The whole sermon is necessary reading, but this excerpt is a gem:
...In these times especially, we should be on our guard against those who
hope, by inducing us to lay aside our forms, at length to make us lay
aside our Christian hope altogether. This is why the Church itself is
attacked, because it is the living form, the visible body of religion;
and shrewd men know that when it goes, religion will go too. This is
why they rail at so many usages as superstitious; or propose
alterations and changes, a measure especially calculated to shake the
faith of the multitude. Recollect, then, that things indifferent in
themselves become important to us when we are used to them. The
services and ordinances of the Church are the outward form in which
religion has been for ages represented to the world, and has ever been
known to us. Places consecrated to God's honour, clergy carefully set
apart for His service, the Lord's-day piously observed, the public
forms of prayer, the decencies of worship, these things, viewed as a
whole, are sacred relatively to us, even if they were not, as
they are, divinely sanctioned. Rites which the Church has {78} appointed,
and with reason,—for the Church's authority is from Christ,—being
long used, cannot be disused without harm to our souls. Confirmation,
for instance, may be argued against, and undervalued; but surely no
one who in the common run of men wilfully resists the Ordinance, but
will thereby be visibly a worse Christian than he otherwise
would have been. He will find (or rather others will find for him, for
he will scarcely know it himself), that he has declined in faith,
humility, devotional feeling, reverence, and sobriety. And so in the
case of all other forms, even the least binding in themselves, it
continually happens that a speculative improvement is a practical
folly, and the wise are taken in their own craftiness.
Therefore, when profane persons scoff at our forms, let us argue
with ourselves thus—and it is an argument which all men, learned or
unlearned, can enter into: "These forms, even were they of mere
human origin (which learned men say is not the case, but even
if they were), are at least of as spiritual and edifying a character
as the rites of Judaism. Yet Christ and His Apostles did not even
suffer these latter to be irreverently treated or suddenly discarded.
Much less may we suffer it in the case of our own; lest, stripping off
from us the badges of our profession, we forget there is a faith for
us to maintain, and a world of sinners to be eschewed."
Tell us again how rock'n'roll fits into his vision.
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