HOLINESS OF CHRISTIANS IN THE PRESENT LIFE --No. 2
Nature of True Virtue
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
from "The
Oberlin Evangelist" Publication of Oberlin College
Lecture II
January 18, 1843
.
Text.--Rom. 13: 8-10: "Owe no man
any thing, but to love one another; for he that loveth another, hath fulfilled
the law. For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou
shalt not steal, Thou shalt not bear false witness, Thou shalt not covet; and if
there be any other commandment, it is briefly comprehended in this saying,
namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. Love worketh no ill to his
neighbor: therefore love is the fulfilling of the law."
Text.--Gal. 5: 14: "For all the law is
fulfilled in one word, even this, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself."
In this lecture I propose to show,
I. What is intended by the term love.
II. That the thing intended is the whole of virtue.
I. What is intended by the term love.
It is of the utmost importance to understand the bible meaning of the term love.
It is represented in the text, and the Bible generally, as the substance of all
religion, and the only preparation for heaven. What can be more important?
- 1. I remark, then, in the first place, that the love required in the text
is not what is generally called natural affection or the love of kindred. This
is manifest (1.) From the fact that natural affection is involuntary. It is
true the will is employed in acting out this love, but the thing generally
intended by natural affection is the strong constitutional impulses
experienced by parents towards their offspring, brothers and sisters towards
one another, &c. But (2.) This natural affection is common to both saints and
sinners, and certainly nothing can be religion which is common to the ungodly
with the saints. (3.) And I may add that it is participated by brutes.
- 2. This love is not complacency or esteem. Complacency is that pleasant
emotion, or state of the sensibility which is experienced when we see any
thing which, from the laws of our constitution, is naturally pleasing to us.
For example. If you contemplate a beautiful natural scenery, you experience a
pleasing emotion, or delight, from the very nature of your constitution. It is
precisely the same in contemplating moral beauty. Men are so constituted that
whenever they contemplate a virtuous character, provided it does not in any
way conflict with their selfishness, they delight in it--a pleasurable emotion
always springs up of course. Now this complacency, or esteem of virtuous
character, is perfectly involuntary, and therefore can have no virtue in it.
This we know by consciousness which I defined in my last lecture to be the
mind's knowledge of its own existence, acts, and states, and of the liberty or
necessity of these acts and states. By consciousness then we know that this
complacency in the character, either in God or any other virtuous being, is
involuntary, and the natural and necessary result of the mental constitution,
when brought into certain relations to such characters. Again, this
complacency cannot be true virtue, or the love required in the Bible, because
it can with propriety be exercised only towards the virtuous, whereas the love
which the Bible requires is to be exercised towards all. We are not required
to exercise complacency towards sinners, and it would plainly be unjust and
absurd if we were, since to delight in a sinful character is impossible. But
the text requires universal love. Therefore the love which it requires and
complacency cannot be identical. Again, complacency is common to real saints,
and to the self-deceived, and impenitent. Much evil is done by denying that
sinners have this feeling of complacency towards God and his law, when the
fact is they know that they have. Whenever they see the character of God aside
from his relation to themselves, they cannot avoid it. It arises by a natural
necessity from the mental constitution. The wickedest devil in hell would
experience it, if he could view the character of God aside from its relations
to himself. It is absurd to deny that mind would feel thus, for if it would
not, it must be inconsistent with itself, which cannot be. Furthermore
complacency in virtuous character is consistent with the highest degree of
wickedness. It is related of a certain infidel that he would go into ecstacies
in contemplating the character of God, and who has not heard the wicked insist
on it that they do love God, and found it almost impossible to convince them
that they did not love Him with any virtuous love? Why? Because they are
conscious of these emotions of complacency towards Him, and mistake it for
real benevolence.
- 3. The love required in the text is not what is commonly called fondness,
for this is a mere emotion and therefore involuntary. I know not what else to
call a certain development of the mind towards God. Persons often exhibit a
fondness towards God, the same as towards any other being. They love Him
because He loves them just as sinners peculiarly love those who do them a good
turn. And they do not distinguish between this and true religion; but
immediately after the strongest exhibition of it, take advantage of a neighbor
in trade, or exhibit selfishness in some other form.
The truth is, it often consists with the most fiendish wickedness, as also
with the highest irreverence. Persons in this state of mind often seem, in
conversing about Him, in their prayers to Him and in every way to regard and
treat God merely as an equal. I have often thought how infinitely insulting to
Him their conduct must be. Again this fondness is consistent with any degree
of self-indulgence. In direct connection with its exercise, persons often show
themselves to be the perfect slaves of their appetites and passions. They
undoubtedly feel their fondness, but do they love? They say they love, but is
their love benevolence? Is it religion? Can that be religion which puts no
restraint on the appetites and passions, or only curbs some of them, while it
cleaves the more tenaciously to others? Impossible!
- 4. The love intended in the text is not synonymous with desire. Persons
say they desire to love God--they desire to love their neighbor as themselves.
No doubt they do, but there is no religion in this, since desire is
constitutional and has no moral character. Sinners have the desire and remain
sinners still, and every one knows that they are consistent with the highest
wickedness. Besides, as it is mere desire, it may exist forever and do no
good. Suppose God had from all eternity merely desired to create a universe
and make it happy. If He had never gone further than that what good would it
have done? So it will not do for us to say to our neighbors be ye warmed, and
be ye fed, but give them not those things which are essential to their well
being. Unless we really will what we desire, it will never effect any good.
- 5. The love required in the text is not pity or compassion to individuals.
This is wholly constitutional, and men are strongly exercised with it in spite
of themselves. It is related of Whitefield that he often appealed to men with
such power in behalf of his orphan-house as to induce those to give liberally
who had beforehand determined not to give, nor to be influenced by him. The
truth is, his mighty appeals aroused the constitutional susceptibility of pity
to such a pitch that they had to give out of self-defense. They were wrought
up to such an agony that they had to give to relieve it. But so far was this
mere excitement from being virtuous, that perhaps those very persons whom it
induced to give the money, called themselves a thousand fools for having done
so, after the excitement subsided.
- 6. Nor is the love required in the text delight in the happiness of
mankind. We are so constituted as naturally to delight in the happiness of
others, whenever there is no selfish reason to prevent. It is this same
constitutional tendency which produces such abhorrence of whatever is unjust
and injurious. For example: How men's feelings of indignation swell and boil
on witnessing acts of injustice. Suppose, in a court of justice, a judge
perverts justice, shamefully wronging the innocent, and clearing the guilty.
How would the spectators feel? There was a case, sometime since, in one of our
cities, where a man had been guilty of a flagrant outrage, but when it was
brought before the court, the justice so insulted and abused the sufferer and
showed such a disposition to clear the guilty, that the indignation of the
spectators became aroused to such a degree that they could hardly be
restrained from seizing, and wreaking their vengeance on him. And these were
persons who made no pretentions to religion. So men universally, whether
virtuous or not, abhor a liar, or the character of the devil. Who ever
contemplated the character of the devil, as it really is, without abhorring
it? On the contrary, men universally, whether virtuous themselves or not,
admire and delight in virtuous characters. Take, for example, the Jews in
Christ's time. How they admired, and manifested their delight in the character
of the prophets who had formerly perished by the violence of their
contemporaries. Now how was this? Why, they now saw the true character of
those prophets, without its sustaining such a relation to their selfishness as
to annoy them and their constitutional delight was naturally awakened in this
way. But at the same time they were treating Christ in the same manner that
their fathers, treated those prophets and for the same reason. So now
multitudes join in admiring and praising such men as Whitefield, and Wesley,
and Edwards, who, if they had lived in their day, would have cried as loud as
their contemporaries did--'away with them.' Now, why is this? Because the
relations of the characters of these men to the world are now changed, and do
not directly cross the track of their selfishness, as they did while living.
The same principle is manifested in respect to human freedom. For example:
Some years ago, during the struggle of the Greeks for their freedom, what
enthusiasm prevailed--what earnestness to go and help them. The government
could scarcely control the waves of excitement in their favor. But those very
men, who were so enthusiastic in behalf of the Greeks, would now hiss at any
error to remove slavery from this country! Now why is this? Because, I say
again, men are so constituted that when no selfish reason exists to prevent
it, men naturally delight in happiness, and sympathize with the suffering. But
there is no virtue in this. It is mere natural emotion which is consistent
with the highest wickedness.
- 7. The love required is not a good will to any particular individuals. 'Do
not even sinners love those that love them?' They love their friends and
partizans, and so do fallen spirits for ought I know, but there is no
benevolence in this.
- 8. This love then must be benevolence. But what is benevolence? It is
benevolence--willing the good of being. The attributes of benevolence are,
- (1.) Voluntariness. It belongs to the will, and not to the sensibility.
- (2.) Another attribute is disinterestedness. By this, I mean that the
good of being is not willed for the sake of its reflex influence upon self,
but for its own sake. It is recognizing the good of being as valuable in
itself, and willing it for that reason. The willing terminates on the good
willed.
- (3.) Universality, is another attribute of benevolence. It goes out
towards all beings. It admits of no exceptions. Wherever there is a being
capable of happiness, benevolence wills its happiness, according to its
perceived value and for its own sake. Such is God's benevolence. It is
universal, embracing in its infinite bosom all beings from the highest arch
angel to the sparrow which falls to the ground. He views and really wills
the happiness of every being as a good. Indeed, universality is essential to
the very nature of benevolence, for if good is willed on its own account,
benevolence will of course cover all good known.
- (4.) Another attribute is unity. Benevolence is a simple principle. It
is the whole heart--an unmixed general choice, as the good of being is a
unity--it is a single end, and benevolence is the choice of this one end.
- (5.) It is a choice as distinguished from volition. The choice of an end
always of course necessitates volitions to accomplish the end, but these
executive volitions have no character in themselves, and all virtue or vice
belongs to the choice or intention which they are designed to execute. We
know this by consciousness.
- (6.) It is a choice also as distinguished from desire, emotion, or
feeling. As I said in the former lecture, we are conscious that all the
states of the sensibility--all desires, emotions, and passions whatever are
involuntary, and therefore without moral character. Benevolence then, cannot
either wholly or partly consist in these.
- (7.) Another attribute is activity and efficiency. Benevolence being
choice it must be efficient. Choice necessitates volition. For example;
Suppose I intend to go to the post-office as soon as possible. While this
choice remains, it of course necessitates all the volitions necessary to its
execution. Its very nature is activity.
- (8.) Aggressiveness is another attribute of benevolence. Of course if
benevolence is willing the good of being, it wills the destruction of
whatever prevents that good, and continually makes encroachments in every
direction upon every form of wickedness however fortified. It will not only
sally out against such sins as licentiousness, intemperance, and profanity,
but every form of selfishness however popular it may be.
- (9.)Benevolence is a disposition, or ultimate intention. Intention is
the choice of an end. Benevolence is the choice of the highest good of
being, and being the ultimate choice, as was illustrated in the last
lecture, it is of course a disposition to promote good to the utmost.
- (10.) It is supreme to God of course. Benevolence as we have already
said, is willing the good of being for its own sake. Of course then it is
willing the good of every being, according to its perceived value, for it is
agreed by all, to be the correct definition of virtue that it is a
disposition to regard things according to their perceived relative value.
Now every one must perceive that the happiness of God is the greatest good
in the universe, and therefore benevolence must, as a matter of course, will
it supremely.
- (11.) Benevolence must be equal to men. I do not mean to say that the
happiness of every man is equal to the happiness of every other man or that
they are equally valuable. The happiness of a man is of more value than the
happiness of a brute. It would therefore be unjust to regard them as equal.
So some men are of more value than others. For example, the life of
Washington was of more value than that of any private soldier; therefore, if
either of them must be sacrificed, it should be the least valuable. But what
I mean to say is that the good of every being is to be regarded according to
its relative value as you understand it.
- (12.) Benevolence also regards the good of enemies, as well as friends.
The Savior insists on this as essential to virtue.
- 9. That this love is benevolence is generally agreed, and it is also
agreed that this is the only form of love which is voluntary, or can
reasonably be commanded. That this, and no other kind of love is voluntary,
every one knows by his own consciousness. We are conscious that our emotions
are all produced, not directly but indirectly. If a parent, for example,
wishes to feel about his family, he must direct his attention to them. The
result will be that he will feel about them by a natural necessity, and his
feelings will take the type of whatever aspect he views them in. And while his
attention is fixed upon them he cannot but feel. So with every form of love
except benevolence. Hatred is produced and perpetuated in the same way. An
individual conceives himself injured by another, and keeps his attention upon
it; the more he views it, the more emotions of hatred or indignation are felt,
so that when urged to give it up, he says he cannot. And it is true that while
he keeps his eye upon that particular thing--while his mind broods over it, he
cannot; but he can turn his attention off and thus indirectly remove his
feelings of hatred or indignation.
- 10. The love required in the text must be benevolence as it is required
towards all beings. This is manifest from what we have already said.
- 11. God's love to us must be benevolence. It could not be complacency, for
instead of feeling complacent towards sinners, He must abhor their character.
It was benevolence then which made the Atonement, and all the provisions of
salvation.
- 12. No other kind of love would do any real good. Without it God would
never have made the Atonement, nor have done anything else to secure the
salvation of sinners, nor would any other moral being. No other love can in
the nature of things be universal than benevolence, which consists in willing
universal good for its own sake.
- 13. Benevolence is naturally and universally obligatory, and therefore
must be virtue. The good of being is valuable, and therefore to will it must
be virtue. To deny this is to talk stark nonsense. It is to deny that we are
to treat things as they are, or according to the nature.
- 14. Therefore the law of God must require it, and would be unjust if it
did not. It cannot be otherwise than unjust not to require all moral beings to
act according to the nature and relations of things.
- 15. Nothing else need be required of moral beings, as every thing else
possible to us follows its exercise of necessity. This follows from the fact
that it consists in choice. If I will right, this will secures corresponding
volitions, muscular movements, desires, and feelings as a matter of course,
and whatever willing will not secure is impossible to me. To produce the right
emotions, I have only to fix my attention on the right objects. If therefore I
will right the whole man will be right of course. That such is the influence
of the will we know by consciousness.
- 16. In short nothing more nor less can be justly required. That nothing
less can be required is a certain intuition of every moral being in the
universe. Ask whomsoever you will if every one ought not to be required to
will the universal good of being, and if he understands the terms of your
proposition, he will immediately cry out, "yes," "yes," from the deepest
recesses of his soul. That nothing more can be required is equally intuitive.
Whenever it is asserted that men can be required to do any thing beyond the
power of their will, the nature of every moral being cries out against it as
false. This is right and nothing else is right.
II. Benevolence is the whole of virtue.
- 1. We have seen that this love is disposition or intention.
- 2. We know that intention necessitates corresponding states and acts.
- 3. Virtue cannot consist in the outward act, nor, in necessitated mental
acts. It must therefore consist in benevolence and this the Bible teaches in
many ways.
- (1.) In the text, it is asserted that love is the fulfilling of the law,
and that all the law is fulfilled in one word even this, thou shalt love thy
neighbor as thyself.
- (2.) It is the spirit of the whole law as epitomized by Christ--'Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy strength and
with all thy mind and thy neighbor as thyself.'
- (3.) It is the spirit of every precept of the Bible. It asserts that 'if
there be first a willing mind, it is accepted according to that a man hath,
and not according to that he hath not,' that is, a right intention obeys the
very spirit of the Bible. If we intend right, the will is taken for the
deed. Suppose my intention is to do all the good I possibly can, but I am
confined to a sick bed so that I can accomplish but little; notwithstanding
I am virtuous. So, on the other hand, the Bible teaches that if people
intend wrong, their moral character is as their intention, whatever they may
do. Even if good should result from their actions, no thanks to them because
they did not intend it.
REMARKS
1. It may be said that the Bible represents our words, thoughts, and outward
actions as virtuous. Answer;
(1.) The Bible makes all virtue strictly speaking to consist in love, and
it cannot be inconsistent with itself.
(2.) Words, thoughts, and outward actions are and can be virtuous only in the
sense of their being manifestations of benevolence.
(3.) The same may be said in regard to words, thoughts, and actions that are
called wicked. The Bible says that 'the ploughing of the wicked is sin.'
Words, thoughts, and actions are holy or sinful in no other sense than that
they indicate the state of the will. A word! What is a word? A breath--a
motion of the atmosphere on the drum of the ear. Can this have moral character
in itself? No, but it may be an index of the state of mind of him who utters
it.
2. See the infinite importance of understanding that benevolence always and
necessarily manifests itself--consisting in choice it is naturally impossible
that it should not.
3. See the spurious nature of any religion which does not manifest itself in
efforts to do good. Such religion is mere antinomianism. It may be some kind of
happiness, but religion it is not.
4. All the attributes of Christian character must belong to the will, just as
all God's moral attributes are only modifications of benevolence. They are not
modifications of emotion, but of will. His justice in sending the wicked to hell
is as much a modification of benevolence, as is his mercy in taking the virtuous
to heaven. He does both for the same reason, because the general good equally
demands both. So with all that the true Christian does.
5. How false and dangerous are the usual definitions of these attributes. For
example: Love is spoken of as a mere feeling. Hence religion is represented as,
at one time, like smothered embers, scarcely in existence; at another, in a
slight glow, which may be fanned till it breaks out into flame. Now this is not
the love which the Bible requires, since it is nothing but mere feeling, and
even if legitimately produced, it is only the natural and constitutional result
of religion, and not religion itself.
Repentance is also spoken of as mere sorrow for sin, but instead of this, it
does not consist in feeling at all. It is a change of mind. As we say, when we
have made up our mind to do one thing, and then change it, and do the opposite,
we say in popular language, "I changed my mind." This is the simple idea of
repentance. It is an act of the will, and sorrow follows it as a result. So
faith is represented as the conviction of the intellect. But this cannot be
faith, for the Bible every where represents faith as a virtue, and it must,
therefore, be an act of the will, and no mere belief whatever. It is a
committing of the soul to God. The Bible says Christ did not commit Himself to
certain persons, for He knew what was in them, that is, He did not trust or
exercise faith in them. The word rendered commit here, is the same as that
rendered faith. Peter says, 'Commit the keeping of your souls to Him in well
doing as to a faithful Creator.' When the mind apprehends the true meaning of
the characteristics and relations of Christ to the world, this is often mistaken
for faith. But the devil may have as good faith as that. This is a mere
perception of truth by the intellect, and is, as a condition, indispensable to
faith, but it is no more faith itself than an act of the intellect is an act of
the will.
So humility is represented as a sense of guilt, and unworthiness. Now, Satan is
doubtless humble if this is humility, and so is every convicted sinner, by a
natural necessity. But humility is a willingness to be known and esteemed
according to your true character. These illustrations will show how dangerous
are the mistakes prevalent respecting the attributes of Christian character.
6. There is no such thing as religion, not in exercise. Persons often talk as
though they had some true religion about them, although they are conscious of
exercising none. They have a good enough religion to be sure, but it is not in
operation just now. Now this is a radical mistake.
7. How many persons are living on frames and feelings, and yet remain perfectly
selfish.
8. Many are satisfied with no preaching but such as fans into existence certain
happy emotions. These are a kind of religious epicures. Whenever we preach so as
to lay bare the roots of selfishness and detect its secret workings, they are
not fed. They say this is not the gospel, let us have the gospel. But what do
they mean by the gospel? Why simply that class of truths that create and fan
into a flame their emotions. And those who most need to be searched are often
most unwilling to endure the probe. They make their religion to consist in
emotions, and if these are taken away what have they left? Hence they cling to
them with a death grasp. Now let me say that these emotions have not one
particle of religion in them, and those who want simply that class of truths
which fan them into existence are mere religious epicures, and their view of the
gospel is sheer antinomianism. If the world were full of such religion it would
be none the better for it.
9. Religion is the cause of happiness but is not identical with it. Happiness is
a state of the sensibility and of course involuntary, while religion is
benevolence and therefore powerful action.
10. Men may work without benevolence, but they cannot be benevolent without
works. Many persons wake up occasionally, and bluster about, get up protracted
meetings, and make mighty efforts to work themselves into a right state of
feeling by dint of mere friction. But they never get a right spirit thus, and
their working is mere legality. I do not mean to condemn protracted meetings,nor
special efforts to promote religion, but I do condemn a legal engaging in these
things. But while persons may work without benevolence, it is also certain that
if they are benevolent they will work. It is impossible that benevolence should
be inactive.
11. If all virtue consists in the ultimate intention, then it must be that we
can be conscious of our spiritual state. We certainly can tell what we are
aiming at. If consciousness does not reveal this it cannot reveal any thing
about our character. If character consists in ultimate intention, and if we
cannot be conscious what this intention is, it follows necessarily that we can
know nothing whatever about our own character.
12. We can see what we are to inquire after in our hours of self-examination.
Our inquiry should not be how we feel, but for what end we live--what is the aim
of our life.
13. How vain is religion without love. Those who have such a religion are
continually lashed up by conscience to the performance of duty. Conscience
stands like a task-master, scourge in hand, points to the duty, and says it must
not be omitted. The heart shrinks back from its performance, but still it must
be done or worse evil endured. The hesitating soul drags itself up by
resolution, to fulfill the letter of the requirement, while there is no
acquiescence in its spirit, and thus a miserable slavery is substituted for the
cheerful obedience of the heart.
14. I must close by saying that benevolence naturally fills the mind with peace
and joy. Mind was made to be benevolent, and whenever it is so it is in harmony
with itself, with God and the Universe. It wills just as God wills, and
therefore it naturally and cheerfully acts out His will. This is its choice. It
is like some heavenly instrument whose chords are touched by some angelic hand
which makes music for the ear of God. But on the contrary, a selfish man is
necessarily, from the very nature of mind, a wretched man. His reason and
conscience continually affirm his obligations to God and his universe, to the
world and the Church. But he never wills in accordance with it, and thus a
continual warfare is kept up within. His mind is like an instrument untuned and
harsh. Instead of harmony, it renders only discord, and makes music only fit to
mingle with the wailings of the damned.
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