Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

Ser. III, ftance if we take in the future, and the whole; this being implied in the Notion of a good and perfect Administration of things. Thus they who have been fo wife in their Generation as to regard only their own fuppofed Intereft, at the Expence and to the Injury of others, fhall at last find, that he who has given up all the Advantages of the present World, rather than violate his Confcience and the Relations of Life, has infinitely better provided for himself, and fecured his own Intereft and Happiness.

SERMON

SERMON IV.
Upon the Government of the
Tongue.

JAMES i. 26.

If any Man among you feem to be religi ous, and bridleth not his Tongue, but deceiveth his own Heart, this Man's Religion is vain.

T

HE Translation of this Text would Ser. IV. be more determinate if it were ren

dered more literally thus: If any Man among you seemeth to be religious, not bridling his Tongue, but deceiving his own Heart, this Man's Religion is vain. This determines that the Words, but deceiveth his own Heart, are not put in Oppofition to feemeth to be religious, but to bridleth not his Tongue. The certain determinate

Ser. IV. terminate Meaning of the Text then being

that he who feemeth to be religious,and bridleth not his Tongue, but in that particular deceiveth his own Heart, this Man's Religion is vain; we may obferve fomewhat very forcible and expreffive in thefe Words of St. James: As if the Apoftle had faid, No Man furely can make any Pretences to Religion, who does not at least believe that he bridleth his Tongue; if he puts on any Appearance or Face of Religion, and yet does not govern his Tongue, he must furely deceive himself in that particular, and think he does: And whoever is fo unhappy as to deceive himself in this, to imagine he keeps that unruly Faculty in due Subjection, when indeed he does not, whatever the other Part of his Life be, his Religion is vain; the Government of the Tongue being a moft material Restraint which Virtue lays us under, without which no Man can be truly religious.

In treating upon this Subject, I will confider,

First, What is the general Vice or Fault here referred to; or what Difpofition in Men is fuppofed in Moral Reflections and Precepts concerning bridling the Tongue.

Secondly,

Secondly, When it may be faid of any Ser. IV. one, that he has a due Government over himself in this respect.

I. Now the Fault referred to, and the Difpofition fuppofed, in Precepts and Reflections concerning the Government of the Tongue, is not Evil-fpeaking from Malice, nor Lying or bearing falfe Witness from indirect selfish Designs. The Disposition to thefe and the actual Vices themselves, all come under other Subjects.The Tongue may be employed about and made to serve all the Purposes of Vice, in tempting and deceiving, in Perjury and Injuftice. But the Thing here fuppofed and referred to, is Talkativenefs; a Difpofition to be talking, abstracted from the Confideration of what is to be faid, with very little or no Regard to, or Thought of doing, either Good or Harm, And let not any imagine this to be a flight Matter,and that it deserves not to have so great Weight laid upon it, till he has confidered what Evil is implied in it, and the bad Effects which follow from it. It is perhaps true, that they who are addicted to this Folly would choose to confine themselves to Trifles and indifferent Subjects, and fo intend only to be guilty of being imper

tinent:

Ser. IV.tinent: But as they cannot go on for ever

talking of Nothing, as common Matters
will not afford a fufficient Fund for perpe-
tual continued Difcourfe; when Subjects of
this Kind are exhaufted, they will go on to
Defamation, Scandal, divulging of Secrets,
their own Secrets as well as thofe of others,
any thing rather than be filent. They are
plainly hurried on in the Heat of their Talk
to fay quite different Things from what they
first intended, and which they afterwards
wifh unfaid; or improper things, which
they had no other End in saying but only
to afford Employment to their Tongue.
And if thefe People expect to be heard and
regarded, for there are fome content meer-
ly with talking, they will invent to engage
your Attention; and when they have heard
the leaft imperfect Hint of an Affair, they
will out of their own Head add the Cir-
cumstances of Time and Place, and other
Matters to make out their Story, and give
the Appearance of Probability to it: Not
that they have any Concern about being
believed, otherwise than as a Means of be-
ing heard.
The thing is to engage your
Attention, to take you up wholly for the
prefent Time; what Reflections will be made
afterwards

« AnteriorContinuar »