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tical remarks, pick up nothing but little stones and shells; others run in pursuit of sublime mysteries, giving themselves but very little trouble about the precepts and instructions that are clear and evident, and these plunge themselves into a pit that has no bottom. But the genuine disciples of this true wisdom are those, who make it their daily employment to purify their hearts by the water of these fountains, and reduce their whole lives to a conformity with this heavenly doctrine. They desire not to know these things, only that they may have the reputation of knowledge or to be distinguished in the world, but that their souls may be healed and their steps directed, so that they may be led through the paths of righteousness to the glorious felicity which is set before them.

The sum of all is, that our felicity lies solely and entirely in that blessed God who is also the fountain and source of our being; that the only means of our union with him is true religion; and this again consists in our entertaining just notions of God, worshiping him acceptably, and endeavouring after a constant and unwearied obedience to all his commands, according to that most pure and perfect rule laid down in those divine books which we profess to receive as such. Let us, therefore, have constantly fixed in our minds these words of the psalmist, Blessed are the undefiled in the way, that walk in the way of the Lord. Thou hast commanded us to keep thy precepts diligently. O that my ways were directed to keep thy statutes. Psal. cxix. 1. 4, 5.

LECTURE XXI.

Of the Divine Attributes.

Of all the maxims that are naturally written on the heart of man, there is none more certain or more universally known, than that God is; concerning which I have given a dissertation some time ago. But of all the secrets and hidden things of nature, which have been the subject of human study and inquiry, there is nothing by any means so difficult or unsearchable, as to know what he is. The saying of St. Augustine concerning time is well known in the schools: with how much greater truth might it be said

of him, who is more ancient than time, and who bade time flow from the beginning, that he hath made darkness his hiding place, and amidst that darkness dwells in light inaccessible; which, to our eyes, is certainly more dark than darkness itself! "O the Divine darkness!" says a great man; and another, most acutely, "If you divide or cut asunder this darkness, who will shine forth?" When, therefore, we are to speak of him, let us always call to remembrance the admonition which bids us speak with reverence and fear; for what can we say that is worthy of him, since man, when he speaks of God, is but a blind person describing light? Yet, blind as we are, there is one thing we may with great truth say of that glorious light, and let us frequently repeat it-Ŏ when will that blessed day shine forth, which shall deliver the souls from those thick integuments of flesh, that, like scales on the eye, obstruct its sight, and shall introduce it into a more full and open view of that primitive, eternal Light! Perhaps, the properest answer we could give to the question, what is God? would be to observe a most profound silence; or, if we should think proper to give any answer, it ought to be something next to this absolute silence; namely, God is; which gives us a higher and better idea of him, than any thing we can either express or conceive.

Theological writers mention three methods whereby men come to some kind of knowledge of God themselves, and communicate that knowledge to others-the way of negation, the way of causation, and the way of eminence. Yet the very terms that are used to express these ways, show what a faint knowledge of the invisible Being is to be attained by them; so that the two last may be justly reduced to the first, and all our knowledge of this kind called negative. For to pretend to give any explanation of the divine essence, as distinct from what we call his attributes, would be a refinement so absurd, that, under the appearance of more accurate knowledge, it would betray our ignorance the more. And so unaccountable would it be to attempt any such thing with regard to the unsearchable majesty of God, that possibly the most towering and exalted genius on earth ought frankly to acknowledge, that we know neither our own essence, nor that of any other creature, even the meanest and most

contemptible. Though in the schools they distinguish the divine attributes or excellencies, and that by no means improperly, into communicable and incommunicable, yet, we ought so to guard this distinction, as always to remember that those which are called communicable, when applied to God, are not only to be understood in a manner incommunicable and quite peculiar to himself, but also, that in him they are, in reality, infinitely different from those virtues, or rather, in a matter where the disparity of the 'subjects is so very great, those shadows of virtues, that go under the same name either in men or angels; for it is not only true, that all things in the infinite and eternal Being are infinite and eternal, but they are also, though in a manner quite inexpressible, himself. He is good without quality, great without quantity. He is good in such a sense as to be called, by the evangelist, the only good Being. He is also the only wise Being; the only wise God, saith the apostle. And the same apostle tells us, in another place, that he only hath immortality, that is, from his own nature, and not from the will or disposition of another. "If we are considered as joined to or united with God," says an ancient writer of great note, we have a being, we live, and in some sort are wise; but, if we are compared with God, we have no wisdom at all, nor do we live, or so much as have any existence." All other things were by him brought out of nothing, in consequence of a free act of his will, by means of his infinite power; so that they may be justly called mere contingencies, and he is the only necessary existent Being. Nay, he is the only really existent Being; Tò óvτws ov, or, as Plotinus expresses it, τὸ ὑπεροντως ὄν ; thus also the Septuagint speaks of him as the only existent Being, o wv. And so also does a heathen poet. This is likewise implied in the exalted name Jehovah, which expresses his being, and that he has it from himself; but what that being is, or wherein its essence, so to speak, consists, it does not say; nor, if it did, could we at all conceive it. Nay, so far is that name from discovering what his being is, that it plainly insinuates that his existence is hid and covered with a veil. I am who I am, or, I am what I am. As if he had said—I myself know what I am, but you neither know nor can know it; and if I should declare wherein my being consists, you

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could not conceive it. He has however manifested in his works, and in his word, what it is our interest to know, that he is the Lord God, merciful and gracious, abundant in goodness and truth.

We call him a most pure spirit, and mean to say, that he is of a nature entirely incorporeal; yet this word, in the Greek, Hebrew, and all other languages, according to its primitive and natural signification, conveys no other idea than that of a gentle gale or wind, which every one knows to be a body, though rarefied to a very great degree; so that, when we speak of that infinite Purity, all words fail us; and even when we think of it, all the refinements of the acutest understanding are quite at a stand, and become entirely useless.

It is, in every respect, as necessary to acknowledge his eternity, as his being; provided that, when we mention the term God, we mean by it the first Being, supposing that expression to include also his self-existence. This idea of a first and eternal Being is again inseparably connected with an infinite degree of all possible perfection, together with immutability and absolute perseverance therein.

In like manner, if we suppose God to be the first of all beings, we must unavoidably therefrom conclude his unity. As to the ineffable Trinity subsisting in this unity, a mystery discovered only by the sacred scriptures, especially in the New Testament where it is more clearly revealed than in the Old, let others boldly pry into it, if they please, while we receive it with an humble faith, and think it sufficient for us to admire and adore.

The other attributes that use to be mentioned on this subject, may be supposed to be perfectly comprehended under the following three, power, wisdom, and goodness: for holiness, justice, mercy, infinite bounty, may be, with great propriety, ranked under the general term of goodness.

But rather than insist upon metaphysical speculations, let us, while we walk daily in these pleasant fields, be constantly culling fresh and never fading flowers. When the psalmist cries out, Great is the Lord, and greatly to be praised, and of his greatness there is no end," he wanted to show," says Augustine," how great he is. But how

can this be done? Though he repeated great, great, the whole day, it would have been to little purpose, for he must have ended at last, because the day would have ended; but his greatness was before the beginning of days, and will reach beyond the end of time." The poet expresses himself admirably well; "I will praise thee, O blessed God, with my voice; I will praise thee, also with silence; for thou, O inexpressible Father, who canst never be known, understandest the silence of the mind, as well as any words or expressions."

LECTURE XXII.

How to regulate Life according to the Rules of
Religion.

I HAVE now, at different times, addressed myself to you. upon several subjects of great importance and of the utmost necessity; though what I have hitherto said was only designed as a preface or introduction to what I further proposed. But to attempt to prosecute this design at the very end of the year, would be quite improper and to little or no purpose. I shall, therefore, altogether forbear entering upon it, and, for this time, lay before you a little advice, which may be useful, not only in order to employ to greater advantage the months of vacation that are now at hand, but also the better to regulate your whole lives.

And my first advice shall be, to avoid too much sleep, which wastes the morning hours, that are most proper for study as well as for the exercises of religion, and stupifies and enervates the strength of body and mind. I remember that the famous abbot of Clairevaux, St. Bernard, when he found the friars sleeping immoderately, used to say, that " they slept like the secular clergy." And though we do not admit of the severe rules to which the monks subjected themselves, we must at least allow, that the measure and degree of sleep and other bodily refreshments, suitable for a young man devoted to study and devotion, is very far different from that excess in which the common sort of mankind indulge themselves.

Another advice, which is akin to and nearly connected

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