Book-bot.com - read famous books online for free

Sermons on Evil-Speaking by Isaac Barrow
page 115 of 130 (88%)
error, inconsiderateness, vanity; as implying weak judgment, and
irrational choice; as thwarting the dictates of reason, and best
rules of wisdom; as producing very mischievous effects to ourselves,
bereaving us of the chief goods, and exposing us to the worst evils.
What can be more egregiously absurd than to dissent in our opinion
and discord in our choice from infinite wisdom; to provoke by our
actions sovereign justice, and immutable severity: to oppose
almighty power, and offend immense goodness; to render ourselves
unlike and contrary in our doings, our disposition, our state, to
absolute perfection and felicity? What can be more desperately wild
than to disoblige our best Friend, to forfeit His love and favour,
to render Him our enemy, who is our Lord and our Judge, upon whose
mere will and disposal all our subsistence, all our welfare does
absolutely depend? What greater madness can be conceived than to
deprive our minds of all true content here, and to separate our
souls from eternal bliss hereafter; to gall our consciences now with
sore remorse, and to engage ourselves for ever in remediless
miseries? Such folly doth all sin include: whence in Scripture
style worthily goodness and wisdom are terms equivalent; sin and
folly do signify the same thing.

If thence this practice be proved extremely sinful, it will thence
sufficiently be demonstrated no less foolish. And that it is
extremely sinful may easily be shown. It is the character of the
superlatively wicked man: "Thou givest thy mouth to evil, and thy
tongue frameth deceit. Thou sittest and speakest against thy
brother; thou slanderest thine own mother's son." It is, indeed,
plainly the blackest and most hellish sin that can be; that which
giveth the grand fiend his names, and most expresseth his nature.
He is [Greek] (the slanderer); Satan, the spiteful adversary; the
DigitalOcean Referral Badge