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Excerpt from Sermons Preached in Manchester
The two Clauses of my text figuratively point to two different classes of operation on the rejectors of the Gospel. What are these two Classes P Whosoever shall fall on this stone shall be broken but on whomsoever it shall fall, it will grind him to powder. In the one case, the stone is represented as passive, lying quiet; in the other, it has got motion. In the one case, the man stumbles and hurts himself; a remediable injury, a self-in¿icted injury, a natural injury, without the active Operation of Christ to produce it at all; in the other case the injury is worse than remediable, it is utter, absolute, grinding destruction, and it comes from the active operation of the stone of stumbling. That is to say, the one class represents the present hurts and harms which, by the natural operation of the thing, without the action of Christ judicially at all, every man receives in the very act of rejecting the Gospel and the other represents the ultimate issue of that rejection.
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