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dispensable that your own minds should be most amply stored with the literature of missions. To this end, you will do well to read, with the utmost care, all the missionary biography to which you can have access; all the missionary history that has appeared, missionary reports, periodical accounts, and general works upon the subject. For purposes of Scripture-illustration, of the most striking and appropriate character, apart from the spirit of missions, these sources will yield you an inexhaustible supply. They will, indeed, render you more service than all commentaries and critical apparatus, and all the encyclopædias, united. This is one of the best methods of training a missionary church. To the following illustrations of the great truth, that the gospel is "the power of God unto salvation," I now beg your

serious attention.

The isles of the South present peculiar advantages for the correct estimate and profitable contemplation of man's fallen condition. Their surfaces are small, and their population is limited, as compared with the great continents of the earth; circumstances singularly favourable to accurate views and deep impressions. The mind feels itself capable of dealing more effectively with the question under these small insular exhibitions, than on the expanded empires of the East. Idolatry, in Polynesia, may be viewed either as a crime or as a calamity, the latter being at once the fruit and the punishment of the former. In the light of a calamity it is more palpable and impressive to the common observer, than in that of a crime; since it is spread as a covering over the face of the Pacific Ocean, dyed in colours of the darkest hue, and traced in all possible or imaginable forms of wretchedness. The original state of Poly

nesian society, considered as the result of idolatry, displayed it as the most heinous enormity conceivable or practicable by man. In the economy of Divine Providence, the measure of penal infliction never exceeds that of moral desert; and the former may, therefore, be considered as the measure of the latter. Now, if we take an island of the South Seas, MANGAIA* for instance, was there wanting a single ingredient of consummate, unmitigated wretchedness? In that wretchedness, then, behold the measure of its people's sin.

Viewing Polynesian idolatry simply as a source of calamity, and merging the fact of its sin in the sight of God, we must consider it as incomparably the greatest disaster that could have befallen the islanders on this side of eternity. The boundless system of creation supplies no similes that even approach the dread reality. The highest efforts of fancy are impotent to furnish illustration or analogy. The dissolution of matured society into its primary elements; the extinction of schools and colleges and all the lights of Christian knowledge; the utter loss of all literature, all science, and all art; the annihilation of commerce, the cessation of agriculture, the destruction of property, and of every element of social comfort: all this complication of distress among an island of Christians, which should leave them nothing but the knowledge of God in their hearts and in their Bibles, would still leave them in a state of incalculable wealth and of ineffable felicity, as compared with the people of MANGAIA. Where the knowledge of God is lost, all is lost that is essential to the happiness of man. It is difficult for youth, without the

* Williams, p. 21.

aid of images, to form any conception of such a calamity. If you can conceive of a peopled planet rushing from its orbit, and shooting away into regions of the deepest night, severed at once from the sight, and rule, and vital influence of the glorious sun, and remaining poised and buried in the shades of those dismal regions, you may imagine a slight analogical resemblance to the dreadful position of MAUKE and MITIARO* before the arrival of Mr. Williams; and the more than mortal or angelic might, which, grasping such a planet, and snatching it from the dominion of the shadow of death, should replace it in its own orbit, to behold the beauty and glory of the sun, to obey his laws, to enjoy the light, life, and felicity which he alone can impart, would perform an act in some degree resembling the deeds achieved by the Martyr of Erromanga.

But we must not confine our views to the earthly calamities by which idolatry was distinguished in Polynesia; for this is only a matter of comparative importance. Time, with whatever trials and tortures it may be attended, soon passes over each successive generation of mankind; but unpardoned guilt survives the wreck of the sepulchre it marches onward to eternity, followed by punishment, as substance by shadow. The condition of the idolater is not improved beyond the grave. By exchanging worlds, he obtains knowledge; but his misery still cleaves to him as a girdle. Living without God, he dies without hope, and awakes beyond the flood, only to descry the certainty, the intensity, and the perpetuity, of his sorrows! The degradation of the idolater then receives the stamp of eternity. Between

Williams, p. 23.

If,

him and the glorious fountain of everlasting felicity, the separation is rendered complete and final. He must remain, through endless ages, an outcast from God, the contempt of the righteous, wholly devoid of all virtue and of all bliss, an inhabitant of perdition, amid "weeping, and wailing, and gnashing of teeth." Who can describe, who can understand, the final results of idolatry? If its temporal consequences have been such that the greatest catastrophes of our earth, arising from plague, famine, and the sword, have only been as the troubles of childhood, who shall estimate its terrible. results on the eternal condition of its votaries? then, there be any means by which we may subvert the empire of idolatry, any means by which we may dry up those streams of endless and intolerable anguish which issue from under its blood-stained and infernal altars, and roll on into the regions of futurity, to embitter the being of its victims, is not the immediate and most extensive application of such means an act of the most devoted piety, the most imperative duty, and the most sublime philanthropy? Are not all other vocations and pursuits, how laudable, how illustrious soever, in the eyes of men, and with whatever favours and honours loaded by the world, but as the plays of infancy and the amusements of dotage? And are there means of certain efficacy to such ends? Yes; and the life of John Williams was devoted to their application. The primary object of that remarkable man was to subvert idolatry, to restore the lost knowledge of the true God, to proclaim the gospel of Christ, to renew the souls of men in the Divine image, and to reinstate them in the favour and service of the Most High. These were his primary objects; but he had also objects of a secondary, yet still

exalted order; such as, to extinguish war and establish peace; to awaken the dormant sensibilities of the human heart; to lay deep and strong the foundations of society by a revival of the law of marriage according to the Divine appointment; to impart the blessings of education, arts, science, commerce, and civilization; to institute just law and free government. We now proceed to show, that both these classes of objects were amply realized by the Martyr of Erromanga.

Our illustrations open with the wondrous narrative of Aunra, the Chief of Rurutu, who, after fleeing from the imaginary fury of his gods, supposed to be expressed in a destructive malady, and escaping the rage of successive tempests, and the perils of famine, reached Raiatea,. where he beheld the effects of the gospel, and listened to the voice of mercy. Divine Providence soon opened a path for the chief to return to his native island; but, notwithstanding his anxiety to revisit it, he refused to go back to "the land of darkness without a light in his hand;" a person, he meant, to instruct his people and himself in the gospel of salvation. He obtained his wish, and returned to Rurutu. Mr. Williams, anxious for the fate of the teachers and the success of their message, soon after sent a boat with a native crew on an expedition of inquiry; and, in the space of a few weeks, the boat returned, laden with the gods of the heathen, which their late worshippers had solemnly abandoned. What a sight was this to the youthful missionary! It was, however, only a pledge of that more abundant success with which the Lord was pleased to honour his servant. Cheering letters from the native teachers accompanied the idol-cargo. You may conceive of Williams, reading the one, and gazing upon the other; his

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