The Worship of Faith––The sermon on the ‘Worship of Faith’ sets forth that ‘To worship Christ is to bow down with love and wonder and thankfulness, before the most perfect goodness that the world has ever seen, and to believe that that goodness was the express image of God the Father.’ All aims and all ideals that are not the aims and ideals of Christ, are distinctly opposed to such worship, and the man who entertains these alien ideals may not call himself a Christian. After examining that attitude of the spirit towards Christ which belongs to the worship of faith, the rest of the sermon is very practical. ‘Work is Worship,’ is the keynote: one longs that a writer who knows so well how to touch the secret springs had taken this opportunity to move us to that ‘heart’s adoration,’ which is dearer to God; but, indeed, the whole volume has this tendency. It is well to be reminded that ‘the thorough and willing performance of any duty, however humble or however exalted, is like the offering of incense to Christ, well-pleasing and acceptable.’
The sermon on the ‘Righteousness of Faith’ is extremely important and instructive. The writer dwells on the ‘deplorable cant’ with which we pronounce ourselves ‘miserable sinners,’ combining the ’sentiments of the Pharisees in the parable with the expressions of the publican.’