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It will be in vain for sinners there to plead, as they sometimes do here, that they could not help continuing in sin; that they were urged on by a fatal necessity; that they were urged on by the violence of natural inclination. For the examples of the righteous will testify, that others, who were once of like dispositions and in like circumstances, have repented, have broken off their iniquities by turning unto the Lord. At the tribunal of Heaven, the example and condition of the righteous will testify, that they only were wise, and that all the impenitent were fools. That "madness was in their heart while they lived." And the example of the wise, instead of provoking a smile of pity or contempt, will only pour eternal shame on all the finally im. penitent.

Again, the sinner's own awakened conscience and memory will testify against him in that day. Conscience may now slumber in perfect insensi bility. The sinner may put far away the evil day, and impiously say, "Where is the promise of his coming? What profit shall we have if we pray unto him?" But far different will be his reflections on another day. For when the slumbers of death are broken, and the terrors of the last judgment burst upon the view-then too will the slumbers of conscience be effectually broken, and a long chain of condemning recollections rush on the mind. . Then will it be recollected, how, in early life, or riper years, the affecting sounds of death, judgment and eternity did ring on the ear, thrill the soul, agitate the heart, and almost persuade you to be a Christian. But conscience will then testify, how you slighted the monition, resisted the truth, and grieved the Holy Spirit. Memory too will on that day be amazingly quickened. Then every act or thought of injustice to man, or dishonor to God--all the millions of your now forgotten sins, of thought, word and deed, will come up in terrible array before you. Oh, what an immense, dark, thick cloud, to break at once in thunder on the conscience! And will not conscience be roused to fury, and declare you verily guilty, when God shall thus "bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing?" But,

Again, the sufferings of the Lord Jesus Christ will testify against the wicked at the day of judgment. That same Jesus who hung on the cross, will then fill the throne. But, O how changed! That countenance, once marred, now glorious as ten thousand suns shining in their strength. His appearance will then say with emphasis, to such as now slight his offered grace, These arms were once extended for your salvation-for sinners like you, this head was crowned with thorns-this body and soul bore the tremendous weight of a world's redemption. And this exhibition will be as vivid lightning to the sinner's eye. It will furnish overwhelming proof of his ingratitude and guilt, whom such love could not melt.

All the instructions of Christ will also testify against the sinner in the last judgment. "He that rejecteth me, and receiveth not my words, hath one that judgeth him; the word that I have spoken, the same shall judge him in the last day." Yes, these glorious truths of the Savior will be as noon-day splendors, to render the ingratitude and wickedness of the wicked the more manifest-their perseverance in sin perfectly inexcusable--and their damnation just.

And now, with such overwhelming variety of evidence against the sinner, and no witness whatever in his behalf, how manifest the certainty that he can

not stand the dread trial! But this certainty is still more manifest, if possible, from several other considerations.

3. Consider then next, THE ETERNAL JUDGE WILL BE INFLEXIBLY STRICT

The omniscient Judge underAnd he can not but have an strictness and purity: for he is

IN INTERPRETING AND UPHOLDING THE LAW. stands those laws which Himself has made. unchanging veneration for them in all their the unchanging God. And from his book of remembrance, he can compare distinctly the life and heart of every man with what is written in the book of his statutes. And when this great God shall exhibit the infinite purity of his Law, and contrast it with the sinner's vileness, then the poor wretch, if he have no Savior to plead for him, must feel that he is indeed undone for everthat it is utterly impossible to stand such a trial. But,

4. The impenitent sinner at God's bar WILL HAVE NO ADVOCATE. At a human tribunal, when the culprit is arraigned, though his case appear exceed. ingly bad--though all the witnesses be against him, and the Judge inflexibly strict--still he sometimes cherishes hope, from the ingenuity and eloquence of his advocate. But for the impenitent at Jehovah's bar no advocate will be found. Not one of his boldest companions in sin will venture a syllable in his defence; not one of those foul spirits of darkness who may have seduced him with lies, will now care for his safety; not one of the bright and generous millions who encircle the throne will have a heart to palliate his guilt. And having slighted the mediation of Christ, he can have no part in his mercy. Every impenitent sinner, therefore, on that day must bear his own burden. He must hear the condemning witnesses, the eternal law, the irreversible sentence, without any advocate whatever in his behalf. How then can he stand the trial?

5. Finally; to make his case perfectly hopeless, let it be remembered, that ALL WHO ARE TO CO-OPERATE IN HIS TRIAL, WILL BE HOLY AND Upright BEINGS. "Know ye not that the saints shall judge the world?" Yes, these happy spirits, themselves "washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb," and admitted to share his glory, will then look on the wicked who have despised his mercy, just as they appear" in the light of God's countenance," ainid the splendors of the "great white throne;" and in such circumstances they cannot but acquiesce in the sanctions of the infinitely holy law. Their part will then be, with Christ, to judge and condemn; and not as now, to entreat, and suffer wrong. Men of eminent piety and moral worth are sometimes most cruelly treated in this world. Wealth and power and intrigue may here succeed in a bad cause. Yes,

"In the corrupted currents of this world

Offence's gilded hand may shove by justice;
And oft 'tis seen, the wicked prize itself
Buys out the law but 'tis not so above:
There is no shuffling."

For Heaven has declared, of all the proud, of all the unjust, yea, of all that do wickedly, "Like sheep they are laid in the grave; death shall feed on them, and the upright shall have dominion over them in the morning." And again, "To execute vengeance upon the heathen, and punishments upon the people, to bind their kings with chains and their nobles with fetters of iron, to execute upon them the judgment written, this honor have all his saints.”

If then wicked kings and nobles shall fall under the condemnation of the saints, when with Christ they shall judge the world, where is the impenitent man that can stand the trial?

O sinner! when all the witnesses shall be against you; when your Judge shall be inflexibly strict; and no kind advocate shall appear for you; and all the jurors shall be perfectly holy can thy heart endure, or thy hands be strong, when God shall deal with thee? Ah, no! Every angel of light would say, No; every man in his right mind must say, No: this controversy is with Omnipotence, and God is right and you are wrong, and there is no possibility of standing, when "the great day of his wrath is come."

What then is the grand inference from this subject? Why, every man in his right mind must say--what the Savior himself hath kindly and earnestly said "Agree with thine adversary quickly, whilst thou art in the way with him."

Hearken, then, sinner, to the advice of infinite wisdom. Settle at once this awful controversy. Have the courage, have the honesty, have the magnanimity to confess before men and angels, that God is right and that you are wrong. Fly to the only Savior, to the all-prevailing Intercessor. Accept his offered mediation, and be at peace. For it is madness, inexpressible madness, as well as guilt, tó remain unreconciled to God, and brave the eternal judgment, without an advocate, without one favoring witness, with no friend on the throne, nor one pitying saint or angel among all the millions who attend the trial.

As a rational being, you know that in such circumstances you must inevitably fall. "The ungodly shall not stand.” And recollect, from that fall there is no recovery. It settles your destiny forever, forever, FOREVER. Then" he that is unjust let him be unjust still." And Oh! eternity, eternity, eternity! how long and dreary must be the period, spent in "weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth," under a full conviction of deserved wrath! Think, O my soul, think before it be too late, what it is to be abandoned by the infinite Redeemer and Judge, and lie forever under the " power of his anger!" Think of the dread amount of misery that must be endured by an incorrigible enemy of God, increasing forever in guilt and remorse! Think of the extent of eternity! Oh! send an angel forward on the awful deep, with the speed of lightning, for millions on millions of centuries, and the dread waves of perdition are still rising and rolling eternally beyond!

Fellow sinner, in view of these considerations, what will you now do? "The prudent man foreseeth the evil and hideth himself, but the simple pass on and are punished." "If thou be wise, thou shalt be wise for thyself, but if thou scornest, thou alone shalt bear it." "Be wise now therefore. Be instructed. Serve the Lord with fear. Rejoice with trembling. Kiss the Son lest he be angry, and thou perish from the way, when his wrath is kindled but a little." For "who can stand before his indignation, and who can abide in the fierceness of his anger ?"

END OF VOL. XI.

GENERAL INDEX.

VOL. I.

SERMON 1 The Glorious Gospel. 2 The Utility of Prayer. 3 Gain from the Sufferings of
Christ. 4 The Duty of sending the Gospel to the Heathen. 5 Internal Evidences of Revela-
tion. 6 and 7 The Mediation of Christ, the Ground of the Believer's Triumph. 8 and 9 The
Evidence and Duty of being on the Lord's Side. 10 The day of Pentecost. 11 and 12 The
Benefit of Afflictions. 13 The Duty of Family Worship. 14 The Union of Believers with
Christ. 15 Duties of the Rich. 16. The Great Chnage.

VOL. II.

SERMONS 17 and 18 The Native Character of Man. 19 The Unreasonableness and Dan-
ger of Indecision. 20 Mirror of Human Nature. 21 Practical Test of Love or Enmity to God.
22 The Repentance of Peter. 23 The Duty of Reproof. 24 Resources of the Adversary, and
Means of their Destruction. 25 The Conversion of Cities. 26 The Pure Gospel rejected by
the Perishing. 27 The Final Judgment. 28 Concern for the Spiritual Wants of Men.
29 Scriptural Measure of Benevolent Effort. 30 Pride abased by the Gospel. 31 God's Re-
spect to the Lowly. 32 The Malady and Physician of the Soul. 33 Christ the Divine and
Only Savior. 34 Free Salvation. 35 Sovereign Grace. 36 Christian Decision.

VOL. III.

SERMON 37 Duties of Young Christians. 38 The Example of Christ. 39 The Efficacy of
Divine Truth. 40 Right Use of the Scriptures. 41 and 42 The Final Condition of All Men.
43 The Sinner's Self Destruction, and Only Remedy. 44 The Chief Evil of Sin. 45 The
Power of Truth and Love. 46 and 47 On praying for all in Authority. 48 Christian and Min-
isterial Self Denial and Faithfulness. 49 Responsibilities of the Ministry and Church. 50 The
Nature of Growth in Grace. 51 The Means of Growth in Grace. 52 The Long Forbearance
of God. 53 Evangelical Truths Offensive to the Unrenewed, but Joyous to the Believer.
54 The Gospel the Only Security for Eminent and Abiding National Prosperity. 55 Propriety
and Importance of Efforts to evangelize the Nation. 56 Preeminent Importance of the Chris-
tian Sabbath. 57 The Immutability of God. 59 The Nature and Reasonableness of Submis-
sion to God. 59 Full Assurance of Faith and Hope.

VOL. IV.

SERMON 60 The Final Dissolution of the World. 61 Preparation for Eternity. 62 The Son
of God must be reverenced. 63 The Two Champions contrasted. 64 The Sinner's Imminent
Danger. 65 The Sinner's Immediate Duty. 66 The Happy Family. 67 The Guilt, Folly,
and Preventives of being in Debt. 68 Objections obviated, and God glorified by the Success of
the Gospel. 69 A Dreadful Meeting. 70 Solemn Responsibility. 71 Encouragement only to
the Devoted and Obedient. 72 Necessary Preparation for the Millennium. 73 The Wisdom
and Beauty of Youthful Piety. 74 Appeal to American Youth on Temperance. 75 The
Prayer of Faith. 76 The Heavenly Mind. 77 The Guilt of Inefficiency and Delay. 78 Man
humbled and God honored. 79 God entitled to our Obedience. 80 Fatal Hinderance to
Prayer. 81 Wealth a Fearful Snare to the Soul.

VOL. V.

SERMON 82 The Teaching of the Spirit. 83 Practical Atheism of Sinners. 84 Alarm to
Distillers and their Allies. 85 and 86 The Early Conversion of Children. 87 Encouragement
to Religious Effort. 88 Why the Wicked are suffered to live. 89 The Facility with which
Sinners go to Destruction. 90 Influence of the Atonement on the Believer's Conscience.
91 Human Depravity and its Remedy. 92 Persuasives to Immediate Repentance. 93 The
Gospel Harvest and Christian's Duty, 94 The Living Epistle. 95 Call to Professing Chris-
tians on Temperance. 96 Conviction by the Law. 97 Scriptural Evidence of Saving Faith.
98 and 99 The Duty, the Benefits, and the Proper Method of Religious Fasting. 100 The Con-
viction of Sinners at the Judgment. 101 The Sinner, and not the Believer, deranged.
102 The Probability of Perdition inferred from Present Impenitence. 103 The Wicked surprised
by their own Destruction.

VOL. VI.

SERMONS 104 and 105 Duty of praying for Rulers. 106 and 107 Early Piety. 108 On the
Death of Jeremiah Evarts, Esq. 109 Sinners avoid Conviction. 110 The Progress of the
Righteous and Wicked compared. 111 Necessity of Divine Influence. 112 Sinners urged to a
Reconciliation with God. 113 Hinderances to the Spread of the Gospel. 114 The Foolish

Rich Man. 115 The Spiritual and Elevated Nature of True Piety. 116 The Character, Con-
duct and Destiny of the Jailer and Felix contrasted. 117 The Signs of the Times. 118 Regen-
eration by the Holy Spirit. 119 The Duty of Restitution. 120 Evidences of True Conversion.
121 Christian Obligation. 122 Claims of the Prison Discipline Society. 123 Difficulties of Old
Age without Religion. 124 Sorrows of Old Age without Religion.

VOL. VII.

SERMONS 125 and 126, Development of Christian Character. 127, Human and Divine
Agency united in the Salvation of the Soul. 123 The Fruit of the Spirit. 129 The Law not
repealed by the Gospel. 130 The Measure of the Sinner's Duty. 131 God's Claims, and the
Sinner's Immediate Duty. 132 Freedom conferred only by the Gospel. 133 The unknown
depths of sin. 134 Sinners entreated to seek the Savior. 135 The God of the Christian and
the God of the Infidel. 136 Choosing the Good Part. 137 The Doctrines essential to salva-
tion. 138 Conviction of sin by the Law. 139 Means of a Revival of Religion. 140 Alarm to
the Careless. 141 Experimental religion. 142 The Tears of Jesus. 143 Practical examination
of the Doctrine of the Saints' perseverance.

VOL VIII.

146 The

SERMON 144 Lessons from the Life of Joseph. 145 Solemn question answered.
Conversion of Zaccheus. 147 The Holy Spirit's agency in regeneration. 148 Purification of
the Sacred Ministry. 149 Apostolic preaching. 150 Unsearchable riches of Christ 151 Pre-
paration for meeting God. 152 The Sinner's ability to obey God. 153 Private prayer. 154
Social prayer. 155 The Guilt and misery attendant on Parental indulgence. 156 Peculiar re-
sponsibilities of young men. 157 Time measured by Eternity. 158 Solemn views of probation.
159 Solemn rebuke to the Ungrateful and backsliding. 160 Causes of a decline of Revivals.
161 The loveliness of Christian love. 162 Union among Christians. 163 and 164 Nature of
intemperance in eating. 165 The Murder of a faithful Minister, or the downward course of sin.
166 The Nature and efficacy of true prayer. 167 The consequences of intemperance in eating.

VOL IX.

SERMON 168 The great King. 169 Practical illustation of God's universal providence. 170
On the death of Dr. Porter. 171 Ground of the Difficulty of conversion. 172 Christ died for
man. 173 The Man that gathered sticks on the Sabbath. 174 The Secret counsels of God.
175 The Beatific Vision. 176 The Guilt of Unbelief. 177 Blessings of Temperance in Food.
179 Zeal in Religion. 179 Danger and Folly of delay. 180 A good wife a heavenly gift. 181
The Sabbath a National blessing. 182 Disastrous Effects of little sins in Christians. 13 The
wise reckoning of time-A new-year's Sermon. 184 and 185 On the death of Lyman, Munson,
and others. 186 Obstinate perverseness of Men. 187 Dying the Death of the Righteous. 188
The Sinner his own Destroyer. 189 Resisting the Holy Ghost.

VOL X.

SERMONS 190-195 The Nature, Importance, and means of eminent holiness. 196 The
Truth in Relation to Christ, the Great bond of Fellowship. 197 Motives and Means of peace to
the Churches. 193 The Importance of Domestic Happiness. 199 The Means of Domestic
Happiness. 200 The Authenticity and Genuineness of the Bible, and Madness of Infidelity.
201 The History, Character, and importance of the Received English Version of the Bible.
202 The Humilation of Christ. 203 The Exaltation of Christ. 204 The Trinity employed in
Man's redemption. 205 The Earth filled with the Glory of the Lord. 205 The Religious In-
fluence of Mothers. 207 The Adorable Savior. 208 Critical periods in the Sinner's life. 209
The Importance and Means of an Able Ministry. 210 Sure means of Spiritual prosperity.
211 The Sin-ner's desperate depravity. 212 The Nature and results of Sanctification. 213 The
means of Sanctification. 214 The one thing needful. 215 The Parable of the Tares. 216 Per-
dition dreadful. 217 The Example of Christ in self-denial.

VOL XI.

SERMON 218 The Infinite worth of the Soul. 219 The Union of Christians essential to the
World's conversion. 220 The Exceeding sinfulness of sin. 221 Necessity and means of regen-
eration. 222 The Sinner arraigned and convicted. 223 The Nature, necessity and evidence of
repentance. 224 Lessons from Autumn. 225 The Influence of Christ's coming upon Human
Destiny. 226 The Harvest past. 227 Carelessness about religion unreasonable. 228 Recon-
ciliation with God. 229 The Propriety and design of an annual Thanksgiving 230 and 231
The Lord our Righteousness. 232 and 233 Joshua's resolution to serve the Lord. 234 The
real Christian. 235 The Alarming Power of Sin. 236 The Unchangeable God. 237 Punctu-
ality in the Payment of Debts. 238 The goodness of God fitted to lead men to repentance.
239 The Day of Judgment: or, Final Appeal to the Impenitent.

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