Submission to God- No. 1
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
from "The
Oberlin Evangelist" Publication of Oberlin College
Lecture XXV
January 16, 1841
.
Text.--James 4:7: "Submit
yourselves therefore to God."
In the discussion of this subject I shall inquire:
I. What constitutes submission to God.
II. Point out some things that are implied in submission.
III. Notice various delusions which many practice upon themselves, in respect
to submission.
IV. Show that without true submission salvation is naturally impossible.
V. Show that with true submission salvation is naturally inevitable.
I. What constitutes submission to God.
- 1. I begin by remarking, that submission belongs to the will; and that
true submission consists in the will's being entirely subdued and under the
control of God's will. It is just that attitude of will, or that voluntary
state of the will that God requires. This includes,
- 2. A joyful acquiescence in all the providence of God. There is perhaps no
man, however wicked, and perhaps no devil in hell, that is not pleased with
some of the providences of God, because they may favor their ambitious and
selfish schemes. The assassin, who prowls at midnight to plunge a dagger into
his neighbor's heart, might be very willing that God's providence should favor
him with a dark and stormy night, when few persons would be abroad to detect
his foul deed of blood. The pirate, also, might rejoice in a fair wind, or in
any other providence that might favor his diabolical designs. Satan himself
might rejoice at some providential dispensation that may give him the
opportunity of extending his rebellious operations against God. The farmer,
though a wicked man, may rejoice in such weather as favors his peculiar
occupation. And thus the worst, as well as the best of men, may be very much
pleased with the providence of God, so long as it favors their particular
designs. But there is no piety in this. One element of true submission, is, as
I have said, a joyful acquiescence in the whole providence of God. A truly
submissive soul cannot know what an adverse providence is; for it has no will
of its own, only that the will of God shall be done. And consequently,
whatever the weather is, whatever the providential occurrences with which he
is surrounded may be, as these occurrences show what is upon the whole the
will of God, he is well pleased with them, equally well, whatever they may be.
If in any thing, the providence of God interferes with what the submissive
soul had intended to do, it is just as well pleased as if the providence had
been different; for the intention to do a certain thing, to go to a certain
place, or attempt any thing whatever, is founded upon the supposition, that
such is the will of God. But if the providence of God is found to be adverse
to the carrying out any such intention, it is regarded by that soul as a
revelation from God, that that intention was not according to his will; in
which case he is just as well pleased to relinquish his design, and pursue any
course that at present seems to be according to the will of God, as he would
have been to have pursued the intended course, which has proved to be adverse
to the providence and will of God. Having no other intention than to do the
whole will of God, he is perfectly and supremely satisfied with whatever the
providence of God may be. He has no interest of his own to promote, no ends of
his own to accomplish--no ways, or schemes, or wishes, but such as he believes
to be in accordance with the will of God. He, therefore, waits, in an attitude
as yielding as air, to be led in a state of supreme sweetness and complacency,
in any direction in which the will of God, as revealed in his providence, by
his Spirit and word, shall lead him. Equally well pleased, to be sick or
well--to be rich or poor--to live or die--to enjoy his friends or part with
them--to be employed in any way, in any place, at any time, wherever the
providence of God shall lead him.
- 3. Another element of true submission is, a cordial, joyful, and actual
obedience to all the known will of God. There is, perhaps, no man and no devil
so wicked or in such circumstances as not to find it for their interest to do
many things required by God. And although they do not do these things in
obedience to the will of God, yet they give themselves credit for good
behavior, as if they really did. And indeed, they are very well pleased, that
God should require such things as these, because it so happens that the letter
of these requirements coincides with what they find to be most agreeable to
themselves, and most for their own interest, under the circumstances in which
they are placed. Now in doing these things it is manifest that there is no
virtue, from the fact that they do not do them because God requires them, but
solely because this course of conduct is most in accordance, under the
circumstances of the case, with the selfish ends they have in view. But true
submission, let it be for ever understood, consists in a spirit of universal
obedience to the whole will of God, because it is his will. It regards the
will of God, on all subjects, as supremely good, and just as good on one
subject as another. It is necessarily under the control of the will of God,
and has no end in view, but in every thing to be directed by the will of God.
Nothing is so dear, nothing so desirable, nothing so desired, as to have the
whole will of God done on earth as it is done in heaven. Consequently, with a
submissive soul there is no picking and choosing among the commandments of
God, being better pleased with some than with others, and preferring obedience
to one rather than another. To a submissive soul, the revealed will of God,
however it may be revealed, whether by his word, providence, or Spirit, is the
supreme and universal law, to which it yields a universal and joyful
obedience.
- 4. Consequently true submission includes the practical and joyful holding
of ourselves and all our possessions and interests at the disposal of the
divine will. I say a joyful holding of ourselves and our possessions at his
disposal, in opposition to a reluctant yielding, in compliance with the stern
demands of conscience, without in reality taking any pleasure in thus doing. I
said, a practical holding of ourselves and possessions thus, in opposition to
that state of fancied willingness, in which men often profess to be willing to
do any thing, when in reality they will do nothing--in which they profess to
hold themselves and all they possess at the disposal of God, but in reality
will never suffer Him to dispose of themselves or their possessions, only as
he disposes of them by sending them to hell, and of their possessions by
putting them into the hands of those that will use them for his glory. By a
practical and joyful holding of ourselves and our possessions at his disposal,
then, I mean, that as a matter of fact, the whole body, soul, and spirit,
time, talents, property, and all things over which we have control, are
yielded up to the advancement of Christ's kingdom in the world; not
grudgingly, or by constraint, but of a ready, willing, joyful mind; finding in
this course our supreme joy, and, as a matter of fact, feeling it to be true
in our own experience, that "it is more blessed to give than to receive."
- 5. True submission includes an unconditional assent to be used all up,
body and soul, both in time [and] eternity, for the promotion of the best
interests of the universe, and the glory of God. God undoubtedly wills that
the most should be made of the influence of every moral being, to promote his
own glory and the interests of his kingdom; and nothing is submission short of
an entire willingness and most intense desire thus to be used up, with the
most divine economy, for the promotion of those vast interests upon which the
heart of God is set.
- 6. It includes a joyful willingness to have justice take its course with
us, if the interests of the universe should demand it. Every sinner in the
universe deserves to be in hell; and since it is a fact that sin exists, it is
indispensable that there should be a hell, that the justice of God should be
vindicated in sending those who sin to hell. And certainly, it is the duty of
all who are in hell to be entirely reconciled to their condition.
By this I do not mean, that they are bound to be reconciled to live in sin;
for they are able to repent, and are bound to repent, and to love God with all
their heart, and with all their soul. But since the interests of the universe
demand, and therefore it is the duty of God to send them to hell, they are
bound supremely to rejoice in being there; that is--they are bound to be
willing, and rejoice to be disposed of in the best possible manner, for the
promotion of the interests of the kingdom of God. And since, under the
circumstances of the case, the best thing that can be done with them, is to
put them in hell, they are bound to be supremely acquiescent in it. Just so in
the case of every sinner on earth. He deserves to be put in hell. And if,
under the circumstances of the case, this is the best disposition that can be
made of him, for the glory of God, and the advancement of his kingdom; if the
moral government of God can be better supported by his punishment than by his
forgiveness, he is bound not only to consent to be punished, but to be
supremely pleased to let justice take its course. By this I do not mean to
affirm, that the pains of hell can be chosen for their own sake, or that any
pain whatever can or ought to be chosen for its own sake. It is contrary to
the very nature of moral beings, and as contrary to the will of God, as it is
to the moral constitution of man, that any degree of pain should be chosen for
its own sake, either in this or any other world. But while the infliction of
pain, on the part of God, is indispensable to the vindication of his
character, and the support of his authority, whenever the endurance of pain is
demanded by the same end, whether in this or in any other world, true
submission consists in choosing and joyfully acquiescing in the endurance of
pain, not for its own sake, but for the sake of the end to be accomplished by
it. A man is just as much bound to be willing to endure the pains of hell, in
vindication of the moral government of God, should the interests of the
universe demand it, as he is to be willing to endure the pains of bodily
disease when physical law has been violated, and the vindication of the ways
of God demand that he should suffer bodily pain.
He is as much bound to be willing to suffer the pains of hell, in support of
the moral government of God, as he is to endure the smarting of a burn, in
vindication of the physical government of God, when he has wantonly thrust his
hand in the fire.
Let me be understood. I am not saying, that a man should be willing to remain
in eternal rebellion against God. I am not saying, that God is as much
gratified and pleased with the damnation as with the salvation of sinners. I
am not saying, that God's glory demands, or that it is consistent with the
glory of God, that any penitent sinner should be damned. I am not saying, that
God desires the damnation of any soul, for its own sake. Nor am I saying, that
the interests of the universe can be best promoted by the damnation of any
one, who can be persuaded to repent and accept salvation.
But I am saying, and do mean to say, that upon the supposition, that any one
is so circumstanced as to render it necessary for God to inflict the pains of
hell upon him, that it is his bounden duty to be supremely acquiescent it.
Suppose that a man has committed the unpardonable sin, or a sin of such a
nature that it cannot consistently be forgiven, can it be right for that
sinner to be unwilling to have justice take its course in this case? Can it be
right for him to make himself miserable, because the supreme good of the
universe demands his damnation? Of his own folly he may complain. Of his sin
he may and ought to repent, and be unutterably ashamed; but with being thus
disposed of for the promotion of the highest interests of God's kingdom, he
ought to be supremely pleased. Why, he was made to glorify God. It was always
his duty, to desire, above all things, that God might be glorified and the
universe benefitted, to consecrate his whole being to the promotion of this
end. In this he was always bound to find his supreme happiness. And now,
because of his own voluntary wickedness, he has placed himself in such a
situation, that the glory of God and the best interests of his kingdom demand,
that he should be put in hell, rather than in heaven, has he a right to demur
to this--to refuse to be used for the glory of God--to refuse to consecrate
his whole being to that which will, in the highest degree, promote this
infinitely desirable end? I say again, and do insist, that in such
circumstances he is solemnly bound, to consecrate his whole being to the glory
of God, and the support of his government, in this particular way, and
willingly to lie down upon the bed of eternal death, and give up his whole
being to suffering the penalty of the law of God.
- 7. True submission includes a deep and continual longing of soul, that the
whole will of God should be done on earth as it is done in heaven. This is the
state of mind that God requires, and that Christ directed to be exercised and
expressed in prayer to God. This is to be the daily constant language of our
souls, "Thy will be done on earth as it is done in heaven."
II. Some things that are implied in submission.
- 1. It implies the actual forsaking of all known sin. It is absurd to say,
that an individual has any degree of true submission to God, and still
indulges in the commission of any known sin. To suppose that true submission
is consistent with any degree of known sin, is to overlook the very nature of
submission. Submission belongs to the will, and consists in the supreme
devotion of the heart to the whole known will of God. Now how manifestly
absurd it is to say, that a man can be supremely devoted, or submissive to the
will of God, and still indulge in some things, or even in one thing that is
inconsistent with God's will. Whoever, therefore, among you, lives in the
indulgence of any known sin, of heart or life, has not one particle of true
religion. This is not a rhetorical flourish. It is not a random, hap-hazard
assertion. It is the unalterable truth of God. By this I do not mean, that if
a man is sometimes overcome by temptation, and falls into occasional sins,
that this demonstrates that his character is that of an unregenerate sinner.
But I do mean, that where any form or degree of sin is indulged, where it is
habitual, connived at, allowed, and practiced by the mind, there is not one
vestige of true religion.
- 2. True submission implies a recognition of the universality of the
providence of God. God is actually, or permissively, directly or indirectly
concerned in all events; and many persons hide their enmity against God from
their own view, by overlooking the fact, that God has in any sense any agency
in the providence about which they vex themselves. They ascribe many things to
Satan, and to wicked men, and seem to feel that they do right to be angry, and
very rebellious, in view of many things that occur, because God has no agency
of any kind in them. Now, a submissive spirit views God as so concerned in
every thing, as to remain calm, undisturbed and joyful, amid all those
occurrences that keep the ungodly in a state of constant fermentation.
- 3. It implies an honest, earnest, and diligent inquiry after the will of
God. There are a great many who profess to hold themselves and all their
possessions at the disposal of the will of God--who profess a willingness to
do, or be, or say any thing that God requires of them. But mark, you will find
it impossible to convince them, that any thing inconsistent with their selfish
schemes, is the will of God. They profess to hold all their property at the
disposal of God; but the agents of benevolent institutions may labor with them
for months, without being able to convince them, that it is the will of God,
that they should part with their possessions to promote these objects. The
attitude of their minds is manifestly such, that they are unwilling to know
what is the will of God in relation to the disposal of their possessions. They
demand a kind and degree of evidence to satisfy their minds that cannot be
had, and ought not to be expected, and would not be demanded by them, if they
were in any other than a supremely selfish state of mind. And thus, while they
profess to hold themselves and all they possess at God's disposal, they can
always manage to quiet their consciences, in their superlative selfishness, by
shutting out the light, and refusing to be satisfied in respect to what really
is the will of God.
I knew a man who professed to be converted, and to give all his property to
God. At one time he was about to devote it to one benevolent object, and at
another to another object; and thus has excited hopes and expectations,
sometimes in one direction and sometimes in another, that he would give up at
least his surplus of worldly goods, to the promotion of the great benevolent
objects of the day. But alas! he seems never to find any object, to which he
can believe it to be the will of God, that he should devote his property. No
actually existing evidence will satisfy him. It seems that nothing short of a
direct revelation from God, in words to this effect, will work conviction in
his mind, "Know you, A.B., of such a place, at such a time, that thus saith
the Lord, it is my supreme will and pleasure, that you devote such a portion
of the earthly goods in your possession to the advancement of the interests of
the Redeemer's kingdom, and that you deliver to C.D., the agent of such a
society, the specified amount without gainsaying." And that this order of God
should be accredited by some direct miracle, or thundered in a voice from
heaven, in order to afford the required evidence. I know others, who, while
they make large professions of holding themselves and all their possessions at
the disposal of God, can always find some excuse for doing little or nothing
for the promotion of any benevolent object. Is a church to be built, they can
avoid giving any thing by imposing some condition, to which the congregation
cannot and ought not to consent. Is the minister's salary to be paid, they can
always find some excuse for not believing it to be the will of God, that they
should do any thing for his support. Is any thing to be given to the Foreign
Mission cause, they can always find some fault with the proceedings of the
Board, as a reason for not believing that it is their duty to give. Is any
call made for funds to support the holy cause of the abolition of slavery,
they don't like the proceedings of the abolition societies. They doubt,
whether the funds are properly expended, or there is some imprudence in their
measures, which renders it obligatory in them to withhold their funds. Is any
thing to be done for the poor, they have always some evasive measure to
propose, some other and better way to supply the poor, than the one proposed.
If any thing is to be done for Moral Reform, they have some objection to the
course pursued by its advocates and friends. And, in short, whatever is to be
done, that calls them to self-denial, or to give their possessions up to the
promotion of the glory of God, they have always some objection to what is
done, or some proposal to have something else done, which, if not complied
with, constitutes in their mind a sufficient reason for giving and doing
nothing for that object.
Now it should be universally understood, that true submission implies, an
earnest desire to be convinced as it respects what is really the will of
God--a diligent, honest inquiry after his will, and a perfect readiness to be
decided and actuated by any reasonable degree of evidence, and to follow the
slightest preponderance of evidence, to whatever self-sacrifice or self-denial
it may lead.
- 4. It implies a thankful spirit, for all the past and present providential
dealings of God with us. And especially a thankful spirit for those
providences that have been and are most deeply afflicting to us. "God does not
afflict willingly, nor grieve the children of men." And in all the afflictions
of his children, the tender heart of God is afflicted. People are very apt to
suppose themselves to be thankful to God for those providential dealings that
seem, at the time, matters of great joy to them; while they think themselves
excused from being thankful for dispensations that greatly afflict them.
Indeed, they suppose themselves to be very virtuous, if they fall short of
going into downright rebellion at such providences. But now let us look at
this, Mother; are you a Christian? Yes. And God has given you a little
blooming babe. It lies smiling at your breast. You touch its little cheek and
chirp as to a little bird; and it looks up and smiles, with such a look of
love as to seduce your heart into an attitude of idolatrous attachment. You
hang over it when it wakes and when it sleeps. It is in your thoughts at the
earliest dawn, at midday, and at evening. All the mother is awake in your
soul. And as its little opening powers develop themselves, day after day, your
attachment grows stronger and stronger, until it is the object of your
thoughts by day, and your dreams by night. You cannot pray, without the image
of your babe before you. You cannot go to the church of God, without having
your warmest affections clustering around your little nursling at home. In the
solemn worship of the house of God, your thoughts are upon your little idol,
and you are weary with the length of the exercises, because they separate you
from your little charmer. Now mark; you suppose yourself very thankful, that
God has committed to you this little treasure. God loves the little one--He
loves its mother. But O! He sees that this sweet gift is too much for your
piety. He loves to see you pleased and happy with it. But He cannot consent to
see it ruin you. Nor can He willingly see you, through your idolatrous
attachment, ruin it. He puts forth his hand and plucks it from your bosom. You
open your eyes, and it is gone! And O! God, as it were, turns away his face
when He strikes the blow. He feels the pang, as if it had touched the apple of
his eye. It has cost Him much. Viewed by itself, it is grievous to his heart
thus to afflict you. It has cost Him more self-denial than all the sweet and
pleasant things He ever bestowed upon you. He would sooner have borne the pain
Himself, than have inflicted it upon you, could it have answered the purpose,
which He has proved to a demonstration, by sooner dying for you than to
inflict death upon you. O! how you have grieved his parental heart, by forcing
Him thus to smite you. Do you feel grieved, when you are obliged to chastise
your children? And when you feel obliged to use the rod, to deprive them of
their food, or take some prompt measures to subdue their wayward tempers--is
it not a matter of grief to you? Are you not more tried and afflicted by it
than by all your other pains to do them good. Would you not rather often take
the blows yourself, could the same end be answered by it? Indeed, do you not
consider it the very climax of parental kindness, self-denial, and love, to
march up to the thorough infliction of chastisement when the good of those you
love so well requires it at your hand? Now what would you say of a child who,
when he had grown to manhood, should look back upon his life and say, I feel
grateful to my mother for watching over my helpless infancy. I thank my father
for the trouble and expense of my education, and for giving me a farm, and for
all the good things of his providence. But, ah! there are many dark spots in
the history of my father's dealings with me, to which I find it difficult to
be reconciled, and for which I feel that I am far from having any cause to be
thankful. At such and such a time he chastised me. This I do not like. I
remember that he did it with tears. I recollect how he trembled when he took
the rod. I recollect how he lifted up his streaming eyes to heaven. I remember
well, that when he had repeated the blows, he turned him away and wept. I saw
and knew, that it cost him much--that his heart was bleeding at every
pore--that much sooner would he receive the blows himself than have inflicted
them on me.
Now do let me ask, for what portion of parental kindness are children under
so great obligations of gratitude, as for that needed discipline, which so
deeply wrung the parent's heart? O, you will say, of all the trials that I
have ever had with my children; of all that I have ever done for them; and of
all their obligations to me; I feel that those are the greatest which compel
me to the self-denial of inflicting wounds on them.
And now let me ask you, Christian, do you think that you do well, barely to
keep away from downright murmuring and rebellion, when you are chastised by
your heavenly Father. O, do you remember, how much more deeply you have
afflicted Him than He has wounded you? Do you remember, how much it costs Him
thus to smite you?--What! can He who loves you so much as to give his life for
you, rebuke and distress you, without affliction? Of all the things that He as
ever done for you, you are bound to be the most grateful for his stripes. For
when He has been obliged to smite, He has been obliged to touch the apple of
his own eye, and reach the deep fountains of compassion in his own heart. O
how his heart has pitied you, when He has lifted up the rod. O, how his bowels
yearned over you, when it fell upon you; and when you wept, how deeply did He
sympathize with your grief. And as soon as you relented how instantly would He
smile and wipe away your tears. O! how readily He forgave you. And as soon as
the prodigal returned, "He saw you a great way off, and ran, and fell upon
your neck, and wept, and kissed you." He took off your rags of shame and
guilt. He clothed you in the robes of gladness, and by his love He chased away
all your grief. Now can a spirit of true submission imply any thing less than
deep gratitude to God for all his providential dealings, and the deepest of
all, for those in which He so deeply wounded Himself in wounding you. And of
what ought you in infinite measure to repent, if not of those idolatries and
sins that lay upon Him such a necessity?
- 5. True submission to God implies, the absence of all carefulness or
perplexing anxiety in regard to his future dealings with us. That man
certainly cannot be reconciled to God--he cannot be perfectly willing that God
should deal with him in future in all respects according to his own will, and
at the same time be perplexed with anxieties, and carefulness, and fears, in
respect to his future dealings. True submission leaves all such questions
entirely in the hands of God, without distress, distrust, anxiety, or fear.
And furthermore, true submission rejoices in the fact, that the wisdom and
goodness of God will meet out all his changes for him, in a way that best
promotes his own glory and the highest good of the universe.
- 6. True submission also implies, that you have no will of your own except
that "the will of God be done on earth as it is done in heaven." It is the
constant language and breathings of a submissive soul, "thy will be done." And
whenever, in any way, the will of God is known, the submissive soul not merely
consents that it should be so, but rejoices in having it so; and would prefer,
that this should take place, to any other possible course of events. Because
it regards the will of God as supremely wise and good.
- 7. It implies, that you are equally well pleased with whatever God does.
The submissive soul does not make a virtue of necessity, and merely consent,
or assent to what God does, because to resist will be of no avail. Submission
is not the mere absence of murmuring and repining at the providence of God;
but is the most joyful and hearty acquiescence and delight in what He does;
and that too, not merely in those dispensations of providence that are usually
accounted merciful and joyous, but also in those that are usually regarded
most afflictive and severe.
- 8. It implies the subjugation of all our appetites and passions to his
will and glory. God requires, that "whether we eat or drink, or whatever we
do, we do all to the glory of God." And true submission implies, that this
requirement be completely obeyed.
- 9. It implies implicit confidence in God. It is certainly impossible that
there should be true submission, when there is not true, real, heart-felt, and
practical confidence in God. To submit, and rejoice in whatever He does,
certainly implies the most implicit confidence that what He does is right and
best to be done. Implicit faith is therefore always implied in true
submission. And this faith must respect the goodness and power of God--that He
is wise, and good, and powerful enough, to do in all respects that which is
best to be done.
- 10. It implies true repentance for sin. Repentance is that change of mind,
that takes the part of God, against all sin--that condemns all sin under every
form and in every degree--that fully and heartily justifies God in all the
measure of his government. It is not a mere intellectual change of views, but
a change of heart, a thorough radical change in the controlling disposition or
affection of the soul, in regard to sin and the government of God. Therefore,
true submission always implies and includes, in a sinner, true repentance, a
thorough reformation of heart and life.
- 11. It implies a cordial acceptance of the salvation of the gospel. And
here, when I speak of the salvation of the gospel, I mean, not merely the
acceptance of a pardon, on account of the Atonement of Christ; but an
acceptance of Christ, as a risen, reigning Savior from sin--not merely an
outward, but an inward Savior as a glorious deliverer from all iniquity. This
is proffered in the gospel; and nothing is true submission short of a cordial
and practical obedience to and acceptance of the gospel of the blessed God.
- 12. It implies actual holiness of heart and life.
- 13. It implies a deep abhorrence of sin and sinners. Said the Psalmist,
"Do I not hate them, O Lord, that hate thee? Am I not grieved with them that
rise up against thee. Yea, I hate them with perfect hatred. I count them mine
enemies" This hatred is a benevolent hatred. It is a hatred mingled with
compassion. Nevertheless, it is a real and deep abhorrence of those that rise
up against God.
The subject will be resumed.
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