Page рабо з SERMON CXXXII. The Tenth Commandment. Ambition.-Rom. xii. 16. SERMON CXXXIII. Man's Inability to obey the Law of God.-Rom. viii. 7. SERMON CXXXIV. Faith and Repentance necessary to restore us to Obe- 16 SERMON CXXXV. The Means of Grace. The Ordinary Means of Grace. Proofs that there are such Means.-1 Cor. iv. 15. SERMON CXXXVI. The Ordinary Means of Grace. What they are; and what is their Influence.-1 Cor. iv. 15. 49 - 60 75 86 SERMON CXXXVIII. The Ordinary Means of Grace. Hearing the Word SERMON CXXXIX. The Ordinary Means of Grace. The Nature, Seasons, and Obligations of Prayer.-1 Thess. v. 17. SERMON CXL. The Ordinary Means of Grace. The Usefulness of Prayer to Individuals.-1 Thess, v. 17. SERMON CXLI. The Ordinary Means of Grace. The Usefulness of Prayer SERMON CXLII. The Ordinary Means of Grace. The Usefulness of Prayer to Communities.-Psalm 1xxiii. 28. SERMON CXLII. The Ordinary Means of Grace. The Objections to SERMON CXLVII. The Ordinary Means of Grace. The Duty of Educating Children religiously. Objections.—Prov. xxii. 6. SERMON CXLVIII. The Ordinary Means of Grace. The Manner in which Religious Education is to be conducted. Motives to this Duty.-Prov. SERMON CXLIX. The Extraordinary Means of Grace. The Character of Ministers of the Gospel. Who are Ministers.-1 Pet. v. 1-3. SERMON CLI. The Extraordinary Means of Grace. Officers of the Church. Ministers of the Gospel. Who are Ministers.-1 Pet. v. 1-3. SERMON CLII. The Extraordinary Means of Grace. The End, Nature, and Subjects of Preaching.-Matth. xxviii. 19. SERMON CLIII. The Extraordinary Means of Grace. The Manner of SERMON CLIV. The Extraordinary Means of Grace. Various duties of SERMON CLV. The Extraordinary Means of Grace. Officers of the Church. Deacons.-Acts vi. 1-6. SERMON CLVI. The Extraordinary Means of Grace. The Ordinances of the Church. Baptism. Its Reality and Intention.-Matth. xxviii. 19. SERMON CLVII. The Extraordinary Means of Grace. The Objections against Infant Baptism answered.-Matth. xxviii. 19. SERMON CLVIII. The Extraordinary Means of Grace. Direct Arguments for Infant Baptism.-Matth. xxviii. 19. SERMON CLIX. The Extraordinary Means of Grace. No Infants but the SERMON CLX. The Extraordinary Means of Grace. The Lord's Supper; Its Nature and Design. The Qualifications of Communicants.-Mark SERMON CLXI. The Extraordinary Means of Grace. The Lord's Supper. Disposition with which it is to be attended; and Motives to the Attend- 273 286 · 298 312 324 338 SERMON CLXIV. The immediate Consequences of Death.-Eccl. xii. 7. SERMON CLXV. The Remoter Consequences of Death. The Resurrec- SERMON CLXVI. The Remoter Consequences of Death. The Final SERMON CLXVII. The Remoter Consequences of Death. The Punishment of the Wicked. Its duration.-Matth. xxv. 46. SERMON CLXVIII. The Remoter Consequences of Death. The Punish- ment of the Wicked. Its Nature.-2 Pet. ii. 12. SERMON CLXIX. The Remoter Consequences of Death. The Rewards of the Righteous. The New Creation.-2 Pet. iii. 13. SERMON CLXX. The Remoter Consequences of Death. The Happiness SERMON CXXXII. TENTH COMMANDMENT.-AMBITION. ROMANS xii. 16.—Mind not high things. THE subject of the preceding discourse, you may remember, was Avarice. In the present, I shall consider the other great exercise of a covetous spirit, viz. Ambition. Ambition is an affection of the mind, nearly related to Pride and Vanity. Vanity is the self-complacency, which we feel in the consciousness of being superior to others. Pride is the same selfcomplacency, united with a contempt for those, whom we consider as our inferiors. Ambition is the desire of obtaining, or increasing, this superiority. Vanity, usually makes men civil and complaisant. Pride, renders them rude, imperious, and overbearing. Vanity, chiefly subjects men to the imputation of weakness; and excites mingled emotions of pity and contempt. Pride, is often attended with a kind of repulsive dignity; is rather seen to be deserving of contempt, than realized as the object of it; sometimes awakens awe; and always creates hatred and loathing. Vain men are always ambitious; proud men generally; but they sometimes appear satisfied with their present envied superiority to all around them. Ambitious men are frequently vain, and sooner or later are always proud. Vanity rests chiefly on personal attributes. Pride, in addition to these, fastens on every thing, which is supposed to create distinction. This love of superiority is the most remarkable exercise of Covetousness; and, united with the discontentment and envy, by which it is regularly accompanied, appears to constitute the principal corruption of the human mind. It is impossible, without wonder, to observe the modes, in which mankind exercise it; and the objects, in which it finds its gratification. They are of every kind; and are found every where. We are proud and vain of whatever, in our own view, raises us above others; whether a gift of nature, an attainment of our own, or a mere accident. Our pride and vanity are excited by the possession of personal beauty, strength, or agility; by a lively imagination, clear judgment, and tenderness of feeling; by patrimonial wealth, and distinction of family; by the fact, that we live in the same neighbourhood, or even in the same country, with persons of eminence; that we know them; or even that we have seen them. No less commonly are we proud and vain of bodily feats, graceful motions, and becoming manners; of our gains; of our learning, inventions, sallies of wit, efforts of eloquence, and exploits of heroism; of the employments, to which we are devoted; of the taste, which we display in our dress, entertainments, manner of living, building, and planting; of our industry, prudence, generosity, and piety; of our supposed interest in the Favour of God; nay, even of our penitence, and humility. We are proud, also, of the town, in which we are born; of the Church, to which we are attached; of the country, in which we live; of the beauty of its surface, the fertility of its soil, and the salubrity of its climate. In a word, these emotions are excited by every thing, from which a roving, eager imagination, and a corrupt heart, can elicit the means of pcrsonal distinction. So far as these gratifications of pride are not in our possession, but are yet supposed to be attainable; or so far as they are supposed capable of being increased, when already possessed by us; they become objects of Ambition. We eagerly covet them, and labour strenuously to acquire them. In the humble circles of life, the first, and very frequently the last, aim of this desire of superiority is to rise above those, who are in the same humble station. To be the first in a village would, it is said, have been more acceptable to Cæsar himself, than to have been the second in Rome. Most men certainly raise their ambition no higher than this very limited superiority. Neither their views, nor their circumstances, permit them to grasp at more extensive and more elevated objects. Persons, who move in a larger sphere, are apt to look down with contempt and pity upon the lowly struggles for pre-eminence, which spring up in the cottage, and agitate the hamlet, without remembering, that they are just as rational, and just as satisfactory, while they are less distressing, and less guilty, than their own more splendid, and violent, efforts to obtain superior consequence. Minds of a more restless cast, of more expanded views, and more inordinate wishes, never stop, voluntarily, at such objects as these. The field of distinction is co-extended with the globe. The means, by which it may be acquired, are endless in their multitude, and their application; and the prize is always ready to crown the victor. It cannot be wondered at, that minds of such a cast should, therefore, enter the race, and struggle vigorously to gain the prize. I have remarked, that the means of distinction are endless in their multitude, and their application. The objects, from which it is immediately derived, are, however, comparatively few. These are chiefly wealth, splendour, learning, strength of mind, genius, eloquence, courage, place, and power. To these are to be added those remarkable actions, which excite the admiration and applause of mankind. |