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gant utterance; with the elements of science, natu- ral, mental, political, and moral; nor is his work complete until he has surveyed the Evidences of Claims of ilic Bible. 87 Christianity, learned what of religion he may from nature, and examined the analogies of the natural to the revealed. The faithful student, in the usual course of study, becomes familiar with this varied and confessedly important knowledge. Here, how- ever, he ordinarily stops. Bible truth is rarely granted a place among these subjects. But, let us view for a moment, the knowledge that may be de- rived from this study. Here, at the outset, he learns a language surely not less Avorlhy of being known than any other — the depository of learning — of an- tiquities, history, poetry, philosophy — surely not less interesting and important than those of Greece and Kome. As he proceeds he learns certain knowl- edge of truth, in relation to which "he might dig with toilsome and painful efforts, in the mines of Pagan literature for many long years, without one ray of light shining upon him in these dreary cav- erns." He learns the being and attributes of the Supreme Jehovah, the Creator and Governor of all; the origin of sin — the disease that infects us all — its nature, its infinite baseness, its eternally ruinous consequences ; the way of deliverance from its power

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