>. . . 6 5 7 J fc ! ■J fe 1 - 1 10 m |11 § THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY,! / Serious reflections on time and eternity \ I - SELECT CHRISTIAN AUTHORS, WITH INTRODUCTORY ESSAYS. N°- 43. PUBLISHED BT WILLIAM COLLJKS GLASGOW SERIOUS REFLECTIONS ON TIME AND ETERNITY. JOHN SHOWER. AND ON THE CONSIDERATION OF OUR LATTER END, AND OTHER CONTEMPLATIONS. SIR MATTHEW HALE, Knt. WITH AN INTRODUCTORY ESSAY, BY THOMAS CHALMERS, D. D. PROFESSOR OF THEOLOGY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH. n GLASGOW: PRINTED FOR WILLIAM COLLINS; WILLIAM WHYTE & CO. AND WILLIAM OLIPHANT, EDINBURGH; R. M. TIMS, AND WM. C‘URRY, JUN. & CO. DUBLIN; G. B. WHITTAKER, AND HAMILTON, ADAMS, & CO. LONDON. 1828. Printed by W. Collins & Co. Glasgow. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. There are certain truths, which lie remote from all direct and immediate observation—and which re¬ quire more than one step on the part of the human mind, ere they are arrived at—which can only, in fact, be reached by a reasoning process, that consists of many steps; and for the describing of which, the habit of sustained attention, and the talent of sound and legitimate inference, and the power of combining principles which are known, and thence eliciting a truth or a doctrine that was unknown, must all be summoned to the work, and be put into strenuous and continued exercise for days, or often for months together, ere the toils of the devoted inquirer be re¬ warded by the discovery that he is in quest of. There is much, for example, both of mathematical and political science, which is incontrovertibly true, but which, instead of being taken up at one act by the understanding, as if it lay on the very surface of contemplation, can only be grasped into the pos¬ session of the mind, by being travelled to through a long intermedium of many transitions and many arguments—and they are only a gifted few who can VI bear the fatigues of such a journey, and to whom the labours of the midnight oil afford a congenial and much-loved employment, and who have had their intellectual powers disciplined to the march of a logical or lengthened investigation. The Smith of the one science, and the Newton of the other, afford very striking illustrations of this kind of men¬ tal superiority over the rest of the species—and in virtue of which they were enabled to discover what before to the whole of mankind was utterly unknown ; and in virtue of which their followers are enabled to see what the majority of mankind do not see. It is only seen in fact from a summit of demonstration— and this is only attained by a series of ascending movements—and the few who have made their way to the temple which stands upon such an eminence as this, find inscribed upon it 4 the temple of philo¬ sophy.’ Now, what we maintain is, that this is alto¬ gether distinct from 4 the temple of wisdom.’ Its successful worshippers are men of reach and men of acquirement, and men who, from the elevation they have won, and on which they have posted themselves, can command a farther prospect over some walk, or some domain of the great intellectual territory, than their fellows around them. And yet they are not on this account men of wisdom, nor have we arrived at the true meaning and application of this epithet, if we either think that to he wise we must be philosophers, or that, if philosophers,'we are therefore wise. There are certain other truths, difficult of access, which are distinct, and distinguishable we think from those that we have just now adverted to— Vll not such as are gained by a continuous effort along a line of investigation—not such as come in view upon the eye of the beholder, after he has scaled one of the altitudes of science—not such as lie re¬ mote, by being placed at a distance, but such rather as lie hidden from common minds, because deeply enveloped under the surface of common observation. To come at these, is not to plod and to persevere from one acquisition to another, as in the former instances. It is done by a process perhaps, too, in which all the elements of ratiocination are concerned, but a process so rapid, as to be felt even by the owner of the mind through which it passes, like an act of momentary intuition. Such is the quickness of his penetrating eye, that what to others is a thick and impalpable vail, hides not from him the truth or the principle which lurks beneath it—and with one glance of perception, can he discern many of the secret things which lie under the broad and osten¬ sible face of human affairs—and this faculty of his, though certainly sharpened by cultivation, and cradled up to its present maturity among the varie¬ ties of experience and of life, is not of slow opera¬ tion like the former, but is sudden in all its exercises, and quite immediate in all the information which it fetches to its owner. One of its main offices is to detect what is latent, and, to ordinary minds, in¬ accessible in the character of man. This it does not by any tardy movement of the understanding, but by something like the tact of an instantaneous discernment, by the look of an instinctive sagacity, directed towards any exhibition either in the coun¬ tenance or in the conduct of another. It is this Vlll faculty which gives the eye of a lynx to the satirist; and which endues, with all his readiness and ad¬ dress, the wily ambassador, who, himself unseen, can cast a piercing intelligence through all the wind¬ ings and intrigues of a cabinet; and which dexter¬ ously guides its possessor’s way among the politics of a city corporation; and which even achieves, as wondrous triumphs as any of subtlety and skill among the severest collisions, or the low jockeyship of a market. It is far more diffused than science and scholarship are through the various ranks of so¬ ciety. You will meet with it in the homeliest walks of life—nay, sometimes, in all its perfection, under the guise, and in the attitude, of a country simple¬ ton. It is not confined to the chicanery of courts. For the play of as deep and as dexterous artifice may be set agoing in the negotiations of private in¬ terest, as has ever been recorded in the annals of diplomacy. And whether it be swindling without the law, or swindling within the law, may there be the same over-reach of one shrewder understanding- over the blind and unsuspecting confidence of an¬ other, in the contests of ordinary trade, as in the contests of politics. The man who is thus gifted, sees deeper than his fellows. He can read the vanity, or the weakness, or the delicacy which are in another’s heart, and he can practice accordingly. It is true, that he may be thus wise as a serpent, and yet harmless as a dove. But the mere wisdom of the serpent is not true wisdom, in the soundest ac¬ ceptation of the term. The epithet wise, according to its largest and its soundest acceptation, is neither exemplified by him, who, by dint of meditation, sees IX farthest into the secrets of philosophy, or who, by dint of shrewd and oft-repeated observation, sees deepest into the mysteries of our nature—nor have we yet reached the conception of a truly wise man, if we think, that to be wise we must be political, or, that if political, we are therefore wise. The consideration of our latter end, which forms the principal topic of the following Volume, is that which the Scripture affirms to be true wisdom. 66 Oh that they were wise, that they understood this, that they considered their latter end.” But the truth of our mortality, by the considering of which aright we are wise, belongs neither to the former, nor to the latter classification. We do not need to travel far in quest of its discovery. Neither do we need to dive among the recesses of a profound observation, that we may be able to fetch it up, and to appropri¬ ate it. It is a truth which, on the very highway of ordinary life, forces itself on the recognition of every man. That world, through which we are all jour¬ neying, abounds in the sign-posts of mortality ; and many is the passing funeral which obtrudes this les¬ son upon our eyes ; and many are the notes of that funeral bell which tolls it upon our hearing;—and well may the old, when they think of a former genera¬ tion, levelled and taken off by the hand of death, learn how sure it is, that the living and busy society around them will at length be swept awayand even to the young, and those the likeliest of us all, does death hang out its memorials, and gives them to know that it wields an indiscriminating arm;—and even from those whom it spares the longest, and comes to the last, may we learn how short a process a 3 X of arithmetic it is which conducts every one of us to our latter end,—and thus, through all the possible avenues of sense, and experience, and feeling, do such intimations multiply upon us, and these so plain and so powerful, and ever and anon recurring with such pathos and in such frequency, that, but to those who are sunk in idiotism, is it a lesson read and re¬ cognized of all men. Nor is there a living man who does not know, that the march of our actual generation is but one vast progressive movement to the grave. It is not the acquirement of new truths, but the right use and consideration of old ones, which constitutes wisdom. It is not the discovery of what was before unknown, which signalizes the wise man above his fellows. It is the ri^ht and the rational application of what they know as well as he, but which they do not reflect upon, and do not pro¬ ceed upon as he. It is not the man who outpeers his acquaintances in intellectual wealth, neither is it the man who outdoes them in homebred sagacity— it is neither the one nor the other, who, in the best, and most significant sense of the term, is the man of wisdom. It is he, who acts upon the sureness of that which is sure. It is he, who proceeds upon the reality of that which is real. It is he, who feels greatness of desire after that which is great, and smallness of desire after that which is small, and shapes his doings to the actual dimensions of every object which is presented to his understanding. And neither is it necessary that, in respect of under¬ standing, he should have a capacity for more than truths which are familiar to all, and are acknowledged of all. He has not to go in quest of strange or XI distant novelties, but only to trace to its right pur¬ pose that which is near to him, and within reach of* every man. In a word, he has not to learn that which is known only to a few, he has only to con¬ sider that which is known to all. i( O that they were wise, that they understood this, that they would consider their latter end !” He has not to be taught the number of his days, but taught so to num¬ ber them, as to apply his heart unto wisdom. Fie is not in the soundest physical condition, who lives on the high-wrought delicacies of an artificial and expensive preparation ; but he, the organs of whose bodily constitution are best suited to the bread and the water, and the universal aliments which nature has provided for the healthful suste¬ nance of her children. And he is neither in the best spiritual, nor even in the best intellectual con¬ dition, the faculties of whose soul are ever on the stretch after lofty and recondite doctrine, or its appetite for knowledge pre-occupied with various and exquisite speculation—but he, who thrives on the daily nourishment of such truth as is familiar to all—he, whose clear and vigorous eye admits most copiously of that light, which is poured around the orbit—he, the food of whose understanding is that common food which is most abundant, and would also be most salutary, but for the common disease that overspreads the families of our species—he who, with no taste and no capacity for what is remote or ingenious, rightly comprehends the truth that is at hand, and goes not beyond the simple ele¬ ments of being in any of his mental exercises, but who, if right in these, has reached a wisdom which philosophy cannot reach, and who, if sound in his • • XU practical estimate of what is due to Time, and what is due to Eternity, is a man of nobler aims, and far more solid and exalted wisdom, than science can induce upon any of its votaries. He lives not upon the nice¬ ties, but upon the staple of spiritual fare, and his spi¬ ritual frame is thereby upheld in strength and in pros¬ perity; and in the plain certainties of the coming death, and the coming judgment, does he walk in a way more truly elevated, than that which is trodden by any son of literary ambition: and hence the impress of dignity and wisdom which we have seen to sit on the aspect of him, who, the father of a cottage fami¬ ly, has no respite from toil hut Sabbath, and no read¬ ing but his much-read Bible, and that authorship, of old and humble piety, which lies in little room upon his shelves. To learn discriminatively and justly what wisdom is, you have just to place the most bril¬ liant and accomplished philosopher by the side of this venerable sage of Christianity. The one knows much, but bis is a knowledge which terminates in itself. The other knows little, but his is a know¬ ledge which is turned to the purpose of his guidance here, and of his provision for eternity hereafter. Wisdom is not bare knowledge. It is knowledge directed to its best and fittest, and most productive application. Thus it is, that there may be much knowledge without wisdom, and there may be much wisdom with little knowledge. It is not he who knows most, who is most wise, but he, who uses aright that which is known and familiar to all men. o For, let it he observed, that it is with spiritual as with natural food. The most useful ingredients of it are the most abundant. Men may refuse to par- Xlll take of them, and starve and die, and thus become, what the majority of our species actually are—dead in trespasses and sins. To bring a man alive again from the apparent death of nature, we never think of wooing back the departed senses by the offer of luxuries. But we admit a supply of air, and try if he can breathe in this universal element; and make use of cold water, which is to be had in every dwelling- place ; and ply his taste with some simple prepara¬ tion ; and could we restore him to the common en¬ joyment of these very commonest articles, we would be satisfied. And so it is in the case of spiritual torpor. To call it back to sensibility, we would never think of elaborate demonstration. But we would ring into our patient’s ears the message of death, which every body knows, but few know with appli¬ cation. We would try to awaken his inner man, by the tidings of its immortality, which all profess to have faith in, while scarcely any human being lives under the power of it. We would sound the trump of alarm, and loudly speak of an angry God and a coming vengeance, notes as familiar to his hearing as is that of the wind of heaven which blows over him, while, in their terror and in their urgency, they are as unfelt by the soul, as if its ears of communication with a human voice were altogether closed. We would deal forth upon him the simplicities of the gospel—and tell of sin and of the Sacrifice—-intima¬ tions which may be as readily taken up by the pea¬ sant as by the philosopher—but which, until roused from their carnal lethargy, are alike unheeded by them both. To recal them from such a paralysis as this, we would not ply them with that which is XIV severe and elaborate, but would, if possible, quicken and revive them by that which is elementary. And not be who is led on by argument to that which is remote, but he who receives the touch of a quicken¬ ing influence from that, the certainty of which is obvious to all, while the sense of it is nearly unfelt by all—he it is who hath attained the only true understanding—he it is who is wise unto salvation. We cannot but perceive, how, while the doc¬ trines of our faith are plain, in opposition to what is recondite, not requiring, like the difficulties of science, a prolonged and strenuous investigation—yet still, plain as they are, they need the influence of the Spirit for the true understanding of them, just as a dead body needs the touch of some miraculous per¬ sonage, ere it can breathe the all-encompassing atmosphere, or use the universal elements, or be sus¬ tained by the common bounties of nature. And so of the soul. It is not by conducting it through any lengthened, or logical demonstration of the schools, that we restore it to that intelligence, the possession of which assures the possessor of life everlasting. It is by visiting it with the manifesta¬ tion of certain great and impending, but withal simple realities. The wisdom which is thus gotten, is altogether distinct from the wisdom of philosophy —hidden in fact from many such wise, and many such prudent, and revealed unto babes. Let us just look to the practical habit of nature, and see that, in the face of the clearest and plainest arithmetic, it gives a superiority to the present over the future world, and then may we acknowledge, that if it be needful to heal the diseased eyes of the XV blind, ere they can see of the common light, or to heal the diseased lungs of the consumptive, ere they can breathe aright of the common air, or to heal the diseased constitution of the sickly, ere they can turn into aliment the common food of all men,—so is it equally needful that a physician’s hand be laid upon our diseased spirits, ere they be nourished by truths so palpable, as that eternity is greater than time, and the enjoyment of God in heaven, greater than that of all those earthly blessings which he causes to descend on our fleeting pilgrimage. We know not on whom it is, that the burden of this sore disease still lies, in all its native aggra¬ vation, or from whom it has been taken away. We can only address our admonitions to the reader at a venture. It is like the shooting of an arrow among a multitude, when who knows what indi¬ vidual will be struck by it ? It is under the de¬ claration of the truth, that a child of darkness be¬ comes a child and a disciple of light. But even the same truth which awakens the former, is the very truth which needs to be repeated, again and again, in the hearing of the latter, to keep him awake. The pure mind must be stirred up in the way of remembrance. And it is not enough that truth be received at the first; in the language of the Bible, it must also be considered. The food which is taken in is of no use, unless, by a digestive process, it be turned into aliment. Truth is the food of the soul. We receive it by faith. But if we keep it not in memory, we, in the words of the Apostle, have believed in vain. The shortness of life, and the certainty of its approaching extinction, may come XVI upon the spirit in a powerful, but momentary visita¬ tion. This gleam of light must be brightened, and sustained, and perpetuated. It must be kept alive amid the shock of many rude and adverse elements. It must shine as a lamp upon all our paths. The converse of this world’s companies should not darken it. The heat and the hurry of our daily business should not stifle it. That sorrow which worketh death, should not swallow it up into the oblivion of our immortality, nor should the still more dangerous gale of prosperity blow this pure and sacred flame into utter annihilation. It is not enough that we ac¬ knowledge the truth at stated times; we must give earnest heed to it, lest at a7iy time we should let it slip. It is not enough that we should know our latter end—nor has our understanding of this been advanced into true wisdom, till it be our care and our habit to consider our latter end. The practical habit of our souls ought to be a habit of anticipation, and of anticipation reaching even unto death, and to the immortality which lies beyond it. A realizing sense of what that is, which a coming futurity is to bring with speed, and perhaps with sud¬ denness, to our doors, would change the habit and posture of the soul altogether. Could we only figure to our imaginations the ebbing, and the quivering, and the agony of death, and then charge ourselves with the certainty that death is coming,—could we be ever looking onwards to the day when the last trumpet shall call us from our graves to the judgment-seat, and give a settled home in our bosoms to the truth of this awful revelation, that judgment is coming,— could we carry our frequent and daily thoughts to XVII the margin of eternity, and, after contrasting the de¬ light and the dreariness of its two immeasurable re¬ gions, with the interests of that short-lived day which separates the morning from the evening of our existence in the world, consider how surely, on the rapid wing of succession, eternity is coming,— and simple as these ponderings are, let them just enter with the power which they ought, and in the new complexion which they cast on all that is in¬ termediate between us and eternity, and they will both give us other minds, and make other men of us. These truths are plain enough for the peasant—but there is in them a challenging authority, which reaches even unto the prince. They are fit for the homeliest understandings. Yet homely as they are, may they be offered to men of all ranks, and all classes in society, and they do look hard upon the pursuits of our existing generation. With so mighty an instrument of demonstration, as the calculus of those months that will soon pass away, and of those years that are so easily summed up, do we bring the lesson of our mortality to bear upon them. And be they the children of wealth, resting their security on that corruptible foundation, of which gold and silver are the materials,—or be they children of poverty, who think that they have lost their all, because, with¬ out a portion in time, they have cast eternity, as a thing of worthlessness, away from them,—or, in a word, be their condition what it may, let them be of that innumerable multitude who use the world not as a road, but as a residence,—we tell them that they are carnally-minded, and if not arrested on the way, they are fast posting to that death which is the doom xviii of all who are so. Awaken, awaken, from these manifold delusions by which nature is encompassed ! —and seek to be spiritually-minded, that you may have life and peace. So closely allied is the consideration of our latter end with the very essence of wisdom, that we know not a likelier expedient for shutting us up, and that immediately, unto Christ—unto him, who is called the wisdom of God, as well as the power of God—unto him, in comparison of the excellency of whose knowledge all was but loss, in the estimation of the Apostle; insomuch, that he determined to know nothing save Jesus Christ and him crucified. What is it that makes us tarry in the great work of seeking a secure righteousness before God ? It is because we feel secure enough in the mean time with the possession of health, and the enjoyment of a warm and well-sheltered home, and the engross¬ ments of business, and the delights of a gay, and pleasing, and varied companionship. These, mixed up with a tolerable sense of our own decencies, and our own duties, serve altogether to make us easy in this evil world, and to keep off from our imagi¬ nations all that can give dread or disturbance in the thought of another world. The truth is, that in these circumstances, and with these feelings, the question , 66 Wherewithal shall I appear before God?” is never seriously entertained. It does not come upon the mind with the urgency of a matter in hand, —and, in reference to the undoubted fact, that the most earthly men are also the most inimical to that doctrine which affirms the ground of our evangelical acceptance before God, we believe the secret but XIX substantial explanation of the whole matter to be, that the soul which keeps a firm hold upon time, is careless and thoughtless about the goodness of its foundation for eternity. He likes this world best, and if he make good a portion here, he will not trouble himself with any nice or scrupulous exami¬ nation of what that is, which makes the best title- deed for an inheritance hereafter. And this will explain a fact which we think must be familiar to many—the very summary process upon which a man of the world comes to his easy and agreeable conclu¬ sion on the question of his eternity—the very com¬ fortable balance which he strikes between his good points and his bad ones—so as to set aside all his sins from the final result of this computation, and bring into view nothing but bis humanities and his virtues, on which to rear a confidence before God. It is not by fully tracing, but, in the language of parliament, by blinking the question, that he comes to a deliverance which is satisfying enough to his mind about the world at a distance, amid so much to satisfy him, in the visible and surrounding world with which he has presently to do. It makes all the difference, between the earnestness of our pre¬ paration to meet the creditor, who threatens instant diligence upon our person, and the creditor whose application for payment we can, by an act of the fancy, put off, and postpone to an indefinite distance away from us. And next time you see a thriving, prosperous, good-humoured man of the world evince his hatred of the doctrine of faith, and of all that is said about acceptance in Christ, and a right basis of justification before the eye of the Lawgiver XX —before you admit the soundness of bis notions about a safe and sufficient passport to eternity-— consider well whether eternity be at all a matter of concern with him—and whether it is not the entertainment of sense which gives him all his de¬ light, and the business of sense which gives him all his occupation. Now, conceive the two elements of eternity and time to be so revealed to his soul, as to stand in their just and naked proportion before him. Con¬ ceive, that the one is seen advancing in nearness and magnitude towards him, and the other as fast flitting into evanescence away. Conceive the scales so to fall from his eyes, that, through all the delusions which the god of this world spreads over the surface of what is present and visible, he beholds the impressive mockery which death stamps upon every enjoyment that is on this side of it ; and feels, that if he fall short of the enjoyment which is on the other side of it, he is undone. Let all this be only mixed up with a right sense of sin and of the Saviour—and not one moment will intervene, ere, under the curse and consciousness of the one,, he seeks for deliverance from the other. Let him thus be made to hear the footsteps of the last messenger—and he will feel all the urgency of a present claim and of a present creditor at his door ; and he will be driven to the necessity of a present settlement, and he will not be so easily set at rest about the footing upon which he stands. His search for securities, will be the search of a man in earnest; and a real practical earnestness is all that we require—assured, as we are, that the man who is truly seeking for a foundation, will not be satisfied XXI till he finds a solid one; and that out of the frail materials of human virtue no such foundation can be formed; and that an obedience, rendered with¬ out heart, and mixed up with all the infirmities both of forgetfulness and pollution, will never quiet the conscience of him who has at all been visited by a realizing sense of these things. Thus it is, that to consider our latter end is to tread on one of the likeliest pathways to the Saviour. Nor do we know a more effectual way of being prompted forward to that place of refuge—where we shall find a blood to wash away our guilt, and a righteousness that can never fail us. So that, could we only demon¬ strate with power, how short-lived the period, and how tottering the basis of all earthly enjoyments, we should not despair of soon finding the alarmed sinner within his secure resting-place, on that foun¬ dation which God hath laid in Zion. There is often, in the pencilled descriptions of the moralist, a kind of poetical and high-wrought imagery thrown around the chamber of death; and that, whether it be the terrors of guilt, or the tri¬ umphs of conscious virtue, which are conceived to mark this closing scene of our history in the world. It is well to know what the plain and experimental truth is, upon the subject. In the case of a worldly and alienated life, the remorse is not nearly so pun¬ gent, the apprehensions not nearly so vivid and ter¬ rifying, the impression of future and eternal realities not nearly so overpowering, as we are apt to fancy upon such an occasion. The truth is, that as it was throughout the whole of his living, so it is gen¬ erally in dying. He is still engrossed with present XXII and sensible things; and there is positively nothing in the mere approach of dissolution that can raise up the ascendency of faith, or render him less the slave of sight, and of the body, than he was before. There is the present pain, there is the present thirst, there is the present breathlessness; and if, amid the tumults of his earthly fabric giving way, and the last irregular movements of its deranged mechanism fast drawing to their cessation, he send for the minister to sooth him by his prayers, even he forms but one of the present varieties. There is no actual going forth of the patient’s mind towards the things which are above. The faith which he has so long shut out, does not now force its entrance into a bo¬ som, habituated to the reception of no other influ¬ ences, than what the world, and the things of the world, have so long exercised over him. We may see torpor upon such an occasion, and call it serenity. We may witness an uncomplaining silence, and call it resignation. We may never hear one note of alarm to drop from the lips of the dying sufferer; and therefore say that he met with Christian forti¬ tude his end. But all these may meet upon a death-bed; and yet, the positive confidence of looking forward to heaven as a home, a positive rejoicing in the hope of the glory of God, a believing, and a knowing, that 66 when the earthly house of this ta¬ bernacle is dissolved, they shall have a building of God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens,” may never enter his bosom. There may be the peacefulness of insensibility, even while the life of him who has been a stranger to the faith of the gospel is waning to its extinction—but a peace XXlll mixed up with the elevation of such prospects as these, is never felt, apart from the thought of Christ as (( the Lord our righteousness.” It is altogether a romance to talk of such anticipations of triumph, to him who looks back upon his own obedience, and then looks forward to his rightful and his challenged reward. If we want our dying hour to have the radiance of heaven’s gate thrown over it—if we want, amid the failure of expiring nature, to have some firm footing, on which we might strongly and securely rest; there" is positively none other, but that to which the consideration of our latter end should now be urging us forward—and, therefore, should we call upon ourselves ?iow to take up with Christ as our foundation, and to associate all our confidence in God, with the obedience which he has wrought, with the ransom which he has rendered. We cannot better enforce these solemn considera¬ tions on the minds of our readers, with the view of shutting them up to the faith that is in Christ, than by referring them to Shower’s “ Serious Reflec¬ tions on Time and Eternity,” and Sir Matthew Hale “ On the Consideration of our Latter End.” In Shower’s excellent Treatise, they will find the serious reflections of a mind, which, by the habit of solemn consideration, and the exercise of a vigorous faith, habitually felt the power and the reality of those important truths, respecting which mankind in general maintain an obstinate, and almost incura¬ ble heedlessness. There is scarcely any form of words, or any mode of computation, or any point of contrast, which he has not employed, to give the reader a vivid and substantive impression of the XXIV littleness of Time, and the greatness of Eternity. The truths on which he insists, are truths of the plainest and most elementary kind ; but thoroughly aware that the practical consideration of them con¬ stitutes the essence of true wisdom, he endeavours, by the most forcible arguments, and the most touch- ing appeals, and the most persuasive earnestness, to arrest mankind in their career of thoughtlessness and unconcern, and to turn their resolute and sus¬ tained attention to the consideration of their latter end, and so to number their days, that they may apply their hearts to that highest of all wisdom—a preparation for the coming eternity; and with the real and tender solicitude of men in earnest, lay to heart those things which pertain to their everlasting peace, ere time be hid from their eyes. The “ Consideration of our Latter End,” and the other kindred pieces of Sir Matthew Hale, are not only marked by the same solemn earnest¬ ness, but possess all that graphic power of thought, and depth of experimental feeling, which characterise the writings of this extraordinary man. We have already adverted, in a former Essay ,* to the charac¬ ter and writings of this great and good man, which precludes the necessity of our entering into any farther exposition of them. But we cannot help observing, that if Sir Matthew Hale, whose genius and learning rendered him one of the most distinguished ornaments of his age, and whose cha¬ racter and wisdom still associate him in England’s * Judge Hale on the Knowledge of Christ Crucified, and other Divine Contemplations, with an Introductory Essay, by the Rev. David Young. XXV best remembrances, with the noblest of her worthies, counted it a wisdom superior to all human learning, to consider his latter end—and if, amidst the nu¬ merous and important avocations of that high official station which he occupied, rendered still more ar¬ duous and difficult, by the anarchy and confusion of that revolutionary period in which he lived, this good man was not unmindful to address those mo¬ nitory lessons to his countrymen, which we now present anew, as salutary admonitions to the pre¬ sent generation,—then have we a testimony to the worth and surpassing excellence of this wisdom, above all the acquisitions of science and philosophy, which cannot be disregarded, without incurring the im¬ putation of folly. Science and human learning we hold in high estimation, and let them be dif¬ fused throughout every corner of our land ; but what we affirm is, that they do not meet the ne¬ cessities of man’s moral constitution. The man of science may be rich in all these acquisitions, and yet be destitute of that knowledge which forms a right preparation for the duties of time, or a sound pre¬ paration for the glories of eternity, while the humble peasant, whose mind has never been illumined with science, may be illustrious in wisdom of a far higher order, and, by turning the consideration of his latter end to its right and practical use, may have attained to that knowledge in which the Apostle determined alone to glory, “ the knowledge of Jesus Christ and him crucified.” It is the great design of such a consideration, to lead us to that gospel which is freely offered to all. But though the gospel be offered freely, it only be- B 43 XX VL comes ours by our receiving it freely; and seldom is it so received by him who, after being laid on the bed of his last sickness, has still a Saviour to seek, instead of a Saviour to enjoy. The evil heart of unbelief, which he has cherished through life, cleaves to him, and keeps its hold till the last hour of it; and, therefore, never does the mind entertain a de¬ lusion more ruinous, never is eternity placed on a more desperate stake, than by those who put away from them now the offers of salvation, and think that then they shall have it for the taking. It is the part, then, of all to look forthwith and earnestly to the Saviour—to contemplate him in his revealed offices—to make a real and intelligent work of clos¬ ing with him—-to receive him as their atonement— to'render allegiance to him as their Lord and their Proprietor—and submit themselves unto Him, that he might rule in them by his Spirit, and over them by his Law. Whether they be the unconverted, who have yet to lay hold of Christ, or the already converted, whose business it is to keep that hold— we know not how the consideration of their latter end can be turned more substantially to the purposes of wisdom and of true understanding, than by lead¬ ing them supremely to prize, and immediately to acquire, that knowledge of Jesus Christ our Lord, which is life everlasting. T. C. Edinburgh, November , 1828. CONTENTS. SHOWER’S REFLECTIONS. Page SECT. I. Of the changeable state and short duration of earthly tilings, especially of man; how little it is consi¬ dered and believed; how necessary it should be, . 37 SECT. II. Of the change in men’s inclinations, opinions, and actions, which one year shows; how observable it is in others; how much more discernible in ourselves. Ho¬ nour and reputation, &c. how uncertainly preserved and how easily blasted, . . . . . .41 SECT. III. Of the uncertainty of living to the period of another year. The vanity of this life; the swiftness of time; and how to be improved, .... 45 \ SECT. IV. Of the seeming difference between so many years past, and the same number of years to come, . 50 SECT. V. The little portion of our time on earth consi¬ dered, by a computation of the life of man, from the num¬ ber of years and hours,.51 SECT. VI. Of the redemption of time, how precious and valuable a treasure it is, and will be thought to be when it is too late, ........ 54 SECT. VII. Of the ordinances of heaven, day and night, summer and winter, seed time and harvest; their order and succession, established by God, are the effect of infi¬ nite wisdom and goodness. What they teach us, B 2 57 XXVU1 CONTENTS. Page SECT. VIII. Of evils to be expected in this year; the wisdom and mercy of God, in concealing from us the knowledge of future events, . . . . .61 SECT. IX. The supposition of dying this year should be improved: the consequence of redeeming time and pro¬ viding for eternity farther pressed. The folly of elder persons is condemned and checked from the example of children. It is advisable to familiarise the thoughts of death, and to imagine beforehand what apprehensions of things we shall then have, ..... 64 , - 1 * SECT. X. The brevity of life considered as the fruit of sin. There are but three ways of leaving this world, as Abel, Adam, or Enoch. A diligent improvement of time further pressed, and the neglect of it bewailed, . 68 SECT. XI. Of the expectation of another life. The vanity and misery of man in his best estate, if there be none. The satisfactory removal of that supposition, by the thoughts of God, and of eternal felicity, in his blessed presence, . . • • • . . . .71 % SECT. XII. The consideration of the death of others, especially of relations, friends, and acquaintance, how to be improved. What instructions we may learn by the sight of a dead carcase, or a death’s head, and the usual motto on it; and what, by the death of holy persons, to quicken our desires to be as they,.76 SECT. XIII. What influence the consideration of eternity would have upon our hearts and lives, if soundly believed and considered. Especially, if the supposition of dying this year be annexed to it, . . . . . . 81 SECT. XIV. How a good man may improve and encourage himself, under the supposition of dying this year, even in the most uneasy and undesirable circumstances, . 85 SECT. XV. Of dying in a foreign country, and of dying young. Considerations proper to reconcile the mind to both, ....... .. 00 CONTENTS. XXIX Page SECT. XVI. The contemplation of our approaching change may assist us to mortify the lusts of the flesh, the lusts of the eyes, and the pride of life; to cure ambition and pro¬ mote contentment, ....... 95 SECT. XVII. The same argument considered farther, as dissuasive from worldliness and earthly-mindedness; and as proper to confute the vanity of long projects and great designs for this world,.98 SECT. XVIII. The consideration of the certain near ap¬ proach of an everlasting state amplified, and pressed, to enforce a holy life, . . . . . . .101 SECT. XIX. The punishments of the damned considered as intolerable and everlasting, and as unquestionably cer¬ tain. What the reflections upon hell-torments may and ought to teach us, . . . . . 106 SECT. XX. The eternal blessedness of heaven considered, as the perfection of holiness, to quicken our desires and endeavours after greater meetness to possess it, . . 115 SECT. XXI. A devout Meditation upon Psalm lxxiii. 25. “ Whom have I in heaven but thee ? and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee.” . . .126 SECT. XXII. The glorious appearance of Christ, to judg¬ ment, considered as certain. The terror and astonishment, confusion and despair, of wicked Jews and Christians, to behold their Judge, and hear his condemning sentence to everlasting destruction,. SECT. XXIII. Meditations of the glory of Christ, in his glorified saints, and of the thankful admiration of believers, when he shall come again from heaven, which shall be con¬ tinued to all eternity, 140 XXX CONTENTS. Page SECT. XXIV. Concerning the examination of a man’s heart and life; the reasonableness, advantages, and neces¬ sity of it. Some directions and advice concerning the time and manner. That we may know in what prepared¬ ness we are for eternity, . . . . . 149 SECT. XXV. How Christians ought to examine their decays of grace and piety. The greatness of their sin, and of their loss, under such a declension: God’s displea¬ sure, and departure from them, considered, to awaken en¬ deavours of a recovery. In what manner the faith of ad¬ herence may be acted by one who hath no assurance, . 158 SECT. XXVI. Confession of sin, humiliation, and repent¬ ance, must follow upon self-examination. Advice con¬ cerning repentance of some particular backsliding. The great perplexity and distress of a penitent sinner repre¬ sented, as a caution against returning to folly, . 167 SECT. XXVII. The necessity of Christian resolution to upright, persevering obedience; how full and extensive it ought to be, and-yet humble; by what means we may be assisted to perform that which we resolve, . . .176 SECT. XXVIII. The import and obligation of our bap¬ tismal covenant. The renewal of it, by a solemn dedica¬ tion of ourselves to God, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, exemplified and recommended, . . . 183 SECT. XXIX. Practical and consolatory reflections on the preceding self-dedication or covenant with God, . 188 SECT. XXX. Thanksgiving to God for his innumerable benefits and mercies, particularly in the year past; with some direction and advice concerning it, . . 196 A SERMON, occasioned by the late Repentance and Funeral of a Young Man, ... . . . . 208 CONTENTS. XXXI HALE’S CONTEMPLATIONS. % Page On the Consideration of our Latter End, . . . 247 On the Redemption of Time, . ' . . . . 259 On Remembering our Creator in the Days of our Youth, 276 No Continuing City here. 285 Of Afflictions,.293 On Contentment, . 330 Jacob’s Vow, 354 . * ■ * . r . ' 1 1 ' * SERIOUS REFLECTIONS ON TIME AND ETERNITY. BV JOHN SHOWER. I — ✓ - - t *.. r r •i - L » „ ■ . •• •' V TO THE READER. Whatever is likely to awaken men to the con¬ sideration of the great acknowledged principles of re¬ ligion, cannot be unseasonable; and, when it is every man’s concern, the meanest and weakest endeavours may be of some use. The subjects of the following reflections are of that kind most necessary to be at¬ tended to by all sorts of persons; and so cannot be too often pressed, though in different manners. Some may possibly give this book a reading, as a new-year’s gift. And whoever shall be so far per¬ suaded by it, as to set apart some time, in the begin¬ ning of the year, for self-examination, confession of sin, repentance, thanksgiving, and solemn renewal of his covenant with God, (which several of these re¬ flections may not only excite to, but are intended to direct and assist him in,) I am persuaded he will thank me for putting him in mind, at least, of so seasonable an exercise. The greatest part of these meditations were begun on a new-year’s day, though some others are thought fit to be inserted, as tend¬ ing to promote the same. But, knowing how much easier it is to stir up other men’s devotion than to command and keep alive my own, it is desired that the most devout thoughts, contained in these papers, may be looked upon as what the Author aims at, and would persuade to, rather than what he hath already attained; as what he knows he ought to be, and do, and doth seriously endeavour, rather than what he is, ^nd hath been; heartily lamenting wherein he hath been faulty or defective in such duties, as these and the like reflections do oblige to, and en¬ force upon all who should read them, and therefore much more upon himself. They were penned at several times, and in occa¬ sional retirements for spiritual exercises; and, if I may hereby render any service to the souls of men, if any secure sinner, any self-deceiving hypo¬ crite, or backsliding Christian, be hereby awakened, or any serious Christian’s devotion be quickened and advanced, I hope God will accept it. To his bless¬ ing 1 humbly recommend it for those ends. J. SHOWER. REFLECTIONS ON TIME AND ETERNITY. SECTION I. Of the changeable state and short duration of earthly things , especially of man; how little it is con - sidered and believed; how necessary it should be . When I consider that yesterday was the conclusion of the last year, and that I am now entered on an¬ other, it is seasonable to reflect on the mutable con¬ dition and short duration of all things in this world, which are measured by time. That, as they have their beginning, so they have their end ; and that the distance or space of time between the one and the other is very little. Let me not then, O my soul ! rejoice and please myself too much in new en¬ joyments, remembering a change may be at hand, and the end is certain. Many, who were rich and flourishing the last year, may be reduced to poverty and deep distress 38 before the end of this ; who are now in a capacity to relieve others, within a few months, or a shorter space, may be objects of other men’s charity. “ The thing which hath been is that which may beand that which hath been seen in one year may happen in another: so easily, so quickly, may a change be made ! Riches may unexpectedly change their own¬ ers, and borrow wings of a thousand accidents, where¬ with to fly to heaven for a new disposal.