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of the eyes, and the pride of life, have reigned over you with a despotism, which, from any other source, would have broken your hearts, and made you cry out of wrong, without measure. Still you have hugged your chains, and licked the hand of your oppressors.

Call next to mind the eagerness with which you have sought the haunts of sin, and courted the means of corruption. Recollect the times and the spirit with which you have gone to those places where sin was known by you to be practised; where it was made easy, convenient, and safe; where temptations were gathered and hoarded up with a careful hand, lest they should fail of their ruinous efficacy, and lest otherwise the young should not in sufficient numbers be destroyed. Think of the midnight hours which you have spent in seeking and perpetrating iniquity. Think of the companions whom you have loved and chosen, and with whom you have united in crimes, which neither you nor they would ever have dared to commit alone.

With these things before your eyes, remember also how often, and in what distressing degrees, you have set an evil example before others. Of all means of corruption an evil example is the surest: and, among the bitter objects of regret seen by the mind on a dying bed, our own corruption of others is one of the most bitter. To think, to feel that we have encouraged others to sin; that we have contributed to fix their evil habits; have lessened or destroyed their conscientiousness; have led them to evil thoughts, principles, and actions, of which, but for us, they would never have dreamed; have, under the name and guise of friendship, taken them by the hand, and led them to perdition, or prevented them from turning back to the path of life,—is to think and feel one of the most distressing combinations of guilt which will ever agonize the soul. Yet, alas! how often are mankind, even in early life, forced to think, and feel, unless they are torpid, these melancholy things? The time would fail me to proceed farther in this employment of remembrance. From what has been said, it will be easy for you all to pursue this solemn subject to any

extent. How well does it deserve to be pursued to the utmost extent, by every man living?

With these most interesting objects in view, I ask again, What will be the appearance of this congregation before the Judge of all the earth? How different from that which we would fain believe; from that which we cannot but fervently desire!

VII. Let me exhort every person present solemnly to ask himself, how he will appear at the great day?

The sole use of preaching is to make the mind better. To the accomplishment of this end it is indispensable that those who hear should make the case their own, and consider themselves as primarily concerned in that which is said. If, then, you who have heard these awful considerations, would derive from them the least benefit, you must severally bring them home to you own hearts. Every one of you must realize that he himself will hereafter appear before the bar of God; and that every work, with every secret thing which he has done, will be brought into judgment. Then it will be scarcely possible for him to fail of asking himself the question which I have now proposed.

Your past life you cannot alter. It is gone beyond recal. But it may be reviewed, and by reviewing it you may become better. If that life, when it shall be brought out into open day, will fill you with shame and anguish, and even with despair, how immensely important is it, that your future conduct should be such as to alleviate these distresses, and furnish you support and consolation at the final trial? For this end you must consent to watch your hearts with all diligence, to mark the rising sin, and to spy out the approaching temptation. You must resolve that you will serve God; must turn to him with all the heart; must mourn for your sins, and renounce them; must believe the Redeemer, and yield your souls into his hands. You must faithfully seek the Lord while he is to be found; you must call upon him while he is near. If you do these things, he will have mercy on you, and abundantly pardon you.

To prompt you to this most interesting change of your conduct, keep these amazing considerations before your eyes. Bind them upon your right arm, lay them up in your hearts; speak of them when you sit in the house and when you walk by the way; solemnly ponder them when you lie down and when you rise up. Can you remember in this manner that you will soon be judged, and yet continue stupid? Can you ask, each for himself, "What will be the account which I "shall give? What will be the place where I shall stand? “What will be the doom which I shall receive?" and still sleep the sleep of death? Remember that you are hastening to endless ruin or immortal glory. "Behold the day cometh, "which shall burn as an oven; and all the proud and all that "do wickedly shall be stubble; and the day that cometh shall "burn them up, and leave them neither root nor branch." In that dreadful day, "They that fear the Lord,” saith Jehovah, "shall be mine when I make up my jewels, and I will spare "them as a man spareth his own son that serveth him." Life and death are this day both set before you; therefore choose life that live for ever. you may

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SERMON XXV.

SERMON I.

THE DISAPPOINTMENTS WHICH WILL TAKE PLACE AT
THE DAY OF JUDGMENT.

LUKE XIII. 28-30.

"There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth, when ye shall see Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and all the prophets, in the kingdom of God, and you yourselves thrust out.

"And they shall come from the east, and from the west, and from the north, and from the south, and shall sit down in the kingdom of God.

"And, behold, there are last which shall be first, and there are first which shall be last."

23 In the 24th verse of this chapter we are informed that a certain man said unto Christ, "Lord, are there few that be saved?" As this was a question of improper curiosity, Christ, instead of answering it, directed him and all others who shall become acquainted with the injunction, to strive to enter in at the strait gate, and subjoined, as a powerful reason for obedience to the command, that many would seek to enter in, and would not be able. To this melancholy declaration he annexed a most affecting account of the miserable disappointment which would

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be experienced by those who in this world, but on false grounds, expect an admission into the divine kingdom. They will go with confidence to the door of life, and say, "Lord, Lord, open to "us." They will declare that they have eaten and drunk in his presence, and that he has taught in their streets, but he will reply, "I know you not whence ye are; depart from me ye "workers of iniquity." Then he subjoins, "There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth when ye shall see Abraham, "and Isaac, and Jacob, and all the prophets in the kingdom "of God, and you yourselves thrust out. And they shall come "from the east and from the west, from the north and from the "south, and shall sit down in the kingdom of God. And be"hold there are last which shall be first, and there are first "which shall be last."

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In this passage of Scripture we are taught,

I. That some of the human race will be shut out from the kingdom of God, who have confidently expected admission. II. That others, whom they expected to see shut out, will be received.

III. That the distress occasioned by this disappointment will be very great.

These subjects, deeply interesting to every religious assembly, and demanding at the present moment the most solemn attention of this audience, will be briefly considered in the following discourse.

I. Some of the human race will be shut out of the kingdom of God who have confidently expected admission.

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"There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth when ye "shall see Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and all the prophets in the kingdom of God, and you yourselves thrust "out." The persons to whom these words are addressed are exhibited in the context as coming with an assurance of admission, and as alleging what they think very sufficient reasons why they should not be rejected. They give Christ the honourable title of Lord, and thus indicate their own character

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