Parochial and Plain sermons

 I

 Sermon 1. Holiness Necessary for Future Blessedness Holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord. Hebrews xii. 14.

 Sermon 2. The Immortality of the Soul What shall a man give in exchange for his soul? Matt. xvi. 26.

 Sermon 3. Knowledge of God's Will without Obedience If ye know these things, happy are ye if ye do them. John xiii. 17.

 Sermon 4. Secret Faults Who can understand his errors? Cleanse Thou me from secret faults. Psalm xix. 12.

 Sermon 5. Self-Denial the Test of Religious Earnestness Now it is high time to awake out of sleep. Rom. xiii. 11.

 Sermon 6. The Spiritual Mind The kingdom of God is not in word, but in power. 1 Cor. iv. 20.

 Sermon 7. Sins of Ignorance and Weakness Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil cons

 Sermon 8. God's Commandments not Grievous This is the love of God, that we keep His commandments and His commandments are not grievous. 1 John v. 3

 Sermon 9. The Religious Use of Excited Feelings The man out of whom the devils were departed besought Him that he might be with Him but Jesus sent h

 Sermon 10. Profession without Practice When there were gathered together an innumerable multitude of people, insomuch that they trode one upon anothe

 Sermon 11. Profession without Hypocrisy As many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ. Gal. iii. 27.

 Sermon 12. Profession without Ostentation Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on an hill cannot be hid. Matt. v. 14.

 Sermon 13. Promising without Doing A certain man had two sons and he came to the first, and said, Son, go work today in my vineyard. He answered and

 Sermon 14. Religious Emotion But he spake the more vehemently, If I should die with Thee, I will not deny Thee in any wise. Mark xiv. 31.

 Sermon 15. Religious Faith Rational He staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief but was strong in faith, giving glory to God: and being

 Sermon 16. The Christian Mysteries How can these things be? John iii. 9.

 Sermon 17. The Self-wise Inquirer Let no man deceive himself. If any man among you seemeth to be wise in this world, let him become a fool, that he m

 Sermon 18. Obedience the Remedy for Religious Perplexity Wait on the Lord, and keep His way, and He shall exalt thee to inherit the land. Psalm xxxv

 Sermon 19. Times of Private Prayer Thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in s

 Sermon 20. Forms of Private Prayer Lord, teach us to pray, as John also taught his disciples. Luke xi. 1.

 Sermon 21. The Resurrection of the Body Now that the dead are raised, even Moses showed at the bush, when he calleth the Lord the God of Abraham, and

 Sermon 22. Witnesses of the Resurrection Him God raised up the third day, and showed Him openly not to all the people, but unto witnesses chosen bef

 Sermon 23. Christian Reverence Serve the Lord with fear, and rejoice with trembling. Psalm ii. 11.

 Sermon 24. The Religion of the Day Let us have grace, whereby we may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly fear. For our God is a consuming f

 Sermon 25. Scripture a Record of Human Sorrow There is at Jerusalem by the sheepmarket a pool, which is called in the Hebrew tongue Bethesda, having

 Sermon 26. Christian Manhood When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child but when I became a man, I put aw

 II

  Sermon 1. The World's Benefactors

  Sermon 2. Faith without Sight

  Sermon 3. The Incarnation

  Sermon 4. Martyrdom

  Sermon 5. Love of Relations and Friends

  Sermon 6. The Mind of Little Children

  Sermon 7. Ceremonies of the Church

  Sermon 8. The Glory of the Christian Church

  Sermon 9. St. Paul's Conversion Viewed in reference to His Office

  Sermon 10. Secrecy and Suddenness of Divine Visitations

  Sermon 11. Divine Decrees

  Sermon 12. The Reverence Due to the Virgin Mary

  Sermon 13. Christ, a Quickening Spirit

  Sermon 14. Saving Knowledge

  Sermon 15. Self-Contemplation

  Sermon 16. Religious Cowardice

  Sermon 17. The Gospel Witnesses

  Sermon 18. Mysteries in Religion

  Sermon 19. The Indwelling Spirit

  Sermon 20. The Kingdom of the Saints

  Sermon 21. The Kingdom of the Saints

  Sermon 22. The Gospel, a Trust Committed to Us

  Sermon 23. Tolerance of Religious Error

  Sermon 24. Rebuking Sin

  Sermon 25. The Christian Ministry

  Sermon 26. Human Responsibility

  Sermon 27. Guilelessness

  Sermon 28. The Danger of Riches

  Sermon 29. The Powers of Nature

  Sermon 30. The Danger of Accomplishments

  Sermon 31. Christian Zeal

  Sermon 32. Use of Saints' Days

 III

  Sermon 1. Abraham and Lot

  Sermon 2. Wilfulness of Israel in Rejecting Samuel

  Sermon 3. Saul

  Sermon 4. Early years of David

  Sermon 5. Jeroboam

  Sermon 6. Faith and Obedience

  Sermon 7. Christian Repentance

  Sermon 8. Contracted Views in Religion

  Sermon 9. A Particular Providence as Revealed in the Gospel

  Sermon 10. Tears of Christ at the Grave of Lazarus

  Sermon 11. Bodily Suffering

  Sermon 12. The Humiliation of the Eternal Son

  Sermon 13. Jewish Zeal, a Pattern for Christians

  Sermon 14. Submission to Church Authority

  Sermon 15. Contest between Truth and Falsehood in the Church

  Sermon 16. The Church Visible and Invisible

  Sermon 17. The Visible Church an Encouragement to Faith

  Sermon 18. The Gift of the Spirit

  Sermon 19. Regenerating Baptism

  Sermon 20. Infant Baptism

  Sermon 21. The Daily Service

  Sermon 22. The Good Part of Mary

  Sermon 23. Religious Worship a Remedy for Excitements

  Sermon 24. Intercession

  Sermon 25. The Intermediate State

 IV

  Sermon 1. The Strictness of the Law of Christ

  Sermon 2. Obedience without Love, as instanced in the Character of Balaam

  Sermon 3. Moral Consequences of Single Sins

  Sermon 4. Acceptance of Religious Privileges Compulsory

  Sermon 5. Reliance on Religious Observances

  Sermon 6. The Individuality of the Soul

  Sermon 7. Chastisement amid Mercy

  Sermon 8. Peace and Joy amid Chastisement

  Sermon 9. The State of Grace

  Sermon 10. The Visible Church for the Sake of the Elect.

  Sermon 11. The Communion of Saints

  Sermon 12. The Church a Home for the Lonely

  Sermon 13. The Invisible World

  Sermon 14. The Greatness and Littleness of Human Life

  Sermon 15. Moral Effects of Communion with God

  Sermon 16. Christ Hidden from the World

  Sermon 17. Christ Manifested in Remembrance

  Sermon 18. The Gainsaying of Korah

  Sermon 19. The Mysteriousness of our Present Being

  Sermon 20. The Ventures of Faith

  Sermon 21. Faith and Love

  Sermon 22. Watching

  Sermon 23. Keeping Fast and Festival

 V

  Sermon 1. Worship, a Preparation for Christ's Coming

  Sermon 2. Reverence, a Belief in God's Presence

  Sermon 3. Unreal Words

  Sermon 4. Shrinking from Christ's Coming

  Sermon 5. Equanimity

  Sermon 6. Remembrance of Past Mercies

  Sermon 7. The Mystery of Godliness

  Sermon 8. The State of Innocence

  Sermon 9. Christian Sympathy

  Sermon 10. Righteousness not of us, but in us

  Sermon 11. The Law of the Spirit

  Sermon 12. The New Works of the Gospel

  Sermon 13. The State of Salvation

  Sermon 14. Transgressions and Infirmities

  Sermon 15. Sins of Infirmity

  Sermon 16. Sincerity and Hypocrisy

  Sermon 17. The Testimony of Conscience

  Sermon 18. Many Called, Few Chosen

  Sermon 19. Present Blessings

  Sermon 20. Endurance, the Christian's Portion

  Sermon 21. Affliction, a School of Comfort

  Sermon 22. The Thought of God, the Stay of the Soul

  Sermon 23. Love, the One Thing needful

  Sermon 24. The Power of the Will

 VI

  Sermon 1. Fasting a Source of Trial

  Sermon 2. Life the Season of Repentance

  Sermon 3. Apostolic Abstinence a Pattern for Christians

  Sermon 4. Christ's Privations a Meditation for Christians

  Sermon 5. Christ, the Son of God made Man

  Sermon 6. The Incarnate Son, a Sufferer and Sacrifice

  Sermon 7. The Cross of Christ the Measure of the World

  Sermon 8. Difficulty of Realizing Sacred Privileges

  Sermon 9. The Gospel Sign Addressed to Faith

  Sermon 10. The Spiritual Presence of Christ in the Church

  Sermon 11. The Eucharistic Presence

  Sermon 12. Faith the Title for Justification

  Sermon 13. Judaism of the Present Day

  Sermon 14. The Fellowship of the Apostles

  Sermon 15. Rising with Christ

  Sermon 16. Warfare the Condition of Victory

  Sermon 17. Waiting for Christ

  Sermon 18. Subjection of the Reason and Feelings to the Revealed Word

  Sermon 19. The Gospel Palaces

  Sermon 20. The Visible Temple

  Sermon 21. Offerings for the Sanctuary

  Sermon 22. The Weapons of Saints

  Sermon 23. Faith without Demonstration

  Sermon 24. The Mystery of the Holy Trinity

  Sermon 25. Peace in Believing

 VII

  Sermon 1. The Lapse of Time

  Sermon 2. Religion a Weariness to the Natural Man

  Sermon 3. The World our Enemy

  Sermon 4. The Praise of Men

  Sermon 5. Temporal Advantages

  Sermon 6. The Season of Epiphany

  Sermon 7. The Duty of Self-denial

  Sermon 8. The Yoke of Christ

  Sermon 9. Moses the Type of Christ

  Sermon 10. The Crucifixion

  Sermon 11. Attendance on Holy Communion

  Sermon 12. The Gospel Feast

  Sermon 13. Love of Religion, a New Nature

  Sermon 14. Religion Pleasant to the Religious

  Sermon 15. Mental Prayer

  Sermon 16. Infant Baptism

  Sermon 17. The Unity of the Church

  Sermon 18. Steadfastness in Old Paths

 VIII

  Sermon 1. Reverence in Worship

  Sermon 2. Divine Calls

  Sermon 3. The Trial of Saul

  Sermon 4. The Call of David

  Sermon 5. Curiosity a Temptation to Sin

  Sermon 6. Miracles no Remedy for Unbelief

  Sermon 7. Josiah, a Pattern for the Ignorant

  Sermon 8. Inward Witness to the Truth of the Gospel

  Sermon 9. Jeremiah, a Lesson for the Disappointed

  Sermon 10. Endurance of the World's Censure

  Sermon 11. Doing Glory to God in Pursuits of the World

  Sermon 12. Vanity of Human Glory

  Sermon 13. Truth Hidden when not Sought After

  Sermon 14. Obedience to God the Way to Faith in Christ

  Sermon 15. Sudden Conversions

  Sermon 16. The Shepherd of Our Souls

  Sermon 17. Religious Joy

  Sermon 18. Ignorance of Evil

 Sermon 11. Bodily Suffering

 "I fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for His body's sake, which is the Church." Colossians i. 24.

 O UR Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ came by blood as well as by water, not only as a Fount of grace and truth the source of spiritual light, joy, and salvation but as a combatant with Sin and Satan, who was "consecrated through suffering." He was, as prophecy had marked Him out, "red in His apparel, and His garments like Him that treadeth in the wine-fat;" or, in the words of the Apostle, "He was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood." It was the untold sufferings of the Eternal Word in our nature, His body dislocated and torn, His blood poured out, His soul violently separated by a painful death, which has put away from us the wrath of Him whose love sent Him for that very purpose. This only was our Atonement; no one shared in the work. He "trod the wine-press alone, and of the people there was none with Him." When lifted up upon the cursed tree, He fought with all the hosts of evil, and conquered by suffering.

 Thus, in a most mysterious way, all that is needful for this sinful world, the life of our souls, the regeneration of our nature, all that is most joyful and glorious, hope, light, peace, spiritual freedom, holy influences, religious knowledge and strength, all flow from a fount of blood. A work of blood is our salvation; and we, as we would be saved, must draw near and gaze upon it in faith, and accept it as the way to heaven. We must take Him, who thus suffered, as our guide; we must embrace His sacred feet, and follow Him. No wonder, then, should we receive on ourselves some drops of the sacred agony which bedewed His garments; no wonder, should we be sprinkled with the sorrows which He bore in expiation of our sins!

 And so it has ever been in very deed; to approach Him has been, from the first, to be partaker, more or less, in His sufferings; I do not say in the case of every individual who believes in Him, but as regards the more conspicuous, the more favoured, His choice instruments, and His most active servants; that is, it has been the lot of the Church, on the whole, and of those, on the whole, who had been most like Him, as Rulers, Intercessors, and Teachers of the Church. He, indeed, alone meritoriously; they, because they have been near Him. Thus, immediately upon His birth, He brought the sword upon the infants of His own age at Bethlehem. His very shadow, cast upon a city, where He did not abide, was stained with blood. His Blessed Mother had not clasped Him to her breast for many weeks, ere she was warned of the penalty of that fearful privilege: "Yea, a sword shall pierce through thy own soul also." [Luke ii. 35.] Virtue went out of Him; but the water and the blood flowed together as afterwards from His pierced side. From among the infants He took up in His arms to bless, is said to have gone forth a chief martyr of the generation after Him. Most of His Apostles passed through life-long sufferings to a violent death. In particular, when the favoured brothers, James and John, came to Him with a request that they might sit beside Him in His kingdom, He plainly stated this connection between nearness to Him and affliction. "Are ye able," He said, "to drink of the cup that I shall drink of, and to be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with?" [Matt. xx. 22.] As if He said, "Ye cannot have the sacraments of grace without the painful figures of them. The Cross, when imprinted on your foreheads, will draw blood. You shall receive, indeed, the baptism of the Spirit, and the cup of My communion, but it shall be with the attendant pledges of My cup of agony, and My baptism of blood." Elsewhere He speaks the same language to all who would partake the benefits of His death and passion: "Whosoever doth not bear his cross, and come after Me, cannot be My disciple." [Luke xiv. 27.]

 Accordingly, His Apostles frequently remind us of this necessary, though mysterious appointment, and bid us "think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try us, as though some strange thing happened unto us, but to rejoice in having communion with the sufferings of Christ." [1 Pet. iv. 12, 13.] St. Paul teaches us the same lesson in the text, in which he speaks of taking up the remnant of Christ's sorrows, as some precious mantle dropt from the Cross, and wearing it for His sake. "I rejoice in my sufferings for you, and fill up in my flesh what remains of the afflictions of Christ for His body's sake, that is, the Church." [n. 1 ] And though he is speaking especially of persecution and other sufferings borne in the cause of the Gospel, yet it is our great privilege, as Scripture tells us, that all pain and trouble, borne in faith and patience, will be accounted as marks of Christ, grace-tokens from the absent Saviour, and will be accepted and rewarded for His sake at the last day. It declares generally, "When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee; and through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee: when thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burned; neither shall the flame kindle upon thee." "Our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory." [Isa. xliii. 2. 2 Cor. iv. 17.]

 Thus the Gospel, which has shed light in so many ways upon the state of this world, has aided especially our view of the sufferings to which human nature is subjected; turning a punishment into a privilege, in the case of all pain, and especially of bodily pain, which is the most mysterious of all. Sorrow, anxiety, and disappointment are more or less connected with sin and sinners; but bodily pain is involuntary for the most part, stretching over the world by some external irresistible law, reaching to children who have never actually sinned, and to the brute animals, who are strangers to Adam's nature, while in its manifestations it is far more piteous and distressing than any other suffering. It is the lot of all of us, sooner or later; and that, perhaps in a measure which it would be appalling and wrong to anticipate, whether from disease, or from the casualties of life. And all of us at length must die; and death is generally ushered in by disease, and ends in that separation of soul and body, which itself may, in some cases, involve peculiar pain.

 Worldly men put such thoughts aside as gloomy; they can neither deny nor avert the prospect before them; and they are wise, on their own principles, not to embitter the present by anticipating it. But Christians may bear to look at it without undue apprehension; for this very infliction, which most touches the heart and imagination, has (as I have said) been invested by Almighty God with a new and comfortable light, as being the medium of His choicest mercies towards us. Pain is no longer a curse, a necessary evil to be undergone with a dry submission or passive endurance it may be considered even as a blessing of the Gospel, and being a blessing, admits of being met well or ill. In the way of nature, indeed, it seems to shut out the notion of duty, as if so masterful a discipline from without superseded the necessity or opportunity of self-mastery; but now that "Christ hath suffered in the flesh," we are bound "to arm ourselves with the same mind," and to obey, as He did, amid suffering.

 In what follows, I shall remark briefly, first, on the natural effect of pain upon the mind; and next, upon the remedies and correctives of that effect which the knowledge of the Gospel supplies.

 1. Now, as to its effect upon the mind, let it be well understood that it has no sanctifying influence in itself. Bad men are made worse by it. This should be borne in mind, lest we deceive ourselves; for sometimes we speak (at least the poor often so speak) as though present hardship and suffering were in some sense a ground of confidence in themselves as to our future prospects, whether as expiating our sins or bringing our hearts nearer to God. Nay, even the more religious among us may be misled to think that pain makes them better than it really does; for the effect of it at length, on any but very proud or ungovernable tempers, is to cause a languor and composure of mind, which looks like resignation, while it necessarily throws our reason upon the especial thought of God, our only stay in such times of trial. Doubtless it does really benefit the Christian, and in no scanty measure; and he may thank God who thus blesses it; only let him be cautious of measuring his spiritual state by the particular exercise of faith and love in his heart at the time, especially if that exercise be limited to the affections themselves, and have no opportunity of showing itself in works. St. Paul speaks of chastisement "yielding afterwards the peaceable fruit of righteousness," [Heb. xii. 11.] formed indeed and ripened at the moment, but manifested in due season. This may be the real fruit of the suffering of a deathbed, even though it may not have time to show itself to others before the Christian departs hence. Surely we may humbly hope that it perfects habits hitherto but partially formed, and blends the several graces of the Spirit more entirely. Such is the issue of it in established Christians; but it may possibly effect nothing so blessed. Nay, in the case of those who have followed Christ with but a half heart, it may be a trial too strong for their feebleness, and may overpower them. This is a dreadful reflection for those who put off the day of repentance. Well does our Church pray for us: "Suffer us not, at our last hour, for any pains of death to fall from Thee!" As for unbelievers, we know how it affects them, from such serious passages of Scripture as the following: "They gnawed their tongues for pain, and blasphemed the God of heaven because of their pains and their sores, and repented not of their deeds." [Rev. xvi. 10, 11.]

 Nay, I would go so far as to say, not only that pain does not commonly improve us, but that without care it has a strong tendency to do our souls harm, viz., by making us selfish; an effect produced, even when it does us good in other ways. Weak health, for instance, instead of opening the heart, often makes a man supremely careful of his bodily ease and well-being. Men find an excuse in their infirmities for some extraordinary attention to their comforts; they consider they may fairly consult, on all occasions, their own convenience rather than that of another. They indulge their wayward wishes, allow themselves in indolence when they really might exert themselves, and think they may be fretful because they are weak. They become querulous, self-willed, fastidious, and egotistical. Bystanders, indeed, should be very cautious of thinking any particular sufferer to be thus minded, because, after all, sick people have a multitude of feelings which they cannot explain to any one else, and are often in the right in those matters in which they appear to others most fanciful or unreasonable. Yet this does not interfere with the correctness of my remark on the whole.

 Take another instance under very different circumstances. If bodily suffering can be presented under distinct aspects, it is in the lassitude of a sick-bed and in the hardships of the soldier's life. Yet of the latter we find selfishness almost a proverbial characteristic. Surely the life of soldiers on service is a very school of generosity and self-neglect, if rightly understood, and is used as such by the noble and high-principled; yet here, a low and carnal mind, instead of profiting by its advantages, will yield to the temptation of referring everything that befalls it to its own comfort and profit. To secure its own interests, will become enshrined within it as its main duty, and with the greater plausibility, inasmuch as there is a sense in which it may really be so accounted. Others (it will suggest) must take care of themselves; it is a folly and weakness to think of them; there are but few chances of safety; the many must suffer, some unto death; it is wisdom to struggle for life and comfort, and to dismiss the thought of others. Alas! instances occur, every now and then, in the experience of life, which show that such thoughts and feelings are not peculiar to any one class of men, but are the actuating principles of the multitude. If an alarm of danger be given amid a crowd, the general eagerness for safety leads men to act towards each other with utter unconcern, if not with frantic cruelty. There are stories told of companies of men finding themselves at sea with scanty provisions, and of the shocking deeds which followed, when each was struggling to preserve his own life.

 The natural effect, then, of pain and fear, is to individualize us in our own minds, to fix our thoughts on ourselves, to make us selfish. It is through pain, chiefly, that we realize to ourselves even our bodily organs; a frame entirely without painful sensations is (as it were) one whole without parts, and prefigures that future spiritual body which shall be the portion of the Saints. And to this we most approximate in our youth, when we are not sensible that we are compacted of gross terrestrial matter, as advancing years convince us. The young reflect little upon themselves; they gaze around them, and live out of doors, and say they have souls, little understanding their words. "They rejoice in their youth." This, then, is the effect of suffering, that it arrests us: that it puts, as it were, a finger upon us to ascertain for us our own individuality. But it does no more than this; if such a warning does not lead us through the stirrings of our conscience heavenwards, it does but imprison us in ourselves and make us selfish.

 2. Here, then, it is that the Gospel finds us; heirs to a visitation, which, sooner or later, comes upon us, turning our thoughts from outward objects, and so tempting us to idolize self, to the dishonour of that God whom we ought to worship, and the neglect of man whom we should love as ourselves. Thus it finds us, and it obviates this danger, not by removing pain, but by giving it new associations. Pain, which by nature leads us only to ourselves, carries on the Christian mind from the thought of self to the contemplation of Christ, His passion, His merits, and His pattern; and, thence, further to that united company of sufferers who follow Him and "are what He is in this world." He is the great Object of our faith; and, while we gaze upon Him, we learn to forget ourselves.

 Surely that is not the most fearful and hateful of evils, here below, however trying to the flesh, which Christ underwent voluntarily. No one chooses evil for its own sake, but for the greater good wrought out through it. He underwent it as for ends greater than the immediate removal of it, "not grudgingly or of necessity," but cheerfully doing God's will, as the Gospel history sets before us. When His time was come, we are told, "He steadfastly set His face to go to Jerusalem." His disciples said, "Master, the Jews of late sought to stone Thee, and goest Thou thither again?" but He persisted. Again, He said to Judas, "That thou doest, do quickly." He proceeded to the garden beyond Cedron, though Judas knew the place; and when the band of officers came to seize Him, "He went forth, and said unto them, I am He." [Luke ix. 51. John xi. 8; xiii. 27; xviii. 2, 4, 5.] And with what calmness and majesty did He bear His sufferings, when they came upon Him, though by His agony in the garden He showed He fully felt their keenness! The Psalmist, in his prediction of them, says, "I am poured out like water, and all my bones are out of joint; my heart is like wax, it is melted;" [Ps. xxii. 14.] describing, as it would seem, that sinking of spirit and enfeebling of nerve which severe pain causes. Yet, in the midst of distress which seemed to preclude the opportunity of obedience, He was "about His Father's business," even more diligently than when in His childhood He asked questions of the doctors in the Temple; not thinking to be merely passive under the trial, but accounting it as if a great occasion for a noble and severe surrender of Himself to His Father's will. Thus He "learned obedience by the things that He suffered." Consider the deep and serene compassion which led Him to pray for those who crucified Him; His solicitous care of His Mother; and His pardoning words addressed to the robber who suffered with Him. And so, when He said, "It is finished," He showed that He was still contemplating, with a clear intellect, "the travail of His soul, and was satisfied;" and in the solemn surrender of Himself into His Father's hand, He showed where His mind rested in the midst of its darkness. Even when He seemed to be thinking of Himself, and said, "I thirst," He really was regarding the words of prophecy, and was bent on vindicating, to the very letter, the divine announcements concerning Him. Thus, upon the Cross itself, we discern in Him the mercy of a Messenger from heaven, the love and grace of a Saviour, the dutifulness of a Son, the faith of a created nature, and the zeal of a servant of God. His mind was stayed upon His Father's sovereign will and infinite perfections, yet could pass, without effort, to the claim of filial duty, or the need of an individual sinner. Six out of His seven last words were words of faith and love. For one instant a horrible dread overwhelmed him, when He seemed to ask why God had forsaken Him. Doubtless "that voice was for our sakes;" as when He made mention of His thirst; and, like the other, was taken from inspired prophecy. Perhaps it was intended to set before us an example of a special trial to which human nature is subject, whatever was the real and inscrutable manner of it in Him, who was all along supported by an inherent Divinity; I mean the trial of sharp agony, hurrying the mind on to vague terrors and strange inexplicable thoughts; and is, therefore, graciously recorded for our benefit, in the history of His death, "who was tempted, in all points, like as we are, yet without sin." [Heb. iv. 15.]

 Such, then, were our Lord's sufferings, voluntarily undergone, and ennobled by an active obedience; themselves the centre of our hopes and worship, yet borne without thought of self, towards God and for man. And who, among us, habitually dwells upon them, but is led, without deliberate purpose, by the very warmth of gratitude and adoring love, to attempt bearing his own inferior trials in the same heavenly mind? Who does not see that to bear pain well is to meet it courageously, not to shrink or waver, but to pray for God's help, then to look at it steadfastly, to summon what nerve we have of mind and body, to receive its attack, and to bear up against it (while strength is given us) as against some visible enemy in close combat? Who will not acknowledge that, when sent to us, we must make its presence (as it were) our own voluntary act, by the cheerful and ready concurrence of our own will with the will of God? Nay, who is there but must own that with Christ's sufferings before us, pain and tribulation are, after all, not only the most blessed, but even the most congruous attendants upon those who are called to inherit the benefit of them? Most congruous, I say, not as though necessary, but as most natural and befitting, harmonizing most fully, with the main Object in the group of sacred wonders on which the Church is called to gaze. Who, on the other hand, does not at least perceive that all the glare and gaudiness of this world, its excitements, its keenly-pursued goods, its successes and its transports, its pomps and its luxuries, are not in character with that pale and solemn scene which faith must ever have in its eye? What Christian will not own that to "reign as kings," and to be "full," is not his calling; so as to derive comfort in the hour of sickness, or bereavement, or other affliction, from the thought that he is now in his own place, if he be Christ's, in his true home, the sepulchre in which his Lord was laid? So deeply have His Saints felt this, that when times were peaceful, and the Church was in safety, they could not rest in the lap of ease, and have secured to themselves hardnesses, lest the world should corrupt them. They could not bear to see the much-enduring Paul adding to his necessary tribulations a self-inflicted chastisement of the flesh, and yet allow themselves to live delicately, and fare sumptuously every day. They saw the image of Christ reflected in tears and blood, in the glorious company of the Apostles, the goodly fellowship of the Prophets, and the noble army of Martyrs; they read in prophecy of the doom of the Church, as "a woman fed by God in the wilderness," [n. 2 ] and her witnesses as "clothed in sackcloth;" and they could not believe that they were meant for nothing more than to enjoy the pleasures of this life, however innocent and moderate might be their use of them. Without deciding about their neighbours, they felt themselves called to higher things; their own sense of the duty became the sanction and witness of it. They considered that God, at least, would afflict them in His love, if they spared themselves ever so much. The thorn in the flesh, the buffetings of Satan, the bereavement of their eyes, these were their portion; and, in common prudence, were there no higher thought, they could not live out of time and measure with these expected visitations. With no superstitious alarms, or cowardly imaginations, or senseless hurrying into difficulty or trial, but calmly and in faith, they surrendered themselves into His hands, who had told them in His inspired word that affliction was to be their familiar food; till at length they gained such distaste for the luxuries of life as to be impatient of them from their very fulness of grace.

 Even in these days, when the "fine gold has become dim," such has been the mind of those we most revere [n. 3 ]. But such was it especially in primitive times. It was the temper, too, of those Apostles who were removed, more than their brethren, from the world's buffetings; as if the prospect of suffering afterwards were no ground of dispensation for a present self-inflicted discipline, but rather demanded it. St. James the Less was Bishop of Jerusalem, and was highly venerated for his uprightness by the unbelieving Jews among whom he lived unmolested. We are told that he drank no wine nor strong drink, nor did he eat any animal food, nor indulge in the luxury of the bath. "So often was he in the Temple on his knees, that they were thin and hard by his continual supplication." [n. 4 ] Thus he kept his "loins girded about, and his lamp burning," for the blessed martyrdom which was to end his course. Could it be otherwise? How could the great Apostle, sitting at home by his Lord's decree, "nourish his heart," as he calls it, "as for the slaughter?" How could he eat, and drink, and live as other men, when "the Ark, and Israel, and Judah were in tents," encamped in the open fields, and one by one, God's chosen warriors were falling before the brief triumph of Satan! How could he be "delicate on the earth, and wanton," when Paul and Barnabas, Peter, too, and John were in stripes and prisons, in labours and perils, in hunger and thirst, in cold and nakedness! Stephen had led the army of Martyrs in Jerusalem itself, which was his own post of service. James, the brother of John, had followed him in the same city; he first of the Apostles tasting our Lord's cup, who had unwittingly asked to drink it. And if this was the feeling of the Apostles, when in temporary safety, why is it not ours, who altogether live at ease, except that we have not faith enough to realize what is past? Could we see the Cross upon Calvary, and the list of sufferers who resisted unto blood in the times that followed it, is it possible that we should feel surprise when pain overtook us, or impatience at its continuance? Is it strange though we are smitten by ever so new a plague? Is it grievous that the Cross presses on one nerve or limb ever so many years till hope of relief is gone? Is it, indeed, not possible with the Apostle to rejoice in "bearing in our body the marks of the Lord Jesus?" And much more, can we, for very shame's sake, suffer ourselves to be troubled at what is but ordinary pain, to be irritated or saddened, made gloomy or anxious by inconveniences which never could surprise or unsettle those who had studied and understood their place as servants of a crucified Lord?

 Let us, then, determine with cheerful hearts to sacrifice unto the Lord our God our comforts and pleasures, however innocent, when He calls for them, whether for the purposes of His Church, or in His own inscrutable Providence. Let us lend to Him a few short hours of present ease, and we shall receive our own with abundant usury in the day of His coming. There is a Treasury in heaven stored with such offerings as the natural man abhors; with sighs and tears, wounds and blood, torture and death. The Martyrs first began the contribution, and we all may follow them; all of us, for every suffering, great or little, may, like the widow's mite, be sacrificed in faith to Him who sent it. Christ gave us the words of consecration, when He for an ensample said, "Thy will be done." Henceforth, as the Apostle speaks, we may "glory in tribulation," as the seed of future glory.

 Meanwhile, let us never forget in all we suffer, that, properly speaking, our own sin is the cause of it, and it is only by Christ's mercy that we are allowed to range ourselves at His side. We who are children of wrath, are made through Him children of grace; and our pains which are in themselves but foretastes of hell are changed by the sprinkling of His blood into a preparation for heaven.

Notes

 1. Vide also 2 Cor. iv. 10.

 2. Vide Rev. xii. 6; xi. 3.

 3. "It is a most miserable state for a man to have everything according to his desire, and quietly to enjoy the pleasures of life. There needs no more to expose him to eternal misery."  Bishop Wilson Sacra Privata, Wednesday .

 4. Euseb. Hist. ii. 23.