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from evil

IX. For thine is the kingdom, and the power the glory, for ever

Concluding Lecture.-Amen

LISTENER, THE

MISCELLANEOUS SUBJECTS.

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31, 87, 134, 198,

Abstract of a Letter to a Studious Young Lady
Reflections in a time of Lingering Sickness

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THE

ASSISTANT OF

OF EDUCATION.

JANUARY, 1824.

A SKETCH OF GENERAL HISTORY.
(Continued from Vol. I. page 312.)

FROM THE DESTRUCTION OF THE EGYPTIAN FORCES IN THE RED SEA TO THE DEATH OF MOSES.

THE history of eminent men is the history of the world. It has pleased the Creator, that at every period there should be some few persons rising so far above the mass of mankind, that by extraordinary talents, distinguished virtues, physical or mental powers, sometimes even by more dauntless wickedness, they should rule the actions and determine the fortunes of all the rest. And the names of these have come down to us, the only key, as it were, to the chronicles of the earth, whose millions and millions of millions have died and left no name, nor any mention of their fortunes or their deeds, but as they may perchance have been connected with the great ones of the earth. The history of a nation, therefore, is made up of the reigns of the kings that governed it—and the history of the world can only be traced by the lives of the distinguished persons who successively or contemporarily presided over its destinies. It is for this reason that we have chosen to divide our sketch of history by the lives of the great men of whom we have to speak, rather than by centuries or any other division of time; and that we proceed to conclude the history of Moses before we turn aside to other matters.

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knew not whither, to perform he knew not what: exce so far as he believed the promised issue of his labours w out being informed of the means of obtaining it. He forth as his army a concourse of men, women, child and cattle, whom he was to guide through the vast bian deserts, never before, perhaps, trodden by the of man. They had not travelled three days forward f the borders of the sea, ere they began to feel the fea strangeness of their situation. They were dying of th and these dreary regions afforded them nothing but s nant and bitter waters. A little further on, and found themselves totally without food, in a waste and inhabited country, bearing not so much, probably, as wild fruits of the earth. But the earth is the Lord's, all that is in it. He had determined, and he knew to perform, in spite of all these natural obstacles. F years he fed his people in a manner that cannot be ot wise now explained, but that a substance of a nutri and wholesome description was daily prepared for t and miraculously supplied. What the substance was know not-probably nothing with which we are now quainted. And the dry rocks of the desert were c pelled to supply water at their Maker's bidding.

Three months had not passed over, ere mortal appeared to add to the perils of the way. The Am kites, descendants probably of Esau, of whom and rejected race we long ago lost sight, attacked the dren of Israel. They had become a nation, inhabi the northern part of Arabia: the Israelites had not vaded them, nor was it their land that was given to their inheritance; but they were idolators and ener of the God, of whom by tradition they must have he as the God of Jacob, though Esau had forsaken him:

Lord had determined on their destruction, and commanded his people to perform his purpose. Moses, himself a legislator and a man of peace, appointed Joshua to command the army, and the enemy were defeated with the sword, though not without the evident interference of Heaven. It is difficult to perceive how the Israelites obtained their arms, unless, as is supposed, the bodies of the drowned Egyptians were cast on the shore and stripped of their weapons.

It is here that the first historical mention is made of writing. The Lord commands Moses to write it in a book that the Israelites were to wage war with the Amalekites till their total extirpation. The invention of written characters to represent our words and perpetuate what they represent, is so useful and curious, that some have thought it was miraculously disclosed to men, when God wrote the law himself upon tables of stone. But this command to Moses was given previous to that event: and it is more likely, we think, to have been invented as other things were, by the necessities of man, and to have been learned by Moses in his education at Pharaoh's court; the more, as letters were some time after introduced from Egypt into Greece. It is thought by some that Moses wrote the book of Job previous to this timebut we have no certain information of his having written it at all.

Meantime Moses began to form for his unmanageable multitude, something of a regular government, by choosing magistrates of different degrees to direct and judge them himself retaining the supreme power, and leaving to Joshua the military command; and to Aaron the priesthood, to which God appointed him. But though in all this there was much exercise of human judgment and acquired knowledge of the arts of government, he did nothing by the suggestion of his own wisdom; but in all things asked and received immediate direction from God.

The Israelites had all this time been going, not towards

the country they were to possess, but farther and farther from it in the desert, till they reached the mount Sinai. It was here that about fifty days after their setting out from Egypt, God made that covenant with his people, for the account of which, and the awful manner of its delivery, we must again refer our readers to the holy scriptures.

The Creator in the beginning, had made agreement with his new-formed world that they should honour and obey him, and he would be their Father and their God. This agreement had been broken even in Paradise, and men had forgotten it over all the world. And now coming down again in fearful greatness to the earth, he made a covenant, not with the world at large-of them he took in this no note-but with this single nation of wandering slaves, assembled at the base of the mountain on whose summit he appeared to Moses, their leader, in the midst of a desert where no other eye was near to behold what was passing between this people and their Maker. By this covenant or charter, they were to be incorporated as a distinct people under the immediate government of God himself. Their laws, their mode of worship, their whole system of civil government as well as moral conduct were appointed by him: and on condition of their observance of them, he agreed to put them in possession of the land of Canaan, to defend them in it, and make it fruitful neither would he leave off to be their protector and their king, till as a nation they rejected his authority. Why he chose this obscure people in preference to nations more numerous and powerful already established upon the earth, it is impossible for us to know; for all the earth was his to choose from; and if we consider their past history, we shall find nothing in this people to recommend them to his choice. Their story is distinguished from others only by his favours and their own ingratitude. All that we know is, that he chose it, he promised it, and so long as the condition was observed on their part, he performed it-for not till the whole

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