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sive of a particular? Let it be for ever rejected by all rational men, as absurd, self-contradictory nonsense. We may then sum up the whole Scriptural doctrine of Providence, in that fine saying of St. Austin, "Ita præsidet singulis sicut universis, et universis sicut singulis!"

"FATHER, how wide thy glories shine!
Lord of the universe-and mine:
Thy goodness watches o'er the whole,
As all the world were but one soul:
Yet keeps my every sacred hair,
As I remain'd thy single care."

27. We may learn from this short view of the Providence of God, first, to put our whole trust in him, who hath never failed them that seek him. Our blessed Lord himself makes this very use of the great truth now before us. Fear not, therefore; if you truly fear God, you need fear none beside. He will be a strong tower to all that trust in him, from the face of your enemies. What is there either in heaven or earth that can harm you, while you are under the care of the Creator and Governor of heaven and earth? Let all earth and all hell combine against you; yea, the whole animate and inanimate creation: they cannot harm, while God is on your side: his favourable kindness covers you as a shield.

28. Nearly allied to this confidence in God, is the thankfulness we owe for his kind protection. Let those give thanks, whom the Lord thus delivers from the hand of all their enemies. What an unspeakable blessing it is, to be the peculiar care of him that has all power in heaven and earth! How can we sufficiently praise him, while we are under his wings, and his "faithfulness and truth are our shield and buckler ?"

29. But meantime we should take the utmost care to walk humbly and closely with our God. Walk humbly: for if you, in any wise, rob God of his honour, if you ascribe any thing to yourself, the things which should have been for your wealth, will prove to you 66 an occasion of falling." And walk closely! See that you have a conscience void of offence, toward God and toward man. It is, so long as you do this, that you are the peculiar care of your Father which is in heaven. But let not the consciousness of his caring for you, make you careless, indolent, or slothful: on the contrary, while you are penetrated with that deep truth, "The help that is done upon earth, He doth it himself:" be as earnest and diligent in the use of all the means, as if you were your own protector.

Lastly: In what a melancholy condition are those, who do not believe there is any Providence: or, which comes to exactly the same point, not a particular one! Whatever station they are in, as long as they are in the world, they are exposed to numberless dangers, which no human wisdom can foresee, and no human power can resist. And there is no help! If they trust in men, they find them deceitful upon the weights. In many cases they cannot help: in others, they will not. But were they ever so willing, they will die: there

fore, vain is the help of man. And God is far above, out of their sight they expect no help from him. These modern (as well as the ancient) Epicureans have learned, that the

"Universal Cause,

Acts not by partial, but by general laws."

He only takes care of the great globe itself; not of its puny inhabitants. He heeds not how those

"Vagrant emmets crawl,

At random on the air-suspended ball."

How uncomfortable is the situation of that man who has no farther hope than this! But, on the other hand, how unspeakably happy is the man, "that hath the Lord for his help, and whose hope is in the Lord his God;" who can say, "I have set the Lord always before me; because he is on my right hand, I shall not be moved." Therefore, "though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me."

SERMON LXXIII.

THE WISDOM OF GOD'S COUNSELS.

O the Depth of the Riches both of the Wisdom and Knowledge of God."-ROMANS Xi. 33.

1. SOME apprehend the Wisdom and the Knowledge of God to mean one and the same thing. Others believe, that the wisdom of God more directly refers to his appointing the ends of all things, and his knowledge, to the means which he hath prepared and made conducive to those ends. The former seems to be the most natural explication: as the wisdom of God, in its most extensive meaning, must include the one as well as the other; the means as well as the ends.

2. Now the wisdom, as well as the power of God, is abundantly manifested in his Creation, in the formation and arrangement of all his works, in heaven above and in the earth beneath: and in adapting them all to the several ends for which they were designed: insomuch that each of them apart from the rest is good: but all together are very good; all conspiring together in one connected system, to the glory of God, in the happiness of his intelligent creatures.

3. As this wisdom appears even to short-sighted men, (and much more to spirits of a higher order,) in the creation and disposition of the whole universe, and every part of it, so it equally appears in their preservation, in his "upholding all things by the word of his power." And it no less eminently appears, in the permanent government of all that he has created. How admirably does his wisdom direct the motions of the heavenly bodies! Of all the stars in the firmament, whether those that are fixed, or those that wander, though never out of their several orbits! Of the sun in the midst of heaven! Of those amazing bodies, the comets, that shoot in every direction through the immeasurable fields of ether! How does he superintend all the parts of this lower world, this speck of creation, the earth! So that all things are still, as they were at the beginning, beautiful in their seasons: and summer and winter, seed-time and harvest, regularly follow each other. Yea, all things serve their Creator: "fire and hail, snow and vapour, wind and storm, are fulfilling his word." So that we may well say, "O Lord our Governor, how excellent is thy Name in all the earth!"

4. Equally conspicuous is the wisdom of God in the government of nations, of states and kingdoms: yea, rather, more conspicuous; if infinite can be allowed to admit of any degrees. For the whole inanimate Creation, being totally passive and inert, can make no opposition to his Will. Therefore, in the natural world, all things roll on in an even uninterrupted course. But it is far otherwise in the moral world. Here evil men, and evil spirits, continually oppose the divine Will, and create numberless irregularities. Here, therefore, is full scope for the exercise of all the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God, in counteracting all the wickedness and folly of men, and all the subtlety of Satan, to carry on his own glorious design, the salvation of lost mankind. Indeed were he to do this by an absolute decree, and by his own irresistible power, it would imply no wisdom at all. But his wisdom is shown, by saving man in such a manner, as not to destroy his nature, nor to take away the liberty which he has given him.

5. But the riches both of the wisdom and the knowledge of God, are most eminently displayed in his church: in planting it like a grain of mustard seed, the least of all seeds; in preserving and continually increasing it, till it grew into a great tree, notwithstanding the uninterrupted opposition of all the powers of darkness. This the Apostle justly terms the manifold wisdom (TORUTOININOS COPIA) of God. It is an uncommonly expressive word, intimating that this wisdom in the manner of its operation, is diversified a thousand ways, and exerts itself with infinite varieties. These things the highest "angels desire to look into," but can never fully comprehend. It seems to be with regard to these chiefly, that the Apostle utters that strong exclamation, "How unsearchable are his judgments!" His counsels, designs, impossible to be fathomed! "And his ways" of accomplishing them, past finding out!" Impossible to be traced. According to the

Psalmist, "His paths are in the deep waters, and his footsteps are not known."

6. But a little of this he has been pleased to reveal unto us. And by keeping closely to what he has revealed, meantime comparing the word and the work of God together, we may understand a part of his ways. We may, in some measure, trace this manifold wisdom from the beginning of the world: from Adam to Noah, from Noah to Moses, and from Moses to Christ. But I would now consider it (after just touching on the History of the Church in past ages) only with regard to what he has wrought in the present age, during the last half century: yea, and in this little corner of the world, the British Islands only.

7. In the fulness of time, just when it seemed best to his infinite wisdom, God brought his first-begotten into the world. He then laid the foundation of his Church, though it hardly appeared till the day of Pentecost. And it was then a glorious Church: all the members thereof being "filled with the Holy Ghost," being "of one heart and of one mind, and continuing steadfastly in the Apostles' doctrine, and in fellowship, in the breaking of bread, and in prayers :" in fellowship, that is, having all things in common; no man counting any thing he had his own.

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8. But this happy state did not continue long. See Ananias and Sapphira, through the love of money, ("the root of all evil") making the first breach in the community of goods! See the partiality, the unjust respect of persons on the one side, the resentment and murmuring on the other, even while the Apostles themselves presided over the Church at Jerusalem! See the grievous spots and wrinkles that were found, in every part of the Church, recorded not only in the Acts, but in the Epistles of St. Paul, James, Peter, and John. still fuller account we have in the Revelation; and, according to this, in what a condition was the Christian Church, even in the first century, even before St. John was removed from the earth: if we may judge, (as undoubtedly we may) of the state of the Church in general, from the state of those particular Churches, (all but that of Smyrna) to which our Lord directed his Epistles! And from this time, for fourteen hundred years, it was corrupted more and more, as all History shows, till scarcely any, either of the power or form of religion was left.

9. Nevertheless it is certain, that the gates of hell did never totally prevail against it. God always reserved a seed for himself, a few that worshipped him in spirit and in truth. I have often doubted, whether these were not the very persons whom the rich and honourable Christians, who will always have number as well as power on their side, stigmatized, from time to time, with the title of Heretics. Perhaps it

was chiefly by this artifice of the devil and his children, that the good which was in them being evil spoken of, they were prevented from being so extensively useful as otherwise they might have been. Nay, I have doubted, whether that arch heretic, Montanus, was not one of the holiest men in the second century. Yea, I would not affirm, that the arch-heretic of the fifth century, (as plentifully as he has been bespattered for many ages,) was not one of the holiest men of that age, not excepting St. Augustine himself: (a wonderful saint! as full of pride, passion, bitterness, censoriousness, and as foul-mouthed to all that contradicted him, as George Fox himself.) I verily believe, the real heresy of Pelagius was neither more nor less than this, the holding that Christians may, by the grace of God, (not without it; that I take to be a mere slander,) "go on to perfection:" or, in other words, "fulfil the law of Christ."

"But St. Augustine says:"-When Augustine's passions were heated, his word was not worth a rush. And here is the secret. St. Augustine was angry at Pelagius. Hence he slandered and abused him (as his manner was) without either fear or shame. And St. Augustine was then in the Christian world, what Aristotle was afterwards. There needed no other proof of any assertion, than "Ipse dixit: St. Augustine said it."

10. But to return. When iniquity had overspread the Church as a flood, the Spirit of the Lord lifted up a standard against it. He raised up a poor monk, without wealth, without power, and at that time without friends, to declare war, as it were, against all the world; against the Bishop of Rome and all his adherents. But this little stone being chosen of God, soon grew into a great mountain; and increased more and more, till it had covered a considerable part of Europe. Yet even before Luther was called home, the love of many was waxed cold. Many that had once run well, turned back from the holy commandment delivered to them. Yea, the greater part of those that once experienced the power of faith, made shipwreck of faith and a good conscience. The observing this was supposed to be the occasion of that illness (a fit of the stone) whereof Luther died: after uttering these melancholy words: "I have spent my strength for naught. Those who are called by my name, are, it is true, reformed in opinions and modes of worship. But in their hearts and lives, in their tempers and practice, they are not a jot better than the Papists."

11. About the same time it pleased God to visit Great Britain. A few in the reign of King Henry the Eighth, and many more in the three following reigns, were real witnesses of true, scriptural Christianity. The number of these exceedingly increased, in the beginning of the following century. And in the year 1627, there was a wonderful pouring out of the Spirit in several parts of England, as well as in Scotland, and the North of Ireland. But from the time that riches and honour poured in upon them that feared and loved God, their hearts began to be estranged from him, and to cleave to the present world: no sooner was persecution ceased, and the poor, despised, persecuted Christians, invested with power, and placed in ease and

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