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élder son, was little inferior to the mercy showed in the pardon that he granted to the

younger.

Jesus, having thus set before them the affectionate behaviour of an earthly parent towards his undutiful child, left every one to judge whether such weak and wicked creatures can love their offspring with more true tenderness than the great Father Almighty does his, or shew them more indulgence for their benefit. In this inimitable composition, the amazing mercy of God is painted with captivating beauty: and in all the three parables, the joys occasioned among heavenly beings, by the conversion of a single sinner, are represented; joys even to God himself, than which a nobler and sweeter thought never entered into the minds of rational creatures. Thus high doth men stand in the estimation of God; for which cause they should not cast themselves away in that trifling manner, wherein multitudes destroy themselves; neither should any one think the salvation of others a small matter, as some who are entrusted with their recovery seem to do. Had the Pharisees understood the parable, how criminal must they have appeared in their own eyes, when they saw themselves truly described in the character of the elder son, who was angry that his brother had repented! Withal, how bitter must their remorse have been when they found themselves not only repining at that which gave joy to God, the conversion of sinners, but excessively displeased with the methods of his procedure in this matter, and maliciously opposing them! If these parables had been omitted by Luke, as they have been by the other three historians, the world would have sustained an unspeakable

loss.

About the same time, our Lord instructed his disciples by the parable of the unjust steward; a part of scripture, the interpretation of which is not considered the most easy. We shall, therefore, first give the whole in the words of Dr. Campbell, and then subjoin a few explanatory remarks.

Luke xvi. 1..13.] "He said likewise to his disciples, a certain rich man had a steward, who was accused to him of wasting his estate. Having, therefore, called him, he said, what is this that I hear of thee? render an account of thy management, for thou shalt be steward no longer. And the steward said within himself, what shall I do? my master taketh from me the stewardship; I cannot dig, and am ashamed to beg. I am resolved what to do; that when I am discarded, there may be some who will receive me into their houses. Having, therefore, sent severally for all his master's debtors, he asked one, how much owest thou to my master? He answered, a hundred baths of oil. Take thy bill, said the steward, sit down directly and write one for fifty. Then he asked another, how much owest thou? He answered, a hundred homers of wheat. Take thy bill, said he, and write one for eighty. The master commended the prudence of the unjust steward; for the children of this world are more prudent in conducting their affairs than the children of light. Therefore I say unto you, with the deceitful mammon procure to yourselves friends, who, after your discharge, may receive you into the eternal mansions.

"Whoso is faithful in little, is faithful also in much; and whoso is unjust in little, is unjust also in much. If, therefore, ye have not been honest in the deceitful, who will intrust you with true riches? And if ye have been unfaithful managers for another, who will give you any thing to manage for yourselves? A servant cannot serve two masters, for either he will hate one and love the other, or, at least, will attend one and neglect the other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon."

The good things of this world are here called the deceitful mammon, because, from their transitory and unsatisfactory nature, they deceive all those that put their trust in them; and they are fitly contrasted with the true riches, the enduring inheritance of

eternal felicity. These are entrusted to their possessors as a deposit, which they are bound to use for the honour of God, and the well-being of their fellow-men. They are lent only for a time, a time unknown to us, and liable to be taken from us every moment: whereas, the joys of heaven are considered by the saints as their own by right of inheritance, in consequence of their being the heirs of God, and jointheirs of Christ, and will never be taken from them. If Christians make a proper use of their riches, they will be endeavouring to promote the cause of God on the earth, and thus will be the means of increasing the joy of angels, by contributing to the salvation of sinners. Gladly, therefore, will these glorious spirits receive the departed souls of those that thus spend and are spent for God into their everlasting habitations, where they shall enjoy unspeakable delights in the presence of God and the Lamb, eat of the fruit of the tree of life, and be clothed with immortality as with a garment.

The Pharisees who heard these excellent instructions treated them as fit subjects of derision, that they might thus justify their own detestable covetousness; nor has their example been found without imitators in all ages, who have exercised a paltry and pretended wit to stifle the reproofs of their consciences, and have thus prepared themselves the more fully for the awful vengeance of God. The answer which Christ gave them was deeply impressive. Ye are they who justify yourselves before men, by your care of external appearances; but God knoweth your hearts. Do not, therefore, plume yourselves upon the approbation of your fellow-creatures; for, it is frequently the case, that that which is highly esteemed among men is abomination in the sight of God. He then repeated what he had formerly observed concerning the eagerness with which men pressed into the kingdom of God, the permanency of the law, and the enormous evil of unnecessary divorce.

That no means might be wanted to impress their minds with these awful truths, he now related the parable of the rich man and the beggar; a parable which every one is in duty bound to read, to remember, and to make the subject of the most devout and humble meditation. There was a certain rich man, who abounded with all the comforts of life, was clothed in purple and fine linen, and being greatly devoted to the enjoyments of the table, fared sumptuously every day. At his gate, within the hearing of his jovial songs, was laid a certain beggar, named Lazarus, a faithful servant of the living God, but who, like Job, the pattern of his imitation, was full of sores. So low, also, was the station in life which this good man occupied, that he depended for his subsistence upon the crumbs which fell from the rich man's table: moreover, he was so destitute of necessary covering, that the dogs, according to the filthy friendly dis position of those animals, came and licked his sores. Death, however, reversed the scene. The beggar died; his body was barely huddled to the grave; but angels carried his soul into that state of felicity which, in allusion to Eastern entertainments, is denominated Abraham's bosom. The rich man was also obliged to pay, the debt of nature; he was buried with great pomp and solemnity, but his soul departed to the abodes of misery, where he lift up his eyes, being in torments, and seeth Abraham afar off, and Lazarus in his bosom. And he cried and said, father Abraham, have mercy on me, and send Lazarus, the poor beggar whom I relieved, though I despised him, that he may dip the tip of his finger in water, and cool my tongue, for I am tormented in this inextinguishable flame. But Abraham said, son, remember that thou in thy life-time receivedst what thou didst vainly account thy good things, and likewise Lazarus. evil things; but now he is comforted, and thou art tormented. And beside all this, between us and you there is a great gulph fixed: so that they that would pass, ou an errand of mercy, from hence to you, cannot; neither can they pass to us that, in order

to escape from their torment, would come from thence. Then he said, I pray thee, therefore, father, that thou wouldest send him to my father's house; for I have five brethren, living, as I did, in rebellion against God, therefore send him that he may testify unto them of the truth and importance of eternal things, lest they also come into this place of torment. Abraham saith unto him, they have Moses and the prophets, let them hear them. And he said, nay, father Abraham, but if one went unto them from the dead, they will repent. And he said unto him, if they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded though one rose from the dead.

By this parable, as Dr. Macknight observes, we are taught several important lessons as 1. That one may be great, and renowned, and highly esteemed among men, who is entirely obscure and vulgar in the eyes of God, nay, an abomination unto him. For what can be greater or better in the eyes of men than to live adorned with all the splendour of wealth, luxury, and honours? and what more disgraceful in the sight of God than to be polluted with sin, and fit only for the flames of hell? On the other hand, the parable teaches, that some who appear mean and despicable in the eyes of their fellows are men of great worth, and highly beloved of God. Wealth, therefore, and power, and grandeur, are not to be coveted; neither is poverty to be dreaded, since that honour which is the chief charm of the one, and that reproach which is the bitterest sting of the other, are altogether without foundation.

2. This parable teaches us, that the souls of men are immortal, that they subsist in a separate state after the dissolution of the body, and that they are rewarded or punished according to their actions in this life; doctrines very necessary to be asserted in those days, when it was fashionable to believe the mortality of the soul, and to argue in defence of that pernicious error. Further it teaches us that the miseries of the poor who have lived religiously, and the happiness of the rich who have lived wickedly, do end with this life; and that the several stations in which they have lived, together with the past occurrences and actions of their lives, are distinctly remembered and reflected upon by them; and that the remembrance of past pains and pleasures will not lessen, but rather increase, the joys of the one and the sorrows of the other; and, consequently, that we make a very false judgment of one another's condition, when we think any man happy because he is rich, or any man miserable because he is poor.

3. From this parable we learn, that men shall be punished hereafter for entertaining principles inconsistent with morality and religion, for their worldly-mindedness and heedlessness with respect to matters of religion, for being immersed in pleasure, and for not using their riches aright, as well as for crimes of a grosser nature; wherefore, it affords a fit caution to all great and rich persons to beware of the rocks on which they are most apt to split. This great man who fell into the flames of hell is not charged with murder, adultery, injustice, oppression, or lying; he is not even charged with being remarkably uncharitable. Lazarus lay commonly at his gate; and though he received evil things, being treated by every one of the family as a beggar, he got his maintenance there, such as it was, otherwise he would not have been laid there daily; nor would the rich man have desired Abraham to send him rather than any other of the blessed with a drop of water to cool his tongue, had he not imagined that gratitude would prompt him to undertake the office with cheerfulness. The rich man's sin, therefore, was his living in luxury and pleasure, which made him, on the one hand, neglect religion, for cultivating which he had the best opportunities; and, on the other, cherish atheistical principles, particularly such as flow from believing the mortality of the soul. If so, all who resemble this person in his character, should take warning by his punishment, and not delude themselves with thinking, that because

they live free from the more scandalous vices, they shall escape damnation. In particular, all who make it their chief business to procure the pleasures of sense, neglecting to form their minds into a relish of spiritual and divine pleasures, may in this parable see their sad, but certain end. They shall be excluded for ever from the presence of God, as incapable of his joys, although they may have pursued their pleasures with no visible injury to any person. But if men, not accused of injustice in getting riches, are thus punished for the bad use they have made of them, what must the misery of those be who both acquire them unjustly and use them sinfully? As this parable admonishes the rich, so it is profitable for the instruction and comfort of the poor; for it teaches them the proper method of bringing their afflictions to a happy issue, and shews them that God will distribute the rewards and punishments of the life to come impartially, without respect of persons.

4. This parable teaches us the greatness of the punishment of the damned. And in hell he lift up his eyes, being in torments, and seeth Abraham afar off, and Lazarus in his bosom. We cannot, from this representation, infer that burning with material fire shall be any part of the true and proper punishment of the damned. The never dying worm, which is sometimes joined with the fire of hell, is confessed by all to be metaphorical, and therefore the fire may be so likewise. Yet no man can be absolutely certain that the wicked shall not be burnt with flames, seeing the resurrection of their bodies, and the union of them with their souls, make the thing possible. In the meau time, be this as it will, the expressions found here, and in other passages of scripture, taken in their lowest sense, intimate that the pains of hell will be very great. For if wicked men retain the passions, appetites. and desires, which were predominant in them on earth, as it is highly probable they will, these desires being for ever deprived of their objects, must occasion a misery which they only can conceive who have felt what it is to lose, without hope of recovery, that which they were most passionately fond of, and to be racked with the violence of desires which they are sensible can never be gratified. Or, although the passions themselves should perish with their objects, a direful eternal melancholy must necessarily ensue from the want of all desire and enjoyment, the misery of which is not to be conceived. In such a state, the bitter reflections which the damned will make on the happiness they have lost, must raise in them a dreadful storm of self-condemnation, envy, and despair. Besides, their consciences, provoked by the evil actions of their lives, and now as it were let loose upon them, will prove more inexorable than ravening wolves; and the torment which they shall occasion will, in respect of its perpetuity, be as if a never-dying worm was always consuming them. This is the fire of hell, and those the everlasting burnings, (in Dr. Macknight's opinion) threatened with such terror in the word, where they are represented, perhaps, by material flames, to strike the dull and gross apprehensions of mankind; but they are far more terrible than the other; for the misery arising from these agonizing reflections must be of the most intense kind. And as there is not any thing in that state to divert the thoughts of the damned from them, they must be uninterrupted also, not admitting the least alleviation or refreshment,

5. From this parable we learn that men's states are unalterably fixed after death; so that it is vain to hope for any end of their misery who are miserable, and unreasonable to fear any change of their prosperity who are happy.

6. The parable informs us, that if the evidences of a future state, already proposed, do not persuade men, they will not be persuaded by any extraordinary evidences that can be offered consistently with the freedom requisite to render them accountable for their actions. The truth is, we do not call the reality of a future state into question, cither because it is not demonstrated by sufficient arguments, or because we are not

able to comprehend them. Every man has within his own breast what leadeth him to the acknowledgment of this grand, this fundamental support of religion; a certain foreboding of immortality, which it is not in his power ever to banish. But, being addicted to sin on account of the present pleasures attending it, we vehemently wish that there were no future state; and, in consequence of these wishes, we will not allow ourselves to weigh the arguments offered in its behalf, and so, at length, came to work ourselves into an actual disbelief of it. Or if the truth, proving too hard for us, should constrain our assent, the habit of yielding to our passions, which we labour under, has influence sufficient to make us act contrary to our convictions. Wherefore, though the evidence of a future state was more clear and forcible than it is, men might hinder themselves from seeing it, just as they hinder themselves from seeing the evidence by which it is at present supported. In a word, the proofs of the soul's immortality have always been sufficient to persuade those who have any candour or love of goodness, and to demand more is unreasonable, because, although it were given, it might prove ineffectual. If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded though one rose from the dead." Accordingly, Abraham's assertion is verified by daily experience; for they who look on all the eternal Son of God, who actually arose from the dead, has said concerning the punishments of the damned as so many idle tales, would pay little regard to any thing that could be told them even by a person risen from the dead.

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Our Lord, after delivering this awful parable, warned his disciples that offences, stumbling-blocks, or occasions to fall, would certainly come; but that if any one, by a careless and improper conversation, should place them in the way of his brother, he would be guilty of a great crime, and bring on heavy woe upon his head. They were, therefore, enjoined to cultivate, among other duties, that of forgiveness, lest a spirit of malice and resentment should find its way among them. As the conversation was now desultory, the apostles asked their Master to increase their faith when he told them, that if they had faith as a grain of mustard-seed, they might say to a sycamore tree that stood near the place, be thou plucked up by the root, and be thou planted in the sea, and it should obey them. This passage is variously understood, some supposing that it refers to the faith of miracles, and is to be interpreted literally; while others take it as a. proverbial expression, relating to the conquering of such temptations as might be the most difficult to subdue.

As nothing is more closely connected with every part of vital religion than a spirit of humility, our Lord then addressed them in a way well calculated to excite that disposition. [Luke xvii. 7..10.] But which of you, having a servant ploughing, or feeding cattle, will say unto him by and by, when he is come from the field, go and sit down to meat? And will not rather say unto him, make ready wherewith I may sup, and gird thyself, and serve me till I have eaten and drunken, and afterward thou shalt eat and drink? Doth he thank that servant because he did the things that were commanded him? I trow not. So, likewise, ye, when ye shall have done all these things which are commanded you, say we are unprofitable servants, we have done only that which it was our duty to do. Thus did Christ guard against those pernicious doctrines which were now taught by the Pharisees, and which afterwards did the most extensive injury in his church.

There dwelt, at this time, in the town of Bethany, a village about two miles from Jerusalem, a pious and respectable family, with whom Jesus was intimately acquainted, and whom he had visited on a former occasion, namely, that of Lazarus, and his two sisters, Martha and Mary. The former of these sisters had distinguished herself by her assiduous attention to our Lord's accommodation; and Mary was marked as

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