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miscuous distribution is not always to subsist. The day cometh, when we all are to appear before a more discerning Judge, and a more impartial tribunal. The day cometh, when our Lord Jesus Christ shall descend from heaven in all the glory of his Father, to unveil every character, and to render to every man according to his works. At that day, how shall he lift up his head, who hath been all his life the slave of the world's opinion; who hath moulded his principles, and his practice, solely to please the multitude; who hath been ashamed of his Saviour and his words; and to gain favour with men, hath apostatized from the native sen

timents and dictates of his heart?— To say all in one word: there is a contest now between God and the world. These form the opposite sides Consider which divide mankind. well to which of these you will adhere. On the one side, lie your allegiance, your honour, and your interest; on the other, lie your guilt and your shame. For the one, conscience and reason; for the other, passion and inclination, plead. On the one hand are the approbation of God, immortal honour, and divine rewards; on the other,―remember and beware!-are the stings of conscience, endless punishment, and endless infamy.

SERMON LXX.

ON THE WISDOM OF GOD.

[This concluding Discourse was chiefly intended to be a general recapitulation of instances of the wisdom of Providence, several of which have been more fully illustrated in other Discourses contained in this volume.]

Now unto the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only wise God, be honour and glory, for ever and ever!-(1 Tim. i. 17.)

IT is of the highest importance to religious conduct, that our minds be filled with suitable conceptions of the attributes of God. They are the foundations of our reverence for him; and reverence is the foundation of religion. All the divine perfections are interesting to man. Almighty power, in conjunction with Eternity and Omnipresence, naturally inspire solemn awe. Infinite Goodness relieves the mind from that oppression which power alone would produce; and from our experience of present benefits, and our remembrance of the past, creates love, gratitude, and trust. In the middle between these stands the contemplation of Divine Wisdom, which conjoins impressions

of awe with those of comfort; and while it humbles us into profound submission, encourages, at the same time, our reliance on that King eternal, immortal, and invisible, who is justly styled in the text, the only wise God.

Among men, wisdom is a quality different from cunning or craft. It always supposes good and fair intention in the person who possesses it; and imports, that laudable ends are pursued by proper and justifiable means. In like manner, wisdom in the Supreme Being cannot be separated from the rectitude of his nature. It is, in him, an exertion of benevolence; and imports, that the purposes of justice and goodness are

carried on and accomplished by means the most effectual. To meditate on some of those instances in which this divine wisdom is displayed, cannot but be highly favourable to the impressions both of piety and of virtue.

It is difficult to say, whether the natural, or the moral world, afford the most conspicuous and striking displays of the wisdom of God. Not one, nor many discourses, nor indeed the study and labour of a whole life, were, in any degree, sufficient to explore them. Of the proofs of wisdom which the natural world affords, I cannot attempt now to discourse. Any illustration of these would lead to discussions of a scientific kind, which more properly belong to the philosopher; and on which philosophy has often employed itself, with much utility and honour. I shall only take notice, that, in proportion as human knowledge hath enlarged its sphere of research and discovery, in the same proportion hath the wisdom of the Creator struck the minds of all inquirers and observers with the highest admiration. All nature is in truth a scene of wonders. In the disposition of the heavenly bodies, and the general arrangement of the system of the universe; in the structure of the earth; in the endless variety of living creatures that fill it; and in the provision made for them all, to enable them to fulfil the ends of their being; it is not easy to determine, whether power, wisdom, or goodness, be most conspicuous. It belongs not only to the heavens to declare the glory of God, and to the firmament to shew forth his handy work; in the smallest and most inconsiderable, as well as in the most illustrious works of God, equal marks appear of profound design and consummate art. It has been justly said, that there is not a vegetable that grows, nor an insect that moves, but what is

sufficient to confound the atheist, and to afford the candid observer endless materials of devout adoration and praise.

When we turn to the moral world, the field of admiration which opens to us is no less extensive and striking. I can only mention a few instances of that exquisite wisdom which every where meets us.

In the first place, let us attend to the constitution of human nature. Though we are taught by revelation. to consider it as now impaired by the fall, yet, as it stands, we behold the traces of a noble structure, planned and executed with the highest skill. All the powers and faculties bestowed on man are such, as perfectly suit his condition, and adapt him to the purposes for which he was designed. Senses were given him, that he might distinguish what is necessary for the preservation and welfare of his body.

Now, suppose that any one of those senses, the sight, for instance, or the hearing, or the touch, had been in a considerable degree either more blunt, or more acute, than it is at present, what an unhappy change would this have made upon our state? On the one hand, greater imperfection of the organs would have deprived us of all the comfort and advantage which we now enjoy from such powers. On the other hand, a greater degree of exquisite sensibility in them would have rendered life a burden to us. Our senses, instead of being inlets to knowledge and pleasure, would then have become constant avenues to uneasiness and pain. Their powers, therefore, are skilfully adjusted to that measure of strength, which allows them to answer the purposes of health, safety, and comfort; without either falling short of this line of usefulness, or improperly, and hurtfully, stretching beyond it.

In the mind, appetites and passions were placed, as the moving powers of

the soul, to impel its activity. But as their impulse required regulation and restraint, reason was, at the same time, conferred as the directing power. Of all our passions, selflove, and the desire of self-preservation were, with the utmost propriety, made the strongest, for a reason which the meanest capacity may comprehend. Every man is most immediately committed by Providence to his own care and charge. He knows his own situation best; and has more opportunities of promoting his own happiness, than he can have of advancing the happiness of any other person. It was therefore fit and wise, that, by the strongest instinct, he should be prompted to attend to himself.--At the same time, as no man standing alone is sufficient for his own welfare, it was necessary that, by mutual sympathy and social instincts, we should be drawn to give aid to one another. Here it deserves our particular notice, that the force of those social instincts is, with admirable propriety, proportioned by Providence to the degree of their usefulness and importance. (See Serm. XXXII.) Thus, that parental affection, which the helpless state of infancy and childhood renders so needful, is made the strongest of them all. Next, come those ties of blood, which prompt mutual kindness among those who are intimately joined together by brotherhood, and other family connexions. To these succeeds that valuable instinct of pity, which impels us to assist the distressed, wherever we behold them. To take part with others in their good fortune belongs to man's social nature, and increases the sum of happiness. At the same time, to take part with the prosperous is less necessary than to sympathize with the unhappy; and therefore the principle which prompts us to rejoice with them that rejoice, is made not to be

so strong as that which impels us to weep with them that weep.

But they are not only the laudable and important parts of our disposition, which discover the wisdom of the Author of our frame; even our imperfections and follies are by him rendered subservient to useful ends. -Amidst those inequalities of condition, for instance, which the state of human life required, where it was necessary that some should be rich and others poor, that some should be eminent and distinguished, and others obscure and mean, how seasonable is that good opinion which every one entertains of himself, that self-complacency with which he compares himself to others; and that fond hope, which is ever pleasing him with the prospect of future pleasures and advantages in life? Without those flattering sensations, vain as they often are, how totally insupportable would this world become to many of its inhabitants? Whereas, by means of them, Providence hath contrived to balance, in a great measure, the inequalities of condition among mankind. It hath contrived to diffuse pleasure through all ranks; and to bring the high and the low nearer to a level with each other, than might at first be supposed. It hath smoothed the most rugged tracts of human life; and hath gilded with rays of borrowed light its most dreary scenes.

One instance of Divine Wisdom, in framing our nature, is so remarkable as to demand particular attention; that is, the measure according to which God has dispensed knowledge and ignorance to man. There is nothing of which we are more ready to complain, than of our narrow and confined views of nature, and of Providence, and of all things around us? And yet, upon examination, it will be found, that our views extend, on every side, just as far as they ought; and that, to see and know more than is

allowed us, instead of bringing any advantage, would produce certain misery. (See Serm. II. and Serm. LIX.) We pry, for instance, with impatient curiosity, into future events. Happily for us, they are veiled and covered up; and one peep behind that veil, were it permitted, would be sufficient to poison the whole comfort of our days, by the anticipation of sorrows to come. In like manner, we often wish with eagerness to penetrate into the secrets of nature, to look into the invisible world, and to be made acquainted with the whole destiny of man. Our wish is denied; we are environed on all hands with mystery; and that mystery is our happiness: for, were those great invisible objects fully disclosed, the sight of them would confound and overwhelm us. It would either totally derange our feeble faculties, or would engross our attention to such a degree, as to lay us aside from the business and concerns of this world. It would have the same effect, as if he were carried away from the earth, and mingled among the inhabitants of some other planet. The knowledge that is allowed to us, was designed to fit us for acting our part in our present state. At the exact point, therefore, where usefulness ends, knowledge stops, and ignorance commences. Light shines upon us, as long as it serves to guide our path; but forsakes us, as soon as it becomes noxious to the eye; and salutary darkness is appointed to close the scene. Thoughtless and stupid must that man be, who, in all this furniture of the human mind, in this exact adjustment of its several powers to the great purposes of life, discerns not the hand of adorable Wisdom, as well as of infinite Goodness.

In the second place, Let us contemplate the same wisdom as exhibiting itself to us in the moral government of the world. We are in

formed by revelation, that this life is designed by Providence to be an introductory part of existence to intelligent beings; a state of education and discipline, where creatures, fallen from their original rank, may gradually recover their rectitude and virtue. Under this view, which is in itself perfectly consonant to all that reason discovers, we shall find the general course of human affairs, confused as it may sometimes appear, to have been ordered with exquisite wisdom.-It was necessary to such a state, that all the active powers of man should be brought forth into exercise, and completely tried. It became proper, therefore, that there should be a mixture of characters in the world, and that men should be shewn in a variety of situations. (See Serm. LIV.)-Hence that diversity of tempers and dispositions which is found in society; those inequalities in rank and station, which we see taking place; and those different talents and inclinations which prompt men to different pursuits. By these means, every department in society is filled up; and every man has some sphere prepared for him, in which he can act. He is brought forth as on a busy stage, where opportunity is given for his character to display itself fully.—His life is, with great propriety, varied by interchanges of prosperity and adversity. Always prosperous, he would become dissipated, indolent, and giddy: always afflicted, he would be fretful, dejected, and sullen. There are few persons, therefore, or none, whose lot shares not of both these states; in order that every disposition of the heart may be explored, and every mean of improvement afforded.-As man is ultimately designed for a higher state of existence than the present, it was not proper that this world should prove a paradise to him, or should afford him that complete satisfaction which he inces

santly pursues.

therefore, are often made to blast his hopes; and, even while the comforts of life last, they are always mixed with some troubles; in order that an excessive attachment to this world may gradually be loosened. The

course of things is evidently so ordered by Providence, that occurrences shall be always happening, to bring down the most prosperous to a level with the rest of his brethren, and to raise up, in their turn, the low and the distressed.

Disappointments, I will finally reward. His approbation
of it is signified to every man by the
voice of conscience. Inward satis-
faction and peace are made always to
belong to it; and general esteem and
honour for the most part to attend it.
On the other hand, the wicked, in no
situation of life, are allowed to be
truly happy. Their vices and their
passions are made to trouble their
prosperity; and their punishment to
grow out of their crimes.
Let any
one attentively recollect the material
incidents of his life; and he will, for
the most part, be able to trace the
chief misfortunes which have befallen
him to some guilt he has contracted,
or some folly he has committed.-(See
Serm. LXIII.) Such is the profound
wisdom with which Providence con-
ducts its counsels, that although it
does not appear to interpose, men are
made to reap from their actions the
fruits which they had deserved; their
iniquities to correct them, and their
backslidings to reprove them; and while
they suffer, they are forced to acknow-
ledge the justice of their punishment.

In the midst of those vicissitudes, which are so obviously conducive to improvement, both wisdom and goodness required, that the Supreme Governor of the world should be seen to protect the interests, and favour the side, of virtue. But in the degree of evidence, with which this was to be shewn, it was no less requisite, that proper temperament should be observed. Had virtue been always completely rewarded, and made happy on earth, men would no longer have had a motive for aspiring to a more blessed state. In the case of every crime, had Divine justice interposed to bring complete punishment on the head of the criminal; or had all the felicity which is prepared for the just in a future world, and all the misery which there awaits the wicked, been already displayed to the view, and rendered sensible to the feelings of men; there would have been an end of that state of trial, for which our whole condition on earth was intended. It was necessary, therefore, that at present we should see through a glass darkly. A certain degree of mystery and obscurity was, with perfect wisdom, left on the conduct of the Almighty. (See Serm. IV.) But, amidst that obscurity sufficient encouragement and support are in the mean time given to virtue; sufficient ground is afforded for the full belief, that it is what the Deity loves, and

-These are not matters of rare or occasional observation; but deeply interwoven with the texture of human affairs. They discover a regular plan, a formed system, according to which the whole train of Providence proceeds; and which manifests, to every serious observer, the consummate wisdom of its author.-As thus, in the constitution of human nature, and in the moral government of the world, Divine wisdom so remarkably appears, I must observe,

In the third place, That in the redemption of the world, and in the economy of grace, it shines no less conspicuously. The subject which opens to us here is too extensive to be fully illustrated at present; but the great lines of it are obvious. (See Serm. V.-Serm. XX.-Serm. XXV.

Serm. LV.)-In carrying on a plan, by which forgiveness was to be dis

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