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Truth; for the Truth is not to be deferted that it may not be evil fpoken of, but it is to be practised without Offence.

In Matters effential to Religion there is no Room for Compliance; and in Matters of 'Chriftian Liberty there is hardly any Room for denying it: Where we are free, the greatest Deference is to be paid to the Opinions, nay, even to the Prejudices of others. This Diftinction is not of my own making; but we have the Exception and the Rule from the fame Hand; for the Apostle, in the Verfe after the Text, adds, For the Kingdom of God is not Meat and Drink. Take the whole of the Apostle's Admonition together, and you will eafily perceive the Meaning of these Words. The Dispute was about the Lawfulness of Meats: I know, fays the Apostle, and am perfuaded by the Lord Jefus, that there is nothing unclean of itfelf But if thy Brother be grieved with thy Meat, now walkeft thou not charitably: That is, I allow it is lawful for you to eat; if you eat with the Offence of your offend againft Charity. Let not then, fays he, your Good be evil spoken of; for the Kingdom of God is not Meat and Drink: This being the Cafe, forbear eating, when

but yet,

Brother, you

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eating will give Offence: For it is not neceffary to your Gospel Obedience, or to the establishing the Kingdom of God, that you fhould eat; for it is a Matter of Christian Liberty, and you may act which Way you please. From which it is plain, that, in Matters that are neceffary to the establishing the Kingdom of Heaven, we are not at the fame Liberty to pleafe and humour Men : For the Reason the Apostle gives in this Cafe, why it ought to be done, is, that the Kingdom of God confifted not in it; which is by Implication an Exception to the Rule, and amounts to faying, This Advice which I give you, of forbearing Things which are offenfive, extends only to Matters of Christian Liberty; for where the Kingdom of God is concerned, you must be content to follow Christ, and us his Apoftles, through good Report and evil Report.

DISCOURSE

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NUMBERS Xxiii. 10.

Let me die the Death of the Righteous, and let my laft End be like his.

HERE is fomething very affecting in these Words, and apt to engage us upon the first Hearing to become Parties to

the good Wish contained in them. Whatever our prefent Thoughts, Views, and Inclinations are, yet when our Eyes are called off from the Prospects of the World, and fixed upon the last Point of Life, and we ftand as it were beholding ourselves under the Arreft of Death, and just ready to expire, we want no Arguments to direct our Choice to what is beft for ourfelves. These Circumftances carry Convic

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tion with them; and how indifpofed foever we are to live the Life of the Righteous, we are willing to die his Death, and that our last End fhould be like his.

There is a Comparison implied in the Words of the Text, between the Cafe of the Wicked and the Cafe of the Righteous, which the Mind readily fupplies. The Comparison is ftated under fuch Circumftances as throw out all Prejudices and Partialities, and bring only the Merits of the Cause on both Sides into Judgment. You are called upon to behold the Wicked and the Righteous, both at the Point of Death, and to fay which Condition you would chufe for yourself: In this View, the Pleasures and Allurements of the World on one Side, the fuppofed Difficulties and Hardfhips on the other, are equally fet afide: Virtue and Vice are brought naked to the Bar, cloathed only in their own natural Features, without Colour or Difguife; and, being thus placed before you, your Judgment is defired. We have no Exceptions to take in Behalf of Virtue to any Judge: Let the mot Corrupt give Sentence, yet Corruption fhall not prevail; but Virtue fhall be justified out of the Sinner's Mouth, whilft he wishes

to

to die the Death of the Righteous, and that his laft End may be like his.

It may seem perhaps that we have but little Confidence in the Cause of Virtue under all other Circumftances and Conditions of Life, when we defer the Judgment to the laft Moments, and bring the Wicked and the Righteous to the very Doors of Death, before we venture to ask your Opinion upon their feveral Conditions: It may be thought unfair too, so to state the Cafe as to exclude all the Pleasures and Enjoyments on one Side, all the Difficulties and Difcouragements on the other, which are the very Confiderations that are known to weigh moft with the Generality of Mankind, and to leave nothing but the Profpect, whether certain or uncertain, of a future State, when every thing is removed out of the contrary Scale, which might ferve, as in Experience we find they do ferve at other Times, to balance against fuch Hopes and Fears: It may be said too, that it is no very great Commendation to Virtue, that Men fhould prefer the Hopes it offers to the Fears of Iniquity, when all Contest is over in other Refpects, and at a Time when nothing is left but mere Hope and Fear; for who would

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