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the plan of redemption? Shall I reject as untrue or absurd whatever I do not clearly understand or am unable perfectly to explain? The consciousness which I have of my own being must be renounced then among the first, and every thing within and around us must be reduced to darkness, doubt, and uncertainty.

Blessed Jesus, we cannot declare thy generation, and would not be wise above what is written, but we adore in silent wonder, we rejoice that "the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us," and that men "beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth." We rejoice that what we know not now we shall know hereafter. Suffice it now that "we see Jesus who was made a little lower than the angels, for the suffering of death crowned with glory and honour, that he by the grace of God should taste death for every man:" that "it became him, for whom are all things, and by whom are all things in bringing many sons unto glory, to make the Captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings." We can form no conception of a state pre-existent to this frame of nature, for imagination itself must draw its ideas from reality; and to give scope to a faculty so fantastical, in treating a subject of such high moment, were presumptuous and profane. Let us reply then to the prophet's challenge, with the modesty and humility becoming creatures so ignorant, so limited, and so imperfect. We presume not to explore the records of eternity, to pry into the counsels of peace, to measure the infinite Jehovah, his nature, his decrees, his operations, by the contracted line of our finite understanding; but, taking Scripture for our instructer and guide, we will with reverence and joy contemplate the manifestation of the Son of God in the likeness of man, the mystery of the incarnation, his generation as one of our brethren. In the next Lecture, therefore, if God permit, we will endeavour to lead your attention to some of the remarkable circumstances which immediately preceded the birth of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, and which give celebrity and notoriety to that illustrious event, and mark the interest which eternal Providence took in it, and the importance thereby stamped upon it to every serious and reflecting mind.

We conclude at present, with suggesting, from what has been said, and from every view which is given us in Scripture of the person of the Saviour, that there is spread around it at once an effulgence that dazzles and repels, and a mildness and simplicity which composes and attracts. Is he spoken of as a man, we are sent to Bethlehem to behold a babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, to Nazareth to converse with the carpenter's son, to Cana of Galilee to join with him in

the innocent festivity of a marriage solemnity, to Bethany to witness the endearments of private friendship, to Gethsemane to sympathize with the agonizing mourner, to scenes such as daily occur in human life; but we are never left long to consider a mere man in situations and employments like our own, a man of like passions with ourselves; the glory of the Lord arises, the Son of God stands confessed, a generation not to be declared, a power that nothing can resist, at which devils tremble, which winds and seas obey, to which death and the grave are subservient. He speaks as never man spake, legions of angels are continually on the wing to minister unto him.-Prophecy and history represent him in the self-same lights, in alternate humiliation, and majesty, obscurity, and splendour. What a contrast does the description of our prophet present? "For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given, and the government shall be upon his shoulder; and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace. Of the increase of his government and peace there shall be no end, upon the throne of David, and upon his kingdom, to order it, and to establish it with judgment and with justice, from henceforth even for ever. The zeal of the Lord of hosts will perform this." The progress of his history, in every particular stage of it, will elucidate the same observation, and therefore it shall not now be farther prosecuted.

Again, this subject seems much calculated to correct the prejudices which prevail among men in the matter of pedigree. There is in reality no such thing as mean and high birth; or if there be a distinction, to be born perfect in every limb and feature, with a sound and vigorous constitution, with a mind complete in all its faculties, this is to be nobly born; as, on the contrary, to come into the world diseased and debilitated, with a constitution undermined and destroyed by the vice of parents, is to have the disadvantage of being meanly born; a distinction which, if founded in reason, truth, and justice, leaves the great, in general, little to glory in, and the poor little at which to repine. Have we not all one father? What genealogy is pure from every stain of infirmity, folly, or vice? Is it any diminution of our Saviour's dignity, any impeachment of his perfect purity, or any imputation on his great public character, that in the roll of his ancestry after the flesh, we find the name of Rahab the harlot, and of her who had been the wife of Uriah, and that he was brought up under the roof, perhaps to the occupation, of an obscure craftsman? Virtue and vice are personal not hereditary, and nothing but vice is a just ground of shame. Shall I call myself a disciple of Jesus then, and think it

You

a reproach to be called a carpenter's son, despised because I am a Galilean, lightly esteemed because my parents were poor and ignoble, because a paltry monosyllable introduces not my name? Real worth ennobles itself independent of the breath of kings, it draws obscure progenitors into light, and leaves a fair and honourable inheritance to posterity-in a bright example, and a re-tance, but "your life is hid with Christ in spectable name.

Once more, whatever may be our pretensions or our want of pretension as citizens of this world, we have all equal right and encouragement to aspire after the title, and the spirit, and the privileges of the sons of God. He whose generation cannot be declared, is not ashamed to call the humblest of you, brethren. The end of his coming into the world, of his humbling himself to death, of shedding his blood, was to make you kings and priests unto God and his Father." What he is by eternal generation,

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that he is making you by redemption, by the
spirit of adoption, by the hope of glory to be
revealed. Support the honour of your hea-
venly Father's name, prove your relation,
preserve unclouded your prospects.
are now in a state of depression," in hea-
viness through manifold temptations," your
title lies dormant, your possession is at a dis-
God, and when he shall appear, you shall
appear with him in glory. Beloved, now are
we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear
what we shall be, but when He shall ap-
pear we shall be like him, for we shall see
him as he is." "Fear not," then, little
flock, for it is your Father's good pleasure
to give you the kingdom." "Ye are a
chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an
holy nation, a peculiar people; that ye
should show forth the praises of him who
hath called you out of darkness into his mar-
vellous light."

HISTORY OF JESUS CHRIST.

LECTURE CX.

For thus saith the Lord of hosts. Yet once, it is a little while, and I will shake the heavens, and the earth. and the sea, and the dry land; and I will shake all nations, and the desire of all nations shall come: And I will fill this house with glory, saith the Lord of hosts. The silver is mine, and the gold is mine, sath the Lord of Hosts. The glory of this latter house shall be greater than of the former, saith the Lord of hosts: And in this place will I give peace, saith the Lord of hosts.-HAGGAI ii. 6-9.

THE great Lord of Nature demonstrates the stars withdraw their light; the barrier his existence and divine perfection, in the which restrained the ocean is removed, the original formation, and in the constant pre- windows of heaven are opened, and the earth servation of all things. "He spake and it is overflowed. The rain that falls on Sodom was done, he commanded and it stood fast." becomes a fiery tide; the flame of NebuHe upholdeth all "by the word of his power." chadnezzar's fiery furnace is rendered harmThe continual support of the universe has less air; the hungry lion licks the prophet's accordingly, with the utmost propriety, been feet. The glaring eccentric comet, the wanrepresented as creation every instant repeat-dering planet, and the fixed star, all, all refer ed. In a system which is all life and motion, us to one original, to one moving, restraining, power almighty, and attention unintermitting, directing, supporting cause. must ever be exerted to maintain life, to carry on motion, to preserve harmony. Every being is subjected to the peculiar law of its own nature; and the great whole is governed by general laws. Unity, simplicity, multitude, variety, strike the eye of every attentive beholder; every individual presents a little world apart, and the vast combination of individuals forms but one world, animated by one vital principle.

But Jehovah makes himself known to his intelligent creatures not only in the stated order and harmony of his works, but in the occasional and temporary interruption of that order, and in deviation from that harmony. The powers of earth and heaven are shaken; the sun is turned into darkness and

Neither, however, the regular observance, nor the occasional suspension of the laws of nature are mere wanton displays of power, to amuse the curious, to alarm the fearful, or to confound the proud. Every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God, and every act of omnipotence have an important meaning and design. The end at which the Ruler of the world still aims, is the manifestation of his own glory in promoting the wisdom and happiness of his creatures.

The prophet, in the passage of the sacred volume which has now been read, is evidently referring to some signal display of the divine glory. We behold universal commotion raised and settled by the same power; heaven and earth, the sea and the dry land,

burnt-offering." But when "sacrifice and of fering thou didst not desire, when burnt-offering and sin-offering were not required, then said I, Lo, I come, I delight to do thy will, O my God." This, Christians, like the star which conducted the wise men of the East, leads us directly to the Saviour of the world. Would you behold the superior glory of the latter temple, look to Simeon visiting it, looking and longing for the consolation of Israel: behold him with the babe in his arms, exulting with joy unspeakable and full of glory, in having seen the salvation of God. Look to Jesus at the age of twelve years "sitting in the temple in the midst of the doctors, both hearing them and asking them questions," displaying at that tender age, a wisdom and dignity far superior to that of Solo

in his zeal for the honour of the sacred edi fice, purging it of those impurities which a worldly spirit had introduced into it. Listen to the divine eloquence which there flowed from the lips of him who spake as never man spake. Hear him predicting its destruction, and establishing the truth of his own mission in denouncing against it, and devoting it to total and irrecoverable ruin. Behold him on those ruins, rearing an everlasting and a spiritual building, on a rock against which the gates of hell shall never prevail; and in all this, behold as in a glass the glory here spoken of, the advent of "the desire of all nations," the "star of Jacob" arisen, Shiloh come, to whom the gathering of the nations shall be, "the Prince of Peace," by whom peace is proclaimed, and through whom peace is given to "him that is afar off and him that is nigh."

and all the kindreds of the nations shaken together. Universal attention is excited, universal expectation is raised, and that expectation is completely gratified, by the appearance of "the desire of all nations;" by the restoration of peace to a troubled world; by a lustre bestowed on the second temple which should eclipse the glory of the first. Now, the expression, "the glory of this latter house shall be greater than the former, saith the Lord of hosts," enables us to fix the period, and to discover the person here described. Haggai lived and prophesied after the Babylonish captivity, and the immediate object of his prophecy was to urge his restored countrymen to industry and perseverance, in the work of rebuilding the temple of the Lord. And as the most powerful and encouraging of all motives he is commis-mon in his zenith. Look to that same Jesus, sioned to assure them, that the period fast approached when the fabric which they were then rearing should be invested with much greater honour, than that of Solomon in all his glory ever possessed. But if this were meant of temporal splendour merely, the fact contradicts it; for from Ezra we learn, that in this respect, the former temple was far superior to the latter; "many of the priests and levites, and chief of the fathers who were ancient men that had seen the first house, when the foundation of this house was laid before their eyes, wept with a loud voice;" so mortifying was the comparison. Our prophet himself holds the same language, eh. ii. 3. "Who is left among you that saw this house in her first glory? and how do you see it now? is it not in your eyes in comparison of it as nothing?" We must look therefore for a different kind of glory, to explain and confirm the prediction: and it In order still farther to justify the applicais impossible to be at a loss about an inter- tion of this prophecy to the person and chapretation, when we consider wherein the real racter of the Redeemer, we may inquire into glory of the second temple consisted. Not the import of the other expressions here emin being filled, and overlaid with silver and ployed, to describe the appearances of nature gold, for these are spoken of as comparatively and providence, which signalized the era of vile and contemptible. "The silver is mine, his manifestation in the flesh." Yet once, it and the gold is mine, saith the Lord of hosts," is a little while." The reign of prophecy was a claim exactly in the same spirit with that hastening to a conclusion. Haggai was one made in the fiftieth Psalm. "Hear, O my of the last on whom that spirit rested; with people, and I will speak: O Israel, and I will Malachi, who lived probably somewhat later, testify against thee: I am God, even thy God. it entirely ceased; and a dark period of I will not reprove thee for thy sacrifices, or five hundred years without a vision, interthy burnt-offerings, to have been continually vened, till it was revived in one who came in before me. I will take no bullock out of thy the spirit and power of Elias, the forerunner house, nor he-goats out of thy folds: for eve- of the Messiah," the voice crying in the wilry beast of the forest is mine, and the cattle derness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, upon a thousand hills. I know all the fowls make straight in the desert a highway for of the mountains; and the wild beasts of the our God," Isaiah xl. 3, and it shone in all its field are mine. If I were hungry I would not lustre in the Messiah himself, "the great tell thee: for the world is mine, and the ful-prophet that should come into the world." ness thereof. Will I eat the flesh of bulls, or drink the blood of goats? Offer unto God thanksgiving; and pay thy vows unto the Most High." "Lebanon is not sufficient to burn, nor the beasts thereof sufficient for a

By him it is here intimated that God should
speak "once" for all; that he should be the
full and final declarer of the will of God to
mankind; "yet once," but no more.
"It is a little while." With God, what is

purposed, is begun to be executed, his agents | by degrees strengthening her wing, and preare already at work, time is lost with him paring to take her flight round half the globe. who sees the end from the beginning. "The The succession of those great monarchies, Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as those shakings of the heavens and the earth, some men count slackness;" "beloved, be this shaking of all nations, led gradually and not ignorant of this one thing, that one day imperceptibly to that happy conjuncture, that is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a fulness of time, that maturity of divine counsel thousand years as one day." The interval which suited the introduction of Christianity. between the prediction and the accomplish- They arose one after another, they enlarged ment, though a period of five centuries, is, one upon another, till at length the genius in the sight of God, "a little while;" and of Rome, under the permission of Heaven, five centuries, when they are past, are but triumphed over and swallowed up all others, "a little while" in the eyes of man also. and expanded, opened, united, consolidated, But to what circumstances attending the that wide-extended, well-informed, civilized coming of our Saviour refers the prophet, empire, through which the gospel of Christ when he represents the great God as "shak- was destined to make a progress so rapid ing the heavens and the earth, and the sea, and so successful. To favour this great and the dry land, and all nations?" It is well event, to procure attention to the Author known that the sacred writers frequently and finisher of our faith, and to render the employ, by a bold figure, the appearances of first appearance of our holy religion at once the natural world to represent and explain more august and more secure, the struggles moral objects. In the case before us, it will of ambition which had so long shaken the be found that both the literal and figurative world, those restless contests for superiority, sense of the words are strictly applicable to subsided at last, suddenly and unexpectedly, the subject. Every one, who is at all ac- into universal peace. That stormy ocean, quainted with the history of mankind, knows which had been for ages and generations in that the whole course of things has been a continual agitation, now all at once sunk constant and successive concussion and con- into a surprising calm; the bloody portal of vulsion, a shaking of the nations, struggle Janus, which had so long emitted unrelenting for dominion, the progress of empire from destruction to mankind, was shut, and the east to west; and an aspect of the heavenly globe was instantly overspread with tran bodies and influence, analogous to the state quillity, relieved from the din of arms, from of the moral world. The observer of nature the confused noise of the warrior, and the endeavours to trace all these up to their na- horrid sight of garments rolled in blood, in tive causes in the great system of the uni- order to receive the Prince of Peace. verse; the moralist looks for them in the nature and constitution of man, and the politician, in the combinations and exertions of passion and interest. The Believer, the Christian, refers all to God, sees him in the cloud, in the sky; hears him in the wind, in the thunder, in the songster of the grove: and he sees the swelling tide of nature and providence labouring with one object of peculiar importance; all things are shaken and composed in subordination to the preparation of the gospel of peace.

Let me compress what I mean to say within a narrow compass; and I shall do it nearly in the words of an elegant preacher whom I have oftener than once had the honour to quote in this place. The eastern part of the world was, in the wisdom of Providence, first peopled, great and extensive empires were first formed there, and there learning and the arts were first brought to perfection. But while science and empire flourished in the east, a power was rising by degrees in the western world, which was one day to surpass all that had gone before it. Unknown to the proud empires of the eastern hemisphere, which vainly flattered themselves that they divided the world amongst them, this power was then silently advancing from conquest to conquest, and the Roman eagle was

The shaking of the nations, as paving the way for the desire of all nations, is striking to the contemplative mind in another point of view. Philosophy rode triumphant, every question relating to physics, morals, polities, science, religion, was freely canvassed; and the noise of the schools in many instances drowned that of the ensanguined plain. The introduction of Christianity was preceded by a remarkable diffusion of knowledge, and the radiance of science ushered in the gospel day, as Aurora announces the approach of the sun, and prepares the world for it. Egypt, Persia, Greece, and Rome, poured from their separate urns, those distinct rills of science, which meeting in one great channel, became a mighty flood, and overspread the vast Roman empire. And thus was revelation ens. bled to give a most illustrious proof of its coming down from above, by diffusing over the world, all at once, a light superior to all collected human wisdom in its brightest glory. And need we ask who it was that thus shook and settled the sea and the dry land, who re gulated the vast engine, who conducted all these great events, and brought them to one issue, concurrence, and conclusion? At the same period of time the promised Messiah came; the greatest empire that ever existed was at the height of its glory: learning

flourished beyond what it had done in any
former age: and the world was blessed with
universal peace.
A coincidence of facts,
every one of which is in itself so extraordi-
nary that it cannot be paralleled by any other
times, clearly points out the hand of that su-
preme, overruling Power, who from eternity
beheld the great plan of his providence
through its whole extent, who alone "can
declare the end from the beginning and from
ancient times the things which are not yet
done," saying, "My counsel shall stand, and
I will do all my pleasure."

To put this beyond all doubt, let it be observed, that these events took their rise in remotest ages, and were prepared in times and countries far distant from and unknown to each other. Empire which sprang up amidst the seven hills of Rome; science nursed in the academic groves of Greece; and religion from the obscure vales of Judea, all met at one grand crisis. To one another unknown, they must have been conducted by the hand of Providence. But meet they did, and peace from heaven crowned them with her olive. And thus were the nations shaken, to prepare the way of the Lord; thus "the valleys were exalted, and the mountains and hills laid low, the crooked made straight, and the rough places plain," and the high and aspiring thoughts of men were brought into captivity to the obedience of Christ.

markable circumstances which immediately preceded, or which accompanied the birth of Christ.

And was all this mighty preparation made to introduce a mere man of like passions with ourselves? Were the heavens from above and the earth beneath stirred to meet him at his coming? Did flaming ministers descend singly and in bands, did departed prophets revisit the earth, and the dead bodies of saints arise to do homage to a creature, their equal, their fellow? It is not to be believed. But surely this is the Son of God; and to receive him, coming for our salvation, what solemnity of preparation was too great, what homage of angels and men too submissive, what testimony of created Nature too ample? "Hosanna to the son of David, blessed is he who cometh in the name of the Lord, Hosanna in the highest."

Is his name and description "the desire of all nations?" how fitly applied! Is light desirable to the benighted, bewildered traveller in a land of snares and of the shadow of death? Is pardon desirable to a wretch condemned? Is the cooling stream desirable to the parched pilgrim, and bread to the hungry perishing wretch? Is the friendly haven desirable to the tempest-tossed mariner, and liberty to the languishing captive? What then to an ignorant, guilty, perishing world, must that wonderful man be whom Providence has raised up to be "a hiding place from the wind, and a covert from the tempest; as rivers of water in a dry place; as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land."

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But the heavens and the earth were literally shaken, at the coming of "the desire of all nations." Witness that new created star which conducted the eastern Magi to the place where the Saviour was born; witness the descent of Gabriel and a multitude of But what if when he shall appear, desirthe heavenly host, to announce his arrival; able as he is, a blind world shall see and witness the other appearances of celestial form or comeliness in him, no beauty why he spirits to minister to the Lord of Glory in his should be desired?" Afflicting thought! temptation and agony, at his resurrection and He was despised and rejected of men!" ascension into heaven; witness the descent" He came to his own and his own received of Moses and Elias to the mount of transfigu- him not." They "denied the holy one, and ration; witness too the eclipse of the sun the just, and desired a murderer to be grantbeyond the course of nature, which marked ed unto them." The cry was, "away with the hour of his death, the quaking of the him, crucify him;" his "blood be upon us earth, the rending of the rocks, the rising of and upon our children!" O Lord, remove the dead witness the voice from heaven the film from the eyes of those prejudiced which, like thunder, oftener than once, shook Jews; dispose them to receive "The Prince the echoing air, while God himself declared of Peace," let him be all their salvation and his well beloved Son, and demanded atten- all their desire. Lord, remove the film from tion for him. All these confirm the testi- my eyes that I may see in him, whom God mony of the prophet, they point it to the the Father hath sent and sealed, one "fairer Lord Jesus, and inspire joy unspeakable and than the children of men; into whose lips full of glory, on discovering the perfect coin- grace is poured:" that though he may be, cidence between prediction and event. To" unto the Jews a stumbling block, and unto this auspicious, this all important era we are the Greeks foolishness, He may be unto us now brought; and the next Lecture, with who believe, Christ, the power of God, and the divine permission, will detail the re- the wisdom of God." Amen.

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