Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing (CMSW) - www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/ Document : 681 Title: A Sermon Preached on the Occasion of the Death of the Late Rev. Dr. Small, Of the Ministers of Stirling Author(s): MacFarlan, Reverend Patrick A SERMON, PREACHED ON OCCASION OF THE DEATH OF THE LATE REV. DR. SMALL, ONE OF THE MINISTERS OF STIRLING, ON 16th JANUARY, 1825. BY THE REV. PATRICK M‘FARLAN, MINISTER OF ST. JOHN'S, GLASGOW. GLASGOW: PRINTED FOR CHALMERS AND COLLINS; WILLIAM WHYTE & CO. AND WILLIAM OLIPHANT, EDINBURGH; R. M. TIMS, AND WM. CURRY, JUN. & CO. :DUBLIN; AND G. B. WHITTAKER, LONDON. 1825. Printed by W. Collins & Co. Glasgow. SERMON. ACTS VIII. 2. And devout men carried Stephen to his burial, and made great lamentation over him. WHEN the seven deacons were chosen to manage the common fund of the church at Jerusalem, it was not intended that men, eminently distinguished as they were for spiritual gifts and endowments, should be entirely withdrawn from the work of the ministry. All that was aimed at was, that the apostles should be relieved from the burden of secular business; and it was the earnest wish of the whole church, that in those times, when the active service of every well-- qualified individual was required for the diffusion of the Gospel, and the establishment of the kingdom of Christ, the seven deacons should, besides taking charge of the common fund belonging to the church, devote the remainder of their time and labour to the diffusion of Christianity. This they accordingly did ; all of them appealing to have devoted themselves, so far as their other avocations permitted, to the work of the ministry, or rather, to the duty of evangelists, announcing the glad tidings of salvation to an unbelieving world. Stephen seems to have been pre-eminent among the seven for spiritual endowments, and for success in promulgating the Gospel. He was "a man full of faith and of the Holy Ghost,"* he was "full of faith and power;"† words which evidently imply, not only that he was distinguished for the supernatural gifts which the Holy Ghost communicated to the primitive believers; but that he was spiritually enlightened; - that he had a deep and realizing persuasion of the transcendent importance of divine things, a firm faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, and an assured hope of the glory to be revealed. Thus endowed, he "did great wonders and miracles among the people,"‡ and was one of the means, in the hand of God, of multiplying the number of disciples in Jerusalem greatly. His success excited the hostility of the unbelieving Jews. " There arose certain of the synagogue, which is called the synagogue of the *Acts vi. 5. † Acts vi. 5. ‡ Acts vi. 5. Libertines, and Cyrenians, and Alexandrians, and of them of Cilicia and Asia, disputing with Stephen."* But they failed of attaining the object which they had in view: they were not "able to resist the wisdom and the spirit by which he spake." Instead of yielding to their convictions, however, they were filled with deadly enmity against him; and, like those who procured the crucifixion of our Saviour, they "set up false witnesses"† against Stephen, who accused him before the council, or Jewish Sanhedrim, of speaking blasphemous words against Moses, and against God, against the temple and the law. Stephen made his defence with the resistless wisdom and energy which he had already discovered; and, after a large induction of facts from the Old Testament history, for the purpose of proving the inclination of unbelieving men to refuse the word of God, and to oppose and persecute his faithful servants, he concluded with boldly and explicitly charging his accusers with these crimes: "Ye stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears, ye do always resist the Holy Ghost: as your fathers did, so do ye. Which of the prophets have not your fathers * Acts vi. 9. † Ver 13. persecuted? and they have slain them which showed before of the coming of the Just One; of whom ye have been now the betrayers and murderers: who have received the law by the disposition of angels, and have not kept it."* When the persecutors of Stephen heard these things, their indignation was still more strongly excited: "they were cut to the heart, and gnashed upon him with their teeth." He, on the other hand, aware of the danger which threatened him, "full of the Holy Ghost, looked up steadfastly into heaven, and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing on the right hand of God; and said, Behold, I see the heavens opened, and the Son of man standing on the right hand of God." The rage of his enemies was now at its height: "they cried out with a loud voice, and stopped their ears, and ran upon him with one accord, and cast him out of the city, and stoned him, calling upon God, and saying, Lord Jesus, receive my spirit. Lord, lay not this sin to their charge. And when he had said this, he fell asleep." It is added in the words of our text, "And devout men carried Stephen to his burial, and made great lamentation over him." * Acts vii. 51, 52, 33. Methinks all who were minutely acquainted with your much-loved pastor, lately deceased, must agree with me in opinion, that there is a striking resemblance between his character and that of the faithful servant of Christ, whose history we have briefly recited. Laying out of view all that was peculiar to the primitive believers — the inspiration of Stephen — his miraculous powers — the persecution with which he was assailed — the manner of his death, and, perhaps, the vision of celestial glory with which he was favoured on that occasion, there was a striking similarity in every particular. Like Stephen, our dear departed brother was, in the highest sense of the words, a partaker of the Holy Ghost; and, as he passed through the painful bodily and domestic afflictions which marked the last years of his life, we may say truly, he was "filled with the Spirit:" he was a man of prayer, and spiritual desires, and heavenly affections, and Christian love. Like Stephen, he was full of the faith which overcometh the world; the faith which, as the evidence of things not seen, and the substance of things hoped for, enabled him to look down, with comparative indifference, on all the objects of this world's ambition, and which, uniting him to Jesus, fitted him for the active discharge of every duty, and the humble, the patient endurance of every trial. Like him, he devoted himself with unremitting ardour to the work of the ministry — speaking, I may say with truth, with a wisdom and energy which none could successfully resist — a wisdom and energy, the fruits not merely of a vigorous and well-cultivated understanding, but of a mind deeply impressed with the truth and unspeakable importance of what he declared, and glowing with ardent zeal for the glory of his Master, and the best interests of his fellow-men. Like the first Christian martyr, he was undaunted in the discharge of ministerial duty, and eminently faithful in the application of the truth to the consciences of his hearers. Like him, he was arrested in the midst of his career of usefulness; and though, unlike him in the manner of his death, he looked without dismay on the king of terrors, and piercing by the eye of faith into the glorious realities of an unseen world, he exulted, like Stephen, in the prospect of heaven, with a joy. which was unspeakable and full of glory. Finally — he has been followed to the grave by the deep-felt lamentations of all who are able to appreciate his Christian worth and excellence, and the importance of his services to the church of Christ. When a pious and faithful minister is taken away in the vigour of life, there is a feeling of regret awakened in the mind of almost every individual. Some who forget that his best and highest happiness is beyond the grave, lament that he has been withdrawn so early from earthly enjoyments, and from the honours which he might have acquired in his professional studies and pursuits. Others, looking chiefly to his family relations, are grieved for the widow who has lost her stay, and the children who have been bereft of the guide of their youth: whilst a third class, admiring the talents or amiable disposition, the public spirit, and the active beneficence by which he was distinguished, mourn his early death as a severe and irreparable loss to the community with which he was connected. In the two last of these reasons of grief, the Christian cordially sympathizes; and he feels the more deeply for the loss which friends and the public have sustained, because he takes a spiritual view of the importance of a good man's life to his family and to the world. But there are causes of grief, on such an occasion as this, peculiar to a Christian mind. It is a remarkable fact, which is stated to us in our text, that "devout men carried Stephen to his burial, and made great lamentation over him," obviously because, in that persecuting period, none but truly pious men had such respect and love to Stephen, as to embolden them to pay to him the last offices of friendship, and publicly to bewail his death. Their reasons of grief were peculiar to themselves. As Christian men, men that feared God, they bewailed the early death of this Master in Israel, fully aware of the unspeakable loss which they themselves, and the church at large, had sustained: and so strong were their emotions, that at the very time when persecution was dispersing their brethren throughout the region of Judea and Samaria, they could not restrain their grief, but made great lamentation over their departed brother. Following the idea suggested by the words of our text, I shall abstain from attempting the pathetic description of scenes which shall never again be realized; and, instead of throwing away the present opportunity of usefulness in such vain and unprofitable effusions, I would act as if the eye of my departed friend were upon me — as if he looked down on his beloved flock, and on him who now addresses them, with the elevation and holy affection of a glorified spirit, longing for the spiritual improvement of his surviving brethren, and his much-loved and affectionate people: or, rather, as if I heard the voice of his divine Master and ours, warning his ministering servants by the event which has recently taken place, to preach the word — to feed the flock of Christ — to endeavour to convert some thoughtless sinner, or to edify and comfort the church of God. With these views, I propose, in what remains of this discourse, in the first place, To consider the reasons which real Christians have peculiar to themselves, for lamenting the death of pious and faithful ministers, adverting, as we proceed, to the consolations by which their grief ought to be assuaged ; and, in the second place, To consider some of the important lessons of a practical nature, which we are taught by the late mournful, event. We proceed, I. To consider the reasons which real Christians have, peculiar to themselves, for lamenting the death of pious and faithful ministers. In the first place — By every such event, they are deprived of the presence, conversation, and advice of a Christian brother. Christians are united together in the strongest and most indissoluble of all bonds, the faith of the Gospel—the bond of peace. They have one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is above all, and through all, and in them all. They have the same sentiments in religion — the same deep impression of its unspeakable importance — the same love to the Redeemer, and the same great ends in view — the advancement of the kingdom of Christ — the complete redemption of their own souls. Thus united in principle and conduct, the very presence of a Christian brother, the knowledge that he lives and walks with God in the world, is encouraging to his fellow-Christians. Each of them feels himself animated and strengthened by the consciousness that he is not alone, by the assurance that others taught by the same word, and enlightened by the divine Spirit, have embraced the consolations which he has experienced, and walk in the good way in which he humbly trusts he has found rest to his soul. How much more pleasing and profitable the conversation of Christian brethren, when, with their Master present with them, though invisible, their hearts burn within them while they talk together of the sufferings of Christ, and the glory into which he has entered on their behalf, when they confess their faults one to another, and entreat an interest in each other's prayers, and encourage one another to come with new earnestness, and firmer faith, to the throne of grace, for mercy to pardon, and grace to help, in the time of need! And if any such Christian brother be a minister of Christ, mighty in the Scriptures, and intimately acquainted with devices of Satan and the deceitfulness of his own heart, how instructive, and how profitable is his conversation, and the advice, and the consolation which he imparts to his Christian brethren! It is not to them only, however, that these are profitable for the advancement of the interests of religion. All men feel their influence in a greater or less degree. The piety of many a private Christian is concealed from the observation of the world: that of a Christian minister stands prominently to view: nor is there, perhaps, a more powerful or efficient instrument than this, for maintaining the tone of Christian morals, and preventing the ruin of a people. — It is this which, in conjunction with the sentiments which he is known to entertain, pervading unconsciously the minds of other men, prevents Christianity from being altogether despised, or violently opposed in the world, restrains the licentiousness of the ungodly, and compels men to respect religion; and though not to love, yet to profess their attachment to the Gospel of Jesus. And it is the holy example of a Christian minister, his separation from the world and its pursuits, his visible sincerity and deep concern in the business of his own salvation, and in the work of the Lord committed to him, which, through the blessing of Christ, give effect to his ministrations, and make them the means of saving the souls of his hearers: so that, whilst the dry orthodoxy of an ungodly minister falls pointless to the ground, or only serves to rivet the infidelity, and increase the profligacy and impiety of his hearers, the sincere and the godly servant of Christ, by "manifestation of the truth," in his example and his ministrations, commends himself "to every man's conscience in the sight of God." Christian ministers are in an eminent sense "the light of the world — the salt of the earth — a city set on a hill — a candle set on a candlestick," giving light to all that are in the house; men who so cause their light to shine before others, that they seeing their good works, glorify their Father who is in heaven. Who that has felt the influence of a pious minister's presence and conversation, in confirming his own faith and promoting the salvation of his own soul; or who that has understanding to perceive the influence of his godly example, in preserving the world from utter corruption, and in giving effect to his ministrations as the means of saving sinners, can fail to lament the death of such a minister, as one of the severest and most painful bereavements which the commupity with which he was connected can sustain? A pillar in the house of God has been removed — a light of the church of Christ and of the world has been extinguished. Though to some, may I not say to all his Christian brethren? he yet speaketh, and will ever speak to their delighted remembrance; by many his holy conversation and godliness will gradually be forgotten, — they will cease to exert even their former imperfect influence upon their minds; and ungodly men, continuing impenitent and unbelieving, will sink into perdition, unawakened and unsanctified by the remembrance of his faith, and piety, and holiness, We are not forbid to mourn, on occasions like these. If we did not mourn, we should discover a sinful insensibility to our own best interests, and to the present and eternal welfare of our fellow-men. But we ought not to sorrow, "even as others who have no hope." So far as our departed brethren are concerned, there is cause for unmingled joy and triumph. They have evinced, by the sane tity of their lives, and, perhaps, (for this is not always the privilege of dying believers,) by their exultation and hope in death, that they were united to Jesus, and are numbered with those whom God "will bring with him." They have been released from all their sorrows and imperfections on earth, and admitted into unmingled joy and unspotted holiness in heaven. They do not cease to glorify and serve God: they are only removed from being pillars in the house of God upon earth, to be pillars in his temple in heaven; from shining with a comparatively feeble, and sometimes obscured lustre on earth, to shine in all the brightness of celestial glory in heaven. And when the resurrection-day shall arrive, their once corruptible bodies shall be raised incorruptible, and "death shall be swallowed up of life." "Wherefore let us comfort one another with these words." In the second place — By the death of pious ministers, we are deprived of the benefit of their ministrations. The preaching of the word is the chief instrument which God. has been pleased to employ in every age for converting sinners, and for edifying the church of Christ; and it is evidently his will that an order of men should be set apart, who should give themselves "wholly to these things," to reading, to exhortation, to teaching, that their profiting may appear to all — who should beseech men to be reconciled to God, who should feed the flock of Christ, giving to "every man his portion of food in due season."' "Who is sufficient for these things?" After. the utmost study and preparation, how difficult is it even for truly pious and able men, rightly to divide the word of truth ! How difficult to discover the best way of bringing the truth to bear upon the consciences of their hearers, to awaken them from their slumbers, to drive them from their refuges of lies, and to lead them to Christ for wisdom, and righteousness, and strength! How difficult to administer consolation to all the varieties of spiritual distress which may be presented to our view, and to give suitable direction and advice to the tempted disciple of Jesus! How difficult to give instruction and support to the sick and the dying, without soothing the unbelieving with false hopes, or agitating and perplexing the souls of believers by withholding from them the consolations of the Gospel of Jesus! To perform these various duties with any measure of wisdom and success requires the experience of years, and, after all, they are far from being wisely or perfectly performed. But we can scarcely imagine a more evident token of the goodness of God to a parish or congregation, than when he permits a faithful minister to continue among them to a good old age, growing in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ; in a minute acquaintance with the truths of the Gospel, and the experience of their power in his own heart, and in the ability to explain, illustrate, and enforce them for the conversion and edification of his hearers; sanctified and made humble by the afflictions and temptations which he has endured; a witness to the faithfulness and mercy of the God of salvation, speaking to each individual from his own experience, and spending the vigour of his life, and the last remnant of his days, in testifying the Gospel of the grace of God. On the other hand, what cause has a Christian people for deep humiliation and sorrow, when a minister of zeal, and talents, and distinguished fidelity, is cut off in the commencement of his career! How much more, when one is taken away in the flower of his days, matured in spiritual understanding and knowledge, and eminently fitted to be useful in the church of Christ; purified and made spiritual by painful and long-- continued afflictions, and conciliating the respect even of the enemies of religion, and the cordial attachment of the people committed to his care! This is a dark and mysterious dispensation, not unfrequently realized in the history of providence: and it is rendered doubly afflictive by the fearful uncertainty whether, with the purest intentions on the part of those whose right it is to fill up the vacancy, it may be worthily supplied. The death of Stephen must have appeared an inexplicable mystery to the primitive believers. A man full of the Holy Ghost and of faith, pre-eminent among his fellow-labourers for ministerial gifts and endowments, and probably for success in the work of an evangelist, had been taken away. What a loss to the church! what hope could the believers cherish that it would be speedily repaired? It might be the will of God to raise up, and supernaturally to endow another individual, and to make him equal to Stephen, and perhaps superior to him. But they had no assurance of this, no gracious premonition that Saul of Tarsus, the chief persecutor of Stephen, should soon after be selected to supply his place, and to surpass him, at least in the success of his endeavours for the diffusion of the Gospel. The death of this holy martyr bore every mark of the divine displeasure, and awakened the primitive Christians to mourning, and lamentation, and sorrow. But the Lord reigneth, and he will accomplish all his pleasure. Every minister of Christ, whether, like Stephen, he be taken away in the beginning of his labours, or come down, like Paul, "as a shock of corn cometh, in his season," has gathered unto the Saviour all whom it is the will of God to gather by his means. It has been justly, though perhaps quaintly remarked, that till he has done this, he is immortal: and all the might of persecuting foes, or of wasting and enfeebling disease, shall assail him in vain. If he die in early life, his death, and the state of his mind in the prospect of eternity, may, by the divine blessing, make an impression on his flock, which his holy life and faithful ministrations have failed to produce; so that even in this world the mystery of providence may be in part unravelled, and we may have cause to exclaim, "Oh the depth of the riches, both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out!" We remark, in the last place, That Christians have an additional reason for lamenting the death of pious ministers, if they have been peculiarly skilful in defending and promoting the cause of Christianity. The Gospel has always had to contend with open or with secret enemies; with men who have denied its divine authority, or the truth of its distinguishing doctrines; or with men who, professing to be the friends of religion, have maintained opinions, and supported measures, tending to diminish the influence of Christianity, and to obstruct its progress. It is therefore of the last importance, that infidelity should be opposed by solid and convincing arguments, — that false doctrine should be ably refuted, and that the external form and institutions of a church, founded on the word of God, and well fitted for maintaining and promoting true religion, should be vigilantly guarded and preserved. "Now there are diversities of gifts," though it is the same spirit who works in the souls of all true believers: and many a one who preaches the Gospel of Christ, with no small measure of talent and success, has not the penetration nor the skill necessary for exposing the sophistical reasoning and inconclusive arguments of the ingenious infidel, or for setting in a clear and convincing light the evidences for the truth of Christianity, or for demonstrating the unscriptural nature, and dangerous tendency of false doctrine; or the information, the courage, and the self-possession necessary for withstanding the secret enemies of the Gospel, and for counteracting those measures which undermine the purity of faith and manners, as professed in the church of Christ. We have cause for gratitude and rejoicing, when the great Head of the Church raises up individuals, who add to their ministerial endowments the gifts and qualifications to which we have now referred; and in proportion to the rare occurrence of these, we have reason to lament when such zealous defenders of Christianity are taken away. Under the feeling of our destitution, we may exclaim with the Psalmist, "Help, Lord, for the godly man ceaseth: the faithful fail from among the children of men." The soldier of Jesus Christ, who fought the battles of the Lord against the enemies of the cross, the watchman who stood on the towers of Zion, and gave notice of the approach of the enemy, the champion who defended her bulwarks, or who, marching from her gates, carried his victorious arms into the camp of the enemy, has been cut off in the unsearchable providence of God, and, whilst we lament the loss which we have sustained, we ought to be strongly impressed with the admonition, "Cease ye from man, whose breath is in his nostrils; for wherein is he to be accounted of?" Having stated some of the reasons which real Christians have for lamenting the death of pious and faithful ministers, we proceed, II. To point out and illustrate a few of the practical lessons which we are taught by the late mournful event. It is not enough to grieve, and gradually to forget our sorrows; nay, it is not enough to grieve and to be comforted. There is no sorrow acceptable or allowed in the sight of God, which passes from our minds without leaving any good fruit, or, without earnest endeavours on our part, that it may produce the fruits of righteousness: and it is when the heart is softened by the death of friends, or of beloved and faithful pastors, that we are to seek to have those impressions made upon our minds which shall enable us afterwards to say, that it has been good for us that we have been afflicted. There is nothing of which we are more powerfully reminded, by the late mournful event, than our absolute dependence on God for our Christian privileges and endowments, and the duty of cultivating a feeling of dependence on Him for these things. When death has deprived us of one, whose apparent health and bodily vigour, but a few years ago, afforded what we call the fair prospect of a long continuance of life, no laboured argument is required to prove, that the life of our Christian brethren and pastors is entirely dependent on the providence of God. We are no less forcibly reminded, by the late mournful event, that God is sovereign in all his dispensations, and that it is his will to take from us our Christian friends and endeared pastors, when, in our estimation, it is of the utmost importance for his glory, and the good of his church, that they should be permitted to remain. There is no spiritual privilege or enjoyment, of the continuance of which, for any definite period, we can have any assurance. For reasons which we cannot comprehend, they may be taken away one after another, and we may be left desolate and forlorn, without a Christian friend to countenance and support us, and without an affectionate faithful pastor to feed our souls with the bread of life, and to guide us onward to the kingdom of heaven. It is far more easy to be convinced of the truth of these assertions, than to cultivate the feeling of dependence on God which they ought to awaken in our minds. We acknowledge that we are entirely dependent on Him; but the remembrance of our dependence makes neither a very deep nor a lasting impression. Yet it is obviously our duty to confess, that from Him cometh down every good and perfect gift — that we enjoy all our religious privileges and means of improvement, through his mercy and forbearance, and that when it seems good to Him they may be taken away — to confess our unspeakable obligations for divine mercies, for privileges enjoyed in time past, and to show the gratitude of our hearts for those which we are permitted to retain, by using them with unceasing diligence for his glory, and the eternal welfare of our souls. To the people of this parish and congregation, these admonitions ought to come home with peculiar force. Notwithstanding the painful bereavement which you have sustained, your opportunities of spiritual improvement are greater and more valuable, than, in the hearing of your surviving pastor, I am at liberty to express. Long may he be preserved, and continued among you, declaring with the earnestness, affection, and fidelity for which he is so conspicuous, and from his own deep-Mt experience, the truth as it is in Jesus. But taught by the late afflictive dispensation, that the ministers of Christ are "earthen vessels," see that you improve with increasing diligence the privileges which you now enjoy. Wait with constancy on the ministrations of the Gospel — receive with meekness and earnest desire the word of salvation — seek to be Christians indeed, and to make continual progress in your preparation for the kingdom of heaven: and let your fervent supplications be presented to Him who has the hearts of all men in his hand, and on whose good pleasure you entirely depend, that He would give you another pastor after his own heart, "who shall feed you with knowledge and understanding." "Remember them who have had the rule over you, who have spoken unto you the word of God, whose faith follow, considering the end of their conversation." The issue of a pious minister's conversation, so far as it respects himself, is the salvation of his own soul, the full enjoyment of eternal life and happiness in heaven: as it respects others, it is the eternal salvation of them that hear him. Do we mourn a deceased brother, a beloved and a faithful pastor, because we are deprived of the benefit of his holy example and impressive ministrations? Let us evince the sincerity, and the sacredness of our grief, by endeavouring to keep alive in our minds the impressions which his example and ministrations have produced — let us pray that his lamented death may add to the force of these impressions, and make them permanent in our hearts; and let us imitate his faith, that we may follow him also in receiving the end of our faith, even the salvation of our souls. In the last place, Awakened by the late mournful event to new and more active exertions, let us strive, every one of us, according to his opportunities, to promote the interests of religion in the world. When Stephen was put to death, his friends and fellow-labourers were not so stunned and paralyzed by the blow, as to renounce in despair the diffusion of the Gospel. No: they made great lamentation over him; but they appear to have felt his death, not as a discouragement, but rather as an excitement to continued, vigorous exertion. The apostles remained at Jerusalem preaching the word, and the rest of the disciples dispersed throughout the neighbouring provinces, went every where also preaching the word. A labourer, a distinguished labourer in the vineyard, had been taken away: the more eminent his endowments, the louder was the call to them to increase their exertions, that they might thereby supply his place. It is thus that we ought to feel and act on the present occasion. To us who commenced our course of ministerial labour at the same time with our departed brother, or a little before him,. his death speaks a lesson which we ought daily to remember. It calls us to redeem the time which we may have lost — to strive to win souls to Christ — to warn every man, and to exhort every man, "that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus" — to work the work of God while it is day, remembering that time is short, and that "the night cometh when no man can work," — to do whatsoever our hands find to do, with all our might, remembering, that "there is no work, nor device, nor wisdom, in the grave," whither we go. To all, the admonition ought to come home with power. The humblest believer, by his example, and conversation, and charity, and patience, and active exertions, has it in his power to glorify God, by promoting the interests of religion in the circle in which he moves; and some have far greater opportunities of usefulness than others. "Ye are bought with a price: therefore, glorify God in your bodies and spirits, which are his." Endeavour to feel your obligations, and to feel them habitually: and, instead of being discouraged by the death of faithful, and zealous, and able ministers, seek to promote the cause which they had so deeply at heart, trusting in the grace and blessing of Him, who can render the exertions of the feeblest of his servants the means of promoting his glory, and establishing the kingdom of Christ in the world. I cannot conclude, without again bearing my testimony to the Christian worth, and ministerial fidelity of your departed pastor; not in the spirit of vain and fulsome eulogy, which no man disapproved more strongly than lie, nor, I trust, greatly blinded by the partiality of friendship, but with all sincerity, grateful to God for what he was, and magnifying the grace of God in him. — He was naturally a man of a vigorous and ardent mind, which was cultivated by a liberal education, in which he devoted himself, with much success, to literary and scientific pursuits. In early life, he was brought under deep impressions of religion, and, though fitted for rising to eminence in more lucrative professions, he determined to give himself to the office of the ministry. As the intimate friend and companion of his youthful years, I can bear witness to the ardour with which he engaged in the study of the Scriptures, and in the acquisition of the knowledge connected with the profession which he had chosen : and the distinguished ability with which he illustrated the truths of the Gospel, when he became a preacher and a parish minister — the comprehensive view which he took of every subject which he handled, whether it belonged to Christian doctrine or to Christian morals — the judicious arrangement of his thoughts, his ingenious explanation of difficult passages, and his clear and luminous illustrations — with the solemnity, the fidelity, and the affection, with which he applied his instructions to the consciences of his hearers, constituted him, if not one of the most brilliant, certainly one of the most solid, and instructive, and useful preachers of our age and nation. Of his private ministrations, many of you are better able to judge than I can be. Yet I am confident that I draw no unreal picture, when I say, that perhaps no minister was ever more distinguished for condescension to the poor and the ignorant of his flock; for patience in instructing the weak, and admonishing and reproving the ungodly; and for assiduity, when health permitted him, in the discharge of all the duties of the pastoral office. Nor will I shrink from mentioning his conduct in church courts, though, on this particular, some now hearing me may differ with me in opinion. Of his masterly talents in these assemblies, there is, I believe, but one sentiment; of his honesty and integrity in the measures which he advised or supported, all men are equally persuaded. He held those views of the constitution and government of our Church, which many wise and good men deem the only sound and scriptural opinions on these subjects; he supported them with manly firmness, and uniform consistency, with an utter, abhorrence of all cunning and worldly policy, and with a candour and sincerity, which his most decided opponents cannot and will not refuse to acknowledge. To say of his dispositions and external deportment, that they were correct, were to give a very defective view of them. In the qualified sense in which the words must be used of every human being, "he walked in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless." His was a life of faith in the Son of God: he walked with God, he lived to God, and to Him who died for him. The ruling passions of his heart were subdued by the all-powerful influence of the grace of Christ. He was humble, deeply convinced of his imperfections, and ever ready to confess them. Though conscious of his intellectual superiority, and placing a sober confidence in his own talents and attainments, there was nothing in him haughty, or supercilious, or overbearing. He was wise and provident in his worldly arrangements: but I never knew a man more indifferent to the acquisition of wealth, and of worldly pre-eminence and distinction. He was almost entirely free from worldly ambition, and was willing to be engaged in the service of his Master wherever he might be pleased to cast his lot. He was a lover of all good men, and frank and sincere in his professions of attachment ; delighting to converse with those who feared the Lord, and deriving peculiar refreshment and pleasure from the conversation of the youthful disciples of the Saviour. He rejoiced in the success of the Gospel: he was a zealous promoter of religious and benevolent institutions, and was liberal of his money, both in public and private charity. He was plain, unaffected, and without ostentation: he was mild under the strongest provocations, and never harboured resentment against those who injured him. Of his virtues in private life, of his gentleness and affection, and the warmth and steadiness of his friendship, I dare not trust .myself to speak. They are well known to many. And what shall I say of his patience under domestic bereavements and long-continued bodily disease and infirmity — of the fixed, yet fearless eye with which he looked into an awful eternity, when he received, years before his death, the solemn warning of his approaching dissolution — of the tranquillity with which he often told us, that the time of his departure was not far distant — of the unwearied diligence of his preparation for the change which awaited him, and the progress which he evidently made in meetness for heaven — of the faith and joy of his soul, while contemplating his immediate dissolution, and of his triumphant entrance into the mansions of glory? That my deceased friend and brother was without imperfection, even in the last and purest days of his life, I dare not affirm. But how seldom can a minister of Christ, from the pulpit, the chair of truth, speak of one adorned with so many excellent qualities, and having so few blemishes or defects, confidently appealing to a numerous congregation for the truth of what he affirms? What abundant cause of gratitude to God, and of joy and consolation to ourselves! How strong the excitement which the remembrance of the grace of God in him ought to produce, to awake from slothfulness, and to be "followers of those who, through faith and patience, are now inheriting the promises," that we may "die the death of the righteous, and that our latter end may be like his!" APPENDIX. THE foregoing Sermon, preached in the East Church of Stirling, was written without any view to publication. It is printed as a memorial of a much-loved friend, and as a tribute of respect to his virtues, as a minister and a private Christian. The following sketch of his character, inserted in No. 237 of the Stirling Journal, includes a few particulars which were omitted in the concluding paragraphs of the Sermon, and is subjoined for the sake of those who wish to have a more full and extended view of his talents and acquirements. "THE LATE DR. SMALL." "The opinion of all classes in this town and neighbourhood, respecting the character and talents of this much-- lamented clergyman, has been so strongly and unanimously expressed in private conversation, that it seems almost superfluous for us to say one word upon the subject. Yet we think it due to the memory of that most excellent man, to bear a public testimony to his virtues and eminent endowments, and to record in the pages, (we are grieved to say the fleeting pages) of our Journal, what is the universal sentiment with regard to him. "His intellectual endowments were of a very superior order. He had an uncommonly quick apprehension, and clear conception of every subject to which he turned his thoughts, and grasped the ideas which were presented to him, with a remarkably vigorous and comprehensive mind. Ile separated all that was extrinsic of the subject, from the subject itself; and with a mind disciplined by the successful pursuit of the mathematical sciences, reasoned with the greatest distinctness and accuracy. His style was manly and vigorous, entirely free from false ornament, and never turgid nor declamatory. It conveyed the ideas which he meant to express, with a clearness and conciseness which could scarcely be surpassed, and which, even when he failed to convince, made a powerful impression on every mind. "He was not less distinguished by the qualities of his heart. He was naturally affectionate: and the sanctifying influence of the Gospel of Christ, which he had experienced from his early years, strengthened and purified his kind affections — subdued and controlled every feeling and principle inconsistent with them, and procured for him the fond attachment of all who had the happiness of his intimate acquaintance. He was gentle in his manners, ardent and steady in his friendship, and peculiarly tender in the intimate and endearing relations of life. He delighted in every opportunity of doing good; he took a lively interest in the distresses of others; and, by his consolation, encouragement, advice, and pecuniary assistance, endeavoured to relieve or alleviate them. "He was, in the highest sense of the word, a Christian, and a minister of the Gospel; and he never forgot the conduct becoming his profession. He was cheerful, and often playful in his conversation; but he had no levity: and when occasion required, checked with firmness and dignity every approach to profaneness in other men. He was cordially devoted to the duties of his office; his time and thoughts were consecrated to them. No secular pursuits — no officious meddling with political intrigue, tarnished the lustre of his priestly character — he was altogether a minister of Christ. And when, in his pulpit ministrations, he spoke with the solemnity and awful seriousness, which were the distinguishing characteristics of his manner of preaching, he was felt by his hearers, not as one acting a part in a public exhibition, but as carrying to the pulpit, and presenting to their consciences, the gravity and sincerity which he carried about with him, in all his intercourse with the members of his flock. "No man was more averse than he was to contention and strife. But the clearness of his conceptions, and the soundness of his judgment, fitted him in a peculiar manner for taking an active share in the proceedings of our ecclesiastical courts. He was conscious of this, and from a sense of duty, he did not decline the part which Providence seemed to have assigned to him. When any difference of opinion arose, he was pre-eminent for the distinctness of his statements — his knowledge of the constitution and laws of our church — his perfect self-possession — the readiness with which he discovered, and the good temper with which he exposed the false arguments of his opponents. He was particularly distinguished for his acquaintance with the forms of procedure in ecclesiastical matters. And, we are well informed, that in the church courts, of which he was a constituent member before his translation to Stirling, as well as in those with which he was connected at the time of his death, he won the respect, in some examples, the sincere attachment of those who did not coincide with him in sentiment, or who were decidedly opposed to him. "In every view which we can take of this truly respectable and good man, we heartily unite with our fellow-citizens, and the country at large, in lamenting his death, as an irreparable loss to his family, to his parish, and to the church of Christ; a loss, alleviated only by pleasing reflections on his holy life, and peaceful and happy, nay, we may say with perfect truth, triumphant death. And it is our earnest wish and prayer, that the patrons of the vacant charge, disposed, as we believe them to be, to make a wise and prudent choice, may be enabled to supply the vacancy which has occurred, with one similar in character, if not equal in talents, to him whose early death we so deeply deplore." — Stirling Journal. FINIS. Printed by W. Co'Rini & Co. Glasgow,