Lectures to Young People
William B. Sprague, 1830
DANGER OF EVIL COMPANY
"Do not be misled—Bad company corrupts
good character." 1 Corinthians 15:33
Nothing is so valuable to man as his character. This is proverbial even in
regard to the present life. Strip him of everything else, and leave him with
a good conscience, and what will probably attend it, a fair reputation—and
all that you do will be comparatively harmless. You may have wounded his
sensibility, or overcome his resolution, or clouded his worldly prospects;
but he has that which, in the end, will be likely to place him above the
power of malice. His character is a broad shield, which the arrows of
adversity, and even the sting of detraction, can never effectually
penetrate. Be his circumstances what they may, the fact that he has a good
conscience and a good character, may justly render him contented and
fearless.
But if the character which is formed here, be important
in its relation to our present existence, it is infinitely more so, as it
stands connected with eternity. This present life is the only period of our
probation. It is a school in which we are training for an immortal
existence. Every moral action of our lives will exert an influence upon
us—either in heaven or hell; and the sum of these actions will decide the
complexion of our characters, and of course, our eternal destiny.
If these remarks are just, then it clearly follows that
there is no part of our conduct which ought to be considered unimportant.
The least departure from duty, the least violation of conscience, may be a
seed which will produce a harvest of everlasting woe. It may be the germ of
a sinful habit. It may be the first of a progressive series of wicked
actions which will extend through eternity. It may prove the outer door to
the temple of vice; and he who enters it, may reasonably expect to be led
on, until he has explored all its scenes of pollution and darkness—until he
finally sacrifices his immortal soul on the altar of confirmed profligacy.
Perhaps there is no influence so uniform and so powerful
in the formation of character, as that of example. This results from
the fact that we are creatures of imitation: there is a principle in our
nature which leads us instinctively, and from our earliest childhood, to
copy the manners of those with whom we associate. This, to a great extent,
is involuntary; insomuch that people have often unconsciously contracted
peculiarities of character, which, when they were reminded of them, they
could instantly trace to the example of some friend. I do not here inquire
whether we are more likely, from our constitution, to imitate good or bad
examples; but only speak of the general influence of example, of whatever
kind, founded on the fact that we are naturally imitative beings.
The considerations at which I have now just hinted,
namely, that with the characters which we form here, must be connected not
only our present, but eternal condition; and that there is no influence more
powerful in forming these characters than that of example. These
considerations, I think, must prepare you suitably to estimate the subject
to which I am about to call your attention; I mean the DANGER OF EVIL
COMPANY. I wish each one of you to hear for himself; and to let conscience
make a faithful and honest application; and it is my earnest prayer to God,
and I doubt not that it is the prayer of your parents who are here among
you, that you may so listen, and so apply—that this discourse shall prove
the means of making you better and happier through eternity.
That evil company has a corrupting and dangerous effect,
is a fact so well understood, and so universally acknowledged, that it would
be quite superfluous to enter into any direct proof of it. The wisest man in
the world has long ago said that "a companion of fools shall be destroyed!"
And who has not seen the assertion verified in instances almost innumerable?
It will be more to our purpose, therefore, to show you the process by
which evil example operates; or to notice the different principles which
it brings into action, in corrupting the morals, degrading the character,
and ruining the soul.
I. The danger of associating with wicked companions
commences in the fact that
it renders vice familiar. I know it
has been fashionable to say, in the language of a distinguished poet, that
"Vice is a monster of so frightful mein,
That to be hated, needs but to be seen;"
and on this principle some have gone so far as to justify the most profane
and licentious exhibitions of the stage; and have gravely contended that
those splendid scenes of impiety, decked out with all that is most
attractive and provoking to the sensual appetites, are fitted indirectly to
nourish good affections, and lead to a virtuous life. The fundamental error
of this kind of philosophy is, that it overlooks the melancholy fact that
man is a being of depraved inclinations; and the moment you bring him in
contact with vice, you place by his side a companion to whom his arms and
his heart involuntarily fly open.
However you will account for the fact, all experience
proves that there is a tendency in human nature to go astray; and that while
nothing more than the absence of restraint is necessary to the formation of
evil habits; a habit of virtue and piety is always the result of fixed
resolution and severe effort. If then, the state of the heart naturally
is such as to render it most sensible to the solicitations of vice, you will
easily perceive how this consideration operates to invest all needless
fellowship with evil company with great danger. You may apply fire to
materials which are exposed to the frost and damps of winter, and you will
find it difficult to produce a flame; but if you bring it in contact with
some highly inflammable substance, you will see a blaze, or hear an
explosion, in an instant. In like manner, if all our inclinations were
originally on the side of virtue, the danger from being familiar with vice
might be comparatively small; but the case becomes greatly changed, when it
is recollected that we have within us evil propensities, which are ready
to kindle as soon as the torch of temptation is applied to them!
I am aware that the circumstances of our present
condition sometimes necessarily lead us to witness scenes of wickedness; but
this, so far as it is unavoidable, is to be considered as constituting part
of our trial, and as making a loud demand for our vigilant activity and
resistance. But in a large part of the instances in which young people are
the witnesses of vice, it is not because Providence places them in the way
of it in the course of their duty—but because they are prompted by
inclination. Now let me say that those of you who have yielded so far to
curiosity, or any other principle, as to place yourselves deliberately and
unnecessarily in the way of vice—I care not what kind it is—have
unconsciously entered into a league with it. The fatal poison is already
in your hand, and unless you cast it from you without delay, in all
probability, you are ruined.
II. It is the tendency of mixing with bad associates, to
benumb and finally destroy
the moral sense.
By the moral sense, you will understand me to mean
that faculty or principle of action, partly of an intellectual, and partly
of a moral character, by which we discern the difference between right and
wrong, and approve the one and condemn the other. In some, I suppose, this
faculty is originally more active and delicate than in others; but in all,
it is an essential part of the human constitution, and is indispensable to
moral agency. It is easy to see that in the formation of character, much
will depend on cultivating or neglecting to cultivate the moral sense.
And of course, whatever contributes to render our moral perception less
accurate, or our moral sensibility less keen, must proportionably put in
jeopardy our virtue. Now let me ask whether the voice of universal
experience does not decide that mingling in evil company, and witnessing
evil examples, has this unhappy tendency? Have not even people of an
established principle of piety, who have been called, in the course of
providence, to mingle in scenes of wickedness, found it exceedingly
difficult to maintain that high and solemn sense of the evil of sin, which
they wished to cultivate; and have they not been obliged to fortify
themselves against this deadening influence, by a double degree of
watchfulness and prayer? But perhaps there are some before me who can bear
testimony on this subject from experience. Can you not remember the time
when some particular vice, say that of profane swearing, or gaming, or
drunkenness, excited in you emotions of disgust and even horror—when you
could hardly look upon its miserable victim without an aching heart? But it
may be, that you have since frequently been in wicked company; and the
sounds of blasphemy and the riot and loathsomeness of intemperance have
become familiar to you; and has not this familiarity rendered you
insensible, in a great degree, to the odiousness of these vices?
Nay, are there not some among you who can now commit,
without much remorse, sins, the very thought of which would once have made
you tremble? Look back, O young man, and see how far you have already fallen
towards the gulf of profligacy and ruin; and then, in the light of your past
experience, and over the ruins of a good conscience, look forward and
prophecy concerning your future doom!
The extinction of the moral sense is usually very
gradual, and the progress of its decline is often marked, with great
accuracy, by the conduct. Everyone knows that conscience is originally one
of the most active and powerful of all the inhabitants of the human bosom;
and that she will never yield up her authority until she has sustained a
severe struggle. There is nothing, perhaps, in which this conflict is more
clearly marked, than in the progress of a young man, who has had a pious
education—towards a habit of profaneness. Though he has been accustomed
occasionally to hear the language of cursing from others, the impressions of
his childhood are too strong, to allow him immediately to copy it.
At length, in an evil hour, he summons resolution enough
to make the awful experiment of uttering an oath; but his faltering tongue
and blushing cheek proclaim, that there is a commotion and a remonstrance
within. Conscience rouses up all her energies, and thunders out a rebuke,
which almost puts him into the attitude of consternation. Perhaps his early
resolutions to reverence the name and authority of God, come thronging upon
his remembrance—or perhaps the instructions of other days, enforced by
parental affection, rise up before him—or it may be, that the image of a
departed parent, who had trained him up in the way that he should go, haunts
his busy and agitated mind, and reproaches him with filial ingratitude. He
resolves that the dreadful privilege of taking the name of God in vain, has
been purchased at too great expense; and that he will not venture to repeat
an experiment that has been so fruitful in remorse end agony. But presently
he is heard to drop another oath, and another; and in each successive
instance, the conflict with conscience becomes less severe, until, at
length, this faithful reprover is silenced, and he blasphemes his Maker's
name without remorse, and almost without his own observation.
When I see an ingenuous youth taking the first steps in
this path of death—when I see his countenance change, and hear his voice
falter, and the embarrassment and awkwardness of his manner tell me that
conscience is uttering her remonstrance at the very moment when the language
of profaneness is upon his lips, I say to myself—'Poor young man, little do
you know what disgrace and wretchedness you are treasuring up for yourself!'
I regard him as having set his face like a flint towards perdition; and I
read on his character, in dark and ominous letters—"The glory has
departed!"
It is important here to be observed, that the effect of
any particular vice in destroying the moral sense, is universal. That is, by
being familiar with any one sin, the mind gradually contracts a degree of
insensibility to all others. For instance, if you indulge in profaneness,
the sin of licentiousness, or drunkenness, as an offence against God, will
not appear to you in its native odiousness; for this plain reason, that, by
indulging in sin of any kind, you lose your regard for God's authority.
There is also such an intimate connection between different vices, that it
is exceedingly difficult to be devoted to one, without being, in a greater
or less degree, the slave of more. Remember, therefore, that, in frequenting
the company of the wicked, you expose yourselves not only to the particular
vices which you may happen to witness in them—but to any others to which
subsequent temptations may invite you; because, when you have once cast off
the fear of God, your heart will be open to every bad impression, and will
be a soil in which every kind of sin will flourish luxuriantly.
III. It is another effect of associating with evil
company, that it
checks the operation of the principle of shame.
This too is part of our original
constitution; and is so essential and active a principle, that the absence
of it is always taken as a decisive indication of confirmed profligacy;
insomuch that there is hardly a more striking epitome of a thoroughly
depraved character, than that he is without shame before others. Though some
higher principle than a regard to the opinion of others is necessary to
constitute an action good in the sight of God, or to be the foundation of a
pious life; and though this principle, like every other, is liable to abuse,
and needs to be properly restrained and regulated; still, no doubt it was
intended by Providence to impose a check upon our wicked inclinations. And
so essential is the operation of shame, to the welfare, and I may
say, the existence of society, that if all those evil propensities which are
now kept in check by a regard to the opinion of the world, were allowed to
operate freely, it is probable that all the opposition which human laws
could make to the vices of men, would be no more than the weakest mound of
earth set to defy the angry torrent, as it comes rushing from the mountains.
If, then, this principle of shame, is so important to the
preservation of virtue in the community, and, of course, to the virtue of
each individual—surely anything which has a tendency to extinguish it is
greatly to be deprecated; and that this is the direct tendency of evil
company, must be obvious to everyone.
Here again, I appeal directly to the consciences of
those, if there be any such before me, whose experience renders them the
most competent judges. When you first associated with those who took the
name of God in vain, would not the thought of your ever being heard to utter
the same language have crimsoned your cheek with shame? But after a while,
did not this peculiar sensibility to the opinion of others, so far wear off,
that when none but your sinful companions were present, you ventured a
profane expression; and even after you could swear fearlessly in their
presence, was it not a considerable time before you could feel willing to
hazard an oath in the hearing of your serious friends? And when, after
taking the name of God in vain, you have sometimes turned your face, and
been unexpectedly met by the reproving countenance of some pious friend,
have you not been awed into confusion by the majesty of virtue; and felt
that you had done an act which, in the estimation of that good man, would
cover you with disgrace? But you may, for ought I know, have long since bid
adieu to all such scruples; and you may be congratulating yourselves upon
the victory you have gained over a prejudice of pious education; and you may
have become so shockingly familiar with the dialect of hell, that even the
presence of the virtuous and good cannot restrain you from it: for all this
may be calculated upon as a legitimate consequence of being often found in
the way of sinners.
Just so it is with the sin of intoxication.
Probably the greatest drunkard in the community can remember the time when
he would have shuddered at the thought of thus foolishly sacrificing his
reputation; and perhaps there was hardly ever an instance in which a man
yielded to this kind of temptation for the first time, that he was not
thoroughly ashamed of it, and would turn his face from you when you met him
in the street, lest your countenance should reveal to him your pity or
contempt. But by frequently resorting to the company of drunkards, and by
repeating a few times the brutish experiment, the flush of shame faded from
his cheek, and made way for a still deeper hue of crimson, which proclaims
that he is a shameless sot.
And so it is with respect to every other bad habit. By
frequenting the society of the wicked, a person soon comes practically to
regard them as the most important part of the world; and consequently, his
regard for the opinion of the godly, and his fear of losing it, are
gradually diminished and destroyed.
IV. Another sentiment which is brought into operation in
aid of a wicked habit, by associating with wicked companions, is
the dread of being singular.
There is nothing that goes to the heart of a young man
like "the world's dread laugh;" or the idea of standing alone; or of being
charged with superstitious scruples of conscience: and this is a principle
of which the abettors of vice are always sure to avail themselves, in regard
to those who are inexperienced. When a young man, whose mind has been stored
with good sentiments through the influence of education, falls into their
company, it is astonishing to observe how their invention is quickened for
devising means for his destruction. They take care not to display to him all
the mysteries of iniquity at once, lest it should produce a shock which
should drive him from their society. At first, perhaps, he discovers in them
nothing more than an excessive cheerfulness; and so far, he thinks they may
be imitated without much danger. But it is not long before he must take
another step; and if he hesitates and falters now, he sees on one side, a
reproachful frown, and on the other, a contemptuous smile. One, perhaps,
charges him with unmanly superstition, and another with the lack of
independence; or it may be, the whole fraternity of them send up one general
shout of ridicule. At such a moment, I look upon a young man as suspended
between life and death; and as the experiment which is now going forward may
result, I expect his eternal destiny will be decided. If I could look into
his heart at this awful crisis, I would expect to find it in a state of
fearful agitation; and if the power of reflection had not deserted him, to
find him proposing to himself some such questions as these—"What step is
this which I am now tempted to take? Where will it conduct me? May it not
ruin my character, and ruin my soul? What mean these counsels and warnings
of my early youth, that now come knocking at the door of my heart? If I
yield, will not the hearts of my pious friends bleed with tenfold deeper
sorrow than if I were to die—nay, will it not almost send a pang of agony
down into the graves of my departed parents, who dedicated me to God, and
with their dying breath charged me to beware of a life of sin? But how can I
sustain the anguish of being singular? How can I bear to be thought cowardly
and spiritless; to hear these shouts of ridicule, and witness these
expressions of contempt? No, I will not submit to this intolerable burden: I
will rush headlong into the haunts of sin, and endeavor to stifle conscience
and drown reflection. Cease, then, to trouble me, you recollections of my
early days. You pious friends, who have followed me all my life with
affectionate wishes and good offices, I can heed you no longer. I will
sooner pierce all your hearts with anguish, than to stand alone and try to
stem this torrent of ridicule. And you too, departed parents, even if I knew
I should disturb the repose of your graves, and plant a thorn in that pillow
which sustains your head in yonder lonely mansion—I could not bear to be
singular. Leave me therefore, friends; leave me, conscience; leave me, every
tender and endearing recollection; leave me too, you gloomy forebodings of
future misery; and let me sacrifice my soul as quietly as I can! I can
hazard anything else, even the eternal burnings of hell; but I cannot, I
will not, hazard the odium of being singular!"
I do believe, my hearers, that many a young man, who now
sits in the seat of the scoffer, if he would honestly tell you his whole
experience, would be obliged to relate the story of some such conflict as
this which I have here supposed; and it may be that there are young people
before me, who can recollect something like it in their own experience. But
if I knew there were such a case, I should hardly think it premature to call
upon you to begin even now to mourn for the death of an immortal soul.
V. I shall close the illustration of this subject with
one more remark; and that is, that it is
the tendency of evil company to
separate a person from the means of grace.
What though he may live in the midst of Christian
privileges, and almost at the very threshold of the sanctuary—will he enter
those hallowed courts, where everything betokens reverence and purity—when
his heart loathes the service of his Maker? Will he deliberately place
himself in the way of reproof for those very vices to which he has
deliberately resolved to yield? Or will he be likely to read the word of
God, when he meets his own sentence of condemnation on every page? I do not
say indeed that the whole extent of this evil will ordinarily be realized in
the early stages of vice; on the contrary, I well know that its progress,
for the most part, is gradual. But I do say—and I appeal to the heart of
every profligate for the truth of it—that the tendency of wicked company is,
finally, to form a complete separation from all the means of true religion.
If he is entirely devoted to the service of sin, it were an absurdity to
suppose that he should have either time or relish for the service of God;
and even if he attends upon it with external formality for a while, it will
soon become too irksome to be continued. And when the means of grace are
once abandoned, I know not where we are to look for a more decisive symptom
of a hard heart and a reprobate mind. We must not indeed venture to limit
the power of the Most High God; but if there ever be a case which, upon all
the principles of human probability, we may pronounce hopeless, and in which
our most awful apprehensions may reasonably cluster around the destiny of a
fallen mortal—surely it is the case of him who has voluntarily cut himself
off from the means of salvation.
On a
REVIEW of this subject,
1. We may see
how insidious is sin!
From small and almost imperceptible beginnings,
it gradually makes its way, until it reduces the whole man to its dominion,
and brings into captivity every affection and faculty of the soul. Sin first
throws out the bait of pleasure, and flatters its victim on to forbidden
ground; then it makes him the sport of temptation; and does not give him
over until he is fast bound in the chains of eternal death.
In its very nature, sin is deceitful; it is a stranger to
all open and honest dealing; its very element is the region of false
appearances, and lying promises, and fatal snares. When it addresses itself
to the unwary youth, it puts on a smiling countenance, and makes fair
pretensions, and takes care to conceal its hideous features, until, like a
serpent, it has entwined him with its deadly coils, and rendered his escape
impossible!
For instance, how common is it for young men to yield to
the solicitations of evil companions, from the notion that it
discovers great independence of character! But what sort of independence, I
would ask—is that which cannot command resolution enough to resist a few
worthless and wicked companions? What sort of independence is that which had
rather put at hazard the interests of eternity, than to brave the sneers of
half a dozen vile associates? The truth is, that the person who acts this
part, shows himself the greatest coward that walks the earth: he is afraid
to encounter the reproaches of those whose censure is the highest praise;
and rather than do it, he deliberately consigns his character and his soul
to destruction.
Again, how often do young men become profane, from
the idea that profaneness is a mark of manliness; and that to break out
occasionally in the language of cursing, gives them a sort of dignity and
importance. But let them go out into the street, and see in what kind of
characters this vice is to be found in its most frightful height; and then
say whether they wish to share the honor of profaneness with such
companions. Let them listen to the poor drunkard who has fallen down in the
highway, and is just waking from his beastly slumber, and they will find him
muttering an oath; cursing the God who made him, or it may be, the hand that
is attempting to relieve him. Let them go into the most vulgar circles where
not even decency is tolerated—and there they will find profaneness,
vulgarity, and drunkenness, mingling in the same scene of disgusting riot.
And yet they are cheated into the delusion that, at least, an occasional
indulgence in this vice makes them more manly. They are beguiled, as were
our first parents by the fatal apple; and think not of the danger, until it
is too late to avert it.
2. We learn from this subject,
how dreadful is the character of
a corrupter of others. Every wicked man
is more or less chargeable with this, whether he particularly intends it or
not; because it is impossible for him to live in the world, without exerting
an influence upon those with whom he associates; and this influence will
receive its complexion altogether from his character. But there are men with
whom the business of corrupting others is a profession; who deliberately lay
their plans for ruining immortal souls; who seize upon the unwary youth,
like the animal upon his prey, and never leave him until they have
accomplished his destruction. I know not that there are any such here—I am
willing to believe there are none. But if such a man has been providentially
sent to the sanctuary, I cannot feel willing that he should go away without
a word of warning. And I am not going to expostulate with you in regard to
the danger, or cruelty; or guilt of your conduct; but only to direct your
thoughts to one event, which will as certainly overtake you as that there is
a God in Heaven. You are hastening to the judgment; and at that dreadful
bar, you will meet every soul that you have helped to destroy; and the blood
of each of these souls will be upon your own head! Nay, more; your
corrupting influence may be propagated from generation to generation; and
thousands whom you may never see in the flesh, may recognize you at the
judgment as their destroyer; and the united curses of all these miserable
beings may be heaped upon you through the ages of a suffering eternity. If
your heart has not absolutely received the dark seal of reprobation, or if
all the fountains of feeling have not been congealed by the chilling
atmosphere of vice—must not the prospect fill you with horror?
3. The subject supplies an important argument to all in
favor of a pious life. It is but too
common for people of wicked character to take shelter under the plea that
they injure none but themselves; and that, whatever the consequence of their
conduct may be—they alone must bear it. Never was there a greater mistake. A
corrupt example, even where it is not accompanied by a deliberate purpose of
corruption, mingles contagion with the whole moral atmosphere in which it
operates; and such must ever be its effect, until human nature is subject to
a new set of laws.
What a powerful motive is here for a life of virtue and
piety! You are acting, not for yourselves alone—but for the world around
you; and when we urge you to a life of true religion, we are pleading in
behalf of the immortal interests of your fellow men. What an argument also
for the most exemplary circumspection on the part of the professed disciples
of Christ! You may have even a living principle of true religion, which will
secure your own salvation; and yet for the lack of proper vigilance, you may
be betrayed into practices which will blast the rising germ of youthful
promise, and even cause the darkest shades of vice to settle on some heart
which had already begun to yield to the impressions of true religion.
How dreadful the thought that a friend, by a careless and
unedifying example, should be instrumental in destroying his friend for whom
he would even have died! How delightful, on the other hand, is the
reflection that, by yielding your hearts and lives to the purifying
influence of the gospel, you may not only save yourselves—but may be
preparing to meet some in heaven—it may be, the objects of your tenderest
affection—who will have been conducted there by the light of your example!
Finally:
Let every young person be deeply impressed with the danger of his
situation, and avoid the beginning of evil.
I cannot suppose that there is a youth before me, who
has deliberately formed the purpose to resign himself to a wicked habit, and
to persevere in it until he shall enter eternity. But I have reason to fear
that there are those here in whom this fearful result will actually be
realized; those who are venturing into the path of vice with that most
foolish of all notions—that they shall retreat early enough to save their
souls. Alas, with all your advantages, I fear you have not yet learned the
slippery and insidious nature of vice. As well might you think to take the
deadly viper into your bosom, and render him harmless by flattering words;
or as well might you drink down the fatal poison, and expect to stop its
progress in your system, when the blood had curdled at your heart, as to
think of being the companion of fools, and yet not be destroyed.
If you enter on a career of vice, and make the wicked
your chosen companions, I acknowledge that Omnipotence may, in his adorable
sovereignty, pluck you as a brand out of the burning; but without some
special interposition which you have no right to expect, it is altogether
probable that you will be lost forever. Your only safety lies in a cordial,
practical, immediate reception of the gospel of Christ. Every other guide
will mislead you—this will conduct you safely and certainly to heaven.
And now, if such a conclusion would not do violence to
all the principles of human calculation, I would like to believe that all of
you have resolved to enter immediately, and in earnest—on a pious life. But
probably there are some here, who have not even thought of forming such a
purpose; and perhaps others who have formed it, in whose remembrance it will
hereafter exist, as a monument of the power of temptation, or the treachery
of the heart. I confess that an ominous gloom settles upon my mind, as it
ventures forward to explore the path of these people through the darkness of
futurity. I see them going away from this place, unaffected by all which
they have heard, and returning to the haunts of sin with as keen a relish as
ever. I see them becoming more and more hardened in vice, turning their
backs upon pious instruction, and living as if eternity were a dream, and
the word of God a fable. At no great distance onward in the path of life, I
discover them struggling under the pressure of adversity. I hear them call
to the world for assistance; but the world turns a deaf ear to their
entreaties. I extend my views yet a little further, and see these same
people on the bed of death. I see by the sinking countenance, the fluttering
pulse, the faltering accents—that their conflict with the destroyer has
commenced. I cast an eye around me to see whether any of their former wicked
companions are present, to try to sustain them in this awful exigency; but
not one of them is to be seen: theirs was the work of destruction, not of
consolation. I see them writhing in agonies unutterable; oppressed and
appalled by the prospect of an opening retribution, without a hold in the
universe on which to hang a single hope. I hear their lamentations over a
mispent life; their cutting reflections upon their miserable associates;
their agonizing supplications for a longer space for repentance. And while
my eye rests with horror on the frightful impressions that Despair has made
upon the countenance, I witness the ominous change, which tells me that the
soul is in eternity. And then, amidst all the wailings of parental
tenderness which surround me; and while my mind is busy in trying to
recollect some word or look which might have been a symptom of
repentance—even then, from that world where "hope never comes," I seem to
hear echoed in groans of unavailing anguish, "the harvest is past, the
summer is ended, and I am not saved!"
And is there a youth before me, of whose future lot all
this may prove to have been a faithful prediction? Especially, is there one
who has been dedicated to God, and had the benefit of a Christian education
and parental prayers, in whose experience this complicated wretchedness
shall be realized? "O Lord God—you know!"
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