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some acquaintance with the evidences of Christianity, they are apt to give way for a time, and leave the mind open to the temptations of the spiritual adversary. The rock, indeed, of the Christian faith remains firm and immovable, and the sincere believer, though washed off for a moment by the swelling surge, will regain his footing; yet it is important to prepare him for the storm, and assist him in making fast his position, and teach him how to resist and baffle the waves. He must be duly instructed in the foundation of his faith, and have his mind thoroughly imbued with the collective force of the Christian evidences, in order to be prepared for temptation, and guarded against the danger of apostacy from the faith.

The thoughtful Christian, however, need not fear the result of the present agitation of the public mind and the activity and effrontery of unbelievers. Their numbers are few, their learning and talents not formidable, their spirit and morals indications of a bad cause. The cross of Christ has stood unmoved for eighteen centuries, and has lost none of its outward evidences, or internal grace and efficacy. We need only a holy boldness to avow the hope that is in us, and give a reason of it with discretion and meekness, in order to see greater victories achieved than we have ever yet done. The arm of the Lord is not shortened. Let our coldness and timidity and worldly-mindedness be renounced, and let vital Christianity be diffused, and the Christian evidences will assume their native dignity and force.

Various facilities and advantages for a defence of our faith, are afforded by the circumstances of the times.

The diffusion of education prepares for us a better informed class of hearers, gives us minds more accustomed to reflection, and capable of entering upon the consideration of a great question.

The progress also made generally in the study of the law of evidence, of the nature and bearing of testimony, of the importance of weighing numerous coincident circumstances, and observing how far they converge to a single conclusion, the habit of comparing a series of independent witnesses

and the general acknowledgment of the force of historical testimony, are all in favor of the Christian argument.

Again, the avowed necessity of following, and not prescribing to, nature; of proceeding in every investigation by slow and cautious and adequate experiments, and not by hypothesis and conjecture; of confessing and acting upon man's ignorance, except as clear phenomena lead him onthe whole system, in short, of Lord Bacon's Inductive Philosophy-prepares the mind for a similar suspension of judgment, and a similar subjection to fact and experience, on the question of Christianity.

The revival of primitive piety and zeal which has been so widely diffused in our own country, and in different parts of Christendom, is a yet more prominent vantage-ground on which we may plant our spiritual artillery against sin and unbelief. The spirit of inquiry as to real religion, the multiplied translations of the scriptures in every tongue, the propagation and large success of the gospel in foreign missions, the reproduction of the self-same holy faith and joy and obedience in the converts from Paganism now, as in the first age of Christianity, the desolations and miseries which the triumph of infidelity has uniformly producedare all so many points in favor of such an exposition of the evidences of our faith as may prepare, by the historical testimony, for the internal evidences of the religion of Christ.

Nor can we doubt that the blessing and grace of that Saviour, who is pleased to honor the humblest means used in his service, will be afforded to us in the course of our argument, if only we enter upon it and pursue it in a spirit of meekness and candor, and with a sincere desire to know, in order that we may do, the will of God.

For I shall take for granted in my argument the Being of a God, and those other truths of natural religion which the Deist is generally so ready to grant, and which he boasts of as all-sufficient for the guidance and happiness of mankind. I assume, therefore, throughout these lectures the existence of one supreme and infinitely glorious Being who is to be worshipped and obeyed by man, to whom virtue is

pleasing and vice hateful; and who will reward the good and punish the wicked in a future world.

How the unbeliever came by this knowledge, what use he practically makes of it, and whether after all it be indeed sufficient for man in his present state, are other questions. I give our opponent all that he asks. I meet him upon his own ground; and what I am to prove is that Christianity is a revelation from God, and is of supreme obligation upon every human being.

In conducting this great argument upon these admissions of natural religion, the first question to be asked is, What is THE TEMPER OF MIND IN WHICH SUCH A SUBJECT SHOULD BE STUDIED, and do unbelievers seem in any measure to possess that temper ?

We may inquire in the next place, What has been

THE STATE OF MANKIND IN ALL AGES AND NATIONS WHERE

CHRISTIANITY HAS BEEN UNKNOWN, and of Christian nations, in proportion as it has been inadequately known and obeyed?h

AND

The succeeding topic will be to prove THE AUTHENTICITY CREDIBILITY of the books of sacred scripture-that these books were really written and published at the time they profess to be, and contain a trustworthy narrative entitled to full credit and belief.i

Our books being found to be genuine and credible, we next open them to see what they contain, and finding that our Lord and his apostles lay claim to a DIVINE AUTHORITY, as bringing a revelation from the great and Almighty God, we ask what credentials they produce of such a claim. This leads us to consider the undeniable and numerous MIRACLES that were publicly wrought; the astonishing series of PROPHECIES that has been fulfilled, and is now fulfilling in the world; the first miraculous PROPAGATION of the gospel; and the prodigious EFFECTSTM it has produced and is producing upon the welfare of mankind.

(g) Lecture ii.
(h) Lecture iii.
(k) Lecture viii. & ix.

(i) Lectures iv. v & vi. (j) Lecture vii. (1) Lecture x. (m) Lecture xi.

Having thus sufficiently established the divine authority of the scriptures, we must pause before we proceed to the internal evidence, which that authority would lead us next to consider, in order to inquire whether these books are, properly speaking, inspired, so that every part of them was written under the superintendence of the Holy Spirit, and is an unerring rule of faith and practice. In other words, we must show THE INSPIRATION OF THE HOLY SCRIPTURES."

We come next to the evidence arising from the internal excellency and efficacy of the religion; those marks which it presents to every humble inquirer, abstracted from its outward evidences, from its own peculiar nature. Here we shall show that to the sincere and devout student who submits to the Christian doctrine on the footing of its undoubted credentials, there will arise the strongest confirmation of his faith from considering the SUITABLENESS of Christianity to the obvious state and wants of man as an ignorant and sinful creature-the excellency of all its DOCTRINESP-the unspotted purity of its PRECEPTS-the inimitable character of its DIVINE FOUNDER and its TENDENCY to promote, to the highest degree, the temporal and spiritual happiness of nations and individuals.

But it may be asked, in the next place, whether there is any test to which the serious inquirer may bring the practical effects of Christianity in his own case-can he obtain a share in its blessings and make a trial of its promises? This is a practical and most important part of the whole subject. And we shall show that this may be done by SUBMITTING TO ITS DIRECTIONS, AND MAKING THE TRIAL FOR OURSELVES of its proffered grace and mercy.

A consideration of the chief OBJECTIONS" of infidels, and a comparison of their LIVES AND DEATHS with those of sincere Christians, will furnish a forcible subsidiary argument in favor of our religion, and will turn the very weapons of our adversaries against themselves.

(n) Lect. xii. & xiii. (s) Lect. xviii.

(0) Lect. xiv. (p) Lect. xv. (q) Lect. xvi. (r) Lect. xxvii. (1) Lect. xix. & xx. (u) Lect. xxi. (v) Lect. xxii.

THE FAITH with which the religion is to be receivedthe sound SYSTEM OF INTERPRETING its records which such a faith implies—and the UNIVERSAL OBLIGATION of obeying this divine doctrine which lies upon every human being, will close the whole.

Need I say, then, on concluding this introductory discourse, that if any question can be important to a reasonable and accountable creature under the moral government of an Almighty and righteous Being, (for such is the admission on which we are to proceed,) it is the investigation of the subject which I have now opened?

The Christian religion proposes to needy, miserable man, a hope-a solid, substantial, abiding hope-of everlasting happiness, founded on the mysterious death of the incarnate Son of God, received by faith, implanted and nourished in the heart by the sacred aid of the Holy Ghost, and producing the most holy effects in the entire life and character. Over against this hope of endless life, the Christian religion sets the unutterably woful state of the disobedient and unbelieving who reject its proffered grace, and persist in their rebellion against God. Its sanctions stand thus, He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved, and he that believeth not shall be damned. It is to infuse into you this blessed hope, and warn you to escape the opposite gulph, that we enter upon the present subject.

It demands, therefore, your attention. It is most momentous in its consequences. Indifference is madness. The alternative of neglecting, despising, disobeying this religion, is unspeakably awful. It is not a speculation which Christianity brings you, it is not a curious inquiry, it is not an intellectual disquisition which leaves the state of men's morals and hearts and hopes where it found them. It is a question upon which an eternity of happiness, or misery depends. It is a religion which inspires hope in a hopeless world, which establishes a way of pardon and peace, which reveals all the corruption of our fallen state in order to reveal all the blessedness of the remedy for that state which is proposed to us in the Son and Spirit of God.

(w) Lect. xxiii. (x) Lect. xxiv. (y) Lect. xxv. (z) Lect. xxii.

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