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sinner shall descend into hell; and, which is the confirmation of all evil, for a transient sin God shall inflict an eternal death. Well might it be said in the words of God by the prophet, ponam Babylonem in possessionem erinacei; Babylon shall be the possession of an hedge-hog; that is, a sinner's dwelling, encompassed round with thorns and sharp prickles, afflictions and uneasiness all over. So that he that wishes his sin big, and prosperous, wishes his bee as big as a bull, and his hedge-hog like an elephant: the pleasure of the honey would not cure the mighty sting; and nothing make recompense, or be a good, equal to the evil of an eternal ruin. But of this there is no end. I sum up all with the saying of Publius Mimus, Tolerabilior est qui mori jubet, quam qui male vivere; he is more to be endured that puts a man to death, than he that betrays him into sin: for the end of this is death eternal.

SERMON XXII.

THE GOOD AND EVIL TONGUE.

EPHES. iv. 29.

Let no corrupt Communication proceed out of your Mouth, but that which is good to the Use of edifying, that it may minister Grace unto the Hearers.

He that had an ill memory did wisely comfort himself by reckoning the advantages he had by his forgetfulness: for by this means he was hugely secured against malice and ambition; for his anger went off with the short notice and observation of the injury; and he saw himself unfit for the businesses of other men, or to make records in his head, and undertake to conduct the intrigues of affairs of a multitude, who was apt to forget the little accounts of his own seldom reading. He also remembered this, that his pleasures in reading books were more frequent, while he remembered but little of yesterday's study, and to-morrow the book is news, and with its novelties gives him fresh entertainment, while the retaining brain lays the book aside, and is full already.

Every book is new to an ill memory, and one long book is a library, and its parts return fresh as the morning, which becomes a new day, though by the revolution of the same sun. Besides these, it brought him to tell truth for fear of shame, and in mere necessity made his speech little and his discoursings short;

because the web drawn from his brain was soon spun out, and his fountain grew quickly dry, and left running through forgetfulness. He that is not eloquent and fair spoken, hath some of these comforts to plead in excuse of his ill fortune, or defective nature. For if he can but hold his peace, he shall be sure not to be troublesome to his company, nor marked for lying, or become tedious with multiplicity of idle talk; he shall be presumed wise, and oftentimes is so: he shall not feel the wounds of contention, nor be put to excuse an ill taken saying, nor sigh for the folly of an irrecoverable word; if his fault be that he hath not spoken, that can at any time be mended: but if he sinned in speaking, it cannot be unspoken again. Thus he escapes the dishonour of not being believed, and the trouble of being suspected; he shall never fear the sentence of judges, nor the decrees of courts, high reproaches, or the angry words of the proud, the contradiction of the disputing man, or the thirst of talkers. By these and many other advantages, he that holds his peace, and he that cannot speak, may please themselves; and he may at least have the rewards and effects of solitariness, if he misses some of the pleasures of society. But by the use of the tongue, God hath distinguished us from beasts; and by the well or ill using it we are distinguished from one another: and therefore though silence be innocent as death, harmless as a rose's breath to a distant passenger, yet it is rather the state of death than life; and therefore when the Egyptians sacrificed to Harpocrates their god of silence, in the midst of their rites they cried out Ja; the tongue is an angel, good or bad; that is, as it happens: silence was to them a god, but the tongue is greater; it is the band of human intercourse, and makes men apt to unite in societies and republicks; and I remember what one of the ancients

said, that we are better in the company of a known dog, than of a man whose speech is not known, ut externus alieno non sit hominis vice; a stranger to a stranger in his language, is not as a man to a man; for by voices and homilies, by questions and answers, by narratives and invectives, by counsel and reproof, by praises and hymns, by prayers and glorifications, we serve God's glory, and the necessities of men; and by the tongue our tables are made to differ from mangers, our cities from deserts, our churches from herds of beasts, and flocks of sheep. Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God, spoken by the tongues of men and of angels; and the blessed spirits in heaven cease not from saying night and day their Tig; their song of glory to him that sitteth on the throne, and to the Lamb, for ever and ever; and then our employment shall be glorious as our state, when our tongues shall to eternal ages sing hallelujahs to their Maker and Redeemer: and therefore since nature hath taught us to speak, and God requires it, and our thankfulness obliges us, and our necessities engage us, and charity sometimes calls for it, and innocence is to be defended, and we are to speak in the cause of the oppressed, and open our mouths in the cause of God: and it is always a seasonable prayer that God would open our lips, that do the work of heaven, and declare his praises, and show forth his glory; it concerns us to take care that nature be changed into grace, necessity into choice, that while we speak the greatness of God, and minister to the needs of our neighbour, and do the works of life and religion, of society and prudence, we may be fitted to bear a part in the songs of angels, when they shall rejoice at the feast of the marriage supper of the Lamb. But the tongue is a fountain both of bitter waters and of pleasant; it sends forth blessing and cursing; it praises God, and

our mouth

may

:

rails at men; it is sometimes set on fire, and then it puts whole cities in combustion; it is unruly, and no more to be restrained than the breath of a tempest; it is volatile and fugitive: reason should go before it; and, when it does not, repentance comes after it it was intended for an organ of the divine praises, but the devil often plays upon it, and then it sounds like the screech-owl, or the groans of death; sorrow and shame, folly and repentance, are the notes, and formidable accents of that discord. We all are naturally 20, lovers of speech, more or less; and God reproves it not, provided that we be also wise and material, useful and prudent in our discourses. For since speech is for conversation, let it be also charitable and profitable, let it be without sin, but not without profit and grace to the hearers, and then it is as God would have it; and this is the precept of the text, first telling us what we should avoid, and then telling us what we should pursue; what our discourse ought not to be, and secondly, what it ought to be; there being no more variety in the structure of the words, I shall, 1. discourse of the vices of the tongue; 2. of its duty and proper employment.

1. Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth; was cargos xs, corrupt or filthy communication; so we read it and it seems properly to note such communication as ministers to wantonness; such as are the Fescennines of Ausonius, the excrement and spume of Martial's verse, and the Ephesiaca of Xenophon; indeed this is such a rudeness as is not to be admitted into civil conversation; and is wittily noted by the Apostle, charging that fornication should not be once named among them, as becometh saints; not meaning that the vice should not have its name and filthy character, but that nothing of it be named in which it can be tempting or offensive; nothing tending to it, or

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