"we quote form the Commentary of
Calvin, one of the ablest and most spiritual of expositors, and on the
whole, decidedly our own favorite."
"The doctrine with which we are at
present concerned is not that of the simplicity of moral actions, nor that
of the constant sinlessness of such as have been converted, but simply
this, that nothing short of present entire conformity to the divine law is
accepted of God."
With a critique of opposers; such as
Dr. Beecher's letter on Perfection.
With multliple illustrations from
Jonathan Edwards.
ARTICLE XIV.
THE HOLINESS ACCEPTABLE TO GOD.
By
John Morgan,
Professor of the Literature of the
New Testament,
Oberlin C. Institute.
February 1846.
[Retyped and reprinted (exactly) in
April 1999 by Rick Friedrich.]
"WHEREWITH shall I come before the Lord, and bow
myself before the High God?" This has in all ages been the solemn and
anxious inquiry of earnest souls. It is the question of one who has
sinned--the question, however, of hope and not of despair--the question of
one who conceives that perhaps the High and Holy One may be acceptably
approached. But the inquiry presupposes, that whatever God may have done,
may be doing, or ready to do for his salvation, the inquirer has a
personal responsibility which he must meet, that there are conditions
which he must fulfil. What shall I do to inherit eternal
life? The question recognizes the moral agency of the inquirer, and the
necessity of its appropriate exercise.
It is admitted by all, except utter antinomians,
that some degree of holiness or conformity to the divine law, is
indispensable to acceptance with God. No one, we think, would refuse to
unite with the venerable Westminster Confession in the statement that
"repentance, by which a sinner so grieves for, and hates his sins as to
turn from them all to God, purposing and endeavoring to walk with him in
all the ways of his commandments, is of such necessity to all sinners,
that none may expect pardon without it." Still the majority of the church
would doubtless, with the Larger Westminster Catechism, maintain that the
"best works" of God's accepted saints, "are imperfect and defiled in the
sight of God." The celebrated Dr. Beecher in his recent letter on
Perfection, exhibits the theory which he has embraced on the subject. We
will quote a few of his questions and answers.
"
Question 1. What takes place in regeneration?
Answer. The reconciliation of an enemy to God;
submission to his will; love to God more than to all creatures and all
things. In its commencement, this love is feeble compared with "all the
heart, mind, soul, and strength," according to the moral law; and to
qualify for heaven must be progressively augmented through sanctification
of the Spirit and belief of the truth.
Q. 2. How can the help of Christ be obtained, to
secure our growth in grace?
A. By renouncing all reliance upon our own strength
and merits, and relying entirely on the sufficiency and willingness of
Christ to help us, sought by filial supplication, and the diligent use of
the appointed means of grace; striving, as the Puritan writers say, as if
all depended on ourselves, and looking to Christ as if all depended on
him.
Q. 3. What will be the effect of such a prayerful
reliance upon Christ, in the diligent use of the means of grace?
A. Not perfection; for faith can be no more perfect
than the love which animates it; and not including love with all the
heart, and mind, and soul, and strength, is always an implication of
defect, needing an advocate and pardon. The child who cannot go a step
alone, may as well exult in the claim of perfect manhood, as those who can
do nothing without Christ, in the claim of perfection. But the result will
be that they will grow in grace till they die, going from strength to
strength, till they all appear in Zion before God.
"
The doctrine of these extracts clearly is, not
simply that the love of a newborn saint is feeble compared with that of an
advanced Christian, but that it is less than the moral law requires, and
therefore sinfully defective. These extracts also teach that "the most
prayerful reliance on Christ, and the most diligent use of the means of
grace" ever practiced in this life, never produce an obedience which does
not itself, on account of sinful defect, need pardon. In these views he
coincides with the representation of the Westminster Confession, that
"they who in their obedience attain to the greatest height which is
possible in this life, * * fall short in much which in duty they are bound
to do."
We propose in the present article to seek a
scriptural answer to the inquiry, Is any degree of holiness acceptable
to God, which, for the time being, falls short of full obedience to the
divine law? We put the question into the most general form, intending
it to apply to both the accepted holiness of the newborn soul, and the
holiness of the most mature Christian.
1. In order to an intelligent answer to this
inquiry, we must first determine what the requirements of the law are, and
in what phraseology they are couched.
(1.) In Duet. 6: 5, we find the first table of the
law expressed in the fullest form that occurs in the Old Testament: "Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy
soul, and with all thy might." It is remarkable that this
emphatic mode of expression occurs, in the form of a command, no where
else in the Old Testament; but it is once strikingly referred to in the
historic account of the character of Josiah, 2 Kings, 23: 25. The passage
is quoted, Mat. 22: 37, Mark 12: 3, and Luke 10: 27, with some difference
of words, but manifestly with no modification of meaning. The emphasis
obviously lies in the words which we have marked by italic.
(2.) We have, Duet. 10: 12, 13, somewhat different
language: "And now, Israel, what doth the Lord thy God require of thee,
but to fear the Lord thy God, to walk in all his ways, and to love him,
and to serve the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all
thy soul, to keep the commandments of the Lord and his statutes, which
I command thee this day for thy good?" The whole spirit of this passage
would be expressed in the words: "What doth the Lord thy God require of
thee but to love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy
soul?" The rest is added to make the passage more impressive, and perhaps
also to convey the important truth that inward obedience manifests itself
in the external conduct. It is the doctrine of Paul, Rom. 13:8-10, that
"he that loveth hath fulfilled the law;" and this is the doctrine also, so
far as we know, of the whole Christian church. The above passage omits the
expression, "with all thy might," and yet the introductory words
show that the whole content of the law is given. The phraseology, "with
all thy heart and with all thy soul," is employed, we believe, where
emphasis is intended, more frequently than any other formula, to designate
the demand of the law.
(3.) We find, 1 Sam. 12:20-24, the words, "Turn not
aside from following the Lord, but serve the Lord with all your heart.--Only
fear the Lord, and serve him in truth with all your heart." Here
the phrases, "with all your might," and, "with all your soul," are both
omitted, and yet who can reasonably doubt, that the prophet meant, in the
use of the phrase, "with all the heart," to enjoin full obedience
to the law?
It is, perhaps, worth noticing, that in passages
which exhibit the emphatic phraseology before us, wherever any of the
phrases are omitted, it is always those that come last. It is always,
"with all the heart and soul," or, "with all the heart,"--never, "with all
the might," "with all the soul," or "with all the soul and might,"--which
may perhaps lead us to conclude that the omitted words were in the
writer's or speaker's mind, and in the minds of his Israelitish readers or
hearers, just as with us, the whole of a familiar verse or even hymn is
frequently referred to, when we mention only the first line.
(4.) In Micah 6:8, all duty is denoted without the
use of any emphatic phraseology: "He hath showed thee, O man, what is
good; and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly and to love
mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?" The first part of the concluding
interrogation, plainly shows that the whole compass of the divine commands
is exhibited.
(5.) The above-cited passages present the divine law
chiefly in its relations to God. The precept, "Thou shalt love thy
neighbor as thyself, occurs in the Old Testament only Lev. 19:18. In the
New Testament it is quoted as containing the sum of all the law with
respect to our fellow men. But though in the ten commandments and in the
other precepts of the law, the language of equality and impartiality is
omitted, it is always to be understood--an affirmation, which in relation
to the second table of the ten commandments, we presume no one will deny.
For an equally cogent reason, in the first table and in all other commands
which relate to the Most High, the expressions are to be understood which
denote the engagement of all our powers of heart, soul and might. David
adopted this rule of interpretation in his charge to Solomon, 1 Kings,
2:2-4. Referring to the promise and its conditions, recorded Ps. 132:12,
and elsewhere in similar language, the dying prophet says, "I go the way
of all the earth: be thou strong, therefore, and show thyself a man, and
keep the charge of the Lord thy God, to walk in his ways * * that the Lord
may continue his word which he spake concerning me, saying, If thy
children take heed to their way, to walk before me in truth with all their
heart and with all their soul, there shall not fail thee a man on the
throne of Israel." The original condition of the promise did not contain
the emphatic expression, "with all the heart and with all the soul," but
the inspired interpreter supplies it as being understood. Indeed, it is an
obviously just rule of construction, that when several passages refer to
the same thing, some of them in more, and others in less specific
language, the more specific passages should govern the interpretation of
the less specific.
Perhaps some of the preceding observations might
have been spared, inasmuch as it is generally admitted that the formulas,
"with all the heart, with all the soul, and with all the might," "with all
the heart and with all the soul," and "with all the heart," universally
have the meaning contended for. They are considered as equivalent, though
more or less emphatic modes of expressing the full requirement of the law.
To make the less emphatic expressions mean less than the others, is to
ascribe to them an utter indefiniteness, not to say that it would make
them involve a license to commit some degree of sin.
The language of the law plainly shows that it
concerns itself with nothing else than the voluntary inward state or
actions of men. If it makes mention of external actions, it is only as the
necessary manifestations of the inward voluntary state. When the voluntary
state or action of the heart is right, the law has no further demand. It
commands nothing but love,--it forbids nothing but its opposite. It knows
nothing of any other holiness than love, under it, behind it, or causative
of it. It has no complacency in any thing but love, be it found in
whatever being it may, man or angel. Nor is there any depravity,
corruption, bias, evil nature, or any thing else of whatever name, with
which it is offended of displeased, in man or devil, except voluntary
exclusion of love, or the indulgence of its opposite. Disobedience on the
one hand, and obedience on the other, which are purely voluntary, are the
only moral entities know to the Scriptures, or of which the law of God
takes the least cognizance. It demands nothing but cordial obedience--it
forbids nothing but cordial disobedience. We say not that there may not be
inward occasions of sin as well as outward temptations; nor do we say
there may not be inward influences impelling to holiness as well as
external persuasives; but we do say that the law of God takes no
cognizance of either the one or the other. It concerns itself with naught
but the inward voluntary state or action of the moral agent. We are aware
that we might have said all this in a single sentence; but we chose to say
over and over again in different words, what we deem a very important and
obvious Scripture doctrine, because it is denied or misunderstood by many
good men.
The doctrine we have thus laid down, agrees with
that which President Edwards urges in his Treatise on the Will, Part III.
Sec. IV. "If there be any sort of act or exertion of the soul, prior to
all free acts of the will, or acts of choice in the case, directing and
determining what the acts of the will shall be, that act or exertion of
the soul cannot properly be subject to any command or precept in any
respect whatsoever, either directly or indirectly, immediately or
remotely. Such acts cannot be subject to commands directly, because
they are no acts of will; being by the supposition prior to all acts of
the will, determining and giving rise to all its acts: they not being acts
of the will, there can be in them no consent to, or compliance with, any
command. Neither can they be subject to command indirectly or
remotely; for they are not so much as the effect or
consequences of the will, being prior to its acts. So that if there be
any obedience in that original act of the soul, determining all volitions,
it is an act of obedience wherein the will has no concern at all; it
preceding every act of will. And therefore, if the soul either obeys or
disobeys in this act, it is wholly involuntary; there is no willing
obedience or rebellion, no compliance or opposition of will in the affair:
and what sort of obedience or rebellion is this?"
Well would it have been for theology, if all that
the great and good Edwards wrote had been in harmony with the manifest
good sense of this passage.
2. Having thus considered the various phraseology in
which the law of God is delivered, we proceed more directly to the
question, whether full obedience to its requisitions, is the conditions of
acceptance with God. Those who believe that "the best works of justified
persons are defiled in the site of God," cannot believe that full
obedience to the divine law is the present condition of the divine favor.
They may believe that the law has various salutary uses to the saints,
but, on their scheme of doctrine, one of those uses cannot be to tell them
what they must do to inherit eternal life.
But inasmuch as some of these passages manifestly
speak of the holiness they enjoin as a condition of justification before
God, it may be imagined by some that they treat not of the justification
of those who have ever sinned, but of legal justification for those only
who practice from the beginning of life an unbroken obedience, in order
that sinners may see their need of mercy and grace, and flee for refuge to
Christ.
(1.) Nothing can be plainer than it is, that such
passages as Micah 6:8 speak of a condition on which sinners may approach
acceptably. A serious inquirer is introduced as asking, "Wherewith shall I
come before the Lord and bow myself before the high God? Shall I come
before him with burnt-offerings, with calves of a year old? Will the Lord
be pleased with thousands of rams, or with tens of thousands of rivers of
oil? Shall I give my first-born for my transgressions, the fruit of my
body for the sin of my soul?" Can any thing be more manifest than it is,
that's these are the questions of a sinner?
Let us hear again the answer of the inspired
prophet: "He hath showed thee, O man, what is good: and what doth, the
Lord require of thee to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly
with thy God?" He presents to him the whole compass of duty, and
encourages him with no hint that he may come before the Lord and bow
himself before the High God with a partial performance of it. What a
strange change would be introduced into such passages if qualifying words
were to be inserted. "What doth the Lord require of thee but partially to
do justice, to love mercy with sinful defect, and in an imperfect degree
to walk humbly with thy God?" Are we to construe Is. 1: 16-17, thus: "If
you would have your worship accepted, wash you in part, make you in some
good degree clean; put away in the greater part the evil of your doings
from before my eyes; cease partly to do evil--learn to do in some good
degree well?" Does Is. 55 : 7, mean, "Let the wicked in great measure
forsake his way and the unrighteous man partially his thoughts, and let
him return with the greater part of his heart to the Lord, and he will
have mercy upon him?" Since these passages and innumerable others like
them contain no intimation that less than entire obedience will do for
acceptance, those who teach that God will accept less from us, are bound
to substantiate their doctrine by irrefragable proofs, or to abandon it.
(2) Such passages as 1 Sam. 12: 20-24, obviously
treat of the condition of a sinner's justification. The people of Israel
had committed the great wickedness of rejecting the Lord from being their
king, and asking for a human king to reign over them; and God, at Samuel's
instance, had sent upon them miraculous tokens of his displeasure. The
affrighted people entreat the prophet to pray for them. Samuel replies,
"Fear not: ye have done all this wickedness; yet turn not aside from
following the Lord, but serve the Lord with all your heart. (28) *
* Only fear the Lord and serve him in truth with all your heart.
But if ye shall still do wickedly, ye shall be consumed, both ye and your
king." Here the conditions of even their temporal salvation was that they
should serve the Lord with all their heart. Persistence in
wickedness--in their refusal to serve the Lord with all their heart--would
ensure their destruction.
In Deut. 11: 13, obedience "with all the heart and
with all the soul" is spoken of as the condition of even the common
temporal blessings promised to the Israelites in their land. "And it shall
come to pass, if you shall harken diligently unto my commandments which I
command you this day, to love the Lord your God and to serve him with all
your heart and with all your soul, that I will give you rain of your land
in its due season, the first rain and the latter rain, that thou mayest
eat and be full." The Israelites were already sinners, and to proclaim to
them the terms of a strict legal justification would have been the same
thing as to denounce their destruction. The terms of the passage are terms
of mercy and suited to their wants as members of the guilty human family.
The holiness here demanded, too, was to be practiced in this life; for it
would have been most absurd to condition the bestowment of temporal
blessings, the blessings of this state of existence, on a holiness
subsequent to their enjoyment, and not to be attained till the promises
had passed or were just passing into the invisible world. In the nature of
the case, the condition must be performed ere the blessing can be bestowed
in fulfillment of the promise.
The same observations might in substance be made in
respecting the condition of the promise made to David, mentioned by him, 1
Kings, 2: 4. Here the blessing, though ultimately relating to the eternal
throne of the spotless Messiah, was also a part to be given to mortals who
had sinned. The condition was that "they should take heed to their way to
walk before the Lord in truth, with all their heart and with all their
soul."
(3.) Full obedience is the condition on which God
promises to remove from sinners, judgments under which they are suffering.
Deut. 4: 29,--"But if from thence, [the land of captivity,] thou shalt
seek the Lord thy God, thou shalt find him, if thou seek him with all thy
heart and with all thy soul." Deut. 30: 1-3, 9, 10,--"And it shall come to
pass when all these things are come upon thee, the blessing and the curse,
which I have set before thee, and thou shalt call them to mind among all
the nations whither the Lord thy God hath driven thee, and shalt return
unto the Lord thy God and shalt obey his voice, according to all that I
command thee this day, thou and thy children, with all thy heart
and with all thy soul,--that then the Lord thy God will turn thy
captivity and have compassion upon thee, and will return and gather thee
from all the nations whither the Lord thy God hath scattered thee." "The
Lord will again rejoice over thee for good, as he rejoiced over thy
fathers, if thou shalt harken to the voice of the Lord thy God, to keep
his commandments and his statutes which are written in this book of the
law, and if thou turn unto the Lord thy God with all thy heart and
with all thy soul." Joel 2:12-14. "Therefore also now, saith the
Lord, turn ye even to me with all thy heart, and with fasting, and
with weeping, and with mourning: and rend your heart, and not your
garments, and turn unto the Lord your God: for he is gracious and
merciful, slow to anger, and of great kindness, and repenteth him of the
evil. Who knoweth if he will return and repent, and leave a blessing
behind him; even a meat offering and a drink offering unto the Lord your
God?" Jer. 29: 13,--And ye shall seek me and find me when ye shall search
for me with all your heart." The first and last of these questions
especially evince that the mentioned condition was an indispensable one.
No seeking would regain the Lord's favor, but seeking with all the heart
and all the soul. It is observable in these passages also, that some, at
least, of the blessings promised, pertain to this state of existence. We
infer therefore that the full obedience required, was, if it would gain
these blessings, to be exhibited in the present life. If the first act or
exercise of full obedience was delayed till the last moment of life, it
could not place or secure the agent on an earthly throne, or make grass
grow for his cattle, or feed him with "the fat of the kidneys of wheat,"
or deliver him from an earthly captivity. But if whole-hearted repentance,
full obedience, was thus the indispensable condition of promised temporal
blessings, how much more must it be a condition of eternal salvation, of
citizenship in the New Jerusalem, of the palms and white robes of the
celestial state, or a seat with Christ on his heavenly throne!
(4.) The inspired Solomon ventured to ask mercy for
Israel supposed to be driven into captivity for sin on no less confession
than a return to full obedience. 1 Kings, 8: 46-49, 2 Chron. 6:
36-39,--"If they sin against thee, for there is no man that sinneth not,)
and thou be angry with them, and deliver them to the enemy, so that they
carry them away captives unto the land of the enemy, far or near; yet if
they shall bethink themselves, * * * * * * and so return unto thee with
all their heart and with all their soul, * * * * then hear thou their
prayer and their supplication in heaven, thy dwelling-place, and maintain
their cause." If God would have accepted from his exiled people less than
a return to him with all the heart and with all the soul, the
tender interest of Solomon, in behalf of Israel, would have impelled him
to found his intercession of the supposed performance of that more
favorable condition. The wise Solomon would have been a very unskillful
advocate, if he had failed to seize and urge the easiest possible terms.
Not thus did Abraham manage his suit even in behalf of the reprobate
cities of the plain. He pressed peradventure, till he had reached the
lowest which he deemed it fit to urge. But Solomon knew that the word of
God in the writings of Moses, (Deut. 4: 29, 30: 2,-10,) had proposed no
lower terms of deliverance, and so dared not plead that God should
dispense with or abate the conditions on which alone he had promised to
forgive and restore his banished people.
(5.) Israel, with God's sanction, entered into
covenant with him to render full obedience. Before the Lord had given the
law from Sinai, he said to the people by Moses, Ex. 19: 5,- "If ye will
obey my voice indeed and keep my covenant, then ye shall be a peculiar
treasure unto me above all people; for all the earth is mine." "And all
the people answered together and said, (v 9.) "All that the Lord hath
spoken we will do." At the giving of the law, the people, filled with awe
at the presence and voice of Jehovah, say to Moses, Deut. 5: 27,- "Go thou
near and hear all that the Lord our God shall say, and speak thou unto us
all that the Lord our God shall say unto thee, and we will hear it and do
it." "And the Lord, (Moses says, v. 28,) heard the voice of your words
when ye spoke unto me; and the Lord said unto me, I have heard the voice
of the words of this people, which they have spoken unto thee: they have
well said all that they have spoken. O that there were such a heart in
them, that they would fear me, and keep all my commandments always, that
it might be well with them and with their children forever." Twice after
the giving of the ten commandments and the report of Moses respecting "all
the words of the Lord and all the judgments," Israel confirm the covenant,
Ex. 24: 3-7,- "All the words which the Lord hath said, will we do.--All
that the Lord hath said will we do and be obedient." And solemn
covenant-sacrifices seal the sacred engagement. In a subsequent age, in
the time of Asa king of Judah, and at the instance of the prophet Obed,
all Judah, with strangers out of Ephraim and Manasseh and Simeon, (2 Chron.
15: 12,) "entered into a covenant to seek the Lord God of their fathers
with all their heart and with all their soul." At the time of the great
revival and reformation under Josiah, Judah, led by their pious monarch,
renewed the covenant, 2 Kings 23: 3; 2 Chron. 34: 31,- "And the king stood
by a pillar, and made a covenant before the Lord, to walk after the Lord,
and to keep his commandments and his testimonies and his statutes, with
all their heart and with all their soul, to perform the words of this
covenant that were written in this book. And all the people stood to the
covenant." Under Nehemiah, the restored captives of Judah, (Ne. 10: 29,)
"clave to their brethren, their nobles, and entered into a curse and into
an oath, to walk in God's law, which was given by Moses the servant of
God, and to observe and do all the commandments of the Lord their Lord,
and his judgments and his statutes." There was no such thing known to the
ancient people of God as a covenant to do less than the full import of the
divine requirements. God on his part proposed his law in its
uncompromising strictness, demanding all the heart and all the soul, and
they not only voluntarily assent to the obligation to obey, but covenant
on their part, confirming their promise with oaths and the blood of
sacrifices, to render full obedience. Nor would any thing less have been a
consent on their part to the covenant enjoined by the Most High. No one
can reasonably imagine that he would have accepted a vow to yield him
partial obedience. But can it ever be right, not only to vow but swear
full, whole-hearted allegiance, unless the inferior covenanting party has
a reasonable prospect of keeping his vow and oath? Could he do it honestly
if he know with absolute certainty that he would violate his covenant
during his whole subsequent earthly existence? Could he do it with the
divine approbation if he even knew that at the very time of his oath, he
was in his heart commencing its violation? Would not this be the most
awful lying and perjury that could be committed? For aught we can see, the
vows and covenant oaths of the people of God must have contemplated a
partial or less than whole-hearted and whole-souled obedience--a covenant
which God never enjoined,--or they must have had a fair prospect and hope
of fulfilling their vows--a prospect and hope which they could not have
had if they knew absolutely that they would live all their lives in
partial disobedience.
(6.) Individual inspired saints have made the same
vows of whole-hearted service.--Ps. 9: 1; 111: 1; 138: 1; 119: 34-69; "I
will praise thee, O Lord, with my whole heart.--Give me
understanding, and I shall keep thy law; yea, I shall observe it with
my whole heart.--The proud have forged a lie against me; but I will
keep thy precepts with my whole heart." All the observations under
the last head might be repeated here. We would state more explicitly a
principle involved in them, that since God, on his part, in the covenant,
never proposed partial obedience, and a promise of such obedience would
have been no assent to his covenant, all the acceptable vows of the saints
recorded in the Bible, however expressed, are to be understood as
contemplating obedience with all the heart and with all the soul.
(7.) The Bible declares of saints that they have
actually rendered full obedience. It is said of Caleb, Nu. 14: 24, "My
servant Caleb, because he had another spirit with him and hath followed
me fully, him will I bring into the land whereunto he went." Deut. 1:
36, "To him will I give the land that he hath trodden upon and to his
children, because he hath wholly followed the Lord." Of Joshua and Caleb,
(Nu. 32: 12,) it is said, "They have wholly followed the Lord." The same
language is employed, 1 Kings 11: 6, with respect to David. God sentences
the Israelites in the wilderness, Nu. 32: 11, "Surely none of the men that
came up out of Egypt from twenty years old and upward, shall see the land
which I sware unto Abraham, unto Isaac and unto Jacob; because they
have not wholly followed me." Solomon is sentenced (1 Kings, 11: 11,
compare verse 11) to lose his kingdom because "he went not after the
Lord fully as did David his father," and thus failed "to keep the
Lord's covenant." The original Hebrew phrase in all these places is the
same, though translated into somewhat different English. Gesenius,
surpassed by no one in Hebrew lexicography, explains the phrase to mean
"to yield God full obedience." Leopold in his lexicon renders it "integra
obedientian Jovam sequi," that is to follow Jehovah with entire
obedience. In reference to David God says to Jeroboam, 1 Kings 14: 8,
"Thou hast not been as my servant David, who kept my commandments, and
who followed me with all his heart, to do that only which was right in
mine eyes." It is recorded of Jehoshaphat, 2 Chron. 22: 9, that "he
sought the Lord with all his heart." Of Josiah the inspired record is, 2
Kings 23: 25, "And like unto him was there no king before him, that turned
to the Lord with all his heart, and with all his soul, and with all his
might, according to all the law of Moses, neither after him arose there
any like him." On this remarkable passage we observe,
[1.] Its language is manifestly copied from Deut. 6:
5, where the mode of expression is the most emphatic known to the writers
of the Old Testament in proclaiming the law of the Lord, and therefore the
design of the writer of this book is to declare that Josiah "turned to the
Lord with all his heart, and with all his soul, and with all his might"
according to the requisition of that emphatic passage.
[2.] The expressions, "like unto him was there no
king before him, neither after him arose there any like him," are to be
understood, not of his turning to the Lord with all his heart, but of the
comprehensive reformation he effected, extending to all the institutiones
of Moses. As Matthew henry has well expressed it, "he was a none-such as a
reformer:" he had the abilities and influence which qualified him for that
work. But Hezekiah (2 Kings 18: 5,) received the praise of a none-such in
faith, as the same venerable commentator says. "He trusted in the Lord God
of Israel, so that after him was none like him among all the kings of
Judah, nor any that were before him." In the fearful invasion of
Sennecherib, he was placed in circumstances to call for the manifestation
of an exalted faith such as the circumstances of no other pious king
demanded. The piety of every saint will have its type and direction
determined by the original cast of his constitution, and the influences
and emergencies among which he is situated. If he meets the particular
responsibilities which God has imposed on him, he is accepted; but if he
fails to meet them, he sins and falls under condemnation.
With reference to the covenant entered into by Judah
in the time of king Asa, it is recorded, 2 Chron. 15: 15, "And all Judah
rejoiced at the oath; for they had swarn with all their heart and
sought [the Lord] with their whole desire." We have seen that all
the people stood with Josiah to the covenant to walk after the Lord with
all their heart and with all their soul. In 2 Chron. 34: 32, in immediate
connexion with this transaction, it is declared, "that the inhabitants of
Jerusalem did according to the covenant of God, the God of their
fathers." Now we have seen that this covenant was not merely an engagement
to serve the Lord in some degree, but to do it with their whole heart.
(8.) Bible saints professed this entire obedience.
Thus Caleb says to Joshua, Josh. 14: 8, "my brethren that went up with me,
made the heart of the people melt; but I wholly followed the Lord my God."
"I beseech thee O Lord," says Hezekiah 2 Kings 20: 3, "remember how I have
walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart." It is
remarkable that the lexicographers Gesenius, Leopold, and Gibbs in
explaining the word shauem, give both the general signification,
perfect, entire, consummate, and in reference to the relation of men
to God make it signify at peace or on good terms with him.
Ps. 119: 10, 58, 145, the Psalmist professes, "With my whole heart have I
sought thee: O let me not wander from thy commandments.--I entreated thy
favor with my whole heart: be merciful unto me according to thy word.--I
cried with my whole heart; hear me: I will keep thy statutes." It may be
thought that historians or poets in describing the characters or conduct
of others would resort to the language of hyperbole, but do the modest,
humble saints employ hyperbolical expressions in telling of their own
conduct and exercise? Do they magnify their own earnestness and
faithfulness--or use the words of simple truth?--Two remarks we will make
on the passage from the Psalmist: 1. He founds on his whole-hearted
seeking and prayers a covenant claim to be heard, to be made a subject of
mercy and grace. 2. His belief of his own whole-heartedness did not make
him self-confident or presumptuous. "O let me not wander from thy
commandments" is any thing rather than the language of a self-confident
spirit.
In the times of Samuel the prophet, when the ark had
long been absent from its place, the sacred historian tells, us, 1 Sam. 7:
2, "that all the house of Israel lamented after the Lord." "And Samuel
spake unto all the house of Israel, saying, If ye do return unto the
Lord with all your hearts, then put away the strange gods and
Ashtaroth from among you, and prepare your hearts unto the Lord and serve
him only; and he will deliver you out of the hand of the Philistines." The
prophet seems to take it for granted that if they looked for divine favor,
they professed to return to the Lord with all their hearts, and he expects
them to bring forth the appropriate fruits, by casting away idols, and
preparing or rather establishing their hearts to the Lord so as in
future to serve Him only, and promises that then they shall experience
deliverance form their enemies.
(9.) Those who did not yield full obedience are
either branched as hypocrites or spoken of as the objects of divine
displeasure. "Surely," says God, Nu. 32: 11, "none of the men that came up
out of Egypt, from twenty years old and upward, shall see the land which I
sware unto Abraham and unto Isaac, and unto Jacob, because they have not
wholly followed me." It is of these men that the Psalmist speaks,
Ps. 78: 34-37, "When He slew them, then they sought Him; and they
returned, and inquired early after God. And they remembered that God was
their rock and the High God their Redeemer. Nevertheless they did flatter
Him with their mouth, and they lied unto Him with their tongues; for their
heart was not right with Him, neither were they steadfast [or true] in his
covenant." It is true that as the next verse tells us, God "being full of
compassion, forgave their iniquity and destroyed them not: immediately. He
forgave them in the same sense in which he might forgive the murderers of
Christ, that is, he did not at once and forever shut the door of mercy on
them; but in the sense in which he "keeps covenant and mercy with his
servants who walk before him with all their heart," (1 Kings 8:
23,) he did not forgive them or show mercy. God finally swore in his wrath
that they should not enter into his rest; and the epistle to the Hebrews
holds them up as the great warning example of unbelief and consequent
subjection to divine wrath.--Heb. 3: 7--19; 4: 1-7.
God had said to Solomon, (1 Kings 9: 4, 5,) "If thou
wilt walk before me as David thy father walked, in integrity [tom--entireness]
of heart and in uprightness, to do according to all that I have commanded
thee * * * * then I will establish the throne of thy kingdom for ever."
But by and by through the influence of his foreign wives, Solomon's "heart
was not perfect, [shaulem] with the Lord his God as was the heart
of David his father. * * * * And Solomon did evil in the sight of the
Lord, and went not fully after the Lord as did David his father. * * * And
the Lord was angry with Solomon, because his heart was turned from the
Lord God of Israel" 1 Kings 11: 1, 6, 9. The external conduct of the
renowned king was abominable, but it was traced to the swerving of his
heart from "entireness and uprightness." And it was with this inward
defection that the Holy One was displeased.
Then Hezekiah who could, when he was sick, appeal to
God "that he had walked before him with a perfect heart," fell into pride,
and ostentatiously displayed his treasures to the Babylonish ambassadors,
"there was wrath upon him and upon Judah and Jerusalem. Nevertheless
Hezekiah humbled himself for the pride of his heart, (both he and the
inhabitants of Jerusalem) so that the wrath of the Lord came not upon them
in the days of Hezekiah." 2 Chron. 32: 25, 26. In like manner God dealt
with David when he sinned in the matter of Uriah, and in numbering the
people. His heart was no more "perfect with the Lord" when he was
perpetrating those crimes than Solomon's was when he was worshipping the
abominations of the Sidonians. Nor did the heart of Hezekiah remain a
perfect one when "it was lifted up with pride." The Bible knows nothing of
a "perfect heart" which retires in its perfection, somewhere into the
recesses of the inward being and goes to sleep, while the members of the
body are employed in adultery or murder, and the thoughts are full of
pride. Nor does the Bible make the ways of God so unequal that every
sin in one man who has never experienced the grace of God, shall incur
the danger of eternal damnation, and that no sin, not even
murder, in another whose sins are aggravated by the rupture of all the
endearing ties of intimate filial communion and glorious discoveries never
made to his sinning brother, shall incur the danger of no severer penalty
than God's fatherly displeasure and the withdrawal of the light of his
continence. If "Christ in the gospel does not dissolve, but much
strengthen the obligation" of the law to all men, much more so does he do
this with respect to those who have received the richest blessings. If
other sinners incur the danger of damnation by their sins, then when a
righteous man turns from his righteousness and commits iniquity--since
"there is no sin so small but it deserves damnation" and which iniquity is
crimsoned with the deepest hues of guilt,--what peril short of exclusion
from mercy or repentance, shall not such a sinner incur? If he incurs not
the peril of death, then with respect to him, the law, as to its penalty,
is utterly abrogated, and when he is forgiven, he is not released from the
danger of perdition, but merely from further manifestations of God's
paternal displeasure.
It is sometimes argued that the sins of persons who
have been converted, do not bring them into a state of condemnation or
forfeit their justification, because the discipline of the Lord is to
bring them to repentance. But the true question which determines the
relation of the sins of such persons to the divine wrath is, what would
they incur if the perpetrators were to persist in them--or were their
probation at once closed? The fact that they are brought to repentance by
divine chastisements and are then forgiven, no more proves that their sins
did not expose them to damnation, than the same fact proves that the
unconverted who will yet be saved, have not hanging over their guilty
heads the poised thunderbolts of divine indignation. "When a righteous man
turneth away from his righteousness and committeth iniquity, and dieth in
them; for his iniquity that he hath done shall he die." Ez. 18: 26. "The
righteousness of the righteous shall not deliver him in the day of his
transgression--neither shall the righteous be able to live for his
righteousness in the day that he sinneth." Ez. 33: 12. And if a wicked man
would save his soul alive, he must "turn from his sin and walk in the
statutes of life, without committing iniquity." Ez. 33: 14, 15. In
the day that he commits iniquity--the least degree of it for aught the
scriptures any where say--his righteousness shall not deliver him from
death. If he is spared and space is allowed him for repentance, it is not
because he had the least personal covenant claim on favor, but because God
pleases in his own sovereign goodness to spare him, not willing that he
should perish, just as he spares the countless hosts of sinners who crowd
the broad road. After him He cries as after them, Turn, turn, for why wilt
thou die?
3. The text which we have hitherto quoted have been
almost exclusively from the Old Testament. We have chosen to present its
testimony chiefly by itself, in order that our readers may be enabled,
with less effort, to see the harmony of both parts of divine revelation.
On some points we shall have occasion to bring forward a number of other
texts. We wished also to expose the falsity of a notion entertained by
some believers in the doctrine of Christian perfection, namely, that to
those who live under the new dispensation, entire sanctification is
attainable, but that Old Testament saints were generally, throughout the
whole life, sinfully imperfect. The many texts already adduced appear to
us to show very clearly, that under the ancient dispensation, the standard
of acceptable piety was nothing lower than entire conformity to the divine
law. The covenant blessings belonged to none others than those who "kept
God's testimonies and sought him with the whole heart."--Ps. 119: 2, 3.
But if under the Old Testament saints could be
accepted on no less condition than present sinless holiness, much more
must this be true under the new dispensation. For it would be most
preposterous to suppose that the gospel, with its higher and fuller
communications of the Spirit, has lowered the conditions of mercy. We
might safely conclude, then, without further inquiry, that the New
Testament standard is at least as high as that of the Old. But for the
sake of exhibiting the harmony of the two Testaments, and of further
impressing the views already presented, and for other reasons which will
appear in the progress of the discussion, we shall take into consideration
some classes of texts, which we believe support our position.
(1.) We commence with the Sermon on the Mount.
"Think not," says Christ, "that I am come to destroy the law or the
prophets. I am not come to destroy but to fulfil. * * Whosoever,
therefore, shall break one of these least commandments and shall teach men
so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven; but whosoever
shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of
heaven." The Savior then proceeds to give his exposition of some of the
most important of the ten commandments, freeing them from the pernicious
glosses of the Jewish scribes. Indeed it is the general opinion of
Christian commentators, that whatever other objects the Son of God had in
view in the delivery of this sermon, it was one of his main objects to
show forth the spirituality of the divine law. Among the precepts he
utters are such as these, "Whatsoever ye would that men should do unto
you, do ye even so to them, for this is the law and the prophets." "Be ye
perfect even as your Father in heaven is perfect." But does he represent,
that obedience to his instructions in the sermon uncompromising as they
are, is a condition of eternal salvation? The solemn conclusion is the
best reply we can give: "Whosoever heareth these sayings of mine and doeth
them, I will liken him to a wise man, which built his house upon a rock:
and the rain descended, and the floods came and the winds blew, and beat
upon that house; and it fell not: for it was founded on a rock. And every
one that heareth these sayings of mine and doeth them not, shall be
likened to a foolish man, which built his house upon the sand: and the
rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon
that house; and it fell: and great was the fall of it." Nor is there an
intimation that any degree of iniquity, unforsaken, would escape the awful
ruin. [Ed. note: see 7: 23]
(2.) We invite particular attention to Luke 10:
25-28. "And behold a certain lawyer stood up and tempted him, saying,
Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life? He said unto him, what is
written in the law? how readest thou? And he answering, said, Thou shalt
love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with
all thy strength, and with all thy mind; and thy neighbor as thyself. And
he said unto him, Thou has answered right: this do, and thou shalt live."
The lawyer--that is, a Jewish divine or
theologian--to try the theological skill of the great teacher of Galilee,
and to determine whether he taught a different doctrine from Moses and the
prophets, asks him what are the conditions of salvation. The Savior refers
him to the law; and when the lawyer quotes its most emphatic moral
precepts, the two which comprehended the whole law in their sweeping
import, as containing those conditions, the Savior declares that his
answer is correct, and these are in truth the conditions of eternal life,
and that if he would live, he must comply with them.
On this passage we remark: (1.) The fact that the
Savior refers him to the Mosaic writings for an answer to his question,
evinces that He taught, himself, the same conditions of life that Moses
did. (2.) His remark on the lawyer's quotations, shows, that in Christ's
view, the lawyer had not selected erroneously the two all-comprehensive
commands of the law. (3.) The parable of the good Samaritan, told in reply
to the lawyer's question about the word neighbor, in which Christ gives us
a practical embodiment of the fulfilment of the second command,
demonstrates that Christ meant in truth to lay down obedience to the law
as an indispensable condition of mercy. His closing injunction on the
lawyer, "Go thou and do likewise," is a further proof of the same thing.
We know of none who do not admit that we must do as the good Samaritan did
in order to be saved. Not an intimation is given in this whole passage or
its context, that less would do than full compliance with the holy rule.
(3.) We request our readers to consider attentively
such passages as declare, that we cannot serve God and Mammon (a-Mat.
6: 24;)--that we must hate our nearest friends and forsake all that we
have in order to be Christ's disciples (b-Lu. 14: 26, 43;)--that we
must sell all that we have in order to buy the field with the treasure hid
in it, or to obtain the pearl of great price, (c-Mat. 13: 44, 45;)
that the violator of one commandment is guilty of all (d-Ja.
2:10;)--that the accepted Christian is free from sin, dead and buried to
sin--that he is risen to righteousness, (e-Rom. 6: 2, 4, 7, 18,
22;) that to him that is in Christ Jesus old things are passed away and
all things become new. (f-2 Cor. 5: 17.) Let these passages be
examined with their context, and it will be seen that they entirely
harmonize with the numerous texts quoted form the Old Testament.
On Mat. 6: 24, we quote form the Commentary of
Calvin, one of the ablest and most spiritual of expositors, and on the
whole, decidedly our own favorite. The extracts are instructive, both as
showing the force with which such passages strike pious minds, in theory
opposed to their teachings, and as giving a specimen of the best shifts by
which they try to dispose of their natural import. "Christ denies that it
can be that any one should obey God and his flesh at the same time. * *
Since God every where commends sincerity, while a double heart is
abominable, all those are deceived who think he will be contented with
half of their heart. All, indeed, confess with the mouth, that God is not
truly worshipped except with entire affection, but they deny it in
reality, while they study to reconcile things contrary to each other. I
will not cease, says the ambitious man, to serve God, although I apply a
good part of my mind to the chase of honors. * * It is true, indeed, that
believers themselves never are so entirely given to obedience to God, but
that they are displeased with themselves, and do not serve the flesh
otherwise than unwilling and reluctant (inviti et reluctantes)--they
are not said to serve two masters, because their purposes and efforts are
approved by the Lord, just as if they rendered him an entire obedience.
But here the hypocrisy of these persons is exposed, who flatter themselves
in vices, as if they could conjoin light with darkness." We ask, where, in
the whole compass of the Bible, are saints said to be thus distinguishable
from sinners? Where are they said to sin "unwilling and reluctant"--while
none of the ungodly are reluctant about it? We know of no text which can
under any pretense be cited to sustain such a view, except the contested
passages in Rom. 7th and Gal. 5th--with respect to the first of which we
cannot but concur with Tholuck in the remark that "if the least attention
is paid to the connection of this section of ch. 7th with that which
precedes and that which follows, it is not possible to explain it of any
other than a person standing under the law." More on this passage by and
by. Of Gal. 5: 17, we shall, in the sequel, have a word or two to say. If
every man is a saint who sins reluctantly, Julius Caesar must have been a
good saint, when, about to annihilate the liberties of his country, he
reluctantly crossed the Rubicon; and Macbeth, when he reluctantly murdered
his benefactor and king. With great reluctance did the last named villain
drag himself to the deed of blood--with quite as much reluctance,
according to the great poet, as David debauched his neighbor's wife, and
then murdered her generous and heroic husband. The plea of reluctance on
any other ground than that on which a Macbeth might plead it, resembles a
little too much the defense of an ingenious poltroon, that his heart was
as bold as a lion's, but his cowardly legs would run away.
President Edwards (on the Will, Pt. III, Sec. V,)
remarks most justly, "that it is a great mistake and gross absurdity, that
men may sincerely choose and desire those spiritual duties of love,
acceptance, choice, rejection, &c., consisting in the exercise of the will
itself, in the disposition and inclination of the heart, and yet not be
able to perform or exert them. This is absurd, because it is absurd to
suppose that a man should directly, properly and sincerely incline to have
an inclination, which at the same time is contrary to his inclination: for
that is to suppose him not to be inclined to that which he is inclined to.
If a man, in the state and acts of his will and inclination, does properly
and directly fall in with those duties, he therein performs them; for the
duties themselves consist in that very thing; they consist in the state
and acts of the will being so formed and directed. * * That which is
called a desire and willingness for these inward duties in such as do not
perform, has respect to those duties only indirectly and remotely, and is
improperly represented as a willingness for them."
The great Edwards is not always consistent with
himself, nor are his professed disciples. Thus, they all insist that no
one can be a good Christian who does not intend or aim at sinless
perfection, or as the Westminster Confession has it, "purpose and endeavor
to walk with God in all the ways of his commandments," and yet they also
insist that it is dangerous error, if not heresy, to believe that any one
ever really fully obeys God. All Christians have the will for it, but
never do it. "If there be a full compliance of will," says Edwards,
"the person has done his duty; and if other things do not prove to be
connected with his volition, that is not owing to him."
(4.) The apostle Paul appears to us to teach
explicitly, Rom. 8: 6-8, 13, the necessity of conformity to the law in
order to exemption from death. "To be carnally minded is death; * *
because the carnal mind is enmity against God; for it is not subject to
the law of God, neither indeed can be. So then they that are in the
flesh [carnally minded] cannot please God." "If ye live after the flesh,
ye shall die; but if ye through the Spirit do mortify, [that is, put to
death, not partially subdue, or half kill, according to the modern
sense of the English word, mortify] the deeds of the body, ye shall live."
Of how great a degree of sin is death the wages? Do the Scriptures any
where teach us that there is any degree of it so small that it does not
deserve, and will not receive death as its wages, unless it is put away?
It would appear that in the apostle's view, we must be conformed to the
law in order to please God. And how shall He "who is of purer eyes than to
behold iniquity, and who cannot look upon sin," be pleased with less than
full conformity to it?
(5.) The whole argument of Paul, in the 6th, 7th and
8th chapters of Romans, proceeds on the supposition that the entire
subjugation of sin is indispensable to justification. In vain does a man
hope that he may yield himself as a servant to sin, and escape
condemnation, because he has taken refuge with Christ. Death (6: 16, 21,
23; 7: 5, 9, 11, 13, 24; 8: 2, 6, 8, 13) is the inevitable result of sin,
its wages, its fruit. Legal influences do not avail to rescue the sinner
from the power of sin,--they rather aggravate his bondage to it, and while
sin remains, the sword of vengeance threatens the sinner's life. Now how,
according to the apostle, does he escape? By betaking himself to a Savior
who will make partial obedience answer? Or by flying to one who gives him
the victory of sin itself? Not a syllable is dropped in these interesting
chapters about a partial obedience to the law, about a partial conquest of
iniquity. The believer has no condemnation hanging over him or inwardly
harassing him, because he walks not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.
The law of the Spirit of life [salvation] in Christ Jesus, has make him
free from the law of sin, (and therefore of death,) which
has warred in his members and brought him into captivity. God, by sending
his Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and as a sin-offering, has
destroyed sin by a capital condemnation, that the former transgressor may
inwardly fulfil the righteousness of the law. He is married (7: 4) to the
risen Son of God, so that he brings forth fruit, not to death, (7: 5,) but
to God. His fruit is unto holiness, (6: 22,) and the end is everlasting
life. While faith stands, tribulation, distress, persecution, famine,
nakedness, peril, sword, death, life, angels, principalities, powers,
things present and things to come, and every creature in the universe, may
assault him with the utmost fury, and in all these things he more than
conquers through him that loved him. While his eye is on Jesus, though he
walk a tempestuous sea, threatened by all its roaring waves, it shall do
no more than touch the soles of his feet.
We are well aware of the interpretation of Rom. 7:
7-25, still current among Calvinistic writers in England and America. It
is an interpretation, which, beginning with Agustine, spread through his
great influence extensively in the church, and gained still further vogue
by the adoption and sanction of the reformers Calvin and Luther. But till
Agustine broached it, so far as history informs us, the church knew
nothing of it. By the whole early church, learned and unlearned, the
passage was referred to the experience of a sinner under the law.
Notwithstanding the venerable authority of the Reformers, and the high
esteem in which they are held by evangelical men the world over, the whole
body of pious German commentators, several of the most distinguished in
Scotland and England, and Professors Stuart and Robinson in America, have
been compelled, by the apostle's argument, in spite of theological bias,
to return to the ancient interpretation.
With the exception of the Methodist commentators, we
see not how these learned men can be plausibly charged with adopting their
views from theological prejudice, inasmuch as they all, so far as we know,
held, or hold the doctrine of the constant moral imperfection of
Christians. Hence Professor Hodge of Princeton, in his able work on
Romans, while he tenaciously cleaves to the current view among Calvinists,
says, "There is nothing in this opinion which implies the denial or
disregard of any of the fundamental principles of evangelical religion."
But how strong must be the internal evidence in favor of this view, when
it has brought over the great body of the most able commentators in the
world! To ourselves it seems amazing that any man can resist the force of
argument with which Prof. Stuart has assailed the modern view, and
sustained that, which, before, Augustine, was, for aught history informs
us, the universal view of the church. We feel, we confess, an intense
interest in the establishment of the true interpretation of this important
passage; for we believe that the current false view had done more to
hinder the saints and to flatter the hopes of hypocrites than any other
single error that has ever prevailed among good men.
(6.) We should like to make some observations on the
declarations respecting himself, of that apostle and Christian of whose
experience and character the Scriptures tell us the most--the abundant and
most humble confessions of past sin, and the entire absence of any word
respecting present sin or sinful defect--his modest and yet full
profession of consecration to Christ, counting all things but loss for the
excellency of the knowledge of his Lord, of faithfulness in his ministry,
and of his having exhibited so holy, righteous and unblamable an example,
that he had in his own life showed his converts all things, especially the
very spirit of the all-comprehensive saying of the Lord Jesus, It is more
blessed to give than to receive, so that in the most opposite
circumstances and temptations, he, in the practical sense could do all
things in Christ who strengthened him--having no need to tell his brethren
to shun his faults, while they imitated his virtues. We must rather refer
to the apostle's solemn saying, 1 Cor. 9: 27, "I keep under my body, and
bring it into subjection; lest that by any means, when I have preached to
others, I myself should be a castaway." The impartially of the Lord's rule
of judgment, the same apostle declares, 1 Cor. 11:32, where he gives the
ground of the chastisements with which the Corinthians had been visited,
"When we are judged, we are chastened of the Lord, that we should not
be condemned with the world." Had these chastisements failed to
produce the desired effect, condemnation with the world would have been
the inevitable doom of the offending Corinthians. The apostle John, who, 1
Jn. 3: 20 tells us that "if our heart condemn us, God is greater than our
heart, and knoweth all things," told also the backslidden Laodiceans
though rebuked and chastened out of love, that only earnest repentance
could save them from being spued out of Christ's mouth. The Ephesians too,
because they had left their first love, are threatened with the utter
removal of their candlestick. [?] "Verily I say unto you," said Christ to
his emulous disciples, "except ye be converted, and become as little
children--[not, ye will incur God's paternal displeasure, but] ye shall
not enter into the kingdom of heaven." The rule, as we understand it
to be laid down in both Testaments, is the same, that "The Lord keepeth
covenant and mercy with his servants that walk before him with all their
hearts"--so that even Christians who enjoy the blessings of the new
dispensation, which many kings and righteous men desired to enjoy, but did
not enjoy them--are thus exhorted by Peter, 1 Peter, 1: 17, "Since ye call
on him as your Father, who without respect of persons, judgeth
according to every man's work, pass the time of your sojourning here
in fear.
Dr. Beecher supposes that the new-born soul is not
qualified for heaven; but that in order to his being qualified for it, his
holy love must be progressively augmented through sanctification of the
Spirit and belief of the truth. We see not how this doctrine agrees with
those texts which require us to be continually ready for the coming of
Christ, and to be watching for his arrival. Such passages are among the
most solemn and striking in the Bible, and their doctrine appears plainly
to be, that Christ grants us no time for advancement to a state in which
we shall be fitted for his coming, but holds us practically to the
responsibility of being constantly ready to welcome his appearing, and
render up our account.
On the above citations from the New Testament, we
remark, that some of them are almost as explicit as words could make them,
in favor of the doctrine we are advocating, while not one text of those
whose language is less definite, contains a syllable that would lead to a
less strict interpretation. Nor can we recall a single passage in either
division of the Scriptures, which treats of the question of what is
acceptable, and what unacceptable to God, which hints that the Holy One
will accept a divided heart, or a service stained with sin.
4. We now proceed to say, that in our opinion,
whatever has been the speculative theory of the true church of Christ, its
real, practical standard has been the same for which we contend in this
article.
We never, until recently, heard a discourse
addressed to sinners, laying down the conditions of acceptance, which did
not insist that a full surrender, and entire consecration must be made,
that all other confidences must be utterly abandoned, and Christ alone
become the object of faith and trust. The sermons addressed to backsliders
were of exactly the same character, demanding that all idols should be put
away, and that there should be a full return to the Lord. We recently
cited an aged clergyman who sat before us while we were in sermon making a
similar statement, and whom we had nor till then even seen, whether this
was not the character of all the preaching he had ever heard, and his
reply accorded with our own views. Another clergyman, nearly ninety years
old, who remarkably retains the vigor of his mind, spontaneously told us
that he had himself often insisted, in his ministry, as all other
ministers did, on the same unqualified obedience, and then, like as not,
on the next Sabbath would preach a discourse teaching, unwittingly a
totally inconsistent doctrine.
We shall now present our readers with a number of
quotations from evangelical divines, chiefly from the renowned and pious
Pres. Edwards, showing that we have made no rash assertion. Indeed, some
of the language of Edwards is stronger than we have thought it expedient
to use. We do not pretend that Edwards and other evangelical divines are
self-consistent. Like our aged friend above referred to, they have
preached one thing at one time and another thing at another, and even
palpable contradictions in the same sermon, and even in the same
paragraph. But the spirit and soul of their faith we believe to be
embodied in such passages as the following, rather than in those of an
opposite character.
We begin with Dr. Beecher speaking in the very
extract cited in the commencement of this article. We doubt not that Dr.
B. should publish the sermons which have been instrumental in converting
sinners, and reclaiming backsliders unaltered, they would furnish us with
much more explicit statements.
"Question 5. How can the help of Christ be
obtained to secure our growth in grace?
Answer. By renouncing all reliance on
our own strength and merits, and relying entirely on the
sufficiency and willingness of Christ to help us, sought by filial
supplication, and the diligent use of the appointed means of grace;
striving, as the Puritan writers say, as if all depended on ourselves, and
looking to Christ as if all depended on him."
What if the Doctor says that this is a faith and
striving sinfully defective? Does God command us to do any thing more than
"to strive as if all depended on ourselves, and look to Christ as if all
depended on him?" When a man does this, his conscience in its inner depths
is at peace, though false theory may disturb the surface with shallow
rufflings.
We quote a single passage from Baxter, whose
writings are full enough of the sinfulness of the saints:
"If you would be truly converted, be sure you make
an absolute resignation of yourselves and all that you have, to God."--Orne's
Life of Baxter, Vol. 2, p. 82.
We translate a passage from Calvin, on Mat. 13:
44-46, which will show where the practical heart of the great and good
reformer was, notwithstanding the contrary teachings, which he wrote
elsewhere.
"We now have the sum of both parables, that those
are fit to apprehend the grace of the Gospel, who, postponing to it all
other objects of desire (Qui ad eam potiendam sua studia et se totos
addicunt.), apply their zealous efforts and their whole being to gaining
possession of it. * * Still, it is asked, whether we must denounce all
other good things that we may enjoy eternal life. I reply, briefly, that
this is the simple sense of the words, that the Gospel is not regarded
with just honor, unless with us it excels all the wealth, delight, honor
and advantages of the world, and indeed, to that degree, that for the sake
of the spiritual good which it promises us, we contentedly neglect
whatever things draw us away from it: for it behooves those who aspire to
heaven to be freed from all hindrances. Therefore Christ exhorts his
faithful ones to nothing else than the surrender of those things which are
adverse to piety. Meanwhile, he concedes that they may use and enjoy God's
temporal benefits, as if they did not use them."
The excellent Doddridge gives the following as part
of a proper form for entering into covenant with the Lord:--
"This day do I, with the utmost solemnity, surrender
myself to Thee. I renounce all former lords that have had dominion over
me; and I consecrate to Thee all that I am, and all that I have; the
faculties of my mind, the members of my body, my worldly possessions, my
time and my influence over others; to be all used entirely for thy glory,
and resolutely employed in obedience to Thy commands, as long as Thou
continuest me in life; with an ardent desire and humble resolution to be
Thine through the endless ages of eternity; ever holding myself in an
attentive posture to observe the first intimations of Thy will, and ready
to spring forward with zeal and joy to the immediate execution of it.
To thy direction also I resign myself, and all I am
and have, to be disposed of by thee in such a manner as thou shalt in
thine infinite wisdom judge most subservient to the purposes of thy glory.
To thee I leave the management of all events, and say without reserve,
not my will, but thine be done."--Rise and Prog. ch. 17.
We now proceed to our citations from Pres. Edwards,
from whom we give more than from any other author because we find him to
be more full and explicit on this subject than any other writer we have
consulted, and because his authority and influence are greater among
American Calvinists.
"If ever men come to have any true hope, they must
take sin, which is the troubler, and all which belongs to it, even that
which seems most dear and precious, though it be as choice as Achan's
silver and wedge of gold, and utterly destroy them, and burn them with
fire, to be sure to make an utter end of them,--as it were, bury them and
raise over them a great heap of stones, to lay a great weight upon them to
make sure of it that they shall never rise more. Yes, and thus they must
serve all his sons and daughters. They must not save some of the accursed
brood alive. All the fruits of sin must be destroyed. There must not be
some dear sinful enjoyment, some pleasant child of sin spared; but all
must be stoned and burned.
Sin is slain in the godly after trouble and
darkness, and before the renewing of comfort in these three ways:
1. It is slain as to former degrees of it. All
remains of corruption are not extirpated. Sin does not cease to be in the
heart; but it ceases to be in such strength as it has been.
3. It is totally and perfectly slain in his will
and inclination. There is that renewed opposition made against it,
which implies a mortal inclination and design against it. What the saint
seeks, when he comes to himself after a time of great declension, is to be
the death of sin, which has been so prevalent in him and perfectly to
extirpate it. He acts in what he does as a mortal enemy: and if he does
not perfectly destroy it at one blow, it is not for want of inclination
but for want of strength."--Works, Vol. 8, pp. 77, 87
We find here a noticeable instance of those stranger
contradictions of which we have spoken; and yet how does the Christian
heart of the erring theologian shine through his false philosophy! The
sermon from which we take the preceding extracts, was written before his
Treatise on the Will. From this famous treatise we select a short passage
as the best antidote to the mixture of false philosophy in the eloquent
extracts from the earlier sermon.
"If there be such a sincerity, and such a degree of
it as there ought to be, and there be any thing further which the man is
not able to perform, or which does not prove to be connected with his
sincere desires and endeavors, the man is wholly excused and acquitted
in the sight of God; his will shall surely be accepted for his deed:
and such a sincere will and endeavor is all that in strictness is
required of him by any command of God."-- Works, Vol. 2, pp.
171.
Now in the case supposed in our previous citations,
"sin was totally and perfectly slain in the will and inclination." This
is, according to Edwards, all that any command of God requires.
The following passages from the work on the
Affections, we present without note or comment. They will speak for
themselves. They may all be found under the Twelfth Sign of Gracious
Affections.
"They that are God's true servants, do give up
themselves to his service, and make it as it were their whole work,
therein employing their whole hearts, and the chief of their strength:
Phil. 3: 13--'This one thing I do.'"
"What makes men partial in religion is, that they
seek themselves, and not God, in their religion, and close with religion,
not for its own excellent nature, but only to serve a turn. He that closes
with religion only to serve a turn, will close with no more of it than he
imagines serves that turn; but he that closes with religion for its own
excellent and lovely nature, closes with all that has that nature: he that
embraces religion for its own sake, embraces the whole of religion."
"The Holy Scriptures do abundantly place sincerity
and soundness in religion, in making a full choice of God as our only Lord
and portion, forsaking all for Him, and in a full determination of the
will for God and Christ, on counting the cost; in our hearts closing and
complying with the religion of Jesus Christ, with all that belongs to it,
embracing it with all its difficulties; as it were, hating our dearest
earthly enjoyments, and even our own lives, for Christ; giving up
ourselves, with all that we have, wholly and forever, unto Christ, without
keeping back any thing, or making any reserve; or, in one word, in the
great duty of self-denial for Christ; or in denying, that is, as it
were, disowning and renouncing ourselves for Him, making ourselves noting
that He may be all."
"Moses insisted that Israel's God should be served
and sacrificed to: Pharaoh was willing to consent to that; but would have
it done without his parting with the people; Go sacrifice to your God
in the land, says he, Exod. 8: 25. So many sinners are for contriving
to serve God, and enjoy their lusts too. Moses objected against complying
with Pharaoh's proposal, that serving God, and yet continuing in Egypt
under their task-masters, did not agree together, and were inconsistent
one with another; (there is no serving God, and continuing slaves to such
enemies of God at the same time.) After this, Pharaoh consented to let the
people go, provided they would not go far away: he was not willing to part
with them finally, and therefore would have them within reach. So do many
hypocrites with respect to their sins. Afterwards Pharaoh consented to let
the men go, if they would leave the women and children,
Exod. 10: 8-10. And then after that, when God's hand was yet harder upon
him, he consented that they should leave their cattle behind: but
he was not willing to let them go, and all that they had, Exod. 10: 24. So
it oftentimes is with sinners; they are willing to part with some of their
sins, but not all; they are brought to part with the more gross acts of
sin, but not to part with their lusts, in lesser indulgences of them.
Whereas we must part with all our sins, little and great; and all that
belongs to them, men, women, children, and cattle: they must
all be let go, with their young, and with their old, with their sons,
and with their daughters, with their flocks, and with their herds, there
must not be an hoof left behind; as Moses told Pharaoh, with respect
to the children of Israel."
"Thus it is essential to Christianity that we repent
of our sins, that we be convinced of our sinfulness, and that we are
sensible we have justly exposed ourselves to God's wrath, and that our
hearts do renounce all sin, and that we do with our whole hearts embrace
Christ as our only Savior, and that we love Him above all, and are willing
for his sake to forsake all, and that we do give up ourselves to be
entirely and forever his, &c. Such things as these do as much belong to
the gospel: and therefore the profession of them does much belong to a
Christian profession."
"They should profess their faith in Jesus Christ,
and that they embrace Christ, and rely upon Him as their Savior, with
their whole hearts, and that they do joyfully entertain the gospel of
Christ. Thus Philip, in order to baptizing the eunuch, required that he
should profess that he believed with all his heart."
"For persons to profess those things wherein the
essence of Christianity lies, is the same thing as to profess that they
experience those things. Thus for persons solemnly to profess, that,
in a sense and full conviction of their own utter sinfulness, misery, and
impotence, and totally undone state as in themselves, and their just
desert of God's utter rejection and eternal wrath, without mercy, and the
utter insufficiency of their own righteousness, or any thing in them, to
satisfy divine justice, or recommend them to God's favor, they do only and
entirely depend on the Lord Jesus Christ, and his satisfaction and
righteousness; that they do with all their hearts believe the truth of the
gospel of Christ; and that in a full conviction and sense of his
sufficiency and perfect excellency as a Savior, as exhibited in the
gospel, they do with their whole souls, and fountain of their comfort;
that they repent of their sins, and utterly renounce all sin, and give up
themselves wholly to Christ, willingly subjecting themselves to Him as
their King: that they give him their hearts and their whole man: * *
* * * * * I say, for persons solemnly to profess
such things as these, as in the presence of God, is the same thing, as to
profess that they are conscious to, or do experience such things in
their hearts."
5. We shall now offer our readers a few quotations
from hymns which are favorites with the saints, not merely as showing the
sentiments of their authors, but as expressing the heart of the
people of God.
"Love so amazing, so divine,
Demands my soul, my life, my all."
"Thee my new Master now I call,
And consecrate to Thee my all."
"Creatures no more divide my choice,
I bid them all depart."
"Here, Lord, I give myself away,
'Tis all that I can do."
"Welcome, welcome, dear Redeemer,
Welcome to this heart of mine;
Lord, I make a full surrender,
Every power and thought be thine;
Thine entirely,--
Through eternal ages thine."
"Had I a thousand hearts to give,
Lord, they should all be thine."
Is this the language of truth, or of fulsome
flattery? Do the saints tell the Lord that they would give him a thousand
hearts if they had them, and yet not give him the whole of the single
heart they really have? We believe they tell him the simple truth, and
that, therefore, they are not in sin when this is their natural language.
We might, as ever one knows, quote much more Christian devotional poetry
in the same strain; but we have quoted enough to show what is the
breathing of the hearts of God's saints in spite of preposterous theories.
OBJECTIONS.
1. We shall first consider the passages of scripture
which are supposed to be against the doctrine defended in this article.
The doctrine with which we are at present concerned is not that of the
simplicity of moral actions, nor that of the constant sinlessness of such
as have been converted, but simply this, that nothing short of present
entire conformity to the divine law is accepted of God. Now, we admit,
that if it could be made out that the Scriptures represent the saints as
constantly sinful, this would be fatal to our view, though then we should
be at a loss to interpret the numerous texts we have cited so as to make
them harmonize with the texts adduced against us. But no texts proving or
appearing to prove that converted persons sometimes sin or that they
always continue to posses some degree of holiness, would lie at all
against the views we defend in this article.
We think that candid, impartial persons, after
reading and pondering the multitude of seemingly decisive texts which we
have cited, would conclude that it was beforehand improbable that passages
should be found in the word of God declaring beyond the possibility of
mistaking their meaning the continual sinfulness of the saints. Such minds
would naturally inquire whether the laws of interpretation would not admit
of a different explanation of such passages, especially as, at least at
first view, it appears much more consonant with the character of God that
he should forgive only such as put away all their sin.
(1.) In 1 Kings 8: 46, we find the passage, "If they
sin against thee, (for there is no man that sinneth not,) and thou be
angry with them and deliver them to the enemy," &c.-- This text cannot
teach the perpetual sinfulness of the saints; for (v. 48,) the offenders
are supposed to repent "with all their heart and with all their soul" of
the very sin here spoken of. It is therefore ridiculous to quote such a
text in support of that dogma. Besides, the conditional particle if
at the beginning, shows that the sin is not spoken of as what would
certainly take place, and favors the view of those who think that the
parenthesis ought to be rendered, "for there is no man who may not sin,"
a translation which the Hebrew equally admits.
(2.) "There is not a just man that liveth on the
earth that doeth good and sinneth not." Ec. 7: 20. Gesenius, in his
Lexicon (p. 858, Prof. Robinson's translation) explains "There is not a
just man on the earth that doeth good and never sinneth." Thus
understood, (and who can show that the interpretation is not sound?) the
text is far distant from opposition to the doctrine of this article.
(3.) "I know it is so of a truth; but how should man
be just with God? If he will contend with him, he cannot answer him one of
a thousand." Job 9: 2, 3. These are the words of Job, not speaking by
inspiration, but expressing his opinion, as any pious man of the present
day might do. If therefore, the words meant all that the objector supposes
they do, they would poses no more authority than the words of Eliphaz the
Temanite, or Zophar the Naamathite, or Bildad the Shuhite, except as he
was a better and wiser man than any of them; for he too could "darken
counsel by words without knowledge." The sayings of each of these worthies
are not seldom quoted as if they possessed divine authority, and even the
sayings in the Bible of a less respectable personage, who shall be
nameless. The doctrine of the Book of Job taken as a whole, is of divine
authority, but the utterances of the different interlocutors, except God
himself, are no more divine than the words of Luther, Calvin, Whitefield,
or Wesley. Thus much in general on citations from Job. But the words cited
say nothing at all on the question of constant sinfulness. They speak only
of the numberless sins of which every man in the course of his life has
been guilty, so that on the ground of sinless perfection from the
commencement of moral agency no man can be just with God. The words might
be properly employed by a saint who had been a thousand years in heaven.
In a similar manner we are to interpret Ps. 130: 3,
"If thou Lord, shouldst mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand? But
there is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared." Who,
uninfluenced by a theory in need of support, would resort to such a text
as this? Not a syllable is dropped from which we could gather that the
Psalmist refers to present sin. Is it for present, and of course,
unrepented sin, that there is forgiveness with the Lord?
"May one be pardoned and retain the offense?"
Ps. 143: 2, "Enter not into judgment with thy
servant; for in thy sight shall no man living be justified." What word is
here which tells us that the suppliant speaks of present sin? It is God's
way to grant mercy to those who "confess and forsake their sins;"
does the Psalmist ask the Holy One to deal with him, as to part of his
sin, on an opposite principle?
(4.) "But we are all as an unclean thing, and all
our righteousness are as filthy rages." Is. 64: 6. The prophet here speaks
in the name of the backslidden Jews, who, as he says in the immediate
context, "were all fading like a leaf, and whose iniquities, like the
wind, had taken them away--from whom God had hidden his face, and whom he
had consumed because of their iniquities." Does such a passage as this
prove that the saints are always more or less in sin? Yet in this sense it
is often cited, and it is deemed orthodox for those who, like Enoch,
walked with God, to say, "All our righteousness are as filthy rags!"
Nothing can be plainer than it is that the prophet is speaking, not of
those who enjoy God's favor, but of such as suffer the most terrific
judgments for their sins. On the other hand vs. 4, 5, speak of the manner
in which God deals with those who obey Him according to his requirement.
"For from the beginning men have not heard, nor given ear to, nor hath eye
seen a god besides Thee, who doeth such things for those who trust in Him.
Thou makest peace with him that rejoices to practice righteousness, those
that remember Thee in Thy ways." (Barnes on v. 4, Gesenius on v. 5) Thus
this text, instead of disproving the doctrine we advocate, appears, when
taken with its context, decidedly to sustain it.
(5.) "And it [see vs. 36, 37,] shall be upon Aaron's
forehead that Aaron may bear the iniquity of the holy things which the
children of Israel shall hallow in all their holy gifts." Ex. 28: 38. The
true meaning of this text may be more satisfactorily ascertained by
comparing Nu. 18: 1; Lev. 10: 17; Isa. 53: 6, 11; Jn. 1: 29; Heb. 9: 28; 1
Pet. 2: 24. We adopt the interpretation suggested by these references
found in Bagster's Bible. According to this, "the iniquity of the holy
things," is not the iniquity practiced in offering them, but the iniquity
for which, by means of them, typical atonement was to be made. The priests
and the victims were both necessary to constitute a type of the Great High
Priest and Sacrifice who makes real atonement for the people of God, and
they were both therefore said "to bear the iniquity of the congregation of
the Lord." "The iniquity of the sanctuary and the iniquity of the
priesthood," Nu. 18: 1, may be likewise the iniquity for which the rites
of the Sanctuary and the services of the priests made atonement. Other
references in Bagster's middle column indicate another interpretation,
namely, that, as Aaron and his sons offered the holy things in behalf of
the people, if they sinned in so sacred a service with "Holiness to the
Lord" written on their foreheads, they must bear their iniquity, that is,
be visited with judgments for it even if they repented. But while this
explanation suits well Nu. 18: 1; Lev. 22: 9; Ex. 28: 43, and other
similar passages, we think the other is much preferable for Ex. 28: 38.
But neither explanation give the least support to the doctrine of the
constant sinfulness of the saints. The passage contains no intimation that
sin is always mixed with holy duties. When, therefore, persons pray
"Forgive us the iniquity of our holy things," meaning the iniquity mixed
even with the utterance of these very words, they pray thus without
warrant from the word of God.
(6.) "Who can say, I have made my heart clean, I am
pure from my sin?" Prov. 20: 9. This text sounds as if it were much more
in point than any other text which we have ever heard quoted. No one can
intelligently deny that such interrogative sentences are often intended as
a form to express a universal negative, including an appeal for the
universal negative answer to the common sense and common candor of the
reader. But that this I not always the import of such questions is plain
from an example in the very book, 31: 10, "Who can find a virtuous woman?"
The context renders it plain that the writer did not mean to intimate that
there were no virtuous women, nor even that there were not many, but that
they were scarce in comparison with the multitude of women of a different
character. In like manner the passage we are considering, may not mean
that there are no persons in the world who have "cleansed their hearts and
washed their hands in the innocency," (Ps. 73: 13,) but only that such
persons are comparatively rare,--that "strait is the gate and narrow I the
way that leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it." In other very
emphatic ways the prophets set forth the fewness of the righteous,
especially in times of declension. Thus Jeremiah, at a time when certainly
a few righteous might have been found in Jerusalem, says, "Run ye to and
from through the streets of Jerusalem, and see now, and know, and seek in
the broad places thereof, if ye can find a man, if there be any that
executeth judgment, that seeketh the truth; and I will pardon it."
Anther explanation may be suggested. There is a
sense in which none but God is good, and certainly the goodness of the
saints, though it be sinless, is in this world but a frail, weak thing
compared with what it will be ages hence. The hurt done by sin to the
adjustments of the passions and appetites, the power of habit, and the
associative and cognitive nature, must be great and must take long to
heal. Fact shows how often good men are tempted and fall into sin--the
dangers which lodge in them and beset them are imminent. It is not for
them yet to sing the song of everlasting triumph, and, as if a final
victory, certainly never to be followed by the least disaster, were
achieved, to shout, "I have made my heart clean--I am pure from my sin!"
The Red Sea is crossed--Jordan is passed--the last Canaanite is slain--and
I am settled in eternal peace in the promised land.
We have heard another explanation still, which
supposes that the sacred writer refers to the obligations of God's saints
to grace--to the fact that God is the great author of their purification
and not they themselves. "Who can say, I have made my heart clean,
I am [therefore] pure from my sin?" Were the emphatic I in the
original, this explanation would have much to recommend it. We do not say
that the absence of the emphatic pronoun is decisive against it; but to us
it seems less probable than either of the preceding interpretations. Any
one of the three which we have given, renders the passage entirely
consonant with our views.
(7.) "If I justify myself my own mouth shall condemn
me; if I say, I am perfect, it shall also prove me perverse. Job. 9: 20."
The observations made on a passage previously cited from Job, apply also
here, that did the citation mean what the objector supposes it does, it
would contain no divine testimony to his doctrine. The words are Job's and
are entitled only to the weight of a wise and good man's opinion uttered
at the very dawn of revelation, and therefore not nearly so likely to be
sound as the opinion of an equally wise and good man of the present
incomparably more enlightened age. But be this as it may, the passage
before us can, we think, be satisfactorily shown to contain no such
meaning as the objector's cause demands. The current interpretation
evinces an utter ignorance or forgetfulness of the established use of the
word here rendered perfect. It is used of Job 1: 1; 8: 20; 9: 20,
21; Ps. 37: 37; and Gen. 25: 27, in which last passage, as Gesenius in his
lexicon remarks, it seems to designate the character of Jacob as
contrasted with the wilder and more ferocious character of Esau. In all
the other texts it denotes substantially the same as the words upright,
righteous, and is never used to denote a character to which a good man
at peace with God might not lay claim. Thus the writer of the book, 1: 1,
calls Job perfect; Bildad speaks of good men whom God will not cast
away as perfect; and Job himself in the immediate context of our
passage says of God, "He destroys the perfect and the wicked," by
which classes he plainly means simply the upright and the wicked. The
Psalmist says, "Mark the perfect man and behold the upright, for
the end of that man is peace." Here plainly real living saints are
mentioned under the designation of perfect. Why such a word (and
all its cognates) is so used, the objector might, perhaps, do well to
ponder. What then does the passage mean? Mr. Barnes has, in our judgment,
entirely missed its import both in his translation and commentary,
excellent as his work in general is. Rosenmuller on the other hand in his
Compendium had hit it exactly. Job represents that in a judicial contest
with God, the great and dreadful and infinitely wise One--frail man would
have no chance. Should he please to employ his infinite powers, he could
confound him if his cause were ever so good, and turn every thing to his
disadvantage. In his awful presence he would not know his soul, he would
despise his life. Therefore he would not answer him--he would rather
humbly make supplication to his Judge. In that imagined unequal contest,
says Job,
If I should be righteous, my own mouth would condemn
me,
If I should be perfect, it would make me perverse,
If I should be perfect, I should not know my soul--I
should look upon
my life with contempt.
The citation in Rosenmuller, from the celebrated
Albert Schultens, is so striking, that we will venture a translation of
it. "Even if I were righteous, yet I should not recognize my soul, I
should disprove my life, that is, ever if I were plainly sound and
conscious to myself of no stain, yet that bright consciousness could not
sustain me against the infinite splendor of divine exaltation and majesty,
but, however well known to myself, I should be compelled to be ignorant of
my own soul, and to disapprove, condemn, and despise a life passed in
virtue and integrity."
Did Job really mean that in the fancied trial, his
cause would be actually a bad one, and not merely made to appear
bad but the infinite superiority of his imagined opponent, the uniform
import of the word here rendered perfect, and that of its cognates,
would compel us to conclude that here Job confesses that his three friends
are in the right in their controversy, that he is indeed an arrant
hypocrite, and that the afflictions he suffers are the overwhelming divine
testimony to his marked baseness. But neither with this, nor with any
other interpretation than the one we have given from Rosenmuller and
Schultens, can the words translated in the English Bible, "If I justify
myself," be made to agree. These words, by the laws of the Hebrew
language, never can mean, If I pretend to be righteous, or
If I try to make out that I am righteous, but must mean,
If I am really righteous, if I really have a good cause. Our English
version, if the translators knew what they were about, must mean, "If I
should really make out my case, my resistless opponent would turn even my
good arguments against me." And since the words rendered, "If I say I am
perfect," merely resume the same idea in possibly somewhat stronger terms,
they cannot be meant of pretended but must refer to real perfection,
whatever may be the sense of the word translated perfect.
(8.) "If we say that we have no sin, we deceive
ourselves, and the truth is not in us." This text is relied on as
confidently by objectors as any text in the Bible; but in our
apprehension, for no solid reason. The meaning turns upon the
signification of the word "sin," or rather the original word so
translated. The principal signification given in Robinson's Lexicon of the
New Testament are as follows: "1. Aberration from the truth, error.
2. Sin, that is, aberration from a prescribed law or rule of duty
either in general, or spoken of particular sins. 3. From the Hebrew,
the imputation or consequences of sin, the guilt and punishment of sin.
* *
So "to have sin," that is, to be guilty and
liable to punishment, Jn. 9: 41; 15: 22, 24. 1 Jn. 1: 8.--1 Cor.
15: 17, "Ye are yet in your sins," that is, are still under the
guilt and exposed to the punishment of your sins." So Bretschneider: "To
have sin, culpam habere," that is, to be blameworthy or justly
liable to punishment. This writer also refers to 1 Jn. 1: 8.--If the views
of these masterly lexicographers are correct, 1 Jn. 1: 8, has nothing to
do with the question whether the saints are perpetually in sin in the
sense of moral pollution. The passage means simply, If we say that we have
no blameworthiness [on account of sins no matter when committed] needing
atoning blood and pardoning mercy, we deceive ourselves and the truth is
not in us. Thus the first part of the verse means the same with the first
part of verse 10th, while the concluding members have quite different
imports: "If we say, that we have not sin, we deceive ourselves and the
truth is not in us. Not only so, but if we say we have not sinned, we
commit the awful crime of making God a liar, and his word is not in us."
Even Calvin says on this text, "By the name of sin not only depraved and
vicious inclination is here denoted, but blameworthiness, [culpa]
which truly renders us guilty before God." The learned lexicographers and
critics before quoted, justly exclude from their definition "depraved and
vicious inclination" and confine the sense wholly to desert of punishment,
guilt, which may exist and will exist, aside from mercy in Christ, in all
the redeemed saints, sinless in heaven, to all eternity.
When I rise to worlds unknown,
And behold Thee on Thy throne,
Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
Let me hid myself in Thee.
The context demands the interpretation we have
given. In vs. 6, 7, the apostle says, "If we say that we have fellowship
with Him, and walk in darkness, [that is, in sin,] we lie and do not the
truth; but if we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have
fellowship one with another, [that is, God and we have fellowship,] and
the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin." The last
clause relates, not to moral purification, but to the atoning blood which
makes purification for the guilt of the soul-- in other words, it refers
to the justifying, and not the sanctifying efficacy of the Savior's work.
This is the view of Calvin. "This," says he, "is an illustrious passage,
from which we learn, that the expiation obtained by the blood of Christ
properly belongs to us, when we cultivate righteousness with a right
affection of heart." But if we say that we have no sin, no sin in the
sense of guilt, ill-desert, needing cleansing by that blood, we deceive
ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If, on the other hand, we confess
the sins by which we have contracted this ill-desert, God is faithful and
righteous to forgive them, and thus, by not imputing it, to cleanse us
from all iniquity. The use of "sins." in v. 9. instead of "sin,"
proves that sin is used in v. 8 in the sense of ill-dersert; for though we
may commit a sin in one moment, we presume the objector will not
contend that the apostle meant to teach that every man is self-deceived
and destitute of the truth, who thinks that he is not every moment
committing sins. The whole context appears to us, to treat, not of
moral defilement and sanctification, but of guilt and forgiveness, and the
conditions on which forgiveness is exercised. The phrase, then, to have
sin, in v. 8, refers, not to present moral defilement, but guilt,
ill-desert, resulting from sins, committed, when, the phrase does
not at all determine.
(9.) "In many things we offend all."--Ja. 3: 2. It
is no part of the object of this article to prove that Christians never
sin, nor prove that they do not often sin. The text before us will possess
no force to support the objector's cause, till he points out in it some
word signifying continually, all the time, or constantly, or
till he proves that men may not become sinless, and then again fall into
iniquity. This last mentioned notion he cannot establish, unless he proves
that the first sin of Adam and the fallen angels, was owing to a germ in
them of undeveloped depravity. Nor even then will his case be made out,
till he shows that his particular instances fall under a universal law.
(10.) "Not as though I had already attained, either
were already perfect: but I follow after, if I may apprehend that for
which also I am apprehended of Christ Jesus. Brethren, I count not myself
to have apprehended; but his one thing I do, forgetting those things which
are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press
toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ
Jesus."--Phil. 3: 12-14. An erroneous translation of one word has alone
occasioned this glorious passage to be cited to prove the dogma of
constant moral imperfection in the saints. Prof. Robinson, in his Lexicon,
p. 812, has corrected this mistake. His interpretation is, "Not that I
have already completed my course, and arrived at the goal, so as to
receive the prize." We will paraphrase slightly according to the true
sense. "I do not act as if I had already received the prize, or had
completed my course; but I follow after if that I may lay hold on that, in
order that I might gain which, I have been laid hold on by Christ Jesus.
Brethren, while I am in the race, I do not act as if I had gained the
crown; but this one thing I do, forgetting the things which are behind,
and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the
mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus." Thus
understood, the passage exhibits the apostle as an illustrious example of
the full performance of all the duties of the Christian race,--one of
which cannot be, to be all the time at the goal. But he who runs lawfully,
will receive the prize whenever the great Judge shall be pleased to
terminate the race.
(11.) "Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil
the lusts of the flesh: for the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the
Spirit against the flesh; and these are contrary the one to the other; so
that ye cannot [more literally, in order that ye may not] do the
things that ye would."--Gal. 5: 16, 17. It is characteristic of impenitent
sinners, that they "fulfil the desires [margin, wills, i.e.
wouldings, thelemata,] of the flesh." But, in order that his people
may not do this, God has placed his Spirit in them, to oppose and govern
these desires. "Walk in the Spirit," says the apostle, "and ye shall not
fulfil them; for, this very end God as given you the Holy Ghost." But how
strange Paul's argument appears, if we suppose it to run thus: "Walk in
the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh; for there is
such a struggle within you, between the flesh and the Spirit, that it is
impossible for you to obey the Spirit's monitions." To say the least, the
first view presents a little greater encouragement to a soul that would be
holy. Macknight, who in the main supports the current view, insists,
however, that the apostle cannot mean "so that you can at no time do the
things that ye would;" for "how absurd," says he, "would it have been for
the apostle to command the Galatians not to fulfil the lusts of the flesh,
for this reason, that they could not at any time do the things which their
reason and conscience inclined!" This view of Macknight is not opposed to
the argument we are presenting; but still, we think it quite evident that
the explanation first given is the true one. It is not new, but was
adopted by Storr, one of the great bulwarks of the Gospel in Germany,
against Neology. (See Flatt Vorlesungen ueber die Briefe and die Galater
&c.)
(12.) "If ye endure chastening God dealeth with you
as with sons; for what son is he whom the father chasteneth not?"--Heb.
12: 7, and see the context. The argument of the objector is, that
chastening implies sinfulness, and that therefore, the children of God are
always in some degree of sin. But what is the case when the pain of the
discipline has passed away, and it has "yielded the happy fruit of
righteousness?" The saints are sometimes (if need be in heaviness through
manifold trials; but not always are they in heaviness with a discipline
which chastises their present faults. We deny that chastening always
implies present sin, though it may exert upon the soul a salutary
disciplinary influence. David's sin had been put away when he lost his
child, and when Absalom was permitted to drive him from his throne, as a
chastisement for his crimes in the matter of Uriah. It was so to, when the
pestilence was sent to scourge him and his people. In fact, our own
sufferings, as well as the witnessed sufferings of others, may confirm us
in a virtue already attained, and unmixed with sin. "It is plainly
conceivable," says Bishop Butler, "that creatures without blemish as they
came out of the hands of God, may be in danger of going wrong, and so may
stand in need of the security of virtuous habits, additional to the moral
principles, wrought into their natures by him. * * And as they are
naturally capable of being raised and improved by discipline, it may be a
thing fit and requisite, that they should be placed in circumstances with
an eye to it--in circumstances peculiarly fitted to be, to them, a state
of discipline for their improvement in virtue. * * Upright creatures may
want to be improved."--Analogy, Part I, ch. 5. If these observations of
the great Butler are true even of creatures who never have fallen, how
much more are they true of beings, the adjustments of whose mental and
animal constitution have been disturbed by sin, even though that sin may
exist no longer in their hearts! Prest. Edwards, speaking even of the
angles, (Works, vol. 8, p. 524,) says, "They had their hearts confirmed in
obedience, and having often overcome under trials which they had."
(13.) "Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our
Lord and Savior Jesus Christ."--2 Peter, 3: 18. If this passage proves the
constant sinfulness of Christians, it must mean, "Gradually leave off sin
and gradually increase in holiness, till you become perfect, or sinless."
But who cannot see that such a command would involve a license to sin in
some degree? Our Lord Jesus Christ himself is said to have grown in
favor, [grace] with God and man, which could not have been, unless
his moral excellence had really advanced. But his progress, surely, was
not from more to less sin, but from a lower to a higher sinless
perfection. Prest. Edwards, in the Miscellaneous Observations in vol. 8 of
his works, endeavors to show, that all the developments of the divine
character in providence and grace, will advance all the holy creatures of
God in holiness and happiness. Speaking of the general conflagration, p.
584, he observes, "Such a wonderful and terrible display of the holiness
and justice of God, will be a great means of further sanctifying all the
elect universe, setting them at a vastly greater distance from sin against
this holy God, and a means of vastly exalting the purity and sanctity of
their minds." Those who fall in with these truly sublime words, will not
think that the command, Grow in grace, implies the present sinfulness of
those to whom it is addressed.
We have now considered the principle texts which are
relied on to prove the doctrine that the saints are always in this life
more or less sinful. With that success we have prosecuted our attempt to
show that they furnish no such proof, our readers, each for himself, must
judge as in the sight of Him "who searches the reins and hearts." We pass
to other objections.
2. It is said that we might as well interpret such
expressions as "following the Lord wholly," "walking before Him with all
the heart, or with a perfect heart," of the sinlessness of the whole life,
as explain them as we have done, and that our argument, therefore, proves
too much. But it is a plainly just rule of interpretation, that we are to
depart no farther from the natural, literal import of words than we are
compelled to do. When we say, a man is a person of perfect veracity, facts
might show that we did not mean to assert that he never swerved in the
least from the truth; but strange would it seem to those who should find
out that our meaning involved the idea, that in every word he uttered
there was some mixture of lying. When we call a person good natured,
we do not mean that he is never irritated or petulant, but we do man that
good nature is his habitual character. In like manner, the above
remarkable expressions naturally denote at least the habitual character of
the persons spoken of, and so understood, call for no dilution of their
native strength. It would be strange indeed if they were used of men who
in not a solitary act of their lives ever "followed the Lord wholly," or
served Him "with the whole heart." Strange would it be for God's truth, to
say of a man, that he "turned to the Lord with all his heart, and with all
his soul, and with all his might," when not a single man since the fall
ever for one moment did any such thing.
The passage in 2 Chron., chs. 15, 16, respecting
King Asa, is instructive, as showing that the expressions under
consideration, do indeed refer to the habitual character. It is said of
this king, that "his heart was perfect all his days." But the seer Hanani
rebukes him for his sin and folly in a certain transaction, and the
faithful rebuke puts Asa into a rage. The angry monarch goes so far as to
imprison the prophet, and at the same time opposes some of the people,
perhaps persons who applauded the courageous seer. Hanani employs
expressions in his rebuke which imply that Asa had, in the transaction
alluded to, fallen from his habitual perfection: "The eyes of the Lord run
to and fro throughout the whole earth, to show himself strong in behalf of
those whose heart is perfect towards Him." These words plainly intimate,
that Asa's heart was not perfect, and threaten him with the withdrawal of
the protection of that strong arm which had hitherto defended him from
mighty hosts of foes.
3. We have heard the objection urged, that the
strong language used of some of the ancient saints, refers, not to their
whole character at the time spoken of, but of some particular parts of
their conduct, as their devotion to monotheism in opposition to idolatry.
But it is to be noted, that the passages speak not of external doings, but
of the heart. We not only admit, but contend, that the religion of the
heart, will both inwardly, and in its outward manifestations, be modified
by the circumstances of the subject. But that a man should be perfect in
some things and partial in others, we never can believe till the pregnant
saying of the apostle James--Whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet
offend in one point, he is guilty of all--shall be blotted from the Bible.
In whatever degree there is a heart for the practice of one virtue, there
must be a heart for the practice of all. Even the heathen Aristotle held
that all virtues must be possessed by him who possesses one virtue; and
this is the doctrine of every theologian of whose writings we have any
knowledge. Prof. Hodge of Princeton, does but express the common doctrine
of philosophers and divines, when he says in his "Way of Life," p. 303,
"The man who is renewed in the spirit of his mind after the image of God,
is one who has that moral excellence which expresses itself, according to
its different objects and occasions, in all the graces of the Spirit."
4. It is objected, that our doctrine makes all
saints equal, except that some may be more constantly sinless than others.
This objection implies, that the holiness of the heavenly world is at an
eternal stand-still. The holiness of perfect finite beings, on the other
hand, must be everlastingly progressive, because they will forever advance
in knowledge and in the discipline of good habits, if not in capacity!
Sinlessness, it is true, does not admit of degrees; but progressive
perfection in holiness does. From the holiness of the pious child of five
years old to that of Gabriel, the distance must be immense; and the
strength of the archangel's virtue must be inconceivably greater than that
of the infant soul that worships with him in heaven. So, likewise, had
Paul, after his long career of discipline amidst toils and trials, and a
man of equal capacity, but only just born of God, been both transferred
together to the spirit world, the holiness of the apostle would have far
surpassed that of his new-born brother. Were the Creator now to give being
to an archangel equal in capacity to Gabriel, Gabriel in holiness must
still be his superior, by reason of the confirming influence of countless
ages of virtuous habits, and the superior extent, accuracy and familiarity
of his knowledge. We are, our readers will perceive, only echoing the
before-quoted sentiments of Bishop Butler and President Edwards.
5. The consciousness of the most eminent saints, is
said to be against this doctrine. The consciousness of holy men, rightly
interpreted, is good evidence, though we should be far from setting the
alleged consciousness of any human being against the manifest testimony of
the Scriptures. But the citations form Edwards and from familiar hymns,
will tell us what the consciousness of God's accepted children is in
reality. The saints, according to Edwards, are "conscious that they do
only and entirely depend on the Lord Jesus Christ and his satisfaction and
righteousness; that they do, with all their hearts, believe the
Gospel of Christ, willingly subjecting themselves to him as their king;
that they give him their hearts and their whole man."--(Works, V.,
p. 282.) The hymns tell us the saints profess "that if they had a thousand
hearts, they would give them all to the Lord." We never met with a saint
who appeared to be truly walking with God, and blessed with the joy of
salvation, who would decline singing this beautiful couplet. Now, when men
are conscious, truly conscious of all this, their holy, humble lives
attesting their sincerity, their philosophy may tell them that sin is
mixed with it all; their theological system and confession of faith may
persuade them that the law of God is so wonderfully high, that it is
horrible presumption for them to think that they really ever obey it
fully; they may endeavor, with Edwards, formally to prove that the holiest
saints have in them more sin than holiness; but the Bible and emancipated
common sense, will decide that the consciousness is not against the
doctrine of this article.
6. Another objection is, that this doctrine leaves
no room, on the part of accepted persons, for the confession of present
sin. What is the Bible evidence that the saints in their acceptable
approaches to God, are expected to confess present sin, or that it was the
custom of Bible saints to do so? With a view to determine this question,
we have examined the whole book of Psalms and the most remarkable
penitential prayers in the other books of Scripture, and we have found no
such confession. To say the least, they are few and far between, while
confessions of past sins and of ill-desert on account of them, are as
abundant as could be wished. Indeed, how could sin in the very act of
prayer be confessed by persons who believed that "if they regarded
iniquity in their heart the Lord would not hear them." They knew that they
must put it fully away before they could reasonably expect an answer,
instead of keeping enough of it in them "to damn a whole world," as the
way of expressing it sometimes is.
7. The doctrine of this article, it is alleged,
necessarily leads to the conclusion, that the saints do not need the
constant advocacy of Christ, and that the Scripture doctrine of remission
of sins is false. This objection is partly contained in the extracts from
Dr. Beecher, and partly in the following passage translated from Calvin's
comment on Lu. 1: 6-- "In brief, Luke has embraced in these two words, [commandments
and ordinances] the whole law. But, if in observing the law,
Zacharias and Elizabeth were irreprehensible, they had no need of the
grace of Christ; for a full observance of the law, confers life, and where
there is no transgression of it, guilt also ceases. I reply that those
praises with which the servants of God are so splendidly adorned, are to
be taken with some exception. For we ought to consider how God acts with
them, namely, according to the covenant which he has made with them, whose
first head is gratuitous reconciliation, and the daily pardon by which He
remits their sins. They are therefore, reckoned just and irreprehensible,
since their whole life being a sort of exemplar of sanctity, testifies
that they are devoted to righteousness, that the fear of God reigns in
them. But since their pious zeal is far distant from perfection, it
cannot, without pardon, please God. Wherefore, the righteousness which is
praised in them, depends on God's gratuitous indulgence by which it takes
place, that he does not impute what unrighteousness remains in them. It is
necessary thus to expound whatever is contained in the Scriptures
respecting the righteousness of men, that it may not overset the remission
of sins, on which it rests as a building on its foundation." When we read
such passages as this, and the extract from Dr. Beecher, we feel strongly
inclined to fall in with a saying we have met with somewhere, that it
takes great men to put forth great nonsense. For about what pray, is the
advocacy of Christ employed? About sin, of which men repent, or which they
retain? "Hereby," says John, speaking of Christ as our Advocate, "do we
know that we know Him, if we keep his commandments: he that saith, I know
Him, and keepeth not his commandments is a liar, and the truth is not in
him." And what sin is remitted? That which is "broken off by
righteousness"--or that which still remains in the heart? Or, does God
forgive both kinds? Is it the Bible doctrine, that if a man will put away
the greater part of his sin, God will, for Christ's sake, forgive him the
whole? How, in principle, does this differ from the Romish doctrine
of indulgences, against which the great and excellent Calvin was as
unmerciful as even his heroic compeer, Luther? The Scriptures always
conjoin repentance with remission; and what is repentance of sin
but its abandonment? The remission can be no broader than the repentance.
To suppose that Christ pardons unrepented iniquity, and covers it with his
own spotless robe, is to make him the enemy of the law and the minister of
sin. Would not the law have a right to complain if a totally impenitent
soul were forgiven? Could the blood and righteousness of even the Son of
God make such a procedure square with rectitude? But the least sin is
hostility to the law; and were there a race of sinners in the universe
none of whom were guilty of any more than the least iniquity possible, how
could one of them be pardoned without repentance? But where they to remain
impenitent, they would, by the supposition, each cherish no more sin than
what is false theory places in the bosom of the purest saint on earth. On
what principle, then, could one be forgiven, and the other be sent to hell
forever? We believe that all would decide, that such a race of sinners
must be lost, if they failed to put away their sin, that is, to become
sinless; for the supposition is, that their sin, is the least possible. On
the same principle we argue that there is no righteous ground to excuse
mankind from complete repentance. The doctrine of Calvin and Beecher
appears to us, to be fundamentally the same with the monstrous
supralapsarian dogma of the justification of the elect form all eternity.
8. Another objection, not absolutely distinct from
the last mentioned, is, that this doctrine makes grace void, and
introduces justification by law. We reply, that we fully believe in
gratuitous justification by faith, and that our doctrine only, requires
that faith, in order to justify, should not be alone; but, as the
Westminster Confession speaks, "ever be accompanied with all the saving
graces, yielding obedience to the commands, trembling at the threatenings,
and embracing the promises of God, for this life and that which is to
come." Legal righteousness is unremitted obedience to the law of God from
the commencement of moral agency. Hence legal justification is
justification on the ground of merit, a just claim on reward, a
justification to which no one who has ever sinned can have any title
whatever. On the other hand, as Paul tells us, Rom. 4: 6-8; David, Ps. 32,
describes gracious justification, "Blessed is he whose transgression is
forgiven, whose sin is covered. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord
imputeth not iniquity, and in whose spirit there is no guile"--[remissness,
slackness, sloth.] At no height of holiness to which he will ever attain
on earth or in heaven, will the pardoned sinner ever forget, that for his
past sins he deserves to be in hell, and that he stands by faith in the
Lamb of God, that bore the sin of the world. Forever will the redeemed of
Christ sing,
"Should my tears forever flow,
Should my zeal no languor know,
This for sin could not atone;
Thou must save, and Thou alone."
9. The last objection which we shall at present
consider, is, that the doctrine of this article does away the need of
Christ's continual spiritual aid. This objection, which is one of Dr.
Beecher's, proceeds on the supposition, that the sole ground of our
dependence on Christ, is present sinfulness. But this is not our view, nor
is it the view of most evangelical divines. The orthodox doctrine is, that
all creatures are dependent on God for holiness, free agents though they
be; and that the saints will be everlastingly kept holy in heaven, through
the indwelling Spirit of Christ. To be consistent, Dr. Beecher must
maintain, that when the saints get to heaven, they derive no more
spiritual supplies in the way of aid from the Son of God. Thenceforward
they are independent, or derive their aid from God out of Christ, whose
spiritual connection with them is sundered forever. But, according to our
doctrine, it will be eternally true, that the saints will be holy through
their oneness in the participation of the Spirit with the Son of God, he
being the vine and they the branches. And fit it is, that those who have
sinned, should everlastingly stand accepted only in the Beloved, and in
Him receive all the sanctifying influence and joyous communications by
which they forever go onward and upward in holiness and bliss.
Our article has grown on our hands to a greater
length than we expected. We wished to remark on a number of additional
topics--on the tendency of the doctrine we oppose, to discourage and
sadden the hearts of the righteous whom God hath not made sad,--on its
adaptedness to nourish the hopes of hypocrites,--on its tendency to lead
sinners to return to the Lord, like treacherous Judah, feignedly, and not
with all the heart--and on some professed principle of objectors, which
necessarily involve the very doctrine they deny.
In conclusion, we cannot think it arrogant to say,
that those who venture to maintain, that the many passages of God's word,
which in so strong language demand the whole heart, in order to
acceptance, are to be taken with qualifications, are solemnly bound,
either to point out those qualifications in the Holy Scriptures, and not
merely to refer us to the deductions of a doubtful human theology,--or to
abandon a position apparently so dangerous to souls, nor continue to
proclaim a doctrine which mars the Gospel, and in principle makes void the
law. If the Bible can be shown to be against us, we trust that we shall
bow with humble submission to its authority, nor proceed further to darken
counsel by words without knowledge. But while the Bible appears plainly to
teach us these views, we dare not abandon them, nor dare we cease
proclaiming them, though all the Augustines, Luthers, Calvins, Westminster
Assemblies, Theological Seminaries, and learned Theologians in the
universe were against us. "Let God be true, but every man a liar." But it
is delightful to us, to think, that however in appearance divided on this
great subject, the church of the living God are in heart and aim
"perfectly joined together in the same mind and in the same judgment." May
God hasten the day when the wood, hay and stubble which any of us may have
unwittingly placed in the edifice of truth, may be burned away by the
salutary fires of faithful, fraternal discussion, and naught be left in
its strong and beautiful walls, but gold, silver and precious stones.
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