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DISC. shall find still less cause of complaint. The VIII. mifery of man proceeded not originally

from God; he brought it upon himself. "God formed him upright;" and, while upright, happy; but he "fought out "inventions," he followed his own imaginations, and became miferable. What the wife man fays of death, is equally true of affliction; "God made it not, neither "hath he pleasure in the destruction,” or the fuffering, "of the living. For he "created all things, that they might have "their being; and the generations of the "world were healthful, and there was no poison of destruction in them, nor the

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kingdom of death upon the earth: for

righteousness is immortal-But ungodly "men, with their works and words, called "it to them." You fee how exactly this harmonizes with the doctrine of the Apoftle; "death"-and, in like manner, trouble-" came upon all men, for that all had "finned." Whatever, therefore, our fufferings may be, we suffer no more than we deferve; we must bow down under the

VIII.

mighty hand of God; we must kiss the DISC. rod, exclaiming, in the words of Nehemiah, "Thou art juft, O Lord, in all that is brought upon us; for thou haft done right, but we have done wickedly "."

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The Scriptures inform us, that by one man's tranfgreffion moral evil entered into the world; death, and every other kind of natural evil, entered with it. To find our way through all the mazes of that labyrinth of disputation which the subject has occafioned, may be difficult; to explain clearly and unexceptionably every particular in that concise history given us by Mofes, may not be easy: but the fact is fufficient, related in the Old Teftament, acknowleged and built upon in the New. And it is the only clue that can unravel, the only key that can open every thing. Grafp it firmly, and fuffer no man, either by fraud or force, to wreft it from you. Without it, all is dark and inexplicable. You will be driven,

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VIII.

DISC. either to deny there can be a wife and gracious God who governs the world, which is the madness of the Epicureans; or, to affirm that evil is good, which is the abfurdity of the Stoics.

But though it be most undoubtedly an abfurdity to call evil good, there is no abfurdity in holding, that good may be brought out of evil. Natural evil may be converted into a remedy for moral evil, which gave it birth. Sin produced forrow; and forrow may contribute, in fome measure, to do away fin. That the croffes we meet, the pains and the troubles we fuffer through life, are by the providence of God intended, and by his grace rendered effectual, for this purpose, shall be our

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Third obfervation; and I am confident it will give full fatisfaction and rest to your minds, as touching the matter in difcuffion.

From what we feel in ourfelves, and what we fee and hear of others, every perfon,

perfon, who has thought at all upon the DISC. fubject, must have been convinced, that, VIII. circumstanced as we are," it is good for "us to be afflicted." Naturally, man is inclined to pride and wrath, to intemperance and impurity, to selfishness and worldly mindedness; defirous to acquire more, and unwilling to part with any thing. Before he can enter into the kingdom of heaven, he muft become humble and meek, temperate and pure, difinterested and charitable, refigned, and prepared to part with all. The great inftrument employed by heaven to bring about this change in him, is the crofs. Affliction will make him humble and meek, by fhewing him how poor and weak a creature he is, and how little reason he has to be proud, or to be angry; it will render him temperate and pure, by withdrawing the fuel which has nourished and inflamed bafe lufts; it will caufe him to become difinterefted and charitable, as teaching him, by his own fufferings, to fympathize with his fuffering brethren, and to grant that relief, which he perceives

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DISC. perceives himself to want; he will die to VIII. the world, which is already dead to him,

and live to God, in whom alone he finds every bleffing and comfort. Contented, and refigned, he will have but one wish"to depart, and to be with Chrift."

Such is the process which, at different times, and in different manners, muft take place in us. The maladies to be healed are inveterate, and not without much difficulty eradicated. The process therefore must be long, and it must be painful; but there is good reafon for it; the corruption of our nature makes it neceffary, and is the real cause of the pain we endure in the operation. The furgeon applies not the knife where the flesh is found; but when it is otherwise, the application must be made, and made in proportion to the depth of the wound, and the danger of a mortification. In fuch cafe, is it cruelty in him, when he cuts to the quick? No; it is affection, it is skill; it is the manner in which he would treat his

only fon. Does the father hate his child,

whom

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