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whereby to fill our barns with plenteousness, and our hearts with joyfulness. Showers of heavenly blessing, penetrating to the roots of our Christian knowledge and experience, would indeed render us, as a religious community, a blessing and a praise in the earth.

2ndly. The sacredness of the Christian ministry, and the solemn responsibility of those who admit candidates to holy orders in the church of Christ, can scarcely be overrated. Consider Aaron; he might not serve at the altar without an express call to the duty: look at the Greater than Aaron, the glorious Anti-type of all priesthood and of all holy ministration, Jesus Christ; he glorified not himself to be made an high-priest: and yet, alas! how many rush into the sacred office with no due credentials or befitting preparation of heart for its affecting and awful duties! Is this deemed an uncharitable insinuation? Oh would it could be uniformly disproved, and that too well-known fact did not corroborate the assumption! Character and conduct speak in language intelligible to the simplest capacity. What an anomaly is a gay clergyman! how incongruous are the hunt, the race, the midnight assembly, and the various pleasures of a frivolous worldly taste, with death-beds, sacramental ordinances, and the promulgation of a religion whose very elementary command it is, Love not the world, neither the things of the world; and whose solemn declaration reads, If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. 1 John ii. 15. Churches can only flourish but as their pastors become spiritually-minded and devoted men. It is not office which can sanctify the man: witness Nadab and Abihu under the Old Testament, and Judas under the New. The Holy Ghost must both

call and qualify the teacher, or the taught cannot be truly edified. High intellectual attainment and great respectability of rank or station in society, cannot alone suffice to constitute a faithful ambassador of Christ. Rightness of heart with God, is the grand preparative, nay, the indispensable requisite; and where the word of reconcilation is both experimentally and practically known unto the messenger, it will be no difficult matter, under grace, to conciliate and to win the hearts of those to whom he is commissioned. It is always sad and painful when the young children ask bread, and no man breaketh it unto them. Lam. iv. 4. It is a natural and legitimate consequence, when the day becomes dark over such unprofitable ministers, and the Lord intrusts his commission unto others. Mic. iii. 1-12. Orthodoxy of sentiment apart from inward feeling, is as the moonlight of a winter's night : it illuminates, but it does not comfort. Apostolical succession may be valuable in its place, but what can it avail to salvation unaccompanied by apostolical knowledge, zeal, and love? We fervently desire that ALL bishops, priests, and deacons in the church of our favoured land, may be abundantly illuminated with the true knowledge and understanding of God's holy Word, and that BOTH by their preaching and living they might set it forth, and show it accordingly. Preservation from insidious error on the one hand, and steadfastness in simple gospel-truth on the other, are grand desiderata in our day.

3rdly, and lastly. The real worshippers of God, who go forth unto him without the camp, bearing his reproach, and feeling that here they have no continuing city, should keep in continual memory that although now,

for a season, their High-Priest is invisible unto them, yet is He, nevertheless, carrying steadily and unweariedly forward the great work of his mediation, and that soon the little while of his personal absence will terminate in his manifestation with power and great glory. John xvi. 16-22. The children of the bride-chamber fast because the Bridegroom is away from them. His renewed presence will turn their mourning into joy, and their joy no one shall evermore take from them. Mark ii. 19. Occupy till I come, is his command, Luke xix. 13. There is no single individual of the family of God, but in the Divine appointment has a talent to improve, a something to do or endure for the Lord's sake. Let each one ascertain his peculiar gift or gifts, and be sedulous to render unto the great Master and Giver of them all, his own with usury. We know that he will come to reckon with us: ignorance, therefore, can never be pleaded in excuse for slothfulness. Let then patience have its perfect work: let faith repose with child-like confidence upon the holy Word, and aim to substantiate unto itself things not seen as yet: let love be always active in devising and attempting schemes of usefulness for the Redeemer's name, and in furtherance of his cause upon earth: and hope cling with most unyielding tenacity to the only Intercessor, until, as the true Aaron, he shall come forth to realize all the expectations which his Spirit and his grace inspire. Blessed, truly, are all they that wait for him! The hand of his great beneficence will bestow upon them the purchase of his blood. You shall have life for his death, honour for his shame, and a throne for his cross. Thine eyes shall see the King in his beauty; they shall behold the land that is very far off, or that is widely extended the inhabitant thereof shall be forgiven his

iniquity, and shall no more say, I am sick. There the glorious Lord will be unto us as a place of broad rivers and streams, wherein shall go no gally with oars, neither shall gallant ship pass thereby for the Lord is our Judge, the Lord is our Lawgiver, the Lord is our King: he will save us. Is. xxxiii. 17-24.

Spirit of Jesus, come!

Thy hallowing influence shed,
Where'er on earth I roam,

Anoint both heart and head.

Thy unction spiritual

Diffuse thro' all my powers;
Thy joys celestial

Spread o'er my saddest hours.

I want thee to subdue

The low earth-born desire;
To kindle in my soul anew
A pure and heavenly fire.

I want the Boook unroll'd
And every seal remov'd;
To dig these mines of gold

Till all be known and lov'd.

Wake! O thou north wind, come;
Ye gentler breezes, blow;
Breathe o'er my Garden-home,
And let its spices flow.

O make the Saviour's face
So manifest to me;
That in me all may trace

The Saviour's sanctity.

CHAPTER IX.

The Holy Garments.

SIX IN NUMBER: I. THE EPHOD: II. THE GIRDLE: III. THE BREASTPLATE: IV. THE ROBE: V. THE MITRE : AND, VI. THE BROIDERED COAT.

EXODUS XXviii. 2.

Thou shalt make holy garments for Aaron thy brother, for glory and for beauty.

Ir may be seen in Sir Isaac Newton's Observations upon the Prophecies of Daniel and the Apocalypse of St. John, how very much of the scenery and general character of the latter, is derived from the Levitical or ceremonial law. Indeed, it is asserted by this great man, that he who would most readily understand the prophetic writings of the Old Testament, should begin his inquiries by a careful study of the book of Revelation in the New Testament. Be this, however, as it may, it is certainly remarkable that this particular book should both commence and close with a promise of peculiar blessing to him that readeth, and they that hear the words of this prophecy, and keep the things which are written therein. -See chapters i. 3, and xxii. 7. Surprise or regret has been sometimes expressed that the Church of England

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