HEAVENLY LIFE UPON EARTH. 223 ful companions to us, though these indeed are chiefly to be avoided : but too frequent society with persons merely civil and moral, whose conversation is empty and unedifying, may much divert our thoughts from heaven. Our backwardness is such, that we need the most cOnstant and powerful helps. A stone, or a clod, is as fit to rise and fly in the air, as our hearts are naturally to move toward heaven. You need not binder the rocks from flying up to the sky ; it is suffi- cient that you do not help them; and surely if our spirits have not great assistance, they may easily be kept from soaring upward, though they should never meet with the least impediment. O think of this in the choice of your company ! When your spirits are so disposed for heaven, that you need no help to lift them up, but, as flames, you always mounting, and carrying with you all that is in your way, then indeed you may be less careful of your company ; but till then, as you love the delights of a heavenly life, be careful herein. What will it advantage thee in a divine life, to hear how the market goes, or what the weather is, or is like to be, or what news is stirring ? This is the discourse of earth- ly men. What will it conduce to the raising thy heart God-ward, to hear that this is an able minister, or that an eminent Christian, or this an excellent sermon, or that an excellent book, or to hear some difficult, but unimportant controversy ? Yet this, for the most part, is the sweetest discourse thou art like to have from a formal, speculative, dead- hearted professor. Nay, if thou hadst newly been warming thy heart in the con- templation of the blessed joys above, would not this discourse benumb thy affections, and quickly freeze thy heart again ? I appeal to the judgment of any man that hath tried it, and maketh observations on the frame of his spirit. Men cannot well talk of one thing, and mind another, especially things of such different na- tures. You, young men, who are most liable to this temptation, think seriously of what ,I say; can you have your hearts in heaven, among your roaring com- panions in an alehouse or tavern ? or when you work in your shops with those, whose common Ian-
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