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<h2> CHAPTER 29 </h2>
<p>The equal dealings of providence demonstrated with regard to the happy and
the miserable here below. That from the nature of pleasure and pain, the
wretched must be repaid the balance of their sufferings in the life
hereafter</p>
<p>My friends, my children, and fellow sufferers, when I reflect on the
distribution of good and evil here below, I find that much has been given
man to enjoy, yet still more to suffer. Though we should examine the whole
world, we shall not find one man so happy as to have nothing left to wish
for; but we daily see thousands who by suicide shew us they have nothing
left to hope. In this life then it appears that we cannot be entirely
blest; but yet we may be completely miserable!</p>
<p>Why man should thus feel pain, why our wretchedness should be requisite in
the formation of universal felicity, why, when all other systems are made
perfect by the perfection of their subordinate parts, the great system
should require for its perfection, parts that are not only subordinate to
others, but imperfect in themselves? These are questions that never can be
explained, and might be useless if known. On this subject providence has
thought fit to elude our curiosity, satisfied with granting us motives to
consolation.</p>
<p>In this situation, man has called in the friendly assistance of
philosophy, and heaven seeing the incapacity of that to console him, has
given him the aid of religion. The consolations of philosophy are very
amusing, but often fallacious. It tells us that life is filled with
comforts, if we will but enjoy them; and on the other hand, that though we
unavoidably have miseries here, life is short, and they will soon be over.
Thus do these consolations destroy each other; for if life is a place of
comfort, its shortness must be misery, and if it be long, our griefs are
protracted. Thus philosophy is weak; but religion comforts in an higher
strain. Man is here, it tells us, fitting up his mind, and preparing it
for another abode. When the good man leaves the body and is all a glorious
mind, he will find he has been making himself a heaven of happiness here,
while the wretch that has been maimed and contaminated by his vices,
shrinks from his body with terror, and finds that he has anticipated the
vengeance of heaven. To religion then we must hold in every circumstance
of life for our truest comfort; for if already we are happy, it is a
pleasure to think that we can make that happiness unending, and if we are
miserable, it is very consoling to think that there is a place of rest.
Thus to the fortunate religion holds out a continuance of bliss, to the
wretched a change from pain.</p>
<p>But though religion is very kind to all men, it has promised peculiar
rewards to the unhappy; the sick, the naked, the houseless, the
heavy-laden, and the prisoner, have ever most frequent promises in our
sacred law. The author of our religion every where professes himself the
wretch's friend, and unlike the false ones of this world, bestows all his
caresses upon the forlorn. The unthinking have censured this as
partiality, as a preference without merit to deserve it. But they never
reflect that it is not in the power even of heaven itself to make the
offer of unceasing felicity as great a gift to the happy as to the
miserable. To the first eternity is but a single blessing, since at most
it but encreases what they already possess. To the latter it is a double
advantage; for it diminishes their pain here, and rewards them with
heavenly bliss hereafter.</p>
<p>But providence is in another respect kinder to the poor than the rich; for
as it thus makes the life after death more desirable, so it smooths the
passage there. The wretched have had a long familiarity with every face of
terror. The man of sorrow lays himself quietly down, without possessions
to regret, and but few ties to stop his departure: he feels only nature's
pang in the final separation, and this is no way greater than he has often
fainted under before; for after a certain degree of pain, every new breach
that death opens in the constitution, nature kindly covers with
insensibility.</p>
<p>Thus providence has given the wretched two advantages over the happy, in
this life, greater felicity in dying, and in heaven all that superiority
of pleasure which arises from contrasted enjoyment. And this superiority,
my friends, is no small advantage, and seems to be one of the pleasures of
the poor man in the parable; for though he was already in heaven, and felt
all the raptures it could give, yet it was mentioned as an addition to his
happiness, that he had once been wretched and now was comforted, that he
had known what it was to be miserable, and now felt what it was to be
happy.</p>
<p>Thus, my friends, you see religion does what philosophy could never do: it
shews the equal dealings of heaven to the happy and the unhappy, and
levels all human enjoyments to nearly the same standard. It gives to both
rich and poor the same happiness hereafter, and equal hopes to aspire
after it; but if the rich have the advantage of enjoying pleasure here,
the poor have the endless satisfaction of knowing what it was once to be
miserable, when crowned with endless felicity hereafter; and even though
this should be called a small advantage, yet being an eternal one, it must
make up by duration what the temporal happiness of the great may have
exceeded by intenseness.</p>
<p>These are therefore the consolations which the wretched have peculiar to
themselves, and in which they are above the rest of mankind; in other
respects they are below them. They who would know the miseries of the poor
must see life and endure it. To declaim on the temporal advantages they
enjoy, is only repeating what none either believe or practise. The men who
have the necessaries of living are not poor, and they who want them must
be miserable. Yes, my friends, we must be miserable. No vain efforts of a
refined imagination can sooth the wants of nature, can give elastic
sweetness to the dank vapour of a dungeon, or ease to the throbbings of a
broken heart. Let the philosopher from his couch of softness tell us that
we can resist all these. Alas! the effort by which we resist them is still
the greatest pain! Death is slight, and any man may sustain it; but
torments are dreadful, and these no man can endure.</p>
<p>To us then, my friends, the promises of happiness in heaven should be
peculiarly dear; for if our reward be in this life alone, we are then
indeed of all men the most miserable. When I look round these gloomy
walls, made to terrify, as well as to confine us; this light that only
serves to shew the horrors of the place, those shackles that tyranny has
imposed, or crime made necessary; when I survey these emaciated looks, and
hear those groans, O my friends, what a glorious exchange would heaven be
for these. To fly through regions unconfined as air, to bask in the
sunshine of eternal bliss, to carrol over endless hymns of praise, to have
no master to threaten or insult us, but the form of goodness himself for
ever in our eyes, when I think of these things, death becomes the
messenger of very glad tidings; when I think of these things, his sharpest
arrow becomes the staff of my support; when I think of these things, what
is there in life worth having; when I think of these things, what is there
that should not be spurned away: kings in their palaces should groan for
such advantages; but we, humbled as we are, should yearn for them.</p>
<p>And shall these things be ours? Ours they will certainly be if we but try
for them; and what is a comfort, we are shut out from many temptations
that would retard our pursuit. Only let us try for them, and they will
certainly be ours, and what is still a comfort, shortly too; for if we
look back on past life, it appears but a very short span, and whatever we
may think of the rest of life, it will yet be found of less duration; as
we grow older, the days seem to grow shorter, and our intimacy with time,
ever lessens the perception of his stay. Then let us take comfort now, for
we shall soon be at our journey's end; we shall soon lay down the heavy
burthen laid by heaven upon us, and though death, the only friend of the
wretched, for a little while mocks the weary traveller with the view, and
like his horizon, still flies before him; yet the time will certainly and
shortly come, when we shall cease from our toil; when the luxurious great
ones of the world shall no more tread us to the earth; when we shall think
with pleasure on our sufferings below; when we shall be surrounded with
all our friends, or such as deserved our friendship; when our bliss shall
be unutterable, and still, to crown all, unending.</p>
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