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 2. Reverence, a Belief in God's Presence

 "Thine eyes shall see the King in his beauty: they shall behold the land that is very far off." Isaiah xxxiii. 17.

 [ n. ] T HOUGH Moses was not permitted to enter the land of promise, he was vouchsafed a sight of it from a distance. We too, though as yet we are not admitted to heavenly glory, yet are given to see much, in preparation for seeing more. Christ dwells among us in His Church really though invisibly, and through its Ordinances fulfils towards us, in a true and sufficient sense, the promise of the text. We are even now permitted to "see the King in His beauty," to "behold the land that is very far off." The words of the Prophet relate to our present state as well as to the state of saints hereafter. Of the future glory it is said by St. John, "They shall see His face, and His name shall be in their foreheads." [Rev. xxii. 4.] And of the present, Isaiah himself speaks in passages which may be taken in explanation of the text: "The glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together;" and again, "They shall see the glory of the Lord, and the excellency of our God." [Isa. xl. 5; xxxv. 2.] We do not see God face to face under the Gospel, but still, for all that, it is true that "we know in part;" we see, though it be "through a glass darkly;" which is far more than any but Christians are enabled to do. Baptism, by which we become Christians, is an illumination; and Christ, who is the Object of our worship, is withal a Light to worship by.

 Such a view is strange to most men; they do not realize the presence of Christ, nor admit the duty of realizing it. Even those who are not without habits of seriousness, have almost or quite forgotten the duty. This is plain at once: for, unless they had, they would not be so very deficient in reverence as they are. It is scarcely too much to say that awe and fear are at the present day all but discarded from religion. Whole societies called Christian make it almost a first principle to disown the duty of reverence; and we ourselves, to whom as children of the Church reverence is as a special inheritance, have very little of it, and do not feel the want of it. Those who, in spite of themselves, are influenced by God's holy fear, too often are ashamed of it, consider it even as a mark of weakness of mind, hide their feeling as much as they can, and, when ridiculed or censured for it, cannot defend it to themselves on intelligible grounds. They wish indeed to maintain reverence in their mode of speaking and acting, in relation to sacred things, but they are at a loss how to answer objections, or how to resist received customs and fashions; and at length they begin to be suspicious and afraid of their own instinctive feelings. Let us then take occasion from the promise in the text both to describe the religious defect to which I have alluded, and to state the remedy for it.

 There are two classes of men who are deficient in awe and fear, and, lamentable to say, taken together, they go far to make up the religious portion of the community. This is lamentable indeed, if so it is: it is not wonderful that sinners should live without the fear of God; but what shall we say of an age or country, in which even the more serious classes, those who live on principle, and claim to have a judgment in religious matters, who look forward to the future, and think that their account stands fair, and that they are in God's favour, when even such persons maintain, or at least act as if they maintained, that "the spirit of God's holy fear" is no part of religion? "If the light that is in us be darkness, how great is that darkness!"

 These are the two classes of men who are deficient in this respect: first, those who think that they never were greatly under God's displeasure; next, those who think that, though they once were, they are not at all now for all sin has been forgiven them; those on the one hand who consider that sin is no great evil in itself, those on the other who consider that it is no great evil in them, because their persons are accepted in Christ for their faith's sake.

 Now it must be observed that the existence of fear in religion does not depend on the circumstance of our being sinners; it is short of that. Were we pure as the Angels, yet in His sight, one should think, we could not but fear, before whom the heavens are not clean, nor the Angels free from folly. The Seraphim themselves veiled their faces while they cried, Glory! Even then were it true that sin was not a great evil, or was no great evil in us, nevertheless the mere circumstance that God is infinite and all-perfect is an overwhelming thought to creatures and mortal men, and ought to lead all persons who profess religion to profess also religious fear, however natural it is for irreligious men to disclaim the feeling.

 And next let it be observed, it is no dispute about terms. For at first sight we may be tempted to think that the only question is whether the word "fear" is a good or bad word; that one man makes it all one with slavish dread, and another with godly awe and reverence; and that therefore the two seem to oppose each other, when they do not, as if both parties agreed that reverence is right and selfish terror wrong, and the only point between them were, whether by the word fear was meant terror or reverence. This is not the case: it is a question not of words but of things; for these persons whom I am describing plainly consider that state of mind wrong, which the Church Catholic has ever prescribed and her Saints have ever exemplified.

 To show that this is so, I will in a few words state what the two sets of opinion are to which I allude; and what that fault is, which, widely as they differ in opinion from each other, they have in common.

 The one class of persons consists of those who think the Catholic Creed too strict, who hold that no certain doctrines need be believed in order to salvation, or at least question the necessity; who say that it matters not what a man believes, so that his conduct is respectable and orderly, who think that all rites and ceremonies are mere niceties (as they speak) and trifles, and that a man pleases God equally by observing them or not, who perhaps go on to doubt whether Christ's death is strictly speaking an atonement for the sin of man, who, when pressed, do not allow that He is strictly speaking and literally God, and who deny that the punishment of the wicked is eternal. Such are the tenets, more or less clearly apprehended and confessed, which mark the former of the two classes of which I speak.

 The other class of men are in their formal doctrines widely different from the former. They consider that, though they were by nature children of wrath, they are now by God's grace so fully in His favour, that, were they to die at once, they would be certain of heaven, they consider that God so absolutely forgives them day by day their trespasses, that they have nothing to answer for, nothing to be tried upon at the Last Day, that they have been visited by God's grace in a manner quite distinct from all around them, and are His children in a sense in which others are not, and have an assurance of their saving state peculiar to themselves, and an interest in the promises such as Baptism does not impart; they profess to be thus beyond the reach of doubt and anxiety, and they say that they should be miserable without such a privilege.

 I have alluded to these schools of religion, to show how widely a feeling must be spread which such contrary classes of men have in common. Now, what they agree in is this: in considering God as simply a God of love, not of awe and reverence also, the one meaning by love benevolence, and the other mercy ; and in consequence neither the one nor the other regard Almighty God with fear ; and the signs of want of fear in both the one and the other, which I proposed to point out, are such as the following.

 For instance: they have no scruple or misgiving in speaking freely of Almighty God. They will use His Name as familiarly and lightly, as if they were open sinners. The one class adopts a set of words to denote Almighty God, which remove the idea of His personality, speaking of Him as the "Deity," or the "Divine Being;" which, as they use them, are of all others most calculated to remove from the mind the thought of a living and intelligent Governor, their Saviour and their Judge. The other class of men, going into the other extreme, but with the same result, use freely that incommunicable Name by which He has vouchsafed to denote to us His perfections. When He appeared to Moses, He disclosed His Name; and that Name has appeared so sacred to our translators of Scripture, that they have scrupled to use it, though it occurs continually in the Old Testament, substituting the word "Lord" out of reverence. Now, the persons in question delight in a familiar use, in prayers and hymns and conversation, of that Name by which they designate Him before whom Angels tremble. Not even our fellow-men do we freely call by their own names, unless we are at our ease with them; yet sinners can bear to be familiar with the Name by which they know the Most High has distinguished Himself from all creatures.

 Another instance of want of fear, is the bold and unscrupulous way in which men speak of the Holy Trinity and the Mystery of the Divine Nature. They use sacred terms and phrases, should occasion occur, in a rude and abrupt way, and discuss points of doctrine concerning the All-holy and Eternal, even (if I may without irreverence state it) over their cups, perhaps arguing against them, as if He were such a one as themselves.

 Another instance of this want of fear is found in the peremptory manner in which men lay down what Almighty God must do, what He cannot but do, as if they were masters of the whole scheme of salvation, and might anticipate His high providence and will.

 And another is the confidence with which they often speak of their having been converted, pardoned, and sanctified, as if they knew their own state as well as God knows it.

 Another is the unwillingness so commonly felt, to bow at the Name of Jesus, nay the impatience exhibited towards those who do; as if there were nothing awful in the idea of the Eternal God being made man, and as if we did not suitably express our wonder and awe at it by practising what St. Paul has in very word prescribed.

 Another instance is the careless mode in which men speak of our Lord's earthly doings and sayings, just as if He were a mere man. He was man indeed, but He was more than man: and He did what man does, but then those deeds of His were the deeds of God, and we can as little separate the deed from the Doer as our arm from our body. But, in spite of this, numbers are apt to use rude, familiar, profane language, concerning their God's childhood, and youth, and ministry, though He is their God.

 And another is the familiarity with which many persons address our Lord in prayer, applying epithets to Him and adopting a strain of language which does not beseem creatures, not to say sinners.

 And another is their general mode of prayer; I mean, in diffuse and free language, with emphatic and striking words, in a sort of coloured or rich style, with pomp of manner, and an oratorical tone, as if praying were preaching, and as if its object were not to address Almighty God, but to impress and affect those who heard them.

 And another instance of this want of reverence is the introduction, in speaking or writing, of serious and solemn words, for the sake of effect, to round, or to give dignity to, a sentence.

 And another instance is irreverence in church, sitting instead of kneeling in prayer, or pretending to kneel but really sitting, or lounging or indulging in other unseemly attitudes; and, much more, looking about when prayers are going on, and observing what others are doing.

 These are some out of a number of peculiarities which mark the religion of the day, and are instanced some in one class of men, some in another; but all by one or other; and they are specimens of what I mean when I say that the religion of this day is destitute of fear .

 Many other instances might be mentioned of very various kinds. For instance, the freedom with which men propose to alter God's ordinances, to suit their own convenience, or to meet the age; their reliance on their private and antecedent notions about sacred subjects; their want of interest and caution in inquiring what God's probable will is; their contempt for any view of the Sacraments which exceeds the evidence of their senses; and their confidence in settling the order of importance in which the distinct articles of Christian faith stand; all which shows that it is no question of words whether men have fear or not, but that there is a something they really have not, whatever name we give it.

 So far I consider to be plain: the only point which can be debated is this, whether the feelings which I have been describing are necessary; for each of the two classes which I have named contends that they are unnecessary; the one decides them inconsistent with reason, the other with the Gospel; the one calls them superstitious, and the other legal or Jewish. Let us then consider, are these feelings of fear and awe Christian feelings or not? A very few words will surely be sufficient to decide the question.

 I say this, then, which I think no one can reasonably dispute. They are the class of feelings we should  have, yes, have in an intense degree if we literally had the sight of Almighty God; therefore they are the class of feelings which we shall have, if we realize His presence. In proportion as we believe that He is present, we shall have them; and not to have them, is not to realize, not to believe that He is present. If then it is a duty to feel as though we saw Him, or to have faith, it is a duty to have these feelings; and if it is a sin to be destitute of faith, it is a sin to be without them. Let us consider this awhile.

 Who then is there to deny, that if we saw God, we should fear? Take the most cold and secular of all those who explain away the Gospel; or take the most heated and fanatic of those who consider it peculiarly their own; take those who think that Christ has brought us nothing great, or those who think He has brought it all to themselves, I say, would either party keep from fearing greatly if they saw God? Surely it is quite a truism to say that any creature would fear. But why would he fear? would it be merely because he saw God, or because he knew that God was present? If he shut his eyes, he would still fear, for his eyes had conveyed to him this solemn truth; to have seen would be enough. But if so, does it not follow at once, that, if men do not fear, it is because they do not act as they would act if they saw Him, that is, they do not feel that He is present? Is it not quite certain that men would not use Almighty God's Name so freely, if they thought He was really in hearing, nay, close beside them when they spoke? And so of those other instances of want of godly fear, which I mentioned, they one and all come from deadness to the presence of God. If a man believes Him present, he will shrink from addressing Him familiarly, or using before Him unreal words, or peremptorily and on his own judgment deciding what God's will is, or claiming His confidence, or addressing Him in a familiar posture of body. I say, take the man who is most confident that he has nothing to fear from the presence of God, and that Almighty God is at peace with him, and place him actually before the throne of God; and would he have no misgivings? and will he dare to say that those misgivings are a weakness, a mere irrational perturbation, which he ought not to feel?

 This will be seen more clearly, by considering how differently we feel towards and speak of our friends as present or absent. Their presence is a check upon us; it acts as an external law, compelling us to do or not do what we should not do or do otherwise, or should do but for it. This is just what most men lack in their religion at present, such an external restraint arising from the consciousness of God's presence. Consider, I say, how differently we speak of a friend, however intimate, when present or absent; consider how we feel, should it so happen that we have begun to speak of him as if he were not present, on finding suddenly that he is; and that, though we are conscious of nothing but what is loving and open towards him. There is a tone of voice and a manner of speaking about persons absent, which we should consider disrespectful, or at least inconsiderate, if they were present. When that is the case, we are ever thinking more or less, even though unconsciously to ourselves, how they will take what we say, how it will affect them, what they will say to us or think of us in turn. When a person is absent, we are tempted perhaps confidently to say what his opinion is on certain points; but should he be present, we qualify our words; we hardly like to speak at all, from the vivid consciousness that we may be wrong, and that he is present to tell us so. We are very cautious of pronouncing what his feelings are on the matter in hand, or how he is disposed towards ourselves; and in all things we observe a deference and delicacy in our conduct towards him. Now, if we feel this towards our fellows, what shall we feel in the presence of an Angel? and if so, what in the presence of the All-knowing, All-searching Judge of men? What is respect and consideration in the case of our fellows, becomes godly fear as regards Almighty God; and they who do not fear Him, in one word, do not believe that He sees and hears them. If they did, they would cease to boast so confidently of His favourable thoughts of them, to foretell His dealings, to pronounce upon His revelations, to make free with His Name, and to address Him familiarly.

 Now, in what has been said, no account has been taken, as I have already observed, of our being sinners, a corrupt, polluted race at the best, while He is the All-holy God, which must surely increase our fear and awe greatly, and not at all the less because we have been so wonderfully redeemed. Nor, again, has account been taken of another point, on which I will add two or three words.

 There is a peculiar feeling with which we regard the dead. What does this arise from? that he is absent? No; for we do not feel the same towards one who is merely distant, though he be at the other end of the earth. Is it because in this life we shall never see him again? No, surely not; because we may be perfectly certain we shall never see him when he goes abroad, we may know he is to die abroad, and perhaps he does die abroad; but will any one say that, when the news of his death comes, our feeling when we think of him is not quite changed? Surely it is the passing into another state which impresses itself upon us, and makes us speak of him as we do, I mean, with a sort of awe. We cannot tell what he is now, what his relations to us, what he knows of us. We do not understand him, we do not see him. He is passed into the land "that is very far off;" but it is not at all certain that he has not some mysterious hold over us. Thus his not being seen with our bodily eyes, while perchance he is present, makes the thought of him more awful. Apply this to the subject before us, and you will perceive that there is a sense, and a true sense, in which the invisible presence of God is more awful and overpowering than if we saw it. And so again, the presence of Christ, now that it is invisible, brings with it a host of high and mysterious feelings, such as nothing else can inspire. The thought of our Saviour, absent yet present, is like that of a friend taken from us, but, as it were, in dream returned to us, though in this case not in dream, but in reality and truth. When He was going away, He said to His disciples, "I will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice." Yet He had at another time said, "The days will come when the Bridegroom shall be taken from them, and then shall they fast in those days." See what an apparent contradiction, such as attends the putting any high feeling into human language! they were to joy because Christ was come, and yet weep because He was away; that is, to have a feeling so refined, so strange and new, that nothing could be said of it, but that it combined in one all that was sweet and soothing in contrary human feelings, as commonly experienced. As some precious fruits of the earth are said to taste like all others at once, not as not being really distinct from all others, but as being thus best described, when we would come as near the truth as we can, so the state of mind which they are in who believe that the Son of God is here, yet away, is at the right hand of God, yet in His very flesh and blood among us, is present, though invisible, is one of both joy and pain, or rather one far above either; a feeling of awe, wonder, and praise, which cannot be more suitably expressed than by the Scripture word fear ; or by holy Job's words, though he spoke in grief, and not as being possessed of a blessing. "Behold, I go forward, but He is not there; and backward, but I cannot perceive Him: on the left hand, where He doth work, but I cannot behold Him: He hideth Himself on the right hand, that I cannot see Him. Therefore am I troubled at His presence; when I consider, I am afraid of Him." [Job xxiii. 8, 9, 15.]

 To conclude. Enough has been said now to show that godly fear must be a duty, if to live as in God's [ presence ] is a duty, must be a privilege of the Gospel, if the spiritual sight of "the King in His beauty" be one of its privileges. Fear follows from faith necessarily, as would be plain, even though there were not a text in the Bible saying so. But in fact, as it is scarcely needful to say, Scripture abounds in precepts to fear God. Such are the words of the Wise Man: "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge." Such again is the third commandment, in which we are solemnly bidden not to take God's Name in vain. Such the declaration of the prophet Habakkuk, who beginning by declaring "The just shall live by his faith," ends by saying, "The Lord is in His Holy Temple; let the whole earth keep silence before Him." Such is St. Paul's, who, in like manner, after having discoursed at length upon faith as "the realizing of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen," adds: "Let us have grace, whereby we may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly fear." Such St. Luke's account of the Church militant on earth, that "walking in the fear of the Lord and in the comfort of the Holy Ghost," it was "multiplied." Such St. John's account of the Church triumphant in heaven, "Who shall not fear Thee," they say, "O Lord, and glorify Thy Name; for Thou only art Holy?" Such the feeling recorded of the three Apostles on the Mount of Transfiguration, who, when they heard God's voice, "fell on their face, and were sore afraid." [Prov. i. 7. Hab. ii. 4, 20. Heb. xii. 28. Acts ix. 31. Rev. xv. 4. Matt. xvii. 6.] And now, if this be so, can anything be clearer than that the want of fear is nothing else but want of faith, and that in consequence we in this age are approaching in religious temper that evil day of which it is said, "When the Son of Man cometh, shall He find faith on the earth?" [Luke xviii. 8.] Is it wonderful that we have no fear in our words and mutual intercourse, when we exercise no acts of faith? What, you will ask, are acts of faith? Such as these, to come often to prayer, is an act of faith; to kneel down instead of sitting, is an act of faith; to strive to attend to your prayers, is an act of faith; to behave in God's House otherwise than you would in a common room, is an act of faith; to come to it on weekdays as well as Sundays, is an act of faith; to come often to the most Holy Sacrament, is an act of faith; and to be still and reverent during that sacred service, is an act of faith. These are all acts of faith, because they all are acts such as we should perform, if we saw and heard Him who is present, though with our bodily eyes we see and hear Him not . But, "blessed are they who have not seen, and yet have believed;" for, be sure, if we thus act, we shall, through God's grace, be gradually endued with the spirit of His holy fear. We shall in time, in our mode of talking and acting, in our religious services and our daily conduct, manifest, not with constraint and effort, but spontaneously and naturally, that we fear Him while we love him.

Note

 Advent.