Page images
PDF
EPUB

cannot be wanted if we are never to go into battle.

I have gone on to things in life far beyond what your experience has yet reached to:nay, inasmuch as I have carried forward my thoughts to the very end of our earthly course, I have anticipated my own experience also. But so it is, that when we have reached the top of the hill, we can look down it before us as well as behind us, and while the ascent is yet fresh in our recollections, if not actually in our sight, we can see the path by which we have to go down to the conclusion of our journey. Nor can the map, if I may so call it, of any part of the journey of life, be without its uses to you, by whom, in the natural course of things, it must all be travelled over. Would to God, that while your age yet renders it impossible for you to be settled in the peace of death, you might shelter yourselves in the peace of God; that, being children of light, you would walk as such; that, having everlasting habitations prepared for you, you would early prepare yourselves, by an entire turning to God, for entering into them.

ADDRESS BEFORE CONFIRMATION.

ALTHOUGH it is very true that where great stress is laid upon any one particular crisis in our spiritual life, and where a strict preparation has been made for it, the effect, as soon as it is over, is often exceedingly shortlived, and people, feeling themselves in a manner released from something that was hanging over them, run wild with even the greater eagerness, in consequence of their late restraint although there be this danger attending any unwonted effort, if made too violently, and especially in matters that concern our souls, yet as no good is to be done without such an effort, and as it need not be overstrained or excessive, so I think that the preparation for confirmation may be of the greatest use to you, and I would not lose this opportunity of turning it, so far as I can, to your lasting benefit.

I take it for granted, that of the uses and duties of confirmation in general, you must have some tolerable notion, from what has been said to you about it, and from what you have read yourselves. That you are now, in a manner, beginning again your Christian course, with the promises of the Gospel again personally addressed to you, and a renewed call to you, to be disposed in heart and mind to live as believing them, you will have learnt already; and I need not now repeat it to you. What I wish to do, is to speak of confirmation as it concerns you who are now here assembled, in the particular situation in which you are placed, some of you being very shortly to enter upon the business of active life, or on a state of more immediate preparation for it; and the greater part being likely still to continue for a time exposed to the peculiar temptations of a school, and having to discharge its peculiar duties.

And, for the first of these two classes, there is no promise in the Scripture which is more certainly confirmed by experience, than where Christ has told us to seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and that, then, all other things shall be added unto us: that is,

that the surest way to earthly happiness, as well as to that which comes after death, is to begin life and to go through it with steady Christian principles. I do not mean, by Christian principles, a firm profession of belief in the Christian religion; still less, a respect, however sincere, for the church and its institutions. Officers of the Army and Navy have, I fear, on this point, often fatally deceived themselves: they think sometimes, that in their profession, if they are regular in attending and enforcing the attendance of their men at divine service on a Sunday,—if they avoid swearing and profane language, and try to keep up respect to religion and its ministers amongst those under their command or influence,- - they may safely consider themselves as true Christians. But he is a Christian, who, for the love of Christ, and with prayer for the help of Christ's Spirit, struggles against the besetting temptations of his particular calling. And in the world in general, but most especially in the Army and Navy, the great and besetting temptation is to prefer the praise of men to the praise of God, and to dread the reproach of men more than the reproach of God. Where this feeling

is not earnestly struggled with, it obtains in a short time such a dominion, that we shall certainly act in every point as it leads us. The most degrading personal cowardice is not so complete a bondage as the cowarIdice which fears to be called coward. The most timid man alive would be ashamed to say, and to accustom himself to think, that if he were placed in a situation of danger he must fly from it. However fearful his nature, he would struggle against his weakness, and pray earnestly, and earnestly labour, that if he were to be tried with severe pain and danger, they might not overpower his firmness; and there are many instances of persons, constitutionally timid, thus bracing themselves, and being supported by God; so that their resolution has endured amidst the most appalling dangers and the most fearful torments. But moral cowardice,—or the fear of what man can do, not to kill the body, but to inflict shame and insult on the mind, men do not that they would yield to.

their own lives, and risk

lives of others, in personal

scruple to confess
They will
They will expose
taking away the
quarrels, because

they have been accustomed to set such a value on the good opinion of the world,

« PreviousContinue »