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us to administer to us an entrance into the wealthy place.

"I send an Angel before thee, to keep thee in the way, and to bring thee into the place which I have prepared:" thus he did for the Israelites when he introduced them into Canaan: but, O, what will he do for believers when he brings them to the place which he has prepared! a place of which Canaan, after all, affords but a feeble representation; a place prepared for our reception before the world began, and taken possession of by Jesus as our forerunner, who has entered within the veil for us to this place our exertions are directed, and at this place we shall all eventually appear; whilst to bring us thither is the part of our adorable Leader, the Angel of the covenant.

He shall cause us to loose our anchor from the earth, to pass into eternity, a gallant vessel, with every sail set to the favoring breeze, and entering into the harbor of eternal peace, amidst the plaudits of redeemed men and waiting angels. Jesus shall be the medium of our access to God in heaven, and through him, we shall have an abundant entrance administered unto us into his eternal kingdom and glory. He shall receive our disembodied spirits to himself, and, at the end of our journey, open to us the door of everlasting bliss, and show us the regions of glory; yea, say to us, "Come in, ye blessed of the Lord; why stand ye without?" Yea, he will present us to his Father, "blameless before him in love;" he will glory over us as the objects of his love, and the purchase of his blood: yea, through his mediation and death, we shall be forever "holy and unblameable, and unreproveable in his sight, being presented faultless before the presence of his glory with exceed

ing joy." O what a distinguished part in the economy of our salvation does the Angel of the covenant bear! He first leads to the road that will conduct us to his kingdom and glory; and he finally introduces us into the august presence of God, even the Father, and so brings us to the place which he hath prepared. This shall be the portion of all his saints, for in glory they will all finally appear, though some on boards and some on broken pieces of the ship, yet it shall come to pass that they shall all escape safe to land. Who is our guide?

Reason? passion? or the Angel of the covenant?

Sinners, destitute of a guide, &c.*

What is the object of our hope?

Is it being brought to the place which God has prepared! or are we yet attached to earth? If we now have our conversation in heaven―

"See the kind angels at the gates,
Inviting us to come;

There Jesus the forerunner waits,
To welcome travellers home."

IMPROVEMENT.

Our text suggests a motive to obedience; a test of examination; and a ground of hope.

*No doubt Mr. Spencer enlarged on these subjects in delivering this sermon, and also, as usual, in the improvement.

DISCOURSE XV.

SINNERS INSULT THE GOODNESS AND LONG-
SUFFERING OF GOD.

PREACHED DECEMBER 3, 1809.

"Because sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily, therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil." ECCLESIASTES VIII. 11.

which the fall of What a sink of Considered, in

we

How dreadfully depraved is human nature! How abject is the condition in our first parents has placed us! pollution is the heart of man! deed, as creatures in the eye of Deity, we must appear meanness itself: of the dust of the earth we were formed; and as soon as our sovereign Creator says, "Return, ye children of men,' mix with our original; we are obliged to say to corruption, "Thou art my father; to the worm, Thou art my mother, and my sister." But, O, viewed as sinners, how offensive must we be in the sight of the God of infinite purity and immaculate holiness! Alas, for us, for we have fallen! fallen low indeed from the state of rectitude in which we were created: being in honor, we did not abide now darkness overspreads our understanding, perverseness distinguishes our will; earthlymindedness characterizes our affections: the path of folly, is that we choose; the course of impiety, the resolution of living in direct enmity against

God, is that which we decidedly adopt. We need not go far for proofs of the truth of these assertions: that man is depraved, is written in his countenance, is discovered in his conversation, is betrayed in his deportment.

I have now before my eyes one of the most striking evidences of human depravity, that can ever be produced; it is in my text, which declares, that "Because sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily, therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil.” Which passage justifies four observations-That sin is an evil work-That sentence is gone out against it— That the execution of this sentence is often deferred-That this circumstance, through the depravity of men, frequently produces the worst effects. I. Sin is an evil work.

Our remarks upon this part of our subject will, indeed, be very brief; and they must be regarded as only introductory to the rest. But I would charge home upon all my hearers the guilt of sin ; I would, as in the presence of God and his elect angels, tell every individual in this place, that he has, ever since he had a being, been doing an evil work. Our text may, perhaps, directly refer to some particular sin; but it will do us no harm to consider the expression, an evil work," as descriptive of sin in general; sin, brethren, to the commission of which our constitution is prone; sin, in the practice of which some amongst us have lived long; sin, which, perhaps, many in this congregation roll as a sweet morsel under their tongue, is an evil work." A moment's reflection may show us that it is evil in itself-and in its consequences.

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1. Observe, it is evil in itself. For what is sin?

It is the transgression of the law; it is the breach of the commandment which is holy, just, and good. The law of God is divinely excellent; it is the line of human conduct, marked out by infinite wisdom and unquestionable authority now sin is a departure from it, and therefore is evil; it is a violation of the wholesome and excellent injunctions which are stamped with the broad seal of Heaven. To see that sin is an evil work, you need only contrast it with what the Bible recommends, and with that at which the most enlightened and holy men ever aim; in its nature it is exceeding sinful; it is alienation from the Divine life; it is opposition to the Divine will it is enmity to God, the Judge of all. Surely that which Satan brings into action, by influencing an already depraved and abandoned heart, must be evil. It is the abominable thing which God hateth. The reason why man is filthy, is because he drinketh in iniquity like water. Hence,

2. Sin is evil in its consequences; for it was the cause of pain to the Saviour, and of woe to man. I say, it occasioned pain to the Saviour; but for this evil work, he never would have become destitute, afflicted, tormented; but for this, he never would have had to toil up Calvary's hill, bearing the weight of his own heavy cross; but for this, he never would have endured the burden of the Father's wrath, or the insults of his inhuman foes. This evil work, too, introduced the whole train of calamities amongst mankind; gave being to wretchedness and despair; gave sting to conscience, and a sting to death. It is this that is now training up so many for hell, and preparing them for the endurance of the fiercest pains. O, is not sin then an evil work? Ought you not with

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