Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- THE VALEDICTORY ADDRESS
- A CHARGE
- SERMON I PREACHING OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST
- SERMON II OFFICE OF CHRIST
- SERMON III CHARACTER OF CHRIST AND HIS RELIGION
- SERMON IV CHRIST PREACHING TO SINNERS
- SERMON V THE LAW AND THE GOSPEL
- SERMON VI THE CHRISTIAN'S FAITH AND FEAR
- SERMON VII THE CHRISTIAN'S TREATMENT ON EARTH
- SERMON VIII THE PHARISEE AND THE PUBLICAN
- SERMON IX THE GOOD SAMARITAN
- SERMON X LABOURERS IN THE VINEYARD
- SERMON XI THE CONVERSION OF THE HEATHEN
- SERMON XII THE OMNIPRESENCE OF GOD
- SERMON XIII SIN AND GRACE
- SERMON XIV ON THE LOVE OF GOD
- SERMON XV CHRISTMAS DAY
- SERMON XVI NEW YEAR'S DAY
- SERMON XVII EASTER DAY
- ADDRESS ON CONFIRMATION
SERMON XIII - SIN AND GRACE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- THE VALEDICTORY ADDRESS
- A CHARGE
- SERMON I PREACHING OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST
- SERMON II OFFICE OF CHRIST
- SERMON III CHARACTER OF CHRIST AND HIS RELIGION
- SERMON IV CHRIST PREACHING TO SINNERS
- SERMON V THE LAW AND THE GOSPEL
- SERMON VI THE CHRISTIAN'S FAITH AND FEAR
- SERMON VII THE CHRISTIAN'S TREATMENT ON EARTH
- SERMON VIII THE PHARISEE AND THE PUBLICAN
- SERMON IX THE GOOD SAMARITAN
- SERMON X LABOURERS IN THE VINEYARD
- SERMON XI THE CONVERSION OF THE HEATHEN
- SERMON XII THE OMNIPRESENCE OF GOD
- SERMON XIII SIN AND GRACE
- SERMON XIV ON THE LOVE OF GOD
- SERMON XV CHRISTMAS DAY
- SERMON XVI NEW YEAR'S DAY
- SERMON XVII EASTER DAY
- ADDRESS ON CONFIRMATION
Summary
Romans vii. 24, 25.
Oh wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death! I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord!
A very touching and natural complaint is expressed, and a very seasonable and efficacious consolation afforded in the former and latter parts of this passage of Scripture, which contains, indeed, in very few words, a comprehensive and forcible view of the necessities and the hopes of a Christian. The natural misery of man is expressed in the heaviness of that sorrow which, when abstracted from the consideration of redemption through Christ, made St. Paul declare himself most wretched; and the merciful deliverance of man is no less warmly and gratefully acknowledged in that noble burst of rapture wherein he magnifies the favour bestowed on him, and thanks his God for his escape, through his crucified Lord and Saviour, from the body of death.
Without these distinct yet blended feelings; without a sense, and a mournful sense, of the natural weakness and forlorn condition of mankind, and more particularly of his own condition; and without an earnest and thankful hope of God's help and mercy through His Son, it is hardly too much to say that no man can be a genuine Christian. If he is deficient in the former of these feelings; if, not acknowledging his own helplessness, he trusts in himself that he is strong, he cannot ask the aid of Christ, nor will that blessed and mighty aid be offered to him.
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- Sermons Preached in India , pp. 221 - 234Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011First published in: 1829