What Men Highly Esteem, God Abhors
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
from "The
Oberlin Evangelist" Publication of Oberlin College
Lecture V
March 29, 1854
.
Text.--Luke 16:15: "Ye are they which justify yourselves before men; but God knoweth your hearts: for that which is highly esteemed among men, is abomination in the sight of God."
Christ had just spoken the parable of the unjust steward, in which He
presented the case of one who unjustly used the property of others entrusted to
him, for the purpose of laying them under obligation to provide for himself
after expulsion from his trust. Our Lord represents this conduct of the steward
as being wise in the sense of forethoughtful and provident for self--a wisdom of
the world, void of all morality. He uses the case to illustrate and recommend
the using of wealth in such a way as to make friends for ourselves who at our
death shall welcome us into everlasting habitations." Then going deeper, even to
the bottom principle that should control us in all our use of wealth, He lays it
down that no man can serve both God and Mammon. Rich and covetous men who were
serving Mammon need not suppose they could serve God too at the same time. The
service of the one is not to be reconciled with the service of the other.
The covetous Pharisees heard all these things, and they derided Him. As if they
would say--"Indeed, you seem to be very sanctimonious, to tell us that we do not
serve God acceptably! When has there ever been a tithe of mint that we did not
pay?" Those Pharisees did not admit His orthodoxy, by any means. They thought
they could serve God and mammon both. Let whoever would say they serve mammon,
they knew they served God also and they had nothing but scorn for those
teachings that showed the inconsistency and the absurdity of their worshipping
two opposing gods and serving two opposing masters.
Our Lord replied to them in the words of our text--"Ye are they who justify
yourselves before men, but God knoweth your hearts; for that which is highly
esteemed among men is an abomination in the sight of God."
In pursuing the subject thus presented, I shall--
Show how and why it is that men highly esteem that which God avoids.
1. They have a different rule of judgment. God judges by one rule; they by
another. God's rule requires universal benevolence; their rule is satisfied with
an amount of selfishness, so be it sufficiently refined to meet the times. God
requires men to devote themselves not to their own interest, but to His interest
and those of His great family. He sets up one great end--the highest glory of
His name and kingdom. He asks them to become divinely patriotic, devoting
themselves to their Creator and to the good of His creatures.
The world adopts an entirely different rule, allowing men to set up their own
happiness as their end. It is curious that some pretended philosophers have laid
down the same rule--viz.: that men should pursue their own happiness, and only
take care not to infringe on others happiness too much. Their doctrine allows
men to pursue a selfish course only not to infringe too palpably on others
rights and interests.
But God's rule is, "Seek not thine own." His law is explicit--"Thou shalt love
(not thy self, but) the Lord thy God with all thy heart." "Love is fulfilling of
the law." "Charity (this same love) seeketh not her own." This is characteristic
of the love the law requires--it does not seek its own. "Let no man seek his
own, but every man another's." (1Cor.10:24.) "Look not every man on his own
things, but every man on the things of others." "For all seek their own, and not
the things which are Jesus Christ." Phil. 2:4,21. To seek their own interest and
not Jesus Christ, Paul regards an entire departure from true Christianity.
God regards nothing as virtue except devotion to the right ends. The right end
is not one's own, but the general good. Hence God's rule requires virtue, while
man's rule at best only restrains vice. All human governments are founded on
this principle, as all who study the subject know. They do not require
benevolence, they only restrain selfishness. In the foundation principles of our
government, it is affirmed that men have certain inalienable rights, one of
which is the right to pursue each his own happiness. This is affirmed to be an
inalienable right, and is always assumed to be right in itself, provided it does
not infringe on others' rights of happiness. But God's rule requires positive
benevolence and regards nothing else as virtue except devotion to the highest
good. Man's rule condemns nothing, provided man so restrains himself as not to
infringe on others' rights.
Moral character is as the end sought. It cannot be predicated of muscular
action, but must always turn on the end which the mind has in view. Men always
really assume and know this. They know that the moral character is really as the
end to which man devotes himself. Hence God's law and man's law being as they
are, to obey God's is holiness; to obey only man's law is sin.
Men very inconsiderately judge themselves and others, not by God's rule, but by
man's. They do this to an extent truly wonderful. Look into men's real opinions
and you will see this. Often without being at all aware of it, men judge
themselves, not by God's rule, but by their own.
Here I must notice some of the evidences of this, and furnish some
illustrations.
(1.) Thus, for example, a mere negative morality is highly esteemed by some men.
If a man lives in a community and does no harm, defrauds no man, does not cheat,
or lie--does no palpable injury to society; transacts his business in a way
deemed highly honorable and virtuous--this man stands in high repute according
to the standard of the world. But what does all this really amount to? The man
is just taking care of himself; that is all. His morality is wholly of this
negative form. All you can say of him is, he does no hurt. Yet this morality is
often spoken of in a manner which shows that the world highly esteem it. But
does God highly esteem it? Nay, but it is abomination in His sight.
Again, a religion which is merely negative is often highly esteemed. Men of this
religion are careful not to do wrong; but what is doing wrong? It is thought no
wrong to neglect the souls of their neighbors. What do they deem wrong?
Cheating, lying, stealing. These and such like things, they will admit are
wrong. But what are they doing? Look round about you even here and see what men
of this class are doing. Many of them never try to save a soul. They are highly
esteemed for their inoffensive life; they do no wrong; but they do nothing to
save a soul. Their religion is a mere negation. Perhaps they would not cross a
ferry on the Sabbath; but never would they save a soul from death. They would
let their own clerks go to hell without one earnest effort to save them. Must
not such a religion be an abomination to God?
(2.) So, also, of a religion which at best consists of forms and prayers and
does not add to these the energies of benevolent effort. Such a religion is all
hollow. Is it serving God to do nothing but ask favors for one's self?
Some keep up Sabbath duties, as they are termed, and family prayer, but all
their religion consists in keeping up their forms of worship. If they add
nothing to these, their religion is only an abomination before God.
(3.) There are still other facts which show that men loosely set up a false
standard, which they highly esteem, but which God abhors. For example, they will
require true religion only of ministers; but no real religion of any body else.
All men agree in requiring that ministers should be really pious. They judge
them by the right rule. For example, they require ministers to be benevolent.
They must enter upon their profession for the high object of doing good, and not
for the mere sake of a living--not for filthy lucre's sake, but for the sake of
souls and from disinterested love. Else they will have no confidence in a
minister.
(4.) But turn this over and apply it to business men. Do they judge themselves
by this rule? Do they judge each other by this rule? Before they will have
Christian confidence in a merchant or a mechanic, do they insist that these
shall be as much above the greed for gain as a minister should be--should be as
willing to give up their time to the sick as a minister--be as ready to forego a
better salary for the sake of doing more good, as they insist a minister should
be? Who does not know that they demand of business men no such conditions of
Christian character as those which they impose of gospel ministers? Let us see.
If a man of business does any service for you, he makes out his bill, and if
need be he collects it. Now suppose I should go and visit a sick man to give him
spiritual counsel--should attend him from time to time for counsel and for
prayer, till he died, and then should attend his funeral; and having done this
service should make up my bill and send it in, and even collect it;--would there
not be some talk? People would say, What right has he to do that? He ought to
perform that service for the love of souls, and make no charge for it. This
applies to those ministers who are not under salary to perform this service, of
whom there are many. Let any one of these men go and labor ever so much among
the sick or at funerals, they must not take pay. But let one of these ministers
send his saw to be filed, and he must pay for it. He may send it to that very
man whose sick family he has visited by day and by night, and whose dead he has
buried, without charge, and "for the love of souls;" but no such "love of souls"
binds the mechanic in his service. The truth is, they call that, religion, in a
layman which they call sin in a minister. That is the fact. I do not complain
that men take pay for labor, but that they do not apply the same principle to a
minister.
Again, the business aims and practices of business men are almost universally an
abomination in the sight of God. Almost all of these are based on the same
principle as human governments are, namely, that the only restraint imposed
shall be, to prevent men from being too selfish, allowing them to be just as
selfish as they can be and yet leave others an equal chance to be selfish too.
Shall we go into an enumeration of the principles of business men respecting
their objects, and modes of doing business? What would it all amount to? Seeking
their own ends; doing something, not for others, but for self. Provided they do
it in a way regarded as honest and honorable among men, no further restriction
shall be imposed.
(5.) Take the Bible Society for an illustration. This Institution is not a
speculation, entered upon for the good of those who print and publish. But the
object aimed at is to furnish them as cheap to the purchaser as possible, so as
to put a Bible into the hands of every human being at the lowest possible price.
Now it is easy to see that any other course and any different principle from
this would be universally condemned. If Bible societies should become merely a
speculation they would cease to be benevolent institutions at all, and to claim
this character would bring down on them the curses of men. But all business
ought to be done as benevolently as the making of Bibles; why not. If it be not,
can it be a benevolent business? and if not benevolent, how can it have the
approval of God? What is a benevolent business? The doing of the utmost
good--that which is undertaken for the one only end of doing good, and which
simply aims to do the utmost good possible. In just this sense, men should be
patriotic, benevolent, should have a single eye to God's glory in all they do,
whether they eat or drink or whatever they may do.
Yet where do you find the man who holds his fellowmen practically to this rule
as a condition of their being esteemed Christians, viz.: That in all their
business, they should be as benevolent as Bible societies are? What should we
say of a Bible society which should enter upon a manifest speculation and should
get as much as they can for their Bibles, instead of selling at the lowest
living price? what would you say of such a Bible society? You would say,
"Horrible hypocrite!" I must say the same of every Christian who does the same
thing. Ungodly men do not profess any Christian benevolence, so we will not
charge this hypocrisy on them, but we will try to get this light before their
mind.
Now place a minister directly before your own mind, and ask, Do you judge
yourself as you judge him? Do you say of yourself, I ought to do for others
gratuitously all and whatever I require him to do gratuitously? Do you judge
yourself by the same rule by which you judge him?
Apply this to all business men. No matter what your business is whether high or
low, small or great; filing saws, or counting out bank bills; you call the Bible
society benevolent; do you make your business as much so and as truly so in your
ends and aims? If not, why not? What business have you to be less benevolent
than those who print, publish and sell Bibles?
(6.) Here is another thing which is highly esteemed among men, yet is an
abomination before God; viz.: selfish ambition. How often do you see this highly
esteemed! I have been amazed to see how men form judgments on this matter. Here
is a young man who is a good student in the sense of making great progress in
his studies, (a thing the devil might do,) yet for this only, such young men are
often spoken of in the highest terms. Provided they do well for themselves,
nothing more seems to be asked or expected in order to entitle them to high
commendation.
So of professional men. I have in my mind's eye the case of a lawyer who was
greatly esteemed and caressed by his fellow men; who was often spoken of well by
Christians; but what was he? Nothing but an ambitious young lawyer, doing every
thing for ambition--ready at any time to take the stump and canvass the whole
country--for what? To get some good for himself. Yet he is courted by Christian
families! Why? Because he is doing well for himself! See Daniel Webster. How
lauded, I had almost said canonized! Perhaps he will be yet. Certainly the same
spirit we now see would canonize him if this were a Catholic country. But what
has he done? He has just played the part of an ambitious lawyer and an ambitious
statesman; that is all. He has sought great things for himself; and having said
that, you have said all. Yet how have men lauded Daniel Webster! When I came to
Syracuse, I saw a vast procession. What, said I, is there a funeral here? Who is
dead? Daniel Webster. But, said I, he has been dead a long time. Ye, but they
are playing up funeral because he was a great man. What was Daniel Webster? Not
a Christian, not a benevolent man; every body knows this. And what have
Christians to do in lauding and canonizing a merely selfish ambition? they may
esteem it highly, yet let them know, God abhors it as utterly as they admire it.
(7.) The world's entire morality and that of a large portion of the church are
only a spurious benevolence. You see a family very much united and you say, How
they love one another! So they do; but they may be very exclusive. They may
exclude themselves and shut off their sympathies almost entirely from all other
families, and they may consequently exclude themselves from doing good in the
world. The same kind of a morality may be seen in towns and in nations. This
makes up the entire morality of the world.
Many have what they call humanity, without any piety; and this is often highly
esteemed among men. They pretend to love men, but yet after all do not honor
God, nor even aim at it. And in their love of men, they fall below some animals.
I doubt whether many men, not pious, would do what I knew a dog to do. His
master wanted to kill him, and for this purpose took him out into the river in a
boat and tied a stone about his neck. In the struggle to throw dog and stone
overboard together, the boat upset; the man was in the river; the dog, by extra
effort, released himself from his weight, and seizing his master by the collar,
swam with him to land. Few men would have had humanity enough--without piety--to
have done this. Indeed men without piety are not often half so kind to each
other as animals are. Men are more degraded and more depraved. Animals will make
greater sacrifices for each other than the human race do. Go and ask a whaleman
what he sees among the whales when they suffer themselves to be murdered to
protect a school of their young. Yet many mothers think they do most meritorious
things because they take care of their children.
But men, as compared with animals, ought to act from higher motives than they.
If they do not, they act wickedly. Knowing more--having the knowledge of God and
of dying Savior as their example and rule, they have higher responsibilities
than animals can have.
(8.) Men often make a great virtue of their abolitionism though it be only of
the infidel stamp. But perhaps there is no virtue in this, a whit higher than a
mere animal might have. Whoever understands the subject of slavery and is a good
man at heart will certainly be an abolitionist. But a man may be, an
abolitionist without the least virtue. There may not be the least regard for God
in his abolitionism, nor even any honest regard to human well-being. He may
stand on a principles and adopt practices which show that if they had the power,
they would enslave the race. They will not believe that a man can be a
colonizationist, but I know good men who are--some men not only lord it over the
bodies of their fellow men, but over their minds and souls--their opinions and
consciences--which is much worse oppression and tyranny than simply to enslave
the body.
(9.) Often there is a bitter and an acrimonious spirit--not by any means the
spirit of Christ; for while Christ no doubt condemns the slaveholder, he does
not hate him. This biting hatred of evil-doers is only malevolence after all;
and though men may ever so highly esteem it, God abominates it. On the other
hand, many call that piety, which has no humanity in it. Whip up their slaves to
get money to give to the Bible Society! Touch up the gang; put on the cat o'nine
tails; the agent is coming along for money for the Bible Society! Here is piety
(so called) without humanity. I abhor a piety which has no humanity with it and
in it, as deeply as I condemn its converse--humanity without piety. How greatly
then must He abhor either when unnaturally divorced from the other!
All those so called religious efforts which men make, having only self for their
end, are an abomination to God.
There is a wealthy man who consents to give two hundred dollars towards building
a splendid church. He thinks this is a very benevolent offering, and it may be
highly esteemed among men. But before God approves of it He will look into the
motives of the giver; and so may we, if we please. The man we find owns a good
deal of real estate in the village which he expects will rise in value on the
very day that shall see the church building determined on, enough to put back
into his pocket two or three fold what he pays out. Besides this he has other
motives. He thinks of the increased respectability of having a fine house and
himself the best seat in it. And yet further, he has some interest in having
good morals sustained in the village, for vice is troublesome to rich men and
withal somewhat dangerous. And then he has an indefinable sort of expectation
that this new church and his handsome donation to build it will somehow improve
his prospects for heaven. In as much as these are rather dim at best the
improvement, though indefinite, is decidedly an object. Now if you scan these
motives, you will see that from first to last they are altogether selfish. Of
course they are an abomination in God's sight.
The motives for getting a popular minister are often of the same sort. The
object is not to get a man sent of God, to labor for God and with God, and one
with whom the people may labor and pray for souls and for God's kingdom. But the
object being something else than this is an abomination before God.
The highest forms of the world's morality are only abominations in God's sight.
The world has what it calls good husbands, good wives, good children; but what
sort of goodness is this? The husband loves his wife and seeks to please her.
She also loves and seeks to please him. But do either of them love or seek to
please God in these relations? By no means. Nothing can be farther from their
thoughts. They never go beyond the narrow circle of self. Take all these human
relations in their best earthly form, and you will find they never rise above
the morality of the lower animals. They fondle and caress each other, and seem
to take some interest in the care of their children.. So do your domestic fowls,
not less, and perhaps even more. Often these fowls in your poultry yard go
beyond the world's morality in these qualities which the world calls good.
Should not human beings have vastly higher ends than these? Can God deem their
highly esteemed qualities any other than an abomination if in fact they are even
below the level of the domestic animals?
An unsanctified education comes into the same category. A good education is
indeed a great good; but if not sanctified, it is all the more odious to God.
Yes, let me tell you, if not improved for God, it is only the more odious to him
in proportion as you get light on the subject of duty, and sin against that
light the more. Those very acquisitions which will give you higher esteem among
men will if unsanctified make your character more utterly odious before God. You
are a polished writer and a beautiful speaker. You stand at the head of the
College in these important respects. Your friends look forward with hopeful
interest to the time when you will be heard of on the floor of Senates, moving
them to admiration by your eloquence, But alas, you have no piety! When we ask,
how does God look upon such talents, unsanctified, we are compelled to
answer--only as an abomination. This eloquent young student is only the more
odious to God by reason of all his unsanctified powers. The very things which
give you the more honor among men will make you only the scoff of hell. The
spirits of the nether pit will meet you as they did the fallen monarch of
Babylon, tauntingly saying--"what are you here? You who could shake kingdoms by
your eloquence, are you brought down to the sides of the pit? You who might have
been an angel of light--you who lived in Oberlin; you, a selfish doomed
sinner--away and be out of our company! We have nobody here so guilty and so
deeply damned as you!"
So of all unsanctified talents, beauty, education, accomplishments; all, if
unsanctified, are an abomination in the sight of God. All of those things which
might make you more useful in the sight God, are if misused, only the greater
abomination in His sight.
So a legal religion, with which you serve God only because you must. You go to
church, yet not in love to God or to His worship, but from regard to your
reputation, to your hope, or your conscience. Must not such a religion be of all
things, most abominable to God?
REMARKS.
1. The world have mainly lost the true idea of religion. This is too obvious
from all I have said to need more illustration.
2. The same is true to a great extent of the church--professed Christians judge
themselves falsely because they judge by a false standard.
3. One of the most common and fatal mistakes is to employ a merely negative
standard. Here are men complaining of a want of conviction. Why don't they take
the right standard and judge themselves by that? Suppose you had let a house
burn down and made no effort to save it; what would you think of the guilt of
stupidity and laziness there? Two women and five children are burnt to ashes in
the conflagrations; why did not you give the alarm when you saw the fire getting
hold? Why did not you rush into the building and drag out the unconscious
inmates? Oh you felt stupid that morning--just as people talk of being "stupid"
in religion! Well, you hope not to be judged very hard, since you did not set
the house on fire; you only let it alone; all you did was to do nothing! That is
all many persons plead as to their religious duties. They do nothing to pluck
sinners out of the tire, and they seem to think this is a very estimable
religion! Was this the religion of Jesus Christ or of Paul? Is it the religion
of real benevolence? or of common sense?
You see how many persons who have a Christian hope indulge it on merely negative
grounds. Often I ask persons how they are getting along in religion. They
answer, pretty well; and yet they are doing nothing that is really religious.
They are making no effort to save souls--are doing nothing to serve God. What
are they doing! O they keep up the forms of prayer! Suppose you should employ a
servant and pay him off each week, yet he does nothing all the long day but pray
to you!
4. Religion is very intelligible and is easily understood. It is a warfare. What
is a warrior's service? He devotes himself to the service of his country. If
need be he lays down his life on her altar. He is expected to do this.
So a man is to lay down his life on God's altar, to be used in life or death, as
God may please, in His service.
5. The things most highly esteemed among men are often the very things God most
abhors. Take for example, the legalist's religion. The more he is bound in
conscience and enslaved, by so much the more, usually, does his esteem as a
Christian rise.
The more earnestly he growns under his bondage to sin--the more truly he has to
say -
"Reason I hear, her counsels weigh,
And all her words approve;
Yet still I find it hard to obey
And harder yet to love,"
by so much the more, does the world esteem and God abhor, his religion. The
good man, they say--he was all his life-time subject to bondage! He was in
doubts and fears all his life? But why did he not come by faith into that
liberty with which Christ makes His people free?
6. A morality, based on the most refined selfishness, stands in the highest
esteem among men. So good a man of the world, they say--almost a saint; yet God
must hold him in utter abomination.
7. The good Christian, in the world's esteem, is never abrupt, never aggressive,
yet he is greatly admired. He has a selfish devotion to pleasing men, than which
nothing is more admired. I heard of a minister who had not an enemy in the
world. He was said to be most like Christ among all the men they knew. I thought
it strange that a man so like Christ should have no enemies, for Christ,--more
like Himself than any other man can be--had a great many enemies and very better
enemies too. Indeed it is said, "If any man will live godly in Christ Jesus, he
shall suffer persecution." But when I came to learn the facts of the case I
understood the man. He never allowed himself to preach anything that could
displease even Universalists. In fact he had two universalists in his Session.
In the number of his session were some Calvinists also, and he must by no means
displease them. His preaching was indeed a model of its kind. His motto
was--Please the people--nothing but please the people. In the midst of a
revival, he would leave the meetings and go to a party; why? To please the
people.
Now this may be highly esteemed among men; but does not God abhor it?
It is a light thing to be judged of man's judgment and all the lighter since
they are so prone to judge by a false standard. What is it to me that men
condemn me if God only approve? The longer I live, the less I think of human
opinions on the great question of right and wrong as God sees them. They will
judge both themselves and others falsely. Even the church sometimes condemns and
excommunicates her best men. I have known cases and could name them, in which I
am confident they have done this very thing. They have cut men off from their
communion, and now every body sees that the men excommunicated were the best men
of the Church.
.
It is a blessed thought that the only thing we need to care
for is to please God.
The only enquiry we need make is--
What will God think of it?
We have only one mind to please; and that the Great Mind of the universe.
Let this be our single aim and we shall not fai to please him.
But if we do not aim at this, all we can do is only an abomination in his sight.
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