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SERMON V.

St MATTHEW called from the Receipt of Cuftom.

MATT. ix. 9.

And as Jefus paffed forth from thence, be faw a Man named Matthew, fitting at the Receipt of Custom: And he faith unto him, Follow me. And be arofe and followed him.

E this Day commemorate another
Apostle of the Holy Jefus, whofe
Memory is dear, not only for his

indefatigable Labour and Zeal, in preaching the Gospel, but alfo for the Account he has left of it in Writing. The Text (which is Part of the Gospel for the Day) is his own Relation of his own Converfion and Call. In which it is obfervable, that while the other two Evangelists, who relate his Story, mention him only by the Name of Levi, Mark ii. 14. Luke v. 27. the better to conceal him

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SERM. from the Reproaches which were very liberalV. ly bestowed (as I fhall fhew by and by) upon Men of his Employment and Calling; the Apostle himself freely and impartially records his own Hiftory, under his proper Name of Matthew; and (which is a further Evidence of his great Humility) in the Lift of the Apoftles (in which the other Evangelists give him the Precedence to Thomas,) he names Thomas firft, and then himself, under the odious Character of Matthew the Publican, Mark iii. 18. Luke vi. 15. Matt. x. 3.

From hence, by the way, we have a double Inftruction worthy our Observation. For first, the Charity of the other Evangelists in hiding and covering our Apoftle from Reproach, teaches us to treat a penitent Brother with Tenderness and Modefty: According to a known Rule among the Jews, never to say to a Man that repents, Remember thy former Works*: It being against the Rules of Civility, as well as the Laws of Religion, when a Man has feen, and repented of the Errors of his paft Life, to reproach him with them.

On the other hand, the Frankness and Opennefs of St Matthew, in acknowledging his former fcandalous State, is an Inftruction to

*Bava Metfia, apud CAVE's St Matthew, p. 180.

us,

us, not to be ashamed to give Glory to God, s E R M. nor to spare ourselves in the mentioning and V. Acknowledgment of our own former Faults, whenever he refcues us by the Influence of his Grace, from a State and Condition that was leading us to Ruin: Since by how much the greater our Danger was, by fo much the greater was our Saviour's Mercy.

But not to infift upon collateral Hints, the Story of our Apoftle is fo full of Particulars worthy of our Remark, that almost every Word of it deserves a particular Confideration. I fhall lay them before you in the Order they arife, which, with the proper Ufes that may afterwards be made of them, will be the beft Improvement of the present Festival. If we look back upon the foregoing Part of this Chapter, we shall find that our Saviour had just before been healing a Man that was fick of the Palfy. Leaving the Throng which had got about him, wondering and admiring at fo miraculous a Cure, he retires. for a little while by himself: And after his Retreat (loving to divide his Time between the Satisfactions of a pious Privacy, and a charitable Conversation) he comes forth again, to seek new Occafions of doing good, Mark ii. 13. He was at this Time, it seems, at Capernaum,

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SERM. pernaum, where, leaving Nazareth, he had V. fixed his Habitation, Mark ii. 1. which there

fore, in the first Verse of this Chapter, is called his own City. Now Capernaum was fituated (as St Matthew himself tells us) upon the Sea Coaft, in the Borders of Zabulon and Napthalim. Matt. iv. 13. The Place being commodious for receiving of Custom and Toll, for the Paffage and Waftage of Perfons and Goods, over the Sea of Galilee; Here was placed, it feems, the Receipt of Custom, i. e, a Table, or, perhaps a Bench, under Cover, but open to the Sea-Side; fo that whoever fhould attend to receive the Duties, might have a clear View of the Ships and Lading, that paffed to and fro, upon the Sea. And this being a Place of publick Refort, where Paffengers and others, either for Business or Diverfion, were ufed to meet; our Saviour alfo comes hither, and, walking upon the Key, finds there, what he looks for, another Object of as much Pity and Compaffion, as the Man he had cured a little before, viz. a Publican; for Matthew, or, (as the other Evangelifts call him) Levi, the Son of Alpheus was fitting here, ready to receive the Customs or Tolls above-mentioned.

This, you must know, was an Employment of very vile Efteem among the Jews: It

was

was reckoned fcandalous, through all the con- s ERM. quered Provinces of the Romans: And the V. Perfons that managed it were looked on as Thieves and Cheats, for their Exactions, and ill Ufage of those with whom they had any thing to do. Among the Romans themselves indeed, it was esteemed a Place of Credit and Reputation, and was feldom conferred upon any under the Degree of a Knight: infomuch, that the Father of the Emperor Vefpafian, was Chief Publican of the Afian Provinces, and discharged the Office fo much to the Content and Satisfaction of the People, that he had a Statue erected to him infcribed, Kaaws Teλavnoal, i. e. to the honeft Publican *. But now these, being fent into distant Provinces, to gather the Tributes that were due from thence, were used to employ the Natives under them, as Perfons beft fkilled in the Affairs and Customs of their own Country, However honourable therefore, the Chief Publicans might be, as having nothing to do, but to receive what was brought them; it is easy to imagine, that those who were employed under them (of which Sort was the Apostle we this Day commemorate) must be many Ways obnoxious to the ill Will of the People.

*Suetonius in Vit. Vefpaf. c. i. p. 722.

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