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 6. The Incarnate Son, a Sufferer and Sacrifice

 "Being found in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the Cross." Phil. ii. 8.

 [ n. ] H E who thus humbled Himself being first made man, then dying, and that upon the shameful and agonizing Cross was the same who from eternity had been "in the form of God," and was "equal with God," as the Apostle declares in a preceding verse. "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God; and the Word was God; the same was in the beginning with God;" thus speaks St. John, a second witness to the same great and awful truth. And he, too, goes on to say, "And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us." And at the close of his Gospel, as we know, he gives an account of our Lord's death upon the Cross.

 We are now approaching that most sacred day when we commemorate Christ's passion and death. Let us try to fix our minds upon this great thought. Let us try, what is so very difficult, to put off other thoughts, to clear our minds of things transitory, temporal, and earthly, and to occupy them with the contemplation of the Eternal Priest and His one ever-enduring Sacrifice; that Sacrifice which, though completed once for all on Calvary, yet ever abideth, and, in its power and its grace, is ever present among us, and is at all times gratefully and awfully to be commemorated, but now especially, when the time of year is come at which it was made. Let us look upon Him who was lifted up that He might draw us to Him; and, by being drawn one and all to Him, let us be drawn to each other, so that we may understand and feel that He has redeemed us one and all, and that, unless we love one another, we cannot really have love to Him who laid down His life for us.

 With the hope, then, of suggesting to you some serious thoughts for the week which begins with this day, I will make a few remarks, such as the text suggests, upon that dreadful yet most joyful event, the passion and death of our Lord.

 And, first, it ought not to be necessary to say, though it may be necessary even because it is so obvious, (for, what is very plain is sometimes taken for granted by those who know it, and hence is never heard by others at all,) this, I say, in the first place, must be ever remembered, that Christ's death was not a mere martyrdom. A martyr is one who dies for the Church, who is put to death for preaching and maintaining the truth. Christ, indeed, was put to death for preaching the Gospel; yet He was not a Martyr, but He was much more than a Martyr. Had He been a mere man, He would have been rightly called a Martyr, but as He was not a mere man, so He was not a mere Martyr. Man dies as a Martyr, but the Son of God dies as an Atoning Sacrifice.

 Here then, as you see, we are at once introduced into a very mysterious subject, though one which concerns us most nearly. There was a virtue in His death, which there could be in no other, for He was God. We, indeed, could not have told beforehand what would follow from so high an event as God becoming incarnate and dying on the Cross; but that something extraordinary and high would issue from it, we might have been quite sure, though nothing had been told us. He would not have so humbled Himself for nought; He could not so humble Himself (if I may use the expression) without momentous consequences.

 It would be well if we opened our minds to what is meant by the doctrine of the Son of God dying on the Cross for us. I do not say we shall ever be able to solve the mystery of it, but we may understand in what the Mystery consists; and that is what many men are deficient in. They have no clear views what the truth of the matter is; if they had, it would make them more serious than they are. Let it be understood, then, that the Almighty Son of God, who had been in the bosom of the Father from everlasting, became man; became man as truly as He was always God. He was God from God, as the Creed says; that is, as being the Son of the Father, He had all those infinite perfections from the Father which the Father had. He was of one substance with the Father, and was God, because the Father was God. He was truly God, but He became as truly man. He became man, yet so as not to cease in any respect being what He was before. He added a new nature to Himself, yet so intimately, that it was as if He had actually left His former self, which He did not. "The Word became flesh:" even this would seem mystery and marvel enough, but even this was not all; not only was He "made man," but, as the Creed goes on to state, He "was crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate, He suffered and was buried."

 Now here, I say, is a fresh mystery in the history of His humiliation, and the thought of it will cast a new and solemn light on the chapters we shall read during the week. I have said that, after His incarnation, man's nature was as much and as truly Christ's as His Divine attributes; St. Paul even speaks of God "purchasing us with His own blood," and of the "Lord of glory" being "killed," expressions which, more than any other, show how absolutely and simply He had put on Him the nature of man. As the soul acts through the body as its instrument, in a more perfect way, but as intimately, did the Eternal Word of God act through the manhood which He had taken. When He spoke, it was literally God speaking; when He suffered, it was God suffering. Not that the Divine Nature itself could suffer, any more than our soul can see or hear; but, as the soul sees and hears through the organs of the body, so God the Son suffered in that human nature which He had taken to Himself and made His own. And in that nature He did truly suffer; as truly as He framed the worlds through His Almighty power, so through His human nature did He suffer; for when He came on earth, His manhood became as truly and personally His, as His Almighty power had been from everlasting.

 Think of this, all ye light-hearted, and consider whether with this thought you can read the last chapters of the four Gospels without fear and trembling.

 For instance; "When He had thus spoken, one of the officers which stood by struck Jesus with the palm of his hand, saying, Answerest Thou the high priest so?" The words must be said, though I hardly dare say them, that officer lifted up his hand against God the Son. This is not a figurative way of speaking, or a rhetorical form of words, or a harsh, extreme, and unadvisable statement; it is a literal and simple truth, it is a great Catholic doctrine.

 Again: "Then they did spit in His face, and buffeted Him, and others smote Him with the palms of their hands."

 "The men that held Jesus mocked Him, and smote Him, and when they had blindfolded Him, they struck Him on the face, and asked Him, saying, Prophesy, who is it that smote Thee? and many other things blasphemously spake they against Him."

 "And Herod with his men of war set Him at nought, and mocked Him, and arrayed Him in a gorgeous robe, and sent Him again to Pilate."

 "Pilate therefore took Jesus and scourged Him; and the soldiers platted a crown of thorns, and put it on His head, and a reed in His right hand, and they put on Him a purple robe, and said, Hail, King of the Jews! and they smote Him on the head with a reed, and did spit upon Him, and, bowing their knees, worshipped Him. Then came Jesus forth, wearing the crown of thorns and the purple robe."

 Lastly: "When they were come to the place which is called Calvary, there they crucified Him" [John xviii. 22. Matt. xxvi. 67. Luke xxii. 63-65; xxiii. 11. John xix. 1, 2. Matt. xxvii. 29. Mark xv. 19. Luke xxiii. 33.] between two malefactors, and even there they did not cease insulting and mocking Him; but all of them, chief priests and people, stood beholding, and bidding Him come down from the Cross.

 Now I bid you consider that that Face, so ruthlessly smitten, was the Face of God Himself; the Brows bloody with the thorns, the sacred Body exposed to view and lacerated with the scourge, the Hands nailed to the Cross, and, afterwards, the Side pierced with the spear; it was the Blood, and the sacred Flesh, and the Hands, and the Temples, and the Side, and the Feet of God Himself, which the frenzied multitude then gazed upon. This is so fearful a thought, that when the mind first masters it, surely it will be difficult to think of any thing else; so that, while we think of it, we must pray God to temper it to us, and to give us strength to think of it rightly, lest it be too much for us.

 Taking into account, then, that Almighty God Himself, God the Son, was the Sufferer, we shall understand better than we have hitherto the description given of Him by the Evangelists; we shall see the meaning of His general demeanour, His silence, and the words He used when He spoke, and Pilate's awe at Him.

 "And the high priest arose and said unto Him, Answerest Thou nothing? What is it which these witness against Thee? But Jesus held His peace." [Matt. xxvi. 62, 63.]

 "When He was accused of the chief priests and elders, He answered nothing. Then said Pilate unto Him, Hearest Thou not how many things they witness against Thee? and He answered him to never a word, insomuch that the governor marvelled greatly." [Matt. xxvi. 12-14.]

 "The Jews answered Him, We have a law, and by our law He ought to die, because He made Himself the Son of God. When Pilate therefore heard that saying, he was the more afraid, and went again into the judgment hall, and saith unto Jesus, Whence art Thou? But Jesus gave him no answer." [John xix. 7-9.]

 "And when Herod saw Jesus, he was exceeding glad: for he was desirous to see Him of a long season, because he had heard many things of him; and he hoped to have seen some miracle done by Him. Then he questioned with Him in many words, but He answered him nothing." [Luke xxiii. 8, 9.]

 Lastly, His words to the women who followed Him, "Daughters of Jerusalem, weep not for Me, but weep for yourselves and for your children. For behold the days are coming, in which they shall say, Blessed are the barren, and the wombs that never bare, and the paps which never gave suck. Then shall they begin to say to the mountains, Fall on us; and to the hills, Cover us." [Luke xxiii. 28-30.]

 After these passages, consider the words of the beloved disciple, in anticipation of His coming at the end of the world. "Behold He cometh with clouds, and every eye shall see Him, they also which pierced Him: and all the kindreds of the earth shall wail because of Him. Even so, Amen." [Rev. i. 7.]

 Yes, we shall all of us, for weal or for woe, one day see that holy Countenance which wicked men struck and dishonoured; we shall see those Hands that were nailed to the cross; that Side which was pierced. We shall see all this; and it will be the sight of the Living God.

 This being the great mystery of Christ's Cross and Passion, we might with reason suppose, as I have said, that some great thing would result from it. The sufferings and death of the Word Incarnate could not pass away like a dream; they could not be a mere martyrdom, or a mere display or figure of something else, they must have a virtue in them. This we might be sure of, though nothing had been told us about the result. But that result is also revealed: it is this our reconciliation to God, the expiation of our sins, and our new creation in holiness.

 We had need of a reconciliation, for by nature we are outcasts. From the time that Adam fell, all his children have been under a curse. "In Adam all die," as St. Paul says [1 Cor. xv. 22.]. So that every one of us is born into this world in a state of death ; such is our natural life from our very first breath; we are children of wrath; conceived in sin; shapen in iniquity. We are under the bondage of an inborn element of evil, which thwarts and stifles whatever principles remain of truth and goodness in us, directly we attempt to act according to them. This is that "body of death" under which St. Paul describes the natural man as groaning, and saying, "O wretched man, who shall deliver me?" Now for ourselves, my brethren, we know (praised be God) that all of us have from our infancy been taken out of this miserable heathen state by holy baptism, which is God's appointed means of regeneration. Still it is not less our natural state; it is the state in which every one of us was born; it is the state in which every little child is, when brought to the font. Dear as he is to those who bring him thither, and innocent as he may look, there is, till he is baptized, an evil spirit in his heart, a spirit of evil lying hid, seen of God, unseen by man (as the serpent among the trees of Eden), an evil spirit which from the first is hateful to God, and at length will be his eternal ruin. That evil spirit is cast out by Holy Baptism, without the privilege of which his birth would but be a misery to him. But whence did Baptism gain its power? From that great event we are so soon to commemorate; the death of the Son of God incarnate. Almost all religions have their outward cleansings; they feel the need of man, though they cannot supply it. Even the Jewish system, though Divine, effected nothing here; its washings were but carnal; the blood of bulls and goats was but earthly and unprofitable. Even St. John's baptism, our Lord's forerunner, had no inward propitiatory power. Christ was not yet crucified. But when that long-expected season came, when the Son of God had solemnly set Himself apart as a Victim in the presence of His twelve Apostles, and had gone into the garden, and before three of them had undergone His agony and bloody sweat, and then had been betrayed, buffeted, spit upon, scourged, and nailed to the cross, till He died, then He with His last breath said, "It is finished;" and from that time the virtue of the Highest went forth through His wounds and with His blood, for the pardon and regeneration of man; and hence it is that baptism has its power.

 This is why He "humbled Himself and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross." "Christ hath redeemed us," says the Apostle elsewhere, "from the curse of the Law, being made a curse for us." Again, he says that Christ has "made peace by the blood of His cross." He has "reconciled" us "in the body of His flesh through death, to present us holy and unblameable, and unreproveable in His sight." Or, as St. John says, the saints "have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb." And no one speaks more explicitly on this great mystery than the prophet Isaiah, many hundred years before it was accomplished. "Surely He hath borne our griefs and carried our sorrows. He was wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement of our peace was upon Him, and with His stripes we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray, we have turned every one to his own way, and the Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all." [Gal. iii. 13. Col. i. 20-22. Rev. vii. 14. Isa. liii. 4-6.]

 We believe, then, that when Christ suffered on the cross, our nature suffered in Him. Human nature, fallen and corrupt, was under the wrath of God, and it was impossible that it should be restored to His favour till it had expiated its sin by suffering. Why this was necessary, we know not; but we are told expressly, that we are "all by nature children of wrath," that "by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified," and that "the wicked shall be turned into hell, and all the people that forget God." The Son of God then took our nature on Him, that in Him it might do and suffer what in itself was impossible to it. What it could not effect of itself, it could effect in Him. He carried it about Him through a life of penance. He carried it forward to agony and death. In Him our sinful nature died and rose again. When it died in Him on the cross, that death was its new creation. In Him it satisfied its old and heavy debt; for the presence of His Divinity gave it transcendent merit. His presence had kept it pure from sin from the first. His Hand had carefully selected the choicest specimen of our nature from the Virgin's substance; and, separating from it all defilement, His personal indwelling hallowed it and gave it power. And thus, when it had been offered up upon the Cross, and was made perfect by suffering, it became the first-fruits of a new man; it became a Divine leaven of holiness for the new birth and spiritual life of as many as should receive it. And thus, as the Apostle says, "If one died for all, then did all die;" "our old man is crucified in Him, that the body of sin might be destroyed;" and "together" with Christ "when we were dead in sins, hath He quickened us, and raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus." Thus "we are members of His body, from His flesh, and from His bones: for whosoever eateth His flesh and drinketh His blood, hath eternal life," for His flesh is meat indeed, and His blood is drink indeed; and "he that eateth His flesh and drinketh His blood dwelleth in Him, and He in him." [2 Cor. v. 14. Rom. vi. 6. Eph. ii. 5, 6; v. 30. John vi. 54.]

 What a very different view of life do these doctrines present to us from that which the world takes. Only think of this one thing of the eagerness of the great mass of men after matters of time, after engagements of this world, after gain, after national aggrandizement, after speculations which promise public or private advantage; and having thought of this, turn back to the contemplation of Christ's Cross, and then say, as candid men, whether the world, and all that is in the world, is not as unbelieving now as when Christ came. Does there not seem too great cause to fear that this nation, in spite of its having been baptized into the Cross of Christ, is in so unholy a state, that, did Christ come among us as He came among the Jews, we should, except a small remnant, reject Him as well as they? May we not be sure that men now-a-days, had they been alive when He came, would have disbelieved and derided the holy and mysterious doctrines which He brought? Alas! is there any doubt at all, that they would have fulfilled St. John's words, "the darkness comprehended it not?" Their hearts are set on schemes of this world: there would have been no sympathy between them and the calm and heavenly mind of the Lord Jesus Christ. They would have said that His Gospel was strange, extravagant, incredible. The only reason they do not say so now is, that they are used to it, and do not really dwell on what they profess to believe. What! (it would have been said,) the Son of God taking human flesh, impossible! the Son of God, separate from God yet one with Him! "how can these things be?" God Himself suffering on the Cross, the Almighty Everlasting God in the form of a servant, with human flesh and blood, wounded, insulted, dying? and all this as an Expiation for human sin? Why (they would ask) was an Expiation necessary? why could not the All-merciful Father pardon without one? why is human sin to be accounted so great an evil? We see no necessity for so marvellous a remedy; we refuse to admit a course of doctrine so utterly unlike any thing which the face of this world tells us of. These are events without parallels; they belong to a new and distinct order of things; and, while our heart has no sympathy with them, our reason utterly rejects them. And as for Christ's miracles, if they had not seen them, they would not have believed the report; if they had, they would have been ready enough to refer them to juggling craft, if not, as the Jews did, to Beelzebub.

 Such will the holy truths of the Gospel ever appear to those who live to this world, whether they love its pleasures, its comforts, its prizes, or its struggles; their eyes are waxen gross, they cannot see Christ spiritually. When they see Him, there is no beauty in Him that they should desire Him. Thus they become unbelieving. In our Lord's words, "No servant can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one and love the other, or else he will hold to the one and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon ." [Luke xvi. 13-15.] When He said this, the Pharisees derided Him . And He said unto them, "Ye are they which justify yourselves before men; but God knoweth your hearts, for that which is highly esteemed among men is abomination in the sight of God." God grant that we may not be of those who "justify themselves before men," and "deride" those who preach the severe doctrine of the Cross! God grant that, if we have any misgivings about the corruptions and defects of the religion now so popular among us, we may have the grace forthwith to desire honestly to know God's will! God grant that we may not attempt to deceive our consciences, and to reconcile together, by some artifice or other, the service of this world and of God! God grant that we may not pervert and dilute His holy Word, put upon it the false interpretations of men, reason ourselves out of its strictness, and reduce religion to an ordinary common-place matter instead of thinking it what it is, a mysterious and supernatural subject, as distinct from any thing that lies on the surface of this world, as day is from night and heaven from earth!

Note

 Sixth Sunday in Lent.