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which our stained hands piled and the icy gloom it throws。 Never; never can we be free of it till prayer has brought unfeigned repentance; and these; hand in hand; have led us on to Faith; and Faith; opening her door; has shown us the far…off glory of Forgiveness; which glory; growing ever brighter; falls at length upon our heads in blessing and; when we turn our dazzled eyes to seek the familiar mount of shame — lo! it is gone。
The third head; that of the necessity of repentance; needs no elaboration。 Of it I have already said enough。 If we have forgotten out Creator in the days of our youth — or even of our age — let us at least obey the cry of His Messengers; and repent; repent while there is yet time。 “The Promises are sure if only we will believe” were the last words of my friend; the aged William Booth — very true words。 And of these promises perhaps the greatest and the happiest for man is that of full and free forgiveness to those who kneel and from the heart will say; “Father; I have sinned。 Father; forgive!”
But to do this we must have Faith。 When Faith fails there is nought but blackness in which we wander helplessly and in vain。 Even our Lord (as I venture to think; and I know one very learned bishop who agrees with me) as a man perhaps walked the world more by Faith than by knowledge。 It may be that this was the heaviest of His temptations — the temptation to admit some creeping doubt into His own mission and Divinity。 If so we can well understand the full magnificence of His sacrifice and the glory of His triumph。 Once; indeed; in the moment of agony and mortal weakness that Doubt seems to have conquered Him: I mean in the cry upon the Cross; “My God! My God! Why hast Thou forsaken Me?”
If this be so let us take fort; since where He s
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