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regularly and faithfully inculcated upon the Lord's day.
These means, if not immediately followed by a saving change of heart, at any particular period of
their enjoyment, were not altogether unproductive
of salutary effects. — "While I was yet a child," he
says, "the solemn impressions of the being and
presence of God, of my dependence upon him,
and the awful realities of a future state, were very
strong, and frequently interrupted me in my play
and sports. I often left my little companions and
sought some retired spot, where I might pray, without being observed. What I prayed for, and what
my views and exercises in prayer were, I do not
now reccollect; but there was something of the
fear and reverence of God, of the evil of sin, and
an universal obligation to fulfil every duty, which
occupied my mind, aroused my conscience, and
convinced me that I could never be happy, if I remained an enemy to God, or wilfully transgressed
his holy commandments — But these first principles or convictions, whatever they were, did not
prove effectual to produce conversion. They
were changeable and transient. They frequently
returned, and were as frequently forgotten, excepting that they created in me a lively and tender conscience, which, through all the giddy mazes, violent
temptations, and wild eccentricities of youth, never
wholly forsook me. They excited a rigid
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monitor within my breast, and often silently but powerfully preserved me from follies and sins which,
otherwise, I should undoubtedly have perpetrated.
I recollect instances wherein the Lord, with a
strong hand and discernible interposition, prevented me from committing sins where temptations
were numerous and urgent. These early impressions went no farther. — The amount of benefits resulting from early parental instruction, and from all
the ordinances and sermons I had heard during my
whole life, was nothing more than some confused
ideas of truths, which I did not understand, or believe. This was my own fault, for I had not been in
earnest or desirous to know the Lord or obey his
word."
The fault most assuredly was his own; and he
is not the only one who has had to acknowledge the
neglect or abuse of precious means of grace. —
Some, possibly, who read these pages can confess,
that they have sadly disregarded the tears, and
prayers, and faithful instructions of pious friends —
still living, or peradventure, already mouldering in
the grave, — and that various opportunities of religious improvement, which a kind providence has
permitted them to enjoy, through their own remissness or obstinacy, have proved of very little benefit to their souls. Happy they, who see and own
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