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cheerful devotedness to God, and not to frivolity, dissipation, and devotion to the world; and let them cherish their virtuous resolves, and fortify themselves against temptation, by participating of the pledges of mercy and grace in the supper of the Lord.

Those who have assumed the vows of their Christian profession in the ordinance of confirmation, we especially exhort to go on in the happy course on which they have entered, and to perform their vows by participating of the Lord's supper. This duty is imposed on them by one of those commandments which they solemnly assumed at their confirmation; and the assumption is registered in those books which will be opened at the last day; and which, proclaiming vows performed or vows violated, will assign to them the destiny of felicity or wo. This is the awful consideration that enforces, I may say, with the voice of eternity, the duty of making our Christian calling and election sure. For if after death is the judgment, and if death comes in an hour when we think not of it, who can be easy or unconcerned while in the habitual neglect of those commandments and ordinances in which he promised to walk, and in conformity with which will be found his present honour and peace, as well as his eternal felicity?

I beseech those then, who, from a concern for their eternal salvation, have assumed the vows of their Christian calling in confirmation, to prepare to secure that salvation, by receiving, in penitence, humility, and faith, the supper of the Lord. In the devout feelings which a sincere participation of this holy sacrament inspires, in the divine suc

cours which it conveys, they will find their only security against the temptations to which they are exposed, their full consolation under all the changes and trials of life, and an increase of every virtuous enjoyment which may brighten their course. How can they answer to their consciences, how can they answer to God for the neglect of this their bounden duty, this richest source of consolation, of grace, and of happiness? How will they answer to the Redeemer who died for them, when he sits in judgment upon them, for their inattention to his last pressing injunction-" Do this in remembrance of me?"

The season of manhood is the season of reflection, of sober deliberation, of wise determination, and yet how many does the rapid flight of time hurry through this important season, who never reflect on the things that belong to their eternal peace; or who never deliberate on the guilt and the danger of living only for the world, and neglecting their God and eternal interests; or who have.never determined, in the impulses of gratitude and duty to that Lord who hath made and who hath redeemed them, to perform their Christian vows in the courts of the Lord's house, in the sacrament of his supper! But surely, where such obligations impel, where such interests urge, want of reflection, of sober deliberation, of wise determination, cannot be without excuse, will not escape punishment.

What shall we say to those who have grown old in the service of the world, and have not engaged in the service of God; who have been, times without number, invited to participate with their brethren of the symbols of salvation, and are yet

strangers to the heavenly feast? Another invitation is given. It may be the last.

Sincere Christians, in whatever circumstances you are placed, it is your bounden duty, as it is your inestimable privilege, to participate of the symbols of the body and blood of your Saviour, and over these sacred memorials to thank and praise him who hath prepared for you, in his heavenly kingdom'to which he hath ascended, a felicity unspeakable in degree, and endless in duration. If you are surrounded by worldly comforts and blessings, let the holy table be the altar on which you offer the grateful tribute of your hearts to your heavenly Benefactor and Friend. If you are oppressed by sorrow and calamity, at the altar, the mercy-seat of your God, pour forth your griefs, and invoke the consolation and succour of him who, though in faithfulness he afflicts you, hath promised never to leave you nor forsake you; and who hath prepared for you that inheritance of glory and of bliss never to be sullied, never to be alloyed by sin or sorrow. At the altar let your affections be raised to that place to which your Saviour has ascended; that where he is, you may thither also ascend, and reign with him in glory. In the hour of sickness and of death, the hour that must come to all, take the symbols of the body and blood of your Saviour, and in the fulness of faith call on him; and in this hour of death, in the day of judgment, he will save and deliver you.

SERMON XII.

FOR THE HOLY COMMUNION.

PSALM IXV. 4.

Blessed is the man whom thou choosest, and causest to approach unto thee.

EVERY act of devotion, every approach unto God in the ordinances of religion, is calculated to ennoble, and purify, and exalt the powers of the soul. By the law of our nature, we are assimilated to that moral excellence which we frequently and ardently contemplate; and it is the natural tendency of goodness to raise pleasurable sensations in the mind that beholds it. When, then, we supplicate and praise that Being who is infinitely holy, we are powerfully excited to love and to imitate that holiness which we thus fervently adore; and when, in the exercises of faith and devotion, we approach unto that Being who is transcendently good and lovely, we experience those pleasures which the contemplation of excellence and goodness is always calculated to inspire. The living God, the exhaustless fountain of felicity, dispenses blessedness to the soul that humbly and devoutly approaches unto him. "Blessed is the man whom he chooses, and causes to approach unto him."

But of all the acts of religious homage, that in which the Christian approaches unto God in the sacrament of the supper, is the most ennobling in

its tendency, and produces the purest and most elevated joys; for this sacred ordinance exhibits God to our contemplation in his most exalted characters, and it dispenses the mean and pledge, to the humble and penitent believer, of every spiritual blessing.

Let me then, at the present time, when you are called to approach unto God at his holy table, invite your attention to

1. The characters in which he there displays himself and to the blessings which he there dispenses.

In the sacrament of the supper, God is displayed as a holy and just Sovereign punishing transgression; and also as our merciful Father in Christ Jesus, providing an expiation for sin, and extending pardon to the penitent.

On that holy table a victim is set forth under the most expressive symbols. The bread is broken, the wine is poured out, to denote that this victim is bruised for our iniquities, is wounded for our sins: the Lord hath laid on him the iniquities of us all. The victim, whose death, as the penalty of transgressions not his own, is thus set forth, is the Son of the Father in the person of man. Incomprehensible truth, but certain as the voice of inspiration. What an awful exhibition, then, in the symbols of the holy table, of the infinite sacrifice which sin required, and of the tremendous punishment which sin received! What an awful monition comes from that altar!-If the Lord thus smites the man that is his fellow, when constituted the representative of our guilt-if the eternal Sovereign of the universe thus spared not his own Son,

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