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Sermons at Rugby by John Percival
page 37 of 120 (30%)
In the darkest hour of Israel's history we are thus told of an indefinite
multitude who had stood firm in the faith of their fathers, untouched and
untainted by adverse influence, and the recollection of it should serve
to strengthen and encourage every individual who is really jealous for
that which is good.

Let us, then, take the warning, and nurse it as a gift of God, and go
forward where duty calls us, sometimes faint, it may be, and sometimes
weary, but still pursuing.




VII. PRIVATE PRAYER, AND PUBLIC WORSHIP.


"And, as His custom was, He went into the synagogue on the Sabbath
day."--ST. LUKE iv. 16.

"He went out, and departed into a solitary place, and there He
prayed."--ST. MARK i. 35.

These two texts set before us our Saviour's habit in regard to public and
private spiritual exercise; and they suggest to us the question, What
have we, on our part, to say of these two elements in our own life? These
texts, we bear in mind, represent not something casual or intermittent in
the life of our Lord. They stand in the record of it as a typical,
essential, inseparable part of His habitual practice. What we have to
remember about them is that, whereas all men recognise in the life of
Jesus the one unique example in human history of a life which is morally
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