Billeder på siden
PDF
ePub

labours, Mr Martyn was so incessantly occupied, that
his health began to yield. Still he felt unwilling to re-
He devoted much of his time to
lax in his exertions.
the translation of the Scriptures into Hindoostanee and
Persian, an employment which seems to have afforded
him peculiar delight." The time fled imperceptibly,"
he observes," while so delightfully engaged in the
translations; the days seemed to have passed like a
moment. Blessed be God for some improvement in the
languages! May every thing be for edification in the
Church! What do I not owe to the Lord, for permitting |
me to take part in a translation of his Word; never did
I see such wonder, and wisdom, and love, in that bless-
ed book, as since I have been obliged to study every ex-
pression; and it is a delightful reflection, that death cannot
deprive us of the pleasure of studying its mysteries."

While thus engaged, however, in his Master's work,
it pleased Him with whom all wisdom dwells, to visit
him with a severe trial, in the death of his eldest sister,
the intelligence of which affected him with the most
"O my heart, my heart," he ex-
pungent sorrow.
claimed, "
is it, can it be true, that she has been lying
Would that I
so many months in the cold grave!
could always remember it, or always forget it; but to
think for a moment of other things, and then to feel the
remembrance of it coming, as if for the first time, rends
When I look round upon the
my heart asunder.
creation, and think that her eyes see it not, but have
closed upon it for ever,—that I lie down in my bed, but
that she has lain down in her grave,-Oh! is it pos-
sible! I wonder to find myself still in life;-that the
same tie which united us in life, has not brought death
O great and gracious
at the same moment to both.
God! what should I do without Thee! But now thou
art manifesting thyself as the God of all consolation to
my soul; never was I so near thee; I stand on the
brink, and long to take my flight. There is not a thing
in the world for which I could wish to live, except the
hope that it may please God to appoint me some work.
And how shall my soul ever be thankful enough to thee,
O thou most incomprehensibly glorious Saviour, Jesus!
O what hast thou done to alleviate the sorrows of life!
and how great has been the mercy of God towards my
How dreadful would be the
family, in saving us all!
separation of relations in death, were it not for Jesus!"
Acutely as Mr Martyn suffered under this afflicting dis-
pensation, he omitted the prosecution of his various du-
ties for only one day, devoting himself in season, and
out of season, to the work which his Master had as-
signed him. It was not so much by preaching, in the
first instance, that he hoped to reach the hearts of the
natives, but by the institution of schools, and the distri-
bution of the Scriptures. Anxious to try the effect of
this mode of carrying on his missionary work, he re-
sisted the earnest solicitations of his friends at Calcutta,
who were urgent with him to accept the Mission Church
at the Presidency. Mr Martyn preferred the retirement
of Dinapore, with the hope of benefiting the natives,
and, therefore, though the application was made to him
through his much esteemed friend, Mr Brown, he
In a short
counted it his duty to decline the offer.
time, however, his present situation was rendered much
less agreeable, by the removal of the only family with
whom he had lived on terms of Christian intimacy, and
to whom he had been the instrument of first imparting
serious impressions. And another circumstance which
distressed his mind not a little, was the temporary sus-
pension of public worship on the Sabbath, in conse-
quence of the state of the weather. Application had
been made to the governor-general for the erection of a
church, and meanwhile Mr Martyn opened his own
No exertions were spared
house as a place of worship.
"the early morning,
to fulfil, as an hireling, his day;
as well as the closing evening, found him engaged in
his delightful labours." At length he succeeded in ac-

complishing his great work, the version of the New

Testament in Hindoostanee.

In the early part of the year 1809, Mr Martyn was removed from his station at Dinapore to Cawnpore, where his duties varied little from those to which he Soon after his arrival had already been accustomed. at his new station, intelligence reached him from Europe, first of the dangerous illness, then of the death of that sister who had taken so deep an interest in his spiritual This threw a deep gloom, for a time, over welfare. Mr Martyn's mind, but still he persevered in labouring for souls, as one who must give an account. commenced his public ministrations among the heathen, preaching the Gospel to a crowd of mendicants who assembled on a stated day before his house, for the purpose of receiving alms. This motley congregation of beggars, of all descriptions, increased to the amount of even eight hundred, to whom an opportunity was thus afforded Mr Martyn of preaching the glad tidings of salvation.

He now

In the midst of these exertions Mr Martyn's health began to fail. An attack of pain in the chest, accomBut it was with expanied with fever and debility, excited considerable alarm in the minds of his friends. treme difficulty that he was prevailed upon to spare himself; providentially, however, he obtained no small assistance and relief by the arrival of his dear friend, Mr Corrie, who happened to stop at Cawnpore on his way to Agra. Notwithstanding this seasonable aid, Mr Martyn's health became so precarious that he was recommended either to try the effect of a sea voyage, or to return to England for a short time. The latter alternative he at last, though with reluctance, resolved Still anxious, however, to carry forward his to adopt. missionary work, he decided upon going into Arabia and Persia, for the purpose of having the Persian and Arabic At Shiraz, translations of the New Testament revised and corrected by some of the most learned men. in Persia, where he resided for some time, he excited great interest by the success with which he conducted discussions with the Moollahs and the Soofie doctors. After a stay of ten months he completed the Persian New Testament, and also the version of the Psalms in Persian,-" a sweet employment," to use his own words, "and which caused six weary moons that waxed and waned since its commencement, to pass unnoticed."

Having finished the translation, which was the object
of his journey, he set out from Shiraz, with the design
of laying the work before the king of Persia; but, find-
ing that from some informality, he could not obtain an
audience, he proceeded to Tebriz, where the British
minister resided, and from whom he expected to receive
the necessary introduction to the king. After having
It
completed this tedious journey, Mr Martyn was attacked
with a severe fever, which compelled him to give up all
idea of presenting the New Testament in person.
was now becoming every day more evident that a longer
residence in the East would prove speedily fatal to our
missionary; and, accordingly, ten days after his recovery
from the fever, he set out on his journey homewards.
His design was to reach England by way of Constanti-
nople; and accompanied by a Tartar guide, whose in-
human barbarity seems to have caused Mr Martyn's
death, he had reached no farther than Tocat, when, on
the 16th October 1812, he breathed his last. The
special circumstances of his death are unknown, but
one thing is certain, that, whatever these circumstances
he has reaped a rich reward of all his labours,
were,
toils, and privations in the cause of the Redeemer.
"Well done, good and faithful servant, enter thou into
the joy of thy Lord."

FLEMISH MARTYRS IN 1556.
IN the reign of Charles V. of Spain, who was monarch of
the Netherlands also, the Gospel spread to a great extent.
The city of Lille received it with especial favour, in

spite of the bloody edicts made against heretics. The Reformed ministers preached in private houses, in woods, in caves, and for a time the truth mightily prevailed. But when the Church at Lille had increased and was flourishing, Satan stirred up his instruments. One evening, in 1556, the provost of the town, with all his assessors, resolved to go forth and search every house, to see that there were no assemblies held. This was on a Saturday; and the first house which they assailed was that of a respected citizen, Robert Oguier. They instantly seized him and his son, Baudichon, and led them to prison, because they were found in the act of instructing the children and servants in the fear of God and the knowledge of his Word.

A few days after, these two excellent men, father and son, were tried before the magistrates. They boldly confessed the Reformed faith, and were put to the torture, in order to extort the names of all who frequented their meetings; but they firmly refused to name any

one.

[ocr errors]

They were then condemned to die. When the day of execution arrived, they separated the son from the father. On this, the son, as he left the prison, said, "I beseech you support my poor father, and do not trouble him; he is an aged man, and very feeble; do not try to hinder him from receiving the crown of martyrdom." One of the Franciscans hereupon broke out, Away with you, wretch ! it is all your fault that your father is now ruined." And then turning to the executioner, said, "Go, do your office, for we are losing our pains; they are possessed by the devil, and it is impossible to gain them over." Baudichon was undressed in a chamber, and as they put the bag of powder on his breast, one present said to him, "Were you my own brother, I should sell all I had in order to get fagots to burn you: you are too well treated." The martyr replied, "I thank you, my friend; may the Lord shew you mercy." Meanwhile, those around the old man were trying to persuade him to take the crucifix, at least, in his hands, that the people might not be provoked, and they tied an image of wood between his but his son, seeing what was done, hastily snatched it away, and threw it down, saying, "Let none be offended because we will not have a Christ of wood; for we carry Jesus Christ, the Son of the Living God, within us in our hearts; and we have the words of his Holy Scriptures in the bottom of our

hands;

hearts."

They would not permit them to make any confession of their faith; but when the son was bound to the stake, he began to sing Psalm xvii., on which a monk cried aloud, "Listen to the wicked errors which they teach to the people!"

In binding the father, the executioner struck him on the foot with a blow of the hammer. The old man asked, “My friend, you have wounded me; why do you use me so inhumanly?" "Ah," cried out one of the monks, "they wish to have the name of martyrs, and if we just touch them, they roar out as if murdered." The son of the old man calmly replied, that if they feared death and its torments, they should not have come thither; and added "O God, our everlasting Father, accept this sacrifice of our bodies for the sake of thy Son." One of the priests vociferated, "You lie; God is not your father; you have the devil for your father." The martyr made no reply to this insult, but,

[ocr errors]

lifting his eyes to heaven, and speaking to his aged father, said, “O father, look up; I see the heavens open, and thousand thousands of angels around us, rejoicing at our confession before men. Let us be glad, for the glory of God is revealed "Hell is open," cried one of the monks," and thousand thousands of devils are here waiting for your souls!" Just at this moment, one from the crowd cried aloud, 66 Courage, Oguier, endure to the end; your cause is the truth; I am one of yours," and then plunged into the multitude, and escaped undiscovered.

Fire was put to the wood; and the last words heard from the martyrs was the son encouraging his father as the fire burnt their feet: "Be of good comfort, father! but a moment more, father, and we are in the everlasting mansions!-Jesus Christ, we commend our spirits to

Thee."

DISCOURSE.

BY THE REV. ROBERT MENZIES,
Minister of Hoddam.

"For as the lightning cometh out of the east, and shineth even unto the west; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be," &c.-MAT. xxiv. 27-31.

IT is unnecessary to enter minutely into the critical arguments by which it has been clearly demonstrated, that these verses refer solely and exclusively to the future advent of our Saviour. Such a discussion, even if it could be rendered generally interesting, and embraced within the narrow limits of a discourse, might not, perhaps, be greatly conducive to edification; suffice it merely to say, that the opinion of those who contend that our blessed Saviour continues here to prosecute the subject of the preceding context, and fills up, with some additional touches, the picture he had been drawing of the destruction about to overwhelm the state and capital of the Jews, can only be maintained at the expense of doing great and unwarrantable violence to the language; besides, it is not justified, as is erroneously supposed, by any necessity. What has proved the stumbling-block of the critics, is the word "immediately" at the commencement of the twenty-ninth verse, which seemed to connect in close union, with respect to time, the new train of circumstances which the Saviour proceeds to foretell, beginning with the darkening of the sun and moon, with those foretold by him already, and here referred to as the tribulation of those days. But there is the best reason for supposing, that this word "immediately" is an error, which the Greek interpreter has introduced into the text by mistranslating the original word used by the evangelist, who wrote his Gospel in the Syro-Chaldaic. Instead of "immediately" there ought to stand

66

suddenly;" and if, accordingly, we substitute the one for the other, it will be seen, that there is no necessity for supposing the new train of circumstances to be immediately connected with the former. They are, indeed, predicted as about to take place suddenly; and also, subsequently to the tribulations of Jerusalem, but whether they are to follow in close or remote succession is left altogether untold.

Upon these, in addition to many other grounds, we hold that the verses from the twenty-seventh to the thirty-first inclusive, treat of the final and glorious coming of our Lord to judge the world, and we now proceed to enquire what the passage tells us of this momentous event.

First then, we learn that it is to be preceded and announced to mankind by certain preternatural appearances in the material world. These are enumerated in the twenty-ninth verse. "The sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens," the heavenly bodies, both small and great, "shall be shaken." St. Luke in the parallel passage adds, "and the sea and the waves roaring."

this should impose a necessity, or even how it should lay a sufficient ground for a similar interpretation of the words of our Saviour. No, my brethren, when our Lord here tells us, "that the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, that the stars shall fall from heaven and all the powers of heaven shall be shaken," he means just what he says. A day is coming when the inhabitants of the world shall awake; but "behold the darkness is not yet passed." Struck with amazement and alarm, they shall raise their eyes aloft, but shall perceive no sun, or see it, perhaps, shorn of its beams, and diffusing a pale and ominous dawn. In vain shall they expect the moon to dispel the gloom of the uncertain night. The whole "firmament shall be shaken;" the stars shall quit, or seem to quit their places, and shoot at random athwart the obscure vault; and on earth the ocean will share the general convulsion of nature, and with the roaring of its waves make awful music congenial with the terrors of the

scene.

By what means these appalling prodigies shall be brought about we are not told, and cannot divine. Luther hazards the conjecture, that they will be effects of the decay of nature-irregularities in the worn out machinery of a world, which having served the end for which it was made, is soon to be destroyed, and compares them to the dim eye, the fitful pulse, and convulsive agonies, which precede dissolution in the human body. Perhaps they may be consequences of that hidden and mysterious sympathy which subsists between the natural and moral universe-throes of a creation weary of its long subjection to vanity and sin, and indignantly struggling for its approaching emancipation, the last and severest pangs of that agony of nature, of which St. Paul speaks, when he says, "that the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of the body."

The prophets of the Old Testament, on several different occasions, employ a language precisely similar to this of our Saviour. Isaiah does so in foretelling the doom of Babylon; Ezekiel in foretelling that of Egypt. There are many other examples, but we shall cite only one. In denouncing the divine judgments against the nations which had oppressed Israel, the prophet Joel thus speaks: "The earth shall quake before them, the heavens shall tremble, the sun and moon shall be dark, and the stars shall withdraw their shining." It will be felt by every one, that it would be altogether discordant with the lofty tone of the prophetical phraseology in these places, to suppose that they referred to phenomena of so ordinary a nature and of such frequent occurrence as eclipses of the sun and moon, the accumulation of dark clouds in the sky, meteors, shooting stars, and earthquakes. The sacred penmen must have had before their minds changes of a loftier, more awful, and preternatural character. We do not know that any such portentous events accompanied the manifestations of divine wrath alluded to, and hence, if the impressions are to be interpreted literally, they must be regarded as notices of a remoter and more universal judgment blending itself in the prophet's But to whatever cause conjecture may attribute enraptured fancy with the nearer and more con- them, there can be no doubt with respect to their fined inflictions which formed the immediate sub-end and design. They are the sign of the Son of ject of his song, and as thus looking forward to events which are yet in the womb of time and not to be disclosed until the last day; in short, as anticipations of the Saviour's prophecy now under review. Perhaps, however, they are justly considered, according to the common opinion, as symbolical descriptions of political revolutions, and which have had their accomplishment in the subversion of the particular states with respect to which they were pronounced. But this is far from being certain. We speculate doubtfully on a subject which God appears to have intentionally concealed. It is our duty to restrain unsanctified curiosity, and patiently endure our ignorance until the day arrive in whose light we shall behold all the mysteries of providence unravelled, and all the darkness which now rests on the field of prophecy for ever done away.

Even were the symbolical character of these ancient predictions certain, it is difficult to see how

Man in the heavens, intended to presage and announce his approach, and warn the inhabitants of the world to prepare for his reception. And oh, my brethren, how impressive it is" to think," and here I use, the magnificent language of Calvin, "to think," I say, "that all the creatures, both above and below, shall thus be made the heralds to summon mankind before that awful tribunal which, sunk in criminal indulgence, they have despised until the last day!"

Again, we learn from this passage that the return of Christ to the earth shall be visible and glorious. Nothing could surpass the humbleness of his first appearance here below. He laid aside his essential glory; no halo beamed around his head; no ray of uncreated beauty beamed from his countenance, to tell who he was, and awe beholders into adoration. He was above the glittering pomps and vanities with which the great and wealthy of this world court the gaze of the mul

titude. Undistinguished in person, of humble | condition, poor in his circumstances, and meek and lowly in his demeanour, was the blessed Jesus; born in a stable and cradled in a manger, the whole tenor of his future life corresponded with the humbleness and penury of his birth. He made no display, he courted not observation, he sought not honour from men, and he received none. Once, and only once, did he permit the celestial glory of his person to shine through the veil of flesh which he had assumed, but this manifestation took place on a lonely mountain, was confined to three eye-witnesses, and brief in its duration; once, too, he condescended to let the people bear him in a sort of triumphal procession into Jerusalem; but then, as if in mockery of worldly pomp, the Son of David rode upon an ass. Even to shield himself from insult and cruelty, never did our Lord reveal his heavenly greatness; and oh! adorable patience, he who could have summoned to his rescue a host of angels, petrified his tormentors with a glimpse of his divinity, or commanded the fire of heaven to consume them in the twinkling of an eye, allowed himself to be reviled, spit upon and scourged, crowned with thorns, and nailed upon a cross!

Our Saviour paid a second visit to the earth, and on this occasion he came, not as he had done before, concealed beneath the mask of a human form, encompassed with the infirmities and burdened with the sufferings of mortality; but he came charged with the high commission, and armed with the authority and the power to execute the vengeance of heaven upon his guilty countrymen, in the very place where they had so contemptuously rejected and so cruelly slain him. Christ was present in person at the destruction of Jerusalem. The several evangelists designate that tragical event as "the coming of the Son of Man," and "the coming of Christ in his kingdom." But although present, he was present unseen. There were many who said, "Lo, here is Christ, and lo, there," but no where the eye could perceive him. He was sought in the desert, he was sought in the secret chamWith an ber, but in both he was sought in vain. invisible arm did he wield the scourge. Shrouded in a veil of mystery, did he let loose war, famine, pestilence, and murder upon the guilty inhabitants. They fondly expected the Messiah as a Saviour; never could they dream that he was actually there, the executioner of divine wrath against them. If his presence was recognised at all, it was only by the poor remnant of his disciples who remained within the walls, and treasuring his words in their heart, and marking the traces of his hand, were not afraid amidst all the horrors which surrounded them.

We look for another return of the Son of Man to the earth, and his advent on this occasion, as we are assured by his own prediction now under review, shall neither be invisible, like the vindictive visitation of Jerusalem, nor inglorious, like his first appearance in the flesh.

That it will be obvious to human sense, is im

66

plied in the twenty-seventh verse, where it is compared to a flash of lightning, traversing the heavens, attracting and fixing every eye. Nay, we are expressly told in the thirtieth, that "all the tribes of the earth shall see the Son of Man coming in the clouds of heaven." Wherever in the New Testament the event is spoken of, it is stated in words which involve the same idea, viz. that Christ is to be revealed to the sight of men. It is called his appearing "his "revelation;" and what else can mean the language of the angels, who consoled the mourning disciples at his ascension: "While they beheld him," it is written, "he was taken up, and a cloud received him out of their sight;" and while they looked stedfastly towards heaven as he went up, "Behold two men stood by them in white apparel, which also said, ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven. This same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven."

Nor will this manifestation be visible only: it will be glorious and sublime. Men shall not merely behold the Saviour, but be dazzled and amazed by the brightness of his presence, and the glory and majesty which encompass him. Our text says, "they shall see the Son of Man coming in the clouds of heaven, with power and great glory." Our dark and feeble minds, it is true, are unable to form an adequate conception of the excellent majesty of the Son of Man on the great day of his appearing; but if this were possible, it would be done by the glowing language which Scripture employs upon the subject: He shall be seen descending from heaven; troops of angels shall attend him as a retinue; he shall be surrounded with a radiance bright as flame; and the sound of trumpets shall peal through the air. These are but a few traits gathered from St Paul's descriptions of the scene, who never speaks of it but his mind kindles into a holy rapture, and his language assumes a magnificence of tone which cannot fail to thrill every reader who has the slightest pretensions to the possession of a pure and sanctified taste.

to

And well may we believe that the glory of the Redeemer will justify on that day the prophetic raptures of his apostle. If, when transfigured on Mount Tabor before the three favoured disciples, his face did shine as the sun, and his raiment was glistening and white as the snow, so that the glories of the vision dazzled the beholders, and made them afraid, how overpowering will it be when, with a majesty increased in proportion the dignity of the scene, he shall present himself to the gaze of the world he is about to judge, confounding his foes with celestial radiance, and substantiating his claims to the love and adoration of his saints! Ah, my brethren, if when he tabernacled upon earth, it was hard to discern beneath the human form which he wore, and all the penury, neglect, and suffering with which he was encompassed, the lineaments of the Son of God, who on that day, when he wears the brightness of th

Father's glory, and the express image of his per-midnight on the ear of sleepers, and announcing

son, shall be able to recognize the Son of Man,-
the once poor and houseless wanderer of Judea,-
the man of sorrows and acquainted with grief,
the despised, the insulted, and murdered Jesus!
Again, from this passage we learn, that the future
advent of our Saviour will be of an universal cha-
racter, i. e. its manifestation will be perceived, and
its effects experienced over the whole world. The
signs in the heavens by which his advent is to be
presaged, are such as the revolution of the globe
will make apparent to its inhabitants, on whatever
corner of it they may dwell. Is it not compared
to a gleam of lightning traversing the firmament
from the east even to the west? Nay, it is ex-
pressly said, "all the tribes of the earth shall see
the Son of Man coming in power and great glory."
At his first coming, our Saviour chose the land
of Judea as the place of his abode, and the scene
of his labours; hence only his countrymen, or the
strangers whom some happy fortune brought up to
Jerusalem, enjoyed the enviable privilege of looking
upon his blessed countenance. Not so when he
shall come again,: "Behold," it is written, "he
cometh with clouds, and every eye shall see him."
When, again, involved in mysterious secrecy, and
imperceptible by human sense, he revisited the
earth for the purpose of inflicting a just retribution
on those who had despised and murdered him, the
effects of his vengeance, consistently with this
design, were confined to the scene of their crime:
within the walls of Jerusalem did he send forth war,
famine, and pestilence, like birds of prey to devour
the guilty inhabitants. How different shall it be
when he comes again!-Then shall the whole
earth, to her farthest ends, both see and feel it ;
then, wherever the carcass is, there shall the eagles
of vengeance be gathered together;-then, in
whatever corner of the globe unbelievers and im-
penitent sinners may dwell, the wrath of the des-
pised Redeemer shall find them out. The minis-
ters of his wrath shall visit every shore. Hence
it is written," All the tribes of the earth shall
mourn." Nor will the saints feel the blessed
effects of this event less extensively than its venge-
ful consequences shall be experienced by the un-
godly; for "He shall send his angels with a great
sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather his elect
from the four winds, from one end of heaven to

the other."

[ocr errors]

We also learn from this passage, that the last advent of Christ shall be sudden, unexpected, unforeseen. Various and striking are the images employed in Scripture to illustrate this particular quality of our Saviour's advent. It is compared to a flash of lightning, the moment of whose issue from the clouds, human science cannot predict. Again, it is compared to the flood, which surprised the inhabitants of the Old World, supine in sloth, and careless of the approaching danger. Sometimes it is the assault of a thief, who comes by stealth at the darkest hour, when all are fast asleep. It is a snare which entraps the heedless bird. It is the sound of bridal mirth, breaking at

to them that the bridegroom is already at the door. With these similes correspond the admonitions which Christ and the apostles give to their disciples on this subject. "Watch," is the word, which denotes the attitude we maintain towards events which we are sure will come, but of the time of whose coming we are uncertain.

There is something exceedingly impressive in the mystery which Scripture has allowed to hang over the time of our Lord's advent. While in every page the early converts are summoned to watch and prepare for it, as if it were close at hand, they are, at the same time, discouraged and prohibited in the strongest manner from inquiring when it was actually to happen. Our Saviour employed the last words he uttered upon the earth for this purpose; for the farewell admonition which he gave to the witnesses of the ascension was, "It is not for you to know the times and the seasons, which the Father has put in his own power." The example which he gave in this respect, was faithfully imitated by the apostles, who carefully warned believers away from this subject, as one on which it was equally vain and unprofitable for them to speculate. Now, surely, as this mystery must have been intentional on the part of Him whose book the Bible is, it ought to be considered sacred and inviolable by man. It is true that a multitude of circumstances, some of a political, others of a moral and religious description, are mentioned in Scripture, as indicative and premonitory of the approach of the latter days; and these doubtless, when present, will fulfil the intention for which they have been recorded, and spread far and wide among men some general expectation of the day of the Lord, like that which prevailed over the world at his first advent. Especially may it be believed, will his faithful followers,-who wait for his appearing, devoutly study the Word, and mark the ways of Providence, deeply feel this presentiment, as it will derive vigour from their wishes and brightness from their hopes. But even among them, it is probable it will ever be mingled with much doubt and uncertainty; and when strongest, be but like the old man's anticipation of death, which he feels to be drawing on, while it is kindly concealed from him in what precise year or month it is appointed to take place. Upon the unbelieving and impenitent children of this world, it will come with all its appalling preludes, sudden and startling like a peal of thunder, just as the flood overwhelmed the inhabitants of the Old World, while they were "eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage."

And finally, we may remark, that this advent of the Saviour, which such awful prodigies are to presage, which is to be accompanied with such pomp and glory, which all the tribes of the earth are to witness and feel, and over whose date, amidst the multifarious assurances afforded by Scripture of the fact itself, such a veil of mystery has been left, must be intended, it is clear, to accomplish some high and important design. Why

« ForrigeFortsæt »