F 185 .K74 Copy 1 ^^ S E R M T h: E T "^ '"S "Shall there not then. I pray thee be given to thy servant two nniles' l.urdcn of earth?" — II Kinyg, chap. 5, vene 17. Preaciied in Aid of the " Jacobins cf Maryland." 8Y 8£v. mm mm, i. C.ALTiMOKF.; r il 1 .N T i^: I) Y OH T H E A {' F ii ii F 185 .K74 Copy 1 S E R M N r^a^ n cr-< "Shall there not then, I pray thee be given to thy serv:uit t>vo uniU's' LurJc!! of earth?" — JI KiJif/s, chnp. 5, verse 17. Preached in Aid of the " Jacobins cf Maryland." BY R£V. mm KNOK, L, CALTliMOlIF; P 11 i .N T E i) FOB. T H K A K t h O R . s E n M () isr " Shiill there not, tlieii, I pray thee, be given to thy servant two mules' Imnleii of earth ?" — IlKinga, chap. V., oer. 17. My Hearers : Consider the case of this manwlio puts so oxtiaordiiinry •^ question to Elijah. He was Lieutenant General of Assyria. In those day.'^ when might made right, and there were no newspapeis to speak of the writ of Itabeas corpus, he held no slight power. He was, however, though he wore the royal favors, under all his military decorations, a loatlisonre leper. He had tried all the quack doctors and quack prophets of his country, but in vain he cried " out damned spot. ' Slowly the disease enlarged its fatal circles, and his future seemed fated to he spent among tlie caverns of Assyria— the companion of disgusting outcasts^ — picking his steps among the whitened hones of those who in the ages had })rec(H]ed him there. The little captive girl brings him words of cheer. He a)>- pears before the Prophet. He follows his directions, washes and is healed. With a heart over-burdened with joy, he is ready to bestow blessing and wealth upon the austere old man. His i(b)la- trous opinions are changed. ''Now I know,"' cried he, " that there is no (^^jd in all the earth but in Israel," and, in the strong determination of a soldiers will, he declares, "Thy servant will henc«;ibrth offer neither burnt offering nor sacrifice unto other gods. but unto the Lord. ' Dotibdcss the old })i-o[)hct saw with gladness tlie frauk (Miiotion ot Naaman, but lie said notliinir in commendation, and so the general mounts his chariot to he gone. He is about to return to his house healed. The joy of his Avife,-whoni yesterday he was forced to shun, but now may kiss, t'le prattling boy, leader in future of Assyria's hosts, on his knee, these make bright pictures in his imagination. Bnt o'c the chariot had rolled a few yards a fearful shadow darkens Naanian's brow. His joy is gone. He remembers the idolatrous opinions of his countrymen. He holds an official rank and position which any disregard of public sen- timent may endanger. He may be thought a miserable Pie- brew, a mudsill Jcav, if he dare express at home the noble sentiment he uttered to Elijah. Oh, gigantic struggle of the human heart I The soldier who would have faced the com- bined enemies of Assyria w^ith joy, and eagerly braved death in her cause, whimpers to the prophet these words : "' In this thing the Lord pardon thy servant," (notwith- standing what I have just said about burnt offering and sacrifice.) "■ When my master goeth into the (idolatrous) temple of Kimmon to worship there," (the great idol which Assyrians worship,) "and he leaneth upon my hand," (as state ceremony required,) "and when he boAvs I bow myself in the House of Kimmon, when I bow myself in the House of Rimmon the Lord pardon thy servant in this thing." All the manly determination to worship the Glod that healed him liad fled. The courage of the soldier had oozed out in face of ti\e tyranny of public opinion, and however, he believed secretly there was no God but in Israel, puhlicly, for popu- larity, for the sake of his office, to keep his position in so- ciety, that royalty might keep hold of his hand, he must pretend to be an idolater. Though he knew the image in the House of Rimmon to be a great wooden thing, his pusi- laminity and cowardice overcame him, soldier as he was, and in the twinkling of an eye, from the joyous, frank, brave warrior, praising the God of his deliverance, a solitary flash 'this hour of battle for truth what their master said, " lie tlijj,t hath no sword let him sell his garment and buy one." Men who bow their head to Ilimmon in pofitical storms, and to the God of the prophet in personal distress and leprosy. In grief let us pass them. But what did Naaman do with the dirtT^ He is set forth to us in this story a scriptural examj^le of a pusilanimous sneak. Brave before the people. A veritable States' Plights man wlien he cried in his indignation, "• Are not Parphar and Abanar, rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel," but in opposition to public opinion, in moral con- tests, in effort to overthrow untruth, in hostility to error and a publicly professed lie, a miserable conservative and coward. What did Naaman do with the dirt? He ate it! As every cowardly, pusilanimous "■ conserva- tive " has done since who has loved ease more than healtliy strife, error than hard won truth, slavery than God decreed freedom. God grant that a less quantity may serve such of you, in your humiliation and disgrace, as bring open sacrifice in this day to the temple of liimmon.