Page Date:
02/23/2007
From: Anthology 2:3
Introduction
Finney's Style
Doctrines Of
Finney's System
The Government Of God
God Has
Done All He Could To Prevent Sin
Some
Consequences Of This Doctrine
Nature
Of Sin, Depravity, And Regeneration
The
Moral Character Of Mental Disposition
Impossible For Emotions To Possess Moral Character
Natural Depravity
Exsistence Of Sin
Regeneration
Man Can Regenerate
Himself
Divine Influence
Part Two |
We congratulate the friends of truth and
order on the appearance of these publications. We have never had any doubt what would be
the decision of the public mind respecting the new divinity and new-measure system of our
day, if its distinctive features could be brought out to the light and exposed to general
observation. History warrants us in cherishing this our confidence. The truth is, that
this system contains but little that is new. It is mainly, if not entirely, composed of
exploded errors and condemned heresies. The church has already once and again pronounced
judgment upon it; and we have no doubt therefore, that the same sentence of condemnation
will be repeated by the Presbyterian church of the present day, whenever the case is
fairly presented for decision. The chief reason why the condemnation of this system has at
all lingered, is that its true character has not been generally known. Its advocates, when
charged with teaching certain obnoxious doctrines, and, in their religious meetings,
violating the sobrieties of good sense as well as of Christian order, have evaded or
denied the charge, and complained piteously of misrepresentation. Much has been done to
blind the minds of those who were not able to bear the things they had to say, to the
undisguised character of the doctrines they have taught in the lecture room and the
chapel. We rejoice, therefore, in the publication of Mr. Finney's sermons and lectures.
The public can now learn what the new system is, from the exposition of one of its chief
promoters. He has stated his own case, and out of his own mouth may he now be justified or
condemned.
The lectures on revivals were delivered by Mr. Finney to his
congregation in Chatham Street Chapel, during the last winter. They were first published
from week to week, in the columns of the New York Evangelist, from reports furnished by
the editor of that paper. They were subsequently collected, and after having been
submitted to the author for correction, published in a volume. The work, we perceive, has
already reached a fifth edition. Much diligence is employed in efforts to give it an
extended circulation. It is recommended as a suitable book for Sabbath school libraries;
and no pains are spared to spread it abroad through the length and breadth of the land.
Its friends evidently have a strong persuasion of its extraordinary merits. Their zeal for
its circulation proves that they consider it a fair and able exposition of the new system.
The sermons appear to be a monthly publication. We have obtained seven
of them, which are all, we presume, that have yet been published. They discuss the several
topics, "Sinners bound to change their own hearts," "How to change your
heart," "Traditions of the Elders," "Total Depravity," "Why
Sinners hate God," and, "God cannot please Sinners." These sermons, with
the lectures on revivals, give a pretty full exhibition of Mr. Finney's peculiar views. If
we may judge from the tiresome degree of repetition in these productions, the perpetual
recurrence of the same ideas, phrases, and illustrations, we should suppose that he can
have nothing new to say; nothing, at all events, that would materially add to, or modify,
what he has already said. We may consider ourselves fairly in possession of his system. To
the interpretation of that system we shall now proceed, having it less for our object to
refute, than merely to exhibit its peculiarities. We shall endeavor to gather up the
plain, obvious meaning of Mr. Finney's statements, taking it for granted, that there is no
hidden, esoteric sense attached to them.
FINNEY'S STYLE
Of the literary merit of these productions we have but little to say.
The reporter deprecates, or rather defies all criticism upon their style, affirming that
the critic "will undoubtedly lose his labour." No doubt he will, so far as the
amendment of the author is concerned. But the reformation of an offending author is not
the sole object of criticism. The reporter himself (the Rev. Mr. Leavitt) says of Mr.
Finney's language, that it is "colloquial and Saxon." Words are but relative in
their meaning. What kind of "colloquies" the Rev. Mr. Leavitt may have been used
to, we do not pretend to know; but for ourselves we must say, that we desire never to have
a part, either as speakers or hearers, in any colloquy where such language is current, as
Mr. Finney often permits himself to employ. If his other epithet, Saxon, means simply, not
English, we have no objection to it. For, surely it has not often fallen to our lot to
read a book, in which the proprieties of grammar as well as the decencies of taste were so
often and so needlessly violated; and in which so much that may not inappropriately be
termed slang was introduced. But we have higher objects before us than detailed criticism
upon Mr. Finney's style. We should not have made any allusion to it, but that we deemed it
worth a passing notice, as forming part and parcel of the coarse, radical spirit of the
whole system.
DOCTRINES OF FINNEY'S SYSTEM
We proceed to examine, in the first place, the doctrines of this new
system. Mr. Finney does not pretend to teach a slightly modified form of old doctrine. He
is far from claiming substantial agreement with the wise and good among the orthodox of
the past and present generation. On the contrary, there is a very peculiar self-isolation
about him. Through all his writings there is found an ill concealed claim to be considered
as one called and anointed of God, to do a singular and great work. There is scarcely a
recognition of any fellow-laborers in the same field with him. One might suppose indeed,
that he considered himself the residuary legatee of all the prophetic and apostolical
authority that has ever been in the world, so arrogantly does he assume all knowledge to
himself, so loftily does he arraign and rebuke all other ministers of the gospel. He
stands alone in the midst of abounding degeneracy, the only one who has not bowed the knee
to Baal. The whole world is wrong, and he proposes to set them right. Ministers and
professors of religion have hitherto been ignorant what truths should be taught to promote
revivals of religion, and he offers to impart to them infallible information.
It is true, in his preface, he disclaims all pretensions to
infallibility; but in his lectures, he more than once substantially assumes it. He tells
his hearers, in relation to promoting revivals, "If you will go on to do as I say,
the results will be just as certain as they are when the farmer breaks up a fallow field,
and mellows it, and sows his grain." He speaks repeatedly of the "endless train
of fooleries," the "absurdities," the "nonsense," which, up to
his time, have been taught both in private and from the pulpit. He declares, "there
is only here and there a minister who knows how to probe the church," etc. "This
is a point where almost all ministers fail." "When I entered the ministry so
much had been said about the doctrine of election and sovereignty, that I found it was the
universal hiding place, both of sinners and the church, that they could not do anything,
or could not obey the gospel. And wherever I went, I found it necessary to demolish these
refuges of lies." "There is and has been for ages, a striking defect in
exhibiting this most important subject." "For many centuries but little of the
real gospel has been preached." "The truth is, that very little of the gospel
has come out upon the world, for these hundreds of years, without being clogged and
obscured by false theology." What can be more evident than that Mr. Finney considers
himself a great reformer? He comes forth with the avowed purpose of clearing away the
errors by which the true gospel has been so overlaid as to destroy its efficiency. He
comes to declare new truths, as well as to unfold new methods of presenting them to the
mind.
THE GOVERNMENT OF GOD
The first of these new doctrines to which we call the attention of our
readers, has relation to the government of God. It will be remembered that a few years
since, Dr. Taylor, with some other divines, publicly announced and defended the
proposition, that God could not prevent the introduction of sin in a moral system. At
least he was very generally, if not universally, understood to teach this proposition. And
it is strange, if not actually unprecedented, that a writer of an honest and sound mind,
understanding the language he employs, and having it for his serious purpose to convey to
his readers certain important information, should be misunderstood as to the main purport
of his message by those best qualified, from education and otherwise, to comprehend it.
But Dr. Taylor did complain that he was misunderstood. He insisted that
he did not intend to teach that God could not prevent the existence of moral evil, but
only that it is impossible to prove that he could prevent it. His object was to unsettle
belief in all existing theories upon this subject, and then to substitute this negative
one in their place; in other words, to inculcate absolute scepticism upon this point. This
is the ground now occupied by the New Haven divines. We fear, therefore, that they will be
alarmed by the position which Mr. Finney has taken. He has evidently neglected, since his
return from his foreign tour, to post up his knowledge. He has not acquainted himself with
the improvements made during his absence. He teaches, without any qualification, the
doctrine which the New Haven school was at first understood to teach. He complains that
sinners "take it for granted that the two governments which God exercises over the
universe, moral and providential, might have been so administered as to have produced
universal holiness throughout the universe." This, he says, is a "gratuitous and
wicked assumption." It is wicked, then, to believe that God could have produced
universal holiness.
Mr. Finney further adds, "There is no reason to doubt that God so
administers his providential government, as to produce upon the whole, the highest and
most salutary practicable influence in favor of holiness." This sentiment, it is
true, is susceptible of a correct interpretation through the ambiguity of the word
practicable. But another quotation will make it evident that he means this word to include
nothing more than the resisting power of the human will. "The sanction of his law are
absolutely infinite: In them he has embodied and held forth the highest possible motive to
obedience." "It is vain to talk of his omnipotence preventing sin: if infinite
motive will not prevent it, it cannot be prevented under a moral government; and to
maintain the contrary is absurd and a contradiction." A more explicit and confident
statement of this doctrine could hardly be given. It is absurd and contradictory to
maintain that God could have prevented the introduction of sin into our world. The only
semblance of an argument which Mr. Finney urges in support of this opinion is, "that
mind must be governed by moral power, while matter is governed by physical power."
"If to govern mind were the same as to govern matter, if to sway the intellectual
world were accomplished by the same power that sways the physical universe, then indeed it
would be just from the physical omnipotence of God, and from the existence of sin, to
infer that God prefers its existence to holiness in its stead." Again he says,
"To Maintain that the physical omnipotence of God can prevent sin is to talk
nonsense."
We see not the least ground for this distinction between the moral and
physical power of God; nor do we believe that Mr. Finney himself can attach any definite
meaning to his favorite phrase, "physical omnipotence." By the omnipotence of
God we understand a power to do anything without those hindrances and restrictions by
which we and all created beings are beset. It must be the same power which sways the
intellectual and physical universe, unless we are to make as many different species of
power as there are objects upon which it may be exerted. This distinction, however, were
it well founded, would avail Mr. Finney nothing in defence of his position. The power of
God, by whatever name called, can be limited in its exercise only by the laws which he has
himself immutably fixed. The power of the Creator was without any limit; the power of the
Governor labors under no other restrictions than the ordinances of the Creator have
imposed upon it. It is often said that God cannot achieve impossibilities, such as to make
a body exist in several places at the same time. All such limitations of the divine power
are found in those relations and properties of things which he has himself established. A
body cannot be made to exists in several places at once, for if it could it would no
longer be a body. So in the nature of man we may trace certain properties and laws, which
lay a similar restriction, if so it may be called, upon the exercise of the divine power.
God cannot make a sinner happy, while he continues a sinner, for he has already so made
man that his happiness must come to him as the consequence of the right action of his
powers, and he would cease to be man if this law of his nature were altered. Now is there
any similar restriction in the nature of moral agency? Does it enter into our notion of a
moral agent, and go to make up the definition of one, that he cannot be subjected to any
other influence than of motive? Suppose that God should, in some inscrutable way, so act
upon his will as to dispose it to yield to the influence of motive, would such action make
him cease to be a moral agent? If not, we have no right to deny the power of God to effect
it. It is impossible to conceive that his power can be restrained by anything exterior to
himself. The only bounds beyond which it cannot pass must be those that have been
established by his own nature, or his previous acts. Unless he has so made moral agents
that it is a contradiction in terms to assert that they can be influenced in any other way
than by motive, it is in the highest degree unwarrantable and presumptuous to deny that
God can act upon them by other means. But a moral agent, while possessed of the necessary
faculties, and not forced to act contrary to his will, or to will contrary to his
prevailing inclinations and desires, remains a moral agent still. Would, then, the
operation of any other influence than that of motive upon him, destroy his liberty of
action or his freedom of will? Certainly not. And as certainly no man can deny that God
can influence men as he pleases without thereby denying his omnipotence. A more
groundless, gratuitous assumption could not well be found, than Mr. Finney has made in
asserting that it is impossible for God to affect his moral subjects in any other way than
by motive.
Let it be observed that we use the word motive, as Mr. Finney himself
has evidently used it, to denote simply the objective considerations presented to the mind
as they are in themselves, without taking into account the state of the mind in relation
to those considerations. This is the only sense of the word in which it can be at all
maintained that "infinite motives" have been urged upon man for the prevention
of sin and the promotion of holy obedience. If the state of the mind, which always
determines the apparent qualities of the object, be included, as it generally is, in the
term motive, then it is not true that the mind could resist "infinite motives."
In this sense of the word it is self-evident that the will must always be determined by
the strongest motive. An "infinite motive," by which can be meant only a motive
infinitely strong, or stronger than any other we can conceive of, would of course prevail
and carry the will with it. Then it would be just to infer, from infinite motives having
been presented to bear man onward in the paths of holy obedience, that God had done all
that he could to prevent sin. And then too it would be impossible that any sin could
exist, or that sin could ever have entered our world.
GOD HAS DONE ALL HE
COULD TO PREVENT SIN
But granting, what we have shown to be the gratuitous assumption, that
God cannot influence men in any other way than by the objective presentation of truth to
the mind, Mr. Finney has given us no reasons for adopting the opinion that, "He has
done all that the nature of the case admitted to prevent the existence of sin," while
we can see many reasons which forbid us to receive it. The state of the question, as we
are now about to put it, in conformity with Mr. Finney's representation, does indeed
involve the three gratuitous assumptions, that God could not have made man a moral agent
and yet give him a greater degree of susceptibility of impression from the truth than he
now possesses; that man being as he is, God could not have devised any external
considerations to affect him, in addition to those which are actually placed before his
mind; and lastly, that man and the truth both being as they are, God cannot reach and move
the mind of man in any other way than by the truth. These are by no means axioms, and Mr.
Finney would be sadly perplexed in the attempt to prove any one of them. But, for the sake
of showing that even with these bold and barefaced assumptions he cannot maintain the
position, we will admit them all. Man could not have been a moral agent had he been more
yielding to the truth than he now is. "Infinite motives" to obedience have been
provided; by which, as we have already shown, can be meant only that all the truth which
could possibly affect the human mind has been revealed to it. And thirdly, man cannot be
moved but by the truth.
The "nature of the case" being supposed to demand all these
admission, does it still follow that God has done all that he could to prevent the
existence of sin? Mr. Finney himself shall answer this question. His theory of the nature
of divine influence is, that the Spirit "gets and keeps the attention of the
mind," "He pours the expostulation (of the preacher) home", He keeps the
truth, which would else have been suffered to slip away, "in warm contact with the
mind." Here is of course the admission, and we are glad he is willing to concede so
much power to his Maker, that God can gain the attention of the mind, and keep before it
and in contact with it, any or all of the "infinite motives" which he has
provided to deter from sin. Connect this admission with another class of passages, in
which Mr. Finney teaches that, "When an object is before the mind, the corresponding
emotion will rise," and who does not see in the resulting consequence a glaring
inconsistency with the doctrine that God has done all that he can to prevent the existence
of sin?
To make this more plain, we will take the case of Adam's transgression,
of which Mr. Finney has, out of its connection with the subject we are now discussing,
given us the rationale.
"Adam," he says, "was perfectly holy, but not infinitely
so. As his preference for God was not infinitely strong, it was possible that it might be
changed, and we have the melancholy fact written in characters that cannot be
misunderstood, on every side of us, that an occasion occurred on which he actually changed
it. Satan, in the person of the serpent, presented a temptation of a very peculiar
character. It was addressed to the constitutional appetites of both soul and body, to the
appetite for food in the body, and for knowledge in the mind. These appetites were
constitutional; they were not in themselves sinful, but their unlawful indulgence was
sin."
The temptation in this case was the motive addressed to Adam's
constitutional appetites. The reason why this motive prevailed was, that it was kept
before the mind to the exclusion of adverse considerations. The emotions of desire towards
the forbidden fruit were not unlawful until they had become sufficiently strong to lead
Adam to violate the command of his Maker. If, then, just at the point of unlawfulness, the
attention of Adam's mind had been diverted from the forbidden fruit to the consideration
of God's excellency and his command, "the corresponding emotion" would have
arisen, and he would not have sinned. But the Spirit has power to "get and keep the
attention of the mind." Certainly then he could have directed the attention of Adam's
mind to those known truths, though at the moment unthought of, which would have excited
the "corresponding emotions" of reverence for God, and preserved him thus in
holy obedience.
But though Mr. Finney holds forth the views here given of the Spirit's
agency in presenting truth to the mind, it would evidently be a great relief to his
theological scheme if he were fairly rid of the doctrine of divine influence. The
influence of the Holy Spirit comes in only by the way, if we may so speak, in his account
of the sinner's regeneration and conversion. We will cast away this doctrine, therefore,
-- we will grant him even more than he dares to ask, and still his position is untenable,
that God has done all that he can do to prevent the existence of sin. Before he can demand
our assent to this proposition, he must prove, in the case already presented, that God
could not have prevented the entrance of Satan into the garden. Admitting that the
volitions of Satan were beyond the control of his Maker, he must investigate the relation
of spirit to space, and prove that it was impossible for God to have erected physical
barriers over which this mighty fiend could have passed. He must show that it was
impossible for God so to have arranged merely providential circumstances, that our first
parents should have been kept out of the way of the tempter, or that the force of the
temptation should have been at all diminished. Until he has proved all this, and then
proved that his three assumptions, which we have pointed out, are true, we must prefer the
"absurdity" and "nonsense" of rejecting his doctrine, to the wisdom of
receiving it.
SOME CONSEQUENCES OF THIS
DOCTRINE
The argument thus far has been a direct one, and we should not fear to
leave it as it now stands. But we cannot refrain from adverting to some of the
consequences of the doctrine we have been examining. If God has done all that he can to
prevent the existence of sin, and has not succeeded in his efforts, then must he have been
disappointed. If he cannot control at pleasure the subjects of his moral kingdom, then
must he be continually and unavoidably subject to grief from the failure of his plans.
Instead of working all things according to his good pleasure, he can do only what the
nature of the case will permit, -- that is, what his creatures will allow him to do. He in
whose hands are the hearts of all men, and who turns them as the rivers of waters are
turned, is thus made a petitioner at the hands of his subjects for permission to execute
his plans and purposes.
Accordingly we find Mr.Finney using such language as this: "God has
found it necessary to take advantage of the excitability there is in mankind, to produce
powerful excitements among them before he can lead them to obey." He speaks of a
"state of things, in which it is impossible for God or man to promote religion but by
powerful excitements." And of course there may be states of things in which neither
by excitements nor by any other means will God be able to effect the results he desires.
Then may we rightly teach, as some at least of our modern reformers have taught, that God,
thwarted in his wishes and plans by the obstinacy of the human will, is literally grieved
by the perverse conduct of men; and sinners may properly be exhorted as they have been to
forsake their sins from compassion for their suffering maker! It is a sufficient
condemnation of any doctrine that it leads by an immediate and direct inference to so
appalling a result as this.
We know of nothing which ought more deeply to pain and shock the pious
mind. If the perverseness of man has been able in one instance to prevent God from
accomplishing what he preferred, then may it in any instance obstruct the working of his
preferences. Where then, is the infinite and immutable blessedness of the Deity? We cannot
contemplate this doctrine, thus carried out into its lawful consequences, without
unspeakable horror and dismay. The blessedness of the Deity! What pious mind has not been
accustomed to find in it the chief source of its own joy? Who does not habitually turn
from the disquieting troubles and scenes of misery that distress him here, to "drink
of the river of God's pleasures?!" Who can bear the thought that the infinitely holy
and benevolent God should be less than infinitely happy? We see not how any heart that
loves God can feel happy itself, unless it believes him to be, as he deserves to be,
infinitely blessed. Nor can we find any security for the felicity of the creature but in
the perfect and unchangeable felicity of the Creator. If God, therefore, is as this
doctrine represents him, unable to produce states of things which he prefers, and if his
benevolent feelings are thus continually exposed to grief from obstructions to their
operation, the voice of wailing and despair should break forth from all his moral
subjects. We can see, indeed, but little to decide our choice between such a God as this
and no God.
Another consequence of this doctrine is that God cannot confirm angels
and saints in holiness. If he could not prevent the introduction of sin into our world, we
see not upon what principles we are entitled to affirm that he can prevent its
re-introduction into heaven. We see not how he can at any time hinder that standard of
rebellion from being yet once more uplifted among the bright and joyous throng that now
cast their crowns at his feet. We are perfectly aware of the answer which Mr. Finney will
make to this objection. He will contend that the additional motives furnished by the
introduction of sin, such as the visible and dreadful punishment of the sinner, and the
display of the divine character thereby afforded, are sufficient to enable God by the use
of them, together with the means and appliances previously existing, to confirm holy
beings in holiness. Now, independently of other insuperable objections to this as a
sufficient reply, how does it consist with that other part of the scheme, that
"infinite motives" had been already arrayed against the introduction of sin? If
these motives were infinite, then no addition could possibly be made to them. We leave Mr.
Finney to reconcile this contradiction, or to admit that we have no reason to expect that
the gates of heaven will be barred against sin.
This doctrine also takes away from the sinner all just ground for the
dread of everlasting punishment. Its advocates, we know, have contended that it is the
only position from which Universalism can be effectively assailed. But if, when man was
tempted to sin by so insignificant a motive as the forbidden fruit, while "infinite
motives" were drawing him back, God could not prevent him from yielding, it must
surely be impossible for him to prevent the sinner in the other world from obeying the
impluse of infinite motives which, more strongly there than here, will urge him to
holiness. The sinner, then, may dismiss his apprehensions of the everlasting experience of
the miseries of a wicked heart. If God could not prevent Adam from sinning, under the
influence of a small motive, there is no reason to fear that he can prevent any inhabitant
of hell from becoming holy, under the influence of infinite motives.
We have dwelt upon this subject at greater length than was at first
intended. Our excuse is, that the question at issue is a very serious and important one,
and the views of it presented by Mr. Finney seem to be so dishonoring to the character of
God, as well as subversive of some of the most important truths of religion, that they
should be carefully examined. Had our object been simply to criticize, Mr. Finney might
have been more briefly despatched. There is in his pages a surpassingly rich treasure of
contradictions, which might at every turn have furnished us with an argumentum ad hominem,
had we been disposed to avail ourselves of it. But we have felt that the matter in hand
was of too grave and weighty an import to be thus managed.
NATURE OF SIN,
DEPRAVITY, AND REGENERATION
We invite the attention of our readers, in the next place, to Mr.
Finney's views of the nature of sin, depravity and regeneration. He contends that all sin
consists in acts, and assures us that those who teach otherwise are guilty of
"tempting the Holy Ghost," and of a "stupid, not to say willful perversion
of the Word of God." He deems it absurd beyond expression to suppose that there can
be a sinful disposition prior to sinful acts; nay, he solemnly affirms that "millions
upon millions have gone down to hell," in consequence of the doctrine of what he is
pleased to call "physical depravity" having been so extensively taught. He
seldom approaches this subject without breaking out in some such paroxysm as the
following: "O the darkness and confusion, and utter nonsense of that view of
depravity which exhibits it as something lying back, and the cause of all actual
transgression!"
Our readers will soon be able to judge for themselves whether Mr. Finney
has cleared away any of the darkness which rests upon this subject.
In the prosecution of our inquiries into the nature of sin, two
questions very naturally present themselves for decision; first, whether there can exist
anything like what has been called disposition, distinct from mental acts; and secondly,
whether, if such an attribute of mind can and does exist, it may be said to possess any
moral character. Mr. Finney, with much convulsive violence of language, continually denies
that there can be any such thing as a mental disposition, in the sense in which we have
used the word. He employs the term, it is true, but he says he means by it a mental act,
and that it is nonsensical to attach to it any other meaning. His arguments against the
possibility of the existence of mental dispositions, apart from mental acts, may be
briefly dispatched; for we do not reckon among the arguments his violent outcries of
darkness, confusion, absurdity, nonsense, doctrine of devils, etc., nor his assertions
that God himself cannot lead the sinner to repentance without first dispossessing him of
the erroneous notion that his nature as well as his conduct needs to be changed. All the
arguments on the point now before us, that lie scattered through his many pages, may be
reduced to two.
It is impossible, he contends, to conceive of the existence of a
disposition of mind; and again, if there be a disposition distinct from the faculties and
acts of the mind, it must form a part of the substance of the mind, and hence follow
physical depravity and physical regeneration with all their horrid train of evils. When he
asserts the impossibility of conceiving of a disposition of mind, we suppose he means that
it is impossible to frame an image of it, or form a picture in which this disposition
shall stand visible to the mind's eye. It is only in this sense that his assertion is
true. It is true that we cannot form such a conception of a mental disposition, but we
will not insult the common sense of our readers by attempting to prove that this is no
argument against its existence.
The other argument on which Mr. Finney relies to prove the non-existence
of any disposition of mind, is that if there is any such thing it must form a part of the
substance of the mind, it must be incorporated with the very substance of our being, with
many other phrases of like import. Hence he charges those who teach that there are such
dispositions, and that they possess a moral character, with teaching physical depravity,
and representing "God as an infinite tyrant." He avers, in a great variety of
forms, that their preaching has a direct and legitimate tendency to lull the sinner in his
security, to make men of sense turn away in disgust from such absurd exhibitions of the
Gospel, and to people hell with inhabitants. These are grave charges; and as, if
substantiated, they would affect the fair fame and destroy the usefulness of nine-tenths
of the ministers of the church to which Mr. Finney belongs, so, if groundless, Mr. Finney
must be regarded as a slanderer of his brethren, guilty and odious in proportion to the
enormity of the unsustained charges against them.
In one respect at least Mr. Finney is guilty of bringing false
accusations against his brethren. He continually represents them as holding and teaching
all his own inferences from their doctrines. This is more than uncharitable; it is
calumnious. He has a perfect right to develop the absurdities of what he calls physical
depravity, and present them as so many reasons for rejecting any doctrine which can be
proved to result in such consequences; but he has no right to endeavor to cast the
reproach of teaching these inferred absurdities upon men who have uniformly, and if more
decently yet not less strongly than himself, disclaimed them. But we contend that these
absurdities do not lawfully flow from the doctrine that the mind has tastes and
dispositions distinct from its faculties and acts. It is easy to show, in contradiction to
Mr. Finney, that it may possess such attributes, which nevertheless will not form any part
of the substance of the mind. Nay, we can make Mr. Finney himself prove it.
In one of his sermons, where he has lost sight for a brief space of
physical depravity, he speaks on this wise: "Love, when existing in the form of
volition, is a simple preference of the mind for God and the things or religion to
everything else. This preference may and often does exist in the mind, so entirely
separate from what is termed emotion or feeling, that we may be entirely insensible to its
existence. But although its existence may not be a matter of consciousness by being felt,
yet its influence over our conduct will be such, as that the fact of its existence will in
this way be made manifest." Here is a state of mind recognized, which Mr. Finney,
with an utter confusion of the proprieties of language, chooses to call love existing in
the form of volition, but which we call a disposition. But by whatever name or phrase it
may be designated, it is not a faculty of the mind; it is not the object of consciousness,
has no sensible existence, and cannot therefore in any proper sense be called an act of
the mind, nor yet does it form any part of the substance of the mind. It is not without an
object (what it is will be presently seen) that Mr. Finney makes so queer a use of the
term volition in the above quotation; but the insertion of this word does not alter the
bearing of the passage upon the point now in question. His subsequent qualifications show
that he is describing something different from an act of the mind: and the single question
now before us is, whether there can be in the mind any disposition distinct from its acts,
and comprising within it tendencies and influences towards a certain course of action,
which yet does not form a part of the substance of the mind. The passage quoted is clear
and explicit, as far as this question is concerned. Let us hope, then, that we shall hear
no more from Mr. Finney on the subject of physical depravity; or at least that when he
next chooses to harangue his people on this favorite topic, he will have the candor, the
plain, homespun honesty, to tell them that there is not a single minister in the
Presbyterian church who teaches the odious doctrine, or anything that legitimately leads
to it; but that he has brought this man of straw before them to show them how quickly he
can demolish it. We have a great aversion to this Nero-like way of tying up Christians in
the skins of wild beasts that the dogs may devour them.
But it will be said, that the dispositions which have been shown to
exist in the mind are formed by the mind itself, in the voluntary exercise of its powers;
such would not be the case with a disposition existing prior to all action. This is true,
but it is not of the least moment in settling the question of the physical? character of
the disposition. If a disposition may be produced by the mind itself, which so far from
being itself an act makes its existence known only by its influence, and which yet is not
incorporated with the substance of our being, nor entitled to the epithet physical, then
such a disposition might inhere in the mind prior to all mental action, without possessing
a physical character. There is not the least relevancy or force, therefore, in the
argument commonly and chiefly relied upon, that if there be such antecedent disposition,
it must be physical. The only plausible argument that can be urged here, is, that
experience shows us what is the formative law of our disposition, that these are always
generated by the minds own action; and it is absurd therefore to suppose that any
disposition can exist in the mind anterior to all action. The conclusion to which this
argument arrives is wider than the premises. Its fallacy, and it is an obvious one, lies
in extending a law, generalized from observation upon the mind's action, to a case in
which by hypothesis the mind has never yet acted, and to which, of course, the law can
have no application. There is here a fallacy of the same nature as would be involved in a
process of reasoning like this: All our observation proves to us that no tree can be
produced but by calling into action the germinative power of its seed. The seed must be
planted in a fitting soil, and be subjected to a certain class of influences; it must
decay and then send forth the tender shrub, which, in its trunk, must be sustained by
appropriate nourishment; and years must elapse before the tree will lift its tall head to
the skies. No man has ever seen a tree produced by any other means, and the nature of
things is such that a tree cannot be produced in any other way. Therefore, no tree could
have originally come into being but through the same process. The error in reasoning is
here apparent, nor is it less so in the case which this was intended to illustrate.
Here again it will be urged, and at first sight the objection may seem
to gather force from the illustration we have just employed, that if there are any such
antecedent disposition as we are contending for, formed previous to any action of the
mind, it must be the direct effect of creative power; and if it possesses any moral
character, and we shall offer some reasons for believing it does, then God is the
immediate author of sin. This is the form in which this objection is always put by Mr.
Finney and others, and we have therefore adopted it, although it assumes what has been
shown to be untrue, that a disposition of mind, in the sense in which we use the term,
implies the idea either of a physical entity or a spiritual substance. It does not and
cannot include any such idea, and can in no case be considered, therefore, as the effect
of creative power. But does it follow that a primitive disposition, such as we speak of,
must be the direct product of the agency of the Deity? Is it not evident, in the contrary,
that this is only one out of a infinite number of modes in which it may possibly have been
produced? The first tree might have been called into being by the power of God, and sprung
up in an instant, complete in all its proportions; but it might also have been produced in
an endless number of ways, through the operation of some law, different, of course, from
the existing law of vegetable production, but requiring as much time for the completion of
its process, and removing its final result to any assignable distance from the direct
interference of divine agency. So is it possible too, that a primitive disposition of mind
may be produced in an infinite number of ways; and the mode of its formation may be such
that it cannot be considered the effect of the divine power in any other sense than that
in which all the movements and action both of matter and mind throughout the universe, are
said to be of God.
We think we have now shown that there are such states of mind as have
been designated by the term disposition; that a disposition of mind may exist anterior to
all mental action; that this disposition does not form any part of the substance of the
mind; and that it is not necessary to suppose that God is the author of it, in any other
sense than that in which he is the author of all we feel and do.
THE MORAL CHARACTER
OF MENTAL DISPOSITION
We come now to discuss the question of the moral character of mental
disposition. Mr. Finney, with his accustomed violence and lavish abuse of those who teach
a different doctrine, denies that a disposition of mind, granting its existence, could
possess any moral character. Most of his arguments on this point have been already
dispatched by our preliminary discussion. If it is true that a disposition is sinful, then
sin is a substance, instead of a quality of action. Then, too, God is the author of sin,
and he is an infinite tyrant, since he damns man for being what he made him. This sentence
comprises within it the substance of most that wears the semblance of argument in what Mr.
Finney has said on this subject; and how perfectly futile this is has been made
sufficiently apparent.
He argues from the text, "Sin is a transgression of the law,"
that sin attaches only to acts, and cannot be predicated of a disposition. As well might
he argue from the assertion, man is a creature of sensation, that he possessed no powers
of reflection. Until he can show, what indeed he has asserted very dogmatically, but of
which he has offered no proof, that this text was meant to be a strict definition of sin,
it will not serve his purpose.
The only other arguments worthy of notice, which Mr. Finney adduces in
support of his position, that all sin consists in acts, are drawn from the considerations
that "voluntariness is indispensable to moral character."
There is undoubtedly a sense in which it is true, that nothing can be
sinful which is not voluntary. And in this sense of the word all our dispositions are
voluntary. There are two meanings attached to the word will. It sometimes denotes the
single faculty of mind, called will; and sometimes all the active powers of the mind, all
its desires, inclinations and affections. This double meaning has proved a great snare to
Mr. Finney. He either never made the distinction, or perpetually loses sight of it, and
hence is often inconsistent with himself. In seeking to exhibit the meaning which he
prevalently attaches to the words will, voluntary, etc., we shall have occasion to present
to our readers a very singular theory of morals.
"Nothing," he says, "can be sinful or holy, which is not
directly or indirectly under the control of the will." But over our emotion "the
will has no direct influence, and can only bring them into existence through the medium of
the attention. Feelings or emotions are dependent upon thought, and arise spontaneously in
the mind when the thoughts are intensely occupied with their corresponding objects.
Thought is under the direct control of the will. We can direct our attention and
meditations to any subject, and the corresponding emotions will spontaneously arise in the
mind. Thus our feelings are only indirectly under the control of the will. They are sinful
or holy only as they are thus indirectly bidden into existence by the will. Men often
complain that they cannot control their feelings; they form overwhelming attachments which
they say they cannot control. They receive injuries, their anger rises, they profess they
cannot help it. Now while the attention is occupied with dwelling upon the beloved object
in the one case, the emotions of which they complain will exist of course; and if the
emotion is disapproved by the judgment and conscience, the subject must be dismissed from
the thoughts, and the attention directed to some other subject, as the only possible way
of ridding themselves of the emotion. So in the other case, the subject of the injury must
be dismissed, and their thoughts occupied with other considerations, or emotions of hatred
will continue to fester and rankle in their minds."
Again, in another place, he says, "If a man voluntarily places
himself under such circumstances as to call wicked emotions into exercise, he is entirely
responsible for them. If he places himself under circumstances where virtuous emotions are
called forth, he is praiseworthy in the exercise of them, precisely in proportion to his
voluntariness in bringing his mind into circumstances to cause their existence."
Again, he says, "If he (a real Christian) has voluntarily placed himself under these
circumstances of temptation, he is responsible for these emotions of opposition to God
rankling in his heart." We might quote pages of similar remarks.
These passages would afford ground for comment on Mr. Finney's
philosophy. He shows himself here, as on all occasions when he ventures upon the field of
mental science, a perfect novice. But we are chiefly concerned with the theological
bearings of the passages quoted. It is evident that Mr. Finney here uses the words will,
voluntarily, etc., in their restricted sense; and hence we have the dangerous theory of
morals, that nothing can possess a moral character which is not under the control of the
volitions of the mind. But our emotions cannot be thus controlled. They rise spontaneously
in the mind, they must exist when the thoughts are occupied with the objects appropriate
to their production. Hence all our emotions, affections and passions, according to Mr.
Finney, possess a moral character only in consequence of the power which the mind has, by
an act of will, to change the object of thought, and thus introduce a different class of
feelings.
Now, we might object to this view of the matter, that the will does not
possess the power here attributed to it. Our trains of thought are in some degree subject
to our volitions; but the will has by no means an absolute control over the attention of
the mind. Attention is generally indeed but another name for the interesting character of
the ideas to which the mind is attending, and is no more directly subject therefore to the
bidding of the will, than is the state of mind which imparts its interest to the present
object of thought. The grounds and the force of this objection will be evident to anyone
who will reflect upon states of mind which he has been in, when his whole soul was so
absorbed in the contemplation of some subject, that all his efforts to break away from the
scenes which riveted his attention, only served to break for a moment their fascinating
power. But we will wave this objection, not because it is not sufficiently strong to be
fatal to Mr. Finney's theory, but because it lies aside from our present course.
IMPOSSIBLE
FOR EMOTIONS TO POSSESS MORAL CHARACTER
A still more serious objection is, that upon this theory it is
impossible that our emotions should possess any moral character. If they are moral,
"only as they are indirectly bidden into existence by the will," then they
cannot be moral at all. If it is necessary to go back to the act of will which introduced
the object, in view of which these emotions necessarily arise, to find their moral
character, then upon no just grounds can morality be predicated of them. If a man has put
out his eyes, he cannot justly be accounted guilty for not being able to read, nor for any
of the consequences which result from his blindness. These consequences, if he could have
foreseen them, do indeed accumulate the greater guilt upon the act of putting out his
eyes; but that act is all for which he is fairly responsible. So in the other case, it is
upon the act of the will which brought the mind into contact with the objects, which of
necessity awakened its emotion, that we must charge all the responsibility. All the virtue
and vice, the holiness and sin of which we are capable, must lie solely in the manner of
managing the power of attention. He is a perfect man whose mind is so trained that it
takes up whatever subject of meditation the will enjoins; and he is a sinful man, whose
mind, without a direct volition to that effect, reverts, as if by instinct, to holy themes
and heavenly meditations, and adheres to them even though the will should endeavor to
force it away. All the foundations of morality and religion are virtually swept away by
this theory. If its assumptions are true, we should discard all motives and means now
employed to promote virtue. As it makes all moral excellence reside in the readiness and
skill with which the power of attention is managed, the most efficient means for the
promotion of virtue, beyond all comparison, would be the study of the mathematics. Such
are the ridiculous extremes to which Mr. Finney is driven in carrying out his doctrine,
that all sin consists in acts.
It can hardly be maintained that we have caricatured his doctrine, or
run it out beyond it intrinsic tendency. For if, as he says, a man is praiseworthy or
blamable in the exercise of his emotions, only because he has placed himself under
circumstances where these emotions are called forth, then it is plainly unjust to charge
responsibility upon anything else than the act of placing himself under the circumstances.
But without charging upon his theory anything beyond what he has
developed as its admitted consequences, who does not see upon the face of his own
statements absurdity enough to condemn any doctrine which necessarily involves it? A man
is responsible for his emotions, he says, only when he has voluntarily brought himself
under such circumstances as to call them into existence. Let us suppose then, two men,
brought without any direct agency of their own under the same set of circumstances. We
will imagine them taken by force and placed in a grog shop, filled with tripplers quaffing
the maddening drink, and uttering blasphemies that might make "the cheek of darkness
pale." Emotions are at once awakened in both the spectators. The desires of the one
go forth over the scene; he takes pleasure in those who do such things; he longs to drink
and curse with them; he knows that this is wrong, and endeavors to change the subject of
meditation, but his sympathy with the scene before him is so strong that his thoughts will
not be torn away from it, and his mind continues filled with emotions partaking of its
hideous character. The heart of the other instantly revolts at the scene. Every time he
hears the name of God blasphemed, he thinks of the goodness and glory of the being thus
dishonored, and while wondering that others can be blind to his excellency, the liveliest
feelings of adoration and gratitude are awakened in his heart. Now, according to Mr.
Finney, there is no moral difference between these men; they are not responsible for
emotions thus awakened. The one has not sinned, nor is the other praiseworthy. This is no
consequence deduced from something else that he has said. It is a case put in strict
accordance with his explicit statements. Such is the monstrous absurdity to which he is
driven, by denying that the state of mind which would, under the circumstances above
supposed, have disposed one of the spectators to descend and mingle in the filth and
wickedness of the scene, and the other, to rise from it to heaven in his holy desires and
emotions, does of itself possess a moral character.
Another illustration of the absurdities in which he has involved
himself, is furnished by his declaration, that man is praiseworthy in the exercise of his
emotions, "precisely in proportion to his voluntariness, in bringing his mind into
circumstances to cause their existence." Mr. Finney's common method of expressing the
incomprehensibility of anything is by saying, "It is all algebra;" and we must
really doubt whether he knows the meaning of the term proportion. For upon his principles,
the ration between the merit or the demerit of any two actions whatever, must be a ratio
of equality. Voluntariness, in his sense of the word, does not admit of degrees. The will
either acts or it does not, to bring the man under the peculiar circumstances. There are
no degrees in its consent or refusal; and of course there can be no degrees in moral
worth, or in guilt. If two men have each received the same injury, and each by an act of
will directed the attention of the mind to the injury and him who committed it, then they
are equally guilty for their feelings of hatred, however much those feelings may differ in
strength. There can be no difference of degree in the moral demerit of their emotions,
although the one should hate his adversary enough to work him some slight injury in
return, and the other hate him so much that nothing less than the murder of his victim
will satisfy his thirst for vengeance. The two men were equally voluntary in bringing
their minds under the circumstances which awaken their emotions, and must of necessity,
according to Mr. Finney's canon of morality, be equally guilty.
There is indeed another class of passages in Mr. Finney's writings, in
which he brings forward a further criterion of morality. He says, "When the will is
decided by the voice of conscience, or a regard to right, its decisions are
virtuous." The change of preference, or the decision of the will, which takes place
in regeneration, must be made, "because to act thus is right." The will must
decide "to obey God, to serve him, to honor him, and promote his glory, because it is
reasonable, and right, and just." It is the rightness of the duty that must influence
the mind if it would act virtuously." And again, "When a man is fully determined
to obey God, because it is right that he should obey God, I call that principle." In
these passages, and there are many more like them, he seems to resolve all virtue into
rectitude. It is evident why he does so, for he is thus enabled to require a mental
decision, and act of the mind, in relation to the rectitude of any emotion or action, in
order to constitute it virtuous; and thus defend his position that morality can attach
only to acts. He has here fallen into the mistake, however, of making the invariable
quality of an action the motive to its performance. It is true that all virtuous actions
are right, but it does not follow from this that their rectitude must be the motive to the
performance of them. If this is so, then the child, who in all things honors his parent,
does not act virtuously unless each act of obedience is preceded by a mental decision that
it is right for him to obey. Mr. Finney desired to take ground which would enable him to
deny that there is anything of the nature of holiness in the Christian's emotions of love
to God, when prompted by his disposition to love him; but he has evidently assumed an
untenable position.
We could easily bring forward more errors into which he has been
betrayed in carrying out his false doctrine, that morality can be predicated only of acts.
But we have surely presented enough. And this exposure renders it unnecessary that we
should repeat what have been so often produced and never refuted, the positive arguments
for believing that our dispositions, or states of heart, including the original
disposition by which we are biassed to evil, possess a moral character, and are the
proximate sources of all the good and evil in our conduct. Some of Mr. Finney's pretended
arguments against this opinion we have not answered, simply because they are so puerile,
that, though we made the effort, we could not condescend to notice them. All of them that
had the least plausibility we have shown to be without any real force. And if any man can
reject this opinion on account of the difficulties with which it is still encumbered, and
adopt the monstrosities connected with Mr. Finney's rival doctrine, we must think that he
strains at a gnat and swallows a camel.
NATURAL DEPRAVITY
As might have been expected from what has already been said, Mr. Finney
denies that there is any such thing as natural depravity. His views on this subject are
easily exhibited. We might describe them all, indeed, in a single phrase, by saying, that
they are neither more nor less than the old Pelagian notions. "This state of
mind," he says, describing the commencement of sin in a child, "is entirely the
result of temptation to selfishness, arising out of the circumstances under which the
child comes into being." "If it be asked how it happens that children
universally adopt the principle of selfishness, unless their nature is sinful? I answer,
that they adopt this principle of self-gratification, or selfishness, because they possess
human nature, and come into being under the peculiar circumstances in which all the
children of Adam are born since the fall." "The cause of outbreaking sin is not
to be found in a sinful constitution or nature, but in a wrong original choice."
"The only sense in which sin is natural to man is, that it is natural for the mind to
be influenced in its individual exercises by a supreme preference or choice of any
object."
On reading this last extraordinary declaration, the text of an inspired
apostle came to mind, in which he assures us, that we are "by nature children of
wrath." If both those declarations are true, we have the curious result that we are
children of wrath, not because we are sinners, but because we are so made as to be
influenced by a supreme choice! But texts of Scripture are as nothing in Mr. Finney's way.
He makes them mean more or less, stretches or curtails them, just as occasion requires.
His system is a perfect Procrustean bed, to which the Bible, no less than all things else,
must be fitted.
An illustration of this is found in his manner of dealing with the
passage, "I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me." This
text would seem, at first sight, to present a very serious obstacle to his views. And what
does he do with it? He first gravely proves that it does not mean "the substance of a
conceived fetus is sin!" He then jumps to the conclusion, "All that can be
possibly meant by this and similar passages is, that we were always sinners from the
commencement of our moral existence, from the earliest moment of the exercise of moral
agency." That is, when David and the other sacred writers make these strong
assertions, they only mean to inform us, that the moment we adopt the principle of supreme
selfishness as our rule of action, we do wrong; or, in other words, that just as soon as
we begin to sin, we sin! May we not well say, that he has a marvellous faculty for making
a text mean anything, or nothing, as suits his purpose?
Another illustration of this is furnished by his interpretation of the
text, "The carnal mind is enmity against God, for it is not subject to the law of
God, neither indeed can be." The carnal mind, he says, means a minding of the flesh,
a voluntary action of the mind, a choice that is supremely selfish. While men act upon the
principle of supreme selfishness, obedience is impossible. This, he says, is the reason
why the carnal mind, or the minding of the flesh, is not subject to the law of God,
neither indeed can be. Wonderful discovery! So the apostle, in this passage, meant nothing
more than the stale truism, that a man cannot be sinful and holy at the same time, -- that
he cannot, in the same act, transgress the law and render obedience to it.
Pelagians have always found a difficulty in reconciling their theory
with the salvation of infants by the grace of Jesus Christ. Pelagius himself was sorely
pressed on this point. Infants are in no way answerable for the sin of Adam, or otherwise
evilly affected by it than that it brings them into circumstances of temptation, and they
have no sin of nature; how then can they be subjects of pardon? What interest can they
have in the atonement of the Saviour? Let us see how Mr. Finney disposes of this
difficulty.
"Had it not been for the contemplated atonement, Adam and Eve would
have been sent to hell at once, and never have had any posterity. The race could never
have existed. . . . Now every infant owes its very existence to the grace of God in Jesus
Christ; and if it dies previous to actual transgression, it is just as absolutely indebted
to Christ for eternal life as if it had been the greatest sinner on earth." We have
no words to express our aversion to this egregious trifling with sacred subjects. The
Bible teaches us that all of our race who are saved are redeemed from sin; that they are
saved, not born, by virtue of the atonement of Jesus Christ. And when we ask Mr. Finney
how this can be reconciled with his theory that there is nothing connected with infants
that can be atoned for, he very gravely tells us that they owe their BIRTH to the grace of
God!
He does not tell us why he baptizes infants. We do not know, indeed,
whether he ever administers this ordinance to children previous to the supposed
commencement of moral action. Certainly, upon his principles, it could have no meaning. He
rejects, with utter scorn and ridicule, the idea that in regeneration and sanctification
there takes place anything that can be properly symbolized by "the washing off of
some defilement." The water of baptism then, to whomsoever this rite be applied,
cannot have any emblematical meaning; and the apostle committed a rhetorical error, to say
the least of it, when he wrote, "But ye are washed, but ye are sanctified." But
with what propriety this ordinance can be administered to children, who, having never
actually transgressed, are not sinners, who are just what they ought to be, we cannot
conceive. Surely consistency requires Mr. Finney to assign infant baptism a place among
those hated abominations, upon which he so much dwells, that the "traditions of the
elders" have introduced into the church.
EXSISTENCE OF SIN
We shall not undertake to show in detail the inadequacy of Mr. Finney's
theory to account for the sin there is in the world. This has often been done. And it
still remains perfectly inexplicable why, if men come into the world with just such a
nature as they ought to have, prone no more to evil than to good, and are surrounded at
the same time with "infinite motives" to holiness, and "circumstances"
that tempt them to sin, that they should all, with one accord, obey the force of the
finite circumstances rather than the infinite motives. If this IS the state of the case,
we might naturally expect all mankind to become holy, excepting here and there some
luckless one, who, not having sufficient skill so to manage the attention of his mind as
to keep before it the infinite motives to holiness, would fall into sin. Here too we might
ask, what has become of the doctrine that God has done all that he could to prevent the
present degree of sin? If he can so influence some men, after their hearts are set in them
to do evil, that they shall become holy, could he not have induced them, at the first, to
choose holiness instead of sin?
We cannot pass from this part of our subject without developing one of
the many singular results afforded by the comparison of different parts of Mr. Finney's
writings. The one we are now about to present is so very peculiar that we solicit for it
special attention. He rejects the common doctrine of depravity, because it makes man a
sinner by necessity -- it makes God the author of sin -- it is a constitutional or
physical depravity, and leads to physical regeneration, etc. He frequently blows off the
superflous excitement produced in his mind by this view of depravity, in sentences like
the following:
"That God has made men sinners, incapable of serving him --
suspended their salvation upon impossible conditions -- made it indispensable that they
should have a physical regeneration, and then damns them for being sinners, and for not
complying with these impossible conditions -- monstrous! blasphemous! Believe this who
can!"
Now let us see how he gets rid of this physical necessity, which he
falsely but uniformly charges upon the common opinions respecting depravity. According to
his theory, the cause of men becoming sinners is to be found in their possessing human
nature, and coming into being under circumstances of temptation -- in adaptation between
certain motives which tempt to undue self-gratification, and the innocent constitutional
propensities of human nature. But in one of his lectures, where he is endeavoring to
persuade his hearers to use the appropriate means for promoting a revival, and presenting
on that account such truths and in such forms as seem to him most stirring, he says:
"Probably the law connecting cause and effect is more undeviating in spiritual than
in natural things, and so there are fewer exceptions, as I have before said. The paramount
importance of spiritual things makes it reasonable that it should be so."
In the use of means for promoting revivals, he says again: "The
effect is more certain to follow," than in use of means to raise a crop of grain.
Now, upon his system, the efficiency of all means for promoting revivals may be traced up
ultimately to the tendency of eternal motives to influence the mind. We have here, then,
the position, distinctly involved, that motives, when properly presented, when so
presented as to produce their appropriate effect, operate by a surer law than any of the
physical laws of matter. The effect of the proper presentation of a motive to the mind is
more certain, and of course more inevitable, than that the blade of wheat should spring
from the planted seed, or a heavy body fall to the ground. Now he will not deny that the
motives to sin, which meet man soon after his entrance into the world, are thus adequately
presented; for the sad proof of it is found in the uniform production of their effect.
That effect must of course be inevitable, beyond any idea of necessity that we can form
from the operation of physical laws.
REGENERATION
From the parts of his scheme already presented, our readers will be able
to anticipate Mr. Finney's theory of regeneration. The change which takes place in
regeneration he, of course, represents as a change in the mind's method of acting. As it
originally chose sin instead of holiness, so a new habit consists in choosing holiness
instead of sin. The idea that there is imparted to the heart a new relish for spiritual
objects, or that any new principle is implanted, he rejects; to teach this, he says, is to
teach physical religion, which has been the great source of infidelity in the church.
"It is true," he says, "the constitution of the mind must be suited to the
nature of the outward influence or motive; and there must be such an adaptation of the
mind to the motive, and of the motive to the mind, as is calculated to produce any desired
action of the mind. But it is absurd to say that this constitutional adaptation must be a
holy principle, or taste, or craving after obedience to God. All holiness in God, angels,
or men, must be voluntary, or it is not holiness. To call anything that is a part of the
mind or body, holy -- to speak of a holy substance, unless in a figurative sense, is to
talk nonsense."
We remark here, in passing, that this is the uniform style in which Mr.
Finney caricatures the opinions from which he dissents. From one form of statement he
habitually passes to another, as completely synonymous, which has not the remotest
resemblance to it. He assumes here that a principle, or taste, cannot be voluntary,
whereas it cannot but be voluntary, in the only sense in which voluntariness is essential
to moral character; and also that it must be a substance, or form a part of the mind or
body -- an assumption than which nothing can be more groundless and absurd. He adds,
"The necessary adaptation of the outward motive to the mind, and the mind to the
motive, lies in the powers of moral agency, which every human being possesses."
Understanding, conscience, and the power of choice, he supposes, are all
that is needful to enable man to receive the truth of God, and act under its influence.
There is nothing new in all this. It is at least as old as the fifth century. It has been
broached repeatedly since the days of Pelagius, and as often shown, by arguments that have
not yet been refuted, to be utterly inadequate to account for the facts of the case. We
have indeed its radical unsoundness fully exposed to us by the apostle Paul, where he
declares, "The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God; neither can
he know them, for they are spiritually discerned." This passage of Scripture will
bear no interpretation which does not place it in irreconcilable contradiction with Mr.
Finney's theory. He generally asserts that the sinner knows all the truth that is
necessary to induce him to make himself a new heart, and that the only reason why it fails
to produce this effect is because he will not consider the truth.
We say generally, because here, as in everything else, Mr. Finney is
inconsistent with himself. At one time he talks thus: "It is indeed the pressing of
truth upon the sinner's consideration that induces him to turn. But it is not true that he
is ignorant of these truths before he thus considers them. He knows that he must die --
that he is a sinner -- that God is right, and he is wrong," etc. But again, when he
is seeking to make an impression upon the sinner, he assures us that "the idea that
the careless sinner is an intellectual believer is absurd -- the man that does not feel,
nor act at all, on the subject of religion, is an infidel, let his professions be what
they may." But we will leave him to explain how an infidel can be said to know that
to be true, which he does not believe to be true.
The uniform tenor of his representations, when treating of the subject
of regeneration, is that the sinner wilfully refuses to consider known truths, and, on
that account alone, has not a new heart. The apostle, on the contrary, declares the
natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, neither can he know them. We
presume that no one but Mr. Finney himself can doubt to which of these authorities we
should bow.
If the testimony of the apostle needed any confirmation, we might find
it abundantly in human experience. Every man knows that his perception of moral truths
depends upon the state of his heart. It is matter of familiar experience, that truths
which sometimes affect us scarcely at all, will, at another time, act so powerfully as to
break up all the fountains of feeling within us. And this difference is not owing to the
greater or less degree of consideration bestowed upon the truth; -- we may think of it as
profoundly in the one case as in the other. Who has not felt that a familiar truth,
occurring to the mind in the same terms with which it has often before been clothed, will
suddenly display a hitherto unseen richness of meaning, which at once wakes up all the
feelings of the heart? What is it that can thus modify our powers of moral perception but
the state of the mind? And how can we expect, then, that the spiritual truths of God's
holy word should produce their appropriate effect upon the mind of the sinner, who is
destitute not only of any fellowship with those truths, but of the disposition of heart by
which their meaning is discerned? We cannot understand how the unrenewed heart, if as Mr.
Finney says, "hates God with moral hatred," can even understand the real meaning
of the truth, God is love; or feel that this truth is a motive for subduing its hatred.
Nor are we able to see how any of those considerations most frequently presented in the
sacred Scriptures can prevail with the sinner, and produce upon him their appropriate
effect, unless his mind is illuminated, his heart renewed, by the influences of the Holy
Spirit.
Mr. Finney's own pages will furnish us with evidences that he himself
considers the mind as needing some further adaptation to the motives of the Bible, than
the powers of moral agency. This evidence is found in the fact that the motives which he
most frequently and importunately urges, are not those which are commonly employed in the
sacred Scriptures. He seems to have a kind of instinct of the insufficiency of the
considerations presented by the inspired writers, to answer his purpose. The most common
form in which he sets forth the change that takes place in regeneration, is that of a
change in the choice of a Supreme Ruler. He divides the world into two great political
parties, the one with God, the other with Satan, at its head.
When a man makes for himself a new heart, he changes sides in politics,
-- he gives up the service of Satan, and submits to the government of God. The great duty
which he urges upon the sinner is unconditional submission to God. This duty, as presented
by him, is very rarely intended to include submission to the terms of salvation revealed
in the gospel, -- it is a submission to God as the great creator and ruler of the world,
-- the God of providence rather than of grace.
Now it will at once occur to every reader of the Bible, that this is not
the duty which the sacred writers most frequently urge upon the sinner. They call upon men
to repent, and believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. But Mr. Finney says, "It is
generally in point, and a safe and suitable direction to tell a sinner to repent."
Marvellous! That he should consider it generally, but not always safe to tell a sinner to
do that which the apostles, with great uniformity, tell him to do. The other part of the
apostolic exhortation to sinners, "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ," he seems
to think, should no longer be given in any case save where an individual is unwilling to
admit that Christ is the Messiah of God. This exhortation he considers as exclusively
suitable to the days of the apostles, "when the minds of the people were agitated
mainly on the question, whether Jesus was the true Messiah." "They bore
down," he says, "on this point, because here was where the Spirit of God was
striving with them, and consequently, this would probably be the first thing a person
would do on submitting to God." He does indeed number among the directions to be
given to sinners, that "they should be told to believe the gospel;" but he
explains this to mean nothing more than "that trust or confidence in the Scriptures
that leads the individual to act as if they were true." Of that specific act of faith
in which the soul apprehends the Lord Jesus as its Saviour, and receives pardon and
justification, he seems not to have the least idea. The sole value of repentance or faith,
he finds in the manifestation which they afford of the heart's willingness to submit to
the authority of God. "Whatever point," he says, "is taken hold of between
God and the sinner, when he yields that he is converted. When he yields one point to God's
authority, he yields all."
This is evidently another gospel. The apostles urge all men to believe
in the Saviour because faith is in itself a proper and a most important duty, -- but Mr.
Finney deems it of no importance, save as it manifests submission to the authority of the
Great Ruler, and thinks it unsuitable to urge it upon any sinner therefore, unless it is
one whose heart has assumed a hostile attitude towards the claims of Jesus Christ to be
the true Messiah. How widely, indeed, does this differ from the gospel revealed to us from
heaven, which places faith at the head of human duties, teaching us that it is the
instrumental cause of our forgiveness, that it unites us to the Lord Jesus Christ, and is
the mediate source of all our spiritual strength!
As the duty presented by Mr. Finney to the sinner's mind is different
from that commonly urged in the Bible, so does he employ different motives to induce
compliance. The chief motive upon which he relies is, that it is right to acknowledge God
and submit to him as our Great Ruler. We can now see another reason why he assumed the
strange position upon which we have already commented, that "It is the rightness of a
duty that must influence the mind if it would act virtuously." Man in his natural
state can be made to see that it is right for him to submit to God, but he cannot be made
to perceive His moral glory, or to feel that his character is lovely. As he cannot receive
the things of the Spirit of God, Mr. Finney is therefore driven to the necessity of
seeking other things which he can receive. He endeavors, by developing the useful tendency
of the principles of the divine government in contrast with the injurious influence of
selfishness, to produce a conviction in the sinner's mind that it is right for God to
reign; and upon this conviction he relies to induce the sinner to change his voluntary
preference, and submit to the righteous rule of his creator.
In one of his sermons, after describing to the sinner how he must change
his heart, he goes through a kind of rehearsal of the performance. He begs the sinner to
give him his attention while he places before him "such considerations as are best
calculated to induce the state of mind which constitutes a change of heart." In
presenting these best considerations, he dwells upon "the unreasonableness and
hatefulness of selfishness," "the reasonableness and utility of
benevolence," "the reasons why God should govern the universe," etc. His
remarks upon these topics are protracted through ten or twelve octavo pages, in the whole
of which, about as many lines are devoted to a frigid allusion to the justice and mercy
displayed in the atonement of Jesus Christ.
In a previous passage of the same sermon he says, "The offer of
reconciliation annihilates the influence of despair, and gives to conscience its utmost
power." He seems here to limit the efficacy of the gospel, to its opening the way for
the operation of existing motives upon the heart of man. And his practice is certainly
consistent with this low view of the gospel. The considerations which he brings forward,
as best adapted to induce the sinner to change his heart, are almost exclusively such as
are furnished by natural religion. We hear next to nothing of the grace and glory of God
as they shine in the face of Jesus Christ, of the wondrous love of a dying Saviour, of the
demerit of sin as illustrated by his death, or of the guilt of the sinner in remaining
insensible to the motives which address him from Calvary. Our Saviour intimates that all
other sin is comparatively lost in the sin of rejecting Him; and the apostles refer to the
neglect of the "great salvation" provided for man, as presenting the most odious
form of human guilt. To the life and death of Jesus Christ, indeed, do they continually
recur for the illustration and enforcement of all human duties. They make known nothing
save Jesus Christ, and him crucified. This is the great central source of light and heat.
Whatever may be the point of departure, how uniformly do they carry us to the Cross, and
bid us thence look at the character of God, and the duty of man.
But when Mr. Finney professedly addresses himself to the task of
presenting the considerations best adapted to move the heart of the sinner, he thinks he
can find a better point of view. He takes his stand amidst the wonders of creation; he
finds in the character there developed, and the relations there established between man
and his Maker, the right and the duty of God to govern, and man's obligations to obey, --
"the reasonableness and utility of virtue, -- the unreasonableness, guilt, and evil
of sin;" -- hence he charges the sinner with having "set his unsanctified feet
upon the principles of eternal righteousness, lifted up his hands against the throne of
the Almighty, set at naught the authority of God and the rights of man!" We do not
deny the validity of these considerations, upon which he chiefly dwells; but we do deny
that the truths involved in them are the peculiar truths of the gospel, or that they are
those which the apostles deemed best adapted to become "the wisdom of God and the
power of God unto salvation." Throughout his whole system indeed, it is painful to
see how small a space is allotted to the Cross of Christ. Often where it might be expected
to stand forth conspicuous, it seems to be, of set design, excluded.
In this same sermon, when defending the reasonableness of the
"conditions of the gospel," he tells the sinner that faith is reasonable,
because "nothing but faith in what God tells him, can influence him to take the path
that leads to heaven." The faith of which he here speaks is a "condition of the
gospel," and yet he represents it in no other light than as a general belief in the
truth of God's word; and justifies its requirement solely on the ground of its tendency to
make man holy. There is no hint of that faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, so often mentioned
in the Scriptures, by which the soul commits itself to Him as its Saviour, and becomes a
partaker of the benefits of his redemption, -- no allusion to the reasonableness of this
condition, on the ground of its rendering to God all the glory of our salvation. We see
not how any pious mind, accustomed to look to Jesus Christ for all its strength and joy
and glory, can pass through this new system, without being constrained at every step to
cry out, "Ye have taken away my Lord, and I know not where ye have laid Him."
Another illustration, trifling it is true, when compared with the one we
have just presented, but yet worthy of notice, of the difficulty under which Mr. Finney
labors, in carrying out his views of regeneration, is found in the necessity which is laid
upon him of violating the established meaning of words. A new heart is a new act. In
regeneration no principle is implanted in the mind, but the beginning and end of the
process is in a new act; and consequently the process of the divine life in the soul of
man is a series of acts, -- there is no growth of anything which lays the foundation of
those acts and disposes to the performance of them. He not only believes this to be true,
but thinks it vastly important that others should be convinced of its truth. The world has
hitherto been ignorant of the true nature of religion and the method of its progress in
the heart. He expresses his doubt whether one professor of religion out of ten in the city
of New York, if asked what sanctification is, could give a right answer. They would speak
of it, "as if it were a sort of washing off of some defilement," -- or they
would represent it as the growth of some principle, or germ, or seed, or sprout, implanted
in the soul. "But sanctification," he says, "is obedience." Of course,
to sanctify must mean to obey; and to be sanctified is to be obeyed. Now we charitably
hope that Mr. Finney has underrated the number of those who could give a right answer to
this question; for we presume that more than nine out of ten of the professors of religion
in New York have been at school, and can read a dictionary, if not the Bible and the
catechisms of their church, and surely not one, thus qualified, could ever think of giving
his definition of sanctification.
We have already exposed the insufficiency of Mr. Finney's theory; and in
testimony thereof have adduced his own departure, in carrying out his theory, from the
instructions and motives developed in the gospel. He thus evidently betrays his own
conviction that the duties which the apostles commonly urge upon the impenitent are not
consistent with his scheme; and that the motives they present are of such a nature as to
require a corresponding disposition of heart. The force of the objections we have brought
forward, is not at all diminished by the different form in which he sometimes states his
doctrine of the new heart. He has a class of passages in which he represents the spiritual
heart, as "That deep-seated, but voluntary preference of the mind which lies back of
all its other voluntary affections and emotions, and from which they take their
character." If by "preference," be meant such an inclination as he has
elsewhere described under that name, which is not an object of consciousness, and makes
itself known only by its influence over our acts; and by its being
"deep-seated," that is, seated in the will itself, using the term in its larger
sense, and for that reason entitled to the epithet "voluntary," we should have
no objection to this account of the matter. This is precisely our idea of a disposition.
But this is not his act of the mind. It still remains then for him to show how the mind
can be induced to prefer the glory of God, as the supreme end of pursuit, when it is blind
to that glory, and if we may credit the apostle, in such a state, that until renewed, it
cannot know it.
Another difficulty, too, is started by the passage we have just quoted
from him. It seems that we are to look back from every other voluntary affection and
emotion of mind to this "deep-seated preference," to find their moral character.
But as this preference is itself but a voluntary exercise of mind, and differs from its
other voluntary exercises only by being more deep-seated, it would seem that we ought to
look back to something else for its moral character. It is impossible for us to imagine
how one voluntary exercise of mind can possess a moral character, independent of the
subjective motives which prompted it, while all other affections and emotions are good or
evil only through their connection with this one. Is it not wonderful that with such beams
in his own eye, he should be endeavoring to pluck out motes from the eyes of others!
MAN CAN REGENERATE HIMSELF
Mr. Finney asserts the perfect, unqualified ability of man to regenerate
himself. It is easier, indeed, he says, for him to comply with the commands of God than to
reject them. He tells his congregation that they "might with much more propriety ask,
when the meeting is dismissed, how they should go home, than to ask how they should change
their hearts." He declares that they who teach the sinner that he is unable to repent
and believe without the aid of the Holy Spirit, insult his understanding and mock his
hopes, -- they utter a libel upon Almighty God, -- they make God an infinite tyrant, --
they lead the sinner very consistently to justify himself, -- if what they say is true,
the sinner ought to hate God, and so should all other beings hate him, as some have
humorously and truly said, they preach, "You can and you can't, you shall and you
shan't, you will and you won't, you'll be damn'd if you do, you'll be damn'd if you
don't."
It has been reserved, we imagine, for the refined and delicate taste of
Mr. Finney, to discover the humor of this miserable doggerel. He is obviously much
delighted with it, and, like all his other good things, has worked it up more than once.
We hope the next compiler of the beauties of American poetry will pay a due deference to
his commendation, and assign a conspicuous place to this precious morceau.
Most professors of religion, he says, pray for sinners, that God would
enable them to repent. Such prayers he declares to be an insult to God. He thinks it a
great error to tell the sinner to pray for a new heart, or to pray for the Holy Ghost to
show him his sins. "Some persons," he says, "seem to suppose that the
Spirit is employed to give the sinner power, -- that he is unable to obey God without the
Spirit's agency. I confess I am alarmed when I hear such declarations as these; and were
it not that I suppose there is a sense in which a man's heart may be better than his head,
I should feel bound to maintain that persons holding this sentiment were not Christians at
all."
We have certainly never met with a more singularly extravagant and
unfortunate declaration than the one last quoted. Who are the persons who have held and
taught this sentiment, so inconsistent with Christianity? Why, at the head of the list
stand our Saviour and his apostles. "No man," said Christ, "can come to me
except the Father which hath sent me draw him." And the apostles refer continually to
the absolute dependence of man upon God for the necessary strength to perform his duties
aright. Not one of those holy men felt that he was of himself "sufficient for these
things." Their uniform feeling seems to have been, "I can do all things through
Christ, who strengtheneth me." Mr. Finney not only believes that we can do all things
without any strength from Christ, but he makes this one of the fundamental doctrines of
Christianity. The apostles exhorted men to be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus,
and they prayed for those to whom they wrote, that the Lord would strengthen them with
might by his Spirit, that he would make them perfect, establish, strengthen, settle them.
But Mr. Finney says, to pray that God would help the sinner to repent, is an insult to
God; as if God had commanded the sinner to do what he cannot do. Now the Christian has at
least as much ability to be perfectly holy as the sinner has to repent. God commands
Christians to be perfect, and of course, when the apostles prayed that the Lord would
strengthen them and make them perfect, they prayed "as if God had commanded the
Christian to do what he cannot do." These prayers, then, uttered under the
inspiration of the Holy Ghost, must have been "an insult to God!"
Mr. Finney cannot relieve the character of his reckless, irreverent
assertions, by saying that the sacred writers meant to represent nothing more than the
unwillingness of the sinner to do his duty. Beyond all dispute they represent this
unwillingness under the form of an inability, and it is against those who describe it by
precisely equivalent terms that Mr. F. raves with such infuriate bitterness. There is a
question here, not between him and us, but between him and the apostles, whether they
employed proper and safe language in describing the moral condition of man and the nature
of his dependence on divine aid.
He may perhaps say that the language employed by the apostles was
perfectly proper at that time, but as their statements have been perverted and become the
source of ruinous errors, it is now necessary to employ more explicit and guarded
language. We suppose this will be the nature of his defence, as he distinctly takes the
ground that it will not answer to preach the same class of truths, or to exhibit them in
the same manner, in any two ages of the Church, or in any two places. At each time and
place the sinner is entrenched behind his own peculiar errors, and the preacher must be
careful not to present any truth which he can so pervert as to fortify himself in his
refuges of lies. But is it true that any such change can take place, from age to age, in
the natural character or the accidental circumstances of man, as to call for any important
change in the matter or manner of religious instruction? What error has ever existed that
does not find its refutation in some revealed truth? It is a very dangerous principle to
admit, that we are at liberty to omit such truths of the Bible as we deem unsuitable to
existing emergencies, and to exhibit others in a very different light from that in which
they are left by inspired writers. It virtually suspends the whole of the divine
revelation upon the discretion and wisdom of man. But if true, it has no application to
the case now before us. There is no evidence that the perversion of the truth which Mr. F.
thinks can only be met by varying the manner in which the apostles represent man's
dependence, is a modern error. On the contrary, it is undeniable that this very error
prevailed in the days of the apostles. Paul met with the same objections that are now
current, drawn from the divine sovereignty and human dependence; and how does he refute
them? By a flat denial that man is unable of himself to do his duty? Or by a modification,
a softening down of his previous statements? No, he re-asserts the perverted doctrines in
the face of the objections raised against them. He does not, nor does any one of the
sacred writer, affirm in a single instance that the sinner is able to obey the divine
commands. Not a text of Scripture can be found in which this is declared, while a
multitude can be produced which explicitly, and in so many words deny it. Will Mr. F. say
that the apostles urged upon men obedience to the divine commands, and thus virtually
declared their ability to obey? Then why does he not declare it in the same virtual
manner? The same reasons existed then as now for a direct assertion of the sinner's
ability, and yet it was in no case made. Why, then, should he make it now, and dwell upon
it, and magnify it into an important, nay, an essential part of the gospel, so that he who
disbelieves it cannot be a Christian at all?
But it is not true that in urging the commands of God, the sacred
writers teach the entire and independent ability of man to obey. Mr. Finney does not
pretend to bring forward a single passage of Scripture in which his doctrine is directly
taught; he finds it proved in no other way than by his own inferences from such commands
as, "Make to yourself a new heart," "My son, give me thy heart." His
brief argument for human ability is, God commands man to obey, therefore he can obey. He
does not even allude to the distinction often taken between natural and moral ability. He
teaches broadly without any qualification whatever, that a divine command implies the
possession of all the ability necessary to obedience. Obligation and ability, he says,
must be commensurate. And how does he prove the truth of this last proposition? In no
other way than by repeating, times without number, that to teach otherwise makes God an
infinite tyrant. But the Bible does not inform us that there is any tyranny in God's
commanding men to do what they cannot do. It teaches us directly the contrary, by making
known the duty of man to receive the things of the Spirit of God, while it at the same
time declares, that without divine assistance he cannot receive or know them. He must
refer, then, for the truth of this maxim, to our natural sense of justice.
We might object to this reference of a case already so clearly decided
by a higher authority; but we have no fear that there will be found here any discrepance
between the teachings of revelation and the testimony of man's conscience, if the latter
be rightly interpreted. Our natural sense of justice does indeed teach us that no
obligation can rest upon man to perform any duty for which he has not the necessary
facilities; and that he is not responsible for failure in anything which he was willing to
do, but was hindered in the execution by causes beyond his control. When appointed to such
cases as these, there is a self-evidence belonging to the maxim in question which places
its truth beyond all dispute. Mr. Finney's mistake lies in extending it to cases which lie
altogether beyond the limits within which it was generalized. We deny that the common
sense of mankind has ever required that we should possess the ability to change our
inclinations, as the condition of our responsibility for their exercise. To illustrate
this, let us suppose the case of a man under the influence of any dominant passion. Before
he has long indulged this passion, it would be comparatively easy for him to relinquish
it. As he gives way to its impulses, however, its power over him increases, until at
length it binds in complete subjection to itself all the other affections of his nature.
At each step of its progress the difficulty of subduing it is increased; and yet who will
deny that the sin of cherishing is accurately proportioned to this difficulty? The law of
continuity, which has place in moral reasoning, as well as in that "algebra"
which is to Mr. F. the symbol of incomprehensibility, would teach us hence to infer that
the guilt is greatest when the difficulty is greatest, and that the former has its highest
form of aggravation in the insurmountable character of the latter.
The language of the whole world is framed in recognition of this truth.
We speak familiarly of the difficulty which men find in changing their inclinations,
without ever conceiving that we thereby lessen their obligation; nay, we consider the cup
of their guilt full to the brim, when they have so destroyed their ability to become
virtuous, that we may properly say of them, "They cannot cease to do evil, and learn
to do well." When a paramount inclination, like a strong man armed, has taken
possession of the heart, and, with a despotism peculiar to itself, banished all but its
own ideas and emotions, how can it be dispossessed? Will it yield to a volition of the
mind? We all know it will not, and Mr. Finney himself admits it.
He says that our affections will not obey the bidding of the will, -- we
cannot summon or dismiss them by a volition. This admission is fatal to him. The mind, he
says, can operate upon its inclinations and affections only by changing the object of
thought; and this change it certainly cannot effect in a moment. When any strong
inclination is in exercise, the mind has an attraction for those ideas and considerations
which tend to sustain and increase its present emotions, while it repels all others to an
unseen distance, and some little time at least is necessary before it can succeed in
calling up and keeping before it those objects of thought which may introduce a different
class of feelings. Upon his own account of the matter, no man can, in an instant, change a
strong inclination. And yet if that inclination is an evil one, the obligation to an
immediate change is evident. What, then, has become of the maxim that obligation and
ability are commensurate? The sinner who perceives the opposition of the divine government
to his selfish plans, and whose heart is on that account filled with emotions of hatred
towards God, cannot instantly, if at all, turn his mind to such views of the divine
character as will inspire him with love. And yet the duty of immediate, instant submission
is very evident. We see, then, that power is not the exact measure of obligation.
One instance of the failure of the truth of this maxim is as good as a
thousand, since one is enough to destroy its generality, and leave the arguments for the
inability of the sinner standing in all their force, unless they can be overthrown by
considerations drawn from other sources. We do utterly deny that the sinner is able, in
the sense which Mr. Finney contends for, to obey the divine commands. In proof of this we
say that he is dead in trespasses and in sins, and as the dead man is insensible to all
things, so is he to those objects which, if rightly perceived, would be adapted to kindle
within him holy desires and affections. Until renewed, he cannot know the things which he
must know before he can discharge his duty. And the arguments which we urge from reason
and Scripture in defence of these views, are not touched by the assertion that obligation
and ability must be commensurate with each other. We have already produced one instance in
which, upon Mr. Finney's own admission, this maxim fails to be true: and we are now about
to bring forward another, in which he virtually confesses that it is never true when the
affections and inclinations of the heart are in question.
In explaining why there can be no repentance in hell, he says, when a
man's "reputation is so completely gone that he has no hope of retrieving it, in this
state of despair there is no possibility of reclaiming him; no motive can reach him and
call forth an effort to redeem his character." Now, in view of this admission, let it
be true that obligation and ability are commensurate, and what is the consequence? Why,
that when a man has become so vicious as to ruin his reputation, when he has reached such
a confirmed state of iniquity that he himself and all others despair of his ever becoming
virtuous, when he has severed the last link that bound him to humanity, and is floating
loose from his species, a demon or a brute, then is he released from all accountability!
Mr. Finney adds, that in hell "the sinner will be in despair, and while in despair it
is a moral impossibility to turn his heart to God." But will he deny that the sinner
in hell is under any less obligation to love God, on account of this admitted
impossibility of loving Him? Betraying, as he here does, his knowledge of the limitations
to which his favorite standard of obligation is subject, we should suspect him of a set
design to deceive, when he uses it so often in its broad, unqualified sense, and takes his
stand upon it to thunder out his furious anathemas against others, had he not furnished
us, through all his writings, with such abundant evidence of his incapacity to take into
view more than a very small part of one subject at the same time.
With the exposure of the error involved in his position, that God cannot
consistently command man to do that which he cannot perform, we shall take our leave of
this part of the subject, for he has not brought forward the semblance of an argument in
favor of the sinner's ability to regenerate himself, which
does not directly involve the universal truth of this erroneous maxim.2
DIVINE INFLUENCE
We have already occupied so much space, that we cannot exhibit as fully
as we would wish, Mr. Finney's views of the doctrine of divine influence. His theory on
this subject is expressed in the following extract.
"The work of the Holy Spirit does not consist merely in giving
instruction, but in compelling him to consider truths which he already knows, -- to think
upon his ways and turn to the Lord. He urges upon his attention and consideration those
motives which he hates to consider and feel the weight of." Again he says, "It
is indeed the pressing of truth upon the sinner's consideration that induces him to
turn."
It will be at once perceived that he limits the agency of the Holy
Spirit, in the regeneration of the sinner, to the simple presentation of truth to the
mind. Said we not truly, that the influence of the Holy Spirit comes in here only by the
way? It is strictly parenthetical, and has about as much fitness and meaning, in
connection with the rest of his scheme, as "the grace of God" has in the REX,
DEI GRATIA, on the disk of a Spanish dollar. He maintains that the truth of God, if
adequately considered, would convert the sinner; and that he has a perfect and independent
power to keep that truth before his mind. Surely, then, the agency of the Spirit is
superfluous. It is a new cause introduced to account for the production of an effect for
which we already have an adequate cause. But though he has, inconsistently we think,
retained the doctrine of divine influence, he has so modified it that it has but few, if
any, points of resemblance with the scriptural representations of this subject.
His common method of illustrating the nature of the Spirit's agency is
by a reference to the manner in which a lawyer persuades a jury, or an orator sways his
audience. The Spirit merely presents the truth, and the moral suasion of the truth
regenerates the sinner, or rather induces him to regenerate himself. It is not thus that
the Scriptures represent it. What mind can read his frequent illustration of an advocate
persuading his hearers, and then pass to the scriptural one, of a power that raises from
death unto life, without feeling that the agencies which can be properly set forth under
such dissimilar symbols must be specifically and widely different from each other? If he
has given us the correct account of the divine agency exerted in the salvation of man,
then it cannot be denied the language of the sacred writers, on this subject, is most
delusively extravagant.
He does sometimes describe the Spirit as forcing the truth home with
tremendous power, -- pouring the expostulation home, -- keeping the truth in warm contact
with the mind, -- gathering up a world of motive, and pouring it in upon the soul in a
focal blaze. Of these and similar expressions, the "warm contact," and the
"focal blaze," seem to be his favorites, as he has most frequently repeated
them. They are but the rays with which he seeks to conceal from his own view and that of
others, his meagre skeleton of a Scriptural truth. He seems to resort to these expressions
because he feels the inaptness and poverty of his plain statements. But it is as bad to
lose one's self in a fog of metaphor, as in that "fog of metaphysics" which he
so much dreads. His "close contact," and "warm contact," and
"focal blaze," and "Pouring home," mean nothing more than that the
Spirit presents the truth to the mind. However the form of expression may be varied, this
exhausts the subject of his interference. He does nothing to awaken the attention any
further than the truth which he offers awakens it; nothing to arouse the feelings, --
nothing to make the scales fall from the eye of the mind that it may perceive the truth,
-- nothing to change the disposition of the heart so that it may love the truth and feel
its constraining influence. Mr. Finney expressly and warmly excludes any direct operation
of the Spirit upon the mind or heart. To suppose any such agency, he says with an
irreverence of which we hope but few could be guilty, is to suppose a "physical
scuffling" between the Holy Spirit and the sinner! As the Spirit awakens no
inclination of the heart to go forth and embrace the truth, the warm contact with the
mind, into which he brings it, can refer only to its continuous presentation. When the
truth is placed before the mind, and the attention is fixed, the contact is complete, and
cannot be rendered any closer or warmer but by the instrumentality of the affections, upon
which Mr. F. asserts the Spirit exerts no agency. We have already shown the utter
inadequacy of this account of the mode of regeneration. Whether the truth remains for a
short or a long time, in cold or in warm contact with the unrenewed heart, it will feel in
the considerations before it no sufficient motive for loving God.
It will be seen from Mr. F.'s account of the Spirit's influence, that
the agency which he exerts in the regeneration of the sinner is the same in kind as that
exerted by the preacher. Both call his attention to the truth, and neither of them does
anything beyond this. If you go to a drunkard, and urge upon him the motives which should
induce him to abandon his cups, you have done for him precisely what the Holy Spirit does
for the sinner in his regeneration. The preacher, upon this scheme, has the same right
that God has to assume to himself the glory of the sinner's salvation. Indeed Mr. F. fully
admits this in answering the objection that his view of the subject "takes the work
out of God's hands, and robs him of his glory." His defence is, that the glory
belongs to God, inasmuch as he caused the sinner to act. And mark the meaning and force of
his illustration: "If a man," he says, "had made up his mind to take his
own life, and you should, by taking the greatest pains and at great expense, prevail upon
him to desist, would you deserve no credit for the influences you exerted in the
case?" Is it not amazing that any man with the Bible in his hands, and professing to
love its sacred truths, could divide, as this passage fully does, the glory of the
sinner's salvation between God and man, ascribing the work in the same sense to the Holy
Spirit and the preacher, and distributing to each a similar need of praise!
Mr. Finney seems to have a great objection to the peaching of the
doctrine of divine influence in any manner. There was a tract published in New York
entitled Regeneration is the effect of Divine Power. He twice declares that, "The
very title to this tract is a stumbling block." He says that, "While the
sinner's attention is directed to the subject of the Spirit's influences, his submission
is impossible;" and that if the apostles on the day of Pentecost had gone off to drag
in such subjects as dependence upon the Holy Spirit, it is manifest that not one of their
hearers would have been converted. "The doctrine of election and divine
sovereignty," he assets, "has nothing to do with the sinner's duty, -- it
belongs to the government of God." And in another place he says, "To preach
doctrines in an abstract way, and not in reference to practice, is absurd." As the
doctrine of divine sovereignty then has nothing to do with the sinner's duty, we suppose
that he intends that it should not be preached at all. Thus does he distort, thus would he
conceal from view, a doctrine which runs through the while Bible, is incorporated with all
its revelation, and is the basement principle of so many emotions and actions!
It is obvious why he is thus hostile to divine sovereignty. This
doctrine he thinks is calculated to keep men easy in their sins. If they are dependent
upon God, they will be led to wait for his action upon them before they begin to act. No
doubt the truth may be thus perverted. But is not his doctrine greatly more liable to
perversion? He teaches the sinner that he has all the requisite power to convert himself.
What more natural than for the sinner to say, "I love my sins, and therefore as I can
at any moment forsake them and make myself holy, I will continue to indulge myself?"
It is worthy of remark, that when Mr. Finney is exposing, in one of his most moving
paragraphs, the unfitness of a deathbed as a place for repentance, he alludes only to the
difficulty of thinking and keeping the mind in warm and distressing contact with the
truth, during the agonies of dissolution. He does not refer in the most distant manner to
the danger that the sinner, justly abandoned of God, may be unable on that account to
change his heart. Is there no danger, too, that the sinner, so repeatedly assured that God
would be an infinite tyrant if he had commanded him to do what he cannot do, should find
in his own experience that he cannot of himself make a new heart, and thus be led to
condemn the justice of the divine requirements? May he not also very consistently say to
his instructor, `It is at least as easy for you to be perfectly holy as it is for me to
repent. I retort upon you your charges that I am a wicked rebel, and that my heart has
been case-hardened in the fires of hell. Physician, heal thyself. If it is easier for me
to love God than to hate him, it is easier for you to be perfect than to remain imperfect.
It is easier indeed for you to be holy, even as your Father in heaven is holy, than it is
for you to walk home; to do the latter requires that you should both be willing and exert
the proper muscular action, but to do the former only requires you to be willing. You must
be the wickedest being in the universe, then, to refuse to perform a duty so obvious and
so easy.'
We here dismiss this subject for the present. As we have occupied
ourselves with Mr. Finney's doctrines, we have been led to seek them chiefly in his
Sermons, from which most of our extracts have been taken. We propose in our next number to
examine his Lectures more particularly, and develop the measures and the spirit of this
new system. As we have shown that its doctrines are not those of the Bible, so will it be
seen that its spirit is anything rather than the spirit of Christianity.
We have not shown the discrepancies between Mr. Finney's doctrines, and
the standards of the church to which he belongs. This would be holding a light to the sun.
It is too evident to need elucidation, that on all the subjects which we have gone over,
his opinions are diametrically opposed to the standards of the Presbyterian Church, which
he has solemnly adopted. Many of the very expressions and forms of stating these doctrines
upon which he pours out his profane ridicule, are found in the Confession of Faith. Why
then does he remain in the church?
He will hold up to the detesting of his people a man who refuses to pay
his subscription to the Oneida Institute, because he conscientiously believes that
institution is doing more harm than good, asserting that he is not honest, and more than
insinuating that he cannot go to heaven. And can he see no moral dishonesty in remaining
in a church, whose standards of faith he has adopted, only to deny and ridicule them? It
is a remarkable fact that this man, thus incorrect in his doctrinal views, thus dishonest
in his continuance in a church whose standards he disbelieves and condemns, should have
been appointed a professor of theology to assist in training up ministers for our
churches. The trustees of Oberlin Institute had, to be sure, a perfect right to appoint
him; but it seems to us very remarkable that they should have selected him, and rather
more so that he should have felt willing to undertake the office of an instructor in
theology. We suppose, however, that his object was to show the church the way in which her
ministers should be trained. We give him credit for his good intentions. He declares it to
be a solemn fact, that there is a great defect in the present mode of educating ministers,
and that the training they receive in our colleges and seminaries does not fit them for
their work. He assures his readers that all the professors in our theological seminaries
are unfit for their office; some of them are getting back towards second childhood, and
ought to resign; and none of them are such men as are needed in these days. Now is it not
very kind in Mr. Finney, when the church is thus destitute of men who can adequately
instruct her ministers, to step forward and take the office upon himself? No doubt the
whole Presbyterian church ought to break forth in rejoicings. But we confess we would
rather he should make the experiment of his ability in this line out of our church. He
will, doubtless, think this very unkind and ungrateful, but we cannot help it. We tender
him our thanks for the substantial service he has done the c |