arts.
"_Lo, God is here; Him day and night
Th' united quires of angels sing;
To Him, enthron'd above all height,
Heaven's hosts their noblest praises bring;
Disdain not, Lord, our meaner song,
Who praise Thee with a stammering tongue.
"Being of beings, may our praise
Thy courts with grateful fragrance fill;
Still may we stand before Thy face,
Still hear and do Thy sovereign will;
To Thee may all our thoughts arise,
Ceaseless, accepted sacrifice._"
J. WESLEY, from TERSTEEGEN
CHAPTER X.
_PREACHING_ (i.).
_Earthen vessels, frail and slight,
Yet the golden Lamp we bear;
Master, break us, that the light
So may fire the murky air;
Skill and wisdom none we claim,
Only seek to lift Thy Name._
I have on purpose reserved the subject of Preaching for our closing
pages. Preaching is, from many points of view, the goal and summing up
of all other parts and works of the Ministry. What we have said already
about the Clergyman's life and labour, in secret, in society, in the
parish; what we have said about his study and use of the Book of Common
Prayer; all, so far as it has been true, ought to contribute its
suggestions as we approach this great theme.
THE PULPIT THE CENTRAL POINT.
For, indeed, "the Pulpit" (I use the word in its widest application,
wide enough to cover the mission-room desk, or the preaching place in
the open air) is no mere isolated item in the midst of other matters
which call for a Clergyman's attention. If the man is working, and
ordering his work, aright, the Pulpit will not be a something which has
to be taken by the way, a link in a long chain in which committees,
clubs, and social gatherings, and the like, are other and co-ordinate
links. It will be a sacred central point, the living heart of the busy
life, to which everything will bear relation. To the Pulpit everything
will somehow converge, and from the Pulpit everything will be
influenced. As the Pastor moves about amongst his people, he will be
gathering incessantly, from all parochial places and seasons, material
which will tell upon his sermons; he will be getting to know his
people's minds and lives with an intimacy which will give his preaching
to them a point which otherwise it could not have. And when he stands in
the Pulpit, this continually accumulating knowledge will come out, not
indeed in the way of diluting or distorting his Gospel, but so as to
give its
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