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.2་《ཧུར་་་་

if I have found grace in thy fight, shew me now thy way, that I may know thee, that I may find grace in thy fight." He dreaded the thought of taking one ftep forwards in the journey through the wilderness, without the presence and favourable smiles of that God in whom he trufted. Thus again he prays in that pfalm which bears his name, "Let thy work appear unto thy fervants, and thy glory unto their children; and let the beauty of the Lord our God be upon us; and establish thou the work of our hands upon us; yea, the work of our hands establish thou it." It gives fome men no concern, whether their Maker is pleased or displeased with their proceedings; but it is not fo with those who put fuch a value on his favour as to account it their life. They have, in a measure, the fame mind in them which was also in Christ Jefus, who faid of his divine Father, "I do always thofe things which please him." This is what I mean by saying, that the favour of God is the rule of life. In connection with this I add,

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4. The favour of God is the end of life. His pleasure is the due and proper end of the lives and actions of his creatures. For thy pleasure they are, and were created." They are fubordinate to him, as their end; for " of him, and through him,

and to him are all things." All fhould tend to him,

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as the lines in a circle to one common centre. The labours of man in his calling are for the support and comfort of his natural life; in like manner the holy exercises and duties in which a child of God is engaged, have for their end the enjoyment of his favour. He attends the folemnities of public devotion, that he may behold the beauty of the Lord, while he inquires in his temple; that he may fee his power and his glory in the fanctuary. And why fo? "Because," fays he, "thy loving-kindness is better than life; it is better than my existence, the life which I live, for that would do me little good without it.

When the church, as reprefented in Solomon's divine pastoral, had loft the sweet fenfe of God's E favour, through negligence and floth, fhe took great pains in seeking the restoration of her former comforts. She quitted her bed of floth, she rose and went about the city, in the streets and broad ways thereof; that is, fhe renewed her diligence in the public ordinances of divine worship; she inquired of the watchmen upon the walls of the city, "Saw ye him whom my foul loveth ?" And fle refted not till he had restored unto her the joys of his falvation. What is it that a child of grace would not do, what is it that he would not endure, for the enjoyment of a fenfe of God's favour? It is

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more to him than all the world without it. In prayer, in hearing and reading the divine word, in meditation, in approaching to the Lord's table, ftill his cry is," Lord, lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon me."

Thus, the favour of God is the cause, the object, the rule, and the end of a good man's life.

III. The third general head of our discourse is, to confider to whom God's favour is life, and at what particular seasons it is fo,

To the preservation of natural life, the providential favour of the great Governor of the universe, is neceffary to every one, and neceffary every hour, every moment. But I would particularly speak of his fpecial favour, as more immediately intended

in our text.

All the children of God moft certainly know that his favour to them is life, and they know it is fo at all times, particularly in religious duties, under trying difpenfations, and even when they are in the full enjoyment of created comforts. But there are fome special feasons when they will not only acknowledge this as a truth revealed in the scriptures, but when they will lie under a ftrong conviction and impreffion of it.

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This I believe is always the cafe, in a finner's first converfion to God. This is the period when C he begins to put a proper value on the divine favour. In his flate of ignorance and flupidity, alas! he forgets God, and is awfully indifferent concerning either his anger or his love. But in converfion, the poor finner, who was before at cafe, thoughtless and secure, is enlightened, convicted, and pricked to the heart. His awakened foul begins to cry with Peter's hearers, "Men and brethren, what shall we do?" Or with the jailor at Philippi, Sirs, what fhall I do to be faved? I have ruined and deftroyed myself, and want a friendly guide, to fet me in the right way. I know not what to do, or which way to look for relief. I have wandered from God, and from the way of peace till now, and am utterly at a lofs what steps I ought to take. I am fully convinced, that if I proceed in my former course, I am utterly and everlastingly undone. Some other path I muft tread, but how to find the way of fafety I know not. Moft earnestly do I defire to fly from the wrath to come, but alas! whither fhall I fly? Ye minifters of Christ, ye servants of the Moft High God, give me your counfel. Tell me, is there any hope for fuch a wretch as I am? I have gone aftray like a loft sheep, upon the mountains of fin

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and error even till now. The terrors of an angry God fet themselves in array against me; O tell me how I fhall escape them."

To fuch a finner, the most distant prospect, the, fmalleft degree of hope concerning God's favour, and reconciliation with him, would be as life from the dead. If the reader has felt the terrors of an awakened confcience, he will not be at a loss to know what we mean. He who has a juft sense of God's awful difpleasure against him, because of fin, can find no words expreffive enough to fet forth his value of the divine favour.

Now the God of all grace hath promised to guide bewildered fouls into the way of life and peace. "I will inftruct thee, and teach thee in the way which thou fhalt go; I will guide thee with mine eye. Thine ears fhall hear a word behind thee faying, This is the way, walk ye in it. in it. The way. faring men, though fools, fhall not err therein. For thus faith the Lord, thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Ifrael, I am the Lord thy God which teacheth thee to profit, which leadeth thee by the way which thou fhoulde ft go. I will bring the blind by a way that they knew not, I will lead them in paths that they have not known; I will make darkness light before them, and crooked things ftraight. These things will I do unto them, and

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