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singleness of heart; never to compass any design by insidious devices and false appearances; nor to betray my neighbour by not performing what I have promised. Let me never abuse men into a false opinion of themselves, by representing them better than they are. Let my tongue be the true interpreter of my mind, and my expressions the lively image of my thoughts and affections, and my outward actions exactly agreeable to my purposes and intentions; that so, when the secrets of all hearts shall be discovered at thy dreadful tribunal, I may not be confounded, O blessed Jesus, with the workers of iniquity, who will not be able there to hide themselves. Grant this, O Lord, for Jesus Christ's sake.

Amen.

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Q. What Festival does the church celebrate this day? A. That of St. Matthew the Apostle and Evangelist, who was also called Levi.

Q. What was his extraction?

A. Though a Roman officer, yet he was a Hebrew of the Hebrews; both his names discover him to be of Jewish original, and probably a Galilean.

Q. What was his trade, or way of life?

A. That of a publican or toll-gatherer to the Romans, an office of bad report among the Jews."

Q. How was the office of a publican esteemed among the Romans?

A. It was once accounted a place of power and credit, and of honourable reputation, not ordinarily conferred

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upon any but Roman knights; who being sent into the provinces to gather the taxes, employed under them the natives of the country, as persons best skilled in their own affairs.

Q. What made this office so odious to the Jews?

A. The covetousness and exaction of those that managed it; for having farmed the customs of the Romans, they griped the people, that they might be able to pay their rent, and raise profit to themselves; besides, this tribute was not only a grievance to their purses, but an affront to the freedom of their nation, a standing instance of their slavery. And their brother Jews exercising this office, still provoked them more, because it obliged them to converse frequently with the Gentiles, which they held unlawful, and thereby they seemed to conspire with the Romans, to entail perpetual slavery upon their own nation.

Q. How did the Jewish nation express their abhorrence of the publicans?

A. By counting it unlawful to do them any office of common kindness. Money received of them might not be put to the rest of a man's estate, it being presumed to be got by violence. They were not admitted as persons fit to give evidence in any cause. They were not only deprived of all communion in divine worship, but shunned in all affairs of civil society, it being esteemed infamous and unlawful to marry into the family of any such.

Q. In what did St. Matthew's office more particularly consist?

A. In gathering the customs of all merchandize that came by the sea of Galilee, and the tribute that passengers were to pay that went by water, for which purpose the office was kept by the sea-side. And here it

was that Matthew sat at the receipt of custom when our Saviour called him to be a disciple.

Q. Is it probable he had any knowledge of our Saviour before he was called?

A. Yes; living at Capernaum, the place of Christ's usual residence, where his miracles and sermons were frequent, he might, in some measure, be prepared to receive the impressions which our Saviour's call made upon him.

Q. What made St. Matthew's compliance with our Saviour's call so very valuable?

A. In that he exchanged rich and plentiful circumstances, and a gainful trade, for poverty and hardship: quitting whatever the world counts dear, and preferring the attendance upon the Son of Man, who had not where to lay his head, before all the advantages of interest and relations.

Q. Wherein appeared his great contempt of the world?

A. Not only in quitting a plentiful estate in order to become our Saviour's disciple, but in the great abstemiousness he exercised in the remaining part of his life; refusing to gratify himself with the ordinary conveniences, as well as with the pleasures of it; his common diet being nothing but herbs and roots, seeds and berries.

Q. How did he express his satisfaction in becoming our Saviour's disciple?

A. By entertaining our Saviour and his disciples at a great dinner at his own house, whither he invited all his friends, especially those of his own profession; piously hoping, that they also might be influenced by our Saviour's converse and company.

Mat. ix. 9.

Q. What may we learn from our Saviour's conversing so familiarly with the worst of men, which gave such offence to the Pharisees?

A. That the greatest sinners are objects of our pity rather than contempt; and that we ought not to grow faint in our endeavours for their conversion, as long as the wonderful patience of God bears with them. That our company is most suitable where the necessities of souls do require it. And that, in order to reclaim sinners, we ought to prefer acts of mercy and charity before all ritual observances, and the nice rules of persons conversing with another.

Q. Wherein appeared that humility for which St. Matthew was remarkable?

A. In that, when the other evangelists, describing the Apostles by pairs, constantly place him before St. Thomas, he modestly places himself after him. And when the rest of the evangelists record the honour of his Apostleship under the name of Matthew, but speak of his former sordid course of life under that of Levi, he himself sets it down with all its circumstances under his own proper and usual name."

Q. Though St. Matthew continued with the rest of the Apostles till after our Lord's ascension, what became of him?

A. For the first eight years he preached up and down Judea, endeavouring to convert his brethren the Jews to the faith of Christ. And when he betook himself to the propagating the gospel among the Gentiles, Ethiopia is generally assigned as the province of his Apostolical ministry; where, by preaching and working miracles, he mightily triumphed over error and idolatry; in which

Mark ii. 14. Luke v. 27.

country it is most probable he suffered martyrdom, but by what kind of death it is altogether uncertain.

Q. How was he qualified to write his gospel?

A. By being an eye-witness of the life and actions of our blessed Saviour, and by being free from those temptations which prevail upon men to impose upon others.

Q. When and upon what account did St. Matthew write his gospel?

A. While he was in Palestine, about eight years after the death of our Saviour, at the entreaty of the Jewish converts, and, as Epiphanius tells us, at the command of the Apostles. And being designed for the use of his countrymen, he wrote it in the Hebrew language, as is generally asserted by all antiquity. It was very quickly translated into Greek; some attributing it to St. John, others to St. James the Less; the Apostles approved the version, and the church has received it as authentic.

Q. What may we learn from the observation of this Festival?

A. That there is mercy for the worst of sinners, if they forsake their evil ways, and become obedient to that call, which their own consciences and the exhortations of God's ministers so frequently sound in their ears. That true repentance consists in such a change of the heart as produces such actions as are agreeable to God, and avoids such whereby we have formerly offended him. That poverty and want are cheerfully to be embraced when they lie in the way of our duty. That it may be sometimes advisable to punish our past extravagancies by forbearing the ordinary conveniencies and accommodations of life. That if we would enter into the true spirit of this Festival, we should imitate that humility and contempt of riches, which was so remarkable in this blessed Apostle. That we should keep our

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