store,arguments to which the academy boys sometimes listened, and of which they brought astounding reports to the school-room.
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Tina, who was so intensely sympathetic with all social influences that she scarcely seemed to have an individuality of her own, was now glowing like a luminous cloud with religious zeal.
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"I could convert that man," she said; "I know I could! I wonder Mr. Avery has n't converted him long ago!"
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At this time, Mr. Avery, who had always kept a watchful eye upon us, had a special conversation with Harry and myself, the object of which was to place us right in our great foundation relations. Mr. Avery stood upon the basis that most good New England men, since Jonathan Edwards, have adopted, and regarded all young people, as a matter of course, out of the fold of the Church, and devoid of anything truly acceptable to God, until they had passed through a mental process designated, in well-known language, as conviction and conversion.
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He began to address Harry, therefore, upon this supposition. I well remember the conversation.
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"My son," he said, "is it not time for you to think seriously of giving your heart to God?"
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"I have given my heart to God," replied Harry, calmly.
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"Indeed!" said Mr. Avery, with surprise; "when did that take place?"
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Mr. Avery looked at him with a gentle surprise.
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"Do you mean to say, my son, that you have always loved God?"
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"Yes, sir," said Harry, quietly.
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Mr. Avery felt entirely incredulous, and supposed that this must be one of those specious forms of natural piety spoken of depreciatingly by Jonathan Edwards, who relates in his own memoirs similar exercises of early devotion as the mere fruits of the ungrafted natural heart. Mr. Avery, therefore, proceeded to put many theological questions to Harry on the nature of sin and holiness, on the difference between manly, natural affections and emotions, and those excited by the supernatural movement of a divine power on the soul,the
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