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discord around us, it comes in the full, deep harmony of heaven, declaring victory over pain, and sorrow, and death, and life and immortality to the whole race of mankind. Then,

"Who shall weep when the righteous die?
Who shall mourn when the good depart?
When the soul of the godly away shall fly,
Who shall lay the loss to heart?

He has gone into peace; he has laid him down
To sleep till the dawn of a brighter day;
And he shall wake on that holy morn,

When sorrow and sighing shall flee away."

SERMONS.

SERMON I.

True Dignity of Man.

"Show thyself a man."-1 Kings ii. 2.

THESE words were spoken under circumstances the most solemn and interesting in which man can ever be placed. They form a part of the last dying advice of a fond father to a tender and beloved son. We are informed, in the context, that "the days of king David drew nigh, that he should die." His career of regal splendor, of honor and glory, was about to close. He had been borne on by prosperity, and had contended with adversity. He had met with sunshine and storms. He had conquered with his sling and smooth stone, when in contest with the mighty Philistine, and had won the most splendid victories upon the field of battle. He had sat upon a throne of power, and had swayed the sceptre of a great and prosperous nation. But now his days were numbered, and the sun of his existence was about to go down,

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amid the darkness of death. His mantle was to fall upon his son. The kingdom was to be placed in the hands of Solomon. He was to rule over Israel and by him schemes were to be effected, and plans accomplished, which, for magnitude and importance, had never yet been thought of. And, knowing the weighty trust which was to be committed to his charge, and the responsibilities which would rest upon him, David could not but feel a deep and abiding interest in the welfare and success of his son. He therefore calls Solomon to his dying bed, and, with the fond affection of a father, commences thus: -"I go the way of all the earth; be thou strong, therefore, and show thyself a man. To be impressed with the deep importance of this command, we must picture to our imagination a scene like that which gave occasion for the utterance of the text. A venerable father is about to recline upon the pillow of death. The ties that have bound him to earth are about to be sundered forever. He has a beloved son, into whose hands he is to commit the mighty destinies of that powerful nation, over which he himself had been governor and king. He calls that son to his dying bed, and gives him his charge, as the last precious legacy of an affectionate father. "My son, I am about to die -I must soon bid farewell to all that I hold dear upon the shores of time. The fluctuating scenes of this mortal existence, I am about to leave for a world where change can never Soon these faltering limbs will be motion

come.

less, these eyes will be closed, and this voice silent; and soon will it be said, Thy father sleeps in death. To you, my son, I resign my trust — to you I commit the government of this people, and upon you duties will devolve, a faithful performance of which will reflect honor upon you, and confer blessings upon thousands. Be thou strong,

therefore, and show thyself a man."

These, then, are the circumstances under which our text was spoken; making it a part of the dying advice of an affectionate father. The inquiry now presents itself, What did David mean to be understood by the command, "Show thyself a man?" I may remark, as I pass along, that it is not always age that makes the man. You often find those in young life, who manifest more dignity of character

more stability of purpose, and more real worth, than many men of forty. You often see men advanced in life, surrounded with families, and making high pretensions, who manifest more fickleness of mind and of character, than the frolicsome youth of the school-room. They are self-conceited, and will talk about their independence of mind, when they are the veriest slaves of popularity. They have a peculiar faculty of talking when they have nothing to say - and of using large words and expressions. They are like a barrel, the less it has in it, the more noise it makes in letting it off. Such men, however old in years, they may be but "children of a larger growth." It is not always age, then, that makes the man, Were this the

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