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and accurate exhibition of the mind of God. The illiterate man who reads it, with docility and faith, may obtain just as correct information of all that is requisite for salvation, as the most profound and critical scholar the world has ever seen. While we would most earnestly encourage every effort, on the part of all who have it in their power, to prosecute the study of the Scriptures. in their original tongues,-while we feel that the church has a right to expect this of those who are set for the defence of the gospel, we are very sure, that the result of all such investigations will be to heighten confidence in the present version, and fill the heart with unfeigned gratitude to God, for that blessed book which we now enjoy, and which, for more than two centuries, has been pouring its light and consolation, wherever the English tongue is spoken. Let science toil, and diligence labor in original investigation-for the Hebrew Scriptures are a mine of solid and inexhaustible gold, where giants may dig for ages-let literature hold up her torch, and cast all possible light upon the sacred text, but we must and ever shall deprecate any wanton attacks upon our received version-any gratuitous attempts to supersede it by a new and different translation. It is the Bible which our godly fathers have read, and over which they have wept and prayed. It is the GOOD OLD ENGLISH BIBLE, with which are associated all our earliest recollections of religion. As such let it go down unchanged to the latest posterity. We give it in charge to coming generations, and bid them welcome to all the blessings it has conveyed to us. It is our fervent prayer, that the light of the resurrection morning may shine on the very book which we now read:-that we may then behold again the familiar face of our own Bible, the very same which we read in our childhood.

So many interesting reflections crowd on the mind, in connection with our subject, that we find it difficult to select the few only, which we shall be able to present, on this occasion.

1. How great should be our gratitude, that we possess the Bible, in such an intelligible and accessible form. It is not hidden from us in an obscure and foreign tongue; but in "our own tongue, in which we were born, we read the wonderful works of God." We receive not the interpretation of this blessed book from the lips of interested and ungodly men-from hirelings, whose own the sheep are not; but we may, each for himself, come to the living fountain and partake of truth free from any earthly admixture. No more do we hear the cry, "profanation!—an envelope of purple!—a casket and a lock for the word of life!" Whosoever will may come and take of the water of life freely. None are debarred from owning and reading the word of God by legal proscription. No flaming sword hangs over the garden of the Lord. We may possess, and read, and study, and bind the Bible to our hearts, and openly avow it our treasure, and our guide. Neither are any debarred from the privilege of reading the Bible because of the scarcity of copies, and the immense price which they command. When the Scriptures were first introduced into our ancestral land, happy was the man, nay, happy was the religious community, that could say it possessed a small portion of the precious word. What wonders has the press achieved! What millions of copies has it sent forth! Our Bible societies have issued them, in numbers "like the dust of the summer threshing floor." Every one may obtain the Bible now, in any form, and at any price. And he that hath not, to him it is given. And it is worthy of remark, that, in this merchandise, the greater the supply, the greater is the demand. When Bible societies were first formed, it was urged, by some, as an objection to them, that they would interfere with the honest industry of those who were printing and vending the Scriptures on their own responsibility. The reverse has proved wonderfully true. Give away one Bible, and you may sell two. Dispose of a hundred, and you may sell a thousand. Give away a thousand, or tens of thousands, over all the

land, imparting to as many immmortal minds a taste of the pure river of life, and you create a demand which 'cannot be satisfied, short of "all the fulness of God."

2. The remarkable preservation and transmission of the Bible furnishes us with delightful evidence of its inherent and indestructible power. How ineffectual the efforts, which have been made to bury it in oblivion! Secret treachery and open violence have conspired to destroy it. The time has been, when to read it was death. Infidelity has fought against it. But it has lived. It has triumphed. The identical press which was employed by Voltaire, and the French Institute, to disseminate their attacks upon the Bible, has since been used in printing that very Bible they so vainly sought to destroy. Surely "the word of the Lord is tried." At first, like a little spark, it glimmered in the noon of night; many waters could not quench, nor floods drown it. It spread and brightened. The blast of violence but served to fan it to a larger flame, and the world is now illuminated by its celestial light. It shall never expire. It shall shine brighter and brighter unto the perfect day. All the facts in its his. tory, leaving out of account the question of its divine origin, go to show, that it possesses a principle of vitality-a victorious power of its own, by which it has overcome every opposition, and on which we ground the reasonable expec. tation of its final and universal triumph.

3. What obligations rest upon us to multiply and circulate copies of this holy book. Freely have we received, freely let us give. Regarding ourselves as almoners of the divine bounty, furnished with every facility and motive, how incessant should be our labor, to share with all our brethren of the human fam. ily, the precious bread of life. Much has already been accomplished. It is a cheering fact, that the Bible is already translated into the languages of nearly three fourths of all the inhabitants of the world. Past success should stimulate us to still greater efforts. Truly it is the work of God, and let it prosper. Let us never cease from its prosecution, so long as a single individual, in our own or other lands, is destitute of the Bible. Let no brazen gates, no iron walls deter us. The Bible was given by Almighty God to man, as man, wherever and whenever he exists. Robbery most woful is it, to appropriate to a few, what was meant for mankind; to debar any from its perusal; to keep a single soul in ignorance of those celestial truths, which are our only solace and joy. The Bible!-let it go forth as on the wings of the wind. We welcome men of every land, and hue, and rank, to its glorious revelations, free as the air they breathe-the source and element of spiritual life.

4. How surprising and cheering the results which have followed the English translation of the Bible. If it never had been made, how changed would be the present aspect of the world, how different its probable destiny. Suppose, for a moment, that the world were rolled back to that point in its history, when the Bible existed for us only in a foreign and hidden tongue. Let the millions of copies, which are now read, and have been read, wherever the English language is known, be recalled and consumed by the flames. Let the British and Foreign Bible Society, and its sister association in our own land, sink, like lead, in the mighty waters, and carry down in their curling vortex every Tract, and Sabbath School, and Missionary, and Education Society, that now exists on the face of the globe. Let us seek for the Bible and search in vain. Not only have you quenched the light, and liberty, and intelligence, which now exist in our prosperous and highly blessed land, but you strike out of the number of civilized nations the whole country which we inhabit. For we cannot forget the religious character of our origin. Our fathers were mostly brought hither by their high veneration and soul-felt love for the Bible. They journeyed by its light; they labored in its hope. Without its inspiration, never would they have crossed the wintry seas to seek here an asylum for liberty. The Bible was their star.

They sought to incorporate its principles with the elements of their society, and to diffuse its influence through all their institutions, civil, literary, and religious. But recall and annihilate the whole. Give back this smiling land to the wilder. ness from which it has been redeemed. Let loose again the untamed savage, and universal silence and gloom once more overspread this fair heritage of our fathers. We retrace our steps across the waters, but what a change! The spirit of liberty is gone; religion is gone; the Newtons, and Scotts, and Baxters; the men of science, and the men of prayer, the glory of the land are gone. No spires of churches pierce the skies to invoke the blessing of Heaven; here and there are to be seen the sheltered monastery, and the cowled priest; the press is shackled; Papacy has resumed her power; not one dares to peep, or murmur, to move the wing or open the mouth; all are given over to uniform ignorance and oppression, enslaved by that most cruel and most contemptible of all tyrants-religious superstition;-and that land, which, for ages, has been radiating intelligence and liberty over the world, goes back to its primeval darkness, or, becomes like Spain, in our day, unblessed with the Bible, stagnant as the Dead Sea whose sullen waters send no tributary to the ocean; and, as it is said, by some, that no bird ever wings its way through the poisonous vapors, which ascend from that accursed lake, so no faithful ministers of Christ are seen flying, with the messages of salvation, over that deserted land. The whole world lieth in wickedness again-"heaven mourns, and hell keeps jubilee because the daylight has passed, and darkness returned." Oh! what has the Bible already wrought for the world through its English translation! and what mightier results are yet to follow! This may not be the time or the place to discuss the interesting question, but there are not wanting many probabilities that the English tongue is destined to become as nearly universal, as it is practicable for any one lan. guage. Whether we take into account the vast numbers of those who already speak it, and who are now spreading themselves over the face of the whole earth, in pursuit of science or wealth,-the advances which they have already made in improvement-the vast territories under their jurisdiction, and the mighty impulse which bears them on, we cannot but think, that they possess incalculable advantages, not only for translating and distributing the Bible in other tongues, but for making their own tongue ultimately the medium of international intercourse, and our own version to be used by unborn and countless millions of the human family.

5. Our subject teaches us how highly we should prize the word of God; with what prompt obedience, and ready compliance, we should practice all its precepts. It is the precious gift of God. It has been transmitted to us at the price of toil, and tears and blood. It has been preserved for ages to be our guide and comfort. It is our only rule of living, reveals our only source of peace when dying. It sheds its light over all our dreary path in this world, and gathers its joyful hopes, like the setting sun, over the world to come. Millions have, in ages past, made trial of its precious truths. Many an eye has wept for joy over the very book which we now possess, and the cheek of sorrow here been lighted up with the smile of Christian hope. What shall we prize higher than the Bible?—without which this world were a wilderness, and the world to which we are hastening, an awful mystery. Let every passing day bear witness to your gratitude for this blessed book of God. Let the FAMILY BIBLE be a conspicuous object in your dwellings. Let it be the object with which the earliest and fondest associations of your children shall be connected, and to which with hallowed pleasure they will revert, in all the wanderings and dangers of subsequent life. The family Bible! How blessed the recollections which crowd into our minds at the men. tion of the name. It bore the record of our first existence. We remember now its very form and type;-the shelf on which it lay;-the morning and evening hour when it was read. It is associated with scenes of domestic peace,

of parental affection. Forget it! as well might we forget the thousand expressions of a mother's love-the father's voice which daily commended us to God in prayer; as well forget all which made our childhood's Christian home a blessing, and joy, and protection-and what is this but to say, that we might tear in sunder all the delicate threads, out of which that intricate web-workthe heart of man, is woven? Forever hallowed be the word of God. Let every fire-side witness its frequent perusal. Let parental wisdom, and youthful ardor together study its immortal truths. If you can bestow nothing else upon your children, give them the Bible. Give it to them with a parent's blessing, and a Christian's prayers. Tell them it is the word of God; beg them to read it when you are dead. Teach it to them, now, in the house, and by the way; when thou liest down, and when thou riseth up; so shall they call you blessed on earth, and in heaven.

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Finally, How great will be the guilt of those, who remain impenitent, under the full light of the Scriptures. To whom much is given, of the same much will be required. "To him, who knoweth to do good, and doeth it not, to him it is sin." The poor heathen may stand up in the judgment, and plead ignorance, for every man shall be judged according to what he hath, and not, according to what he hath not. To us light has come, and henceforth there can be no cloke for our sin. We know our Lord's will, and, if we do it not, we shall indeed be beaten with many stripes. Wo, wo, unto those, who repent not under the mighty works of God. Deep will be the ruin of those, who, being exalted unto heaven, fall thence into hell. It shall be more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of judgment, than for such. We may not trample, with impunity, upon the pearl of great price. We may not receive or reject the Bible at our option. Oh, no! Light neglected, augments guilt; salvation despised, will exasperate the accents of vengeance. Neglect your Bibles in this life, and they will hang like millstones about your neck, in the life to come. Better to live in Pagan darkness, and grope, trembling and afraid down to the grave, than, amid the effulgent light of the Bible, having eyes, to see not, and ears, to hear not, and an understanding, that will not perceive. Better to die unenlightened, starting, with instinctive horror, from the mystery of the sepulchre, than, in the hour of death, to be stung with remorse, for having despised reproof, and rejected all the counsel of the Lord. Better perish any where else, than in a land where Bibles meet the eye at every step, and are pouring upon the ear their accents of mercy. Oh! go not from the sanctuary, from the light of truth, the weeping expostulations of love,-the offers of forgiveness,-the promises of heaven, the intercessions of Christ,-the strivings of the Spirit,the full displays of God's everlasting love,-go not to the judgment, impenitent and unforgiven. A voice from these sacred pages-cries, "Why, why will you die?" While you have an ear to hear, it will not cease from its eloquent and divine appeals. Hearken and your soul shall live. Blessed be God, with this book in our hands, we may bid every despairing sinner come to his Redeemer. Come, poor, and blind, and naked, and weary, to this unfailing supply. The unchanging word is written on this changeless book, COME. As its glorious revelations were all about to close, its final, free, and unlimited invitation is, Come, "The Spirit and the bride say, Come: and let him that heareth say, Come: and let him that is athirst come: and whosoever will, let him take of the water of life freely." And enamored with the word, the ministers of Christ, go forth to repeat it in the ears of every child of Adam; and, believing in its infinite ful. ness and freeness, we would run forward to meet all coming generations, ere yet they have arrived on the shores of being, and bid them welcome to the pure light of the gospel-the hope of heaven-the splendors of everlasting truth.

FROM THE PRESIDENT OF YALE COLLEGE.

"Allow me to express my decided approbation of the object and plan of the National Preacher. It has opened a new channel for the religious influence of the press. It gives a durable form to a selection of able discourses; and probably gains for them a more attentive perusal, by distributing them, not in volumes, but in smaller portions, at regular intervals of time. The execution, so far as I have observed, is such as to satisfy the public expectation."

FROM THE REV. ASAHEL NETTLETON.

"I have read, as I have had opportunity, the Numbers of the National Preacher with great satisfaction. I regard it as a work peculiarly desirable to Clergymen, and, at the same time, as worthy of a place in every intelligent family."

FROM THE PRESIDENT AND PROFESSORS OF AMHERST COLLEGE.

"Mr. Dickinson has a clear and discriminating mind; and is himself at once an able writer and preacher. Having spent four years at the South and West, and become extensively acquainted with Ministers and Christians of different denominations; and having at the same time, an intimate knowledge of the religious state and wants of New-England; perhaps no man is better qualified to make a powerful and salutary impression on the public mind, by combining (and in a sense directing) the talents of our most eminent divines in his Monthly Preacher.

"Most sincerely do we wish him the co-operation of those whose name and influence may make the work a blessing to many thousands."

FROM PROFESSORS IN PRINCETON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY.

"The plan proposed by the Rev. Austin Dickinson, of publishing a Monthly Series of Sermons, from the pens of respectable ministers of different denominations of Christians in the United States, is one which, in our opinion, may be rendered highly interesting, and extensively useful. We do, therefore, willingly recommend the undertaking to the patronage of the Christian community."

FROM THE QUARTERLY CHRISTIAN SPECTATOR.

"We do not hesitate to say, that Mr. Dickinson has adopted one of the happiest expedients hitherto devised, for eliciting that 'diversity of gifts,' in the Christian ministry, which infinite wisdom and benevolence have bestowed for the edification of the body of Christ, and for bringing sinners to the foot of the cross."

FROM THE NEW-YORK OBSERVER.

"This periodical has, from its commencement in 1826, been regarded as a standard work; and, afforded as it is at the low price of one dollar a year, and sustained by some of the ablest writers of our country, we should expect it would continue to have an extensive and increasing circulation."

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