bISCOURSES ON THE WORLD TO COME. DISCOURSE L THE END OF TIME. REV. s. 5, G. And the Angel, which I saw stand upon the Sea, and upon the Earth, lifted up his Hand to Heaven, and sware by him that liveth for ever and ever,That there should be Time no longer. THIS is the oath, and the solemn sentence ofa mighty angel, who came down from heaven, and, by the de- scription of him in the first verse, he seems to be the "angel of God's presence, in whom is the name of God," even our Lord Jesus Christ himself, who pronounced, and sware, that " time should be no longer ;" for all seasons and times are now put into his hand, together with the .book ofhis Father's decrees, Rev. v. 7. 9. What special age or period of time, in this world, the prophecy refers to, may not be so easy to determine ; but this is certain, that it may be happily applied to the period of every man's life; for whensoever the term of our continuance in this world is finished, our time, in the present circumstances and scenes that attend it, shall be no more. We shall be swept off the stage of this visible 'state into an unseen and eternal world Eternity' comes upon us at once, and all that we enjoy, all that we do, and all that we suffer in time, shall be no longer. Let us stand still here, and consider, in the first place, what awful and important thoughts are contained in this sentence, what solemn ideas should arise Co the view of mortal creatures, when it shall be pronounced concerning each of them, that time shall be no more. I. " The time of the recovery of our nature from its sinful and wretched state shall be no longer." We corne into this world fallen creatures, children of iniquity, and heirs of death; we have lost the image of God, who
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