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THE LOVE OF THE SPIRIT.

No. I.

THE LOVE OF THE TRINITY COMPARED.

true; and because it is a truth of supreme importance; and because, in his case, human appearance had to be counterbalanced and counteracted by divine declarations. He took upon him It is by comparing the revealed perfections and "the form of a servant, and was made in the likeworks of the Father, Son, and Spirit, that we ar- ness of man;" and, therefore, according to the rive at the sublime conclusion, that these three depth of that humiliation, had to be the height of are one; the same in substance; equal in power the proof of his equality with God; and according and glory. The mystery of this fact is not at all to the number of his privations and woes, had to increased, nor is the sublimity lessened at all, by be the number of distinct attestations to his origithe circumstance, that less is said concerning the nal riches and glory. But in the case of the holy divinity of the Spirit, than concerning that of the Spirit, his advent involved nothing which veiled Father and the Son. This can only surprise those his glory, or contrasted with his godhead, or seemwho forget or overlook the fact, that the Savioured to contradict his claims; and, therefore, as no expressly guarded his disciples against expecting nuch information from the Spirit concerning the nature of the Spirit. "When he is come, he shall not speak of himself." John xvi. 13. He shall testify of Me." John xv. 26. "He shall glorify Me." John xvi. 14. After these assurances from the lips of Christ, it is unreasonable to expect so many declarations of the divinity of the Spirit of God, as of the divinity of the Son of God. Besides, it is not the number of texts, which proves a point of this kind, but their explicitness. One explicit declaration of the Godhead of the Spirit, is just as conclusive as a thousand, when Scripture is concerned. It is not, indeed, so satisfactory to the eye, nor so imposing to the ear in controversy, as a host of passages; but as all the validity and value of a host of proofs depends on their individual truth, one ought to be as decisive as any number; for if we cannot depend on the truth of one, many cannot give us certainty.

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counterbalance was wanted, none was given.— Enough was said to declare him to be the eternal Spirit: and, in order to prove the supreme importance of this truth, his divine agency runs through the whole fabric of divine truth, and is so interwoven with the entire Scriptures, that it cannot be separated from them without tearing them to pieces.

I would not have touched this subject at all, had I not felt it necessary to justify my attempt at a comparison between the love of the Father, Son, and Spirit, in redemption; for it is quite unnecessary to multiply books upon the divinity of the Holy Spirit. "What can the man do who cometh after (Owen) the king," except to simplify or condense? My simpler object is, to compare the love of the Trinity, just as others have compared the natural perfections of the Father, Son, and Spirit; in order that their equality in love may be as familiar as the unity of their essence. And I readily grant that, in a matter of such infinite there is need of this argument: for, although no importance as the divinity of any being, who claims Trinitarian would hesitate for a moment to say, our supreme homage and confidence, we have a that the Spirit as well as the Father, "is love;" right to know his title before we yield to his nor to add, that the persons of the Godhead must claims. Although, therefore, I have maintained be as much one in heart as in glory; yet, no writhe sufficiency and satisfactoriness of even one ter, that I know of, dwells with complacency, or text of revelation on this subject, I quite feel that appeals with triumph, or argues with power, on it is natural, and not unreasonable, to expect, that the love of the Spirit. Christ does so. The apossuch a truth as the Godhead of the holy Spirit, tles do so. And Owen evidently saw and felt the would be frequently introduced in Scripture. And capabilities and claims of the subject. In general, it is so. His personality and divine agency are however, theologians do not. They content themnot only implied in all the revealed accounts of selves with taking it for granted; and thus leave creation, providence, and redemption, but are also the fact in an abstract or indefinite form, which often (some hundred times) and unequivocally ex-neither touches the heart, nor tells upon the chapressed. In fact, as much is revealed concerning his divinity, as concerning the divinity of Christ, although less is said.

This is not a distinction without a difference, nor without a cause. Repeating a truth is not adding to its sum or certainty, however it may enhance its importance to us. The divinity of Christ is true, not because it is often repeated; but it is often repeated because the first mention of it was

racter of plain Christians. Indeed, many of the serious "suffer loss," through this inadvertency. They are somewhat afraid of the Spirit. I mean, they do not see that his heart is as warm, and his hand as willing, to do his work in redemption, as the heart and hand of the Father and the Son were to do their part. They have thus less confidence in the Spirit, and less love to him, than towards God and the Lamb. They do not, however,

God, " dwelt in" them, and "witnessed" with their spirit to their adoption. Rom. viii. In like manner, when the Saviour commended the Spirit to the confidence of the church, as "another Ccmforter," it was not by eulogizing or explaining his love, but by stating what he would do when he came: the Comforter shall lead you into all truth; shall bring all things to your remembrance; shall abide with you for ever.

give less attention to him. Happily that is pre-prayer, that the Spirit "led" the children of vented; our theology, both from the pulpit and the press, being rich, beyond comparison, in glorious exhibitions of the necessity, the fulness, and the freeness of the grace of the Holy Spirit. Both the lesser and the greater stars of evangelism are all culminating in the grand scriptural point, that the influences of the Spirit are just as free as they are necessasy, and as accessible as they are indispensable. This is as it should be. And nothing is wanted in order to complete this "demonstration of the Spirit," but to enshrine and crown it with the wonders of his love. That, I am quite unequal even to attempt: because my own mind can only deal with an individual mind, and not with a general subject, in religion. I never could theologize nor generalize at all, apart from trying to carry a practical or experimental point, with a supposed person, to whom I write, just what I should say in conversation. I am, however, on this occasion, more than usually reconciled to this weakness or defect of my own mind; because my conversational hints upon the love of the Spirit, will in no wise forestall the subject; but may, perhaps, create a taste for it in the circle of my "GUIDES" and "CLOSET LIBRARY;" and thus help, at least, to call forth some " Master of Israel," to complete our theology, on the doctrine of The Comforter." Why does not the author of "The Official Glory of the Son of God," bring out that of the Spirit?

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Having thus stated how the subject stands at present, I proceed in my own way. Did you ever notice the emphatic brevity of apostolic language, when divine love is the subject? "God is love," says John. "The love of Christ passeth knowledge," says Paul. With the same sublime brevity, Paul says, "I beseech you by the love of the Spirit." Thus in all the three instances, we are evidently thrown upon a fact, which words cannot express, and which needs no epithets to commend it. Accordingly, it is always illustrated by other facts, and not by descriptive words. Thus, when John says, "God is love," he immediately adds, "In this was the love of God manifest towards us, because God sent his only-begotten Son into the world, that we might live through him. Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved us, and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins." 1 John iii.8. Here facts are every thing, and phraseology is nothing but the bare statement of them. Thus also Paul writes, when illustrating the love of Christ, "He loved me, and gave himself for me." Gal. ii. 20. He loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood," says John, to the seven churches in Asia. Rev. i. 5. Even in heaven, the language of eternity, either does not supply descriptive words to saints or angels, or they prefer facts, in celebrating the love of Christ; for there are no epithets in the new song: "Thou art worthy; for thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood." Rev.

v. 9.

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Now exactly in this way, or by facts, and not by descriptions, is the love of the Spirit illustrated in Scripture. When Paul pleaded with the Romans by "the love of the Spirit," he had just before reminded them, that "the Spirit helpeth our infirmities, and maketh intercession for us" in

Thus, it is not from wards, but from his works, that the love of the Spirit should be estimated, when it is brought into comparison with the love of the Father, or the love of the Son: nor is it any valid objection against the equality of their love to the world and the church, that there is no suffering, nor any humiliation, in the whole history of the Spirit's love. This is equally true of the Father's love.. That too involved no suffering nor privation: but no one doubts, on this account, the reality, the greatness, or the strength of the love of God. No one suspects it of being at all less than the love of Christ, because Paul does not say of it, as of Christ's, that it "passeth knowledge." The absence, therefore, of this epithet in his appeal to the love of the Spirit, implies no inferiority in that love. In a word, its measure is to be found in what the Spirit does, just as the measure of the Father's love is to be found in what he gave, and the measure of the Son's love, in what he endured.

Let us then contemplate the love of the Father. It is amazing! But for it, there would have been no Redeemer, no Sanctifier; and, therefore, no salvation on earth, just as there is none in hell. The love of God is, therefore, the real and original fountain from which all the streams of mercy and grace flow to us, in a river of the water of life. That river could flow, however, only upon channels of "everlasting righteousness," or in full consistency with law and justice; and nothing but the atonement of Christ could be such an honorable medium. Divine love could become redeeming love, only by a sacrifice which magnified the law, and glorified the divine character. The love of God is not, therefore, irrespective of the work of Christ. It both required and provided an atonement, to legitimate and charter the reign of grace in the divine government. And all this the death of Christ did.

Law and justice were not, however, all that had to be satisfied and glorified in the highest, before divine love could become redeeming love, honorably and consistently. HOLINESS, also, had to be satisfied, and magnified, and glorified in the highest; and that could only be done by making the redeemed holy, or the pardoned perfect.

Here there was room-occasion-necessity, for the love of the Spirit. The saved had to be sanctified on earth, and perfected for heaven: and what but love-infinite love-could have led the Holy Spirit to undertake the sanctification of the Church, which Christ purchased with his own blood? This he did undertake; and he will so consummate its perfection, that divine Holiness shall be as much satisfied and glorified with the eventual purity of the redeemed, as justice is with their escape, or law with their acquittal. If, therefore, the love of God passeth knowledge, in

pitying our misery as sinners, and in bringing all in the same sense, and to the same degree; seehis sympathies to bear honorably and effectually ing he gave all the light which revealed that "unupon our salvation, is not the love of the Spirit, inspeakable gift," and all the will and power by pitying both our weakess and depravity, and in which any and every sinner applies to the Saviour. bringing all his grace and strength to bear upon | The Son is thus as much the free and unspeakaour meetness for heaven, love that passeth know- ble gift of the Spirit to individuals, as he was the ledge in its warmth and wonders? Where is the gift of God to the world. difference, between the love which fits sinners for heaven, and the love which opened heaven, by the blood of the Lamb? Both are infinite!

It is desirable on this subject, that our thoughts and feelings should run occasionally in the same channel, and at the same rate they do, when we Let us now contemplate the love of Christ. If realize to ourselves vividly what must have been the comparison fail at all, it will fail here. It the condition of the world, had no Christ unshall not succeed, however, by any forcing or stra- dertaken its cause. In that case, the world would tagem on my part. It will fail unnecessarily, either have been another hell, or the gate of however, if you determine to think only of the "the place prepared for the devil and his angels;" sufferings of Christ; for as there was no penal conscience would have had no peace, and hope tests of the love of the Spirit, there can, of course, no anchor; life no charms, and death no antidote: be no comparison on this point. Christ stands for man could not have been even what heathen alone, in all the glory of suffering and dying love! man is, either in condition or character, had there The Father's love endured nothing penal or pain- not been a mediator between God and man from ful, for the world or the church. That it would, the very moment of the fall. No; even the heahowever, have done so, had any paternal suffer- then are not a specimen of what the world would ing been either proper or necessary, we can hard- have been "without Christ :" for, bad and aboly doubt. Well; why not judge in this way of the minable as idolatry is, it has some moral laws, and love of the Spirit also? There was no more oc- proclaims some hopes, however vague or fallacious; casion for him to suffer at all, in proof of his love, whereas, there would have been nothing but " than for the Father to do so in proof of his love. fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignaDoing any thing unnecessary, is not a demonstration" every where on earth, as every where in hell, tion of love. Doing what is wanted most is the had not Christ interfered on our behalf. This fact, demonstration of that; and nothing of suffering in common with many others, renders the love of was wanted, in order to atone, when the sacri- Christ unspeakable. fice of Christ was finished. His love left no room in Gethsemane, or on Calvary, for the love of the Father or of the Spirit to redeem by price; because he left no drop in the cup of wrath, shrunk from no stroke of the sword of justice, and refused no demand of the law. So far, therefore, the love of the Father, and the love of the Spirit, stand in the same light and relation to redemption by price.

You are prepared to go a step farther towards a comparison, now that you see how the facts stand. The real question is now, what was wanted, after Christ finished his atoning work? There was his sacrifice-perfect, all sufficient, and glorious! Nothing could be added to its merits, or its efficacy, or its acceptableness, before God, as a ransom for souls. But still, around that sacrifice, when it was "finished," stood a world, yea, a church, which knew neither its merits nor its meaning; and which never could have understood them, had not the Spirit explained them; and never would have employed them, had he not applied them. Thus, although the fountain for sin and uncleanness was opened by the death of Christ, there were none to wash their robes in the blood of the Lamb, until the love of the Spirit enlightened and led them. But for his love, therefore, the love of Christ would have remained unappreciated and unknown, both to the world and the church. But for what the Spirit did, all that Christ endured would have had no saving effect upon man on earth, although its instantaneous effect in heaven, was the confirmation of all the angels in their holiness, and the ratification of all the saints in their happiness, and the complacent "rest of God" in his love. O, surely, if God is love because he so loved the world as to give his Son to be the propitiation for our sins, the Spirit must be love also, I (15)

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Well; just ask yourself, what would the world have been without the work of the Holy Spirit? I will not allow myself to answer this question, by supposing the worst. Say, if you will, that we should have gone all the length in morals and hope, which they reach who resist the Spirit. It certainly would have been something, to have even a form of godliness, and a ceremonial of worship, and a theory of Christianity. These, without the Spirit, are useful. Christianity, however nominal, exalts the character of nations; and however corrupted, is still the most powerful check upon immorality. But what is civilization or morality, were they even universal, whilst the heart is unchanged, and heaven not desired, and God not loved, and the Saviour not prized? All thiswould have been the case, every where and all along, had not the Spirit loved the world, and sanctified the church!

These hints do not, I am aware, call up a horrid scene before the imagination: it is, however, an appalling scene to a sober mind. Only think!had all churches in all ages been churches only in name; all ministers mere functionaries for hire; all Christians mere formalists; then, all hope would have been delusion: all faith presumption; all death damnation! This has not been the case. But why? No church would ever have become spiritual, by its own power or choice. No man could have become wise unto salvation, by unaided efforts, however arduous. No sufferer could have extracted solid comfort from the promises, by mere pondering What do we not owe to the love of the Spirit! But for that, the thief saved on Calvary would have been the only trophy of the cross of Christ. Yes; Paradise might have been barred at once and for ever, when he entered: for, without the Spirit, no man, afterward, could either

have gloried in the cross, or understood it. O, if "Want of a due consideration of this great love we love Christ, the love of the Spirit to us, should of the Holy Ghost weakens all the principles of be an inspiring theme! It is, remember, a part our obedience. We lose both the power and of the greatness of the great mystery of godli-pleasure of our obedience for want of this consiness, that Christ was "justified by the Spirit." deration. Let the soul lay due weight on it: The Yes; had not the Spirit justified the claims of the Holy Ghost, in his infinite love and kindness toSaviour, by clearing up the glory of his person wards me, hath condescended to be my Comfortand work; and endeared him, by applying his sa- er. He doth it willingly, freely, powerfully!crifice and grace, even his disciples could not have What have I received from him? In the multidone so, and we should not have attempted it. I tude of my perplexities, how hath he refreshed have been chiefly influenced and regulated in my soul! Can I live one day without his consothese hints, by the stress which the Saviour him- lations? And shall I grieve him by negligence, self laid upon the work of the Holy Spirit. He sin, or folly? Shall not his love constrain me to had, evidently, as much reference to it, in dying walk before him in all well pleasing?”—Owen on for us, as the Father had to him in pardoning. Communion with God, 3d Part.

Consider this fact. You say, and justly, that but for the love of Christ in dying for us, the paternal love of God could not have saved us, consistently with all the perfections of the divine character and government. Now, this is no reflection upon the love of God. It is, in fact, the very glory of his love, that it thus required to be in full and everlating harmony with all righteousness. Well; in this perfect harmony with eternal rectitude, the love of Christ placed the love of God and just so, did the love of the Spirit place the love of Christ. For, it is the very glory of the Saviour's redeeming love, that it depended as much on the sanctifying love of the Spirit, as the paternal love of God did on the blood of the lamb. Without the work of the Son as a mediator, the Father could not have honorably become our Father; and without the work of the Spirit as a sanctifier, the Son could not have honorably become our mediator. Christ himself, therefore, looked as much to what the love of the Spirit would do for us, as God looks to what Christ has done for us. Thus, as our redemption by price required the death of Christ, so our redemption by power required the agency of the Spirit.

These remarks are, I am aware, but general, if not somewhat vague. They are purposely very general; because the love of the Spirit is traced, in this little volume, throughout all the work of the Spirit, from its beginning as the good work of grace, on to its consummation in glory. I conclude this essay, therefore, by reminding you that the love of the Trinity, although not brought into competition, is so far brought into comparison in Scripture, that the name of Father, Son, and Spirit, is equally connected with baptism, and equally associated in the benediction upon the churches; and in heaven, the Spirit appears as "seven spirits before the throne," that we may know and acknowledge the all-perfect Godhead of his nature, and the all-sufficient power and freeness of his grace. Rev. i.

Who can read the following passage from Dr. Owen, without regretting that his purpose was "to number rather than to unfold" the actings of the Spirit? "The principle or fountain of all his actings for our consolation, is his own great love and infinite condescension. He willingly proceedeth, or comes forth from the Father, to be our comforter. He knew what we were, and what we could do, and what would be our dealings with him. He knew we would grieve him, provoke him, quench his motions, defile his dwelling-place; and yet he would come to be our comforter!

No. II.

THE LOVE OF THE SPIRIT IN CONVERSION.

"THE work of Christ, and the work of the Spirit," says Dr. Wardlaw, "are mutually necessary to each other's efficacy and are thus both alike indispensable to the salvation of the sinner. Without the work of Christ, the Spirit would want the means or the instrument of his operation; and without the work of the Spirit these means would remain inefficacious and fruitless. Without the work of Christ, there would not have been, for any sinner, a foundation of hope towards God; without the work of the Spirit, no sinner would have been induced to build upon this foundation. Christ has opened the way of access to God;-the Spirit brings sinners to God in the way which Christ has opened."

This bringing of sinners to God, by "the new and living way" opened by Christ, is CONVERSION.None are brought nigh unto God, nor turned from the error of their ways, by the power of the Holy Spirit, but those who are led "in the way everlasting;" or, as Paul expresses the transition from the broad to the narrow way, "made nigh by the blood of Christ." Without this, there may be departures from sin, and approaches to righteousness, in some things, and for a short time; but, without this there is no saving conversion. The heart, until affected by the cross, does not follow the feet, however fast or far they may run in the path of general duty, by the impulse of ordinary motives.

You have, no doubt, observed and felt this.Perhaps you can recollect instances in your own history, when you made considerable improvements in your conduct, and resolved to make still greater; but neither with good-will. It was compulsion, not choice; fear, and not love, which produced these reformations. Had they even been greater, therefore, and all lasting, they were destitute of the very first principle of true religion, good-will. Forced or slavish obedience is not service rendered to God, but a tax paid to the conscience to moderate its uneasiness.

What a mercy it is, that the gospel contains and presents motives which can win.the heart as effectually as the law can work upon the conscience! Were not this the case, we should never yield to God any cheerful or willing obedience, and thus never please or be pleased: for, as it is

impossible to please God at all “without faith" in Christ, so it is impossible to find pleasure long in works without faith.

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dark and desperate character; but neither is indulged or welcomed. Both are dreaded and hated. This is not the case with mere conscience, Well; if you are thankful that Christ is "the when it breaks loose upon a sinner. It can sear way" to the Father, you ought to be equally as it suffers, just as some sores mortify as they thankful that the Holy Spirit is the guide to and spread; or it can madden against God and man, in that way. Did you ever pause to consider how until the opinion of both is despised, and the powmuch love the Spirit displays in thus leading sin-er of both defied. Such reckless remorse ought ners to God by Christ? It is worthy of your spe- not to be ascribed to the strivings of the Holy Spicial notice and gratitude. It will not divert nor rit. It is not, indeed, natural nor common for even divide your attention from the love of God in giv- a very guilty conscience, to make a man a terror ing his Son, nor from the love of Christ in giving to himself, or to those around him. Indeed, this himself, for us. It will increase your love to God occurs so seldom, that it has been the chief cause and to the Lamb, to trace the love of the Spirit as of confounding natural and supernatural convicthat shines in the conversion of sinners. tion. It is so very rare, to find even a very wicked man trembling or despairing; and so common to see many as wicked as he is, yet quite fearless, that Christians have been tempted by the anoma ly, to ascribe all awakenings of conscience to the work of the Spirit.

Now there is no conversion from sin until there be conviction of sin: and there is no conviction of sin, which tends to Christ, or to holiness, but that which the Holy Spirit implants in the soul. Thus, there is great love even in the severest part and form of the work of the Spirit.

We forget this, or overlook it, whilst conscience is either as unquenchable fire, or as a gnawing worm, within us. Such convictions seem, then, to be sent in judicial anger, not in judicious love. It is, however, in love, that they are sent: witness the design of them at Pentecost. Had not Peter's audience been cut to the heart, they would not have cried out for mercy, much less have looked to Christ for it.

Natural conviction, however strong, never looks to the cross; nor, when very strong, ventures to hope or pray for mercy. It is supernatural whenever it tries to relieve itself at the feet of the Saviour. It is sent in love, whenever it sends us to the gospel to search for hope, or to the mercy-seat to seek for hope, or to the cross to wait for hope. Conviction is then the Spirit wounding, that he may heal; casting down, that he may lift up again. It is evidently his work even when there is only a desire for salvatian; and although the way of salvation be almost unknown at first. Accordingly, both Peter and Paul recognised, in that trembling inquiry, "What shall we do?" the quickening power of the Spirit. Neither the Jews at Pentecost, nor the jailer at Philippi, knew what to do when they were awakened to a sense of their guilt and danger. The sacred fire that inflamed their conscience did not enlighten their understanding equally at the same time. It only revealed danger, and originated the desire to escape, in the first instance; and did not shed guiding light nor cheering warmth upon any mind, until the apostles proceeded to unfold "the fulness of the blessing of the gospel."

Here, if any where, we may learn to distinguish between natural conscience, and supernatural conviction. The latter (as might be expected) is not reckless nor desperate, even when most overwhelming. The sinner quickened by the Spirit, may see no way of escape at first; but he desires one, and is looking and inquiring for one. He may have no hope for a time; but he wishes to hope. Like Jeremiah's penitent, he is willing to "put his mouth in the dust, if so be there may be hope." In a word, his sufferings do not irritate his spirit against God. The agony of his conscience does not harden his heart. There may be a passing thought, or a momentary feeling of a

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This may be well meant; but it is ill judged.All the conviction wrought by the Holy Spirit, is intended to "glorify" Christ, by rendering his cious blood, precious in the sinner's estimation: and, therefore, all hardening horrors, and all terror which has no tendency towards the cross or the mercy-seat, should either be left altogether unexplained, or referred to any thing but the agency of the Holy Ghost; for he can have nothing to do with the production of alarm, which either steels the heart against God, or drives the soul away from the Saviour. It is "the sorrow of the world," and not "godly sorrow," that worketh death and despair, in every instance, where there is no insanity: and whenever there is reason to suspect insanity, (of which vice is not the cause,) there is no reason for putting a harsh construction even upon despair itself.

These distinctions ought not to be lost sight of: and yet, they ought not to be hastily applied. The first aspect of an awakened conscience, however awful, should not be treated as mere remorse. The Spirit, as in the case of the jailer, may have much to do with convictions, which, at first, are altogether terrific, and almost desperate. He had, of course, nothing to do with the rashness of the jailer; but he evidently had much to do with the "trembling," which followed it.Whilst the jailer drew his sword to kill himself, the Holy Spirit was certainly not convincing him of sin: but when he called for a light, and sprang in trembling" and inquiring, Paul treated him as a man quickened by divine power. However, therefore, an awakening may open, or express itself, for a time, it ought to be met promptly, fully, and even kindly, by the glad tidings of a free salvation; and never reckoned mere remorse, until it has defeated all the means of grace.

If these hints throw any light upon the way in which we should judge and act in the case of others, they throw still more light upon our own convictions, of the evil and danger of sin. These are more than natural, yea, more than providential, if they have either endeared the Saviour to us, or led us to pray fervently for an interest in his atonement and intercession. Convictions which lead to this, are the leadings of the Spirit; and all in love, however painful they may be.Had the "hold" which the angel took of Lot, left

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