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John Angell James

This city has so aroused my anger and wrath!

John Angell James March, 14 2009 Audio
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This city has so aroused my anger and wrath. By John Angel James. From the day it was built until now, this city has so aroused my anger and wrath that I must remove it from my sight. Jeremiah 32 verse 31

Let us devoutly acknowledge both the source and the justice of our calamities. The origin of the evils that afflict us is often to be found in the sins which disgrace us. Sin is the only thing in all the universe which God hates, and this He abhors wherever He discovers it. With our limited understanding and feeble powers of moral perception, it is impossible for us to form an adequate idea of the evil of sin or the light in which it is contemplated by a God whose understanding is infinite and whose purity is immaculate.

That law which men are daily trampling upon, equally without consideration, without reason, and without penitence, is most sacred in his eyes, as the emanation and the transcript of his own holiness. He is also omnipresent and omniscient. There is not a nook or corner of the land from which he is excluded. of every scene of iniquity, he is the constant, though invisible, witness. The whole mass of national guilt, with every the minutest particular of it, is ever before his eye. His justice, which consists in giving to all their due, must incline him to punish iniquity, and his power enables him to do it. He is the moral governor of the nations, and concerned to render his providence subservient to the display of his attributes.

And if a people so highly favored as we are, notwithstanding our manifold sins, escape without chastisement, will not some be ready to question the equity, if not the very exercise, of his administration? His threatenings against the wicked are to be found in almost every page of Holy Scripture. nor are the threatenings of the Bible to be viewed in the light of mere unreal terrors, as clouds and storms, which the poet's pencil has introduced into the picture, the creatures of his own imagination, and only intended to excite the imagination of others.

No, they are solemn realities, intended to operate by their denunciation, as a check upon sin, or if not so regarded, to be endured in their execution as a punishment upon our sins. Scripture gives us many examples in which this has happened. It has preserved an account of the downfall of nearly all the chief empires, kingdoms, and cities of antiquity, and that, not as a mere chronicle of the event, but as a great moral lesson to the world. Scripture carefully informs us that sin was the cause of their ruin.

Volcanoes terrify with their eruptions and submerge towns or cities beneath their streams of lava. Earthquakes, convulsive throws bury a population beneath the ruins of their own abodes. Hurricanes carry desolation through a country. Famine whitens the valleys with the bones of the thousands who have perished beneath its reign. Pestilence stalks through a land, hurrying multitudes to the tomb and filling all that remain with unutterable terrors. Wars have been agents in the unparalleled scenes of bloodshed and misery. Scripture proclaims that these are to be regarded as a fearful exposition of the evil nature of sin written by the finger of God upon the tablet of the earth's history.

Visit in imagination, my countrymen, the spots where many of these cities once stood, And you shall see nothing but desolation stalking like a spectre across the plain, Lifting its eye to heaven, and exclaiming amidst the silence that reigns around, The kingdom and the nation that will not serve you shall utterly perish. as you stand amidst the moldering fragments of departed grandeur, does not every breeze, as it sighs through the ruins, seem to say, as a voice from the sepulchre, see, therefore, and know, that it is an evil and a bitter thing to sin against the Lord?

Let us devoutly acknowledge both the source and the justice of our calamities. The origin of the evils that afflict us is often to be found in the sins which disgrace us. From the day it was built until now, this city has so aroused my anger and wrath that I must remove it from my sight." Jeremiah 32 verse 31.

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