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There, the friendship and the presence of Christ is every thing; no matter what your pains are, or whom you are called to part with, the presence of Christ will make death easy. Are you a friend of Christ? When you come to die, may you claim him as a friend, by reason of your friendship to him? To have him show himself to us while the shadows fall between us and time, and to have him whisper, Fear not, for I am with thee, is worth more than a life of sinful pleasure. Be a friend of Christ in your youth, in your prime, in your advanced years, in your declining age. Many a time he will make you feel that he is your Friend, and that promise shall be yours: "AND I WILL NOT BLOT OUT HIS NAME OUT OF THE BOOK OF LIFE, BUT I WILL CONFESS HIS NAME BEFORE MY FATHER, AND BEFORE HIS ANGELS."

SERMON III.

JOHN THE BAPTIST.

MATTHEW XI. 11.

VERILY I SAY UNTO YOU, AMONG THEM THAT ARE BORN OF WOMEN, THERE HATH

NOT RISEN A GREATER THAN JOHN THE BAPTIST; NOTWITHSTANDING, HE THAT IS LEAST IN THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN IS GREATER THAN HE.

WHAT a testimony was this for a man to receive from the Saviour of the world! He is the Judge of character, himself the perfect Man. They who love and serve him have this assurance, that he appreciates and loves every thing in them which is praiseworthy. There is no such honor and happiness as to have the approbation and commendation of Jesus Christ.

As we read this testimony of Christ respecting John, we naturally think of Abraham, and Moses, and Samuel, and David, and Solomon, and Elijah, and Isaiah, seven men who, in their respective classes of character and talent, have no equals in history. But of them, and of all others up to that time, the Saviour says there had not risen a greater than

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John the Baptist. Not merely was he the greatest of Prophets, as he certainly was, in being so long predicted and expected; in being the herald of Christ; and in his remarkable knowledge of the Saviour, as expressed in his testimony concerning him; but Christ prefers him to an equality with all who, ever lived. He might not, perhaps, write such lyrics as David, or utter such strains of finished eloquence as Isaiah, or possess the quick sagacity of Solomon ; but, taking him altogether, the Saviour says he had never had his superior among men. For, though another evangelist represents Christ as speaking of John as the greatest prophet, we must believe that there were intrinsic elements in his character which made him so, in addition to the outward circumstances of his mission. As a man, not merely as a prophet, no one had been greater than he.

With such brief notices of him as we find in the New Testament, we cannot fully analyze his character and determine in what respects, or for what reasons, in particular, he was equal to any mere man. But we know enough to see that he was truly great.

I. JOHN THE BAPTIST WAS MARKED BY THE GREAT STRENGTH OF HIS NATURAL FACULTIES, SHOWING ITSELF IN ENERGETIC, INTREPID WORDS AND CONDUCT.

It is said of him, "And the child grew, and waxed

strong in spirit, and was in the desert until his showing unto Israel."

It is interesting to notice, in the Scripture biographies, what part solitude had in the formation of character. Abraham goes forth from his home, and dwells in a strange land, a pilgrim and sojourner. Thus his faith grew by living alone with God, and he became the father of all them that believe. Jacob pursues a lonely journey on foot, and sleeps in the field all night; heaven is opened to him, and he vows a vow which, with the vision, decides his whole future life. Moses is a shepherd; he leads his flock to the back side of the desert, and there he comes to Horeb, and sees the burning bush, and, by his solitary meditations and communion with God, is prepared for his eventful work. Elijah was the son of the desert. David had great experience of caves, and dens, and holes in the rock. David's Son and David's Lord must be driven into the wilderness, and be with wild beasts before he can preach. Four, at least, of the first apostles were taken from the solitary and contemplative employment of fishers; and John the Baptist lived in the wilds of Judea, on the locust and the wild honey, covered only with the shaggy cloth of camel's hair, so different from any fabric known to us by that name, his waist girded by no belt from Tyre, or scarf from Persia, but with a leathern thong.

There, in those wilds, from the commencement of

his youth till near the age of thirty, his parents, who were well stricken in years before he was born, being, in all probability, dead, he lived apart from the busy paths of men, not, perhaps, as a hermit, for there were scattered dwellings in that wilderness. He was, however, conversant with the rough face of Nature, in her tangled thickets, dark, pathless woods, overhanging cliffs, swollen streams, diversified, all, with spring-tide beauty, and summer's glory, and autumn's melancholy, and winter's rage; his courage nurtured by darkness and storms, perhaps by conflicts with wild beasts, and by the solemn awe with which solitude and stillness sometimes oppress even the bravest spirit.

Three things, of great importance in his future work, were secured by this solitary life.

He was delivered from the superstitions and corrupting influence of the ecclesiastical rulers, and the sad degeneracy of the times.

He had the best opportunities for religious improvement. He was not idle in that desert; for he, no doubt, spent much time in communion with God -not, perhaps, with frequent enjoyment of visions and dreams, for they, in too great a proportion, would prevent the most vigorous growth of faith; but in fastings, and watchings, and prayers. This prepared him for his work of calling on men to repent. And once more,

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