VII. DISC. " the sacrifice which taketh away fin, the "price which hath ranfomed souls from "death, the leader of the whole army of " bodies that shall rise again. For though "it had a beginning from us, yet God " hath given it vital efficacy, Heaven hath " endowed it with celestial power, that " virtue which it hath from above, in re"gard whereof, all the angels in heaven " adore it "." And if " no man ever yet hated his own "flesh," can God hate the flesh, which, by being taken into one person with the WORD, is united to the Godhead? Can the Father hate Him, of whom he more than once declared from heaven, "This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well " pleased?" "And we are members of HIS "body, of HIS flesh, and of HIS bones. " It is a great mystery," faith the apostle, " but I speak concerning Christ and the "church"." U HOOKER, Book v. Sect. 54. When VII. When man had offended, he fled from DISC. his Maker, and dared no more to approach the divine prefence. But now that the WORD incarnate hath published his general invitation" O thou that hearest the " prayer, unto thee shall all flesh come!" If the Son of God became the Son of man, why should it feem a thing incredible, that the fons of men should become the fons of God? "Beloved, now are we "the fons of God; and it doth not yet appear what we shall be; but we know, "that when Christ, who is our life, shall appear, then shall we also appear with " him in glory; for we shall see him as " he is *." : Delight we, then, to talk (and, fince the incarnation of the WORD, why should we not delight to talk?) of the dignity of human nature? Let us be careful to act up to it. To a Christian the advice of the philosopher comes with redoubled force; VII. DISC. " Reverence yourself." - Confider, to whom you are related, by whom you have been begotten again to a lively hope of an unfading inheritance. The stock, from which you are sprung, is noble, it is royal, it is divine. Disgrace it not by base and unworthy actions. Your inheritance is with the faints in light; have no fellowship with the works of darkness. Let your education be suitable to your birth, your conduct answerable to your expectations. The infirmities and dishonours, to which mortality is and must be subject, need not discompose and afflict you. Be not difmayed at the approach of pain and ficknefs; let not the coffin and the shroud terrify you. For though "all flesh be as grafs, " and all the goodliness of man as the "flower of grass;" though "the grass wi"thereth, the flower fadeth," kindly ad y Utile esse civitatibus, dicit Varro, ut se viri fortes, etiamfi falfum fit, Diis genitos effe credant, ut eo modo humanus animus velut divinæ ftirpis fiduciam gerens, res magnas aggrediendas præfumat audacius, et agat vehementius. Augustin. de Civit. Dei, lib. iii. p. 49. See Leland, Advant. and Neceff. of Rev. i. 182. monishing monishing you to prepare for an autumn DISC. VII. and a winter, when the spring of youth and the fummer of manhood shall be paffed and gone; yet "the WORD of God abi "deth for ever." And this is the WORD, which hath been " made flesh, and dwelt 66 among us;" this is the WORD to which your nature is in Christ united; "this is "the WORD, which by the Gospel is " preached unto you;" whose glory there displayed, " as the glory of the only begot"ten of the Father," you may now behold; and who, by his "grace" preceding, and his "truth" accompanying, will lead you to a glory, the excellence of which, enjoyment only can enable you to comprehend. 1 |