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an exemption from the authority of reason, and sentiment, and conscience; if you take the licence to indulge every appetite and every passion without restraint or controul; you may;-but first come down from your rank in the scale of being; break off all intercourse with rational creatures; depart from the society of men; go to your equals; herd with the animals of the field, and eat grass with the brutes that perish: there display humanity degraded exhibit thyself a monument of foliy and guilt, to be pointed at by the hand of scorn, and to be shunned like the pestilence. If ever, like the Monarch of Babylon, thou shalt rise from thy degraded state; if ever thine understanding shall return, and thou shalt be able to lift up thine eyes to heaven, like him thou wilt praise, and extol, and glorify the King of Heaven, and give ear to that law, which he promulgates to the armies in heaven, and to the inhabitants of the earth.

II. Your obligation to obey this law will further appear, when you consider that it is the law of Heaven.

It comes to you not only recommended by your own authority, but it comes enforced by a higher authority, that of God himself. The appearances of the Almighty, to confirm the law, the prophets, and the gospel, were made for the instruction and improvement of those who saw them, and are recorded for the instruction and improvement of those who read them. The mighty God, even the Lord, hath spoken, and called the earth from the rising of the sun to where he goeth down. The first promulgation of the law was from Mount Sinai. To strike a rude and barbarous people, to reclaim a perverse and obstinate generation, it was requisite that the arm of power should be stretched out, and that the majesty of terror should be displayed. Accordingly, when the law was given from Sinai,-there was blackness, and darkness, and tempest; there were thunders and lightnings, and a thick cloud upon the mount; and, when Moses brought the people from the camp to meet with God, they trembled as one man; and Mount Sinai was altogether on a flame, and the smoke thereof went up, as the smoke of a furnace, for the Lord descended upon it in fire, and the mountain quaked; and, when the voice of the trumpet sounded long, and waxed louder and louder, God called Moses up to the top of the mount, and gave the law.

The same precepts, that were given upon Mount Sinai,

Jesus Christ came to confirm and extend. At his first public appearance, in his sermon on the mount, he republished, restored, and perfected the law. The new dispersation indeed was different from the old. The God of Abraham dwelt in darkness, and was clothed with terror. The God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ dwells in light, and is clothed with grace. Miracles of power confirmed the one; miracles of grace distinguished the other. We come not to Mount Sinai, but to Mount Zion. At the publishing of the gospel;-uo fire descended, no thunders rolled: at the publishing of the gospel, when our Saviour, being baptized, entered upon his ministry, the heaven was opened over his head, the Spirit descended upon him in the form of a dove, the messenger of peace, and a voice came from the overshadowing cloud, "This is my beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased.” Revelation, then, concurs with reason in establishing the law, and to the voice of nature is added the voice of God. Such an authority you will not despise. You will not join with the impious king of Egypt, who hardened his heat. and said, "Who is the Lord that I should obey his voice?"

III. Our obligation to obey the law will be further ma◄ nifest. when we consider that it is the law of society.

That righteousness exalteth a nation, and that vice is not only a reproach, but also a depression to any people, are truths so universally received, as to require no confirmation. All lawgivers, in all ages, have thought so, and made it their object to cultivate justice, and ten per ance, and forutude, and industry, conscious that public virtue is the source of public happiness. Philosophers and moralists have been of the same opinion; and have taught, with one consent, that the good morals of the people were the stability of the government, and the true source of public prosperity. Practice and experience have confirmed the truth of these speculations. If we consult the history of the most renowned nations, that have made a figure in the world, we shall find, that they rose to greatness by virtue, and sunk into contempt through vice; that they obtained dominion by their temperance and probity of manners, and a serious regard to religion; and, when they grew dissolute, corrupted, and profane, they became slaves to their neighbours, whom they were no more worthy to govern. Public depravit

paves the way for public ruin. When the health and vigour of the political constitution is broken, it is hastening to its decline. When internal symptoms of weakness appear, the least external violence will accomplish its dissolution.

It is a duty, then, which we owe to society, and to our country, to observe the rules of righteousness; for, in order to be good members of society, and true patriots, we

must be virtuous men.

us,

To shew your obligation to give ear to this law, let

IV. Consider that it is the law of happiness.

This, in some measure, follow- from what has been already said; for, if virtue be necessary to the happiness of public societies, it is also necessary to the happiness of private families, and of private men, unless we can suppose the body politic to be flourishing, while every individual is in misery and distress. In consulting for others, all agree that virtue leads to happiness; but it for others, why not for you? When you consult for them, you have no passions to darken your understanding, and perplex your judgment. When you consider with coolness and with candour, the observation and experience, that all of us have had occasion to make, will be sufficient to convince you, that the law of the Lord is truly favourable to the interests, and friendly to the happiness of man; that it corresponds to the just dictates of the mind, and consults the best affections of the heart. What does it forbid ?— desires, passions and vices, from which for our own sakes we should abstain, though there was no such prohibition. It forbids the gratification of desires, which would lead us to ruin; the indulgence of passions, which are the toubleis of human life, and the source of our greatest misery; the commission of vices, which waken remorse, and deliver us up to the tormentors. What does the law of the Lord command? What is lovely, and pure, and praiseworthy, what tends to make meu peaceable, gentle, hamane, merciful, benevolent, and happy.

SERMON XXV.

ROMANS V. 7, 8.

For scarcely for a righteous man will one die; yet peradventure for a good man some would even dare to die.But God commendeth his love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us.

THE Apostle Paul, the author of this epistle, was bred

at the feet of Gamaliel, and instructed in all the learning of the Jews. To his Hebrew literature, he superadded the erudition of the Gentiles; for we find him, in his epistles, quoting their celebrated authors, and alluding to their remarkable customs, and the events in their history. These verses which I have now read, carry an allusion and reference to a distinction of characters which prevailed among the Jews, and to some illustrious actions performed by the Romans, to whom he addressed this epistle.

The Jews distinguished men, with respect to their characters, into sinners, just men, and good men. Sinners are those who violate the laws of God and man, who disturb the public peace, and are bad members of society.A just man is one who does no injury to his neighbour, who gives no cause of offence to the world, who pays his debts, who conforms to the letter of the law, and who is not deficient in any of the great duties of life. A good man is one who goes farther; who is not only innocent, but useful; who is not only decent, but exemplary; who is generous, beneficent, public-spirited; who sacrifices his ease, his pleasure, his safety, and, when his country calls for it, who sacrifices his life for the public good. Such was the character of this Apostle himself. In order to propagate the Christian religion among the nations, the greatest blessing of God to the world, in order to diffuse the knowledge of this religion, he gave up all that was dear in life, undertook long and hazardous journeys, ex

posed himself to the dangers of the deep, to the chains of captivity, to the sword of the persecutor, to the derision and hatred of Jews and Gentiles. Accordingly, he met with this return, which he here mentions as being sometimes made to superior goodness; for we read in the sixteenth chapter of this epistle, that he found persons, who, for his life, would have laid down their own.

The Apostle, also, in these verses, alludes to some il lustrious actions performed by the Romans, to whom he addresses this epistle. The love of their country was the darling passion of that great people. All the soul went out in this generous ardour, and every private affection flowed in the channel of the public welfare. Judge what a strong hold it must have taken of the heart, when it glowed even in the female breast; when the wife encouraged the husband, and the mother exhorted the son, to die for their country. It was a principle in the breast of every Roman, that he owed his life to his country. This being the spirit of the people, gave birth to many illustrious and heroic actions. The spirit of patriotism glowed among the people for many ages of the republic; one hero sprung from the ashes of another; and great men arose from age to age, who devoted themselves for the public good. These being the most celebrated actions in the history of mankind, the Apostle here compares them with the death of Jesus Christ. Following the train of thought suggested by the Apostle, I shall show you the infinite superiority of that love, which prompted Jesus to die for the sins of the world, to that patriotism, which prompted the heroes and great men of old to die for their friends or for their country.

I. Those, who devoted themselves to death for their friends or their country, submitted to a fate, which they must one day have suffered: but Jesus Christ, who is the true God, and possesseth eternal life, submitted to death for our redemption.

We are all born mortal creatures. Sprung from the dust, we return to the dust again. The sentence of the Lord is passed upon all flesh, and there is no exemption from the law of mortality. We know not how soon our last hour may come. The darts of death are continually on the wing; the arrow of destruction flieth by night, and smiteth at noon-day; victims are daily falling at our right hand, and at our left, and we know not how soon we too

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