HOLINESS OF CHRISTIANS IN THE PRESENT LIFE --No. 1
Prove All Things
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
from "The
Oberlin Evangelist" Publication of Oberlin College
Lecture I
January 4, 1843
.
Text.--1 Thess. 5:21:
"Prove all things: hold fast that which is good."
In speaking from this text, I remark,
1. That it enjoins the duty of fundamental and thorough inquiry on religious
subjects. It requires us to know the reason of our faith and practice, that our
piety may not be superstition, but the result of intelligent conviction, arising
from thorough investigation.
2. In order to fulfill this requirement, the mind must be free from prejudices
on religious subjects. So long as prejudices exist in any mind, it is impossible
that it should examine religious opinions with any such spirit as will admit of
obedience to this precept. All its views will be perverted just in proportion as
it is uncandid and prejudiced.
3. This precept assumes the fact of our ability to "prove all things." The
ability to comply with any requirement is always implied in the requirement.
Otherwise the command is unjust.
4. This precept implies the necessity of correct information on religious
subjects. The sentiment that it is immaterial what our opinions are, seems to
prevail extensively among men, but it is plainly a mistake. Men can never be
expected to remain rooted and grounded in the truth any farther than their
opinions are true. All observation and experience prove this, and such is the
concurrent representation of the Bible.
5. This command is given to all; not merely to ministers, but to laymen and
women. Each is required to examine for himself, and to call no man master, so as
to receive his "ipse dixit" as authoritative. It requires each one to know for
himself the reasons of his faith.
6. The great mass of mankind don't love to think closely. They would prefer to
do almost any thing else. They are like school-boys who shun the labor of study,
and go to be taught without having studied their lesson. What they are told they
forget before the next recitation.
7. I shall address myself, in this lecture, to those, and those only, who will
be at the trouble to think. To address others would but be a waste of time and
strength. Those who will not think cannot be saved.
8. I will neither spend my time, nor endanger your souls, by random exhortation
and appeal, but strive to follow the spirit of the text.
9. My object is not controversy; I hope wholly to avoid its spirit, and, as far
as possible, even its form. On the contrary, it will be my object as far as
possible, to present what I honestly believe to be the truth to the
consideration of the honest and truth-loving.
10. There is but little obedience to the requirement in the text, and as a
consequence great ignorance and error prevail on many questions of fundamental
importance. There are very few who can give any rational account of what
constitutes sin and holiness, moral obligation, or human responsibility.
11. The terms which represent the attributes of Christian character, or what are
commonly called the Christian graces, are almost never rightly defined. The
definitions which are given scarcely ever represent the right idea, for example,
of love, faith, repentance, self-denial, and humility. It is manifest that but
few know how to define them. Why? Because they have not complied with the
requirement of the text. And because these attributes of holiness are not
rightly defined, they are misunderstood, and the result is that they are not
exhibited in the lives of Christians. We see one picture drawn in the Bible, and
quite another in real life. The former is beautiful and glorious, the
latter--how sadly deformed. Why? Because the mass are mistaken, and mistaken as
the result of incorrect views respecting the nature of true piety.
12. The distinction between natural and revealed theology should be understood
and appreciated. Indeed, it is fundamental to an understanding of the Bible, for
the Bible both assumes the truths of natural theology, and that we understand
them; for example, that we exist, the existence of God, our moral agency,
natural ability, the distinction between right and wrong, &c. We do not,
therefore, and can not rightly understand the Bible, unless we understand the
fundamental truths of natural theology, which are taken for granted in the
Bible.
13. Natural theology consists in those truths that we may learn from the book of
nature. God has presented us with two books--that of nature, and that of
revelation, and they are equally authentic, and mutually confirmatory of each
other.
14. The Bible not only assumes, and in various ways confirms the truths of
natural theology, but adds many truths not discoverable by unaided reason, but
which are recognized as truths as soon as suggested.
15. Many err in supposing that because a truth is seen to be such in the light
of its own evidence, when suggested, therefore it might have been discovered
without inspiration. There are plainly multitudes of truths revealed in the
Bible, which men could never otherwise have discovered, but which, now that they
are discovered, are seen to be perfectly reasonable. It is one thing to
apprehend and recognize truth, when made known, but quite another thing to
discover it.
I bespeak your prayers and attention, while I proceed to show,
I. How we know any thing.
II. How we know every thing which we do know.
III. Some things which we know about ourselves, the truth, and our knowledge
of which, are taken for granted by inspiration.
I. How we know any thing.
- 1. Consciousness is a condition of all knowledge. It is the mind's
recognition of its own existence, choice, thoughts and feelings. It is a
knowledge of ourselves in the phenomena of our minds. The mind does not first
observe its phenomena, and thence infer its own existence, for to attempt to
prove this would be to assume as doubtful that which is absolute certainty and
which must be so regarded in order to attempt proof or inferences, but it
absolutely affirms its own existence, and consciousness testifies to this
affirmation, saying, "I exist, I think, I feel, I will." Consciousness give
both the I and its phenomena, that is its choices, thoughts and feelings,
together with their freedom or necessity. Without consciousness knowledge
would be to us impossible, for there is no other way of obtaining knowledge.
How and what could one know, without knowing that he knows? and what knowledge
would that be, of which you have no knowledge?
II. How we know every thing which we do know.
- 1. As our existence, and all our mental acts and states are given us by
consciousness, it is plain that we know by consciousness every thing which we
do know. For example. Suppose I have a sensation: How do I know that I have
it? By consciousness. So it is with all our emotions, desires, choices,
judgments, affirmations, denials, hopes, fears, doubts, joys, and sorrows.
They are all given us by consciousness. I am now speaking what every man knows
to be true.
- 2. Nothing without us is known to us only as it makes an impression upon
our minds which impression is revealed to us by consciousness.
- 3. What we know by consciousness we know with certainty, that is, we know
that our existence, acts, thoughts, and feelings are realities.
- 4. Consciousness is therefore the highest possible evidence. We do, and
cannot but rely upon it as conclusive. If I think, feel, or act, I know that I
think, feel, or act, and know it absolutely. It is impossible from our very
constitution to doubt its testimony.
- 5. But we should carefully distinguish between what is really revealed to
us by our consciousness, and inferences drawn from such revelations. We may
mistake the cause of a sensation, but not the sensation. When God spoke to
Christ from Heaven, the people who heard were conscious of the sensation upon
the auditory nerve. Here was no mistake. But they mistook its cause. They
said, it thundered. So, in forming our various judgments and opinions we may
mistake, but when consciousness testifies that we do judge or form an opinion,
in this we cannot be mistaken.
III. Some things that we know about ourselves, the truth of which, and our
knowledge of which are taken for granted by inspiration.
- 1. We know that we exist, and we know it so certainly that to ask for
evidence is absurd. It is to assume that as doubtful which must be assumed as
absolutely true in order to prove any thing true.
- 2. We know that we perform certain mental acts, and are the subjects of
certain mental states. For example: we know that we originate choices and
volitions, and are the subjects of thought and feeling.
- 3. Hence we know that we possess certain faculties and capacities, that
is, we are capable of acts, thoughts, and feelings.
- 4. We know that these faculties, as also their products, are capable of
being classified. All men naturally classify them. They never confound
thinking with feeling, feeling with willing, nor willing with either of them.
No child does this. Nor do they confound the power of thinking, or of feeling
with that of willing, or with one another.
- 5. Hence all men, although they may not understand the terms employed by
philosophers to represent the natural faculties, notwithstanding, fully
understand the thing intended by these terms. They know themselves to possess
those faculties which we call intelligence, sensibility, and free will. We
think, feel, and will, and therefore we know that we have the faculties of
thinking, feeling, and willing, and mental philosophy is nothing else than an
analysis of what all men are conscious of. Under the general term intelligence
we include consciousness, reason, and understanding. All thoughts,
affirmations, intuitions, judgments, and inferences, are the product of the
intelligence.
- 6. We are conscious of our own liberty in the sense of having ability to
choose in any direction in view of motives--to choose or refuse any object of
choice. We know this with absolute certainty. This is an intuition of reason
revealed by consciousness, and however men may deny their own freedom, in
theory, yet they always act upon the assumption that mankind are free.
- 7. We are conscious that we can voluntarily control some of our
capabilities, and some we cannot; for example; the voluntary, and involuntary
muscles. If I will to move my arm, it moves in obedience to my will, but if I
will that my heart shall cease to beat it still continues to beat wholly
regardless of my will. In like manner we know that some of our capabilities
are directly under the control of the will, and some indirectly.
- 8. We know by consciousness that muscular action is directly necessitated
by our will--that there is a necessary connection between volitions and
outward action. Some have made freedom to consist in doing as we please, or as
we will; but that there is no freedom in this, every one knows, for when I
will to move my arm, or to perform any other outward action, the action takes
place by a natural necessity. While the volition exists, the outward action
must be.
- 9. We also know by consciousness that thought and feeling are only
indirectly subject to the will. Suppose, for instance, you wish to transfer
your thoughts from one object to another. You cannot do this directly, and yet
you are conscious that you can indirectly through the attention.
Hence by directing the attention to any given subject upon which you wish
to think, thought is the necessary result. So if you abstract the attention
from an object upon which you do not wish to think you thus indirectly
abstract the thoughts from it. Even children know this with absolute
certainty. So with feeling of every kind. We are conscious that we cannot
directly feel by willing to feel. Suppose, for example, we wish to call into
being the feelings of love, hope, fear, joy, or sorrow. We are conscious that
we cannot, by direct willing, create these feelings, or even modify them. But,
nevertheless, we are conscious that we can indirectly regulate the feelings to
a great degree. For example: If we wish to experience the emotions produced by
the beautiful, we turn our attention to a beautiful object, and the emotions
arise of course. On the contrary, by turning our attention to an offensive
object, we can indirectly produce disagreeable emotions in our own minds. The
same law operates respecting all religious feelings. They can to a very great
degree be regulated indirectly by the will through the attention, but never
directly.
- 10. We know by consciousness that whatever we can do at all, we can do by
willing and that whatever act or state is not connected with the action of our
will is impossible to us by a natural necessity. Suppose, for example, I will
to move, but suddenly the nerves of voluntary motion are paralyzed, so that
they will not obey my will. Then to move is impossible for me. The same is
true of thoughts and feelings. If I will to expel certain thoughts and
feelings from my mind, and to produce others, I abstract my attention from
those objects on which it rests and direct it to other objects. This course
will universally change the existing thoughts and feelings, but if it should
not, then to change them is impossible for me. So of every thing else.
Whatever we cannot accomplish by willing, we cannot accomplish at all. This is
universal experience.
- 11. We are conscious of possessing in our intelligence a faculty, called
reason, or the intuitive faculty, by which we perceive and affirm absolutely
certain truths which carry with them their own evidence. This faculty gives
us, when certain conditions are fulfilled, all necessary, absolute and
universal truths. It is so infallible, and uniform in its affirmations, that
whenever the terms of a proposition are understood, every reason in the world
will affirm the same things. For example, mathematical truths, as that two and
two equal four, or things which are equal to the same thing are equal to one
another. These affirmations are so absolute that the mind cannot doubt them.
- 12. Among these self-evident truths are all the first principles of morals
such as--
- (1.) That there is such a thing as right and wrong, and that the
difference between them is fundamental.
- (2.) That the existence of these implies moral law.
- (3.) That men have moral character.
- (4.) That moral character implies moral obligation.
- (5.) That moral obligation implies moral law and moral agency.
- (6.) That moral agency implies natural ability.
- (7.) That natural ability implies the existence of intelligence,
sensibility and freewill, that is, that moral agents actually know, feel,
and will. The mind does not call for proof of these things, but affirms them
as absolute verities, and the Bible therefore assumes them as true. It
assumes that moral agents do actually know, feel and will.
- (8.) That moral character does not and cannot belong to the constitution
of either body or mind, since it is impossible that a moral being should be
either praise or blameworthy. It cannot thus belong to the constitution.
- (9.) That the constitutional appetites, desires and passions can have no
moral character in themselves, since they are in themselves involuntary. For
example, the appetite for food. Suppose yourself hungry, and in the presence
of food. The appetite will naturally demand it from the very constitution,
and can therefore in itself have no moral character. The same is true of
desires and passions whenever you are in the presence of objects adapted to
awaken them.
- (10.) This intuitive faculty affirms, that on the will's consenting to
gratify any of these appetites, desires or passions under forbidden
circumstances, there is sin. For example, when Eve saw the fruit, her
appetite naturally craved it. In this there was nothing wrong, but when she
consented to gratify her appetite, not withstanding it was prohibited, this
was supreme selfishness. Had it not been prohibited the gratification would
have been proper, but being prohibited, it was sin. It is the same
respecting the gratifying of any desire or passion whatever.
- (11.) This intuitive faculty asserts that moral character cannot belong
to any involuntary act or state of mind whatever, nor to any outward
actions. If I stab a man, the moral character of the act does not belong to
the dagger, nor to the hand which held it, nor to the muscles of the arm,
nor to the volition which impelled the arm, but to the intention.
- (12.) It also asserts that moral character cannot belong to the states
of the sensibility, that is, to the various emotions or feelings, for these
are necessary; nor to the states of the intelligence. There is no virtue in
the perception of truth. Devils, and wicked, as well as good men, perceive
truth, and doubtless think correctly on many subjects, and their reason
affirms moral truths, but there is no virtue in this.
- (13.) It also asserts that moral character cannot belong to volitions as
distinguished from choices, for choice or intuition necessitates volition
for the time being.
- (14.) But it does assert that moral character belongs to the ultimate
intention of the mind. Intention is the choice of an end. The ultimate
intention is the last end chosen--that for which every thing else is chosen
or done. I will illustrate the difference between ultimate and proximate
intention. Suppose a young man laboring, and you inquire what he is laboring
for. He says, to get money. This is one end. But ask again, what do you want
of money? He says, to buy books. This is another end. Ask again, what do you
want of books? He says, to get knowledge. This is another end. But continue
the inquiry, what do you want of knowledge? He says, to preach the gospel.
This is still another end. But you may ask farther, what do you want to
preach the gospel for? He replies, to do good--because the good of the
universe is valuable in itself. This is the last end--the ultimate
intention, and all the previous ends are only means to this or what are
called proximate ends. But in this case the whole moral character of all the
process belongs plainly to the ultimate intention. In this all ethical
philosophers, worthy of note at the present day, agree. It is plainly the
doctrine of the Bible, and thus the Bible and natural theology are at one
precisely. The truth is even children understand that character consists in
ultimate intention. Pa, says the child in self justification, I didn't mean
to do it. And the question between the child and his parent is about the
intention. So it is in courts of justice. They always inquire for the "quo
animo" or intention. In short, all men, whatever may be their theory,
understand and act upon the truth of this doctrine. If a physician gave
medicine with a design to cure, he would be universally acquitted of blame,
even though instead of curing the disease, it should take the life of a
patient. In fact, this doctrine is so certain that the Bible could not be
believed if it disagreed with it.
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