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and had they received any friendly hint of what they were doing, they would have rejected it with disdain, and probably have put

the monitor to death.

The case is the same now. A considerable part of mankind are vehemently pursuing their own imaginations: and while they themselves are blind to the nature and consequences of their own actions, they are giving instruction to us: their darkness is our light; and I mean, with God's help, to use it as such upon the present occasion.

I am very sensible, that the attention of the public hath been nearly exhausted, and their curiosity satiated, with the many fearful accounts transmitted to us, and the pious and penitent reflections made upon them by good and learned men. But still, there is a certain view of the subject, so edifying, that we can scarcely dwell too much upon it. As politicians, we enquire how far government may suffer from dangerous innovations: as a commercial nation, we consider how trade may be affected: as a military people, we consult how war is to be carried on; with what resources; and what will be its probable issue. All this is very proper: but, as Christians, it is our duty to compare the signs of the time

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with what the Almighty Ruler of the world hath been pleased to open, concerning his own purposes, and the events to be expected as the world draws nearer to its end. I enter here upon no diffuse investigation; but mean to confine myself to one remarkable sign of the last days, which I think hath never yet received an adequate interpretation; not through the unskilfulness of interpreters; but, because it seems to be one of those mysterious predictions, which nothing but the event can enable us to understand: and which a succession of future events may still be opening to us farther than we can see at present.

It seems there was a persuasion very early in the Christian church, that the coming of Jesus Christ, to judge the world, was then near at hand. His judgment of the jewish nation had been foretold, in terms so applicable to his final judgment, that a mistake might thence arise, even among wise and pious Christians: of which St. Paul having heard, gives them proper information, in that remarkable passage of the second chapter of the second epistle to the Thessalonians; wherein he warns them of a very extraordinary fact, which would precede the final destruction of this world; and that the end of all

not

things was not to be expected, till this should have come to pass. The passage is this,Let no man deceive you by any means: for that day shall not come, except there come a falling away (an apostacy) first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition; who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped; so that he as God, sitteth in the temple of God, shewing himself that he is God. It may be proper, that the words, in which a prophecy is delivered, should have a certain degree of obscurity, that they may open too much before the time: and the same happens partly from the necessity of the case; because the thing which hath not as yet been known to the world, will be conceived with difficulty even from a plain description of it. This is applicable to the passage now before us; on which volumes have been written, with great uncertainty of interpretation; depending on facts, which however bad in their way, did certainly never come up to this description. But when the event brings its own interpretation with it, a child may see farther than the most learned could before and if the whole passage be taken in its obvious sense, and with all its circumstances, it will apply itself so directly to a case in hand,

VOL. VI.

hand, that little doubt can remain in the mind of any reader, who has no reason for shutting his eyes against the truth.

We observe, then, first, that a falling away should happen before the end of the world. The original calls it an apostacy; which term, in the mouth of a Christian apostle, can mean nothing but an apostacy from the Christian faith and worship. And this is more particularly said to consist in a revelation of a man of sin, the son of perdition. It is not necessary here to suppose, that this man of sin is only one individual person. In the tenth

Psalm, when we read of the man of the earth, we do not understand a single person but a character, a sort of ungodly people, whose whole confidence is in this world. In like manner, the man of sin may very properly denote a particular sort of sinful character, or even the race of mankind, when become sinful in the extreme, according to that state of depravity, which is described in the words. that follow. For, it seems, this man of sin opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped. Here the terms are less difficult in the original than in the English. All that is called God is literally every person, every man, who is called God:

and

and the word we translate worshipped expresses most properly that sort of worship, which is given to venerable or august persons, whatever the office may be that makes them such.

If we enquire who they are that are called God, it immediately occurs, that the expres sion cannot so properly denote God himself as the vicegerents of God; those who are called by his name. And who are they? The Scripture itself will answer us: I have said, ye are gods; which words are spoken of princes and rulers; as it is also said in the law (Exod. xxii. 28.) thou shalt not revile the gods, nor curse the ruler of thy people; where the latter clause is but explanatory of the former. The reason of this is plain; rulers are called God, because they act under him, and execute his laws by his own authority. The question therefore is partly answered: they that are called God are kings and rulers. Our blessed Saviour himself tells us who they are in the New TestamentHe called them gods, to whom the word of God came. John x. 35. The name of God, therefore, is plainly given to men, on account of their office and commission under the word of God, whether they be princes, prophets or priests; because they act in God's stead with respect to mankind. Our Saviour, therefore,

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