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SERMON XLI.

JOHN, XX. 29.

Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed: Blessed are they who have not seen and yet have believed.

THESE

HESE were the words of Christ's reply to his apostle Thomas, when he, who had refused to credit the resurrection of Jesus upon the report of the other apostles, received the conviction of his own senses in a personal interview, and recognised our Saviour for Lord and God.

What is most remarkable in these words, on the first general view of them, is the great coolness with which our Lord accepts an act of homage and adoration offered

with much warmth and cordiality; a circumstance which plainly indicates some defect or blemish in the offering, by which its value was much diminished. And this could be nothing but the lateness of it — the apostle's wonderful reluctance to believe much less than what he at last professes: But eight days since, he would not believe that Jesus to be alive whom now he worships as the living God.

But this is not all: The apostle is not only reproved for his past incredulity; he is told besides, at least it is indirectly suggested to him, that the belief which he at last so fervently professes hath little merit in it, that it was not of that sort of faith which might claim the promises. of the gospel; being indeed no voluntary act of his own mind, but the necessary result of irresistible evidence. This is clearly implied in that blessing which our Lord so emphatically pronounces on those who not having seen should yet believe. "Thomas, because thou has seen me, thou hast believed:" You now indeed believe, when the testimony of your own senses leaves it

no longer in your power to disbelieve. I promise no blessing to such reluctant faith: "Blessed are they who have not seen and yet have believed."

Here arise two questions, which, either for the difficulty which each carries in the first face of it, or for the instruction which the speculation may afford, may well deserve an accurate discussion. The first is, why Thomas was reproved for not believing till he was convinced? the second, what should be the peculiar merit of that faith which hath not the immediate evidence of sense for its foundation or support, that our Saviour should on this sort of faith exclusively pronounce a blessing? A readiness to believe wonders upon slender evidence hath ever been deemed a certain mark of a weak mind; and it may justly seem impossible that man should earn a blessing by his folly, or incur God's displeasure by his discretion.

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For the clearing up of these difficult questions, this shall be my method, First, to consider what ground there might be for

St. Thomas to believe the fact of our Lord's resurrection upon the report of the other ten apostles, before he had himself seen him; and from what motives it may be supposed that he withheld his assent. the course of this inquiry, it will

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appear that an evidence very different from ocular demonstration may in many cases command the assent of a reasonable man; and that no man can be justified in setting a resolution within himself, as Thomas did, that he will not believe without this or that particular kind of proof. Secondly, I shall show that the belief of any thing upon such evidence as Thomas at last had of Christ's resurrection is a natural act of the human mind, to which nothing of moral or religious merit can reasonably be ascribed. These preliminary disquisitions will furnish the necessary principles for the resolution of that great and interesting question, What is the merit, and at the same time what is the certainity, of that faith which believes what it hath not seen?

In the first place, I propose to consider what ground there might be for Thomas

to believe the fact of our Saviour's resurrection, upon the testimony of the other apostles, before he had himself seen him; and what may be supposed to have been the motives upon which he refused his assent. And here the thing principally to be considered is, what degree of trust the apostle might reasonably have placed in our Lord's promise of rising again after the event of his crucifixion; and what there might be on the other hand to outweigh the expectation of the thing, and the positive testimony of his fellow disciples. Our Saviour had on many occasions foretold his own death; and never without assurances that he would rise again on the third day. This he generally declared enigmatically to the Jews, but in the most explicit terms to the apostles in private: And it is very remarkable, that though he had spoken of nothing more plainly in private or more darkly in public than of his resurrection, describing it under the figure of rebuilding a demolished temple, and under allusions to the prophet Jonah's miraculous deliverance, yet the Jews, whose understandings had been blind to the mean

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