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Christianity? He has then in his own case a demonstration of the power from which the establishment of Christianity sprung. He perfectly well knows that to effect the conversion of one individual from carelessness, ignorance, prejudice and vice, to the love and obedience of the gospel, is a work beyond the power of man-a work which, in his own case, has been difficult, slow, surrounded with obstacles; and which requires, not only for its commencement, but its progress, the continual aids of the Holy Spirit. The conversion, then, of the world from heathen idolatry and licentiousness, or Jewish formality and pride, to the religion of Christ, could have proceeded from no other hand but that of God. As well might feeble man have attempted to dry up the ocean with his word, as the apostles to stop, by human wisdom, the inundation, and torrent, and ocean of vice and misery. The same power which created the world, could alone reform it. The same voice which said "to the deep, Be dry, and I will dry up thy rivers,” alone could say to "the wilderness and the solitary place, Be glad for them, and to the desert, Rejoice and blossom as the rose."

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LECTURE XI.

BENEFICIAL EFFECTS OF CHRISTIANITY.

1 TIMOTHY IV. 8.

Godliness is profitable unto all things, having promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to come.

We have reviewed the arguments for the truth of Christianity which are derived from the miracles performed, the prophecies accomplished and now accomplishing in the world, and from its rapid and extensive propagation.

These establish, beyond all reasonable question, the divine authority of our religion: and we might now pass on to the subject of the inspiration of the Scriptures.

But there is another external argument of great moment which I am desirous first to notice, that derived from THE MORE OBVIOUS EFFECTS WHICH CHRISTIANITY HAS PRODUCED AND IS PRODUCING UPON THE WELFARE OF MANKIND.

This is generally classed with the Internal Evidences. And undoubtedly most of the causes from whence it springs, and many of its details, are best reserved for that part of our course. Still I cannot but think that the beneficial effects of Christianity are so obvious to every candid observer, that we may properly arrange them with the external proofs. It is surely a powerful argument in favor of revelation, that it advances the solid happiness of man, that it has the "promise of the life that now is;" that, whilst its great object is to remedy the fallen state of our nature by the spiritual blessings of redemption, it uniformly dispenses also temporal benefits, and raises the condition, and promotes the present well-being of the human race. Christianity doth this in various ways— it implants those PRINCIPLES on which the welfare of individuals and states depends-it has BANISHED an immense mass of frightful evils from Christian countries-it has MITIGATED many other evils which are not entirely removed-and it has

CONFERRED and is conferring the most numerous and substantial positive benefits on mankind.

I. Christianity IMPLANTS THOSE PRINCIPLES upon which the welfare of individuals and states depends.

1. It begins in the proper province of religion, the silent course of private and domestic life. It makes good fathers and mothers of families, good children, honest men-servants and maid-servants, faithful tradesmen, quiet villagers, peaceful manufacturers and husbandmen. These are the materials of public prosperity. The welfare of states is only the consequence of individual happiness.

2. In the next place, Christianity arouses the powers of conscience and directs aright its determinations. It gives solemnity and sanctity to oaths-on which the security of persons and property, and, indeed, of society in all its relations, so much depends. Thus it lays the foundations and forms the sanction of human laws. Wherever it spreads, it sets up a judge and avenger within the breast, and governs man by the fear of an invisible tribunal.

3. Then it discourages and tends to eradicate the vices which most directly infest society-rapacity, violence, malice, revenge, profligacy, treachery; and establishes the contrary virtues of honesty, meekness, forgiveness of injuries, purity, fidelity and truth: and thus restores peace and harmony amongst men.

4. Further, it mitigates that insatiable ardor after worldly possessions and enjoyments, which is the spring of so many acts of injustice and oppression; by elevating man to a consideration of spiritual, intellectual, solid, pure, eternal blessings.

5. It implants especially the principle of enlarged, active, effectual benevolence, in opposition to that inordinate self-love which is the bane of every virtue, the enemy of all public spirit and love of country, and the gangrene of states. "On earth peace, good will towards men," is inscribed on the banners of the Christian faith.

6. It is, again, the spring of personal exertion and beneficial industry-it expels indolence and self-indulgence, and inspires an active and useful diligence, the employment of life to the most valuable purposes, and the occupying with our time and various talents as accountable stewards of the Great Householder.

7. Lastly: it elevates the whole character, enlarges and

improves the mind, raises man in the scale of being, brings him back to himself, to his fellow men, to his country, to all the ends for which he was created, to his God. It first teaches him to "to love the Lord with all his heart, and soul, and mind, and strength;" and then "to love his neighbor as himself."

II. By the operation of these principles, the Christian doctrine has BANISHED AN IMMENSE MASS OF FRIGHTFUL EVILS from Christian states.

1. Idolatry, with all its atrocious impurities and cruelties, was gradually expelled from the kingdoms of Europe, Asia and Africa, as our holy faith was propagated. Human sacrifices prevailed in the heathen world. Men "offered their sons and their daughters unto devils." The polished Greeks and Romans were infected with this horrid practice, as well as the ruder Scythians and Thracians. It reached from one end of the globe to the other. Our own ancestors offered their druidical victims; and on the discovery of South America, it was found that Montezuma immolated a prodigious number of human beings annually to the sun.* The light of truth scared away the monster from the Christian folds.

2. Again, the heathen were "full of murder," as the apostle to the Romans strongly expresses it. Scenes of blood made a part of the public diversions of the people. Miserable slaves were exposed to the fury of wild beasts for an amusement and recreation to the populace, and were engaged in mortal combat with each other upon a public stage. Such bloody sports are no more.

Women of condition would have no relish, as of old, for the sight. They would not be able to behold it with so much composure as to observe and admire the skill and agility of the champions, and interest themselves in the issue of the combat. The tender virgin would not rise from her seat in ecstasy as the victor put his dagger to the throat of the vanquished; and exclaim, "He is my delight;" and give him a sign with her thumb to lay open the breast of the prostrate wretch. Nor

* See Bishop Porteus's Beneficial Effects of Christianity; to which excellent summary of Ryan's larger work I am much indebted. Bishop Horsley's Sermon before the Philanthropic Society; Paley; Wilberforce's Practical View; Fuller's Gospel its own Witness; Harness's Happiness of Men; Sumner's Reception; the Monthly Lectures, 1827; and Dewar's Designs of Christianity, have also aided me.

would the audience applaud and shout when the blood of the dying man, gushing from the ghastly wound, flowed upon the stage.*

3. Further, Christian nations are not destitute, as the heathen, of "natural affection." "No man in a Christian country would avoid the burden of a family by the exposure of his infant children; no man would think of settling the point with his intended wife before marriage, that the females that she might bear should be all exposed, and the boys only reared."+

4. Once more; Christianity has cleared away the immense mass of misery and vice, arising from the heathen customs of divorce and polygamy. The most profligate of women now would not, as some of Rome did, count the years by the number of her husbands. The statutes of all Christian countries are framed in conformity with the rules of the gospel, and no cause of divorce is allowed but that which violates the fundamental law of the union.

By this one act, Christianity has more benefited mankind, than can be adequately conceived. All the social affections, all the purity and comfort of domestic life, all the duties of family morals and religion, all the right education of children, spring from the inviolability of the nuptial contract. Perhaps the superiority of Europe over Asia more depends on the abrogation of the practice of polygamy, and the recurrence to the original institution of marriage, than on any other cause.

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5. In fact, the Christian faith has put an end to the degradation and dishonor to which the whole female sex had been doomed by pagan nations. Woman is no longer accounted as a slave and beast of burden. The drudgery of the meanest and most servile occupations is no longer imposed on her feeble shoulders. The injustice, the cruelty, the ungenerous and harsh contempt of her by the other sex, is no more.

*Bishop Horsley, vol. 3. Sermon xl. before Phil. Soc.

Bishop Horsley, ut supra. The general neglect of human life is a striking characteristic of paganism. The value of human existence and happiness was reserved to be proved by that religion which teaches the immortality of the soul and the redemption of it by Christ. "The truth is, so very little value do these people (the Hindoos) set on their own lives, that we cannot wonder at their caring little for the life of another. The cases of suicide are double those of suttees; men, and still more women, throw themselves down wells or drink poison, for apparently the slightest reasons, generally out of some quarrel, and in order that their blood may lie at their enemy's door."-Bishop Heber's Journal, vol. i. p. 269.

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