4 i Chapter VIII—Continued. Tb«>n 8»i(3»he, «'t still my dnttgliter until lliou knowhow the matter will fail; for the man will >ot he in rest until he have finished the thingihis day. Eutti had just returned to her mother-in-law from the threshing- door of Boaz. The threshingfloor was the place where the husk or chaff was beat off of the grain, and wliere it was also winnowed. The iVuit of the held was gathered to gether there, threshed, winnowed and heaped together. And Ruth returned to her mother-in-law with lier desires inflamed with six meas ures of barley. Hitherto she had only entered into the field of Boaz, but now she had even gone to his threshingfloor ; but she did no t venture there presumptuously ; the fact that she might have been taken for a harlot forbade that, which to a woman of her chaste spirit whould have been worse than lieing stoned to death, especially to have been spurned as a harlot by Boaz, whom she loved. It would have been eas ier to Ruth to have borne reproach from all the world than from Boaz, and having his good opinion and love, the reproach of the world could 1)0 easily borne. It was her love and great respect for him, coupled with the knowledge of her own unworthi- ness and her origin, that made the ci'oss so heavy in getting down to his feet and asking so great a favor of him. She did not ask that favor of him as though he would be glad and feel himself honored in granting her request; she did not feel that she was confering the favor on him, in giving him an opportunity to make a sacrifice for her, but she was prompted by her necessity to make this appeal to him, in the spirit of the Syrophenician, ready to confess that she being a Moabite?, was therefore unworthy of it, but still was not the less in need of it—therefore she could have borne denial without murmur ing and charging Boaz with injus tice ; and could have received his favors as a grace by which she would be humbled, which would manifest that unity of spirit to be found only in the regenerated people of God. Ruth learned something that night too, and the more she knew of him the better she loved him, the worse she dreaded failing to get him. She learned that night, his high respect for the laws of Israel as well as his respect for his own character and hers. Her love was subdued, not lessened, by her high regard for his character and exalted state, so that she was held in check, that she might not approach him presumptuously, but as an inferior approaches his superior? ready to take a low seat, and there fore prepared to accept a higher one with fear and trembling, lest he in the threshingfloor, that she had not thought of before, at least she had not felt it, if she knew it; and that was, that there was a neurer kinsman. She learned more of Boaz; should be lifted up in his own spirit and not in the spirit of his benefac tor—a harlot would not have these feelings—-she would be ready for a reward upon every corn floor. The closer one is allied to Christ in spirit the greater is his reverence for His word; the more he loves Christ’s doctrine, the stronger is his desire to adore and bring forth the fruits of it. It is these who walk in the pure word or doctrine—clear of chaff, whose works build up the house of the dead. The pure doc trine yields good fruits, it sends forth the reapers to the field, it drops handfuls for the poor stranger, it gathers the wheat into the garner, it gathers the poor to the threshing- floor, it brings Ruth to Boaz and joins them together—and whom God hath joined together let man j)ut asunder, How dare any of \is di vorce works from faith ! Can the church be built up by faith alone? Is it enough to believe in election? Does it answer for baptism to be lieve in baptism? Is it enough to believe it to be our duty to support the ministry—will that support them? Is it enough to believe that we ought to preach—is bbb preach ing? Is it enough to lieiicve that we ought to be just—that tlie debt or ought to be subject to the lender? This is divorcing works and faith; there will be no fruits in the field, no wheat upon the threshingfloor, no child born to Naomi. The liouse will not be built up, Israel will be in league with the flesh, there'll be no armory in Israel, not even a blacksmith shop; they'll have to go to the Philistines’ shops to sharpen their coulters, and beat out Ihelr wheat by stealth, for, fear of the Midianites. Boaz in tellijig Ruth of the near er kinsman, did not do it to c\'ade ‘h-aising up the name of the dead upon his inheritance." hiinsoir, but that it must be done according to the laws of Israel, and not in viola tion of these laws. As the church does not object to preaching the gospel everywhere and to everybody, to evade the sacrifice incident to it, or because she has less love for the human family, or less pity for those in darkness, but she objects to the unlawful systems devised for that purpose, as she does to fornication and adultery, knowing that they gender to bondage and the flesh, rather than to building up the church to the glory of Christ. And hence however .ardent her desires for the growth of the church—she dare not transgress the laws of Israel to attain it, either in making preachers or members. A man said, from a pulpit recently, that Jesus Christ was a Missionary, but if he was, it was not according to the modern meaning of the word. I should rather say, according to my understanding of the word in these days, that Judas would come nigher being a Missionary—with all due respect and with no ill feelings to that large and respectable body of my fellow creatures. The church “hath done what she could”-—she has at least honored Christ in her doctrine. It was not therefore to evade the sacrifice that Boaz refer red to the nearer kinsman, but that the law should be sustained intact ; not a lack of love to Ruth, but be cause he lovedhertoo well to violate her chastitv. As brethren now are charged with a lack of love to their brethren and to the wellfare of the church, who maintain that Baptists should be subject to their plighted \vord and their contracts to men of the world, becau.se they are unwill ing (hat the church.should be pros tituted to the world, her chastity i would lie violated and become but as a harlot by the wayside. Ruth did not love the nearer kins man, and could not therefore have been in rest in his house, but she did not know' that it was be cause slio was a sinner (a Moabite) that slie rvas safe from him. It is from the fact that we are sinners, that none will take pity on us but Clirist; Imt we are uneasy, lest there should be a hindrance in our lack of flesidy righteousness, when that very lack itself is the reason why w'e do not stop short of Christ, why woe are united to him, and why we rest ^vhen avo come to him either in We fear lest our the church we fear that Christ will not accept us—we desire to be right not only in word but in spirit; not only desire to go to the church, but to be a true comer; not only to be baptized in word, but in spirit; not only to be a member outwardly but inwardly; not only to gloryfy him in our bodies but in our spirits. Be cause we know that if we fail of the spiritual joys, our outwuird inheri tance is nothing; and we know also that the outward works alone will not bring us to Christ; that that inheritance is not ot the lawy but of grace; and whilst the outward works are a cross, they are in a measure made so from fearing lest we are not prepared by the Spirit to do them, and if not, we can have no rest in them, for our rest in them would be the rest we Avould receive by knowing that Christ aecepted them. We fear lest He would not, and yet w'e have been emboldened from his kindness to us before, and from a sense of our needs to venture upon him ; and, we want no one else to help us but him. But Naomi told her to “sit still, for the man will not be in rest until he have finished the thing this day.” It all depends upon him, you can do nothing; he can do all. If he loves you—and he dops love you, he wdll finish the thing this day. “Love is as strong as death, many waters cannot quench love, though a man would give all the goods of his house liaitb or Avorks. AYorks lie not right; wdien we go to it Avould be utterly contemned in comparison Avith his love.” Who shall say then, that the work shall not be finished? That Ruth shall not come to rest in the bed of Boaz, and bring forth seed to build up, npt the fleshly house, Avhich was cur off, but the spiritual house; and not l)y the nearer kinsman and by the old covenant, based u})on works, but but by Boaz, by the nerv covenant or marriage, based upon love. The man mil not he in rest until he, have flnished the thing this day. Becansi' he loved her. Though his thresh ingfloor Avas burdened Avith grain, and be could eat and drink, and lie doAvn and rest, yet his couch Avoukl be uneasy Avith penitent and seeking Ruth at his feet; hoAv much less could he rest, IniOAving that she, whom he loved and who had sought his feet, wms suffering hunger and nakedness ! Ah ! how could he rest! Hoav could you rest, knoA\dng that your loved one Avas an outcast, though you were surrounded by all