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God-Man Mediator, and, working faith to receive it, through this infinitely glorious medium, seal pardon, and acceptance and peace upon the conscience. O thou blessed and loving Spirit! this is thy work, and thine alone. Thine to empty, thine to fill. Thine to lay low, thine to exalt. Thine to wound, thine to heal. Thine to convince of sin, and thine to lead the soul all sinful, guilty and wretched as it is, to the precious blood of Jesus"The fountain open for sin and uncleanness." Thou shalt have the praise, and wear the crown! It remains for us to glance at the relation of the personal character of the Spirit, to the existence, reality, and advance of the believer's experience.

A believer's experience of the truth of God, is no mere fancy. However severely experimental godliness may have been stigmatized by an unrenewed world, as the offspring of a morbid imagination, the product of an enthusiastic mind, 'he that believes in the Son of God hath the witness in himself" that, he has yielded the consent of his judgement and his affections to no "cunningly devised fable.” A sense of sin-brokenness and contrition before God-faith in the atoning blood of Christ-a sweet consciousness of pardon, acceptance, adoption, and joy in the Holy Ghost, are no mere hallucinations of a disordered mind. To read one's pardon fully, fairly

written out; to look up to God as one accepted, adopted;-to feel the spirit going out to him in filial love and confidence, breathing its tender and endearing epithet, "Abba, Father;"-to refer every trial, cross, and dispensation of his Providence, to his tender and unchangeable love;-to have one's will, naturally so rebellious and perverse, completely absorbed in his;-to be, as a weaned child, simply and unreservedly yielded up to his disposal, and to live in the patient waiting for the glory that is to be revealed.-O, this is reality, sweet, blessed, solemn reality. Holy and happy is that man, whose heart is not a stranger to these truths. But, rob the Spirit of his personal glory,—divest him of his great offices in the covenant of grace,-reduce him to a mere influence, attribute, or principle, and the believer's experience of the truth dwindles down to an airy nothing. All is fancy, enthusiasm, and delusion, if the Holy Spirit be not a distinct person in the Godhead. But, so long as this doctrine is brought home with convincing power to the soul that, the Holy Spirit is a distinct person from, yet coessential, co-equal, and co-eternal with the Father and the Son, then we have the comforting assurance, that the experience of the truth in the heart, of which He is the Author, and we the subject, is a supernatural work,-the work of

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God the Holy Ghost. stability to the soul.

And this assurance gives

The doctrine of the Spirit's personal dignity, also affords a pledge, that the work, thus commenced, shall be carried forward to a final and glorious completion. Because He is God, He will finish what He has begun. And, let it not be forgotten that, the growth of the believer in the experience of the truth, is as much the work of the Eternal Spirit as was the first production of divine life in the soul. The dependance of the believer on the Spirit by no means ceases in conversion. There are after stages along which it is his office to conduct the believing soul. Deeper views of sin's exceeding sinfulness, a more thorough knowledge of self,—more enlarged discoveries of Christ,—a more simple and habitual resting upon his finished work,-increasing conformity to the divine image, the daily victory over indwelling sin,-and, a constant meetening for the inheritance of the saints in light, all these worketh the one and the selfsame Spirit, who first breathed into his soul the breath of spiritual life. Not a step can the believer advance without the Spirit. Not a victory can he achieve without the Spirit. Not a moment can he exist without the Spirit. As he needed Him at the first, so he needs Him all his journey through.

And so he

will have Him, until the soul passes over Jordan. To the last ebbing of life, the blessed Spirit will be his Teacher, his Comforter,-and his Guide. To the last, he will testify of Jesus.-To the last, he will apply the atoning blood.—And to the very entrance of the happy saint into glory, the Eternal Spirit of God-faithful, loving to the last— will be present, to whisper words of pardon, assurance, and peace. Holy Spirit! build us up in the infinite dignity of thy Person, and in the surpassing greatness and glory of thy Work!

I cannot allow myself to close this chapter, without addressing a few solemn and earnest considerations to the denier of the Personal Dignity of the Spirit. Dear reader, you and I will soon stand at the bar of God. In view of that day, how solemn, how awful is your present position. If you have read the preceding pages with any degree of thought and candour, you must have closed the argument with the conviction that, truly the Spirit is a distinct person in the Godhead, -so full, so clear, and so conclusive is the testimony of the divine Scriptures, to the truth of this doctrine. In rejecting the doctrine, and in resisting the conviction of evidence, you assume responsibilities and incur guilt of a fearful kind. denying the Spirit's personal dignity, you deny God himself,-and in refusing the evidence, you

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turn your back upon his revelation. Can imagi

nation conceive of a position more truly solemn? You may think lightly of experimental truth,—you may deride the religion of a man who hopes that he is "born of the Spirit," and has found pardon and acceptance through Christ, as the very wildness of enthusiasm-and you may press to your heart more closely and fondly than ever, your religion of nature, your form of godliness, your cold, lifeless, soulless creed:- but, O remember, you have to do with a God who searches the heart and tries the reins of men,-a God of spotless holiness and inflexible justice,—with whom the form, without the power of godliness, is a mockery, -and to whom prayer, without the Spirit, is a

sin! Be not deceived in a matter so momentous and involving interests so precious and eternal. Think not to offer to God an acceptable oblation, while you refuse divine honour, homage, and love to the third Person in the glorious Trinity. Wonder not that, the details of Christian experience of a child of God, are all a mystery, an enigma to you; -that, when he speaks of a broken heart-of a contrite spirit-of a mourning over sin-of regeneration of pardon-of acceptance-of the joys of God's salvation-of the comfort of the Holy Ghost-and of a good hope through grace of eternal glory that, he speaks to you of a kingdom,

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