Abbildungen der Seite
PDF
EPUB

nemy are deceitful. Open rebuke is better than secret love. Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? There is more hope of a fool than of him.

He that is slow to anger, is better than the mighty; and he that ruleth his spirit, than he that taketh a city.

He that bath pity on the poor lendeth to the Lord; that which he hath given will he pay him again.

If thine enemy be hungry, give him bread to eat; and if he be thirsty, give him water to drink.

He that planted the ear, shall he not hear? He that form ed the eye, shall he not see?

I have been young, and now I am old; yet have I never seen the righteous forsaken, nor his seed begging bread.

It is better to be a door-keeper in the house of the Lord than to dwell in the tents of wickedness..

I have seen the wicked in great power; and spreading himself like a green bay tree. Yet he passed away. I sought him, but he could not be found..

Happy is the man that findeth wisdom. Length of days is in her right hand; and in her left hand, riches and honor. Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are prace.

How good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell to gether in unity! It is like precious ointment; Like the dew of Hermon, and the dew that descended upon the mountains of Zion.

The sluggard will not plough by reason of the cold; he għall therefore beg in harvest and have nothing.

[ocr errors]

I went by the field of the slothful, and by the vineyard of the man void of understanding and lo! it was all grown over with thorns; nettles had covered its face; and the stone wall was broken down Then I saw, and considered it well I looked upon it and received instruction.

Honorable age is not that which standeth in length of years: time; nor that which is measured by number of But wisdom is the grey hair to man; and an unspotted life is old age..

Solomon, my son, know thou the god of thy fathers; and If serve him with a perfect heart, and with a willing mind. thou seek him he will be found of thee; but if thou forsake him, he will cast thee of for ever.

SECTION IX..

THAT every day has its pains and sorrows is universally experienced, and almost universally confessed. But let us not attend only to mournful truths if we look impartially about us, we shall find, that every day has likewise its please æres and its joys.

:

We should cherish sentiments of charity towards all men: The Author of all good nourishes much piety and virtue in hearts that are unknown to us; and beholds repentance ready to spring up among, many whom we consider as re-probates.

No one ought to consider himself as insignificant in the of his Creator. In our several stations, we are all sent forth to be laborers in the vineyard of our heavenly Father. Every man has his work allotted, his talent, committed to him; by the due improvement of which he may in one way or other, serve God, promote virtue, and be useful in the world!

The love of praise should be preserved under proper sub ordination to the principle of duty. In itself, it is a usefu utotive to action; but when allowed to extend its influence® too far, it corrupts the whole character; and produces guilt, disgrace, and misery. To be entirely destitute of it; is a defect. To be governed by it, is depravity. The proper adjustment of the several principles of action in human nature, is a matter that deserves our highest attention. For whene any one of them becomes either too weak or too strong, its endangers both our virtue and our happiness.

The desires and passions of a vicious man, having once obtained an unlimited sway, trample him under their feet.--They make him feel that he is subject to various contradic tory, and imperious masters, who often pull him different ways. His soul is rendered the receptacle of many repug. nant and jarring dispositions; and resembles some barbarous country, cantoned out into different principalities, which are continually waging war on one another.

Diseases, poverty, disappointment, and shame, are far from being in every instance, the unavoidable doom ot man. They are much more frequently the offspring of his own misguided choice. Intemperance engenders disease, sloth produces poverty, pride creates disappointment, and dishop

i

easty exposes the shame. The ungoverned passions of men betray them into a thousand follies; their follies into crimes and their crimes into misfortunes.

When we reflect on the many distresses which abound in human life; on the scanty proportion of happiness which any man is here allowed to enjoy; on the small difference which the diversity of fortune makes on that scanty proportion; it is surprising that envy should ever have been a prevalent passion among men, much more that it should have prevailed among Christians. Where so much is suffered in common, little room is left for envy. there is more occasion for pity and sympathy, and inclination to assist each other.

At our first setting out in life, when yet unacquainted with the world and its snares, when every pleasure enchant with its smile, and every object shines with the gloss of novelty let us beware of the seducing appearances which surround us; and recollect what others have suffered from the power of headstrong desire. If we allow any passion, even though it be esteemed innocent, to acquire an absolute ascendant, our inward peace will be impaired. But if any which has the taist of guilt, take early possession of our mind, we may date from that moment, the ruin of our tranquillity.

Every man has some darling passion, which generally affords the first introduction to vice. The irregular grati fications into which it occasionally seduces him, appear un der the form of venial weaknesses; and are indulged, in the beginuing, with scrupulousness and reserve. But, hy longer practice, these restraints weaken, and the power of habit grows. One vice brings in another to its aid. By a sort of natural affinity they connect and entwine themselves together; till their roots come to spread wide and deep over all the soul.

SECTION X.

WHENCE arises the misery of this present world? It is aot owing to our cloudy atmosphere, our inclement seasons, and changing skies. It is not owing to the debility of our bodics, or to the unequal distribution of the goods of fortune. Amidst all disadvantages of this kind, a pure, a steadfast, and enlightened mind, possessed of strong virtue, could

has fixed a seat.

enjoy itself in peace, and smile at the impotent assaults of fortune and the elements. It is within ourselves that misery Our disordered hearts, our guilty passions, our violent prejudices, and misplaced desires, are the instruments of the trouble which we endure. Those sharpen the darts which adversity would otherwise point in vain against us.

While the vain and the licentious are revelling in the midst of extravagance and riot, how little do they think of those scenes of sore distress which are passing at that mo ment throughout the world; multitudes struggling for a poor subsistence, to support the wife and the children whom they love, and who look up to them with eager eyes for thats bread which they can Irardly procure; multitudes groaning under sickness in desolate cottages, untended and unmourned; many, apparently in a better situation of life, pining away in secret with concealed griefs; families weeping over the beloved friends whom they have lost, or in all the bitterness of anguish, bidding those who are just expiring the last adieu.

Never adventure on too near an approach to what is evil. Familiarize not yourselves with it, in the slightest instances without fear. Listen with reverence to every reprehension of conscience; and preserve the most quick and accurate sensibility to right and wrong. If ever your moral impres sions begin to decay, and your natural abhorrence of guilt to lessen you have ground to dread that the ruin of virtue is fast approaching.

By disappointments and trials the violence of our pas sions is tamed, and our minds are formed to sobriety and reflection. In the varieties of life, occasioned by the vicISsitudes of worldly fortune, we are inured to habits both of the active and suffering virtues. How much soever we complain of the vanity of the world, facts plainly show that if its vanity were less, it could not answer the purpose of salutary discipline. Unsatisfactory as it is, its pleasures are still too apt to corrupt our hearts. How fatal then must the consequences have been, had it yielded us more complete enjoyment? If, with all its trouble, we are in danger of being too much attached to it, how entirely would it have seduced our affections, if no troubles had been mingled with is pleasures

In

In seasons of distress or difficulty to abandon ourselves to dejection carries no mark of a great or a worthy mind. stead of sinking under trouble and declaring " that his soul is weary of life," it becomes a wise and a good man, in the evil day, with firmness to maintain his post; to bear up against the storm; to have recourse to those advantages which in the worst of times, are always left to integrity and vir tue; and never to give up the hope that better days may yet arise.

How many young persons have at first set out in the world with excellent dispositions of heart; generous, charitable and humane kind to their friends, and amiable among all with whom they had intercourse! And yet, how often have we seen all those fair appearances unhappily blasted in the progress of life, merely through the influence of loose and corrupting pleasures; and those very persous, who promised once to be blessings to the world, sunk down, in the end, te be the burden and nuisance of society!

The most common propensity of mankind, is, to store futurity with whatever is agreeable to them; especially in those periods of life, when imagination is lively and hope is ardent. Looking forward to the year now beginning, they are ready to promise themselves much, from the foundations of prosperity which they have laid; from the friendships and Connexions which they have secured; and from the plans of conduct which they have formed. Alas! how deceitful do all these dreams of happiness often prove !-While many are saying in secret to their hearts, "To morrow shall be as this day, and more abundantly." we are obliged in return to say to them: Boast not yourselves of tomorrow; for you know not what a day may bring forth !"

CHAPTER II.

NARRATIVE PIECES.

SECTION I.

NO RANK OR POSSESSIONS CAN MAKE THE GUILTY MIND HAPPY.

DIONYSIUS, the tyrant of Sicily, was far from being happy, though he possessed great riches, and all the pleasures"

« ZurückWeiter »