, and political elements and allusions, — was, nevertheless, by indirection, one of the most fertile causes of the progress of England and Ame- rica. Subtract it as one of the forces of English history, and the career of the Anglo-Saxon race would be like that of Italy and Spain. The preacher must dare to work upon this theory, and make and keep his sermons thoroughly evangelical, in their substantial matter. The temp- tations are many, in the present age, to multiply topics, and to introduce themes into the pulpit, 250 HOMELETICS. upon wliicli Christ and Ms apostles never preached. It is enough that the disciple be as his master. And if the Son of God, possessing an infinite intelli- gence, and capable of comprehending, in his intui- tion, the whole abyss of truth, physical and moral, natural religion and revealed, all art, all science, all beauty, and all grandeur, — if the Son of God, the Omniscient One, was nevertheless reticent regard- ing the vast universe of truth that lay outside of the Christian scheme, and confined himself to that range of ideas which relate to sin and redemption, — then, who are we that we should venture beyond his limits, and counteract his example ! 2. Secondly, in respect to the manner in which the preacher is to address the popular mind, upon these fundamental truths of Christianity, he ought to use great directness of style and speech. The connection between the matter and the manner of a writer, is one of action and reaction. Clear, evan- gelical ideas favor lucid, earnest style. He who selects semi-religious topics, immediately begins to hyperbolize and elocutionize. No Demosthenean fire, no hearty idiomatic English, no union of energy and elegance, naturally issues when poetry is sub- stituted for theology, and the truths of nature are put in the place of the doctrines of grace. A lan- guid and diffuse manner, like that of moral essays, is the utmost that can be attained upon this method. And, on the other hand, a tendency to a direct, MATTER AOT) MANNER OF PREACHINa. 251 terse, vigorous mode of handling subjects, reacta upon the theological o23inions of the preacher, and favors intensity and positiveness in his doctrinal views. Wordsworth, in conversing upon the style of a certain writer, which was peculiar and striking, I remarked : " To be sure, it is the manner that gives him his power, but then, you know, the matter always comes out of the manner."^ This is revers- ing the common statement of the rhetorician, who is in the habit of saying, that the manner comes out of the matter. But it contains its side of truth. No man can cultivate and employ a vigorous, direct, and forcible rhetoric, without finding that he is driven to solid and earnest themes, in order to originate, and sustain it. Those slender and unsuggestive truths which lie outside of revelation, and which relate more to man's earthly than to his immortal nature, more to his worldly than his eter- nal destiny, prove too weak for a powerful and commanding eloquence, and, thus, the rhetorician of an earnest and natural type is driven by his very idea of style, to those themes of sin, guilt, judgment, atonement, grace, and - eternal glory, which constitute the substance of Christianity, and are full of immortal vigor and power. As the preacher goes forth, to speak, it may be \ for twenty or forty years continuously, to his fellow immortals, upon the awful themes of eternity, let * Emerson: English Traits, p. 294. 252 HOMILETICS. liim weigli well every word lie utters, and make it the direct exponent of a vivid and earnest thought. He lives in an age more inclined to sentiment, than to ideas. The vicious and meretricious manner of the fugitive magazine, and review, is, just now, influ- encing the public taste, more than the dense and powerful style of the classical standards. Let him pay special attention, therefore, to his own manner. He should be a plain, direct, terse, and bold orator. He must employ the rhetoric which Jael used upon Sisera, putting his nail to the liead of his auditor, and driving it sheer and clear through his brain. 3. And, finally, in respect to the spirit with which the preacher should deliver his ideas, we sum up all that can be said upon this point, when we urge him to speak the truth in love. An aflPec- tionate spirit is the type, and the model, for the Christian herald. The greatest of the graces is charity. This we are toiling after all our days, and this comes latest and slowest into the soul. If those who have preached the word for years were called upon to specify the one particular, in respect to which they would have their ministry recon- structed, it would be their deficiency in this mellow, winning, heavenly trait of St. John. Perhaj^s they can say that they have been measurably positive, earnest, plain, and truthful preachers ; but, alas ! they cannot be so certain in their affirmation, that they have been affectionate heralds of the Lord Jesus. Their love for God's honor and glory, and MATTER AND MANNER OF PREACHING. 253 the welfare of the human soul, has been too faint and feeble. This is the weak, and not the strong side of their service in the pulpit. It is well for the clergyman, to know this in the outset of his ministry, so that his efforts may be directed accordingly. That trait in which the human soul is most deficient, because it is most directly contrary to human selfishness, — that Chris- tian trait which is the most difficult, both to origi- nate and to maintain, — is, certainly, the one that should be before the eye of the Christian minister, from the beginning of his course. Other traits, unless toned down by this one, are liable to run into extremes that become positive faults. The preacher's lucid energy, for example, unless tem- pered by a tender affectionateness, may issue in an exasperating vehemence that defeats all the ends of preaching, and renders it impossible to " persuade " men to become reconciled to God, or even to " be- seech " them to become so. The preacher, then, must cultivate in himself, a genuine and sincere affection for man as man, for man as sinful and lost, and for God as the blessed and adorable Saviour of man. And, among; the several means of educating himself in this direction, none is more effectual, than that strict confinement of his mind and heart to evangelical themes, w^hich w^e have already recommended. If he would fee] love for man's soul, he must distinctly see how pre- cious the soul is by its origin, and how deeply 254 HOMILETICS. wretched and lost it is by its sin. If he would feel love towards God as the Redeemer of man, he must distinctly see how great a self-sacrifice He has made, in order to the remission and removal of man's sin. If such topics as these are the infre- quent themes of his study and sermonizing, — if they are crowded out by other topics, which have no direct tendency to fill him with tender emotions in reference to God and man, but, on the contrary, puff up with pride, or perhaps lead to an undervalu- ation of evangelical doctrine, — then, he cannot be an affectionate preacher. He will never be able to say, as St. Paul did of himself, in reference to the TheSsalonians : " We were gentle among you, even as a nurse cherisheth her children : so, being affectionately desirous of you, we were willing to have imparted unto you, not the gospel of God only, but also our own souls, because ye were dear unto us."^ Of all the New Testament truths, none is equal to the doctrine of forgiveness through the blood of the dying Lord, in eliciting this divine and holy love. And therefore the preacher's meditation must be much upon this, and his speech very fre- quent upon it. The Roman Catholic theologians, in their classification of the gifts and graces of the believer, mention the donum lachrymarum^ the heavenly gift of tears. By it, they mean, that ^ 1 Thess. ii, 7, 8. MATTER A]ST> MANNER OF PREACHING. 255 tender contrition of soul wliicli weeps bitterly, like Peter, under the poignant recollection of transgres- sion, and the sweet sense of its forgiveness. It is that free and outgushing sorrow, which flows from the strange unearthly consciousness of being vile, when tried by a perfect standard, and yet, of being the justified and adopted child of God. It is that relief which a Christian man craves for himself, w^hen, after much meditation upon his sin, he still finds the heart is hard, and the soul is parched with inward heat that " turns the moisture into the drought of summer." This gift of tears is most intimately connected with the gift of love. From that soul which is forgiven much, and whose con- sciousness of the Divine mercy flows in the tears of the Magdalen, there issues a most profound affec- tion. We love the soul of man, and are willing to toil and sufier for its welfare, when we are melted down in gratitude and affection, because we have ourselves been forgiven. If, therefore, the Christian preacher would suf- fuse his thoughts with that yearning charity which St. Paul describes, let him live in the light of the Cross; let him feel the virtue of expiating blood in his conscience. The immediate intuition of the great Atonement, arms the preacher with a wonder- ful tenderness and pov/er of entreaty. Other doc- trines are powerful, but this carries him beyond himself, and fills him with a deathless affection for God, and the soul of man, that seems madness 256 HOMILETICS. itself to the natural mind. Whitefield's, Summer- field's, and McCheyne's glowing, and serapliic fer- vor, was inspired almost wholly by this single truth. And what a pathetic earnestness, what a tender and gentle sympathy, ever mingled with the strong flood-tide of Chalmers' emotion, after that memorable sickness, when he sat for weeks upon the brink of eternity, and there, in the face of end- less doom and death, obtained the first clear, calm- ing view of his dying Redeemer. The ao-e and condition of the world demand ministers of this type. The preacher of this age is appointed to proclaim the gospel, at a period, when the Christian religion and church are assailed by materialism in the masses, and skepticism in the cultivated. These are the two foes of Christ, whose presence he will feel wherever he goes. He will meet them in Christendom, and he wdll meet them in Paganism. It looks, now, as if Anti-Christ w^ere making his final onset. Let him, therefore, adopt a positive method. He should not waste his strength, in standing upon the defensive. Christianity is not so much in need of apologetic, as of aggressive efforts. State its doctrines with plainness, and they will hold their ground. Fuse them in the fire of personal conviction, and utter them with the con fidence of an immediate perception, and they will not need the suj^port of collateral argument. They are their own evidence, when once enunciated, and ?:^ MATTEE AKD MAl^OTER OF PEEACHING. 257 lodged in tlie conscience of man ; as much so, as the axioms of science. The Christian herald should go foi-th with faith and hope, remembering that the gospel of the Son of God is the only system that is not subject to fashions, and changes. It is the same now, that it was when St. Paul carried it to Athens, and St. John taught it in Ephesus. It will be the same system down to the end of the world. He is to be a co-worker with a mighty host in the rear, and another mighty host in the front. Why should he not be courageous, standing, as he does, in the cen- tre of a solid column, whose ranks are closed up, and which presents an impregnable front from what- ever side the foe may approach ? And why should he not be the boldest, and most commanding of orators, when he remembers, still more, that the gospel of the Son of God is the only system of truth, for whose triumph the Eternal One is pledged? He hath sworn by Himself, and the word has gone out of his mouth in righteousness, and shall not return : " Unto Him every knee shall bow." IT CHAPTER XI. EECIPROCAL RELATIONS OF PREACHER AND HEARER. The orator is not an isolated person, but one wlio stands in living sensitive rapport with an audi- tory, and therefore the discussion of the subject of Eloquence cannot be regarded as complete, without some account of the mutual relations of the par- ties. And there is more need of this exposition in reference to sacred, than to secular oratory, because, one whole side of the message which the Christian herald carries to man, is unwelcome. He must preach the condemning law, and present the severe aspects of truth. This renders it more difficult for him, to establish a harmonious relation between himself and his audience, than it is for the secular orator. The difficulty in the case will be most easily overcome, if both speaker and hearer have a clear understanding of the attitude, which each is morally bound to take towards the other. " Preach the preaching that I bid thee," is God's explicit command to the herald. " Take heed how ye hear," is His solemn message to the congregation. PEEACHEE AND HEAEER. 259 Botli parties must hear the message, and endeavor to come into right relations to each other, if they would receive the Divine blessing. "For," says Richard Baxter, " we bring not sermons to church, as we do a corpse for a burial. If there be life in tliem, and life in the hearers, the connaturality will cause such an amicable closure, that through the i-eception, retention, and operation of the soul, they will be the immortal seed of a life everlasting."^ This passage, from one of the most fervid and effec- tive of preachers, gives the clue to Christian elo- quence. Life in the preacher, and life in the hearer, — vitality upon both sides, — this, under God', is the o])en secret of successful s]3eech. For, the relation which properly exists between the Christian preacher, and the Christian hearer, is a reciprocal one, or that of action and reaction. Yet it is too commonly supposed, that eloquence depends solely upon the speaker ; that the hearer is only a passive subject, and, as such, is merely to absorb into himself a mighty and powerful influ- ence, that flows out from the soul of the orator, who, alone, is the active and passionate agent in the process. It will be found, however, upon closer examination, that eloquence, in its highest forms and effects, is a joint product of two factors ; of an eloquent speaker, and an eloquent hearer. Burning words presuppose some fuel in the souls to "■ Baxter : Sermon on Christ's absolute dominion. (Preface.) 260 HOMILETICS. whom tliey are addressed. The thrill of the orator, however exquisite, cannot traverse a torpid or para- lyzed nerve, in the auditor. It is necessary, there- fore, as all the rhetoricians have said, in order to the highest effect of human speech, that the audi- tor be in a state of preparation and recipiency ; that there be an answering chord, in the mass of minds, before whom the single solitary individual comes forth, with words of warning or of consolation, of terror or of joy. It follows, consequently, that if there be a true tone in preaching, there is also a true temper in hearing. If it is incumbent upon the sacred minis- try, to train itself to a certain style of thinking and utterance, it is equally incumbent upon the sacred auditory, to school itself into the correspond- ing mood ; so that its mental attitude, its pre-judg- ments, its intellectual convictions, its well-weighed fears and forebodings, shall all be, as it were, a fluid sea, along which the surging mind of the pub- lic teacher shall roll its billows. What, then, is the true tone in preaching, and what is the true temper in hearing, religious truth ? The Divine interrogatory, " Is not my word like as a iiref'^ suggests the true tone, which should at- all times characterize public religious address to the natural man; and the decided utterance of the Psalmist, " Let the righteous smite me, it shall be a ^ Jeremiah xxiii. 29, PEEACHER AIN^D HEARER. 261 kindness,"^ on the other hand, indicates the temper which the public mind should maintain, in reference to such a species of address. From the voice of God, speaking through the most shrinking, yet the most impassioned of his prophets ; from the voice of God, emitted from the deepest, clearest, widest religious experience under the old economy, we would get our answer. The pur^Dose, then, of this chapter will be to specify, in the first place, some distinctively Biblical views of truth, that are exceed- ingly intense in their quality, and penetrating in their influence, and should, therefore, enter as con- stituent elements into preaching ; and, in the second place, to indicate the proper attitude of the popular mind, towards such preaching. I. The prophet Jeremiah, in the well-known interrogatory to which we have alluded, directs attention to those elements in Revelation, which are adapted to produce a keen and pungent sensation, like fire, whenever they are brought into contact with the individual or the general mind. Just in proportion, consequently, as public address upon religious themes emits this subtle and penetrating radiance, because the preacher has inhaled the vehement and fiery temper of the Scri]3tures, re- specting a certain class of subjects, will it speak to men with an emphasis that will startle them, and hinder them from sleep. ^ Psalm cxli. 5. 262 HOMILETICS. 1. Commencing the analysis, then, we find these elements of force and of fire, in the Biblical rep- resentation of God as an emotional person^ or, in Scripture phrase, as the " living God." And here, we shall pass by all those more gen- eral aspects of the Divine personality, which have been abundantly brought to view, in the recent and still existing contest between theism and pan- theism, and confine ourselves to a notice of those more specific qualities, which have been somewhat overlooked in this controversy, and which constitute the core, and life, of the personal character of God. For, the Biblical representation of the Deity not merely excludes all those conceptions of him, which convert him into a Gnostic abyss, and place him in such unrevealed depths, that he ceases to be an object of either love or fear, but it clothes him with what may be called individuality of emotion, or feeling. Revelation is not content with that inadequate and frigid form of theism, that deism, which merely asserts the Divine existence and unity, with^jthe fewest predicates possible, but it enun- ciates the whole plenitude of the Divine Nature, upon the side of the affections^ as well as of the understanding. When the Bible denominates the Supreme Being the " living God," it has in view that blending of thought with emotion, that fusion of intellect with feeling, which renders the Divine Essence a throbbing centre of self-consciousness. For, subtract emotion from the Godhead, and there PEEACHEE AND HEAREE. 263 remains merely an abstract system of laws and truths. Subtract the intellect, and there remains the mystic and dreamy deity of seutimentalism. In the Scriptures, we find the union of both elements. A^ccording to the Bible, God possesses emotions. He loves, and he abhors. The Old and New Testa- ments are vivid as lightning, with the feelings of the Deity. And these feelings flash out in the direct, unambiguous statement of the Psalmist : " God loveth the righteous ; God is angry with the wicked every day;" in the winning words of St. John, "God is love," and in the terrible accents of St. Paul, "Our God is a consuming fire." Complacency and displeasure, then, are the two specific characteristics, in which reside all the vitality of the doctrine that God is personal. These are the most purely individual qualities that can be conceived of. They are continually attrib- uted to the Supreme Being, in the Scriptures, and every rational spirit is represented as destined for- ever to feel the impression of the one, or the other, of them, according as its own inward appetences and adaptations shall be. While, therefore, the other truths that enter into Christian theism are to be stated, and defended, in the great debate, the philosopher and theologian must look with a lynx's eye, at these emotional elements in the Divine Na- ture. For these, so to speak, are the living points of contact between the Infinite and Finite ; and that theory of the Godhead which rejects them, or 264 HOMILETICS. omits them, or blunts them, will, in the end, itself succumb to naturalism and pantheism. There are no two positions in Revelation more unqualified and categorical, than that" God is love," and that " God is a consuming fire." Either one of these affirmations is as true as the other ; and, there- fore, the complete unmutilated idea of the Deity must comprehend both the love, and the displeasure, in their harmony and reciprocal relations. Both of these feelings are equally necessary to personality. A being who cannot love, is impersonal ; and so is a being who cannot abhor. Torpor in one direc- tion implies torpor in the other. " He who loves the good," argued Lactantius fifteen centuries ago, *^ by this very fact, hates the evil ; and he who does not hate the evil, does not love the good ; because, the love of goodness flows directly out of the hatred of evil, and the hatred of evil springs directly out of the love of goodness. There is no one who can love life, without abhorring death ; no one who has an appetency for light, without an antipathy to darkness."^ He who is able to love that which is lovely, cannot but hate that which is liateful. One class of emotions towards moral good, implies an opposite class towards moral evil. Every ethical feeling necessitates its counterpart ; and therefore God's personal love towards the sera23h, necessitates God's personal wrath towards the fiend. ^Lactantius, De ira Dei, c. 5. Compare also Tertulliantjs : PKEACHER A^D HEAEER. 265 There is, therefore, no true middle position be- tween the full Script aral conception of God, and the deist ical conception of him. We must either, with some of the English deists, deny both love and indignation to the Deity, or else we must, with the prophets and apostles, attribute both love and in- dignation to him. Self-consistency drives us to one side or the other. We may hold that God is mere intellect, wdthout heart, and without feeling of any kind ; that he is as impassive, and unemotional as the law of gravitation, or a geome4:rical axiom ; that he neither loves the holy, nor hates the wicked ; that feeling, in short, stands in no kind of relation to an Infinite Essence ; or, we may believe that the Divine Nature is no more destitute of emotional, than it is of intellectual qualities, and that all forms of righteous and legitimate feeling enter into the Divine self-consciousness,-^we may take one side or the other, and we shall be self consistent. But it is in the highest degree illogical and inconsistent, to attribute one class of emotions to God, and deny the other ; to 230stulate the love of goodness, and repudiate the indignation at sin. What reason is there, in attributing the feeling of complacency to the nature of the Infinite and Eternal, and denying the existence of the feeling of indignation, as so many do, in this and every age? Is it said that emotion is always, and of necessity, beneath the Divine Nature? Then why insist, and emphasize, that ^' God is love f Is it said that wrath is an 266 - HOMILETICS. unworthy feeling? But tliis, like love itself, de« pends upon the nature of the object upon which it is expended? What species of feeling ought to possess the Holy One, when he looks down upon the orgies of Tiberius ? when he sees John Baptist's head in the charger ? Is it a mere illicit and un- worthy passion, when the wrath of God is revealed from heaven, against those sins mentioned in the first chapter of Romans, and continually practised by mankind ? And may not love be an unworthy feeling ? Is not this emotion as capable of degen- erating into a blind appetite, into a mere passion, as any other one ? Which is most august and ven- erable, the pure and spiritual abhorrence of the seraphim, wakened by the sight of the sin and uncleanness of fallen Babylon, or the selfish fond- ness, and guilty weakness, of the unprincipled afi(ec- tion of earth ? Which is most permeated with eternal truth and reason, and so most worthy of enterino" into the consciousness of a Divine and Supreme Mind, the wrath of law, or the love of lust? So the Scriptures represent the matter; and upon the preacher's thorough belief, in the strict metaphysical truth of this Biblical idea of God, and his solemn reception of it into his mind, in all its scope and elements, with all its implications and applications, depends his power and energy as a religious thinker and speaker. He must see for himself, and make his hearers see, that God is just PEEACHER AND HEAHER. 261 fhat intensely immaculate Spirit, botli in his com- placency and his displeasure, in all his personal qualities, and on both sides of his character, which' Revelation represents him to be. No other energy can make up for the lack of this. With this, though his tongue may stammer, and his heart often fail him, the preacher will go out before his account- able, guilty, dying fellow-men, with a spiritual 2:)0wer that cannot be resisted. For, man's mind is startled, when the Divine individuality thus flashes into it, with these distinct and definite emotions. ''I thought of God, and was troubled." The human spirit trembles to its inmost fibre, when God's personal character darts its dazzling rays into its darkness. When one realizes, in some solemn moment, that no blind force or fate, no law of nature, no course and con- stitution of things, but a Being as distinctly self- conscious as himself, and with a personality as vivid in feeling and emotion tow^ards right and wrong, as his own identity, has made him, and made him re- sponsible, and will call him to account; when a rnan, in some startling but salutary passage in his experience, becomes aware that the intelligent, and the emotional I am is penetrating his inmost soul, he is, if ever upon this earth, a roused man, an earnest, energized creature. All men know how wonderfully the faculties of the soul are quickened, when it comes to the consciousness of guilt ; what a profound and central activity is started in all the 268 HOMILETICS. mental powers, by wliat is technically termed " con- viction." But this conviction is the simple con- sciousness that God is one person, and man is another. Here are two beings met together, — a holy One, with infinite and judicial attributes, and a guilty one, with finite and responsible attributes, — the two are in direct communication, as in the garden of Eden, and hence the shame, the fear, and the attempt to hide. If, however, it is supposed that there must be some abatement and qualification, in order to bring the Biblical representation of the Deity into har- mony with some theory in the head, or some wish in the heart, it loses its incisive and truthful power over the human mind. If the full-orbed idea be so mutilated, that nothing but the feeling of love is allowed t^ enter into the nature of God, the mind softens and melts away into moral imbecility. If nothing but the emotion of displeasure makes up the character of the Deity, as was the case with the sombre and terrible Pagan religions, the mind of the worshipper is first overwhelmed Avith terror and consternation, and finally paralyzed and made callous by fear. But, if both feelings are seen necessarily to coexist in one and the same Eternal Nature, and each exercised towards its appropriate and deserving object, then the rational spirit adores and burns like the seraph, and bows and veils the face like the archangeL 2. In close connection with the doctrine of the PEEACHEE AND HEAEER. 2G9 living God, tlie Bible teaches the doctrine of the guilt of man ; and this is the second element of force and fire, alluded to by the prophet in his in- terrogatory. We have already noticed the close affinity, that exists between a vivid impression of the Divine character, and the conviction of sin. When that comparatively pure and holy man, the prophet Isaiah, saw the Lord, high and lifted up, he cried, " I am a man of unclean lips." And just in propor- tion as the distinct features of that Divine counte- nance fade from human view, does the guilt of man disappear. But here, again, as in the prece- ding instance of the Divine emotions, the difficulty does not relate so much to the bare recognition of the fact, as to the degree and thoroughness of the recognition. We have observed that there is a natural proneness to look more at the complacent, than at the judicial side of the Divine nature ; to literalize and emphasize the love, but convert the WTath into metaphor and hyperbole. In like man- ner, there is a tendency to extenuate and diminish the degree of human guilt, even when the general doctrine is acknowledged. To apprehend and con- fess our sin to be our pure self-will, and crime, is very difficult. We much more readily acknowledge it to be our disease, and misfortune. Between the fall denial, on the one hand, that there is any guilt in man, and the full hearty confession, on the other, that man is nothing but guilt before the Searcher 270 HOMILETICS. of tlie heart, and Eternal Justice, there are many degrees of truth and error ; and it is with regard to these intermediates, that the preacher especially needs the representations of the Bible. It is by the dalliance with the shallows of the subject, that public religious address is shorn of its strength. The Scriptures, upon the subject of human guilt, never halt between two opinions. They are blood- ied. The God of the Bible is intensely immaculate, and man in the Bible is intensely guilty. The in- spired mind is a rational and logical one. It either acquits absolutely and eternally, or condemns abso- lutely and eternally. It either pronounces an entire innocency and holiness, such as will enable the possessor of it, to stand with angelic tranquillity, amidst the lightnings and splendors of that coun- tenance from which the heavens and the earth flee away, or else it pronounces an entire guiltiness, in that Presence, of such scarlet and crimson dye, that nothing but the blood of incarnate God can wash it away. The Old Testament, especially, to which the preacher must go for knowledge upon these themes, because the Old Dispensation was the edu- cational dispensation of law, is full, firm, and dis- tinct, in its representations. Its history, is the history of an economy designed by its rites, sym- bols, and doctrines, to awaken a poignant and constant consciousness of guilt. Its prophecy, looks with eager straining eye, and points with tremulous and thrilling finger, to an Atoner, and PEEACIIEE AND HEAEEE. 271 his atonement for guilt. Its poetry, is either the irrepressible mourning and wail of a heart gnawed by guilt, or the exuberant and glad overflow of a heart experiencing the joy of expiated and pardoned guilt. And to this, is owing the intense vitality of the Old Testament. To this element and influence, are traceable the vividness and energy of the Hebrew mind, — so different, in these respects, from the Oriental mind generally. The Hebrews were a part of that same great Shemitic race, which peopled Asia and the East, and possessed the same general constitutional characteristics. But why did the Hebrew mind become so vivid, so intense, so dynar mic, while the Persian and the 'Hindoo became so dreamy, so sluggish and lethargic? Why is the religion of Moses so vivific in its spirit, and particu- larly in its influence upon the conscience, while the religions of Zoroaster and Boodh exert precisely the same influence upon the conscience of the Per- sian and the Hindoo, that poppy and mandragora do upon his body ? It is because God subjected the Hebrew mind to this theistic, this guilt-eliciting education. From the very beginning, this knowl- edge of God's unity and personality, and of God's emotions towards holiness and sin, was kept alive in the chosen race. The people of Israel were separated, purposely, and with a carefulness that was exclusive, from the great masses of the Oriental world. Either by a direct intercourse, as in their 272 HOMILETICS. exodus from Egypt, witli that personal Jehovali who had chosen them in distinction from all other nations, or else by the inspiration of their legisla- tors and prophets, the truth that God is a sovereign and a judge, " keeping mercy for thousands, forgiv- ing iniquity and transgression, and that will by no means clear the guilty," was made more and more distinct and vivid in the Hebrew intuition, while it grew dimmer and dimmer, and finally died out of the rest of the Oriental i^opulations. This education, this Biblical education of the Hebrews, was the source of that energy and vitality which so strikes us in their way of thinking, and modes of expres- sion, and the absence of which is so noticeable in the literatures of Persia and India. And here, it is obvious to remark upon the importance of a close investigation of those parts of the Old and New Testaments, which treat of the subject of atonement, as antithetic to that of sin and guilt. For, this doctrine of expiation, in the Christian system, is like a ganglion in the human frame ; it is a knot of nerves ; it is the oscillating centre where several primal and vital truths meet in unity. This single doctrine of sacrificial oblation is a vast implication. It implies the personality of God, with all its elements of power. It involves the absolute self-will and responsibility of the crea- ture in the origin of sin. It implies the necessary, inexorable nature of justice. And if we analyze these again, we shall find them full of the " seeds PREACHER ANT> HEARER. 273 of things ;" fall of tlie substance, and staple, of botli ethics and evangelism. Those portions of the Bible^ therefore, which treat of this central truth of Chris- tianity, either directly or indirectly, should receive the most serious and careful investigation. The Mosaic system of sacrifices should be studied, until its real meaning and intent is understood. The idea of guilt, — we employ the word in the Platonic sense, — and the idea of expiation, as they stand out pure and simple, yet vivid and bright, in the Prophets and Psalms, and in their inspired commen- tary, the Epistle to the Hebrews, should be pon- dered, until their intrinsic and necessary quality is apprehended. For, there is danger that the very ideas themselves may fade away and disappear, in an age of the world, and under a dispensation, in which there is no daily sacrifice, and frequent bleed- ing victim, to remind men of their debt to eternal justice. The Christian religion, by furnishing the one great sacrifice to which all other sacrifices look and point, has, of course, done away with all those typical sacrifices which cannot themselves take away guilt, but can remind of it.^ And now that the daily remembrancers of the ritual and ceremonial are gone, the human mind needs, more than ever, to ponder the teachings, and breathe in the spirit of the legal dispensation, in order to keep the con- science quick and active, and the moral sense ^ " In those sacrifices there is a remembrance again made of sing Heb. X. 3. 18 274 HOMILETICS. healthy and sound, in respect to the two great fundamental ideas of guilt and retribution. It has been an error, more common since the days of Grotius, than it was in the time of the Protestant Reformation, that the doctrine of the atonement has been explained, and illustrated, too much by a reference to the attribute of benevolence and the interests of the creature, and too little by a reference to the attribute of justice, and the re- morseful workings of conscience. There is hazard, upon this method, that the simple, uncomplex ideas of guilt and atonement, as they operate in the very moral being of the individual sinner, and as they have their ground in the very nature of God, may be lost sight of, and the whole transaction of recon ciliation be transferred into a region which, during the first exercises of an awakened soul, is too distant for a vivid apprehension and impression. Man must in the end, indeed, come to understand the bearings of the sacrifice of the Son of God, upon what Chalmers calls " the distant places of God's crea- tion ;" but he will be more likely to attain this understanding, if he first comes to apprehend its bearings upon his personal guilt and remorse, and how the blood of the Lamb expiates crime within his own burning self-consciousness. For, guilt and expiation are philosophical correlates, genuine cor respondencies, set over against each other, like hunger and food, like thirst and water. " My flesh,'* saith the Atoner, "is meat indeed; my blood is PEEACHER AKD HEAEER. 2^5 drink with emphasis." He who knows, with a vivid and vital self-consciousness, what guilt means, knows what atonement means as soon as presented ; and he who does not experimentally apprehend the one, cannot apprehend the other. If, therefore, any man would see the significance and necessity of sacrificial ex^Diation, let him first see the significance and reality of crime, in his own personal character and direct relationships to God. The doctrine grasped and held here^ presents little difficulty. For, the remorse, now felt, necessitates and craves the expiation ; and the expiation, now welcomed, explains and extinguishes the remorse. Now, it is the peculiarity of the Biblical repre- sentation of this whole subject, that it handles it in the very closest connection with the personal sense of sin ; that is to say, in its relation to the conscience of man, on the one side, and the moral indignation of God, on the other. In the Scriptures the atonement is a pi^opitiation / and by betaking himself to this representation, and making it his own spontaneous mode of thinking and speaking upon this fundamental doctrine, the preacher will arm his mind with a preternatural power and energy. Look at the preaching of those who, like Luther and 'Chalmers, have been distinguished by an uncommon freedom and saliency in their manner of exhibiting the priestly office and work of Christ, and see how remarkably the Old Testament atone- ment vitalizes the conception, and the phraseology. 276 HOMILETICS. There is no circumlocution, or mechanical explana- tion. The remorse of man is addressed. The simple and terrible fact of guilt is presupposed, the consciousness of it elicited, and then the ample pacifying satisfaction of Christ is offered. The rationality of the atonement is thus seen in its inward necessity ; and its inward necessity is seen in the very nature of crime; and the nature of crime is seen in the nature of God's justice, and felt in the workings of man's conscience. In this way, preaching becomes intensely personal, in the proper sense of the word. It is made up of personal ele- ments, recognizes personal relationships, breathes the living spirit of personality, and reaches the heart and conscience of personal and accountable creatures. Is not, then, the word of God as a fire, in respect to this class of truths, and its mode of presenting them ? As we j^ass in review the representations of God's personal emotions, and of man's culpability, which are made in those living oracles, from which the clergyman is to draw the subject-matter of his discourses, and the layman is to derive all his cer- tain and infallible knowledge respecting his future prospects and destiny, is it not plain, that if there be lethargy and torpor on the part of either the preacher or the hearer, if there be a lack of elo- quence, it will not be the fault of the written Reve- lation \ As we look abroad over Christendom, do we not perceive the great need of a more incisive PEEACHER AND HEAEER. 271 impression, from those particular truths which relate to these ]3ersonal qualities, these moral feelings of the Deity, which cut sharply into the conscience, probe and cleanse the corrupt heart, and induce that salutary fear of God which the highest author ity assures us is the beginning of wisdom? Is there in the visible Church, such a clear and poign- ant insight into the nature of sin and guilt, such reverential views of the Divine holiness and majesty, and such a cordial welcomino; of the atonement of God, as have characterized the more earnest eras in Church history ? And if we contemplate the mental state, and condition, of the multitude who make no profession of godliness, and in whom the naturalism of the age has very greatly under- mined the old ancestral belief in a sin-hating, and a sin-paj'doning Deity, do we not find still greater need of the fire, and the hammer, of the word of the Lord ? II. Having thus described the preacher's duty, in regard to a certain form and aspect of revealed truth, we pass, now, in the second place, to consider the hearer's duty, and thereby evince the recipro- city of the relation that exists between them. We shall direct attention, in the remainder of the chap- ter, to that sort of understanding, with regard to this mode of preaching, which ought to exist be- tween the hearer and the preacher, — that intellec- tual temper which the popular mind should adopt and maintain, towards this style of homiletice* 278 HOMILETICS. For if, as we remarked in the outset, tlie effective- ness of the orator is dependent upon the receptivity of the auditor, then, there is no point of more im- portance to the Christian ministry, than the general attitude of the public mind towards the severer truths, and doctrines of revelation. What, then, is the proper temper in hearing, which is to stand over against this proper tone in preaching ? In order to answer this question, we must, in the outset, notice the relation that exists between Divine truth and an apostate mind like that of man, and the call which it makes for moral earnestness and resoluteness. For, we are not treating of public religious address for the seraphim, but for the sinful children of men ; and we shall commit a grave error, if we assume that the eternal and righteous truth of God, as a matter of course, must fall like blessed genial sun-light into the corrupt human heart, and make none *but pleasant impres- sions at first. It is therefore necessary, first of all, to know precisely what are the affinities, and also what are the antagonisms^ between the guilty soul of man, and the holy Word of God. It is plain, that such an antagonism is implied in the prophet's interrogatory. For, if the word of God is " as a fire," the human mind, in relation to it, must be as a fuel. For, why does fire exist, except to burn? When, therefore, the message from God breathes that startling and illuminating spirit which thrilled through the Hebrew prophets, PEEACHER AND HEAEER. 279 and at times fell from the lips of Incarnate Mercy itself, still and swift as lightning from the soft summer cloud, it mnst cause "Anguish, and doubt, and fear, and sorrow, and pain, In mortal minds." The posture, consequently, which the "mortal mind " shall take and keep, in reference to such a painful message and proclamation from the heavens, is a point of the utmost importance. Many a human soul is lost, because, at a certain critical juncture in its history, it yielded to its fear of mental suffering. The word of God had begun to be " a fire " unto it, and foreseeing (O, with how quick an instinct!) a painful process of self scrutiny and self-knowledge coming on, it wilfully broke away from all such messages and influences, flung itself into occupations and enjoyments, and quenched a pure and good flame that would have only burnt out its dross and its sin ; a merely temporary flame, that would have superseded the necessity of the eternal one that is now to come. For, there is an instinctive and overmastering shrinking in every man from suffering, which it requires much reso- lution to overcome. The prospect of impending danger rouses his utmost energy to escape from it, and his soul does not recover its wonted tranquil- lity, until the threatening calamity is overpast. In this, lies all the power of the drama, in its higher forms. The exciting impression made by a tragedy 280 HOMILETICS. springs from the steadily increasing danger of suf- fering, which thickens about the career of principal characters in the plot. The liability to undergo pain, which increases as the catastrophe approaches, united with the struggles of the endangered person to escape from it, wakens a sympathy and an ex- citement, in the reader or the spectator, stronger than that produced by any other species of litera- ture. And whenever the winding-up of any pas- sage in human history, lifts off the burden of apprehension from a human being, and exhibits him in the enjoyment of the ordinary, happy lot of humanity, instead of crushed to earth by a tragic issue of life, w^e draw a breath so long and free, as to evince that we share a common nature, one of whose deepest and most spontaneous feelings is the dread of suffering and pain. And yet, when w^e have said this, w^e have not said the whole. Deep as is this instinctive shrink- ing from distress, there are powers and motives which, when in action, will carry the human soul and body through scenes, and experiences, at which human nature, in its quiet moods and its indolent states, stands aghast. There are times, w^hen the mind, the rational judgment, is set in opposition to the body, and compels its earth-born com^Danion to undergo a travail, and a woe, from which its own constitutional love of ease, and dread of suffering, shrink back with a shuddering recoil. This antagonism between the sense and the PEEACHER AOT) HEAEEE. 281 mind, is seen in its more impressive forms, witliin the sphere of ethics and religion. Even upon the low position of the stoic, we sometimes see a severe dealing with luxurious tendencies, and a lofty hero- ism in trampling down the flesh, which, were it not utterly vitiated by pride and vainglorying, would be worthy of the martyr and the confessor. But when we rise up into the region of entire self-abne- gation for the glory of Grod, we see the opposition between the flesh and the spirit, in its sublimer form, and know something of the terrible conflict between mind and matter in a fallen creature, and, still more, of the glorious triumph in a redeemed being, of truth and righteousness over pain and fear. " If thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out and cast it from thee," is a command that has actu- ally been obeyed by thousands of believers, — by the little child, and by the tender and delicate woman, who would not adventure to set the sole of her foot upon the ground, for delicateness and ten- derness, — not in stoical pride and self-reliance, not with self-consciousness and self-gratulation, but in meekness, and fear, and much trembling, and also in the spirit of power, of love, and of a sound mind. There is call, therefore, on the part of the hearer of religious truth, for that sort of temper which is expressed in the words of the Psalmist, "Let the righteous smite me, it shall be a kindness." In this resolute utterance, suffering is not deprecated, as it 282 HOMILETICS. would be, if these instincts and impulses of human nature had their way and their will, but is actually courted and asked for. That in the Psalmist which needs the smitins: of the rio-hteous and of rio^hte- ousness, and which, for this reason, shrinks from it, is rigorously kept under, in order that the inflic- tion may be administered for the honor of the truth, and the health of the soul. And suck, it is contended, should be the general attitude of the public mind, towards that particular form and aspect of di\^ine revelation which has been delineated in the first part of this chapter. Every human being, the natural as well as the spiritual man, ought to say, "Let the righteous smite me, it shall be a kindness ; let the truth and law of God seize, with their strongest grasp and bite, upon my reason and conscience, it shall be an eternal blessing to me." We do not suppose that the natural man, as such, can make these words his own in the high and full sense, in which they were uttered by the regenerate and inspired mind of David. But we do suppose, that every auditor can control his impatience, and repress his impulses to flee away from the hammer and the fire, and con- quer his prejudices, and compel his ear to hear doc- trinal statements that jiain his soul, and force his understanding to take in truths and arguments that weigh like night upon his feelings, and that say to him, as did the voice that cried in the tortured soul of Macbeth, " Sleep no more ; rest and peace for PEEACHER AND HEAEER. 283 thee, in tliy present state, are gone forever." Has not the Christian ministry a right to expect a tacit purpose, and a resolute self-promise, upon the part of every attendant upon public worship, to hold the mind close up to all logical and self-consistent exhibitions of revealed truth, and take the mental, the inward consequences, be they what they may ? One of the early Fathers speaks of the "ire of truth." Ought not every thinking, every reasoning man, to be willing to resist his instinctive and his effeminate dread of suffering, and expose his sinful soul to this " ire," because it is the ire of law and righteousness? 1. In presenting the argument for this sort of resolute temper, in the public mind, towards the cogent representations of the j^ulpit, it is evident, in the first place, that upon the general principles of propriety and fitness, the sacred audience, the assembly that has collected upon the Sabbath day, and in the sanctuary of God, ought to expect and prepare for such distinctively Biblical representa- tions of God and themselves, as have been spoken of The secular week has been filled up with the avocations of business, or the pursuits of science and literature, and now when the exclusively reli- gious day and duties begin, is it not the part of consistency, to desire that the eternal world should throw in upon the soul its most solemn influences, and that religious truth should assail the judgment and the conscience, with its strongest energy? 284 HOMILETICS. Plainly, if the religious interests of man are worth attending to at all, they are worth the most serious and thorough attention. This Sabbatical segment of human life, these religious hours, should be let alone by that which is merely secular or literary, in order that while they do last, the purest and most strictly religious influences may be experienced. A man's salvation does not depend so much upon the length of his religious experience and exercises, as upon their thoroughness. A single thoroughly penitent sigh wafts the soul to the skies, and the angels, and the bosom of God. But such exhaust- ive thoroughness in the experience, is the fruit only of thoroughness in the previous indoctrination. He, therefore, who is willing to place himself under the religious influences of the Sabbath and the sanctuary, should be willing to experience the very choicest of these influences. He who takes pains to present himself in the house of God, should expect and prepare for the most truthful, and sol- emn of all messages. Professing to devote himself to the subject of religion, and no other, and to lis- ten to the ministration of God's word, and no other, his utterance should be that of the Psalmist : " Let the righteous smite me, it shall be a kindness." Seating himself in the house of God, it should be with an expectation of plain dealing with his understanding, and with the feeling of the stern, yet docile auditor, whose uniform utterance before the preacher was : " Now let the word of God PEEACHER AND HEARER. 285 come." We lay it down, then, as a maxim of fit- ness and self-consistency, that the public mind ought ever to expect and require from the public religious teacher, the most distinctively religious, and strictly Biblical exhibitions of truth, upon the Sabbath day, and in the house of God. Other days, and other convocations, may expect and demand other themes, and other trains of thought, but the great religious day of Christendom, and the great religious congregation, insists upon an impression bold and distinct from the world to come. " He has done his duty, now let us do ours," was the I'eply of Louis XIV., to the complaint of a fawning and dissolute courtier, that the sermon of Bourda- loue had been too pungent and severe. There was manliness and reason, in the reply. The pulpit had discharged its legitimate function, and irreligious as was the grand monarch of the French nation, his head was clear, and his judgment correct. If, now, the auditor himself, of his own free will, adopts this maxim, and resolutely holds his mind to the themes and trains of thous^ht that issue from the word of God, a blessino; and not a curse will come upon him. Like the patient smitten with leprosy, or struck with gangrene, who resolutely holds out the diseased limb for the knife and the cautery, this man shall find that good comes from taking sides with the Divine law, and subjecting the intellect (for we are now pleading merely for the human understanding), to the searching sword 286 HOMILETICS, of the trutli. There is such a thing as common grace, and that hearer who is enabled by it, Sabbath after Sabbath, to overcome his instinctive fear of suffering, and to exercise a salutary rigor with his mind, respectmg the style and type of its religious indoctrination, may hope that common and preve- nient grace shall become renewing and sanctifying grace. Probably, no symptom of the feeling and ten- dency of the popular mind would be witnessed and watched with more interest, by the Christian phi- losopher or the Christian orator, than a growing disposition, on the part of the masses, to listen to the strict truths, the systematic doctrines of Chris- tianity, and to ponder upon them. And why should there not be this disposition at all times ? That which is strictly true is entirely true ; is thoroughly true; true without abatement, or qualification. Why, then, shall a thinking creature shrink back from the exactitudes of theology, the severities of righteousness ? Why should not the human inind follow out every thing within the province of reli- gion, to its last results, without reference to the im- mediate painful effect upon the feelings ? If a thing be true, why confer with flesh and blood about it ? If certain distinctly revealed doctrines of revelation, accurately stated and logically followed out, do cut down all the cherished hopes of a sinful man, with respect to his future destiny, why not let them cut them down ? Why not, with the unsparing self- PEEACHER AND HEARER. 287 consistence of tlie matliematician, either take tliem as leofitimate and inevitable conclusions, from ad- mitted sources and premises, in all their strictness and fearful meaning, or else throw sources, premises, and conclusions all away ? How is it possible for a thinking man, to maintain a middle and a neu- tral ground, in doctrinal religion, any more than in science ? 2. But, leaving this mainly intellectual argument for the Psalmist's temper, towards the stern side of Revelation, we pass, in the second place, to the yet stronger moral argument, drawn from the nature of that great spiritual change, which the Founder of Christianity asserts must pass upon every human being, in order to entrance into the kingdom of heaven. Man, though self-ruined, is helplessly, hopelessly ruined. Loaded with guilt, which he cannot expi- ate, and in bondage to a sin from which he can never deliver himself, he cannot now be saved ex- cept by the most powerful methods, and the most thorough processes. What has been done outside, in the counsels of eternity, and in the depths of the Triune God, to bring about human redemption, evinces the magnitude and the difficulty of the work undertaken. But, of this we do not propose to speak. We speak only of what is to be done in- side, in the mind and heart of the individual man, as evincing, conclusively, that this salvation of the human soul cannot be brought about by imperfect 288 HOMILETICS. and slender exhibitions of truth, or by an irresolute and timorous posture of the auditor's mind. ]^o man is compelled to suffer salvation. Pardon of all sin, from the eternal God, and purity for eternal ages, are offered to him, not as a cheap thing to be forced upon an unwilling recipient, but as a price- less boon. Our Lord himself, therefore, bids every man count the cost, and make up the comparative estimate, before he commences the search for eternal life. "Either make the tree good, and his fruit good ; or else make the tree corrupt, and his fruit corrupt." Be thorough in one direction, or the other. Either be a saint, or a sinner. The Redeemer, virtually, advises a man not to bes^in the searck at all. unless he begin it in earnest. The entire Scripture repre- sentation is, that as man's salvation cost much on high and in the heavens, so it must cost much be- low, and in the soul of man. If, then, religion be not rejected altogether, and the hearer still expects and hopes to derive an everlasting benefit from it, he should take it precisely as he finds it, and allow its truths to Avound first, that they may heal after- wards; to slay in tke beginning, that they may make alive in the end. For, suck is the method of Christianity. Con- viction is the necessary antecedent to conversion. But how is this great process to be carried through, if the public mind shrinks away from all convicting truth, as the sensitive plant does from the touch ? How is man to be conducted down into the depths PREACHER AND HEARER. 289 of an humblino: and al^asinsf self-knowleclo^e, if he does not allow the flashing and fiery illumination of the law and the prophets, to drive out the black darkness of self-deception ? It is impossible, as we have already observed, that Divine truth should pour its first rays into the soul of alienated man, without producing pain. The unfallen seraph can hear the law proclaimed amidst thunders and light- nings, with a serene spirit and an adoring frame, because he has pei'fectly obeyed it from the begin- ning. But Moses, and the children of Israel, and all the posterity of Adam, must hear law, when first proclaimed, with exceeding fear and quaking, be- cause they have broken it. It is a fact too often overlooked, that Divine truth, when accurately stated and closely applied, cannot leave the mind of a sinful being as quiet, and happy, as it leaves that of a holy being. In the case of man, therefore, the truth must, in the outset, cause foreboding and alarm. In the history of the human religious ex- perience, soothing, consolation, and joy, from the trath, are the subsequents, and not the antecedents. The plain and full j^roclamation of that word of God which is " as a fire," must, at first, awaken mis- givings and fears, and, until man has passed through this stage of experience-, must leave his sinful and lost soul with a sense of danger and insecurity. There is, consequently, no true option for man, but either not to hear at all, or else to hear first in the poignant and anxious style. The choice that is left 19 290 HOMILETICS. him is either that of the Pharisee, or the Magdalen that of the self-righteous, or the self-condemned, either to hate the light, and not come to the light, lest painful disclosures of character and conduct be made, or else to come resolutely out into the light, that the deeds may be reproved. For, this work of reproval is the first and indis- pensable function of religious truth, in the instance of the natural man. If there be self-satisfaction, and a sense of security, in the unrenewed human soul, it is certain that, as yet, there is no contact between it and the Divine word. For it is as true of every man, as it was of the apostle Paul, that when the law shall come with plainness and power to his mind, he will " die." His hope of heaven will die; his hope of a quiet death -bed will die; his hope of acquittal and safety in the day of judgment, and at the bar of God, will die. That apostolic experience was legitimate and normal, and no natural man must expect that the truth and law of God, when applied with distinctness and power to his reason and conscience, will leave him with any different experience, in the outset, from that which has initiated and heralded the passage from darkness to light, and from sin to holiness, in every instance of a soul's redemption. There is no royal road across the chasm that separates the renewed, from the unrenewed man. In order to salvation, every human creature must tread that strait and narrow path of self-examination, self-condemnation, PREACHER AXD HEARER. 291 and self-renunciation, wliich was trodden by the goodly fellowship of the prophets, the glorious company of the apostles, and the noble army of the martyrs. In subjecting the mind and conscience to the poignant influence of keen and pure truth, and doing every thing in his power, to have the stern and preparatory doctrines of the legal dispensation be- come a schoolmaster, to lead him to the mercy and the pity that is in the blood of Christ, the hearer in the sanctuary is simply acting over the conduct of every soul that, in the past, has crossed from the kingdom of darkness to the kingdom of light. He is merely travelling the King's highway, to the celes- tial city ; and whoever would climb up some other way, the same is a thief and a robber. Even the thoughtful pagan acknowledged the necessity of painful processes in the human mind, in order- to any moral improvement. Over the Delphic portal were inscribed these words : "Without the descent into the hell of self-knowledg-e, there is no ascent into heaven." We do not suppose that this remarkable saying exhibits its full meaning, within the province of the pagan religion, or of natural religion. The heathen sage often uttered a truth, whose pregnant significance is understood only in the light of a higher and supernatural dispensation. But, if the anguish of self-knowledge is postulated by pagan- ism, in order to the origin of virtue within the human soul, much more, then, is it by Christianity 292 HOMILETICS. If tlie Leatlien moralist, with liis low view of virtue, and his very indistinct apprehension of the spiritu- ality of the moral law, and his utterly inadequate conception of a holy and happy state beyond the grave, could yet tell us that there is a hell of self- knowledge to be travelled through, a painful pro- cess of self-scrutiny and self-condemnation to be endured, before moral improvement can begin here, or the elysiums of the hereafter be attained, — if this be the judgment of the Heathen moralist, from his low point of view, and in the mere twilights of natural religion, what must be the judgment of the human mind, when, under the Christian dispensa- tion, the moral law flashes out its nimble and forked lightnings, upon sin and pollution, with a fierceness of heat like that which consumed the stones and dust, and licked up the water in the trench, about the prophet's altar; when Divine truth is made quick and powerful by the superadded agency of the Holy Ghost, so as to discern the very thoughts and intents of the heart ; when the pattern-image of an absolute excellence is seen in Him who is the brightness of the Father's eternal glory ; and when the heaven to be sought for, and what is yet more, to be prepared for, is a state of spotless and sinless perfection in the light of the Divine countenance ! Plainly, self knowledge within the Christian sphere implies, and involves, a searching and sifting ex- amination into character, motive, thought, feeling, and conduct, such as no man can undergo without PEEACHER AXD HEARER. 21)3 shame, and humiliation, and self-condemnation, and remorse, and, without the blood of Christ, everlast- ing despair. '• The same course of reasoning, respecting each and all the remaining processes that enter into the change from sin to holiness, and the formation of a heavenly character, vrould, in each instance, help to strengthen the argument we are urging in favor of the plainest preaching, and the most resolute hear- ing, of religious truth. The more a man knows of sin and of holiness, of the immense gulf between them, and of the difficulty of the passage from one to the other, the more heartily will he believe, that the methods and the processes by w^hich the trans- ition is effected, are each and all of them of the most energetic and thorough character. And the deeper this conviction, the more hearty and ener- getic will be his adoption of the Psalmist's utter- ance, " Let the righteous smite me, it shall be a kindness." We have thus considered the mutual relations of the Sacred Orator, and the Christian Auditor. In doing this, we have passed rapidly over a very wide field, and have touched upon some of the most momentous themes that can engage the human mind. What, and how, we are to conceive of God; and, particularly, how we are to represent Him as affected in His own essential being, towards the holiness or the sin of His creatures, is of all subjects the most serious and important. In closing the discussion, 294 H0MILETIC3. we are more tlian ever impressed witli tlie import- ance of a bold and Biblical theism, in the Christian pulpit. Whenever the preacher asserts that God loves the righteous, let him assert it with energy, and warmth, and momentum. Let him make his hearers see, and know, that the great God is personal in this emotion ; that He pours out upon those who are in filial sympathy with Him and His law, the infinite wealth of His pure and stainless affection, and that it permeates the whole being of the object so beloved, with warm currents of light and life eternal. And whenever he asserts that God hates sin, and is angry with the sinner, let him assert it without any abatement or qualification. Let him cause the impenitent and sin-loving man to see, and know, that upon him, as taken and held in this sinful character and condition, the eternal and holy Deity is pouring out the infinite intensity of His moral displeasure, and that, out of Christ, and irre- spective of the awful passion of Gethsemane and Calvary, this immaculate and stainless emotion of the Divine Essence is now revealed from heaven against his unrighteousness, and is only awaiting his passage into the eternal world, to become the monotonous and everlasting consciousness of the soul. Amidst the high and increasing civilization, and over-refinement, that are coming in upon Christen- dom, and, especially, amidst the naturalism that threatens the Scriptures and the Church, the Chris* PEEACHER Al^D HEAEER. 295 tian ministry must themselves realize, as did the Hebrew prophets, that God is the living God, and by God's own help and grace evoke this same con- sciousness in the souls of their hearers. Let, then, these two specific personal qualities, — the Divine wrath, and the Divine love, — be smitten, and melted, into the consciousness of the nations. Then will there be the piercing wail of contrition, preceding and heralding the bounding joy of con- scious pardon. CHAPTER XII. LITURGICAL CULTIVATION OF THE PREACHER. Haying discussed tlie principal topics in the department of Homiletics, we are brought, now, to a subject which lies outside of it, but which is intimately connected with it, in the services of the Christian sanctuary. It is Liturgies. In passing to this theme, we leave the subject of elocpence, and consider that of worship. In treating of Sa- cred Rhetoric, we were occupied with the address of an individual to an audience ; but in considering the nature and province of Liturgies, we are con- cerned with the address of the audience itself to Almighty God. The liturgical services of the sanctuary are those parts which relate to Divine worship. As the ety- mology denotes, the liturgy is the work of the peo- ple : 'ku^Qv^])ubliGum^ populare ; e^yov^ opus. The appropriate work of the auditor is worship, as the appropriate work of the orator is eloquence. Not that the two may not sometimes interpenetrate, ■ — especially in the instance of the preacher, who is LITUEGICAL CULTIVATION. 297 himself to worship, while he instructs, and moves his audience to acts of worship. Yet, as it is the peculiar function of the preacher, as such, to address an audience, so it is the peculiar function of the audience, as such, to address God, as the result of the preacher's address to them.' Preaching should always end in worship. While the rhetorical pro- cesses of instruction, conviction, and persuasion, belong to the speaker, the liturgical acts of suppli- cation, adoration, and praise, belong to the hearer. But, the preacher is to lead them in these acts of worship, and hence the need of principles, and rules, by which he may be guided in the discharge of this part of his duty. Hence arises the depart- ment of Liturgies, in the general course of clerical discipline. It is necessaiy, in the outset, to remark, that this department, though an important one, cannot be made so prominent, in those Churches which adopt no complicated formulary of public devo- tions. It naturally becomes more complex, and comprehensive of rules and regulations, in Churches which*, like the Romish, the English, and the Lu- theran, use a liturgy. Hence, in the German trea- tises upon Practical Theology, that part denomi- nated Liturgies is very thoroughly elaborated ; and if we do not find the same thing true of Romish, and Episcopal treatises, it is because there is in these communions little disposition to examine into the speculative grounds of ecclesiastical usages, and 298 HOMILETICS. not because the department itself is undervalued by them, in actual practice. As matter of fact, in both the Romish and English Churches, the liturgy overshadows the sermon; the forms, and formu- laries of worship, receive more attention than the principles, and canons, of eloquence. This branch of the subject, consequently, demands a briefer and less elaborate treatment, so far as the wants of those Protestant churches which, are distin- guished by a simple ritual, are concerned ; and we shall be able to exhibit its leading topics, in a single chapter. The liturgical services of the sanctuary, in those Protestant communions which have no liturgy, are left, very much, to the choice of the preacher. In the Episcopal and Lutheran Churches, the passages of Scripture to be read, the prayers that are to be offered, and, to some extent, the praises that are to be sung, are prescribed by regulation, and are embodied in a collection called the Liturgy. In the other Protestant churches, tliis choice is left to the individual clergyman, and hence there is, in reality, more need of a careful liturgical discipline, in the instance of the Presbyterian or Congrega- tional clergyman, than in that of the Episcopa- lian, or Lutheran, or Romish. For, even if the 3stablished and appointed liturgy should not in all its parts be appropriate, the officiating clergyman has no option ; and when its arrangements are appropriate, he has only passively to adopt them as LITURGICAL CULTIVATION. 299 his own. But tlie minister of a simpler worship, inasmuch as he is deprived of these external aids^ needs, all the more, the internal aids of a good taste, and a cultivated mind, that he may make all that part of the services of the sanctuary which relates to worship, as distinguished from discourse, harmonize with itself, and with the service as a whole. There are three topics which fall within this department of Liturgies: namely, selections from Scripture^ selections of liymns^ and public prayer. We shall discuss them in the order in which they have been mentioned. 1. The reading of a portion, or portions, of Scripture, though not so strictly a liturgical act, is nevertheless not a rhetorical one. It is true, that praise is not always offered to God, in and by this service. On the contrary, preceptive instruction is very often imparted to the people, in the Scripture lessons ; and, in this respect, the service seems to belong more to the work of the orator, than to the work of the audience. Still, it does not prop- erly fall within the province of Ehetoric ; the prin- ciples and canons of Homiletics have nothing to do with this part of Divine service. It must be regu- lated by the principles of taste. The matter is already formed and fixed in the Scriptures, and f there is no call for original composition. It only remains, therefore, to make a suitable choice ; and hence, the topic itself falls most properly into the general department of Liturgies. The principal 300 HOMILETICS. directions to guide tlie clergyman in tlie selection of Scripture lessons, are the following. In tlie first place, when there is nothing that specially calls for a different selection, he should choose a portion of Scripture that gives expression to some feeling, — such as the feeling of praise, of thanksgiving, of adoration, of contrition. The Psalms are largely composed of such matter, and ought to be selected for the reading before sermon, more often than they are, by the clergy of most Protestant denominations. The great excellence of the English liturgy, consists in the size of the Psalter embodied in it. The Psalms are better adapted than any other compositions, to elicit the Christian feeling of an assembly. They range over the whole field of the affections, and every mood of the Christian heart finds a full and gushing utterance in them. " The harp of David was full- stringed, and every angel of joy and of sorrow swept over the chords, as he passed." They ought, therefore, to be made the means of worship ; of stirring the emotions of a Christian assembly, and of preparing it for the lyrical hymn or psalm. There are other portions of the Scriptures, also, like the glowing predictions of the proj^hets, con- cerning the future of the Church, which partake of this characteristic of the Psalms. These should be selected by the preacher, so that the Bible, in all its variety of emotional utterance, may become the organ through which the Christian assembly gives LITUEGICAL CULTIVATIOJS^. 301 expression to its own emotions, in the sanctuary In this way, the Bible itself becomes the liturgy. Secondly, there may be, occasionally, a special reason for selecting a doctrinal, or an historical por- tion of Scripture, and hence the clergyman ought not to be rigidly confined to such portions of the Bible as we have mentioned. It may be, that his sermon is of such a special character, as to require the reading of a long passage, which stands in close connection with it. In this particular instance, if he think proper, he may make this service of read- ing somewhat less liturgical, and more didactic, than would ordinarily be desirable. Lastly, whether a liturgical, or a didactic, j^ortion of Scripture be chosen, it should be congruous with the general tone of the services. If, for example, the attention of the audience is to be directed, in the sermon, to an encouraging, cheering, or joyful subject, the psalm selected should be one of thanks- giving. To preface a sermon of such a character, with a mournful and penitential psalm, would be inapposite, and would defeat the end in view. The passage to be read, should be carefully chosen, and carefully perused, beforehand, by the preacher. He should never look up his Scripture lessons, in the pulpit. 2. The choice of Hymns is the second topic, under the head of Liturgies. The principal direc- tions, which we mention, for securing an excellent selection, are the following. First, the clergyman 302 HOMILETICS. must acquire a correct knowledge of the nature of lyric poetry. Many educated men are deficient in a thorough understanding of this species. Epic and dramatic poetry absorb the interest of students, to the neglect of lyric. They are more familiar with Homer, Shakspeare, and Milton, than with Pindar, and Burns. This is owing, partly, to the fact that, as a species, lyric poetry is of a lower grade, than epic or dramatic, and has engaged kss eminent poetic powers. But, after allowing that the epic and the drama are loftier performances than the ballad and the song, and that the genius of Pindar and Burns is not equal to that of Homer and Shakspeare, it is still true that lyric poetry does not, commonly, receive that degree of attention from educated men, which its intrinsic excellence and importance deserve. For, in some respects, the lyric comes nearer to the ideal perfection of poetry, than any other species. As works of art, as exquisitely complete wholes, the hymns of Pin- dar stand at the head of human compositions. The range of thought is very limited, it is true, in the lyrical ode, but this permits the poet to impart an ideal completeness, and finish, to it, that are not to be found in works that are more extended in their range. We never shall see a perfect epic, or a perfect drama, because of the variety and amount of the contents. But, the hymns of Pindar, and the odes of Horace, if they are not absolutely perfect, do yet, it is universally conceded, approach LITURGICAL CULTIVATION. 303 SO near to the ideal, that lie should possess the very highest aesthetic culture who presumes to assert their imperfection, and ventures to attempt to make good his assertion, by pointing out defects. The clergyman must devote a proper attention to this species of poetry, in order to know, both by natural feeling and cultivated instinct, what is lyri- cal, and what is not. This kind of verse is made to be sung. Other species have no special connec- tion with music ; but this is nothing, unless it can be set to tune. That poetry which is not fitted to be accompanied with the human voice, and the musical instrument, is not lyrical. Tried by this test, much poetry which bears this name is not worthy of it. It is too didactic, or it is not the expres- sion of feeling, or it may be emotive, yet not a tune- ful utterance of emotion. The preacher must, there- fore, understand the general subject of lyric poetry. He ought to familiarize his mind, with the best specimens in Ancient and in Modern literature, and with the most philosophic and genial criticism upon them. He should study the odes of Pindar and Horace, for the sake of the perfusive grace, the high artistic finish, and, in the instance of Pindar, the impassioned fire and energy. He should study the Old English Ballads, not so much for their artistic merits, as for their simplicity, artlessness, and heartiness. He should study the little gushes of song, that are scattered like gems here and there, in the pages of Shakspeare ; wonderful composi- 304 HOMILETICS. tions, which, in the midst of the complexity and combinations of the mighty drama, strike the mind, very much as the sweet liquid notes of the human voice fall upon the ear, in the lull of the tumult of the orchestra, — musical as golden bells heard in the silence of the band. He should study the songs of Burns, until he feels their immeasu- rable superiority to the artificial sentiment, and melody of Thomas Moore. In the second 23lace, while seeking this knowl- edge of 4he nature of lyric poetry from profane lite- rature, the clergyman should examine, very care- fully, the lyric poetry of the Christian Church. Doctor Johnson has asserted that devotional j)oetry not only does not please, but, from the nature of the case, cannot please. Probably, this is the greatest blunder ever made by a critic. For what judgment could be more erroneous, than that religious feel- ing, the purest and highest form of emotion, is in- compatible with a melodious utterance of itself. The fact that, universally, the higher we ascend in the scale of existence, the more rhythmical, melodi- ous, and harmonious, we find every thing becoming, would lead to the exactly contrary judgment, and to the affirmation that the sacred ode is, in its own nature, as much superior to the secular, as the ideas of eternity are grander than those of time, and the emotions of heaven higher than those of earth. The preacher must begin the study of sacred lyrics, by imbuing his mind with the sj^irit of LITURGICAL CULTIVATIO]vr. 305 Hebrew poetry. If a man like Milton drew inspi- ration from this source, for the ]3urposes of his merely human art, most certainly should the preacher go to it for liturgical culture. The lyric writers of the Christian Church have been distinguished for excellence, in proportion as they have reproduced the Hebrew Psalter, in the forms of modern metri- cal composition. The finest hymns of Watts are Hebrew, in their matter and spirit. Modern poetry, it is true, exhibits a variety in its forms, that ren- ders it a more complex and elaborate portion of lite- rature, than Hebrew poetry; but it is far inferior to the Hebrew, in respect to the lyrical tone, — espe- cially that solemn lyrical tone, which alone is suited to the sanctuary. The modern poet must go to the song of Deborah, and the psalms of David, for triumphant and jubilant praise, for the " seven-fold chorus of hallelujahs, and harping symphonies." Next in order, the preacher ought to study the hymns of the Patristic, and the Mediaeval Church. His examination of these should be discriminating, as his examination of the Fathers and the School- men themselves, should be. The modern theologian and preacher, too generally, has committed an error in regard to this portion of Christian history. He has either neg-lected these ao-es altoorether, or else he has devoted an exclusive and extravagant atten- tion to them. Both of these periods belong to the history of the Christian Church, and, as such, in their proper place, deserve and challenge the atten 20 306 HOMILETICS. tion of the Modern. They contain, as every thing human does, a mixture of truth and error; and, probably, a more confused and remarkable mixture than other ages. This characteristic appears in their Hymnology. .Some of the Greek hymns of Synesius, for example, are a mixture of pantheism and theism. The piercing wail of guilt, and cry for mercy, is blended with the dim and dreamy worship of mere naturalism. Much of the later devotional poetry of the Latin Church, is vitiated by Mariolatry and saint worship. But such grand chants as the Gloria in excelsis, and the Te Deum laudamus^ if frequently read and meditated in the sounding and rhythmical Latin, lift up the mind for praise and adoration, like the pealing tones of an organ, and impart a craving for simple and lofty verse, in the sanctuary. The solemn majesty and mystery of the Trinity, as expressed in the hymns of Hilary and Ambrose, awe the soul in profound reverence and self-abasement; while the earnest and vivid Christology of St. Bernard, imbues the heart with a tender and precatory feeling. The two greatest lyrics of the Mediaeval Church, are the Stahat Mater and the Dies irce. The former exhibits too much of the peculiar doctrine of Komanism, in combination with gospel truth, to be expressive of a pure religious feeling; but the Dies ircB is a most spiritual utterance of human guilt, without any reference to the intercession of the saints, or of the Virgin Mother. This latter LITUBGICAL CULTTVATIOIS". 30 T hymn is worthy of the frequent perusal of any Protestant. It is sometimes employed in Protestant services, on the Continent of Europe. Tholuck, in a note to one of his sermons, alludes to the sensation produced by the singing of this hymn, in the University Church at Halle, and remarks, that " the impression which was made by the last words, as sung by the University choir alone, will be for- gotten by no one." An American clergyman who happened to be present on this occasion, says that " it was impossible to refrain from tears, when, at the seventh stanza, all the trumpets ceased, and the choir, accompanied by a softened tone of the organ, suno^ those touchinc: lines : Quid sum miser tunc dicturus ? Quem patronum rogaturus, Cum vix Justus sint securus ?" The Hymnology of the German Church is ex- tremely rich. Some of the hymns of Luther, and Paul Gerhard, stand second to none in all the Christian centuries. But the English Hymnology must, of course, receive most attention from the preacher, in order to a proper liturgical cultivation. It is the product of that English mind in whose characteristics he shares, and belongs to that English literature which has done more than any other, to make and mould him, intellectually, and morally. There is much religious poetry, and some of it lyric, composed by the writers of Elizabeth's age, that 308 HOMILETICS. deserves constant and careful perusal. Tlie works of Spenser, Raleigli, Ben Jonson, Herbert, Vaughn, Herrick, Drummond, and Milton, contain devotional hymns of high merit, both as respects matter and form ; and he who looks through a collection of English poetry, like that of Chalmers, for example, will be surprised to discover, here and there, a religious lyiic breathing a most penitential or ado- ring spirit, in the very midst of the most earthly and perhaps erotic poetry.^ The Hymn-Book of the Church to which he ministers should, however, receive most of the clergy- man's study. After deducting all the prosaic matter that is to be found in it, there still remains a large remainder of genuine lyric poetry. With this the preacher ought to be intimately familiar, oc- casionally enlivening his own discourse, mth a glow- ing, or a swelling, or a thrilling stanza, and always selecting for j)urposes of worship, those hymns which, while they give vivid and vital expression to Christian emotions and affections, also " voluntary move harmonious numbers." That acquaintance with the denominational Hymn-Book, and that deep interest in it, which are seen in the Methodist clergy and the Methodist Church, deserve to be imitated by all. It is a much safer, and more truly rational interest, than that which some clergies and denomi- nations show towards formularies of worship. The ^Herkick, and Deummond of Hawthornden, aiford examples. LITUEGICAL CULTIVATION. 309 hymns of Charles Wesley, the sweet singer of Meth- odism, have done much towards the production of that peculiar intensity of the religious life in Meth- odism, w^hich led Chalmers to define it, as " Chris- tianity in earnest."" By thus studying the Hym- nology of the Church, — of the Jewish, and the entire Christian Church, — the preacher is to obtain that taste and feeling for sacred lyric poetry, which will guide him, as by a sure instinct, to the choice of the best and most appropriate hymns. Without laying down a rule to be servilely followed, perhaps the choice of hymns for public worship should be somewhat as follows. The first hymn should be one of general praise, serving to inspire feelings of w^orship and adoration towards God, as the Being to be w^orshipped. The second may be either of the same character as the first, or, may refer to the discourse which is to follow. The third and last hymn should have this reference. Whether the second hymn should be didactic, or not, will depend upon the character of the sermon. Probably, in the majority of instances, the first and second hymns should be strictly liturgical, offerings of praise and thanksgiving; the last hymn, alone, being didactic and applicatory of the sermon. 3. The third topic under the head of Liturgies, is Prayer. This subject deserves a fuller treatment, than is possible within these limits. Bishop Wib kins. Dr. Watts, and Witsius, have composed very sensible treatises upon it, but a good work, suited 310 HOMILETICS. to the wants of those Protestant clmrclies wliich use extemporaneous prayers, is still a desideratum. The following rules involve, perhaps, the principal points to be regarded by the clergyman, in his pub- lic petitions. First, he ought to study method in prayer, and observe it. A prayer should have a plan, as much as a sermon. In the recoil fi-om the formalism of written and read j^rayers, Protestants have not paid sufficient attention to an orderly, and symmetrical structure, in public sup23lications. Extemporaneous prayer, like extemporaneous preaching, is too often the product of the single instant, instead of devout reflection, and premeditation. It might, at first glance, seem that premeditation and supplication are incongruous concejDtions ; that prayer must be a gush of feeling, without distinct reflection. This is an error. No man, no creature, can pray well without knowing what he is praying for, and whom he is praying to. Every thing in prayer, and espe- cially in public prayer, ought to be well considered and well weighed.^ So far as concerns the method, and plan of prayer, in the sanctuary, the following from Bishop Wilkins's treatise, is judicious. The first thing in a form of prayer is the preface : consisting first, of the titles of invocation, together with some brief * Chalmees was accustomed, oifer. See Appendix B. to the occasionally, to write out the second volume of his Life, prayer in full, which he was to LITURGICAL CULTIVATION. 311 mnplincation of them, mostly in Scripture pliraseol- ogy, sufficient to impress the Divine character, upon the mind both of him who leads, and those who accompany, in public worship ; secondly, of some general acknowledgment of personal unworthiness ; and, thirdly, of supplication for the Divine assist- ance, and attention. After this preface, follow the -prmciipsil parts of prayer: 1, confession ; 2, petition; 3, thanksgiving. The order in which these come, is not uniform. There will be transposition, accord- ing to circumstances. In some prayers, confession will predominate ; in others petition ; in others thanksgiving. The preacher should study his prayer, in order that he may vary, and change, with the circumstances in which he is called to offi- ciate. Some clergymen pray but one prayer, through their whole ministry. It contains just so much preface, and just so much confession, petition, and thanksgiving, and always in the same order. In reality, it is a form, which is repeated from habit and memoriter. It is destitute of the excellences of written prayers, and yet is as monotonous, and uniform, as they are. Secondly, the clergyman must avoid verbiage and repetition^ in prayer. " Vain repetitions " are denounced by our Saviour, and although he proba- bly referred primarily, to conscious and intended repetitions, the spirit of his direction would exclude that thoughtless, and indolent reiteration of the same thoughts, which is one of the principal faults 312 ' HOMILETICS. in extemporaneous prayers. It is better to stop, even before the time allotted to prayer lias expired, tLan to attempt to fill it up with verbiage. In this connection, the habit of didactically discoursing in prayer, should be guarded against. The suppli- ant for the Divine mercy, sometimes turns into the instructor of the Divine omniscience. The clergy- man should ever remember that God " knows what we have need of, before we ask Him," and not en- large, and explain to Him. No one can do this, while under a realizing sense of the character of Him, with whom he has to do. It is only when tlie clergyman forgets God, and addresses the con- gregation, that the prayer degenerates into a sermon. Thirdly, the preacher must study directness in matter, and manner. This does not imply familiar- ity, but simple earnestness, in the creature's address to the throne of grace. Familiarity is the worst of faults in prayer. Circumlocution, paraphrase, and repetition, are not so reprehensible, as an irreverent approach to the Eternal Jehovah. On the contrary, a direct address to God is commanded, and is proper, in the creature. The suppliant should first know clearly what he needs, and what he wants, and the more importunate his entreaty, the more imme- diate his petition for it, the more appropriate and acceptable is his prayer. One chief reason why supplication for spii^itual blessings, such as the con- version of men, is not answered, lies in the fact, that too often there is no clear understanding of the LITUEGICAL CULTIVATION. 313 nature of the blessing, and no direct petition for it. That Being who searches the heart, and knows the entire consciousness of the man in the attitude of prayer, sees that there is no distinct conception of the thing implored, therefore no strong desire, and therefore no strong cry and supplication. Such a prayer is continually discoursing about the topic, or enlarging upon the blessing, but does not asJc for it. "Ask," really as\ "and ye shall receive." The clergyman should not only school himself in respect to this point, but he should school his church likewise. A word upon this topic, though not strictly in place, in this connection, may perhaps be allowable. There is nothing which infuses such life into the prayer-meeting, as earnestness and directness. In times of awakened religious feeling, this characteristic appears. The same blessings that have been the subject matter of prayer, for many years it may be, are still prayed for ; there is no great change in the general phraseology of the petitioners; but their minds are awake, and they now know what they need, and what they desire, and a direct, earnest, and comparatively brief prayer is the consequence. The clergyman, by his own example, and if need be by precept, should seek to impress this characteristic upon his church, so that the assemblings together for meditation and prayer may be efficacious means of grace, and of blessing. lie ought to cultivate, in the minds and hearts of 314 HOMILETICS. Christians, a disposition to be distinct, direct, sin- cere, and brief, in supplication. In this way, the number of those who partici- pate in this exercise, will become much greater than it now is. The entire church will pray, instead of a few persons; therewill.be more variety in the petitions, and more pertinency in them ; and, through the action and reaction of mind upon mind, greater fervor and sincerity will mark the devotional services of the Christian brotherhood. We have thus passed rapidly over the depart- ment of Liturgies ; touching upon those principal topics which are connected with worship, as distin- guished from discourse, or address, to the audience. The subject deserves special attention, from the clergy of a simple ritual. The impressiveness, and effectiveness of non-liturgical worship, must depend, mainly, upon the taste and judgment of the indi- vidual clergyman. He has no fixed, and imposing forms, by which to be guided, inevitably, in the conduct of public worship. He, therefore, specially needs a judicious discipline, in this direction, — a liturgical culture obtained in the general mannei that has been indicated. The clergyman, then, car- ries his rule with him. He has an unwritten liturgy, in his own cultivated and pure taste, which he is at perfect liberty to vary, with times and circum- stances. One who has acquired this true liturgical sense and feeling, will render the services of the sanctuary impressive, by their appropriateness, by LITUEGICAL CULTIVATIOIT. 315 their symmetry, and by that unity which we have seen to be the inmost essence of beauty. Without drawing away the attention of the congregation from more important matters, as a formal and splen- did ritual is apt to do, such a minister will throw a sacred, and spiritual atmosphere, over the entire services of the sanctuary, more impressive than even the dim religious light of the cathedraL PASTORAL THEOLOGY. PASTORAL THEOLOGY. CHAPTER I. DEFINITION OF PASTORAL THEOLOaY. It is a convenient, and accurate classification, whicli distinguishes the scientific part of clerical discipline, from the practical. All that side of the clergyman's training, which relates to strictly theoretic branches, — for example, to philology, phi- losophy, and theology, — falls under the denomination of theological science ; while all that part which re- lates to the public application of this theoretic cul- ture, is practical theology. The subject of 'Homiletics would therefore be comprehended under this latter, because sermonizing is the popular presentation of theological science. Sacred Rhetoric supposes that the speculative principles of the Christian religion have been previously mastered, by means of studies, and methods, that are more abstract than its own. 320 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. Having been made a theologian, by tlie severer training, and tlie more fundamental discipline, the clergyman is then to be made an orator, by the more popular and practical culture of Homiletics. But, the clergyman bears still another character, and performs still another kind of labor, which like- wise belongs to the practical side of his profession. He is not only a preacher, whose function it is to impart public instruction before an audience, but he is also sl pastor^ whose office it is, to give private and personal advice from house to house, and to make his influence felt in the social and domestic life of his congregation. The clergyman is an orator, and therefore needs the homiletical educa- tion that corresponds. He is also a pastor, and hence requires the special discipline that qualifies him to watch over the personal religious interests of his flock. It is the object of the department of Pastoral Theology, to prepare him for this part of his work. The formation of clerical character, and the discharge of strictly parish duties, are, then, the principal topics in this branch of inquiry. We define Pastoral Theology to be, that part* of the clerical curriculum which relates to the clergy- man's parochial life. It contemplates him in his more retired capacity, as one who has the care of individual souls. The pastor is a curate^ and Pas toral Theology relates to the clergyman's curacy. These terms, which are not so familiar to the American as to the English ear, if taken in their DEFmiTION. 321 etymological signification, denote precisely the more private character and duties of the clergy- man. They are derived from the Latin curare^ to take care of. A curate is one who has the care of souls.^ The apostle Paul speaks of " watching for souls." The pastor, or curate, is a watcher for souls. Having regard, then, as it does, to this impor- tant side of the clerical vocation, and these impor- tant aspects of clerical labor, the department of Pastoral Theology deserves very careful study. In its own place, it is as necessary to a complete professional discipline, as the more imposing de- partments of sacred philology, and dogmatic the- ology. Imperfect education, in respect to the pastoral and parochial duties of the clergyman, must lead to the neglect of them ; and this will seriously impair his influence, and, in the review of his ministry, awaken many poignant regrets. The limits of this treatise do not allow more than the briefest discussion, of a few cardinal points ; but we feel that we shall have accomplished much, even if we should do nothing more than direct attention to the well-known work of Richard Baxter. The Reformed Pastor of this wonderful and successful minister, should be read through once in each year, by every clergyman. '^ If," says John Angell James, ^ I may, without impropriety, refer to the service * The .G-erman Seelsorger expresses the same idea. 21 322 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. which, during fifty-four years, I have been allowed to render to our great Master, I would express my thankfulness in being able, in some small degree, to rejoice that the conversion of sinners has been my aim. I have made, next to the Bible, Baxter's Reformed Pastor my rule, as regards the object of my ministry."^ * A valuable collection in one has been published at Oxford, bj volume, of tracts and treatises Rivington & Oo. pertaining to Pastoral Theology, CHAPTER 11. RELIGIOUS CHARACTER AND HABITS OF THE CLERGTMAJ^. The foundation of influence in parochial life is in the clergyman's character, and the root of clerical character is piety. The first theme, consequently, that demands attention, in the discussion of the subject of Pastoral Theology, is the religious cha- racter^ and habits^ of the clergyman. The calling and profession of the clergyman de- mand eminent spirituality. An ordinary excellence is not sufficient. The Christian minister, by his very vocation, is the sacred man in society. By his very position, he is forbidden to be a secular member of community, and hence he must not be secular, either in his character or his habits. It is true, that the clergy are not a sacred caste, yet they are a sacred profession. Hence, society expects from them a ministerial character and bearing, and respects them just in proportion as they possess and exhibit it. The clergyman is sometimes called the "par- son." Though the word has fallen into disuse, owing to the contemptuous employment of it, by S24 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. the infidelity of tlie eighteenth century, its etymo- logy is instructive in this connection. Parson is derived from the Latin persona. The clergyman is the person, by way of emphasis, in his parish. lie is the marked and peculiarly religious man, in the community/ His very position and vocation, there- fore, make it incumbent upon him to be eminently spiritual. His worldly support is ^ provided by the Church, to whom he ministers, and his acceptance of it is an acknowledgement upon his part, that a secular life is unsuitable for him, and a demand upon their part, that he devote himself entirely to reli- gion, and be an example to the ilock. Every cler- gyman ought to be able to say to his congregation, with the sincerity, and the humility, with which St. Paul said it to the Thessalonians, " Ye are wit- nesses, and God also, how holily, and justly, and unblamably we behaved ourselves among you." Not only does the ministerial calling and profes- sion require eminent piety, but it tends to 23roduce it. By his very position, the clergyman is greatly assisted in attaining to a superior grade of Chris- tian character, and if, therefore, he is a worldly and unspiritual man, he is deeply culpable. For, so far as his active life is concerned, his proper professional business is religious. The daily labor of the clergy- ^ One reference, also, was to the ed, and lie is himself a body cor- teniporalities of the Church. "He porate, in order to protect and is called parson (^J6rs6>7z«), because, defend the rights of the Ol'urch, by his person, the Church, which which he personates." is an invisible body, is represent- PELIGIOUS CHAKACTER. 325 man Is as truly and exclusively religious, as that of tbe farmer is agricultural, or that of the merchant is mercantile. This is highly favorable to spirit- uality. Ought not one to grow in grace, whose daily avocations bring him into communication with the anxious, the thoughtful, the convicted soul, the re- joicing heart, the bereaved, the sick, and the dying ? Ought not that man to advance in the love and knowledge of God, whose regular occupation from day to day it is, to become acquainted with the strict- ly religious wants, and condition of the community, and to minister to them ? If the daily avocations of the mechanic have a natural tendency to make him ingenious, and inventive, if the daily [^vocations of the merchant tend to make him enterprising, and adventurous, do not the daily avocations of the clergyman tend to make him devout ? The influ- ence of active life upon charactei* is, in its own place and manner, as great as that of contemplative life. A man is unconsciously moulded and formed by his daily routine of duties, as really as by the books he reads, or the sciences he studies. Hence, a faithful performance of clerical duties contributes directly to spirituality. Again, so far as the contemplative life of the clergyman is concerned, his profession is favorable to superior piety. In discussing the subject of Homlletlcs, we have seen that the clergyman, in order to successful sermonizing, must absorb him- self in theology, must induce and maintain a theo« 326 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. logical mood, must acquire tlie homiletic spirit and talent, and make all liis culture subservient to preaching. But sucli a life as this, from day to day, naturally affects tlie moral character. The studies of the theologian, and preacher, work directly to- wards the growth of piety. Those who unduly magnify the practical, to the undervaluation of the doctrinal and theoretic, in theology, are wont to make the objection, that study is unfavorable to devotion. There cannot be a more erroneous judg- ment than this. The studious, thoughtful Christian is always more unworldl}/ and sincere, than the Christian who reads but little, and thinks still less. The pastor can emj)loy no means more certain to sanctify his flock, than reading and reflection, upon their part. Just in proportion as he is able to in- duce the habit of studying the Scriptures, and of perusing religious and doctrinal books, will he spiritualize the church to which he ministers. This is equally true of the clergyman. Study, close, persevering study, improves his religious cha- racter. An indolent minister is not a spiritually- minded man. He who neglects his library, and passes by Biblical and theological science, to occupy himself with the frivolities of society, or with the light literature of the day, cannot keep his mind and heart in a very high state of devotion. There is something in a regular routine of careful investiga* tion, eminently fitted to deepen and strengthen the religious character. The mind converses with solid EELIGIOUS CHAEACTEE. 327 verities, and is thereby preserved from what the Scriptures call "vain imaginations." It does not ramble and wander in the fields of fancy, but is busy with sober, serious truth. How much more favora- ble to the growth of piety is such a studious life, than an indolent and day-dreaming one. For the mind must do something. If it is not occupied with great and good themes, then it will be busy with small and frivolous ones. This is specially true of the clergyman. He has no secular occupations to engross him, like those of the farmer, the mechanic, and the merchant. He does not rise up in the morning, and go out among men, to his work, until the evening. His time is all at his own disposal, and if he does not devote it, with fidelity, to the ac- tive and contemplative duties of his profession, it will hang upon his hands. The consequence will be, a restless, vagrant, and inefficient mental action. So far as his intellect is concerned, he will drag out a feeble and unhaj)py life. And is this favorable to growth in holiness ? Is this the sort of mortifi- cation that is profitable to godliness ? It is no more profitable than the dull, paralytic existence of the monk, in his dark, damp cell. The fact is, that the holiest men, in the Christian Church, have been the most studious men. Those spiritual and heavenly-minded divines, who accom- plished most in the ministry of their own day, and who have been the lights and guides of the minis- try up to this time, were men of great learning. 328 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. Augustine, Calvin, Owen, Baxter, and Edwards, were hard students. Henry, in his life of Calvin, — ■ a work which deserves to be read, and pondered, by every clergyman, — furnishes striking examples of the studiousness of this great, and intensely spirit- ual man. He was so assiduous in completing his Institutes, that he often passed whole nights with- out sleeping, and days without eating. Beza re- marks, that for many years Calvin took only one meal a day, and then only a very sparing one, assigning, as a reason, the weakness of his stomach. Thousrh, from his connection with the Reformation generally, and his relation to the Genevese common- wealth particularly, Calvin was compelled to per- form as much public civil labor as a modern secre- tary of state, he yet found time to write a commen- tary upon nearly the whole Bible, to carry on learned and powerful controversies with all sorts of errorists and heretics, to compose a system of divinity, which has exerted more influence in the world than any other uninspired production, and, besides all this, to preach, probably, more than three times the number of sermons delivered by the minister of the present day, in the same length of time. Henry remarks of his labors at Geneva, that in addition to his literary employments, such as the composition of treatises, didactic and polemic, and an extensive correspondence with kings and cabinet ministers, in behalf of the Chm^ch, he had to attend to the busi- ness of the court of morals, or the consistoiy, to EELIGIOUS CHAEACTER. 329 that arising from the assembly of the clergy, and from his connection with the congregation, — a great amount of local, legislative, and judicial business. Three days in the week, he lectured on theological subjects, and every alternate week, he preached daily. When the day had been wholly occupied in business, the quiet hours of the night remained to him, and, allowing himself a brief repose, he would continue his studies. Writing to Farel from Strasburg, Calvin says : " When the messenger was ready to take the beginning of my work, with this letter, I had about twenty leaves, to look through. I had, then, to lecture and preach, to write four letters, make peace with some persons who had quarrelled with each other, and answer more than ten people, who came to me for advice. Forgive me, therefore, if I write only briefly."^ Baxter has left a larger body of theological composition, for the use of the Church, than any other English divine; and how much he accom- plished, in the way of preaching, and of pastoral work, is well known. Though his early education was ne2:lected, and he did not receive a colleo-iate training, he was one of the most studious, and learned of men. He is generally known by his more ]3opular, and practical writings, and one who had read these alone, might infer that Baxter was distinguished only for a vivid intellect, and a zeal- ' Henry : Life of Calvin, I. p. 424. 330 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. ous heart. But, if any one will study liis strictly theological treatises, he will discover evidence in every line, of the most severe discipline, and the most patient and extensive reading. Besides the close and critical study of the Scriptures, in the original tongues, Baxter was well versed in the Pagan theologies and philosophies, in the specula- tions of the Christian Fathers, and in the theology and philosophy of both the Schoolmen, and the Eeformers. The familiarity which Baxter shows with the Scholastic philosophy and theology, is remarkable. His own mind was eminently analytic, and one of the English prelates remarks of him, that if he had lived in the Middle Ages, he would have been one of the Schoolmen. The plain, una- dorned, and pungent periods of the Saint's Rest, and the Call to the Unconverted, came from a mind that was entirely master of the subtle metaphysics of Thomas Aquinas.^ Now we hold, and affirm, that this severe study fostered the piety of Calvin, and Baxter. If we could suppose that, in the economy of grace, the same degree of Divine iniluence is bestowed without the use of means, as is bestowed with it, and should assume the existence of the same degree, in the * " Kext to practical divinity, brought things out of the dark- no books so suited with my dis- ness of confusion. For I could position as Aquinas, Scotus, Du- never, from my first studies, en- randus, Ockhara, and their disci- dure confusion." Baxter : Nar- pies ; because I thought they nar- rative of his Life and Times, rowly searched after trvth, and RELIGIOUS CIIAEACTEE. 331 instances of Calvin and Baxter, that was actually enjoyed by them, while subtracting the influence of this close studiousness, upon their Christian charac- ter, it would undoubtedly lose much in depth, tho roughness, and ripeness. God bestows a blessing upon intellectual seriousness, upon devotion to good books, and upon a meditative spirit. It is true, that the learned man is oftentimes proud and unevan- gelical, but would ignorance render him any less so ? In order to convert a proud scholar, into a meek and lowly Christian, is it only necessary to take away his library, and strip him of his acquisitions ? Is ignorance the mother of devotion ? Having thus seen that the clerical calling, and pro- fession, itself demands, and is favorable to, a supe- rior religious character, we proceed to mention some practical rules, for its cultivation in the clergyman. 1. The first rule is that which is to be given in every age, and clime, to all grades of cultivation, and all varieties of occupation, and profession. That which is the first maxim, for any and every Christian, in keeping the heart, is also the first for the clergyman. He must maintain regular habits of communion with God, in prayer. The lettered Christian is more liable to neglect this duty, and ])rivilege, than the unlettered, because his mind is constantly conversant with divine truth, and he is exposed to the temptation of substituting this, for the direct expression of desires, and wants. But, in order to growth in religion, it is not enough for 332 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. him to meditate upon the Divine character and religious doctrines; he must actually address God, in supplication. Undoubtedly, a serious mood may be maintained, by being familiar with great and lofty subjects, especially with the deep themes of metaphysical philosophy. The merely natural at* tributes of the Deity, have power to elevate, and solemnize the human mind. Pantheism itself, intro- ducing the soul to the immensity of nature, and bringing it under the mysterious impression of vast forces, and laws, and processes, operating in infinite space and everlasting time, throws a shadow over the spirit, and renders it grave in its temper. Spinoza was a serious-minded person ; so much so, that l^ovalis, one of the most thouofhtful of the secu- lar German poets, named him the " God-intoxicated man ;" and Schleiermacher himself, in one of his Discourses upon Religion, calls him the "holy, per- secuted Spinoza."^ But the very delineation of liis character which follows, shows that this solemnity of Spinoza's intellect originated in the awe, and worship, of the impersonal Infinite, — a worship that is meditative, indeed, but never supplicatory. But, this is not religion. It has no root in the knowledge, and acknowledgement, of the I am. It never holds actual communion, w^ith the living and true God. Naturalism never prays. There is no address^ of one person to another person. For, this ^ ScHLEiEEMAOHEE : Eedcii tibcr Keligion, p. 48. EELIGIOUS CHAEACTEE. 333 communion with the Infinite ; this " mingling with the universe," and feeling, in the phrase of Byron, " what one cannot express, yet cannot all conceal;" this worship of mere immensity; is not religion. There is no personality, upon either side. The man who worships loses his individuality, and the God who is worshipped has none to begin with.^ And tills holds true, as we go up the scale. It is not sufficient to commune with the truth ; for truth is impersonal. We must commune with the God of truth. It is not enough to study, and ponder, the contents of religious books, of even the Bible itself. We must actually address the author of the Bible, in entreaties and petitions.^ * That there can be no penitence for Bin, and confession, in panthe- ism, is self-evident ; and, there- fore, so far as this is an element in religion for man, religion is impossible for the pantheist. ' Coleridge,during that panthe- istic period in his mental history, which is so interesting in its psy- chological aspects, fell into this error respecting prayer, but after- wards criticized, and corrected it, with a depth of insight into the nature of prayer, all the more pro- found, perhaps, for the previous experience. A writer in Tait's Magazine informs us, that on his first introduction to Coleridge, " he reverted with strong com- punction, to a sentiment which he had expressed in earlier days, upon prayer. In one of his youth- ful poems, speaking of God, ho had said, — Of whose all-seeing eye, Aught to demand, were impotence of mind. This sentiment he now so utterly condemned, that, on the contrary he told me, as his own peculiar opinion, that the act of praying was the very highest energy of which the human heart was ca- pable, praying, that is, with the total concentration of the facul- ties ; and the great mass of worldly men, and of learned men, he pronounced absolutely inca- pable of prayer." Henry Nelson Coleridge corroborates this state- ment, in the following interest- 334 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. There can, consequently, be no genuine religion without prayer. And the degree of religion, will depend upon the depth and heartiness of prayer. It does not depend so much upon the length, as the intensity of the mental activity. A few moments of real and absorbing address to God, will accom- plish more for the Christian, in the way of arming him with spiritual power, than days or years of reflection, without it. Hence, the power of ejacula- tory prayer. In the brief instant, the eye of the creature catches the eye of the Creator, glances are exchanged, and the Divine power and blessing flow down into the soul. It is this direct vision of God, and this direct imploring something of Him, which ing anecdote. " Mr. Coleridge, within two years of liis death, verj solemnly declared to me his conviction upon the same subject. I was sitting by his bedside, one afternoon, and he fell, an unusual thing for him, into a long account of many passages of his past life, lamenting some things, condemn- ing others, but complaining withal, though very gently, of the way in which many of his most innocent acts had been cruelly misrepresented. 'But, I have no diflQculty,' said he, 'in forgiveness ; indeed, I know not how to say, with sincerity, the clause in the Lord's prayer, which asks forgiveness as wc forgive. I feel nothing answering to it in my heart. Neither do I find, or reckon, the most solemn faith in God, as a real object, the most arduous act of the reason and will. O no, my dear, it is to peay, to PEAT as God would have us ; this is what, at times, makes me turn cold to my soul. Believe me, to pray with all your heart and strength, with the reason and the will, to believe vividly that God will listen to your voice through Christ, and verily do the thing he pleaseth, thereupon, — this is the last, the greatest achievement of the Christian's warfare upon earth. Teach us to pray, Lord ! ' And then he burst into a flood of tears, and begged me to pray for him." CoLEEiDGE : Table Talk, VTorks, YI. 327 EELIGIOUS CHAEACTEE. 335 renders the brief broken ejaculations of tne martyr, so supporting, and triumphant over flesh and blood, over malice and torture. The martyr might medi- tate never so intensely and long, upon the omnipo- tence and the wisdom of God, and still be unable to endure the flame, and the rack. But the single prayer^ " Lord Jesus, receive my spirit," lifts him high above the region of agony, and irradiates his countenance with the light of angelic faces. The most holy and spiritual teachers and preach- ers, in the Church, have been remarkable for the directness, and frequency of their petitions. They were in the habit of praying at particular times in the day, and also of ejaculatory prayer. Some of them began the day with hours of continuous sup- plication, and then interspersed their labors with brief petitions. Luther was distinguished for the urgency, and frequency of his supplications. His maxim, hene orasse est bene studuisse^ is familiar. So easy and natural Avas it for him to pray, that even in company with friends, and in the midst of social intercourse, he would break out into petitions. This was often the case, in times of trouble to the Church, and the cause of the Reformation. God was then present, without intermission, to his anxious and strongly exercised soul, and hence he talked with Him, as a man talketh with his friend. The peculiar vigor, and vitality of Luther's religion, should be traced, not solely to his recep- tion of a doctrine, even so vital a doctrine as justi- 336 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. fication by faith, but to direct intercourse witli God. Consider, again, for an illustration, the Confes- sions of Augustine, — the most remarkable book, of the kind, in all literature ; a book, in which the religious experience of one of the subtlest and deep- est of human minds, allied with one of the mightiest and most passionate of human hearts, is portrayed in letters of living light. But, it is full of prayer. The autobiography is intermingled, all through, with petitions and supplications. So natural had it be- come for that spiritual and holy man, to betake him- self to his God, that the reader feels no surprise, at this mixture of address to man and address to God. This work is well entitled Confessions^ for, in it, Augustine pours out his whole life, his entire ex- istence, into the Divine ear. Well, therefore, may we lay down, as the first rule for the promotion of piety in the clergyman, the great and standing rule for all Christians. Let him not be satisfied with studying, and pondering, the best treatises in theology, or with studying, and pon- dering, even the Bible itself Besides all this, and as the crowning and completing act, in the religious life, let him actually, and really pray. Let him not be content with a theological mood, with a homi- letic spirit, with a serious and elevated mental habitude. Besides all this, and as a yet higher and more enlivdning mental process, let him truly, and personally address his Maker and Redeemer, in sup- EELIGIOUS CHAEACTEE. 337 plication. Let him not attempt to promote piety in the soul, by a merely negative effort, — hj neg- lecting tlie cultivation of the mind, and undervalu- ing learning and study. If the clergyman is not spiritually-minded, and devotedly religious, with learning and studiousness, he certainly will not be so without it. Neglect of his intellectual and theo- logical character, will not help his religious charac- ter. Let him con^antly endeavor to advance the divine life in his soul, by a positive, and comprehen- sive method. Let him consecrate, and sanctify all his study, and all his meditativeness, and all his profound and serious knowledge, with prayer. 2. The second rule, for the cultivation of the re- ligious character of the clergyman, is, that he pur- sue theological studies for personal conviction, and improvement. Melancthon, one of the most learned and contemplative of divines, as well as one of the most spiritual and best of men, makes the following affirmation respecting himself: "I am certain and sure, that I never investigated theology as a science, for any other purpose, primarily, than to benefit myself."^ If the clergyman would advance in spir- ituality, he must seek first of all, in the investigation of divine truth, to satisfy his own mind, and put it at rest, in respect to the great themes of God's purposes, and man's destiny. He must make the theology of the Bible contribute to his own mental ^ Compare a similar remark himself, in his ITarrative of his which Baxter makes respecting Life and Times. 22 338 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. peace. That which a man knows with certainty will affect his character. If theoloo-ical studies o result in an undoubted belief, a belief in which there is no wavering or tremulousness, they will result in solid religious growth. . To say nothing of the influence of such a mode of pursuing the truth, upon the manner of communicating it, its effect is most excellent upon the preacher himself We are, in reality, influenced by divine truth, only in pro- portion as we thoroughly know it, and thoroughly believe it. Suppose that the theologian wavers in his mind, in respect to the doctrine of endless pun- ishment ; will not his own religious character be damaged, in proportion to the degree of his mental wavering ? Suppose that his mind is not made up, and at rest; suppose that he hesitates, not out- wardly, but in the thoughts of his heart, in respect to the absolute perdition of the impenitent ; will not his own sense of the malignity of sin be less vivid, and his own dread and abhorrence of it less intense ? Of course, he cannot preach the doctrine to another, with that solemn earnestness, and that impetus and momentum of statement, which causes the hearer to believe, and tremble ; but, he cannot preach the doctrine to himself. He cannot fill his own soul, with a profound fear of sin. Thorough knowledge, and thorough personal belief of the truth, are indispensable to the existence of sincere, unhypocritical religion. 3. The third rule for the promotion of the reli EELIGIOUS CHARACTER. 339 gious character of the clergyman is, that he perform every clerical duty, be it in active or contemplative life, witli punctuality, uniformity, and thorough- ness. There is discipline in labor. The scrupulous and faithful performance of work, of any kind, im- proves botli the mind and heart. A thorough and punctual mechanic, is a man of character. He pos- sesses a mental solidity, and strength, that renders him a noticeable man, and a reliable man, in his sphere. The habit of doing work uniformly well, and uniformly in time, is one of the best kinds of discipline. He who has no occupation, or profes- sion, must be, and as matter of fact is, an undis- ciplined man. And, in case one has an occupation, or a profession, the excellence of his discipline is proportioned to the fidelity, with which he follows it. If he half does his work, his moral character suffers. If he does his work thoroughly, when he does it at all, but does not perform it with punctu- ality, and uniformity (a thing which is, however, not likely to happen), it is at the expense of his moral power. All this is true, in an eminent degree, of j^rofes- sional labor. Consider, for example, the contem- plative side of the clergyman's life, the duties of his profession so far as concerns the prepara- tion of sermons, and see how directly, thorough- ness, and uniformity, in this department, pro- mote his religious growth and character. It is his duty, as a preacher, to deliver two public discourses, 840 PASTORAL THEOLOG ill each week. There may be, and there will be, more or less of informal religious instruction to be imparted, besides this ; but the substance of the clergyman's professional service, in the present state of society, is performed, if he preaches two sermons, two oratorical discourses, every Sabbath day. This is the re2:ular and established routine of clerical life, on its literary and contemplative side. Now, we affirm, that the careful and uniform preparation of two sermons, in every six days, is a means of grace. It is, in its very nature, adapted to promote the piety of the clergyman. Punctual and faithful sermonizing fixes his thoughts intently upon divine truth, and preserves his mind from frivolous and vain wandering ; it brings his feel- ings, and emotions, into contact with that which is fitted to enliven, and sanctify them; it over- comes the natural indolence of human nature, and precludes a great deal of temptation to employ the mental powers wrongly ; it leaves no room for the rise of morbid and unhealthy mental exercises ; it makes the clergyman happy in his profession, and strong in the truth, because he becomes, in the pro- cess, a thorough-bred divine ; it gives him a solid weight of character, and influence, that does not puff him up with vanity, as mere popularity always does, but makes him devoutly thankful, and hum- ble, before God ; and, lastly, it promotes his piety, by promoting his permanence in the ministry, for the piety of a standard man, is superior to that of RELIGIOUS CHAEACTEK. . 341 a floating man. And thus we might go on specify- ing particulars, in regard to which, the conscientious performance of clerical duties, in the study, tends directly to build up a solid, and excellent religious character. There is a variety in the means which the cler- gyman must employ, in order to spiritual growth, and they differ, in the degree of their importance. We have assigned the first place, to prayer, but, we do not hesitate to assign the second place, to conscientious, and thorough sermonizing. For, what is such sermonizing, as we are pleading for, but religious meditation, of the very best kind ? patient thought, upon that divine truth which is the food, and nutriment of holiness ? bringing put into the clear light of distinct consciousness, in our own minds, and for the minds of others, the doctrines of salvation ? There is no surer way, to become interested in a truth, than to write a well-considered discourse upon it. The careful composition of a sermon, oftentimes brings the heart into a glow of feeling, that gives itself vent in prayer. Hence, we find some of the .greatest preachers, among the Fathers and the Reformers, writing down the prayer that rose, spontaneously, from their overflowing souls, making it the conclusion of their sermon. Many of the sweetest and loftiest hymns of Watts, were the lyrical utterance of what had passed through his mind in sermonizing, and were, origin- ally, appended to his discourses. And the same 342 JE>ASTOEAL THEOLOGY. thing appears, still more remarkably, in the writings of the Schoolmen. In these strictly scientific trea- tises, which do not pretend to be oratorical, or applicatory to an audience, we meet, here and there, a short prayer, full of earnestness, and full of vital- ity. In Anselm, in Aquinas, and in Bernard, the reader sees the spirit of these analytic metaphysical men, at the close of its intense meditation upon some mystery in the Divine being, or the Divine administration, subdued, and awed, hushed, and breathless, in supplication and adoration. The in- tensely theoretic turns into the intensely practical, pure reason into pure emotion, dry light into vivid life. What has been said of the contemplative life of the clergyman, applies with equal force to his active life. A thorough and punctual performance of pas- toral duties, is a direct means of grace. In the first place, the conscientious delivery of the two sermons, that have been composed in the conscientious man- ner spoken of, ministers to edification. Although this is not strictly a pastoral work, yet it belongs to the active, rather than the contemplative side of clerical life. That clergyman \n\o preaches his ser- mons with earnestness, feeling the truth of every word he utters, will be spiritually benefited by this part of his labors. Elocution, the mere delivery of truth, which is too often destitute of both human nature and divine grace, when emphatic, and sincere, promotes piety. Speaking in and by a sermon, with EELIGIOUS CHAEACTEE. 343 ardor and feeling, to an audience, in respect to their spiritual interests, as really sets the Christian affec- tions into a glow, as speaking, in the same spiiit, to an individual in private intercourse. In the second place, a faithful and constant per- formance of the duty of pastoral visiting, is a means of grace. No one who has had any experience in this respect, will deny this for a moment. There is nothing better adapted to develope piety, to elicit the latent principles of the Christian, than going from house to house, and conversing with all varieties of character, and all grades of intelligence, upon the subject of religion. The colporteur s piety is active and zealous ; and the missionary, who is generally obliged to teach Christian truth to indi- viduals, is a fervid and godly man. The clergyman, then, will grow in grace, by simple assiduity in the discharge of this part of his professional labors. Whenever he is called to the bed-side of an impeni- tent sinner, let him be thorough in dealing with that endangered sinner's soul, affectionate but solemn in probing his consciousness, perseveringly attentive to the moral symptoms of the unregenerate man, on the bed of languishing ; — ^let him be a faithful pastor, in each and every such instance, and he will be en- riched with heavenly wisdom and love. Let him stand with the same uniform fidelity at the bed-side of the dying Christian, dispelling momentary gloom by the exhibition of Christ and his atonement, sup- plicating for more of the comfort of the Holy Ghost, 344 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. in the soul of tlie dying saint ; listening to the utterances of serene faith, or of rapturous triumph ; let him submit his own soul, to the great variety of influences that come off from the experience of the sick, and the dying, and he will greatly deepen and strengthen his own religious character. And, lastly, the same fidelity and constancy, in conversing with w^ell and happy men, and therefore thoughtless men, respecting their eternal interests, and in catechising the children, conduces powerfully to the formation of an unearthly, and a holy frame of spirit. Here, then, in the clerical office itself, is a most efficient means of grace. The clergyman needs not to go up and down the earth, seeking for instru- mentalities for personal improvement. By his very position, and daily labor, he may ])e made spiritual and heavenly. The word is nigh him, in his mouth and in his heart. A single word, is the key to holi- ness in the clergyman. That word is fidelity^ — fidelity in the discharge of all the duties of his closet, his study, and his parish. A somewhat noted rationalist speaks of some men, as being " aboriginal saints," — men in whom virtue is indigenous. There IS no such man. But, we may accommodate this hypothesis of a natural virtue, and say, that the clergyman, so far as his calling and position are concerned, ought to be naturally holy. His whole environment is favorable to piety. He ought to be spontaneously religious. CHAPTER III. INTELLECTUAL CHARACTER AND HABITS OF THE CLER- GTMAN. In the preceding chapter, we were led to speak of intellectuality and studiousness, in their rela- tions to the religious character of the clergyman ; taking the position that, provided he is faithful iu other respects, learning and contemplation are, in themselves, favorable to spirituality and piety. In this chapter, we are to consider, first, the type of intellectual character which the clergyman ought to form, and, secondly, the means of forming it. In respect to the style of mental culture, at which the clergyman should aim, we sum up the whole in the remark, that it should be choice. It should be the product of a very select course of reading, and study, and hence of a finer grade than the common intellectuality. In this country, and in this reading age, almost every man is somewhat literary. He is more or less acquainted with books, and may be said to have an intellectual, as well as a moral character. Two centuries ago, this was less the case. There was then, in society at large, 346 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. very little of tliat enliglitenment wliich is the effect of miscellaneous and general reading. Culture was concentrated in a smaller number; and hence, in the seventeenth century there was a higher intellec- tual character, in the learned professions, relatively to that of the mass of society, than there is at the present day. The masses have made more advance, than the literary circles have. The professional classes, and the public, are now nearer a common level, than they were two centuries ago ; because, while the public has enlarged its acquaintance with literature, there has not been a corresponding progress, on the part of the professions. The learn- ing and intellectual power of the theologians of the present day, is not as much superior to that of Richard Hooker, or John Howe, as the popular knowledge of the nineteenth century, is superior to that of the sixteenth and seventeenth. Neither is the mental culture of the upper class, in the literary world, as choice now as formerly, because it partakes more of the indiscriminateness of the common en- lightenment. The great multiplication of branches of knowledge, and of books, has made the profes- sional man more of a miscellaneous reader, than he once was. The consequence is, that the intellectual character of the professions, while it has gained something in variety and versatility, has lost in quality. In view of this fact, as well as on account of the intrinsic desirableness of the thing itself, the INTELLECTUAL CHAEACTEE. 347 clergyman ought to aim at clioiceness, in Lis educa- tion. He sliould strive after ripe scholarsMp, and sucli mental traits as profundity, comprehensiveness, clearness, and force. These are too often neglected, for a more superficial culture, and a class of qualities like versatility, vivacity, and brilliancy. These latter are much more easily obtained, than the former. They do not task the persevering power of the mind, and, consequently, do not draw out its best capacity. The natural indolence of human nature, is inclined to that species of intellectuality Avhich is most readily acquired, and which makes the great- est momentary impression upon others. The clergy- man, the lawyer, and the author, are too content with a grade of knowledge that is possessed by society at large. They are too willing to read the same books, and no more ; to look from the same point of view, and no higher one; in short, to reflect the general culture of the masses. But, a professional man has no right to pursue this course. Society does not set him upon an eleva- tion above itself, and maintain him there by its institutions and arrangements, merely to have him look through their eyes, and from their own lower position. Society does not, for example, place a man upon the high position of a public religious teacher, expecting that he will merely retail the current popular knowledge. Society looks up to the clergyman as its religious instructor, and re- quires that he be in advance of its own information. 348 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. It does not, indeed, insist that lie know all tMngs, and be ahead in all respects. The lawyer, as he listens to his clergyman, does not look for a more extensive and accurate knowledge of law. than he himself possesses. The man of business, — the farmer, the manufacturer, and the merchant, — does not expect from his minister, a shrewder and wider information in the department of active life, than he has himself But each and all expect, that in regard to religion, and all those j)ortions of human knowledge which are most closely connected with theology, the clergyman will be in advance of them- selves. They demand that, in its own sphere, cleri- cal culture be superior to that of society at large. The clergyman should not, therefore, be content with the average intellectuality. He ought not to loudly profess a choicer culture, than that of the community, but he ought actually to possess it. As the clerical position, and calling, demands a superior and eminent religious character, so it demands a superior and eminent intellectual character. If the clergyman may not supinely content himself with an ordinary piety, neither may he content himself 'with an ordinary culture. These remarks upon the kind and type of intel- lectual character, at which the clergyman must aim, prepare the way for considering the chief means, and methods of forming it. And these may all be reduced to one, namely, the daily ^ nightly^ and ever-' lasting study of standard authors, " Few," remarks INTELLECTUAL CHAEACTER. 349 Jolm Foster, *' liave been sufficiently sensible of the importance of that economy in reading, which selects, almost exclusively, the very first order of books. Why should a man, except for some special reason, read a very inferior book, at the very time that he might be reading one of the highest order ? A man of ability, for the chief of his reading, should select such works as he feels beyond his own power to have produced. What can other books do for him, but waste his time and augment his vanity ?" Choice and high culture is the fruit of com- munion with the very finest, and loftiest intellects of the race. Familiarity with ordinary produc- tions, cannot raise the mind above the common level. Like breeds like, and mediocre literatui'e, that neither descends deep, nor soars high, will leave the student mediocre, and common-place, in his thoughts. The preacher must love the profound thinkers, aud meditate upon them. But, these are not the multitude. They are the few. They are those who make epochs, in the provinces in which they labor. As we cast our eye along the history of a department, be it poetry, or philosophy, or the- ology, a few names represent, and contain, the whole pith and substance of it. Though there are many others who are respectable, and many more who are mere sciolists and pretenders, still, an acquaintance or un acquaintance with them all would not materially affect the sum of his knowledge, who 350 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. Bhould be tliorouglily familiar witli tliese leading and standard writers. The clergyman, therefore, must dare to pass by all second-rate authors, and devote his days and nights to the first-rate. No matter how popular or brilliant a cotemporary may be, no matter how active may be the popular mind in a particular direction, it is his true course, to devote his best powers to mastering those authors who have been tried by time, and are confessedly the first intellects of the race. If a great thinker actually arises in our own acre, we are not to neo^lect him because he is a cotemporary. Greatness should be recognized whenever it arises. But it must be remembered that a single age does well, if it produces a single historic mind, — a mind that makes an epoch, in the history of the department to which it devotes itself. And, moreover, it must be remembered, that we are more liable to be prejudiced in favor of a cotempo- rary, than of a predecessor, and hence, that cotem- porary judgments are generally modified, and some- times reversed, by posterity. The past is secure. A student who bends his energies to the compre- hension of an author who is acknowleds^ed to be standard, by the consent of ages and generations of scholars, takes the safe course to attain a choice culture. It is not possible to go over the whole field of literature, in a single chapter, and we shall, there- fore, confine ourselves to those three departments, INTELLECTUAL CHAHACTEE. 351 whicli exert the most direct and important influence upon the intellectual character of the clergyman. These are poetry, philosophy, and theology. In each of these, we shall mark out a course of reading and study, which we think adapted to result in a ripe cultivation. And assuming that the Bible, from its difference in kind from all other literature, and its peculiar and paramount claims upon the study of the clergyman, will be the object of supreme attention, the Book of books, we shall confine our remarks to uninsj^ired literature. In poetry, the clergyman should study all his days, the great creative minds, namely, Homer, Vir- gil, Dante, Shakspeare, and Milton. A brief sketch of their characteristics, and specification of the ele- ments of culture furnished by each, to go into the combination we are seeking, will be in place here. Homer is to be studied, as the head and representa- tive of Greek poetry. The human mind reached the highest grade of culture that is possible to paganism, in the Greek race ; and the inmost spirit and energy of the Greek intellect, is concentrated in the blind bard of Chios. Lono:-continued fami- liarity with the Iliad and Odyssey, imparts force, fire, and splendor, to the mental character. Ifc also imparts freshness, freedom, and enthusiasm. Bou- chardon said that while reading Homer, his whole frame appeared to himself to be enlarged, and all surrounding nature to be diminished to atoms. The 352 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. function of Homer is to dilate, and kindle tlie in- tellect. Virgil is to be studied as tlie embodiment of dignity, and grace. Thougli hardly severe and mas- sive enough, to be a full representative of the Ro- man mind, yet, upon the whole, he contains more of its various characteristics, than any other single Roman poet. He adequately represents imperial Rome, if he does not monarchical and republican. The dignity of the Roman character is certainly exhibited in the Virgilian poetry. The influence of familiarity with the ^neid, is highly refining. Men of elegant traits, like Canning and Robert Hall, relish and quote Virgil. Every thing in him is full of grace, and propriety. Even in the Georgics, though the theme is not favorable to the exhibition of such qualities, they yet appear in their height. As Addison says, the farmer in the Georgics, tosses his dung about with an air of dignity. Dante is the great poet of the Middle Ages. Though a Papist by birth and position, he is yet a Protestant in temper and spirit. Dante and Michael Angelo, so far as the fundamental traits of their minds are concerned, were both of them blood-rela- tions of Martin Luther. Intensity is the prominent characteristic of the Divine Comedy. Familiarity with Dante imparts a luminous distinctness, to the operations and products of the mind. The poetry of Dante is more speculative than that of any other E^TELLECTUAL CHAEACTER. 353 poet.^ He was well acquainted with Aristotle's philosopliy, and exhibits the subtlety and analysis of the Schoolmen themselves. Indeed, the general literary characteristics of the Middle Ages, are all concentrated in the great Italian poet. Shakspeare and Milton stand upon a common level. The English Parnassus, to use the figure of Coleridge, has twin peaks that crown its summit. Both alike deserve a life-long study, — Shakspeare, for the breadth and subtlety of his thinking ; Mil- ton, for his loftiness and grandeur. The English poets in this list, the clergyman may read in their own tongue. If he would be perfect, he must study the others, in the tongues in which they were born, and wrote. With the Latin of Virgil, he should be ashamed to be unfamiliar ; while it is to be remembered that dignity and grace, being formal qualities, are more difiicult to be transfused into another language. Dante has been faithfully translated by Gary, and by frequent perusal the student may, even through this medium, thoroughly imbue his culture with the spirit of the Divine Comedy. Homer, so far as possibJa,, ought to be read in the original Greek ; but if. a translation is to be employed, it should be that of Chapman, one of the early English translators. It ^It is also more theological, of the doctrines of sin and atone- than that of any other, unless we ment, for example, have not been except Milton, — if indeed he is to made, than Dante lays down ia be excepted. Better statements the seventh oanto of the Paradise. 23 354 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. is exceedingly rugged, yet very faithful to the ori« ginal. But what is of most importance, Chapman has caught the Homeric sj)irit far more than any other translator, be he English, French, German, or Italian. That fiery energy, that rushing life, and that dilation and inspiration which are so charac- teristic of the Greek, re-appear in the Englishman. Familiarity with this version, even without any other knowledge of Homer, will bring the student into a more living sympathy with him, than the perusal of Pope's version can, even if helped out with a mere dictionary-knowledge of the original. The spirit of the performance is intensely Homeric. It is, as Lamb says, not so much a translation, as an original production ; such an one as Homer himself would have composed, had he been compelled to use the less flexible and harmonious English, instead of the pliant and mellifluous Greek. But, while we are speaking of translation, it must be remembered that a continuous study of an author, even in ver- sions, naturally results in more or less study of him in the original. Struck with the force, or perhaps the obscurity of the translation, the reader takes down the original to compare or explain, and, in this way, keeps his mind considerably familiar with the original, — certainly, more familiar than he would, if the writer were entirely neglected.^ *Tlie prohibition of transla- guage, is wise and necessary, tions to the young student, while But their subsequent use, after acquiring the rudiments of a Ian- the foundations of classical know- ITn:ELLECTUAL CHAEACTER. 355 The autliors thus mentioned and sketched, are the first and greatest in the province of poetry, in their respective ages and literatures. The clergyman who is thoroughly familiar with these, though he should be ignorant of all others, will be marked by a choice poetical cultivation ; while, if he neglects these, though he should be acquainted with all other poets, this part of his education would betray radical defects. The department of philosophy next demands our attention. This exerts a very powerful influ- ence upon the intellectual character, and may be said to determine its whole style and tone. If we know the philosophical authors with whom a stu- dent is familiar, we know the fundamental and dis- tinguishing characteristics of his education ; for philosophy furnishes him with his methods of reason- ing, and investigating, forms his habits of thought, and, to a great extent, determines the direction of his thinking, by presenting the objects of thought. Thus, it may be said to contain the principles, means, and end, of mental development ; and, there- fore of merely human and intellectual branches of ledge have been laid, and the even from a translation, is proved scholar is compelled, by the de- by the fact, that the English Bible mands of a laborious profession, is the only source, whence the to make wide excursions over the majority of the Anglo-American whole immense field of Ancient world derive their acquaintance literature, is a dififerent matter, with the Hebrew and Greek That a real and vivid knowledge Scriptures. of an author may be acquired 356 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. discipline, it is the first and most important. The same injunction to read standard authors, applies with full force here also. A few names make up the list of first-class minds, in this department. The clergyman should become familiar with the two masters of Grecian philosophy, Plato and Aristotle. Their systems are sometimes represented as radically different from each other ; but the difference is only formal, such as naturally arises, when, of two minds, one is synthetic, and the other is analytic, in its na- ture and tendency. The diligent student of these Grecians will discover in them, a material agreement in respect to first principles, together with a formal difference in the mode of investigation and repre- sentation, that is for his benefit. Their systems should be studied in connection, as two halves of one coherent whole. He who has mastered them, has mastered all that is true and valuable, in the philosophy of the Ancient world. As these authors are voluminous, and in a difiacult language, the clergyman needs all the aids possible. Of Plato, there is a good Latin version by the Italian, Ficinus, two German versions, one by Schleiermacher and one by Schwarz, and an excellent French transla- tion by Cousin. Of the English translations, that which is now publishing by Bohn, of London, includes the entire works of Plato, and is of un- equal merit in its parts. On the whole, the cheap Tauchniz edition of the Greek, a good Greek lexicon, and Bohn's translations, make up an ap- INTELLECTUAL CHAEACTEE. 357 paratus for tlie study of Plato, tliat is within the reach of every clergyman. When he wishes to read rapidly, let him peruse the English version, correct- ing the mistakes, and elucidating the obscurity of the translators, by the Greek. When he desires to read for the sake of the language and style of the original, let him carefully study this. In this way, the clergyman, notwithstanding the multiplicity of his labors, may become well acquainted with the philosophy of the Academy. In reading Aristotle, the same method may be followed. The same publisher is printing, from time to time, translations of this author, and the German publisher Tauchuiz furnishes an equally cheap edition of the Greek. More discrimination is needed in selecting from Aristotle, than from Plato. Aristotle wrote extensively upon natural philosophy, and his speculations in this department are not of so much worth to the modern student, sur- rounded as he is with the achievements of modern science. The Metaphysics and Ethics, the Khetoric, and, though last not least, the Politics and Econo- mies, are the treatises of Aristotle of most value to the clergyman. The Greek of this author is w^orthy of special attention, by reason of its affinity with that of the New Testament, and it is much less difficult than the poetic prose of Plato. The clergyman should peruse the philosophical writings of Cicero. The Roman reproduces in a genial and elegant manner, the moral philosophy of 358 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. Plato. He ought to be read in the original, altogether, and may easily be. The most valuable of his philo- sophical treatises are the tract on the Immortality of the soul, the De Natnra Beorum^ and the De Finihus^ which discusses the nature of good and evil. There is no writer of the Middle Ages, in phi- losophy, who stands in a similar relation to his time, with Plato and Aristotle and Cicero, to theirs. Philosophy, during this period, passed over into theology, and hence we shall speak of the Mediaeval thinkers under that head. Moreover, as the Aris- totelian philosophy was the dominant system of the Middle Ages, the study of Aristotle himself, will make the student acquainted with the Mediaeval methods of thinking and investigation. Des Cartes is justly regarded as the father of Modern philosophy, because he gave it its pre- dominant direction towards psychology. His first principle, Cogito ergo sum^ converts philosophy into an analysis of consciousness. His discourse on the ^* Method of rightly conducting the Eeason," and his ^^ Meditations," are of most value to the theological student. Though not chronologically in place, yet from his intellectual relations, we here mention the name of Leibniz. The philosophical speculations of this writer are highly theological, and therefore are attractive to the clergyman. Written in the most pellucid style, such treatises as the Theodicee and Nouveaux Essais (the most masterly criti- INTELLECTUAL CHARACTER. 359 cism that has yet been made upon the philosopliy of Locke), well reward the scholar for theii* perusal. The clergyman ought to become well acquainted with the method, and system, of that sagacious, comprehensive, and substantial thinker. Lord Bacon. He, also, like Aristotle, is regarded by some, as the antagonist of Plato ; but a perusal of his works, par- ticularly the Novum Organum, in the light thrown upon them by those Essays of Coleridge in the Friend,^ in which he compares Bacon and Plato, will convince any one that their philosophical methods are essentially the same, only applied to different departments of inquiry, — Plato, being the philoso- pher of the intellect and spirit, Bacon, the philoso- pher of nature and matter; the one, cultivating intellectual and moral philosophy, the other, inves- tigating natural philosophy and physical science. The next system, in the historic movement of philosophy, is that of Locke. This merits the study of the clergyman, mainly for negative pur- poses. Thus fer, the systems which we have men- tioned are substantially the same, and in one straight, though sometimes wide, path of progress. But this system is out of the line of a true philo- sophic advance. It has, however, exerted so great an influence in the philosophic world, that it de- serves to be thoroughly studied, as the most self consistent, and at the same time moderate, of all the ^ OoLEEiDGE : Works, Vol. II. p. 437, sq. 360 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. systems of materialism. A critical mastery of it, results in a more immoveable position upon the true philosophic ground. In this reference, the study of Locke is of great negative W9rth, while, at the same time, it is often of value, in repressing that false spiritualism into which the human mind is apt to run, in passing from one extreme to another. The last name that we mention, in this series of philosophers, is that of Kant. He who goes to the study of this author, after that of Locke, will find himself again in the broad, travelled highway of philosophy ; and will come into contact with the most logical mind since Aristotle. The fundamental principles of theism, and ethics, are laid down with scientific precision, in the three Critiques of this latest of the great metaphysical thinkers. Kant is most satisfactorily read in the original German ; yet, such a study of previous philosophers, as we have recom- mended, resulting, as it does, in what may be called a philosophic instinct, and sagacity, in detecting the drift of a system, will enable the student to gather his general meaning, even out of the very inade- quate translations that have been made of him. Something, moreover, may be learned from the English and French writers who have either adopted, or opposed his opinions. Of them all, Coleridge and Hamilton were by far the best acquainted with Kant, and their writings are the best introduction to the German philosopher, that is accessible to the merely English reader. INTELLECTUAL CHAEACTEE. 361 In concluding under this "head of philosopliy, W6 make a remark similar to that at the close of the paragraph upon poetry. Familiarity with these eight authors, Plato, Aristotle, Cicero, Des Cartes, Leibniz, Bacon, Locke, and Kant, will impart a choiceness to the clergyman's metaphysical disci- pline, that cannot be obtained without them ; and, that cannot be obtained by a perusal of the hun- dreds and thousands of second-rate works in this province. These are virtually the whole. The entire department of philosophy, is potentially in these eight authors. They are the fountains whence all others draw. It now remains to mark out a course of study, in the department of theology. And the first name in the series, both chronologically and in- trinsically, with which the clergyman ought to be- come familiar, is that of Augustine. The position of this writer, in systematic theology, is very central ; so that a clear understanding of him, is a clue to very much that comes after him. Though not every thing in his writings is fully developed, or accurately developed, yet, the principal seeds and germs of the modern Protestant theology are found in them, and he, more than any other one of the Fathers, and far more than any one of the School- men, constitutes the organic link of connection, between Scriptural Christianity in the Ancient Church, and Scriptural Christianity in the Modern. And besides the scientific interest which the most 362 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. distinguished of the Christian Fathers awakens, his personal character itself wins upon the admiration of the student, all the days of his life. His entire works are no longer difficult of access, through the cheap reprint in Migne's series of the Fathers and Schoolmen. Individual writings of his have also heen republished, which may be obtained as readily as the Latin and Greek classics. Of his entire works^ may be mentioned the important tenth ^volume in the Benedictine arrangement, which contains his views upon the great themes of sin and grace, in opposition to Pelagianism and Semi-Pelagianism. To these must be added the De Oivitate De% and the Confessiones^ — the one doctrinal, and the other biographical. The City of God is one of Augustine's largest works, and conveys a more adequate im- pression of him as a systematizer, than any other single treatise of his. It is somewhat unequal in structure. This, however, arose, in part, from the disposition to be exhaustive in the investigation, not only of the principal topics in theology, but of all collateral topics. Augustine, for example, dis- cusses the question, " How ought the bodies of saints to be buried V with as much serious earnestness, and as strong a desire to answer it correctly, as he does the question, " What was the condition of the first man before his fall V This same inclination to take up every point and exhaust it, is seen in the Schoolmen as well as the Fathers, and accounts for the wood, hay, and stubble, mixed with the mTELLECTUAL CHAEACTER. 363 gold, silver, and precioais stones found in tLeir writings. The clergyman should, next, be familiar with the Scholastic theology, so far as is possible for him. Very little is now known of the theologians of the Middle Ages, even by professed scholars and authors. The great minds among them, however, deserve to be read, at least in a few of their best tracts and treatises. On the whole, Anselm deserves most attention, because he unites the speculative and practical tendencies, in greatest harmony. Thomas Aquinas has left the most important systematic treatise of the Middle Ages, and should be associ- ated with Anselm. Lastly, the spiritual and saintly Bernard, the most contemjDlative of the Schoolmen, opens many veins of rich and edifying thought. The following works of these authors may be the most easily obtained, and deserve to be pondered in the order in which they are mentioned. Anselm'a Gu/r Deiis Homo ? is a treatise, in which the philo- sophic necessity, and rationality, of the doctrine of atonement is exhibited for the first time, and which has been studied by the ablest thinkers upon this subject, ever since. His Proslogion and Monologium are two closely reasoned tracts, of which, the first contains the most metaphysical a priori argument yet made for the Divine Existence, and the last, an excellent statement of the relation of Reason to Reve- lation. The three tractates, De lihero arhitrio^ De casu diaboU, and De virginali conceptu^ hold the 364 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. cine to the deep mystery of the finite will, and the origin of moral evil, if that clue has ever been vouch- safed to the human intellect. The Summa Theologi- ca of Thomas Aquinas, is the systematic theology of the Middle Ages. The Sententice^ De consider atione^ and De modo bene mvendi^ of Bernard, will intro- duce the student to trains of reflection, in which there is a rare union of depth with edification. The next era, in the history of theology, is that of the Reformation, including also the succeeding period of conflict between Calvinists and Armi- aians. Calvin and Turretin are the two leading theological minds of this period, and the clergyman cannot study the Institutes of the former, and the Institutio of the latter, too patiently or too long. In the former, he will find the completion of the systematic structure whose foundations were laid by Augustine, while in the latter, the more minute and thorough elaboration of particular doctrines appears. For, controversy compels thorough state- ments ; and that discussion between the Calvinists and Arminians, was one of the most analytic and subtle that has ever occurred. The English divines of the seventeenth century, next deserve the study of the clergyman. If he were to be shut np, as he ought not to be, to a sin- gle period in the history of theology, and to com- munion with a single class or school, it would be safe to leave him alone with the theologians of England, both Prelatical and Non-conforming. They mTELLECTUAL CHAEACTER. 365 were men of the widest reading, the most thorough learning, and the most profound piety. There are many noble names among them, but, in accordance with a parsimonious method, and having special reference to dogmatic theology, we shall mention only Owen, Howe, and Baxter. Though the theo- retic and the practical elements wonderfully inter- penetrate each other, in the writings of all three, yet each has his distinguishing excellence. Owen is the most comprehensively systematic, Howe the most contempLative and profound, and Baxter the most intense and popularly effective. The last writer, in the series, is the elder Ed- wards, — a theologian equal to any that have been mentioned, whether we consider the depth and sub- tlety of his understanding, the comprehension and cogency of his logic, or the profundity and purity of his religious experience, and who deserves the patient study of the American clergyman, in particu- lar, because, more than any other American theo- logian, he forms an historical connection with the theologies of the past, and stands confessedly at the head of our scientific theology. We have, now, passed in review the departments of poetry, philosophy, and theology, and we think that any one would concede, that a course of study such as we have marked out, would result in a high type of intellectual character. By pursuing it, the mind of the clergyman would be put into commu- nication with all the best culture, and science, of the 366 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. human race. Sucli a choice intellectual discipline would give him influence with the most highly educated men in society, and the respect of the people at large. The people naturally venerate learning. They expect it in their religious teacher, and they are impressed by it. It inspires their confidence. Baxter, in speaking upon this point, in his Reformed Pastor, goes so far as to recommend the preacher, to introduce, occasionally, into his ser- mons a scholastic word, or a learned term, which the people do not understand, in order to show that he is familiar with sciences and branches of knowl- edge, with which they themselves are unacquainted Baxter recommends this in all seriousness and so lemnity, as he does every thing else. The rule is not worth observing, but the sjDirit of it is.- Such an intellectual discipline, moreover, leaves room for growth and expansion, and impels to it. The standard minds, as we have remarked, are in one and the same general line of thinking, and hence, all the acquisition that is made by the stu- dent, is homogeneous. He is not compelled to un- xcarn any thing. He is studying one common sys- tem of truth, and employs one common method of apprehending and stating it ; so that whatever may be the particular part of the great whole, which he is studying for the time being, the results of his study will fall in with all other results, and go to constitute a harmonic and symmetrical education. The plan of clerical study, upon this scheme, is like INTELLECTUAL CHAEACTER. 367 tlie plan of a perfect campaign. All the movements are adjusted to each other, and are coherent ; so that at whatever point the individual soldier labors, and however distant from head-quarters, he is con- tributing directly to the one predetermined and foi e- seen issue. Hence, although we have mentioned the standard authors chronologically, as the most convenient and natural order, it is not necessary that the clergyman should invariably study them in this order. Let him be retrogressive, or progres- sive, as he pleases ; let him begin anywhere in the series, and with any single writer, and he will be in line, and may form connections with the front and the rear. He may, also, indefinitely expand his sys- tem of study, — widening and deepening the founda- tions, rearing up and beautifying the superstructure, — and yet never essentially varying the form, and proportions, of the temple of truth and of science. But how, it may be asked, is the clergyman, with all his public and private occupations, to find time, for such an extensive and thorough course of study ? We shall devote the short remainder of the chapter, to the answer to this question. Before proceeding, however, to give specific rules, let us observe that this is a course of study for life. It is not to be run through in a year, or ten years, and then to give place to another. It is not to be out- grown, and left behind. One of the most eloquent and enthusiastic of literary men remarks, that the scholar should " lay great bases for eternity," — that 368 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. is, lie sLould adopt a plan and method of study, which possesses compass enough, and coherence enough, to "be ever permanent, for purposes of discipline and scholarship. The clergyman should intellectually, as well as morally, lay great bases for eternity. He ought not, therefore, to be overwhelmed in the very outset, by the greatness of the proposed edifice, but should relieve his mind, by remembering that he has his whole life before him. In order to the successful prosecution of such a course of study, and the attainment of a high intel- lectual discipline, the clergyman must rigorously obserye_hours of study. His mornings must be seasons of severe application. By proper arrange- ments, the time from eight to one may be a period of uninterrupted devotion to literary toil. Of these five hours, two may be devoted to books, and three to sermonizing ; or, in the outset, one hour to books, and four to sermonizing. Supposing that no more than six hours are devoted to pure study, in a week, even this, in the course of twenty, thirty, forty, or fifty years, would carry the clergyman over a verj wide field of investigation, and carry him thoroughly. But, as he advances in this course, he will find his mind strengthening, his faculties becoming more manageable, and his resources more ample ; so that after ten, perhaps ^ve years have elapsed, the two hours are sufficient for sermonizing, and the three may be devoted to study. As the clergyman grows into a learned and systematic thinker he becomes . INTELLECTUAL CHARACTER. 309 al)le to preacli witli much less immediate prepara- tion. These ^ve hours, every day, are sufficient for literary purposes, provided they are strictly hours of intellectual toil. Let there be, in the study, no idleness, no revery, and no reading outside of the prescribed circle. Let the mind begin to work as soon as the door is shut, and let it not cease until the clock strikes the appointed hour; then stop study, and stop composition, and devote the remain- der of the day to parochial labors, the amenities of life, and the relaxation of lighter literature. Again, in order to the prosecution of such a course of study as has been described, it is evident that the clergyman must read no more of second-rate literature, of either the past or the present, than is consistent with these severer studies. He must dare to be ignorant of much of it, in order that he may know the Dii majorum gentmm. He must purchase very little of it, and none of it at all, until he has obtained the standard works. His library, like his culture, should be choice, a gem of a library, and then he will not be tempted by inferior produc- tions to waste his time. And, especially must he be upon his guard against the great mass of periodical literature that is coming into existence, and dying as fast as it is born. Periodical literature, as a spe- cies, is the direct contrary of standard literature, and its influence upon education is directly antago- nistic to that of true study. The nature of this class of mental products, is analogous to that of one of 24 370 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. tlie lowest grades of animal existence. The periodi- cal is like a polypus. The polyp propagates itself by sprouting and swelling, like a vegetable. Cut a polyp into two halves, and these two halves complete them- selves, and become two polypi. Cut each of these two into two, they become four perfect polypi ; and so tlie process goes on, ad infinitum. And this is the process in periodical literature. A very slender idea, or thought, is bisected, and these parts are ex- hibited, each as a complete whole, and the entire truth. These, again, are subdivided by another journalist, and re-exhibited, and thus the polyp- process goes on, until a single idea, not very solid at the beginning, is made to propagate itself through page after page. One man writes a book, the whole of which does not contain a thousandth part of the truth that is to be found in some standard work. Another writes a review of this book, — unless, per- chance, to employ the comparison of Matthias Clau- dius, the hen reviews her own %^^. Another writes a review of this review, and so the work goes bravely on, from month to month, and year to year. The true course, for the clergyman, as well as for the student generally, is to devote no more attention to the current and periodical literature of his age, than is just sufficient to keep him acquainted with its tendencies, and currents of thought and action, devo- ting himself, in the meanwhile, to those standard pro- ducts which are for all time, and from which alone, he can derive true intellectual aliment and strength. CHAPTEK IV. SOCIAL AND PROFESSIONAL CHARACTER OP THE CLER- GY^tAX. The third topic in Pastoral Theology, to be ex- amined, is tte social and professional cliaracter of the clergyman. These terms will be employed in a comprehensive sense, and include all tliat part of clerical character, which has not been considered under the heads of religious, and intellectual. The subject of clerical manners, naturally constitutes the substance of this chapter. These are twofold, and may be discussed, in their reference to the jper- sonal conduct of the clergyman towards individuals, and his professional conduct towards his congre- gation. 1. In respect to the first branch of the subject, it is obvious, that the conduct, and bearing, of a clergyman ought to be appropriate to his profession, and distinguish him, not perhaps from a Christian man generally, but from the world at large. A sanctimonious behavior, so different from that of a Christian gentleman, as to call attention to it, and inspire contempt, is to be carefuUy avoided. A 372 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. clergyman ought Dot to advertise himself before- hand, and, by something exquisite and peculiar, give notice that he is more than a Christian layman ; yet, he should always maintain such a port and demeanor, that a stranger, while plainly seeing that he is a Christian, would not be surprised to dis- cover that he is also a clergyman. The clergyman ought to be of grave manners, — in the phrase of St. Paul, a man of decorum {nQ(j[Lio^} His behavior in society must be seri- ous. He should make the impression that he is a thoughtful person. These terms, gravity, serious- ness, and thoughtfulness, imply that his mind is pre- occupied with great and good subjects, so that wherever he goes, and with whomsoever he asso- ciates, he cannot stooj) to " foolish talking and jest- ing," to frivolity, gayety, or levity. Gravity, though assumeable for the hour, cannot be permanently simulated. The hypocrisy is sooner or later de- tected. The innate levity of the mind unconsciously breaks out. A single word betrays the secret, and then there is no recalling. For, men reason correct- ly, that a really light-minded person can temporarily assume seriousness and gravity, and often has a motive to do so, but a really serious and solemn man cannot, so readily, imitate levity and worldli- ness, and, what is more, will not, because he has no motive for so doing. Hence, the secret of Christian ^ 1 Tim. iii. 2. PROFESSIOJ^AL ClIAEACTEE. 373 decorum iu social intercourse is, to be really, and at heart, a serious man. Let the clergyman form such a religious, and such an intellectual character, as we have described, and be absorbed in his callino\ and he will spontaneously be grave and dignified in manner. Secondly, the clergyman should be of affable manners. As the etymology denotes (affarl), it must be easy for him to speak to others, and, thus, easy for others to speak to him. He ought to be an accessible person, in social intercourse. Clerical character is apt to run to extremes. On the one hand, gravity becomes false and excessive, so that it repels address. If this be the case, the clergy- man's influence is much diminished. The timid are afraid of him, and the suspicious 'dislike him; and thus, the really good man is avoided by two very large classes of society. By one, he is thought to be stern, and by the other, he is thought to be proud. On the other hand, affability sometimes becomes excessive, so that the clergyman loses dignity of character, and weight of influence. He is too ready to talk. He speaks upon all sub- jects, with the same ease, and the same apparent interest. He opens his mind to every one he meets, without regard to character, and, unlike his Divine Master, " commits himself " to men.^ There is not suflScient reserve in his manner. He does not study * John ii. 24. 374 PASTOEAL THEOLOaY. the characters of men, and consequently does not know men. His conversation is not adapted to tlie individual he is addressing, because it is adapted to every one alike. The consequence is, that affa- bility degenerates into familiarity, and familiarity breeds contempt. The social manners of the clergy- man ought, thei'efore, to be a just mingling of gravi- ty and affability. The one must temper the other, and prevent an extreme, in either direction. The clergyman will then be a dignified and serious man, to that degree which represses frivolity, and inspires respect. And he will be an affable man, to that j)oint which wakens confidence, and wins regard. 2. We pass, now, to consider the professional bearing of the clergyman among the people of his charge. The clergyman sustains more intimate and special relations to his parish, than he does to gen- eral society and the world at large. He is a person of more authority and influence in his own church, than elsewhere, and hence the need of further state- ments and rules, than those that have been given, respecting his general social relations. In the first place, it is the right and the duty of the clergyman, to be a man of decision^ in adminis- tering the affairs of his parish. The apostle James, addressing a Christian church, gives the admoni- tion, " Be not many masters" (hihaaTcaT^oC)^ — indica- ting, thereby, that the interests of a cc ngregation ^ James iii. 1. PEOFESSIONAL CHAEACTEE. 375 flourish best under the guidance of a presiding mind. When church members are disposed, each and ev^ery one, to be the teacher, nothing but rival- ry among themselves, and the destruction of minis- terial authority and respect, can possibly result. The genius of a truly Scriptural ecclesiastical polity is undoubtedly republican. Whenever the monar- chical spirit has shaped ecclesiastical government, the Church has speedily declined in spirituality and power, as the history of the Papacy, not to speak of otiier church organizations, plainly evinces. But, republicanism is not a wild and ungoverned democ- racy. It supposes, indeed, like democracy, that all power is ultimately lodged in the people, but, un- like democracy, it supposes that some of this power has been fi-eely delegated to an individual, or indi- viduals, who, by virtue of this endowment, possess an authority, which, as ordinary members of the community, they would not have. The people of a republic are not compelled to delegate their sove- reignty, — it is a voluntary procedure on their part ; and neither are they compelled to bestow power upon any particular man, or class of men. But, when they have once freely made their choice of officers, and have solemnly invested them with authority, and a delegated sovereignty, then they have no option in regard to obeying their rulers. They are bound to respect their own work. They are solemnly obligated to submit themselves to the government which they themselves have established, 376 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. BO long as it is faithful to the trusts that have been committed to it. The difference between a pure democracy and a republic, consists not in any differ- ence of opinion respecting the ultimate seat of sove- reignty. Both, alike, claim that it resides in the people. But, a pure democracy does not ^^ut any of this sovereignty out of its own hands. It never delegates authority. As in Athens, the entire popu- lation meet in popular assembly, enact or repeal laws, try causes as a court, and make peace or de- clare war. The people, in this instance, are not only the source of authority, but the acting govern- ment itself Republicanism, on the contrary, while adopting the same fundamental j)rinciple with de- mocracy, finds it more conducive to a stable and reliable government, to lodge power, for certain Sj3ecified purposes, in the hands of a few, subject to constitutional checks, — to a recall in case of mal- administration, and, in some instances, to a recall after a certain sj)ecified time, even though it has been well used. Most Churches in this country claim, that the Scriptures enjoin a republican form of jDolity. Very few are disposed to contend for a purely democratic ecclesiastical organization. The dispute between non-prelatical Churches, relates mainly to the grade of republicanism, — that is, to the amount of authority that shall be delegated, the number of persons to whom, and the time for which. We assume, therefore, that under existing eccle- PEOrESSIONAL CHAEACTEE. 377 eiastical arrangements, the pastor is a man to whom the people have intrusted more er less authority. In the Presbyterian Church, they have formally dispossessed themselves of power, to a certain ex- tent, and have made it over to the session, consisting of the pastor and elders. In the Congregational Church, though they have not formally done this, and though they reserve the " power of the keys " in their own hands, yet, they expect their clergy- man to be the presiding mind of the body. The clergyman, then, standing in this leading attitude in his j^arish, ought to be a man of decision. But, this implies that his own mind is settled, and established. There is nothing which weakens a leading man, that is, a man who by his position ought to lead, like wavering, and indecision. Doubt and uncertainty are a tacit acknowledgment of unfitness to guide, and preside. The clergyman must, therefore, be positive in his theological opin- ions. Inasmuch as he is called to the work of in- doctrination, he ought to be clear in his own mind. It is his vocation, to shape the religious views of an entire community, and, consequently, his own views ought not only to be correct, but firmly es- tablished. For, how can he say to his auditory, "This doctrine is false,. and fatal to your salvation; but this doctrine is true, and you may rest your eternal welfare upon it," — how can he say this with any emphasis, unless he knows what he is saying, and is made decided, by his knowledge? The 378 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. clergyman's communication must not be yea and nay, together. King Lear, in his madness, remarks that, " Ay and no, too, is no good divinity," and there is reason if not method, in his madness. And so far as the doctrines of Christianity are concerned, why should not the clergyman be a man of decided opinions ? If the gospel were a merely human system, there would be ground for hesita- tion and doubt ; but since it is the revelation of an Infallible Mind, what is left for the Christian teacher, but to re-affirm the Divine affirmation, with all the positiveness and decision of the original com- munication itself? The Scriptures teach but one system of truth, though the ingenuity of the human intellect, under the actuation of particular biases, has succeeded in torturing a variety of conflicting systems out of it, by dislocating its jDarts, instead of contemplating it as a whole. This one evangelical system has been received by the Christian Church in all ages, and if the clergyman feels the need of aids in getting at it, imbedded as it is in the living, and therefore flexible, substance of the Bible, let him study the creeds of the Christian Church. An examination of the doctrinal statements which the orthodox mind has constructed out of the Bible, to counteract, and refute those which the heterodox mind has also constructed out of the Bible, will do one thing, at least, for the clergyman, if it does nothing more. It will very plainly show him what system of truth the Scriptures contain, in the opinion PEOFESSIOTTAL CHAEACTEE. 379 of the Church. The Church, it is true, may be mis- taken. It is not infallible. Creeds may be errone- ous. But after this concession has been made, it still remains true, that the symbols of the Christian Church do very clearly, and fully, display the opin- ions of the wisest and holiest men, and the closest students of the Scriptures, for sixteen hundred years, in respect to the actual contents of Eevelation. The clergyman who adopts the theology embodied in them may possibly be in an error ; but if he is, he is in good company, and in a large company. Moreover, that man must have a very exaggerated conception of his own powers, who supposes that he will be more likely to find the real teaching of the Scriptures, upon each and all of the profound sub- jects respecting which it makes revelations, by shut- ting himself out of all intercourse with other human minds, who have gone through the same investiga- tion. That the Bible must be studied by each one for himself, and that each individual must, in the end, deliberately exercise his own judgment, and form his own opinion as to the system of truth con- tained in Revelation, is the fundamental distinction between Protestantism and Romanism. But this does not carry with it, the still further, and really an- tagonistic position, that the individual should isolate himself from the wise, aiyl the good men who have preceded him, or are his cotemporaries, and do his utmost to be uninfluenced by those who have studied the Scriptures for themselves, and have, 380 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. moreover, found themselves coming to the same common result, with thousands and millions of their fellow-men. There is, and can be, but one truth, and therefore all men ought to agree. The position, that, so far as the nature of the case is concerned, there may be as many minds as there are men, and as many beliefs as there are individual judgments, is untenable. We affirm, then, that the clergyman should make a proper use of the studies, and inves- tigations, of his brethren in the Church, not merely of the particular Church to which he belongs, and not merely of the particular Churches of the age and generation in which he lives, but of the Church uni- versal, — the holy catholic Church, not in the Roman sense, but in that, in which the Scripture employs the term, when it denominates the Church '^ the pillar and ground of the truth." And the result of this study and investigation of the Scriptui'es, by the general Christian mind, is embodied in the creeds that have formed the doctrinal basis of the various branches of the one body of Christ. Now, the clergyman will be likely to be positive in his doctrinal opinions, in proportion as he per- ceives that his own views of the meaning, and con- tents of Scripture, are corroborated by those of the wise and good of all ages. If, on the contrary, he finds himself unable to a^-ee with his predecessors, and cotemporaries, in the ministry, we do not see how he can be a decided man, in the proper sense of this term. He may be a presumptuous, self- PROFESSIONAL CHARACTEE. 381 conceited, arrogant man, setting up Ms individual judgment in opposition to tliat of the great majority of individual judgments. He may be a kind of private pope, first throwing himself out of the line of historical Christianity, and then, calling upon the Church universal to unlearn all that it knows, and forget all that it has learned, insisting that it bend the neck and bow the knee to the new infallibility that has appeared, — ^lie may be all this in spirit, if not in form, and still be very far from being estab- lished in his own mind. The first serious opposition to him, would probably unsettle his views. Yet, even if his convictions should take on a fanatical temper, and carry him like Servetus to the stake, he knows nothing of the true martyr-spirit. The clergyman, again, is obliged to form opin- ions upon other subjects than doctrinal, and to-give expression to them. The social, economical, and political questions of the day, vnll be put to him by society, or else he will feel urged up to an expression of opinion, by the condition and wants of his people. He should not, by any means, seek for opportuni- ties of this sort. Blessed is the clergyman, who is permitted by community, and his own conscience, to devote his whole thinking, and utterance, to strictly religious themes. Blessed is that parish which seeks first the truth as it is in Jesus, takes most interest in the conviction and conversion of sinners, and the edification of Christians, and desires to see the evils of society removed, by additions to 382 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. the Church, of such as shall be saved. Still, the clergyman will not be permitted to be entirely silent during his whole ministry, respecting those semi- religious subjects, which underlie the various re- forms of the age. He should, therefore, be a decided man, in this sphere, as well as that of theology. Let him not be in haste to discuss these themes ; let him wait for the sober second thought upon his own part, and especially upon the part of the people, before he gives his opinion. " In reference to the exciting subjects of the day and the hour," said a wise and judicious minister, '' do as the sportsman does : never fire when the flock is directly over your head ; but fire when it has passed a little beyond you, that your shot may be raking." When, how- ever, the time has evidently come, to speak upon these semi-religious themes, the clergyman should do so with decision. Let him make up his mind fully, and when he sees that the interests of his peo- ple require it, let him speak out his mind, without doubtino^ or waverino:. But, in order that the clergyman may be a decided man, in respect to such themes as these, he needs to pursue the same course, as in reference to strictly religious opinions. He should take counsel of his- tory, and of the wisest men of his own generation. If he isolates himself from them, and sets up for a reformer, or associates with those who are so doing, he cannot be a truly determined man. He will be blown about, by the popular breeze that is blowing PEOFESSIOJ^-AL CHAEACTEE. 383 for the hour, and which changes every hour. He will be carried headlong by designing men, who cloak the worst aims under a religious garb. In the present condition of society, there is great need of a power, in the clergy, to stem currents, — of a decision, and determination, that is rooted in intelli- gence, in reason, and in wisdom. But such a settled and constant mental firmness, can proceed only from a historic spirit, or, what is the same thing, out of a truly conservative temper. For, conservatism, prop- erly defined, is the disposition to be historical, to attach one's self to those opinions which have stood the test of time, and experience, rather than to throw them away, and invent or adopt new ones. A conservative theologian, for example, is inclined to that system of doctrine which has been slowly formins: from ag-e to ao-e, ever since the Christian Mind beci^an a scientific construction of revealed truth, and is unwilling to make any radical changes in it. He concedes the possibility of a further ex- pansion of existing materials, but is opposed to the addition of new, as well as the subtraction of old matter. He does not believe that there are any new dogmas, lying concealed, in the Scriptures, hav- ing utterly escaped the notice of the theologians of the past. Christianity, for him, is a completed re- ligion. The number of fundamental truths neces- sary to human salvation, is full. The Church of the past needed the same truths, in order to its sanctifi- cation and perfection, that the Church of the present 384 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. needs; and it possessed each and everyone of them. There can be no essential addition, therefore, to the body of Christian doctrine, until another and new revelation is bestowed from God. This historic and conservative spirit is not life- less and formal, as is frequently charged. It does not tend to petrifaction. For, it keeps the individ- ual in communication, not only with the whole long series of individual minds, but, with the very best results to which they have come. Conserva- tism is dead and deadening, only upon the hyjDothe- sis, that the universal history of man is the realm of death. There v/as just as much vitality in the past generations, as there is in the present, which is soon to become a thing of the past. Furthermore, the steady and strong endeavor to become master of the past, stimulates and kindles in the highest degree. For, this knowledge does not flow into the individual as a matter of course. It must be toiled after, and the more the student becomes acquainted mth the past workings of the human mind, the more conscious is he of his own ignorance as an individual. He finds that there is much more in the past with which he is unacquaint- ed, than there is in the present. He discovers that sixty centm-ies are longer than three-score years and ten. Where one subject has been thoroughly dis- cussed by a cotemporary, one hundred have been by preceding minds. The whole past thus presents an unlimited expanse, over which the choicest intellects PEOFESSIOIS-AL CHAEACTEE. 385 have careered, and instead of Ms being well ac- quainted with their investigations and conclusions, he finds that life itself is too short, for the mastery of all this tried and historic knowledofe. The old, therefore, is the new to the individual mind, and, as such, is as stimulating as the novel product of the day, and more likely to be nutritious and strengthening, because it has stood the test of ages and generations. By the conservative, rather than the radical method, then, the clergyman should render himself a decided man in his opinions and measures. His mind will then be made up in comj^any with others, and he will not be compelled to stand alone, as an isolated atom, or, at most, in connection with a clique, or a clan, or a school, that has nothing of historic permanence in it, and which must vanish away with the thousands of similar associations, and never be even heard of in human history, be- cause history preserves only the tried and the true for all time. In the second place, the clergyman ought to be a judicious man. As it was necessary to mingle affability with gravity, in order to an excellent man- ner for the clergyman in general society, so, decision must be mingled with judgment, in order to an ex- cellent manner for him in his parish. Judiciousness teaches when to modify, and temper, the resolute and settled determination -of the soul. Some sub- jects are more important than others. Some opin- 25 386 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. ions and measures are vital to the prosperity of re* ligion, and others are not. The clergyman must be able to distinguish fundamentals from non-funda- mentals, so that he may proceed accordingly. It is absurd to be equally decided upon all points. A conservatism that conserves every thing with equal care, insisting that one thing is just as valuable as another, is blind, and therefore false. It is this spurious species which has brought the true int^ disrepute ; or,* rather, has furnished the enemies of historic views, and a historic spirit, with their strongest weapons. When a fundamental truth is menaced, or a fundamentally wrong measure is proposed, the cler- gyman must be immovable. In the phrase of Ig- natius, he should " stand like an anvil." If he does so, he will in the end spoil the face of the hammers, and wear out the strength of the hammerers. But when the matter in controversy is not of this vital nature, even though it have great importance, judi- ciousness in the clergyman would dictate more or less of yielding. If the clergyman can bring his parish over to his own views, upon every subject, he ought to do so ; but if he cannot, then he must accomplish the most he can. In case the congrega- tion are restless, and disposed to experiments, he will be more likely to prevent radical and danger- ous steps, in primary matters and measures, if he yields his individual judgment to them, in secondary matters. His people will perceive that he has PEOFESSIONAL CHAEACTEE. 387 made a sacrifice, in regard to subjects which he deems to be important, though not fundamental, and will feel obligated and inclined to make one in return, when, with a serious tone, and a solemn manner, he insists that there be no yielding, upon either their part, or his own, in matters that are absolutely vital to the interests of Christ's kingdom. By thus mingling decision with judiciousness, the clergyman will be able to maintain himself as the presiding mind in his parish. It is his duty to be such. He cannot be useful, unless he is. We do not hesitate to say, that if, after fair trial of a congregation, a minister discovers that he cannot secure that ascendency, in the guidance and manage- ment of their religious affairs, to which he is enti- tled, his prospects for permanent influence are too slight to warrant much hope. But, a due mingling of intelligent decision, and wise judgment, generally does, as matter of fact, secure that professional au- thority and influence in the parish, which is insep- arably connected with the prosperity of religion. Under the voluntary system, the clergyman is not much aided by ecclesiastical institutions, or arrange- ments, and the rejDublicanism - of the people strips off from the clerical office, as it does from all other offices, the prestige of mere position. The American clergyman, unlike the member of an establish- ment, derives no authority from the mere fact that he is a clergyman. It is well, that it is so. For now he must rely upon solid excellences, upon learning 388 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. and piety, upon decision and good judgment, in the administration of liis office. And if lie possesses these qualities, lie will be a more truly authoritative and influential man, than the member of an estab- lishment can be ; because, all the authority he has, is fairly earned upon his side, and voluntarily con- ceded upon the people's side/ CHAPTER V. PASTORAL YISITma. WE iiave had occasion, in previous chapters, to remark that the clergyman bears two characters, and sustains two different relations. He is an orator, that is, one whose function it is to address public assemblies. The relation which he sustains to society, by virtue of this character, is public and formal. It requires the regularly constructed ad- dress, the sacred time, and the sacred place. It calls for the sermon, the Sabbath, and the sanctuary. In this capacity, the clergyman is the minister of a public instruction, and a public worship. But this is not the whole of a minister's char- acter, and these are not all his functions. He is a pastor, that is, one whose duty it is to go from house to house, and address men privately, and individually, upon the subject of religion. This kind of labor, as necessarily forms a part of the ministerial service, as preaching. A perfect clergy- man, if such there were, would combine both the oratorical and the pastoral character, in just propor- 390 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. tioDS, and degrees. The clergyman is liable to he deficient upon one, or tlie other, side of this double character. He is a better preacher than he is pastor, or else a better pastor than he is preacher. It should, therefore, be the aim of the clergyman, tc 23erfect himself in both respects. It is an error, to suppose that these two offices are totally independent of each other, and that the clergyman can secure the highest eminence in one, by neglecting the other. Some make this mistake. Supposing themselves to be better fitted by nature, to be preachers than pastors, or, what is more com- monly the case, having more inclination to address men publicly and in bodies, than privately and individually, they devote their whole time and attention to sermonizing and eloquence, with the expectation of thereby becoming more influential and able preachers. They are mistaken in this course. They may, indeed, by close study, make themselves popular preachers, while they are neg- lecting personal intercourse with their hearers, but they would make powerful preachers, if their study and composition were vivified by the experience of the pastor. If, without that knowledge of men which comes from direct intercourse with them, in health and in sickness, in prosperity and in adversity, in joy and in sorrow, they are able to construct at- tractive sermons, with that knowledge interpenetra- ting their reading and rhetoric, they might compose discourses of eminent or pre-eminent excellence. On PASTOEAL VISITmG. 391 the otlier hand, it sometimes occurs that the clergy man, being naturally of a social turn, and finding it easier to converse with individuals than to address an audience, turns the main current of his activity into the channel of pastoral work, to the neglect of his pulpit ministrations. In this instance, the same remark holds true, as above. Even if, by this course, he should succeed in becoming a measurably useful pastor (a thing not very likely to occur), by a different course in respect to sermonizing, he would become a highly useful one. The degree of success, in both instances, is much increased, by cultivating a complete clerical talent. The learning and study of the preacher, are needed to enlighten and guide the zeal and earnestness of the pastor ; and the vitality and directness of the pastor, are needed to animate and enforce the culture of the preacher. Instead, therefore, of regarding the functions of the preacher and the pastor, as totally independent of each other, and capable of being carried to per- fection, each by itself, the clergyman must perform them both, and v^th equal fidelity. And as ho must, from the nature of the case, exert his chief influence as a pastor, by pastoral visiting, we proceed to lay down some rules for the performance of this part of clerical service. 1. First, the clergyman should be systematic^ in pastoral visiting, regularly performing a certain amount of this labor every week. There will be extraordinary seasons, when he must visit his people 392 PASTORAL THEOXOGT. for personal religious conversation, witli greater fre* queney. Times of unusual religious interest will compel Mm to abridge Ms hours of study, and go from house to house, that he may guide the inqui- ring, or awaken the slumbering. We are not giv- ing a rule for such extraordinary occasions, and we need not, for they will bring their own rule with them. But, in the ordinary state of religion among his congregation, the minister ought to accomplish a certain amount of this parochial work, in each week, not much exceedino; or fallins; short of it. There are two advantages, in this systematic regulation. In the first place, if the pastor is moi-e inclined to address men individually, and in social intercourse, than he is to address them collectively, and in the regularly constructed sermon, this fixed- ness of the amount of pastoral visiting will prevent him from neglecting his sermons. Having performed the labor in the homes of the people, he will re- turn to his study and his books. In the second place, if his tendency is in the opposite direction, he will be very much hel]3ed, by systematizing that part of clerical duty to which he is most disinclined. There is no way so sure, to overcome the indisposi- tion of a reserved, or a studious man towards direct j)ersonal conversation with indiv^iduals, as working according to a plan. He may enter upon the dis- charge of the unwelcome service, from a sense of duty, but, before long, he begins to work with spontaneity and enjoyment. There is no fact in the PASTOEAL VISITmG. 393 Christian experience better established, than that the faithful performance of labor, from conscience, ends in its being performed with relish and 2:)leasure. Conscience is finally wrought into the will, in a vital synthesis. Law, in the end^ becomes an impulse, instead of a commandment. In systematizing this part of his work, the cler- gyman should fix a day for its performance. Let it uniformly be done on the same day of the week, and in the same part of the day. Again, he should pass around his entire parish within a certain time. This will make it necessary to visit his people by districts, or neighborhoods ; and, unless there be a special reason for it, he should not visit in the same locality again, until he has come round to it in his full circuit. This course will compel the parishion- er, should there be need of a special visit, as in case of sickness, religious anxiety, or afiliction, to send for him, in obedience to the apostolic direction, " Is any sick among you, let him call for the elders of the church." In regard to the day of the week, to be selected by the pastor, for this work, the nearer it is to the middle of it, the better. This is the time when his own physical strength is most recruited, from the labors of the Sabbath, and when he will be most inclined to leave his study, to mingle with his peo- ple. It is, also, the time when the congregation most need to have their attention recalled to spiritu- alities, as the mid-point between two Sabbaths. 394 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. With regard to the length of time to be spent, much depends upon the extent of the parish, and the number of the people. In a parish of ordinary size, one afternoon every week, especially if the evening ensuing be devoted to preaching in the district or neighborhood, is sufficient, — provided, the pastor makes his visits in the manner which we shall describe under another head. This may seem a short time to devote to parochial visiting ; but, if it be systematically and regularly devoted, it is longer than it looks. As, in a previous chaptei', we remarked that even five hours of severe, close study, will accomplish a great deal in the way of intel- lectual culture and sermonizing, in the course of years, so we shall find that a half day in each week, will accomplish much in the way of parochial labor, in the lapse of time. The clergyman, like every other man, needs to pay special attention to the particulars, of system, and uniformity, in action. Small spaces of time become ample and great, by being regularly and faithfully emj^loyed. It is because time is wasted so regularly and uniformly, and not because it is wasted in such large amounts at once, that so much of human life runs to waste. Every one is familiar with the story of the author who composed a voluminous work, in the course of his life, by merely devoting to it the ^ve or ten minutes, which he found he must uniformly wait for his dinner, after having been called. Besides these advantages upon the side of the PASTORAL VISITmG. 395 Jergyman, in systematic visiting, there are others upon the side of the congregation. They will be pleased with their pastor's business-like method. They will copy his example, and become a more punctual and systematic people, both secularly and religiously. They will notice that their pastor is a man who lays out his work, and, what is more, does it, and, what is still more, does it thoroughly. They will respect him for it. They will not crowd him, and urge him, as they will a minister who has no system, and who is therefore always lagging in his work. They will not volunteer advice to him, for they will perceive that he does not need any. And, if a parishioner, with more self-confidence than self- knowledge, should take the clergyman to task, and suggest that more pastoral visits would be accept- able, or that fewer would suffice, the systematic pastor can say to him, " The work is laid out for the year ; the campaign is begun, and going on." Again, by this method, the clergyman will avoid all appearance of partiality. One prolific source of difficulty between pastor and people, in this age and country, lies in the suspiciousness of a portion of the people. All men are free and equal, but some are more tormented by the consciousness, than others. This part of society are afraid that their merits are not sufficiently recognized, and are con- stantly watching to see if others are not esteemed more highly than themselves. A true republican feeling is dignified and unsuspicious; but vulgar 396 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. democracy impliedly acknowledges its desert of neglect, by continually apprehending that it is neg- lected. This spirit leads to rivalries and jealousies among a people, and the pastor needs great tact and judgment in managing it. There is no better way of dealing with this temper, if it exists, than to visit a parish systematically. Each family then takes its turn. No person is neglected, and no per- son can claim more than the pre-arranged and pre- determined amount of attention, except for special reasons. The pastor, upon this plan, moves around among his whole people, a faithful, systematic, and impartial man. He is no respecter of persons. He goes to converse with the members of his flock, upon the concerns of their soul, each in his turn. He sees no difference between them, except moral and spii'itual difference. If he takes a deeper inter- est, for the time being, in one of his parishioners, than he does in the rest of them, it is only because the one sinner that repents causes more joy, than the ninety and nine just persons which need no re- pentance. Tlie spiritual condition of this person distinguishes him from, the thoughtless and indiffer- ent mass, and the pastor would rejoice, if his whole parisli might become an object of equally distin- guished attention, for the same reason. 2. Secondly, tke clergyman should visit his con- gregation professionally. The term is employed here, in its technical signification. "When he per- forms strictly parochial labor, let him visit as a PASTOKAL visiTmo. 397 clergyman, and go into a liouse upon a purely and wholly religious errand. Mucli time is vv asted 1)}; the pastor, in merely secular, social intercourse, even when going the rounds of his parish. Ostensibly, lie is about the business of his profession, the care of souls; but really, he is merely acting the part of a courteous and polite gentleman. Even if he gives the subject of religion some attention, it is only at the close of his interview, after secular topics have been discussed. It may be, that he shrinks from a direct address to an individual, upon the concerns of his soul, and therefore, as he thinks, prepares the way, that he may broach the difficult subject indi- rectly. He enters into a general and miscellaneous conversation, and if he comes to the subject of reli- gion at all, it is only late, and after the energy and briskness of the conversation have flagged. More- over, the person to be addressed, is quick to detect this shrinking upon the part of his pastor, and, if really unwilling to be spoken to upon the subject of religion, will adroitly lead the conversation away into other directions. The man who is averse to religious conversation, and who, therefore, specially needs to be directly and plainly addressed, is the last person to be surprised into such a conversation. His eyes are wide open, and the only true way for the pastor, when the proper time for it has come, and the pastoral visit is made, is to look him in the eye, and speak directly and affectionately upon the most momentous of all subjects. 398 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. That lie may visit in this professional manner, the pastor should have an understanding, to this eifeet, v^ith his people. In the very opening of his ministry, let him preach a sermon upon the subject of parochial labor, explaining the nature and pur- pose of this part of the clergyman's duty, and pre- paring the minds of his people, for a strictly profes- sional performance of it. Then, they will expect nothing but religious conversation, when a pastoral visit is made, and will be ready for it. Apprecia- ting the fidelity of their minister, they will be at pains to meet him at their homes. A clergyman who is thus systematic and faithful, soon accustoms his congregation to his own good way of perform- ing duty, so that they not only adjust themselves to his exact and thorough methods, but come to like them. This is by far the most successful mode of reach- ing the individual conscience, in direct religious conversation. We have already alluded to the fact, that the endeavor to introduce the subject of reli- gion indirectly, and imperceptibly, commonly fails, because of the adroitness of the unwilling person addressed. He is quick to detect the shrinking of the clergyman, from the performance of the most difficult part of ministerial duty, and though it may, or may not, result from a sensitive nature, he is very apt to impute it to a false shame. The con- sequence is, that the clergyman loses much of his weight of authority and iniiuence, in the eyes of the PASTOEAL VISITE^G. 399 parishioner, and never gains tlie ascendency over Lim, to whicli he is entitled by his profession and calling, because he does not act up to its privileges and prerogatives. When, therefore, a parochial call is made, let the pastor plunge in medias sacras res. Let him not atttempt to bridge over the chasm between seculari- ties and spiritualities, but let him leap over. He has a right to do so, because it is understood be- tween the parties, what particular subject it is that has brought him into the household. He courteously concedes a few words to ordinary interests, but when this concession is made, he proceeds to the proper business of the occasion. This method brings the subject of the soul, and its needs, before the mind of a parishioner, with a formal authority, that causes him to realize that it is no merely passing and secondary topic. The clergyman does not admit that religion may be introduced side-wise, to his attention. He has come upon purpose, to direct his thoughts to this great concern. And this method relieves both parties from einl^arrassment, or constraint. For, the parishioner is entirely free in the matter. He is not compelled to be a party to the arrangement which brings the clergyman upon a purely religious errand, to himself, and to his house- hold. But if he does voluntarily admit him to personal conversation, in the capacity of a sj)iritual adviser, then he is obligated to let him do his work faithfully, and well. And even the worldly man is 400 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. Letter pleased with this thorough professional deaL ing, than might be supposed at first sight. Even if, owing to the hardness of the heart and the in- tensity of the worldliness, the pastor makes no other impression, he will show, beyond dispute, that he is an earnest and sincere watcher for souls, and iisher of men. The parishioner will say to himself: ^' My pastor understands his work, and performs it with fidelity ; it will not be his fault, if I continue irreligious." It is certain, that this spiritual ear- nestness and love for the human soul, when thus organized into a regular plan of operations, and systematized into regular uniformity, will produce results. Thoughtless men, finding their pastor upon their trail, coming into their families, and to them- selves personally, with a plain and affectionate ad- dress upon'the subject of religion, and nothing else, once in every year or half year, will begin to think of wliat it all means. They will find themselves in a net-work. They will see that they are caught in a process. Their pastor has laid out his work ahead, for many long years, and, if he lives, and they live, they know that the regular motion of the globe will bring him around to them, once in so often. They will come to some conclusion. They will either submit, and subject themselves to these uni- form and persistent influences, or else they will get clear of them altogether. In ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, they will do the former thing, and thus the pastor will be instrumental, by his deter- PASTOEAL visiTma. ■ 401 mined parochial fidelity, in bringing into the church, a great number who would otherwise go through life almost Christians, and die unregenerate. We have advised a systematic visitation of the parish, by districts or neigliborhoods. In case the clergyman is settled among an agricultural popula- tion, widely scattered, he will find this much the easiest, and surest way to communicate with the whole body of his people. His parish is his dio- cese, and he is its bishop. Let him make his visitations throuo-h the whole leu2:th and breadth of it, with the same system and regularity, with which the prelatical bishop makes his annual visi- tation. The pastor should also imitate the method of the prelate, in another respect, and preach in these districts, in connection with his pastoral calls. If he is settled in a city or town, where the main body of the congregation are within a short distance of the church edifice, his public discourses must be in one place. But, if his lot has been cast among an agricultural people, who are scattered (and this is the kind of parish, in which the major- ity of clergymen are appointed to labor), he should preach a free, extemporaneous discourse, in the evening of the day of his visitation. Having gone from house to house, m the manner that has been described, let him wind up the earnest work of pastoral visiting, for the week, with a plain and glowing address to the families df the district, as- sembled at an appointed place. He will find it a 26 402 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. most genial and exhilarating service, upon his own partj and a most interesting and profitable one, upon the part of the people. Enforcing, in a common assemblage, all that he has said in the families, and to the individuals, he will clinch the nails which he has been driving. Pastoral visiting, conducted in the manner de- scribed, is a very efficient aid to the public preach- ing of the Sabbath and the sanctuary. The -p-dro- chial call, combined with the free, extemporaneous lecture, corroborates the sermon. The pastor of this true stamp is the complement of the preacher. He supplies, and fills out, what is lacking, in the strictly public character and functions of the sacred orator. Having, uj^on the Sabbath, and in the Christian temple, logically and elaborately enunciated the principles of the oracles of God, he comes down from the pulpit, and on the week day goes into the private house, and applies the truth to the indi- vidual. The clergyman, is in this way, a complete man, and does a complete work. He is both a preacher and a pastor. If there were space, it would be natural, here, to enlarge upon the reciprocal relations and infiuences of these two clerical functions, particularly with reference to sermonizing. It is obvious, that such a regular, and systematic intercourse with his congre- gation, will fill the mind of the clergyman with sub- jects for sermons, with plans, and methods of treat- ing them, and with trains of reflection. Nothing PASTORAL YisiTma. 403 so kindles and enriches the orator's mind, as living intercourse with individual persons. A preacher who is in the habit of conversing with all grades of society, and becomes acquainted with the great va- rieties in the Christian experience, and the sinful experience, will be an exuberant and overflowing sermonizer. Full of matter, and full of animation, he will vitalize every subject he discusses, no mat- ter how trite it may have become in the minds of others. Passing through the parched valley of Baca, he will make it a well. He will rain upon the driest tract, and the rain will fill the pools. The systematic, and professional manner of visit- ino- his cono-reo-ation recommends itself to the cler- gyman, upon the ground of its great practical usefulness. It is a very sure means of producing conversions and revivals. So far as human agency is concerned, it seems to be the divinely appointed method, of bringing the experience of individuals to that crisis which results in actual conversion. The public preaching of the Sabbath and the sanctuary is formal, logical, and oratorical. It ought to be so. Its general purpose, like that of all eloquence, is to instruct the mind, with a view to move the affec- tions, and actuate the will. But, this practical effect of sacred eloquence does not, commonly, occur imme- diately, and at the close of the discourse. It is in- deed true, that the sermon is sometimes instrumen- tal in conversion, upon the spot, in the house of God. But this is a rare caae. While the secular 404 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. orator, the jurist, or tlie statesman, sees the effect of his eloquence in the verdict or the vote given im- mediately, the sacred orator does not ordinarily see the practical effect of his eloquence, until after many days, it may be months or years. Hence, the need of following up the sermon with the pastoral visit. Hence, the pastor must tread close upon the heels of the preacher. Preaching upon the Sabbath, if it is plain and powerful, produces an imj)ression, which, if it could only be perpetuated, would result in a change of character and conduct. But, occurrin^: at intervals of a week, the effect of sermons is too often evanes- cent, unless it is seconded by other agencies. Hence, the disposition, in some periods and localities, to protracted sermonizing, to a series of public ad- dresses to the popular mind, — a method which, if judiciously employed by the pastor, aided by his ministerial brethren rather than by an evangelist, is often productive of great and good results. With- out in the least disparaging this mode of promoting conversions and revivals, and believing that it is perfectly legitimate and safe to employ it, whenever the craving for additional preaching, upon the part of the people, renders it necessary, we yet insist, that systematic pastoral visiting is the principal means to be relied upon, by the ministry, in order to bring individual men to a crisis, and a decision. When- ever it has been faithfully employ ed, this part of tbe clergyman's service has been rich i n fruits ; and it PxVSTORAL VISITING. 405 is an evil day for the Cliurch, when it is neglected, and more public and mechanical means are adopted in the place of it. Addressing parishioners in per- son, inquiring into their state of mind, telling them plainly and affectionately what their prospects for eternity really are, and what they need in order to salvation, entreating them not to stifle convictions, urging home the truths that have impressed them upon the Sabbath, — doing this work, is the surest way to bring matters to an issue, with the impeni- tent. If the clergyman would see what may be accomplished by pastoral work, let him read Bax- ter's account of his labors at Kidderminster. Few ministers have so large a charge as he had, and few are called to do so much of this service. But the same proportionate laboriousness will produce the same proportionate results. When Baxter first went to Kidderminster, he says, "there was about one family in a street that worshipped God, and called on his name ; and when he came away, there were some streets, where there was not more than one family on the side of a street that did not do so, and that did not, in professing serious godliness, give him hopes of their sincerity." From his own account, this was, in a great measure, the conse- quence of following his people to their homes, and there enforcinsc the lessons of the Sabbath and the sanctuary, catechising the families, and conversing with individuals. The pastor can do nothing more serviceable to his own ministerial power, and influ- 406 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. ence, than to study that account which Baxter gives of his labors as a pastor/ to set up Baxter's zeal and earnestness as a model, to adjust Baxter's plan and method of operations to the state of modern society, and then to make full proof of this part of his ministry. ^ Compare, also, the very in- gow. Hastn'a : Life of Chalmers, teresting narrative given of Chal- Vol. IL, ch. vi. mers's parochial work, at Glas- CHAPTER YI. CATECHISING. The catechising of tlie children and youth in a congregation, is a theme that deserves to be dis- cussed with the comprehensiveness, and precision, of a systematic treatise. In the whole range of topics in Pastoral Theology, there is not one, that has stronger claims upon the attention of the clergy- man, than the doctrinai instruction of the rising gen- eration. Within the the half century, catechising has fallen greatly into disuse. Creeds themselves have been more undervalued, than, in some periods, they have been over-estimated. The consequence is, that the experience of the Church has outrun its knowledge. There are many, undoubtedly experi- mental Christians, who are unable to define the truths of Christianity, either singly, or in their con- nections in the system. They feel more than they reflect, and more than they can state. There is danger in this state of things. The Church cannot advance, it cannot even maintain itself upon its present position, by this theory and methoa of 408 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. religious culture. Experimental religion, without doctrinal knowledge, must deteriorate. Religious feeling will become more superficial, religious zeal more insiDcere, and relis^ious action more fitful and selfish, if the mind of the Church is not obtaining clear and self-consistent conceptions of religious truth. A dead orthodoxy is an evil ; and, so is an ignorant pietism. But there is no necessity for either. Feeling and cognition are not antagonistic, but exist together in the most perfect Being. And only as they co-exist in the renewed mind, is there the highest type of Christian life. Without, how- ever, dwelling upon this part of the subject, we proceed to recommend the practice of catechising children and youth, by considering its influence, first, upon the clergyman himself, and, secondly, upon \heo])le, 1. The habit of imparting catechetical instruc- tion, developes the power of lucid and precise state- ment. The clergyman's theological knowledge is liable to ^e imperfect, in respect to the subtler and sharper distinctions in the Christian system. He apprehends the doctrines in their general scope and dj'ift, but does not draw that thin haii^-line which marks them ofl^ from each other. Some very bitter controversies have arisen from the fact, that the one party distinguished interior differences, used lan- guage with scientific exactness, and stuck to terms, while the other party recognized no differences but external and obvious ones, and employed a loose CATECHisma. 409 phraseology, and even ttis witli no rigorous uni- foi-mity. There is something in the endeavor to convey doctrinal instruction to the human mind, especially when it is in the forming period, that is highly adapted to promote discrimination and clearness. The catechising pastor does not, that is, he should not, confine himself to merely putting the questions and hearing the answers. After the work of reci- ting is through, he then explains to the body of youth gathered before him, the meaning of the phraseology they have learned, and of the truths they have committed to memory. To do this well, and plainly, so that children and youth may under- stand, will draw upon the clergyman's nicest dis- crimination, the choicest portion of his vocabulary, and his most pertinent illustrations. It is often asserted, that it is impossible for children to under- stand the creed, — that the doctrines of justification, sanctification, and election, are too strong meat for babes. The difficulty lies rather in the teacher, than in the capacity of the pupil, or in the in- trinsic nature of the doctrine. He has only a vague and general apprehension of revealed truth, and has never trained himself to make luminous and exact statements of it. Any clergyman who is master of Christian theology, and who thor- oughly understands the creed and catechism, will be able to make the youth of his congregation understand it also, as others have done before 410 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. him. And this endeavor will bring out into clear and definite forms of statement, those great ideas and truths of Christianity, which lie large but vague in too many minds. That clergyman who is in the habit of catechising, will know exactly what his own creed is, and can phrase it in language and illustrations intelligible to children and youth. 2. A second effect of catechising upon the clergyman is, to render his views in theology de- cided. The importance of decision in theological opinions was remarked upon in a previous chapter, and it was affirmed that the study of creeds is one of the best means of acquiring it. He who is able to adopt a creed cordially, because he perceives and feels its intrinsic truthfulness, will be a positive man. It is plain, therefore, that all this work of teaching a creed, tends to determination and firm- ness of theoloo-ical character. Catechisino^ is, in reality, the intensely practical study of systematic theology, in the endeavor to transmute the dogmas of religion into the thoughts and feelings of the youthful mind. As man becomes a little child, in order to enter the kingdom of truth, so, in this pro- cess, the kingdom of truth becomes a little child. The creed is incarnated in the little children. While imparting this catechetical instruction, there- fore, the clergyman becomes more profoundly certain of the truth of Christianity. He finds it more and more impossible to doubt it. He grows more and more positive in his views and affirma- OATECHISUSTG. 411 tions, and gradually acquires that Scriptural bold- ness whicli causes Mm to speak with authority. Finding a response to the Evangelical system, in the heart and mind of childhood and youth, and hear- ing the testimony of the most sincere and unso- phisticated period of human life respecting it, the catechising clergyman matures into the most Tindoubting and impregnable of men. 3. A third effect of catechising, upon the clergy- man, is to assure him of the harmony of revelation and reason. It may at first sight seem strange, to recommend the doctrinal instruction of children and youth, as a means of attaining to the true philosophy of religion. Nothing is more common, in the skeptic, than to speak of the creeds of the Christian Church, as at the very farthest remove from rationality. He is, generally, a little more willing to allow that the Scriptures are reconcilable with reason, than that the theological system which an Augustine, or a Calvin, derived from them, is. But, he has a design in this. The Calvinistic creed is definite. It is impossible to make it teach more than one system. There is no dispute, except among disingenuous men, in respect to what Calvinism really is. The Bible, on the other hand, is not a creed or a system, though it contains one. But what this system ac- tually is, is the point in regard to which Churches and theologians are disputing ; and hence, the skep- tic is more ready to concede the general rationality of the Bible, than he is that of a particular system, 412 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. like tlie Calvinistic, for example, "because lie can im- mediately append to his admission respecting Fhe Scriptures, the qualifying remark, that it is yet an open question what the Scriptures really teach. This addition is a saving clause for him, and his skeptical purposes. It has, moreover, passed over into the religious world, in the form of a feeling, and hence, we sometimes hear good men disparaging the creed, even the creed of their own Church, and advising, in a controversy with the infidel, to have as little as possible to do with doctrinal theology. There never was a greater error than this. For, what is a creed, but a generalization from the Scrip- tures? The Westminster symbol, for example, is the scientific substance of E-evelation, in the view of the divines of the Westminster Assembly. That assembly was composed of the most learned, and reflecting men, of the Church of Christ in England, at that time. It embodied the philosophic mind of the Church, in that country, and century. If there was no scientific talent in the Westminster As- sembly, then there was none in England. And that assembly aimed to give to the churches that had called them together, a systematic statement of the contents of Revelation, or, in other words, a philo- sophical exhibition of the Scriptures, in a creed. It \vas their purjDose, to present the fundamental truths of Christianity, not in a popular oratorical manner, but in a self-consistent and compact form* that should commend itself to the reason and judgment of man- CATECHISIlS^a. 413 kind. If, tlierefore, there be any rationality in tlie Christian religion, any philosophy of Christianity, it is most natural to seek for it in the carefully con- structed symbol ; and hence, the clergyman, instead of conceding to the infidel that the catechism is in- defensible at the bar of reason, ouo-ht to refuse the concession instantaneously and always, and to join issue with him, and try the point. In so doing, he will certainly have one advantage which we have al- ready hinted at, namely, the distinctness and definite- ness of the creed ; and if the position which we have taken be correct, that the creed is the philosophical analysis of the contents of Revelation, by the philo- sophic mind of the Church, he will have the still further advantage, of the rationality of the creed. Hence we affirm, that the habit of studying the catechism, in order to teach it to youthful minds, conduces to the clergyman's perception of the unity of reason and religion.^ The longer he studies and teaches the creed, the more unas- sailable does his conviction become, of its abso- lute rationality. He finds it commending itself to the frank and unsophisticated reason of the young. He sees the ingenuous mind responding to its statements concerning God and man, with that artless spontaneousness which is the strongest ^It is a fact of history, that the knowledge of Christianity to the scientific theology of the Church more cultivated catechumens, at took its first beginnings, in the Alexandria. Compare Gueeioke : endeavor to impart an advanced Church History, § 59. 4:14: PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. of evidences for the trutli. " It is tlie most beauti- ful mark of tlie excellency of a doctrine," says Herder, " that it instructs a child." That which is welcomed by the open, unbiased nature of child- hood, is certainly true. For, if there be any pure reason, as Kant phrases it, among mankind, it is in children and youth. During this period in human life, reason shows itself in an instinctive, recipient and docile form, and responds more immediately and imhesitatingly to the voice of truth, than at an after period, when it has become better acquainted with error, and more or less sophisticated and blunt- ed by it. There may be a deeper meaning than appears upon the face of our Saviour's words, " Except ye receive the kingdom of heaven as little children, ye shall not enter therein." He may have also taught a lesson to the philosopher, and have meant to say, in addition to what we commonly understand by these words, " Except ye open your rational nature to the truth, with that freedom from prejudice and that docile recipiency which marks the child, ye can never apprehend it." 1. Passing to the second division of the subject, namely, the influence of catechising upon the con- gregation, we remark, in the first place, that it re- sults in the indoctrination of the adults. We do not now refer to adults who were once the children and youth of a pastor's charge, but to such as have more recently come under a clergyman's ministry. In a long pastorate, the adult population becomes CATECHISmG. 415 indoctrinated, as a matter of course, in case the pas tor begins to cateclaise at the opening of his minis- try. But besides this, the practice of catechising tends to the indirect spread of doctrinal knowledge, among those who are not the immediate objects of its influence. Uncatechised parents are uncon- sciously affected by their catechised children. Un- catechised adults, imperceptibly, learn to set a justei estimate upon the systematic doctrines of Chris- tianity, through their intercourse wdth catechised youth. The creed of the Church is more respected among the congregation, in case it is taught and explained to the children and youth. The pastor who is faithful in the performance of this duty, will see adults coming into the catechetical exercise, as listeners. Parents, whose early religious educa- tion was neglected, will accompany their children, not from mere curiosity, but from a desire to obtain a knowledge of the Word of God, which they value in their children, and of which they are conscious of being too destitute, themselves. In these, and other ways, doctrinal knowledge will radiate from the class of catechumens, into the whole body of an adult population whose catechetical education w^as neglected, both by their parents, and their minister. 2. Secondly, catechising the youth of a parish protects them against infidelity and spurious phi- losophy. A well-indoctrinated person can state the fundamental truths of Christianity in exact phrase- 416 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. ology, can specify their connections in a system and tlieir relations to eacli other, can quote tlie texts of Scripture whicli prove them, and, in proj)ortion as his pastor has been thorough with him as a cate- chumen, can maintain and defend them in an aro-u- ment with an opposer. One thus discij^lined is pre-occupied, fore-warned, and fore-armed. The skeptic cannot, as he can and does in case he is ar- guing with the uninstructed, mis-state and caricature the truth. The catechumen will set him right, by citing to him the well-weighed and precise phrase- ology of the creed; and this rectification in the outset, of an incorrect statement, always gravels the infidel, whether his mis-statement originates in a real or a pretended ignorance. A well-trained youth, in a contest with an ordinary skeptic, soon ceases to act upon the defensive. The unbeliever soon discovers that he is dealinsr with a mind that knows where it is, and what it is about, and is wil- ling to give over a contest which he began not from any love of the truth, or any desire of finding it, but solely from a mischievous, and really malig- nant wish, to undermine the religious belief of an ingenuous youth. ^ Again, there is no preservative against philoso- phy falsely so called, so effectual as a doctrinal education. The youth, and especially the reading and literary youth, of a congregation, are liable to be misled by sjDurious science, because it is preten- tious and assuming. They have not yet reached CATECHISING. 417 " the years which bring the philosophic mind," — to employ the phrase of Wordsworth. The genuine philosophic spirit is a thing of slow growth. The truly scientific mind adopts its philosophy, which is no other than its method of looking at things, with great circumspection, judgment, and deliberation. The immature understanding is exposed to great mistakes, in the formation and adoption of opinions in philosophy, and hence the great influence which a showy, pretentious, and utterly unscientific scheme sometimes exerts over the young men of a nation, or an age. The counterfeit science comes up before the youthful intellect, like Comus to the lady, with an insolence that is never seen in genuine philoso- phy, and attempts to carry it, by rudely bearing down upon it. It is both confident and contemptu- ous in its tone, and too often, like the ari'ogant and impudent adventurer in general society, succeeds in imposing upon the unpractised and untaught. But he who has received, from the mind of a learned and ^ thoughtful clergyman, a thorough grounding in the principles and truths of Christian- ity, is the last one to be taken captive by a false system of speculation. He sees through it, and is not deceived by its pretensions. He is not thus to be irresistibly borne down, by its imposing appear- ance. Socrates is represented by Plato as remark ing, that nothing so speedily disposes of a showy and sounding system, like that of the Sophists, as a cool and deliberate examination of it. A big bell, 27 418 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. he saySj booms out a great noise, but place only one single finger firmly upon the bell, and the sound whieli is going out into all the earth, will stop. A youth who understands the scheme of Christianity, and has been made deliberative and reflecting, by the catechism, will examine a preten- tious system before he adopts it, and, especially, be- fore he surrenders his religious belief for the sake of adopting it. In the present condition of society, there is great need of catechetical instruction, in order to protect the rising generation from infidelity in the form of false philosophy. Unbelief does not now adopt the open, and comparatively manly method of the last century. The English deists did not pretend to be Christians, but attacked Christianity with all their force. The French infidels did the same, only with more virulence and hatred. But the infidel of the present day, claims to be only a more philosophic and advanced Christian. Skepticism now repre- sents itself as the refinement, and inmost essence, of Christianity. The infidel schools in England and America deny the charge of unbelief They afiSrm that they are themselves the highest of believers, and have a mission to lift up the general mass of Christians, to a higher, even the highest, religious position. Their system does not contain so much truth as that of the English deists, neither is it as consistently constructed, nor as clearly expressed ; but instead of allowing it to pass for what it is, CATECHISmG. 419 these pantheistic and materializing skeptics attempt to palm it off, as the permanent residuum of truth, after the Biblical and ecclesiastical elements have been purged out, as dross. The ministry cannot protect the cultivated youth of their care, from these artifices of unbelief, by de- crying philosophy in the abstract. This only ren- ders them suspicious, and strengthens their doubts, if they have any, respecting the rationality and phi- losophic necessity of the Christian faith. A clergy- man should never vilify a legitimate department of human knowledge, and philosophy is such. His true method is, to guide the inquiring mind into the very science of Christianity, as it is presented in the creed, and thereby enable it to see, beyond dispute, that the truths of Revelation are excellent in them- selves, and in their influence ; that they exhibit worthy views of the Divine character, — representa- tions of the holiness, justice, mercy, wisdom, truth, and power of God, that are intuitively rational ; that in respect to man's character (a point which usually troubles the skeptic, for he is more solici- tous about imputations upon man, than upon God), the statements in the catechism are questions of fact, and may be verified by every man's conscious- ness, — let the clergyman, in brief, fill the mind of the catechumen with the conviction, that the Chris- tian system, as laid down in the doctrinal standards, is the absolute and ultimate religion for man, and he may then leave him to deal with infidelity, and 420 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. spurious philosophy, by himself. Instead of being made ashamed of Christianity, and of his Christian education and belief, by the tone of the scorner, the pastor himself may, perhaps, have to guard his pupil against a too intense contempt for the shal- lowness of skepticism, and remind him, that he that thinketh he standeth must take heed lest he fall. It is certain, that if the rising generation could only receive such a catechetical and doctrinal edu- cation as we are describing, from the pastorate of the land, infidelity and false philosophy would find it difficult to draw breath, in such a pure iiitelr lectual atmosphere as would exist for the next fifty years, to say nothing of the moral and religious atmosphere that would be generated. 3. A third effect of catechetical instruction upon the congregation, is to promote a better understand- ing of the Word of God. The youth of this coun- try, during the last half century, have committed much of the Bible to memory. The Sabbath-School has made the present generation of both parents and children, familiar with the contents of Revela- tion ; but we are inclined to think, that this mass of material is somewhat lacking in system, and or- ganization. It is not sufficient to learn by rote, independent passages and isolated texts of Scrip- ture ; they ought to be made to teach some truth, and establish some doctrine, and ultimately be systematized into a body of theology. It is an error, to study the Bible without generalizing its CATECHisrN^a. 421 teachings, and acquiring some conceptior of it as a whole. Single unconnected texts are oftentimes dangerous lialf-truths, or positive untruths. Noth- ing but the power and impression of isolated pas- sages of Scripture, keeps Universalism in existence. Tne moment that that denomination shall begin to understand, and interpret, the contents of the Bible as a self-consistent wJiole^ it will begin to die. "Texts of Scripture," says Donne, "are like the hairs in a horse's tail. Unite them, and they con- cur in one root of strength and beauty ; but take them separately, and they can be used only as snares and springs to catch woodcocks." The pastor should, therefore, combine catechet- ical with Sabbath-School instruction. While he enlists the active zeal of his best educated parish- ioners, in the Sabbath -School, he should show his own deep interest in this excellent institution, by personally generalizing its teachings, in the catechet- ical exercise, and thereby putting the crown upon its influence. The pastor who thus completes the work of the Sabbath-School teacher, will raise up a generation of exceedingly intelligent Biblical schol- ars. It was once said of a very learned, and at the same time very logical, jurist, that his learning was continually passing from his memory into his judg- ment. His acquisitions were not merely passively held, but w^ere used for the argumentative purposes of his profession. In like manner, the indoctrina- tion of Sabbath-School scholars causes the contents 4:22 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. of tlie memory to pass over into tlie reason and the judgment, and makes all the texts and passages that have been learned, subservient to an intelligent and self-consistent religious belief Indeed, to borrow an illustration from the Kantean philosophy, the catechism does with the memorized contents of Scripture, what the understanding, by its categories, does with the passive contents of the sense. It reduces the scattered and manifold elements to compactness and unity, and converts the large and distracting variety of items into distinct f jrms and clear conceptions, so that the mind can take this great number of particulars all in at once, and feel their single and combined impression. The catechism enables the pupil to feel the force of the whole Bible, and of the Bible as a whole. 4. A fourth effect of catechisinof, is to render the youth of a congregation more intelligent hearers of preaching. One reason why preaching is uninter- esting to youth, is the fact, that they carry no clue to it in their minds. They do not see any very close connection between the sermon, and any thing within themselves. No one can l)e intei'ested in a discourse, unless he perceives the drift and bearing of it;^ and in order to this, he roust carry within 'Tliis supposes, of course, that berry, in a recent nuitiber of a the sermon has a drift and bear- popuhir monthly magazine, repre- ing. In some quarters, however, sents a certain pulpit celebrity as this unity and self-consistence is having introduced a new era in thought to be a defect, in sacred sermonizing, by showing how to eloquence. For example, a Dog- deliver discourses that ''Edwards CATEcmsma. 423 himself some kind of internal correspondent to it. Now, the mental correspondent to an excellent ser- mon, is an excellent scheme of Christian doctrine, in the mind of the hearer. When this exists, the sermon has a reference, and an easy reference ; and the mind possesses a key that unlocks it, a clue or magic thread which leads it along through the whole performance. This is the reason w^hy clergy- men are better auditors, generally, than laymen. They have more of the inward correspondent to the sermon, — more knowledge of the Christian sys- tem. It is plain, therefore, that, just in proportion as the pastor indoctrinates the youth of his charge, he is making good auditors for himself He will find the youth, who is generally too little interested in preaching, looking up to the pulpit with as keen an eye as any of his hearers, and with a more tender and susceptible heart. 5. A fifth effect of catechising, is to induce seri- ousness among the youthful part of the congrega- tion. There is such a correspondency between truth and the reasonable soul of man, that reflection naturally results in a grave temper. This is seen and Voltaire, Whitefield and like pulpit eloquence, which re- Thomas Paine, would heartilj quires scientific training, and pro- and equally enjoy " ! Itisimpos- fessional culture, and at least a sible, since the invention of print- little faith in the Christian reli- ing, and with the freedom and gion, in order to its comprehen* cheapness of the press, to prevent sion, are as worthless as they the shoemaker from going beyond would be in regard to the calcu- liis last. But such judgments of lus itself. a mere litterateur^ upon a subject 424 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. even in fhe sphere of secular knowledge. Tlie men of science, — the studious mathematician, the curi- ous and analyzing chemist, the gazing astronomer, — are seriously disposed. Study casts a shadow. This is still more true, in the province of morals and religion. He who meditates upon divine truth, may not be so changed by it as to become a new creature in disposition and feeling, but he will be sobered by it. He has no option. His rational mind was created to be influenced by the great truths of God and eternity, and it is true to its construction, to the extent of being made serious, though not necessarily to the extent of being made holy. Just so far, consequently, as a pastor brings the doctrines of Christianity to bear upon the youthful mind, does he solemnize it. For they are the most serious of all themes of reflection, and throw a deeper shadow over a frivolous and volatile spirit, than all other truths ; and this is one reason why the worldly and the gay shun them, as they do the house of mourning and the grave-yard. The pastor can take no course so effectual, against that giddy levity which so infects the younger portion of society, as to imbue it with evauQ-elical ideas. Such knowleds^e elevates the mind, and this mental elevation is opposed to the emptiness and littleness of fashionable life. If an intellectual person does not avoid the l)all-room from any higher motive, he is very apt to, from the lower motive of self-respect. He is too literary to CATECHIsmG. 425 dance. The same feeling, in kind, that keeps the philosopher, and the thoughtful man of science, from the rounds of fashionable life, keeps him from them. In this manner, the high religious education which we are recommending, makes its power felt through that younger portion of community which so often gives tone to society, and prepares the way for the more decisive and actually converting effects of Divine truth. 6. And this suggests as the sixth effect of cate- chising, that it results in frequent conversions. The Spirit of God is the Spirit of truth. Hence that mind which is saturated with the teachings of Reve- lation, contains something with which the Divine energy can work. It is indeed true, tliat the in- doctrinated natural man is as really averse to God and holiness, as the unindoctrinated. The carnal will is the same, whether within the pale of Christendom or out of it, and the necessity of Divine influences, in order to its renewal, is as great in one instance, as the other. But, he who has acquired a clear theoretical apprehen- sion of the doctrines of Christianity, is much more likely to be the subject of special and efficacious grace, than is the pagan, or the unin- structed nominal Christian. There may be as much perversity and obstinacy of will, as worldly and sinful affections, in the catechised as in the uncate- chised youth, but there is also an amount of truth m the mind of the former, which is not in the 426 PASTOEAL THEOLOGY. latter. This truth is God's truth. God the Spirit finds His own word congruous with His own agency, and therefore acts with it, and by it. The Holy Ghost, like the Redeemer, " comes to His own," and " His own " are the doctrines of revelation. Hence, conversions may be expected with more frequency among an indoctrinated, than among an unindoctri- nated population. God honors His own revelation. The human mind is not worthy of honor from the Eternal, but the truth lodged in it is worthy ; and God says to the preacher, as He did to the children of Israel, " It is not for your sake, but for my truth's sake, and my name's sake, that I bestow the bles- sing." 7. A seventh and final effect of catechising, is that it results in genuine conversions. Knowledge is favorable to thoroughness in mental exercises, generally. The surest way to prevent hypocrisy or self-deception, is to cause the light of truth to shine into the mind. Give a youth, or a man, cor- rect conceptions of the holiness of God, and the spirituality and extent of the Divine law, and you take the most direct means of preventing a spurious religious experience. He may not come to a genu- ine experience, but he will not be liable to rest in a false one. He may not become a Christian, but neither will he rank himself with Christians. His orthodox head will be likely to keep him out of the visible Church, until he is really fit to join it. But, besides this negative effect, catechising tends diiectly OATECHisma. 427 to a deep and wide religious experience. Chris- tian character matures rapidly, when the mind is leavened with evangelical truth, and it is developed symmetrically, because the fundamental doctrines have been, studied in their connections in a system. These co-ordinated truths regulate and shape the experience, so that one grace or quality is not neg- lected for the sake of another. The Christian character is developed, and compacted, by that which every doctrine supplies, making increase of the whole in true and beautiful proportions. These, then, are the principal reasons, why the practice of catechising children and youth should be repristinated in the American Churches. It is the hope, and perhaps somewhat too much the boast, that the American Republic is called to per- form a great work in the evangelization of the globe. It will not be either inclined or able to do this, unless it is itself a deeply thoughtful and pro- foundly religious nation. It would be a most hope- ful indication, if the intense interest which the American feels in politics, could be transferred to theology, and that wide acquaintance with govern- ment, which marks him, might be equalled, and ex- ceeded, by his knowledge of the purposes and plans of Grod in Redemption. Would that the laws and principles, the ideas and doctrines, of the Christian religion, might be, for the new power that is rising in the West, what the civil law, and the political constitution, were, for imperial Rome in the East. 428 PASTORAL THEOLOGY. " The Komans, in their best days, made ev^ery school- boy learn by heart the Twelve Tables, and the Twelve Tables were the catechism of Roman public and private law, of their constitution, and of the 23roud jus Quiritium that led the Roman citizen to pronounce so confidently, as a vox et invocation his civis Momdnus sum^ in the most distant corners of the land, and which the captive Apostle collectedly asserted twice before the provincial officers. Cicero says that when he was a boy, he learned the Twelve Tables ut carmen necessariuin^ like an indispensable formulary, a political breviary, and deplores that at the time when he was composing his treatise on the Laws, in which he mentions the fact, the prac- tice was fallinsr into disuse."^ Such ou^-ht to be the interest taken in the Christian faith, by a people like the American, the foundations of whose gov- ernment were laid in the truths of Revelation, and all of whose early history was religious. Upon the clergy, it mainly depends, whether systematic reli- gion, or systematic infidelity, shall be the future car- men necessarium of the multiplying millions on this continent. Sir Joshua Reynolds, in the last of his Lectures before the Royal Academy, thus expresses his sense of the importance of the study of the works, and spirit, of the mightiest and greatest of artists : " I should desire that the last words which I should pronounce in this Academy, and from this ^Liebee: Inaugural Discourse before Columbia College. CATECHISr^G. 429 place, miglit be tlie name of Michael Angelo." In closing tliese brief chapters upon Pastoral Theology, we feel deeply, that there is not a topic of greater importance than this subject of catechising; and the last words we should desire to address a young clergyman, as he is going forth to his life-long labor, would be an exhortation to make full proof of that part of his ministry, to which belongs the indoctrination of the rising generation, in the truths and principles of the Christian Religion. THE END. I Date Due ir Vr, , »e^ ^00^1^^' PPIP' •QU.J-dj-.'f^ !StSr^'' .J^^^j^ff ■^^* ^^^^^fStM^^^ i i i ^ •