C|e Ceniple ma t|e C|r0ne; OK, THE TRUE FOUNDATIONS A SERMON, PREACHED IN THE NORTH BROAD STREET PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, September 26th, 1861, REV. E. E. ADAMS PHILADELPHIA: H. C. PECK & THEODORE BLISS, 113 N. THIRD ST. CHAS. S. LUTHER, PRESBYTERIAN HOUSE, 1334 CHESTNUT ST. 1861. yvw. F. youNO, tkivzzv., 52 north sixth strbet. Philadelphia, Sept. 27, 1861. Rev. E. E. Adams: Dear Sir : — The undersigned having, with much pleasure and profit, heard your sermon on our national fast day, and believing its publication will tend to promote a healthful public sentiment and pui'e patriotism, we respectfully ask a copy for publication. Respectfully yours, A. AVHILLDIN, JAMES C. SCOTT, GEO. SNOWDEN, WM. E. CAMP, HENRY DAVIS, H. J. DARLING. H. H. ELDRIDGE, THOMAS POTTER, WM. C. LOGAN, H. C. PECK, THOMAS CARSON, G. H. HAZLETON, W. H. ANDERSON, P. HERST, JOHN W. HEARS, JOHN SNYDER, Jr. Philadelphia, Oct. 14, 1861. Messrs. Alexander Whilldin, Wm. C. Logan, and others: Dear Sirs: — Against my own judgment this manuscript is yielded to your kind request. If I have any great support, next to the Divine pro- mise and favor, it is in the readiness of my people to encourage my poor labors for truth and godliness. Yours, affectionately, E. E. ADAMS. THE TEMPLE AND THE THROiNE. If the foundations be destroyed, what can the righteous do? — Psahu si o. This question was uttered in despair, but answered in hope. David had been chased like a hunted deer among the mountains of Judah. The bands of Saul pursued him to the cUffs, "which only the wild goats could scale." Some- times, for days together, he concealed himself and his few followers in a cave, sometimes in the humble dwellin2:s of friends, or in the court of a neighboring king. During the transition from one retreat to another — perhaps, at a period when he least feared his enemy, or was most exposed — his friends urged him to save his own life and theirs, by flight to the rocks and solitudes whicli had sheltered them before. They said to him — Flee as a bird to your mountain, for tJie wicked hend their how ; theij make ready their arroio upon the string, that they may pri- vily shoot at the upright in heart. If the foundations he de- stroyed, what can the righteous do ? There is nothing left to us but flight and concealment. The king is mad with envy, and ready to destroy us. Doeg has well nigh crushed the priesthood, and closed the doors of the temple. Prin- ciples, which ought to be the basis of all right rule and healthful legislation, are rejected. . The foundations of the kingdom are giving way. Let us fly while the hour lin- gers ; what else ca7i we do ? The reply is : In the Lord put I my trust. The Lord is in his holy temple. The Lord's throne is in heaven. His eyes hehold, his eyelids try the chil- [ 6 ] dren of men. The Lord trieth the riyhteous, but the wicked, and Mm that loveth violence, his said hafeth. In this answer of David — king already in the purpose of Heaven — we see the advantage of having a heart edu- cated to behold God in all things; a heart that will not be swung from its anchorage in the holy principles by which the Supreme Ruler governs men and nations. All the omens of evil, all the dreadful experiences which he had, in his relations to Saul and to the kingdom of Judah, only deepened his confidence in the permanency of truth, and his persuasion that all the schemes and violence by which himself and his followers were beset, would^ in the end, be utterly futile. The rage of the enemy was fierce, for a season ; but it fell like a harmless meteor, that dashes itself to ashes and darkness in the depth of the wilderness. Herein is a lesson for ourselves, for the righteous in our land, when the stability of our Government and our nationality is threatened — waves dashing on us as from a sea of wrath, and our sins threatening to sink us into the abyss. In the thoughts which we lay before you to-day we shall state — I. What we regard as the foundations of true national BEING. It is not possible so thoroughly to analyze the compo- nents of any nation as to point out to what extent a single element prevails therein ; impossible to say, in all cases, which predominates in the origia and history of a republic or a kingdom. This is an interesting inquiry. But time will not now permit us to pursue it. Some nations par- take largely, in their early formation, of the philosophy which prevailed at the period of their birth. This element gives tone to laws, to social relations, to institutions, to the genius of the people. [ ' ] Men and their political constitutions are, in most coun- tries, under the moulding influence of physical causes. Ex- tent of territory, climate, the nature of the soil, coasts, mineral wealth, harbors, rivers, remoteness from or prox- imity to other nations — these contribute largely to the form- ing of national character. Some nations derive their prevailing tone from the poli- tical and religious convictiorfs of their founders. Colonies are formed, and ultimately grow into independ- ent nations under the stimulus of commerce — as it was in the Euxine, in the age of Grecian supremacy, and with the Spaniards in America. Sometimes a commonwealth is the result of priestcraft, or kingcraft, impelling thoughtful Christian minds to accept of exile in a region where they shall be called to struggle only with the forces of nature in planting the germ and guarding the growth of a new nationality. In such instances antagonisms, by which the older countr}- becomes unconge- nial to them, will suggest an opposite sentiment and policy in the new. We believe that in our commonwealth most or all of these elements appeared at the outset. When our fathers took on them the work of forming this nation, they were actuated by broad views of libertj', by a large apprehension of the future. They endeavored to gather from the models of the past the best elements of each, to form an eclectic — a harmonious conservatism, but progressive republic. They had learned in Britain the worth and power of some prin- ciples, religious and governmental. They understood the value of education, of liberty, of commerce, and the arts of peace. They found everything liere, in physical causes, to stimulate industry, to enlarge the mind, and to promise a theatre of noble development. They aspired after self- government, and hoped to realize for ages to come, in the thrift and happiness of this broad land, more than Grecian [ 8 ] republics promised, more than the British constitution gave. Dreading the power of an aristocracy and the abuses of royalty, they thought only of a representative government for these United States. Having seen and felt the evil of a church establishment as it had existed in Europe, tend- ing as it did to persecution, encouraging distinctions inju- rious and unjust, becoming an instrument of political am- bition, and a theatre for the abtion and support of those of the gentry and nobility who were unequal to the demands of statesmanship, and too idle for the stern defences of the realm, they proclaimed liberty of religious belief and wor- ship, leaving the people to their own choice of forms and sects, and protecting them in their religious assemblies, as they would protect men in the exercise of any other consti- tutional privilege. Indeed, so far did their fears of priestcraft and of a state religion carry them, that, to the regret of thoughtful and godly men in these times, the name of God has not a place in our Constitution. We find, in the origin of nations, some influences ope- rating specially on the people, diffusing themselves through- out the commonwealth; while others are taken up silently, and without much further action, into the written forms, into the constitution which they adopt. We see the latter result in our own history. The virus of Atheism, which was imported hither previous to and during our revolution, did not break into prevalent disease among the people, but it did infect many leading minds of that day, operating, through them, to keep out of our magna diarta the recognition of God. And now, although irreligion is actu- ally less a characteristic among us than it is among other nations, it f