1. That the tenderest personal
friendship is not inconsistent with the most pure religion. Piety binds
stronger the tie of friendship, makes tenderer the emotions of love, and seals
and sanctifies the affections of friends.
2. It is right, it is natural, and it is
indispensable for the Christian to sympathize with others in their afflictions.
Romans 12:15; "rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them that
weep."
3. Sorrow at the death of friends is not
improper. It is right to weep. It is the expression of nature and religion does
not forbid or condemn it. All that religion does in the case is to temper and
chasten our grief; to teach us to mourn with submission to God; to weep without
complaining, and to seek to banish tears, not by hardening the heart or
forgetting the friend, but by bringing the soul, made tender by grief, to
receive the sweet influences of religion, and to find calmness and peace in the
God of all consolation.
4. We have here an instance of the tenderness
of the character of Jesus, The same Savior wept over Jerusalem, and felt deeply
for poor dying, sinners. To the same tender and compassionate Savior Christians
may now come. Hebrews 4:15; and to him the penitent sinner may also come,
knowing that he will not cast him away.
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