REV. CHARLES PREST
“Therefore thus will
I do unto thee, O Israel; and because I will do
this unto thee, prepare to
meet thy God, O Israel.” -- AMOS iv
12.
This chapter refers to the condition
of Israel at the time of this prophecy, and to the
expostulation and threatened procedure of God concerning
the nation. God’s people had revolted from
Him; they had sunk into idolatry; they had been often
reproved, but had hardened their necks, and therefore
the Lord, after recapitulating the calamities which
had befallen them, and which all came in the way of
fatherly chastisements for their recovery to righteousness,
and indicating that his anger was not turned away,
says, “and because I will do this unto thee” and
because having done this repentance does not appear,
then prepare to meet me. That is, meet me in
battle. If you will not submit, then let the
battle be fought; if you will not bow down to these
kind modes of discipline kindly intentioned,
however terrible in execution, then prepare to meet
me. This expostulation proceeds upon a very
intelligible principle a principle, however,
which we sometimes sadly forget, and which we are
too much in the habit of neglecting on the
principle that man is an accountable creature; and
secondly, that God will call him to account for his
conduct.
God has a controversy with man, with
us a controversy with us because of our
sin, our sin being an outrage against the divine love;
a controversy with us because He is right and we are
wrong; because He designs the welfare of all, and
the sin that we love is productive of universal destruction;
a controversy with sinners that can only be terminated
in one of two ways a controversy with every
unconverted person here to-day. Do not deceive
yourselves: if you are strangers to the life of
God, you are in opposition to Him, and with you as
sinners there is a controversy only to be terminated first,
by your submission, your repentance and,
thank God, He has prepared a perfect and suitable method
for our submission, and for our repentance.
If He has a controversy with us, He wills it to be
terminated in such a mode as shall secure the original
purpose of his great love, which our sin has outraged.
Christ has appeared in our behalf, and for this purpose
has offered a full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice,
oblation, and satisfaction for our sins. For
this purpose the Divine Spirit waits in all our assemblies,
and now in this place, that any of you who are now
enemies to Him by wicked works, being pricked in your
hearts on account of your sins, and groaning under
your condemnation, may fly for refuge to the hope set
before you in Christ Jesus our Lord. So God
would have this controversy terminated. So He
invites you in his great mercy to terminate it.
And for this purpose we are ministers of reconciliation,
and “we pray you in Christ’s stead, be
ye reconciled to God.”
There is but one other way of terminating
this controversy, and that is by our destruction.
If we will abide in our controversy, if we will wage
the battle to the end, this destruction must ensue,
here is no method else no escape any where
between the one extreme and the other; it is submission
and life, it is battle and death death eternal.
O that death eternal! What is it? Not
the annihilation of your souls. What is the
death of a soul? The loss of the life of God the
loss of communion with God. The soul is made
for such a communion: this is its true life; it
has no satisfaction apart from this enjoyment.
There cannot be communion without love; that is the
soul of communion; and if you renounce the reign of
love, and come under the dominion of enmity, you cut
yourselves off from the life of God, you die, and
must endure the bitter pains of eternal death.
I pray God that you may terminate this controversy,
and thank God that you may do so, by the submission
of your hearts to his merciful provision of salvation,
that so you may live in hallowed Christian blessedness
here, and inherit perfect fellowship and communion
with God hereafter.
We should humble ourselves in the
presence of that great calamity which has fallen upon
our flocks and upon our herds. I think it is
well in times of public calamity that public attention
should be called to these things; and our attention
has been called thereto not, it is true,
by the governing authorities of the country.
No matter for that. It is right that we should
listen to the admonition that we have received in
our own denomination, and do all we can rightly to
humble ourselves, and above all, earnestly to pray
to God that He would take away the evil from us, and
that, in taking away the evil, He would render us the
less liable to promote the dire necessity of future
visitation. Let me then call your attention
to some general principles connected with God’s
dealings with the nations.
There is a national as well as an
individual providence. In the ancient government
of God over the nations of the earth, in his dealings
with his own people and with the heathen peoples about
them, his hand was clearly discerned on many occasions,
and his arm sometimes made bare. There were
the predictions of certain events to come, and there
was the recognised accomplishment of those predictions
sometime afterwards. Then, again, you find miraculous
interpositions of correction, of punishment, or
of deliverance. If you turn your attention to
the history of God’s Church, you find all these
things manifest; you find Israel in Egypt; then the
command that they should be allowed to pass away from
their bondage; you find Egypt resisting the command,
and God sent among the people of Egypt signs and wonders,
and plagues by the hand of Moses, but they submitted
not. He called them to obedience, but they rebelled.
By and bye, He slew their firstborn, the chief of
all their strength, and then the people came out with
silver and with gold. Nations are not simply
chastised in this world, they are also punished.
Every one of us shall give an account of himself
to God at the last great day, and strictly speaking,
the punishment of separate individuals will not begin
in this life; but nations cannot be judged collectively
hereafter; they are dealt with here; and God’s
dealings with the nations stand out in his palpable
acts with these Egyptians. They saw the hand
of God for a time, but they fell back into their ancient
rebellion and pursued the Israelites to the Red Sea,
and God made that sea a way for his ransomed and destroyed
the pursuing host. Go through the entire history
of God’s ancient people. You find the Assyrians
round about Jerusalem, you see the angel of God going
forth, and that mighty host is destroyed. Go
through all the dealings of God with heathen nations,
and you find these physical manifestations of God’s
power. In our day there are no such manifestations
as these. In modern times the events of the divine
government are not so authoritatively predicted, and
the exceedingly foolish attempts of some people to
interpret prophecy and to apply it arbitrarily to
passing events cannot be too severely condemned.
They tend greatly to prejudice the proper interpretation
of Scriptural prophecy before the world, and deserve
severe reprehension, and should be altogether discountenanced
by all men of sound mind. In our day we have
not these authoritative predictions of events.
But amid all this there is a tendency to ignore the
action of God in the government of the world altogether.
Instead of recognising his presence or acknowledging
his power, the varied events political,
social, and otherwise events like the one
to which I have just referred, affecting the nation,
are denied their true character; and the view that
I have ventured to place before you in many places
would be treated with ridicule. Men say, when
they look at political events, that they are to be
traced to the conclusions of well-directed political
economy, or to the failure of the application of sound
principles of government. I know very well that
if the pestilence comes there are men who trace it
to no higher than physical causes. I know very
well that if great calamities happen in storm or tempest
the physical cause is alone recognised. And with
reference to the scourge of our cattle clever men
look, as they ought, after the physical causes.
They look, as I think they are bound, to the development
of the evil influences leading to such a result.
But if men now-a-days are Christian enough to recognise
God in the parliament of this country there is no
great response, unless it be a response of ill-concealed
scorn; and even among people who profess more of Christianity
there is a danger of leaving the stern, enlightened,
and faithful recognition of God which distinguished
our fathers, and of looking, in some fancied superiority
of our intellect which is but a fancy;
for there were wise men before us for explanation
in something, in anything oft-times, rather than the
recognition of God’s power.
Remember this, however, brethren,
that the principles of God’s government in our
day are the same which have inhered in that government
in all ages that, however human circumstances
may differ, however the nations of this world may
alter, however the powers of men may vary time after
time, God’s government is an immutable thing;
it changes not. The perfect idea of a human
government is this I do not say it is realised to
have certain fixed principles that are to abide, and
then in the application of those principles to find
an elasticity which shall meet every conceivable alteration
of circumstances about us. That is the idea
of a perfect human government; but human governments
do not attain to it. The government of God,
however, is perfect. The great principle is
love “God is love;” its great
end, the welfare of man; the purpose of that government,
the spread of Christianity for the welfare of mankind.
There is no expediency in this government,
as men understand it. The governments of this
world are too much founded upon expediency the
government of this country for the last sixty or seventy
years lamentably founded upon it. There was
a time when there was less of it here, but the disciples
of expediency increase, and it is now rather “What
is convenient?” than “What is right?”
There is an expediency taught in the Bible, but it
is nothing more than the best way of doing the right
thing. It never truckles. The government
of God knows nothing of our human expedients; it knows
a great deal of Divine arrangements, and God as truly
governs as though in his government of the nations
He should work signs and wonders and divers miracles
daily.
God has spoken in the history of our
own country. Look at some of the startling events
of the last two hundred years. You look at the
act of our noble, intelligent, never-to-be-sufficiently-admired,
firm old English ancestors, in driving James the Second
from his throne, and working out the glorious Revolution
of 1688. Well, if you look at all this politically,
you speak of their wisdom, their fortitude, and their
indomitable spirit; you speak too of storm and tempest
all working in their favour. Aye, aye, but the
hand of God was there, as much in sending away that
unworthy King as God’s hand was in sending Nebuchadnezzar
to feed among the oxen. God’s hand may
not appear in our modern times as in former days,
but faith sees that hand in the common affairs of
mankind. But because we do not see the operation,
because the operation is not palpable to men’s
senses, the agency of God is forgotten. Depend
upon it, it is a great mistake to imagine that if we
could see, now and then, some great miracle wrought,
we should get into the habit of recognising the power
and wisdom of God. The Israelites were fed in
the desert by miracle, and rebelled against God whilst
they ate the food miraculously given to them.
The wonder the perfection of the Divine
operation is this, that without disturbing in our little
individual history any of the common affairs which
arise in every-day life, without working any miracle
at all, and whilst to the eyes of men all things continue
as they were from the beginning, whilst there is nothing
observable in the method, He works all things together
for the good of them that love Him, combining opposing
forces and blending together the elements of life
and of death in one grand atmosphere of benediction
for the welfare of the righteous, and all this without
disturbing the ordinary course of cause and effect.
The power of God impresses itself not merely through
the lower links of the chain of providence cause
and effect, but upon the higher part of that chain
which sends down its influence, its intelligence, its
all-wise benevolence, to work out the welfare of those
that are the objects of his love.
So it is with nations. You will
see public events rising up in connection with ordinary
causes, but we ought to acknowledge the great First-cause.
The principles of divine government which operated
in the old time are now as surely in operation as
they were then. They are not antiquated:
they are not at all supplanted; they operate in the
same way, to the same ends; they operate to national
and personal benefit, to national and personal reproof,
or, in the neglect of such admonition, to national
and personal punishment, showing us that God’s
government is now the government which it was in the
ancient days, and that though we see no miracles in
our day God is as much in the midst of unthinking
multitudes as when men were startled by the visible
interposition of his Almighty power.
Let us look, then, at the state of
things about us now. Is there not sufficient
cause in this land to lead us to humble ourselves,
to improve the admonition of our God; that we should
prepare to meet Him, in the only way in which we can
meet Him to our profit, by our personal submission
to a greater extent; and if we love our country, that
we should put ourselves into a position to bring the
nation out of any state of rebellion against God,
to lead it back to a more perfect reconciliation with
Him? What evils have we now to deplore?
Why, a great number. It is a blessed land after
all; and there is more of Christianity found in it
than in any other in the world. There is doubtless
more of the direct influence of Christianity in our
population than you will find elsewhere, and certainly
more of the indirect influence upon the constitution
of the nation, upon our legislation, upon our national aye,
and upon our domestic habits. There is a large
amount of the indirect influence of Christianity in
our midst, for which we have cause to be thankful.
But then, on the other hand, how much is there of
evil? There is great evil in our midst.
There is first, what really our fathers had not so
much to do with there is the presence and
power of a subtle, of a most ably-wrought and powerfully-patronised
Popery, about which we have been asleep for too long
a time, Popery, which is inimical to the welfare of
any nation, and inconsistent with the political happiness,
prosperity and security of any people. You have
not far to go for the proof of this. You have
only to go to the present miserable condition of Ireland
to prove it. It is all very well for disclaimers
to arise from the men who created the disloyal element
of this mischief, but they must esteem the Protestants
of this country more credulous than I hope they will
prove if they expect them to believe their present
protestations. What else have you? You
have the presence of this Popery also where Protestantism
alone ought to be known. You have it dishonestly
intruded into the temples of Christian truth; and you
have the pernicious nonsense of miserable and disgraceful
antics obtruded into what men call divine worship,
utterly beneath the dignity of sensible men.
You have another thing. You have infidelity,
and in the pulpit too the pulpit in high
places infidelity in its worst form.
You have all this, and no power, and very little
inclination exists to correct it. You have all
this, and multitudes love to have it so. That
is one form of evil, leading to many other forms,
and causing all thoughtful men to deplore the condition
of churches cursed with a schism like this, with a
false doctrine and heresy so utterly opposed to the
truth and to the salvation of men. Well, then,
look, at the profanity of the people around us.
Look at the ungodliness of decent people. I
am not here to-day to call your attention simply,
as people sometimes do, to the lowest classes of society.
They are bad enough. They are a festering mass
at the foundation of all the greatness of the nation;
they are a mass which, if not corrected in their tendencies,
may at any time be quickened into an activity that
will utterly wreck the entire superstructure of all
that as Christians and as Englishmen we hold dear.
But higher up, where there is no profaneness or criminality,
or gross and disgusting visible intemperance, what
other evils are there? There is decency, but
there is an absence of the recognition of God.
God is not in men’s thoughts. And there
is a fearful and fatal indifference as to the claims
of religion that has come over the nations. Multitudes
neglect public worship. I apprehend the least
evidence that anybody can give of religious impression,
or of recognition of the claims of religion, is that
they should attend the public worship of Almighty God.
You find, however, hundreds of thousands in this nation
who never attend divine service. If our churches
and chapels in London were to be attended next Sunday
by the usual number of persons, and those besides
who ought to attend were disposed to try to gain admission
at any one time during the day, we have not half churches
and chapels enough to hold them; whilst, as it is,
the room provided is not occupied. This indifference
is a fearful thing. Paul yearned over his countrymen,
but in some respects our countrymen are worse than
Paul’s. “I could wish,” said
that glorious, patriotic man that grand
old man, that most blessed and chief of all the Apostles,
with heaven in his view, his career well-nigh ended,
his work done, and Churches rising up around him of
which he was the father not churches built
upon other men’s foundations “I
could wish myself accursed from Christ for my brethren,
my kinsmen according to the flesh.” Yet
“I bear them record, that they have a zeal of
God, but not according to knowledge.” In
England, at this day, there are multitudes of whom
it may be said, “God is not in all their thoughts.”
And the heathenism spread about us is as bad in its
developments as in any other part of the world, and
more aggravated in its character because of its immediate
proximity with the light and truth of our blessed
Christianity. There is in this land, too, an
absorbing of men in worldliness: this, perhaps,
comes nearer to us. In my time I have seen worldliness
not only enthralling obviously and professedly worldly
men. I have seen worldliness come into the Church aye,
among Methodists. How many young men have I
seen, earnest, zealous, devoted, doing just that work
for God which must be done by young men if the population
of this land is to be won to Christ they
enter into business-life, by-and-bye God prospers
their industry, and they begin to thrive in the world;
and what then? Oh, then this fervour abates they
get immersed in earthly things. We lose their
activities in the Church; the ungodly part of the
world lose the influence of a blessed example and
of their Christian teaching. They are too busy
to attend to the service of God at all on the week
days, they say to their ministers: “We will
find the money if you will send men to do the work
among these poor people.” Find money to
do it! So they ought: but do they think
they place the Church under obligation by doing that?
Not a whit. They ought to be thankful to the
Church, and to the God of the Church, that He will
have their money, that God permits them gratefully
to recognise in this way their stewardship; but I
say to every such person, if you think you can purchase
exemption from personal devotion to God, and from such
devotion as shall lead you to spread the truth by your
personal labour, to the utmost extent of your ability,
you are greatly mistaken. We can have no such
compositions of God’s claim; you must not dream
of them. There is a feebleness, therefore, of
the Church; oft-times arising from this cause, a feebleness
we must seek to cure, as it only can be cured, by
an increase of our own personal godliness.
But how do we stand just now?
God has sometimes admonished this nation for its
ungodliness. I do not speak of the nation now
as profane or criminal. Take the best view of
it. And I remember that a great theologian has
said, the true view of man’s depravity is not
that every man is profane or intemperate or mischievous the
great proof of the universal depravity of man is found
in man’s ungodliness in his not recognising
the claims of God, and not bowing to his love.
We have had admonition after admonition, within our
own lives, most of us. Not long since God sent
a pestilence into our midst on two remarkable
occasions. Well do I remember the state of the
people where I was labouring in one of the large towns
of this country, with between three and four hundred
deaths, from cholera, occurring every week. The
people were alarmed. There was a national day
of humiliation and prayer; our places of worship were
crowded. The people were alarmed, but they were
not permanently impressed. God heard prayer;
yes, he delights to hear prayer. God answered
it; he delights to answer it. The evil passed
away; the concern passed with it; and I shall never
forget the contrast between the congregations on the
day of humiliation, and when they were summoned to
thank God for the removal of the scourge. “Were
there not ten cleansed? but where are the nine?”
It is only four years ago that another
check came upon the nation that one of
our great branches of national industry became suddenly
paralysed; and what mercy was there in that!
There was the good hand of God in the administration
of that chastisement, in the conduct of the people
under such calamities, and in the absence of mischievous,
designing men from among them. I have known
the time when that population would have been inflamed
by a calamity of far less consequence to acts of the
greatest violence. God’s hand was there.
He chastised the nation; but He guided the chastisement.
And now again, another evil has come upon us a
greater evil, perhaps, than people imagined at first this
plague among our herds. There will be great
loss to individuals, and no doubt there will be great
loss to all; for it is impossible for so much wealth
or money’s worth to be destroyed in any nation
without all the people in the nation feeling it more
or less. I think it right, therefore, that we
have been called to recognise the hand of God therein to
look through all external causes to his hand.
It is a very dangerous thing, a thing I have never
done in my life, and never would do, to talk about
the providence of God in its punitive power, to talk
about retribution in the application of God’s
providence in individual cases. It is very unwise
to do that, and sometimes it may be most uncharitable.
It is different, however, in God’s dealings
with a nation. We are admonished, or punished,
by a great national calamity that has stirred all classes
of men each in their own way, and has raised all their
activities in order to see if evils of this kind may
not be checked in their operation. This evil
is present with us. And then, as to other evils
that may arise. If you look abroad into the
world, to the relations of this country to other nations,
you have peace just now; but he would be a bold man
who should predict the continuation of this peace
for any length of time. No, your statesmen cannot
keep the peace of nations; and the folly of our boasting
about the peace-working power of our commercial relations
has already be seen. We cannot give peace to
the world. Who can tell how soon the calamity
of war may afflict this country? Not I trust
on its shores; but what is this land that it has any
right to expect a perpetual immunity from the horrors
of war in her midst? Do not say these things
will pass away. Do not say these things are
remote. They may quickly overtake us, and we
should be careful that we do not provoke our God to
hasten any of his judgments or to aggravate present
ones. If you are delivered from calamity if
this great national calamity, for such it is, has not
touched you, or at least not so touched you as to inconvenience
you at all, remember to give sympathy to those that
are suffering from it; and let thankfulness for your
present mercies manifest itself in that godly amendment
of life which shall prove your best contribution to
the future safety and the prosperity of the nation.
If we neglect this we place ourselves in opposition
to God’s government, and are in danger, by our
opposition, of being told to prepare to meet God in
conflict. Individual sinners do so who refuse
repentance; nations do so that will not submit to
God. You that are living without God, pray what
prospect have you, what prospect of victory?
The potsherd of the earth may strive with the potsherd,
but woe to the man that strives with his Maker.
The God whom you are called upon to meet is the “God
that formeth the mountains, that createth the wind,
that declareth unto man what is his thought, that
maketh the morning darkness, and treadeth upon the
high places of the earth, the Lord, the God of hosts,
is his name.”
Let the ungodliness of this land increase and
it will increase if we neglect the manifestation of
godliness in opposition to it and what
then? There will be the culmination of national
sin, and there will be the enactments of Parliament
against the law of God, as on a former memorable occasion
in France; let it come to that, and let a crisis arise;
and though your statesmen should be the most sagacious,
and have all the ability which has ever distinguished
the foremost men of the Government of this land; let
your Parliament be intelligent and patriotic; let
your sons be as brave on flood or field as their fathers;
let your commerce be ever so flourishing, your arts
ever so perfect, your literature ever so exalted none
of these things would save the nation none
of these things would be an effectual shield against
calamity; and upon the wreck of this grand old realm wrecked
by its ungodliness, made rotten at its base by sin upon
the wreck of this nation which, had it been godly,
would have borne the shock of all the earth, and dashed
it back like foam on the wreck of Britain
shall be written, “The nation, the kingdom,
that will not serve thee shall perish.”
That inscription has been often written upon empires
as magnificent, as powerful, and as illustrious as
this.
What, then, is our duty? What
have we to do with this? We who are gathered
together in this chapel may say, can we arrest the
course of the nation? Can we turn back the floods
of ungodliness? Can we go out and produce an
influence that may avert these calamities? I
do not say that you alone can do this; but I do say,
that you are bound to contribute your utmost to the
check of these evils, with as perfect a heart, and
with as earnest a purpose, and as free a will, as though
your hand could dash back the evil and rescue the
nation from its danger.
Our immediate duty is repentance.
That is the duty of the nation. But the word
nation is a comprehensive one; we lose ourselves in
it. We may do as we are in danger of doing with
the word Church, lose sight of our own individual
responsibility in confused ideas of what the Church
collectively is to do. God cannot yield in this
conflict; his righteousness forbids this. The
nation must yield and become obedient, or the result
indicated must follow. If then the nation is
to repent, where is that repentance to begin?
Why in this place to-day, so far as we are concerned.
In whose hearts must this repentance commence?
Why in the hearts of every one of you unconverted
persons, that are rather contributing to the ungodliness
of the country than to the increase of its spiritual
power. You may not be drunkards, you may not
be profligate; but if you are living without the recognition
of God’s love and the enjoyment of his favour,
you are ungodly; and your first duty is to repent.
There is no salvation without this repentance, let
some modern preachers say what they will. The
Master of all preachers sent the Apostles forth, and
they preached everywhere that men should repent.
There is a fashionable preaching, I am told, that has
no repentance in it. So much the worse for the
people that listen to such error. There is no
merit in repentance; the only meritorious cause of
your salvation is the blood-shedding and the present
and perfect atonement of Christ. But “the
law is our schoolmaster to bring us to Christ.”
The old Puritans were right who said, that the soundest
conversions were those with which the law had most
to do. Mount Sinai exhibited proofs of God’s
love, and Christ, who died for us on Calvary, is the
author and enforcer of the whole law. There
must be the bowing down of your souls to the claims
of the law, the struggle for amendment, the renunciation
of sin, the recognition of your own hopelessness,
and the cry, “What must I do to be saved?”
“Who shall deliver me from the body of this
death?” Then comes Christ, and peace, and joy;
a participation in the divine nature; and a power
to contribute practically to the repentance of the
nation. This is your duty.
You Christian people, too, are called
upon to repent. Depend upon it as we go through
life an act of repentance, once for all, will not do:
we shall need repentance daily. When a man is
admitted to the favour of God it is that his mouth
should be stopped, it is that he should entertain
penitential feeling as long as he lives not
the penitence of guilt, but the penitence of gratitude.
The recollection, I am a sinner, will inspire and
maintain such penitence; and a blessed end that man
will make, who in the full meaning of the words, pours
out the prayer at the last, “God be merciful
to me a sinner.” We need repentance we
all need it. Let us turn our attention to ourselves,
and ascertain how much we have contributed to the
existing evils of the nation. How much have we
contributed to the present state of things which in
the judgment of sober Christian concern may be held
to have provoked the anger of God? We may have
contributed to these evils, and I dare say we have,
in two ways: first, by neglect of duty.
There are sinners about you, you need not go far
to find them perhaps there are some ungodly
people in your own houses. What have you ever
done to make them godly? What effort have you
made, what kind of an example have you set them in
your words, in your tempers, in your spiritual aspirations?
Now tell yourselves honestly. You have been
living with them up to this day, living with them
during this day. What have you said to them?
Do your conduct and your words condemn their sin,
and invite them to reconciliation with God? What
does conscience say to this? What does the recollection
of the past few hours say to this? There are
wicked people about you: some of you have leisure;
what have you done for your ungodly neighbours?
What poor man’s house have you visited?
What wretched sinner have you talked to? You
have passed along the streets, and have seen sin abounding;
have you ever tried to check it? Have you ever
thought it worth while to follow some half dozen people
deeply immersed in sin, and by patient, earnest, godly
admonitions, counsels, and entreaties, have you sought
the salvation of their souls? Have you done
this? “Oh!” you busy men say, “we
have not time.” I know better; you must
not tell practical men that; they know that all of
us waste a great deal more time than we want for such
a purpose. It is not a question of time at all,
but a question of inclination. Have we done
so? Are evils abating by our instrumentality?
Do not say, “I could do very little.”
Do what you can! “If I could move a multitude
I would do it.” No, that will not do.
You good women, are you doing all the good you can
in your families? Do you mothers give yourselves
to the right training of your children? Fathers,
are you practically anxious for the spiritual good
of your families? Do you help your wives to
bring up a godly family, which shall prove a blessing
to the nation; and not such an one as Dr. Paley says,
as shall turn out wild beasts upon society.
You have little ability; well, if you have not ten
talents, do not bury the one talent. Paul did
one thing, and that was the secret of all his greatness he
did his duty. Do you do yours?
There was a simplicity of purpose about him, an earnestness
of endeavour, a thoroughness in the doing of it that
made him what he was, the greatest of all apostles
and the greatest man that the Christian Church has
known. Take that simple rule, you young people;
strive to spread the influence of a godly example
among all about you: do what you can, in a way
consistent with your position in life, and in a way
consistent altogether with modesty, humility, and
a deep devotion to God, and you will not labour in
vain. We are guilty of sins of omission, and
we need repentance.
But how have we contributed to the
evils of the nation by our activities? Some of
you were converted, perhaps, when you had lived to
be twenty years of age, some of you thirty or forty,
some perhaps were older; what kind of lives had you
led before that time? How many of your former
companions did you injure by a godless example? perhaps
by foolish words, perhaps by ungodly actions.
God has rescued you; where are they? What has
become of the seed you then planted in their minds?
If God drew out the roots of vice by his grace from
your hearts, the influence of this evil remains elsewhere.
What mischief is often done by men prior to their
conversion in their families! When you see there
is so much wickedness in the land, then say, “What
have I done to increase it?” And I think we
shall all find great need to repent; great need to
set an example of repentance to all about us.
The first thing, then, is this deep
humiliation of heart that shall bring us all to bow
before God, and cause us to join in the prayer, “Enter
not into judgment with thy servants, O God, for in
thy sight shall no man living be justified.”
But, then, you Christian professors must bestir yourselves.
This repentance must not be a passing emotion, not
a temporary influence, however powerful; but there
must be a correspondent continued effort to promote
it amongst your families and neighbours, and to the
utmost extent of your power in the world; engaging
meanwhile in earnest prayer; and then consecrating
yourselves more fully to this work under the influence
of two things, a deep sense of personal responsibility
and of the constraint of divine love. Submit,
then, to this will of God. Know the rod, and
Him that hath appointed it. If the multitudes
about you do not know it you know it. If God
be not recognised, let it be yours to recognise Him
amid the surrounding worldliness, and depend upon
it your purity of heart shall increase, and you will
see God in all things, in all calamities, and in all
joys. It is a strange thing that nations and
individuals see God more readily in trouble than they
do in their joys. Amid the immunities from ill
which Christian people often enjoy how little they
think of God. Trouble comes, calamity comes,
and we owe the quickening of our religious feelings,
strangely enough, more to our fears than we to our
gratitude. And it will be well if we are so quickened
by present calamity.
Thus let us prepare ourselves to promote
that condition of feeling in the nation which shall
lead us to meet God not in conflict but in the way
of his judgments, to bow to his rule, to abate our
ungodliness, and to become as a nation wise and understanding.
One remark as to the popular interpretation
of the text. You will have to meet God speedily
in your death. You should prepare to meet Him,
for you cannot resist; you cannot flee from Him.
Let us prepare to meet Him by embracing the mercy
which He offers, receiving the love which He communicates
to us, and devoting the rest of our lives to his service
and glory. You are called upon, then, and I
think for these reasons properly called upon, to contribute
to and to promote the humiliation of the nation.
Whatever other people do, humble yourselves before
God. And let not the impression be a temporary
one, but in the future seek that practical love which
constitutes the repentance necessary to the nation,
and necessary to you that you may prompt the repentance
and reformation of those about you, and which can
alone save the land of our fathers from calamity and
make her more fully what she ought to be, “a
praise in the earth.” Amen!