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Literary
November 19, 1840
Whig Republican
Lexington, Holmes County, Mississippi
What is this article about?
An extract reflecting on the Sabbath as a time for retired meditation, intellectual review of life, and resistance to worldly influences, emphasizing its role in pious lives and true Christian doctrine.
OCR Quality
98%
Excellent
Full Text
The Sabbath--an Extract.
"Our religion points out to us one periodical season of retired meditation, when, by the convention of society, the world will leave us, if we do not court its presence--I refer to the Sabbath, which, as itself, serves to summon us to thoughtfulness; and which, if men regarded only their intellectual improvement, would be devoted to the sober review of human life. It is a happy break in the galling chain of the world's custom. The mind may pause, and the heart recover itself. The peace of Sabbath retirement forms the best part of the happiest lives. They may be congratulated whose pious education has established such an association of ideas with the day, that it never returns without bringing with it feelings, imaginations and hopes of a higher than earthly origin. Let them preserve this sanctification, not so much of the Sabbath, as of their own minds. Let them resist the encroaching spirit of the world, which would invade and grasp this sacred portion of time. Let them not be a party to a breach of what, in allusion to an institution of our ancestors, we must denominate the trace of God. Where secular interests and anxieties come near the day, let them say, as the patriarch said to his servants, Abide ye here, and I will go yonder and worship.' They need not fear superstition; they are safe if they keep themselves from worldly mindedness. They may be told that every day is alike holy; but let them reflect, though this is a plain Christian doctrine, it is true only in a sense in which some that are the most forward to assert, are the slowest to comprehend; for in the signification, which alone is both rational and pious, it means, that the Sabbath should be made a common day, but that to a mind formed in the image of Him to whose memory the day is devoted, every day is a Sabbath."
"Our religion points out to us one periodical season of retired meditation, when, by the convention of society, the world will leave us, if we do not court its presence--I refer to the Sabbath, which, as itself, serves to summon us to thoughtfulness; and which, if men regarded only their intellectual improvement, would be devoted to the sober review of human life. It is a happy break in the galling chain of the world's custom. The mind may pause, and the heart recover itself. The peace of Sabbath retirement forms the best part of the happiest lives. They may be congratulated whose pious education has established such an association of ideas with the day, that it never returns without bringing with it feelings, imaginations and hopes of a higher than earthly origin. Let them preserve this sanctification, not so much of the Sabbath, as of their own minds. Let them resist the encroaching spirit of the world, which would invade and grasp this sacred portion of time. Let them not be a party to a breach of what, in allusion to an institution of our ancestors, we must denominate the trace of God. Where secular interests and anxieties come near the day, let them say, as the patriarch said to his servants, Abide ye here, and I will go yonder and worship.' They need not fear superstition; they are safe if they keep themselves from worldly mindedness. They may be told that every day is alike holy; but let them reflect, though this is a plain Christian doctrine, it is true only in a sense in which some that are the most forward to assert, are the slowest to comprehend; for in the signification, which alone is both rational and pious, it means, that the Sabbath should be made a common day, but that to a mind formed in the image of Him to whose memory the day is devoted, every day is a Sabbath."
What sub-type of article is it?
Essay
What themes does it cover?
Religious
Moral Virtue
What keywords are associated?
Sabbath
Meditation
Piety
Worldliness
Christian Doctrine
Literary Details
Title
The Sabbath An Extract.
Subject
On The Sanctity And Observance Of The Sabbath
Key Lines
It Is A Happy Break In The Galling Chain Of The World's Custom. The Mind May Pause, And The Heart Recover Itself.
Let Them Preserve This Sanctification, Not So Much Of The Sabbath, As Of Their Own Minds.
They Need Not Fear Superstition; They Are Safe If They Keep Themselves From Worldly Mindedness.