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name He will give it you. Ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full!

Again, our Lord's Ascension greatly confirms that hope to which we instinctively cling, that most blessed hope of a life beyond the grave. He is in heaven as the first fruits of the resurrection of the dead. He is there with body, flesh, and bones, and all things appertaining to the perfection of man's nature.”

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Yes! where, and whatever, heaven may be however difficult it is for us to form a picture of it to our mindsone thing we know about it, which is of incalculable worth-we know that it is the abode of Jesus Christthat He, the prophet of Nazareth in Galilee-Who did those works of mercy and of goodness recorded in the Gospel-Who once led that truly human life on our earth -Who was the friend of sinners-Who preached His glad tidings to the poor-Who was Himself poor-poor as the very poorest-Who could have compassion on the ignorant, and on them that are out of the way, for that He Himself was compassed with infirmity—we know that He now dwells, and dwells unchanged, with God in heaven. And further we know, that where He is, there shall all His people be also.-Ye cannot follow Me now, but ye shall follow Me afterwards. I go to prepare a place for you, and if I go and prepare a place for you I will come again, and receive you unto myself, that where I am ye may be also!

I will not dwell upon this now; it was the subject that occupied us last Sunday. But O, how thankful should we be for the glimpses thus opened to us of the

other world! thankful for the assured hope that it brings us of our immortality!

For now have we an anchor for our soul sure and stedfast-now there is a light in our darkness-comfort for our heart in its greatest need, when the shadows of death or bereavement fall upon it! Now is the far-off land brought, as it were, very near to us. Now, when we think of heaven, there arises up a vision of home, of a Father's house, and of a loving fellowship, and of One already there, the chiefest among ten thousand, who is not ashamed to call us His brethren!

May we, in due time, be added to that blessed company! May we so walk through life in Christ's footsteps, so be clothed by His spirit, so overcome in His strength, that, this weary life ended, we may have rest with Him-may, with many a dear companion already gone before us, sleep in the Lord-and awake also in the Lord-pass from the narrow house of our mortality unto the house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens; and there be for ever with the Lord!

WHIT-SUNDAY.

THE PROMISE OF THE FATHER SENT.

ST. LUKE XXIV. 49.

Behold, I send the promise of my Father upon you.

THIS day was this Scripture fulfilled. It was on the tenth day after He had so spoken-the tenth after His Ascension, that the Lord Jesus Christ did as He had said-sent the promise of His Father upon His Church— poured down the gift of the Holy Spirit upon the Apos

tles whom He had chosen. We read in our service of the wonderful outpouring of the Spirit. The Apostles were gathered together in Jerusalem, expecting the fulfilment of their Lord's parting promise. It was the day of Pentecost, and they were all with one accord in one place. And suddenly there came a sound from heaven as of a rushing mighty wind, and it filled all the house where they were sitting. And there appeared unto them cloven tongues, like as of fire, and it sat upon each of them, and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and spake with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance.

So did the Holy Ghost come down at the beginning;

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so were Christ's Apostles endued visibly and instantaneously with power from on high. There was a sound in the sky-the rush of a mighty wind; there was the appearance of fiery tongues on the Apostles' heads, and together with these outward tokens of unusual power, they received, and it would seem ever afterwards possessed, the marvellous faculty of speaking in tongues they had never learnt-speaking so as to be understood by the groups of many nations from all parts of the world congregated at that feast.-No less than seventeen different nations are enumerated, who had representatives at that time in Jerusalem, and these all, we are told, did hear the Apostles speak in their own tongue wherein they were born the wonderful works of God!

From that day to this the Church of Christ has observed Whit-Sunday as the anniversary of this great event. Just as we keep Christmas in honour of our Lord's birth-Easter in honour of His resurrection-so do we keep this day, year by year, in commemoration of the descent of the Holy Ghost, Who proceedeth from the Father and the Son-Whom Jesus Christ, when He went back, sent, as He had promised, from the Father.

The use of such an anniversary is great-it serves to remind us of God's goodness, and of our own responsibilities. We cannot now plead ignorance, as did the disciples at Ephesus, of the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity. We who come to church on Whit-Sunday, if we only give attention to what is read, must at least know so much as this, that there is a Holy Ghost-that, besides the Father Who made us, the Son Who redeemed us, there is present with us in this lower world another

Person-the Spirit of might Who helpeth our infirmities, "Who sanctifieth" us, "and all the elect people of God."

That this knowledge may be the more impressed upon our hearts, let us now look at some results which have followed from the coming of the Holy Ghost into the world-from the fulfilment of those words of my textBehold, I send the promise of my Father upon you.

One result has been the mighty and rapid growth of the word of God. The Gospel, which has now gone out into all lands, sprung from a very small beginning. There were at the first, about nineteen centuries ago, but twelve men to preach it; and those twelve were most of them—perhaps all—unlettered men. They were opposed by the wise and learned, by the rich and powerful of their countrymen; they were treated as impostors, as disorderly persons by the rulers, and forbidden to speak at all in the name of Jesus. But they were not to be put down: they continued to preach, and with such power, that none of their opponents were able to gainsay or resist them. Chains, imprisonment, torture, death, all that malice and hatred could devise or inflict was tried-but all in vain. The word spread and had a free course-it spread-beginning at Jerusalem, and going out over all the neighbouring countries. The man who most sought to injure it was quickly changed into its chief herald. By his labours-the labours of St. Paul-the blessing was communicated to the heathen, and by them gladly received. At Ephesus, at Corinth, at Athens, at Romethose great seats of ancient civilization-the centres of the old heathen idol worship-within the years of one

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