Watts - Houston-Packer Collection BX5207.W3 S4x 1805 v.2

DISC. III.I SURI'RIZE IN DEATH: .177 deed. Sermons would not do it; the voice of the preacher was not loud enough ; strokes ofaffliction; and smarting providences, would not do it; perhaps the soul might be roused a little, but dropped into profound sleep again : Sudden or surprizing deaths near them, and even the pains of nature in their own flesh, their own sicknesses and diseases, did not awaken them, nor the voice of the Lord in them all : But the parting- stroke, that divides' the soul and body, will terribly awaken the soul from the vain delusion, and all its fancied delights for ever vanish. When they are " visited by theLord of hosts with this thunder, and earthquake," as the prophet Isaiah speaks ; Is. xxix. S. when this storm and tempest of death shall shake the sinner out of his airy visions, " he shall he as a hungry man that dreameth he was eating, but awakes, and his soul is empty; or as a thirsty creature dreaming that he drinks, but he awaketh, and behold he is faint," and his soul is pained with raging appetite: The sinner finds, to his own torment, how wretchedly he has de- ceived himself, and fed uponvanity: There are no more earthly objects to please his senses, and to gratify his in- clinations; but the soul for ever lies _upon a rack of car- nal desire, and no proper object to satisfy it. His taste is not suited to the pleasures of a world of spirits, he can find no God there to comfort him :. God, with his offers of grace, are gone for ever, and the world with its joys are for ever vanished, while the wretched and ma- licious creatures, into whose company he is hurried, and who were the tempters or' associates of his crimes, shall stand round him tobecome his tormentors. III. " Though death will awaken sinful souls into a sharper and more lively sense of divine and heavenly things, than ever they had in this world, yet they shall never be awakened to spiritual life and holiness :" And I think I may add, that though they should be awakened to a sight of God, and his justice, and his grace, to a sight of heaven and hell, more immediate and perspicu- ous than what even the saints themselves usually enjoy in this life, yet they would remain still under the bon- dage of their lusts, still " dead in trespasses and sins." They shall for ever continue unbeloved of God, and in- capable of all the happiness of the heavenly state, be-

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