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Britain's Mercies, and Britain's Duty.
by George Whitefield
"That they might observe his statutes and keep his laws."
Psalm 55:45
Men, brethren, and fathers, and all ye to whom I am about
to preach the kingdom of God, I suppose you need not be informed, that being
indispensably obliged to be absent on your late thanksgiving day, I could not
show my obedience to the governor's proclamation, as my own inclination led me,
or as might justly be expected from, and demanded of me. But as the occasion of
that day's thanksgiving is yet, and I trust ever will be, fresh in our memory, I
cannot think that a discourse on that subject can even now be altogether
unseasonable. I take it for granted, further, that you need not be informed,
that among the various motives which are generally urged to enforce obedience to
the divine commands, that of love is the most powerful and cogent. The terrors
of the law ma affright and awe, but love dissolves and melts the heart. "The
love of Christ," says the great apostle of the Gentiles, "constraineth us." Nay,
love is so absolutely necessary for those that name the name of Christ, that
without it, their obedience cannot truly be stiled evangelical, or be acceptable
in the sight of God. "Although, (says the apostle) I bestow all my goods to feed
the poor, and though I give my body to be burnt, and have not charity," (i.e.
unless unfeigned love to God, and to mankind for his great name's sake, be the
principle of such actions, howsoever it may benefit others) it profiteth me
nothing." This is the constant language of the lively oracles of God. And, from
them it is equally plain, that nothing has a greater tendency to beget and
excite such an obediential love in us, than a serious and frequent consideration
of the manifold mercies we receive time after time from the bands of our
heavenly Father. The royal psalmist, who had the honor of being stiled, "the man
after God's own heart," had an abundant experience of this. Hence it is, that
whilst he is musing on the divine goodness, the fire of divine love kindles in
his soul; and, out of the abundance of his heart, his mouth speaketh such
grateful and ecstatic language as this, "What shall I render unto the Lord for
all his mercies? Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless his
holy name." And why? "who forgiveth all thine iniquities, who healeth all thy
diseases, who redeemeth thy life from destruction, who crowneth thee with loving
kindness and tender mercies." And when the same holy man of God had a mind to
stir up the people of the Jews to set about a national reformation, as the most
weighty and prevailing argument he could make use of for that purpose, he lays
before them, as it were, in a draught, many national mercies, and distinguishing
deliverances, which have been conferred upon and wrought out for them, by the
most high God. The psalm to which the words of our text belong, is a pregnant
proof of this; it being a kind of epitome or compendium of the whole Jewish
history: at least it contains an enumeration of man signal and extraordinary
blessings the Israelites had received from God, and also the improvement they
were in duty bound to make of them, "Observe his statues and keep his laws."
To run through all the particulars of the psalm, or draw a parallel (which might
with great ease and justice be done) between God's dealings with us and the
Israelites of old; To enumerate all the national mercies bestowed upon, and
remarkable deliverances wrought out for the kingdoms of Great Britain and
Ireland, from the infant state of William the Norman to their present manhood,
and more than Augustan ____ [unreadable text], under the auspicious reign of our
rightful Sovereign King George the second; howsoever pleasing and profitable it
might be at any other time, would, at this juncture, prove, if not an irksome,
yet an unreasonable undertaking.
The occasion of the late solemnity, I mean the suppression of a most horrid and
unnatural rebellion, will afford more than sufficient matter for a discourse of
this nature, and furnish us with abundant motives to love and obey that glorious
Jehovah, who giveth salvation unto kings, and delivers his people from the
hurtful sword.
Need I make an apology, before this auditory, if, in order to see the greatness
of our late deliverance, I should remind you of the many unspeakable blessings
which we have for a course of years enjoyed, during the reign of his present
Majesty, and the gentle, mile administration under which we live? Without justly
incurring the censure of giving flattering titles, I believe all who have eyes
to see, and ears to hear, and are but a little acquainted with our public
affairs, must acknowledge, that we have one of the best of Kings. It is now
above nineteen years since he began to reign over us. And yet, was he seated on
a royal throne, and were all his subjects placed before him, was he to address
them as Samuel once addressed the Israelites, "Behold here I am, old and
gray-headed, witness against me before the Lord, whose ox have I taken? Or whose
ass have I taken? Or whom have I defrauded? Whom have I oppressed?" They must,
if they would do him justice, make the same answer as was given to Samuel, "Thou
hast not defrauded us, nor oppressed us." What Tertulius, by way of flattery,
said to Felix, may with the strictest justice be applied to our sovereign, "By
thee we enjoy great quietness, and very worthy deeds have been done unto our
nation by thy providence." He has been indeed Peter Patria, a father to our
country, and though old and gray-headed, has jeopardized his precious life for
us in the high places of the field. Nor has he less deserved the great and
glorious title, which the Lord promises, that kings should sustain in the latter
days, I mean, "a nursing father of the church." For not only the Church of
England, as by law established, but all denominations of Christians whatsoever,
have enjoyed their religious as well as civil liberties. As there has been no
authorized oppression in the state, so there has been no publicly allowed
persecution in the church. We breathe indeed in free air? As free (if not
better) both as to temporals and spirituals, as any nation under heaven. Nor is
the prospect likely to terminate in his majesty's death, which I pray God to
defer. Our princesses are disposed of to Protestant powers. And we have great
reason to be assured, that the present heir apparent, and his consort, are like
minded with their royal father. And I cannot help thinking, that it is a
peculiar blessing vouchsafed us by the King of kings, that his present Majesty
has been continued so long among us. For now, his immediate successor (though
his present situation obliges him, as it were, to lie dormant) has great and
glorious opportunities, which we have reason to think he daily improves, of
observing and weighing the national affairs, considering the various steps and
turns of government, and consequently of laying in a large fund of experience,
to make him a wise and great prince, if ever God should call him to sway the
British scepter. Happy art thou, O England! Happy art thou, O America, who on
every side art thus highly favored!
But, alas! How soon would this happy scene have shifted, and a melancholy gloomy
prospect have succeeded in its room, had the revels gained their point, and a
popish abjured pretender been forced upon the British throne! For, supposing his
birth not to be spurious, (as we have great reason to think it really was) what
could we expect from one, descended from a father, who, when Duke of York, put
all Scotland into confusion; and afterwards, when crowned King of England, for
his arbitrary and tyrannical government, both in church and state, was justly
obliged to abdicate the throne, by the assertors of British liberty? Or,
supposing the horrid plot, first hatched in hell, and afterwards nursed at Rome,
had taken place? Supposing, I say, the old Pretender should have obtained the
triple crown, and have transferred his pretended title (as it is reported he has
done) to his eldest son, what was all this for, but that, by being advanced to
the popedom, he might rule both son and subjects with less control, and by their
united interest, keep the three kingdoms of England, Scotland, and Ireland, in
greater vassalage to the see of Rome? Ever since this unnatural rebellion broke
out, I have looked upon the young Pretender as the phaeton (vehicle) of the
present age. He is ambitiously and presumptuously aiming to seat himself in the
throne of our rightful sovereign King George, which he is no more capable of
keeping, than Phaetan was to guide the chariot of the sun; and had he succeeded
in his attempt, like him, would only have set the world on fire. It is true, to
do him justice, he has deserved well of the Church of Rome, and, in all
probability, will hereafter be canonized amongst the noble order of their
fictitious saints. But, with what an iron rod we might expect to have been
bruised, had his troops been victorious, may easily be gathered from these cruel
orders said to be found in the pockets of some of his officers, "Give no
quarters to the Elector's troops." Add to this, that there was great reason to
suspect, that, upon the first news of the success of the rebels, a general
massacre was intended. So that if the Lord had not been on our side, Great
Britain, not to say America, would, in a few weeks or months, have been an
Akeldama, a field of blood.
Besides, was a Popish pretender to rule over us, instead of being represented by
a free parliament, and governed by laws made by their consent, as we now are; we
should shortly have had only the shadow of one, and it may be no parliament at
all. This is the native product of a Popish government, and what the unhappy
family, from which this young adventurer pretends he descended, has always aimed
at. Arbitrary principles he has sucked in with his mother's milk, and if he had
been so honest, instead of that immature motto upon his standard, Tandem
triumphant, only to have put, Sret pro ratient Vahmitat, he had given us a
short, but true portrait of the nature of his intended, but blessed be God, now
defeated reign. And why should I mention, that the sinking of the national debt,
or rending away the funded property of the people, and the dissolution of the
present happy union between the two kingdoms, would have been the immediate
consequences of his success, as he himself declares in his second manifesto,
dated from Holy-read House? These are evils, and great ones too; but then they
are only evils of a temporary nature. They chiefly concern the body, and must
necessarily terminate in the grave.
But, alas! What an inundation of spiritual mischiefs, would soon have overflowed
the Church, and what unspeakable danger should we and our posterity have been
reduced to in respect to our better parts, our precious and immortal souls? How
soon would whole swarms of monks, dominicans and friars, like so many locusts,
have overspread and plagued the nation; with what winged speed would foreign
titular bishops have posted over, in order to take possession of their
respective fees? How quickly would our universities have been filled with youths
who have been sent abroad by their Popish parents, in order to drink in all the
superstitions of the church of Rome? What a speedy period would have been put to
societies of all kinds, for promoting Christian knowledge, and propagating the
gospel in foreign parts? How soon would have our pulpits have every where been
filled with these old antichristian doctrines, free-will, meriting by works,
transubstantiation, purgatory, works of supererogation, passive-obedience,
non-resistance, and all the other abominations of the whore of Babylon? How soon
would our Protestant charity schools in England, Scotland and Ireland, have been
pulled down, our Bibles forcibly taken from us, and ignorance every where set up
as the mother of devotion? How soon should we have been deprived of that
invaluable blessing, liberty of conscience, and been obliged to commence (what
they falsely call) catholics, or submit to all the tortures which a bigoted
zeal, guided by the most cruel principles, could possibly invent? How soon would
that mother of harlots have made herself once more drunk with the blood of the
saints? And the whole tribe even of free-thinkers themselves, been brought to
this dilemma, either to die martyrs for (although I never yet heard of one that
did so) or, contrary to all their most avowed principles, renounce their great
Diana, unassisted, unenlightened reason? But I must have done, lest while I am
speaking against antichrist, I should unawares fall myself, and lead my hearers
into an antichristian spirit. True and undefiled religion will regulate our
zeal, and teach us to treat even the man of sin with no harsher language than
that which the angel gave to his grand employer Satan, "The Lord rebuke thee."
Glory be to God's great name! The Lord has rebuked him; and that too at a time
when we had little reason to expect such a blessing at God's hands. My dear
hearers, neither the present frame of my heart, nor the occasion of your late
solemn meeting, lead me to give you a detail of our public vices. Though, alas!
They are so many, so notorious, and withal of such a crimson-dye, that a gospel
minister would not be altogether inexcusable, was he, even on such a joyful
occasion, to lift up his voice like a trumpet, to show the British nation their
transgression, and the people of America their sin. However, though I would not
cast a dismal shade upon the pleasing picture the cause of our late rejoicings
set before us; yet thus much may, and ought to be said, that as God has not
dealt so bountifully with any people as with us, so no nation under heaven has
dealt more ungratefully with Him. We have been like Capernaum, lifted up to
heaven in privileges, and for the abuse of them, like her, have deserved to be
thrust down into hell. How well soever it may be with us, in respect to our
civil and ecclesiastical constitution, yet in regard to our morals, Isaiah's
description of the Jewish polity is too applicable, "The whole head is sick, the
whole heart is faint; from the crown of the head to the sole of our feet, we are
full of wounds and bruises, and putrifying sores." We have, Jeshurun-like, waxed
fat and kicked. WE have played the harlot against God, both in regard to
principles and practices. "Our gold is become dim, and our fine gold changed."
We have crucified the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame. Nay,
Christ has been wounded in the house of his friends. And every thing long ago
seemed to threaten an immediate storm. But, O the long-suffering and goodness of
God to us-ward! When all things seemed ripe for destruction, and matters were
come to such a crisis, that God's praying people began to think, that though
Noah, Daniel and Job, were living, they would only deliver their own souls; yet
then in the midst of judgment the Most High remembered mercy, and when a popish
enemy was breaking in upon us like a flood, the Lord himself graciously lifted
up a standard.
This to me does not seem to be one of the most unfavorable circumstances which
have attended this mighty deliverance; nor do I think you will look upon it as a
circumstance altogether unworthy your observation. Had this cockatrice indeed
been crushed in the egg, and the young Pretender driven back upon his first
arrival, it would undoubtedly have been a great blessing. But not so great as
that for which you lately assembled to give God thanks; for then his Majesty
would not have had so good an opportunity of knowing his enemies, or trying his
friends. The British subjects would in a manner have lost the fairest occasion
that ever offered to express their loyalty and gratitude to the rightful
sovereign. France would not have been so greatly humbled; nor such an effectual
stop have been put, as we trust there now is, to any such further Popish plot,
to rob us of all that is near and dear to us. "Out of the eater therefore hath
come forth meat, and out of the strong hath come forth sweetness." The
Pretender's eldest son is suffered not only to land in the North-West Highlands
in Scotland, but in a little while he becomes a great band. This for a time is
not believed, but treated as a thing altogether incredible. The friends of the
government in those parts, not for want of loyalty, but of sufficient authority
to take up arms, could not resist him. He is permitted to pass on with his
terrible banditti, and, like the comet that was lately seen, spreads his baleful
influences all around him. He is likewise permitted to gain a short-lived
triumph by a victory over a body of our troops at Prestan-Pans, and to take a
temporary possession of the metropolis of Scotland. Of this he makes his boast,
and informs the public, that "Providence had hitherto favored him with wonderful
success, led him in the way to victory, and to the capital of the ancient
kingdom, though he came without foreign aid." Nay, he is further permitted to
press into the very heart of England. But now the Almighty interposes. Hitherto
he was to go, and no further. Here were his malicious designs to be staid. His
troops of s sudden are driven back. Away they post to the Highlands, and there
they are suffered not only to increase, but also to collect themselves into a
large body, that having, as it were, what Caligula once wished Rome had, but one
neck, they might be cut off with one blow.
This time, manner, and instruments of this victory, deserves our notice. It was
on a general fast-day, when the clergy and good people of Scotland were
lamenting the disloyalty of their persidious countrymen, and, like Moses,
lifting up their hands, that Amalek might not prevail. The victory was total and
decisive. Little blood was spilt on the side of the Royalists. And, to crown
all, Duke William, his Majesty's youngest son, has the honor of first driving
back, and then defeating the rebel-army. A prince, who in his infancy and youth,
gave early proofs of an uncommon bravery and nobleness of mind; a prince, whose
courage has increased with his years. Who returned wounded from the battle of
Dettingen, behaved with surprising bravery at Fontenoy, and now, by a conduct
and magnanimity becoming the high office he sustains, like his glorious
predecessor the Prince of Orange, has delivered three kingdoms from the dread of
popish cruelty, and arbitrary power. What renders it still more remarkable is,
The day on which his Highness gained this victory, was the day after his
birthday, when he was entering on the 26th year of his age; and when Sullivan,
one of the Pretender's privy-council, like another Abitaphel, advised the rebels
to give our soldiers battle, presuming they were surfeited and over-charged with
their yesterday's rejoicings, and consequently unfit to make any great stand
against them. But, glory be to God, who catches the wise in their own
craftiness! His counsel, like Ahitaphel's, proves abortive. Both General and
soldiers were prepared to meet them. "God taught their hands to war, and their
fingers to fight," and brought the Duke, after a deserved slaughter of some
thousands of the rebels, with most of his brave soldiers, victorious from the
field.
If we then take a distinct view of this notable transaction, and trace it in all
the particular circumstances that have attended it, I believe we must with one
heart and voice confess, that if it be a mercy for a state to be delivered from
a worse than a Catiline's conspiracy, or a church to be rescued from a hotter
than a Dioclestan persecution; if it be a mercy to be delivered from a religion
that turns plough-shares into swords, and pruning-hooks into spears, and makes
it meritorious to shed Protestant blood; if it be a mercy to have all our
present invaluable privileges, both in church and state secured to us more than
ever; if it be a mercy to have these great things done for us, at a season, when
for our crying sins, both church and state justly deserved to be overturned; and
if it be a mercy to have all this brought about for us, under God, by one of the
blood-royal, a prince acting with an experience far above his years; if any, or
all of these are mercies, then have you lately commemorated one of the greatest
mercies that ever the glorious God vouchsafed to the British nation.
And shall we not rejoice and give thanks? Should we refuse, would not the stones
cry out against us? Rejoice then we may and ought: but, O let our rejoicing be
in the Lord, and run in a religious channel. This, we find, has been the
practice of God's people in all ages. When he was pleased, with a mighty hand,
and out-stretched arm to lead the Israelites through the Red Sea, as on dry
ground, "Then sang Moses and the children of Israel; and Miriam the prophetess,
the sister of Aaron, took a timbrel in her hand, and all the women went out
after her. And Miriam answered them, Sing ye to the Lord; for he hath triumphed
gloriously." When God subdued Jabin, the King of Canaan, before the children of
Israel, "then sang Deborah and Barak on that day, saying, "Praise ye the Lord
for the avenging of Israel." When the ark was brought back out of the hands of
the Philistines, David, though a king, danced before it. And, to mention but one
instance more, which may serve as a general directory to us on this and
such-like occasions: when the great Head of the church had rescued his people
from the general massacre intended to be executed upon them by a cruel and
ambitious Haman, "Mordecai sent letters unto all the Jews that were in all the
provinces of the King Ahaserus, both nigh and far, to establish among them, that
they should keep the fourteenth day of the month Adar, and the fifteenth day of
the same yearly, as the days wherein the Jews rested from their enemies, and the
month which was turned unto them from sorrow unto joy, and from mourning into a
good day: that they should make them days of feasting and joy, and of sending
portions one to another, and gifts to the poor." And why should wee not to and
do likewise?
And shall we not also, on such an occasion, express our gratitude to, and make
honorable mention of, those worthies who have signalized themselves, and been
ready to sacrifice both lives and fortunes at this critical juncture?
This would be to act the part of those ungrateful Israelites, who are branded in
the book of God, for not showing kindness to the house of "Jerub-Baal, namely
Gideon, according to all the goodness which he showed unto Israel." Even a
Pharaoh could prefer a deserving Joseph, Ahasuerus a Mordecai, and
Nebuchadnezzar a Daniel, when made instruments of signal service to themselves
and people. "My heart, says Deborah, is towards (i.e. I have a particular
veneration and regard for) the Governors of Israel that offered themselves
willingly. And blessed above women shall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be;
for she put her hand to the nail, and her right hand to the workman's hammer,
and with the hammer she smote Sisera, she smote off his head, when she had
pierced and stricken through his temples." And shall we not say, "Blessed above
men let his Royal Highness the Duke of Cumberland be; for through his
instrumentality, the great and glorious Jehovah hath brought might things to
pass?" Should not our hearts be towards the worthy Archbishop of Tirk, the Royal
Hunters, and those other English heroes who offered themselves so willingly? Let
the names of Blakeney, Bland and Rea, and all those who waxed valiant in fight
on this important occasion, live for ever in the British annals. And let the
name of that great, that incomparable brave soldier of the King, and a good
soldier of Jesus Christ, Colonel Gardiner, (excuse me if I here drop a tear; he
was my intimate friend) let his name, I say, be had in everlasting remembrance.
But, after all, is there not an infinitely greater debt of gratitude and praise
due from us, on this occasion, to Him that is higher than the highest, even the
King of kings and Lord of Lords, the blessed and only Potentate? Is not his arm,
his strong and mighty arm, (what instruments soever may have been made use of)
that hath brought us this salvation? And may I not therefore address you, in the
exulting language of the beginning of this psalm, from which we have taken our
text? "O give thanks unto the Lord, call upon his name, make known his deeds
among the people. Sing unto Him; sing psalms unto him; talk ye of all his
wondrous works; glory ye in his holy name; remember his marvelous work which he
hath done."
But shall we put off our good and gracious benefactor with mere lip-service? God
forbid. Your worthy Governor has honored God in his late excellent proclamation,
and God will honor him. But shall our thanks terminate with the day? No, in no
wise. Our text reminds us of a more noble sacrifice, and points out to us the
great end the Almighty Jehovah proposes, in bestowing such signal favors upon a
people, "That they should observe his statutes, and keep his laws."
This is the return we are all taught to pray, that we may make to the Most High
God, the Father of mercies, in the daily office or our church, "That our hearts
may be unfeignedly thankful, and that we may show forth his praise, not only
with our lips, but in our lives, by giving up ourselves to his service, and by
walking before him in holiness and righteousness all our days." O that these
words were the real language of all the use them! O that these were in us such a
mind! How soon would our enemies then flee before us? And God, even our own God,
would yet give us more abundant blessings!
And why should not we "observe God's statutes, and keep his laws?" Dare we say,
that any of his commands are grievous? Is not Christ's yoke, to a renewed soul,
as far as renewed, easy; and his burden comparatively light? May I not appeal to
the most refined reasoner whether the religion of Jesus Christ be not a social
religion? Whether the Moral Law, as explained by the Lord Jesus in the gospel,
has not a natural tendency to promote the present good and happiness of a whole
commonwealth, supposing they were obedient to them, as well as the happiness of
every individual? From when come wars and fighting amongst us? From what
fountain do all those evil, which the present and past ages have groaned under,
flow, but from a neglect of the laws and statues of our great and all-wise
law-giver Jesus of Nazareth? Tell me, ye men of letters, whether Lycurgus or
Solon, Pythagoras or Plato, Aristotle, Seneca, Cicero, or all the ancient
lawgivers and heathen moralists, put them all together, ever published a system
of ethics, any way worthy to be compared with the glorious system laid down in
that much despised book, (to use Sir Richard Steel's expression) emphatically
called, the Scriptures? Is not the divine image and superscription written upon
every precept of the gospel? Do they not shine with a native intrinsic luster?
And, though many things in them are above, yet, is there any thing contrary to
the strictest laws of right reason? Is not Jesus Christ, in scripture, stiled
the Word, the Logos, the Reason? And is not his service a reasonable service?
What if there be mysteries in his religion? Are they not without all controversy
great and glorious? Are they n9ot mysteries of godliness, and worthy of that God
who reveals them? Nay, is it not the greatest mystery, that men, who pretend to
reason, and call themselves philosophers, who search into the arcana natura,
and consequently find a mystery in every blade of grass, should yet be so
irrational as to decry all mysteries in religion? Where is the scribe? Where is
the wise? Where is the disputer against the Christian revelation? Does not every
thing without and within us, conspire to prove its divine original? And would
not self-interest, if there was no other motive, excite us to observe God's
statutes, and keep his laws?
Besides, considered as a Protestant people, do we not lie under the greatest
obligations of any nation under heaven, to pay a cheerful, unanimous, universal,
persevering obedience to the divine commands.
The wonderful and surprising manner of God's bringing about a Reformation, in
the reign of King Henry the Eighth; his carrying it on in the blessed reign of
King Edward the Sixth; his delivering us out of the bloody hands of Queen Mary,
and destroying the Spanish invincible armads, under her immediate Protestant
successor Queen Elizabeth, his discovery of the popish plot under King James;
the glorious revolution by King William, and, to come nearer to our own times,
his driving away four thousand five hundred Spaniards, from a weak (though
important) frontier colony, when they had, in a manner, actually taken
possession of it; his giving us Louisbourg, one of the strongest fortresses of
our enemies, contrary to all human probability, but the other day, into our
hands: these, I say, with the victory which you have lately been commemorating,
are such national mercies, not to mention any more, as will render us utterly
inexcusable, if they do not produce a national Reformation, and incite us all,
with one heart, to keep God's statutes, and observe his laws.
Need I remind you further, in order to excite in you a greater diligence to
comply with the intent of the text, that though the storm, in a great measure,
is abated by his Royal Highness's late success, yet we dare not say, it is
altogether blown over?
The clouds may again return after the rain; and the few surviving rebels (which
I pray God avert) may yet be suffered to make head against us. We are still
engaged in a bloody, and, in all probability, a tedious war, with two of the
most inveterate enemies to the interests of Great-Britain. And, though I cannot
help thinking, that their present intentions are so iniquitous, their conduct so
persidious, and their schemes so directly derogatory to the honor of the Most
High God, that he will certainly humble them in the end, yet, as all things in
this life happen alike to all, they may for a time, be dreadful instruments of
scourging us. If not, God has other arrows in his quiver to smite us with,
besides the French King, his Catholic Majesty, or an abjured Pretender. Not only
the sword, but plague, pestilence, and famine, are under the divine command. Who
knows but he may say to them all, "Pass through these lands?" A fatal murrain
has lately swept away abundance of cattle at home and abroad. A like epidemical
disease may have a commission to seize our persons as well as our beasts. Thus
God dealt with the Egyptians: who dare say, he will not deal so with us? Has he
not already given some symptoms of it? What great numbers upon the continent
have been lately taken off by the bloody-flux, small-pox, and yellow-fever? Who
can tell what further judgments are yet in store? However, this is certain, the
rod is yet hanging over us: and I believe it will be granted on all sides, that
if such various dispensations of mercy and judgment do not teach the inhabitants
of any land to learn righteousness, they will only ripen them for a greater
ruin. Give my leave, therefore, to dismiss you at this time with that solemn
awful warning and exhortation, with which the venerable Samuel, on a public
occasion, took leave of the people of Israel: "Only fear the Lord, and serve him
in truth, with all your heart: for consider how great things he hath done for
you. But if ye shall still do wickedly, [I will not say as the Prophet did, You
shall be consumed; but] ye know not but you may provoke the Lord Almighty to
consume both you and your king." Which God of his infinite mercy prevent, for
the sake of Jesus Christ: to whom, with the Father, and the Holy Ghost, three
persons, but one God, be all honor and glory, now and for evermore. Amen, Amen.
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