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persecutors. To such as those, holy counsel, doctrine, and reproof, is but like casting sacramental or consecrated bread to the dogs, or pearls before swine."

Awful indeed is the fact that there are dogs who are ready to bite even those who should offer them the bread of life, and swine who would trample under feet the pearl of great price!

HYMN.

How sweet, how heavenly, is the sight,
When those who love the Lord
In one another's peace delight,
And so fulfil his word.

O may we feel each brother's sigh,
And with him bear a part;
May sorrows flow from eye to eye,
And joy from heart to heart!

Free us from envy, scorn, and pride,
Our wishes fix above;

May each his brother's failing hide,
And show a brother's love!

Let love, in one delightful stream,

Through every bosom flow;
And union sweet, and fond esteem,
In every action glow.

Love is the golden chain that binds

The happy souls above;
And he's an heir of heaven that finds
His bosom glow with love.

§ XXIV. CHAP. VII. 7—11.

Christ exhorteth to prayer.

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These solemn words of our merciful Redeemer deserve to be often and deeply considered in many points of view. Well may they lead us to unite with increasing fervour in that wise and humble petition, "From hardness of heart, and contempt of thy word and commandment, good Lord, deliver us!" And great is the encouragement which may be hence derived by all those who are engaged in imparting religious instruction to the young. Theirs is indeed a good, and hopeful, undertaking. They are employed in sowing heavenly seed in hearts which, by God's blessing, may now receive it to their eternal profit, but, if neglected a few years longer, would perhaps be involved in the ruin and condemnation implied in that precept, give not that which is holy to the dogs, cast not your pearls give him a serpent?

7 Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you:

before swine!

8 For every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened.

9 Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone?

10 Or if he ask a fish, will he

11 If ye then, "being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more

your

shall Father which is in heaven give good things to them that ask him?

ech. xxi. 22. Mark xi. 24. Luke xi. 9, 10; & xviii. 1. John xiv. 13; & xv. 7; & xvi. 23, 24. Jam. i. 5, 6. 1 John iii. 22; & v. 14, 15.-f Pro. viii. 17. Jer. xxix. 12, 13.-g Luke xi. 11, 12, 13.-h Gen. vi. 5 ; & viii. 21.

READER. In these "gracious gracious words" of our blessed Saviour the nature and benefits of prayer are most strikingly set forth.-The state of mind in which a true suppliant approaches the throne of grace, and the merciful reception which he finds at the hands of his heavenly Father, are brought before our minds in a manner capable of affording at once direction and encouragement.

Ask. This implies a sense of want. It is the man who practically feels his need of anything that is disposed to ask for it,-to prefer a suit or petition to another who may be able to confer the desired benefit. It is the child who feels hunger that asks his parent for a piece of bread. And so, before there can be real prayer there must be a sense of our want of the bounty which God is able to bestow. How deep was this consciousness of need in Bartimæus, when he said, "Lord, that I may receive my sight;"-in the woman of Canaan, when she cried, "Lord, help me;"—and in the lame man at the gate of the temple, when he "gave heed unto" Peter and John, pecting to receive something from them!" Such a sense of want, spiritual and temporal, mingles in the fervent and effectual prayer of a righteous man.

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And asking implies, moreover, hu

A man may

feel his

mility of mind. need, but at the same time he may be too proud to confess it, and to ask for relief. "I cannot dig," said the unjust steward in the parable, "to beg I am ashamed." So it is with the proud heart in the presence of God. It endeavours to stifle and keep out of sight a consciousness of deficiency, misery, and want, rather than to acknowledge its helplessness, and cast itself in deep humility before him who alone can administer relief. But the man who asks, as a child of his parent, as a beggar at the hands of a rich man, and in that temper of mind to which the promise is annexed, is one of those concerning whom it has been declared, "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven."

Seek. This implies earnestness and diligence ;-a sense of the value of that which is desired, and a fixed determination to lose no opportunity of obtaining it. "We must not only ask, but seek; we must second our prayers with our endeavours; we must, in the use of appointed means, seek for that which we ask for, else we tempt God. When the dresser of the vineyard asked for a year's respite for the barren fig-tree, he added, 'I will dig about it;' Luke xiii. 7, 8. God gives knowledge and grace to those that search the Scriptures, and wait at Wisdom's gate; and power against sin to those that avoid the occasions of it."

Knock. This denotes perseverance and importunity. Humble, earnest, importunate prayer is indeed a knocking at the gate of heaven.

· ....

And they who feel that they are making application at their Father's house, will knock again and again, and not be easily repulsed. It was thus with the widow of Canaan in her supplications to the Lord Jesus Christ. It was thus, in earlier times, with the patriarch Jacob.-" Jacob was left alone; and there wrestled a man with him until the breaking of the day . . . And he said, Let me go, for the day breaketh. And he said, I will not let thee go, except thou bless me. And he said unto him, What is thy name? And he said Jacob. And he said, Thy name shall be no more called Jacob, but Israel for as a prince hast thou power with God and men, and hast prevailed;" Gen. xxxii. 24, 26-28. -In like manner our blessed Saviour assures us that true prayer shall not be unsuccessful; He says,

It shall be given you;-ye shall find;-it shall be opened to you.How plain and positive is this precious word of promise! And lest any individual should find room to doubt

which is in heaven give good things to them that ask him!-How powerful the argument, how consolatory and cheering the assurance, which our Lord conveys to us by placing before our minds the tenderness and compassion of an earthly parent towards his children, and then declaring that the goodness and lovingkindness of God towards those that fear him, and his readiness and ability to answer their petitions, are far greater! How much more! God is, in the highest sense, the Father of those who believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, through whom they have received the adoption. And with the much more of this place we may well connect that of the Apostle St. Paul in the fifth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans,-"If, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by his life."

"The effectual fervent prayer of a

of the success of his petitions on ac-righteous man availeth much." Jas.

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v. 16.-"By the infallible testimony of Heaven we are authorised to affirm constantly that there is an efficacy in the prayer of faith, which, though inexplicable by our feeble understandings, must, throughout all ages, continue to avail as much as it did in the days of those patriarchs, prophets, and righteous men who, as princes, had power with God, when, receiving a kingdom which cannot be moved, they had grace to serve him acceptably with reverence and

the side of man. Bring Christ's word, and Christ's sacrifice, with thee; and not one of heaven's blessings can be denied thee." How much more shall your Father godly fear. The Lord is ever nigh

unto them that are of a broken heart, and saveth such as be of a contrite spirit, when, taking with them the words which inspired wisdom has taught them to utter, they lift up their desires at his footstool, not seeking great things for themselves, or panting after the dust of the earth, or sighing for the vain delights of the sons of men, but thirsting and longing for the blessedness of the man whose transgression is forgiven, and who, being justified by faith, has peace with God, through our Lord Jesus Christ. We have no encouragement to hope that by taking thought for temporal satisfactions we shall find grace in the sight of the Lord; but if we aspire after the best gifts which are the heritage of the faithful, seeking first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness, we believe, and are sure, that his Divine power will give us all things that pertain unto life and godliness, through the knowledge of Him that hath called us unto glory and virtue. Though our Father in the heavens knoweth what things we have need of before we ask him, and though the purposes of his everlasting kindness are often fulfilled more substantially by withholding than by granting the desires which we naturally cherish, it is only to them who worship Him in spirit and in truth that He has promised to do exceeding abundantly above all that they ask or think; and we have no more solid ground to expect that we shall receive without asking, or that we shall find without seeking, than the husbandman has to look for an abundant

harvest springing up in the fields. which he has neither planted nor watered, or than the merchant has to calculate on receiving his own with usury for the talent which has been tied up in a napkin, or buried in the earth.”

HYMN.

What shall we ask of God in prayer?
Whatever good we want;
Whatever man may seek to share,
Or God in mercy grant.

Father of all our mercies ;-Thou

In whom we move and live, Hear us in heaven, thy dwelling now, And answer, and forgive.

When bound with sins and trespasses From wrath we fain would flee, Lord, cancel our unrighteousness, And set the captives free.

When harass'd by ten thousand foes
Our helplessness we feel;
O give the weary soul repose,
The wounded spirit heal.

When dire temptations gather round,
And threaten or allure,
By storm or calm, in Thee be found
A refuge strong and sure.

When age advances, may we grow In faith, and hope, and love: And walk in holiness below

To holiness above.

When earthly joys and cares depart,
Desire and envy cease,
Be thou the portion of my heart,

In Thee may we have peace.

When flames these elements destroy

And worlds in judgment stand, May we lift up our heads with joy And meet at thy right hand.

MONTGOMERY.

§ XXV.

CHAP. VII. 12.

12 Therefore all things 'whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them for this is the law and the prophets.

i Tob. iv. 15. Luke vi. 31. k Lev. xix. 18. ch. xxii. 40. Rom. xiii. 8, 9, 10. Gal. v. 14. 1 Tim. i. 5.

READER. This, great precept deserves a very attentive consideration; and I am induced to adopt it as the single subject for our present contemplation, especially as I am desirous of bringing before your minds some valuable remarks which have been made, by men of deep piety and sober judgment, in connection with this comprehensive rule of Christian morality.

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Therefore. Since God is ready to be so good and bountiful towards yourselves, be ye also ready to be just and kind to your neighbours. Since have received this encouragement to offer up prayers to your heavenly Father in hope of a gracious answer, take care that while you present your petitions you are in charity with all men,-who, like yourselves, are children of the universal Parent.

All things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them. This has been called the Saviour's golden rule. It is indeed a precept which applies to all the duties which we owe to our neighbours. And even a heathen emperor was so

struck with admiration at the substance of its meaning that he caused it to be written (negatively) in letters of gold, over the gate of his palace. -Let us pray that it may be written and engraven, by the Holy Spirit, on the tables of our hearts!

"The equity of this rule," says one, "is so visible, that it needs no proofs; the universal reason of mankind agrees to it in theory, although their appetites and passions may cause them to neglect it in practice."-" It commends itself, as soon as heard, to every man's conscience and understanding; insomuch that no man can knowingly offend against it, without carrying his condemnation in his own breast."

"It may be understood in either a If unpositive or negative sense. derstood in a negative sense, the meaning is 'Whatever ye would not that men should do to you, do ye not unto them.' Here is a plain rule, always ready at hand. In all matters relating to your neighbour, make his case your own. Suppose the circumstance to be changed and yourself to be just as he is now. And then beware that you indulge no temper or thought, that no word pass out of your lips, that you take would have conno step, which you demned in him, upon such a change of circumstances.-If understood in a direct or positive sense, the plain meaning of it is, 'Whatsoever you could reasonably desire of him, supposing yourself to be in his circumstances, that do, to the utmost of your power, to every child of man.' To apply this in one or two ob

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