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is kind to the unthankful and the evil. Be ye therefore merciful, as your Father also is merciful †. But at least, you will say, proper submission may be required first. Why undoubtedly it may. And he, who hath done the wrong, should always consider, whether, if he had received it, the satisfaction which he deems it beneath him to give, would not have appeared very necessary for him to claim. But then at the same time, you, who have received the wrong, should consider too, whether if you had done it, you could have yielded to the rigorous terms and debasing compliances which you exact: nay, would not have thought it very hard, that such as might be in strictness due, should be without abatement insisted on.

Another situation, requisite to be mentioned, in which we are strangely apt to violate our Saviour's rule, is, when connexions or circumstances call us to show courtesy, love, or pity. Very commonly we have scarce any attention to return the obliging behaviour, which we absolutely expect: give mighty small proofs of affection, even where we should be miserable, if the greatest were not given us; and hardly express the least compassion to the afflicted, whereas we should look for all possible assiduity of tenderness, were we in their condition. Or if even our strength of mind were such as not to need support; we ought surely to ask ourselves, what we should justly wish for, had we less strength, as others may. But instead of being moved by that consideration to a friendly sympathy, we can persecute the wretched with unreasonable harsh maxims of impracticable wisdom; nay, perhaps imbitter their sorrows with groundless or immoderate reproaches, when the * Luke vi. 31. 35, 36.

VOL. IV.

justest and the gentlest reproofs would be ill-timed and hard-hearted. What feelings the persons thus treated must have, and consequently what our own under the same treatment would be, is incomparably set forth in those words of Job: I also could speak as ye do: if your soul were in my soul's stead, I could heap up words, and shake my head at you. But I would strengthen you with my mouth; and the moving of my lips should assuage your grief. This therefore is our duty; for this would assuredly be our desire. But then, as they, who are not in affliction, should think, if they were, with what kindness they should expect to be attended and regarded: so they, who are, should think in return, if it had fallen to their lot to pay this attendance and regard, what patience and reasonableness they should have expected from those, to whom they paid it; and what thankful acknowledgments, for discharging an office but tolerably well, which must be in itself a melancholy and unpleasing one.

These are some, and I hope the more usual, of the numberless cases, in which we should all be solicitously careful to do to others, as we would they should do to us. Indeed were we to aim at taking one step further, and a little exceed the goodness, which we conceive we might equitably demand, we should seldom go beyond the rule, but only make somewhat surer not to fall short of it: a point of which it concerns us in the highest degree to make sure. when God is so gracious, as to appeal to our hearts, and govern us by a law, as it were of our own enacting (a law which we cannot be ignorant of, cannot except against, and one should think can hardly forget or misapply); we must be dreadfully inexcusable

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*Job xvi. 4, 5.

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before him, when we disobey it. Indeed the general disobedience to it which there is in the world, affords us a deplorable view of the state of mankind; and should excite us to a strict examination of our past, and a diligent watchfulness over our future conduct. We have all transgressed even this most obvious and unexceptionable rule: let us all beg that pardon, which our Saviour hath merited, for what we have done ill; and apply for that grace of the Holy Spirit, without the help of which we can do nothing well.

SERMON XIV.

GEN. ii. 3.

And God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it: because that in it he had rested from all his work, which God created and made.

THESE words contain the account of that original appropriation of one day in seven to the purposes of religion, from which all subsequent appointments of the same nature have been derived. And therefore I shall take occasion from them to shew, God willing, in three discourses,

I. On what authority the observation of a weekly day of public devotion and rest is founded.

II. In what manner that day ought to be spent.

I. On what authority it is founded.

It is not only our duty to address God in private prayer, but also to assemble ourselves together in order to offer up to him our united devotions. As we are by nature formed for society, we ought to be social in religion as well as in other instances. As we are all dependant for every thing we have or hope for on the same Almighty Being, the Creator and Governor of the universe, we ought all to join in openly acknowledging that dependance, in begging with one voice the supply of our common wants, the forgiveness of our common offences, the removal of our common calamities; and in returning thanks for the various mercies which we have in common re

ceived from our heavenly Benefactor. But besides this, public worship is of all other things the best calculated both to cherish in ourselves, and by the powerful force of sympathy and example to excite in others, the warmest sentiments of piety and virtue. Indeed without it (as both reason and experience prove) mankind would gradually lose all sense of religion; and without that the lower part of them would quickly sink into the grossest depravity of mind, and profligacy of manners.

Joining in family devotions might indeed in some degree guard against these mischiefs and answer the other good ends above mentioned: and large families may be considered almost in the same light with small parishes. But family devotions are shamefully neglected and were they universally kept up, they could seldom be expected to convey so much knowledge, and would scarce ever produce in the mind so strong a feeling that whole neighbourhoods and nations are members of one body, as the offices performed in more numerous assemblies do.

Since therefore on these accounts there must be public worship and instruction: it is not only useful, but necessary, that there should be also fixed times, appointed for it by sufficient authority: for were it left at large to be performed at any time, there is but too much reason to fear that it would be frequently delayed, or neglected, and at last perhaps wholly thrown aside. But how much and what time should be devoted to this employment, if God hath given no intimation of his will, every society must have determined for themselves: and in all likelihood would have determined very differently. For the imagined mysteries and excellencies of the number seven would probably have been no more regarded,

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