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pathize with his sufferings, and no spirit of dependance to link your perishing soul to the all-sufficient atonement and righteousness of Christ! Oh the intense misery you are preparing for yourselves! What a life of degradation is it to live ignorant of Christ, to be guided by the senses and passions of this lower nature! What a melancholy condition it is for an immortal creature capable of enjoying GOD, and having the character of GOD emblazoned on this blessed page! What a degradation is it to the immortal spirit to pursue a course of life merely to gratify the passions that brutalize, but never can ennoble! Oh, but eternity! in that word lies an emphasis of interest on this subject. It is little, perhaps, to live a few years degraded; but to live eternally degraded, to have all the pulsations of the heart beating in misery, to be outcast from GOD's regard, and to pass eternity amidst scenes of pollution and death-what heart can endure, and what hand can be strong when this eternal calamity enwraps the conscious creature? Oh, then, seek ye to know the love of Christ; he is free to you, he stands with out-stretched arms, his accents and his voice are heard amidst the pauses of this world's storm, if you have but the ear to listen for them: "Come unto me all ye that are weary and I will give you rest." Seek ye after Christ, and your souls shall live, and then you too shall know what it is to rejoice in Christ Jesus, in a suffering and sinful world; you, too, shall know what it is to carry a bur

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And, finally, to those who have known something of the love of Christ, to those to whom it is given of special grace to turn from this world's objects, to pursue the great realities of eternity-to those, whose hearts God has impressed by his own Spirit, and sealed them for the day of redemption; oh, beloved brethren, to you, I say, ponder often on this theme of love! Surround yourselves with all these assurances of everlasting kindness. Endeavour, by the grace of GOD, to bring up your low thoughts of Christ to the high level on which he has presented himself to you. Oh think of him, and then amidst the sorrows of life your heart shall be glad, you will trace in the severest privations the marks of his wisdom and his kindness, and you will be looking forward to that great and glorious day, when shall be realized to you all that is spoken, and when it shall be true of you that “GOD has wiped away all tears from your eyes;" and true of you, as servants, that you shall serve him with no interruption of obedience, with no dimunition of gratitude, with no ending of love-shall serve him as he wishes you to serve him, and shall fall at his feet, with astonishment, ascribing grace unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins, in his own blood, and hath made us kings and priests unto God."-Amen.

66

A Sermon

DELIVERED BY THE REV. H. Mc NEILE.

(for the benefit of the reform school,)

AT ST. CLEMENT DANES, Nov. 15, 1832.

Galatians, ii. 10.-" Only they would that we should remember the poor: the same which I also was forward to do."

in all the Scriptures, as it does, and must do, in the management of every Christian, or nominal Christian community. Christian benevolence will vary and multiply her activity with the varying and multiplying necessities of the poor in her lands; and, perhaps, in none of her efforts does she more conspicuously manifest her divine origin and her scriptural cha

WHEN Saul of Tarsus was converted of this deeply important subject— to the faith of Christ, and was come Remembrance of the poor. This subto Jerusalem, he essayed to join him-ject occupies a very conspicuous place self to the disciples, but they were afraid of him. They knew what his character had been, and they did not | believe that he had become indeed a disciple; but his friend and fellow labourer, Barnabas, took him by the hand, brought him to the Apostles, told them what had passed on the road going to Damascus, how Saul had seen the Lord, how Jesus had spoken to him, and how he had after-racter, than in those where temporal wards preached boldly in Damascus in the name of the Lord Jesus. When Peter, James, and John perceived the grace that was given to Saul, they gave to him the right hand of fellowship, agreeing that they should divide amongst them the divine work of preaching the Gospel, Saul and Barnabas going to the Gentiles, and the other Apostles to the Jews. But before they separated, there was one thing which the original Apostles of TION of the poor. the Lord mentioned with some anxiety to their new associates in this work-it was, that they should remember the poor; which thing Saul and Barnabas themselves were willing, nay, forward to do.

Thus, my brethren, we find, that at the very fountain head of the history of the Christian church, where the waters of life separated into two streams, bearing their rich and free blessings to Jew and Gentile, there, at that interesting period of history, we find most honorable mention made

support is combined with moral discipline and Christian instruction. It is to such an effort, that it becomes my duty to invite your attention now.

But, first, I desire, in humble reliance upon the promised guidance of the Holy Ghost, to declare,

GOD'S SOVEREIGN APPOINTMENT IN THE CONTINUANCE OF POVERTY,

AND GOD'S PROVIDENTIAL PROVISIONS FOR THE SUPPORT AND INSTRUC

The continuance of poverty, my brethren, is not the result of human oppression, but of divine appointment, otherwise how could it have continued. Poverty has ever been declaimed against by factious, and turbulent, and mischievous, and interested demagogues, as a thing intolerable amongst men who had equal rights by nature. Such harangues readily catch the attention and inflame the passions of the multitude; and they have led to insurrection fre

quently, sometimes to revolution itself. | part of my design to consider directly or indirectly these schemes as a mitigation of the evil. All that is necessary for me to say now is, that, at the best, they could be but mitigations; and that poverty retains with unsparing grasp his uncompromising tenacity upon the communities of mankind.

But again, poverty has been legislated against by benevolence in the

favored land a legalized provision against poverty has been made. Every effort that human industry could accomplish, and every effort that human ingenuity could devise has been adopted by one legislator after another, in the hope of improving this provision, and rendering it better adapted to the varying circumstances of the times, and the various circumstances of divers individuals. And what has been the result? The man who denies the divine appointment of poverty, the man who denies that the perpetuity of poverty is of the pur

The excited and discontented poor, stimulated by such harangues, have arisen, in the physical force of overwhelming numbers, against the constituted authorities of the land as administered by the rich, and havoc, rapine, murder, and civil war have been the fearful consequences. And what then --is a question of the deepest importance-what then? Has poverty ceased when insurrection has become suc-high places of our state; in our own cessful? Has poverty ceased when revolution has been effected? No truly; men may excite to rebellion and violence if they will, but poverty remains with most persevering obstinacy. In the political wheel of revolution, like every other lottery, the blanks are many and the prizes are few; and the histories of civil wars supply us with this stubborn fact, that, in the end, the increase of power and riches has been found among the few, and a corresponding increase of poverty and slavery amongst the many. Poverty has been reasoned against by infidel philosophers and by politi-pose of GOD, is bound, if true to his cal economists. Grounding their ar- own principles, to admit that such a guments on the abstract, as they say, system, as I have now described, and equal rights of men, they have must now put an end to it-equality propounded one theory after another, preserved from the rashness of revoeach holding out the plausible and lution and the plausible theories of flattering prospect of putting an end untutored philosophers. Here is the to poverty in the land. One has practice of wisdom carried on by fancied that he has found a cure for practical men, under the sanction of it in the fertile resources of the land the lawful authorities of a state, itself, sufficient, he alleges, amply to adapted from time to time to the rising supply every man and leave none exigencies of the people; surely, this poor, if only properly cultivated. man ought to say, against such a sysAnother, casting his view across the tem as this, nothing so unnatural, surface of our globe, and finding vast nothing so barbarous as poverty can tracts of uncultivated and unoccupied possibly continue? But my brethren land, has proposed emigration pro- what has been the fact? Have the perly organized as a panacea for the poor laws put an end to poverty? evil. Another, laying his hand on Let the overseers of the parishes be the fountain head of the mischief, has enquired of, where benevolent con→ proposed, what he has called, restric- tributions assume the aspect of legal tions on the rapid increase of popu- payments, and those men will tell lation. My brethren, it is not any you, that the wants of the poor "have

grown by what they fed on;" that a liberal poor rate has removed the shame without removing the pressure of poverty; and that, in too many painful instances, the warm expression of gratitude for a donation of love, has been converted into the cold murmuring of discontent at the allowance of the law. But why? Poverty is unnatural in the abstract; it is opposed to all man's reasoning about equal rights; it is opposed to all his passions; unnatural to the majority, intolerable to the feelings of the vast physical majority of mankind, and how is it that it has continued? Every effort has been made against it-efforts by law-efforts by fraud -efforts by force-efforts by argument, and all in vain, it abides still. We challenge the infidel to account for the phenomena; and if he retort the challenge, and ask us to account for it, we, with fairness, reply, it is the appointment of a sovereign God.

Concerning the land of Judea, that land that flowed with milk and honey, which was the glory of all lands, we read this decisive announcement in the word of GOD, "The poor shall never cease out of the land." And, again, we read, "The Lord maketh poor, and maketh rich." And in the Gospel his- | tory, when a poor woman, whose sins had been many, and being freely pardoned, her love found vent; when she came to the Saviour with an alabaster box of very precious ointment, and broke the box, and poured the ointment on his feet; and when some of the bystanders murmured against her because of this manifestation of her tender love, saying, "Why was this waste made, because the ointment might have been sold for much and given to the poor," Jesus interposed and said, “Let her alone, why trouble ye her, she hath wrought agood work on me, for the poor, yehave always

with you, and whensoever ye will, you may do them good." The poor ye have always with you.

My brethren, it is a matter of more consequence than may strike your apprehension at first hearing, that the continuance of poverty is not by any ingenuity or combination of artful men in authority, retaining that authority over the majority of the poor; but that it is of the purpose and appointment of GOD. There is no combination of artful men that could have borne the assaults which in every country hath been made against poverty; but the purpose of Jehovah stands, endures, perseveres, and makes every effort of man to countervail it recoil upon himself. "The poor shall never cease out of the land," saith the Lord. Let us try whether we cannot make them cease out of the land, says the benevolent legislator. They may surely cease, says the sanguine philosopher. They shall cease, and that suddenly, says the infuriated revolutionist. But all in vain, they do not cease, because GOD has said it.

Now, my brethren, there is one circumstance recorded in the Scriptures which seems to raise objections to this, and which ought in candour to be noticed in this branch of my argument. We read in the Acts of the Apostles, concerning the Christian church in its infancy, that "they had all things in common." In the fourth chapter of the Acts, it is written, "The multitude of them that believed were of one heart and one soul: neither said any of them that ought of the things which he possessed was his own; but they had all things in common. Neither was there any among them that lacked: for as many as were possessors of lands, or houses, sold them, and brought the prices of the things that were sold, and laid them down at the Apostles' feet: and distribution was made unto every mali,

according as he had need." It may | history to which I have alluded in the

here be argued, that the Christian church presents an instance of a community from which the poor had ceased; and it may further be argued, that the Christian church has fallen from her high estate, in that there do exist poor within her bosom now who could not exist, had the principles upon which she started been persevered in and carried into faithful operation.

Acts, we read of the saints at Jerusalem, "that no man lacked," that there was no poverty amongst them, they had every thing in common, there were contributions as every man had need, and no man lacked any thing. Within a very few years after, we find collections made, under the sanction of the Apostle, for those poor saints at Jerusalem. What then are we to conclude? either that the system of having all things in common had ceased, and that distinctions again arose amongst them, so that there were poor saints at Jerusalem; or else that the system persevered in had made them all poor together, so that not one amongst them could help another, but they were all indebted for help to the contributions sent from saints in strange countries? In either case it is plain that the poor had not ceased out of the church, any more than out of the land, and that the circumstances set before us in the fourth chapter of the Acts, were temporary in their duration; for those of whom it is there written, that "they lacked nothing," are afterwards described as "poor saints of Jerusalem," for whom the Apostle begged of his brethren in Macedonia and Achaia.

Now, my brethren, before I say any thing in answer to such an argument, grounded on this passage in the Acts, let me remind you of the language of the Apostle Paul, respecting the collections that were to be made in various churches of the saints of Greece, to be sent for the support of the poor saints at Jerusalem. On this subject, he is very urgent with the Corinthian church, in both his epistles. In the first epistle to the Corinthians, in the last chapter, he says, "Now concerning the collection for the saints, as I have given order to the churches of Galatia, even so do ye. Upon the first day of the week let every one of you lay by him in store, as God hath prospered him, that there be no gatherings when I come. And when I come, whomsoever ye shall approve by your letters, them will I send to bring your liberality to Jerusalem." In the second epistle, at the beginning of the ninth chapter, he presses the same subject. "As touching the ministering to the saints, it is superfluous for me to write to you: for I know the forwardness of your mind, for which I boast of you to them of Macedonia, that Achaia was ready a year ago; and your zeal bath provoked very many." And alluding to this subject in the epistle to the Romans, he says, in the fifteenth chapter, "For it hath pleased them of Macedonia and Achaia to make a certain contribution for the poor saints which are at Jerusalem." Now in the

We conclude from such a string of reasoning, that the poor are appointed of GOD to continue to the end. And sure I am that whatever some persons may think of such an argument, and such a conclusion it will come with the precious power of divine consolation to the poor christian man, who will look up with contentment, seeing the appointment of his Heavenly Father's hand in the position he holds in society, who will thereby be encouraged in the diligence, that is Christian duty, in his calling, whatever it may be; and will thereby, also, be strengthened in that trust to which he is invited by the most affectionate words of his dear

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