S5-5 THE SPOILER SPOILEn. A. SERMOlSr PR£A.CH£ID IN THE FREE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHES OF NESHANOCK AND HOPEWELL, THURSDAY, JUNE 1st, 186 J. BY REV, J. C. BI#GHAM. PUBLISHED BY THE CONGREGATIO>f. ■ • ^ ♦ MEBCEB.' Printed at the Office of tUe AVliig aud DiapnUh. ^^tr- THE SPOILER SPOILED. ^' IVoe to ihec that spoilest, and thou wast not sj)oiledj and dealest treacherously/ f and they dealt not treacherously icith thee^ when thou shall cease to spoil, thou shalt he spoiled, and when thou shalt make an end to deal treacherously, they shall deal trearh^ erously with thee'' — IsAlAH, XXXIII : 1. "I do Dot believe that the Bible is a revelation from GoJ, and having read it carefully, 1 confess that I cannot tell where it came from/' Such is the recent confession of one whose landmarks were swept away by the tide of spurious religion which almost eugultcd our country, and made a slave-holder's rebellion possible. God is tearing up the foundations, alike of skepticism and fraud- ulent Christianity, by writing the woeb of the Bible in the history of proud oppressors,"^ and by stretching out his arms in pity and deliverance to the poor. He has lifted the veil of mystery, and we look right down into the habitations of horrid cruelty. We see the spoiler and the spoiled, the treacherous dealer, and those who have been treacherously dealt with. VVe have felt the relentless blows of the traitor's hand upon ourselves, — a hand made strong in its treason against humanity, by our encouragement and iorbeyrance. We have been long acquainted with its spirit, but not until we felt its blows, did we know its accumulated power. The elave bowed beneath it, and we called him menial ; we did him wrong, he needed a helping hand ; God gave it to him, and he rose and helped to deliver \i3. The history of slavery has ever been one of treason, fraud and barbarism. It has defrauded millions of liberty, light, property, family relations, everything on earth that is desirable. Its vic^ tims by millions lie buried and forgotten in the desolated fields, and in- the swamps and wilderness of the South, In heroic endurance, in patient suffering, each hopeless generation passed away. Their .<;hains were their only heirloom, parents lived to see them securely 4 THE SPOILER SPOILED. fastened upon the limbs of their children, to bathe and rust them with their tears, then joyfully retired to rest in their humble graves. Now and then a bold spirit like ''Nat Turner/' would strike and break himself against the iron sceptre of the mighty despot, but, "'on the side of the oppressor there was power, and they had no comforter." The joke grew heavier with every effort that was made to break it, the taskmasters increased their burdens, flayed the weak or stubborn, as examples at the whipping post, burned the rebellious at the stake, chased the fugitives, and allowed them to be torn ia pieces by blood-hounds, and the ^'Hunker" of olden times, the in^ cipient Northern disloyalist of the present, exclaimed, ''cease from your agitation, it only makes the slave's condition worse/' The same spirit, even in what were called peaceful days, mobbed and murdered hundreds of citizens who onlj presumed to question its rightfulness and authority. Long ago Lovejoy died a martyr, Richard Dillingham, an Ohio quaker, perished in a 3Iis3issippi prison, for daring to sympathize with the spoiled. Fairbanks in Kentucky, and Samuel Green in Maryland, were held fast prison- ers until liberated by the progress of the war, because they loved humanity. It shed the blood of hundreds in Kansas, kidnapped her free citizens, and let them die in Missouri jails, endeavored to drive out every man who loved liberty, made it a capital crime to speak against slavery, strove to strike down the right of petition, and freedom of debate in the Congress of the United States, chal^ lecged to duel every man who dared to lift his voice against its presumptuous claims, made it a high crime to give a cup of cold water or a crust of bread to their fleeing victims, even in our own homes. It silenced most of the pulpits of our country, and en- deavored to prostitute the word of God into its foul support. The leading men of the rebellion received high salaries, and occupied emioent places in the government, while they were bend- ing every effort of their lives for its overthrow. A solemn oath had no binding force upon the conscience ot traitors. Why should a man shrink from the crime of perjury who makes light of the crime of treason ? It was a little thing for them to rob the armory and treasury of the nation, scatter its vessels of war, conspire to take the President's life before he should reach the Capital, and openly attack the government in the hour of its supposed helpless- ness, for with their uplifted right band they had sworn allegiance to its Constitution, while in their perjured hearts they were already planning how most effectually to destroy it. When the war began there were traitors in every department of the government, all over the country great organizations were la- boring for its overthrow, railroad bridges were burned, trains of c;iis ladened with soldiers were thrown from the track, and masked Datterics were erected almost in reach of the Capital ^nE SPOILER SPOILED. As the war progressed wounded and helpless men were murdered on the battle field, ornaments were made of the bones of Uniou soldierg, left unbaried where they fell, tens of thousands perished by starvation in Southern prisons, and last of all, when ruin stared them in the face, when their guilty cause was hopeless, they mur^ dered the President, who in this hour of their extremity, as in- deed, from the beginning, was the best friend they had on earth. Thus the spoiler spoiled ; thus the treacherous dealer dealt treacherously. For long years they spoiled with impunity, the rich and powerful were on their side, those who opposed them in wickedness were few, and feeble, and despised. Now they are scattered before God, they are driven away like smoke, as wax melteth before the lire, so do they perish from the presence of the Lord. Their sword is entered into their own flesh, and their bows are broken. We have met to. day in accordance with the proclamation ot our new President. It tells us that, ''our country has become one great house of mourning, the head of the family being taken away." And in order to mitigate that grief on earth, which can only be assua^^ed by communication with the Father in Heaven, ''Thi3 day i? observed wherever in the United States the flag of the eountry is respected, as a day of humiliation and mourning," and we are called upon to "unite in solemn service to Almighty God, in memory of the good man who has been removed." Mr. Lincoln was the President of the people. He removed the rubbish of aristocracy that had been gradually gathering around the Presidential ofiice, and brought it back again to simple familiarity with the masses; working men wrote to him letters of encourage- ment, and received from him kind appreciative words in reply. His mode of thought and expression corresponded with theirs, and every sentence he uttered was at once understood. His strong, clear common sense made the gilding of rhetoric superfluous. With him, words were the reprsentatives of ideas. Never did _ ho "sue- ceed in saying nothing" The art of deception was not his. He had imbibed the political notions of the people, corrupted and prostituted by the influence of Slavery, as was the politica of the nation. The holding of slaves was by almost common consent, a constitutional right. The Fugitive Slave Act was constitutional. Whoever opposed either, or hinted that there is a higher law was a "sickly sentimentalist," and "impracticable theorist," or an im-. pertinent meddler." Every officer bowed before this all-powerful, and relentless Moloch, and swore to protect its rights, and faith- fully do its bidding. There is an inexpressible sense of relief in the knowledge that all this is past. The Fugitive Slave Law is dead, and Slavery has ceased to exist under the old constitution, unamended. Under the stern discipline of God's Providence, Abraham Lin- G THE SPOIL Ell SPOILED. coin was proparnl in twenty months to do ns ^reat J\n act as man is ever permitted to do on earth. As the rnler of thirty millions of people, the chosen instrument of the God of nations, on the first; day of January, eighteen hundred and sixty