HOLINESS OF CHRISTIANS IN THE PRESENT LIFE --No. 4
Christian Character
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
from "The
Oberlin Evangelist" Publication of Oberlin College
Lecture IV
February 15, 1843
.
Text.--1 John 3:9:
"Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for his seed remaineth in
him: and he cannot sin, because he is born of God."
In this discourse I shall,
I. Inquire what sin is not.
II. What it is.
III. What to be born of God is not.
IV. What it is.
V. What the seed spoken of in the text is not.
VI. What it is.
VII. What is not intended by the assertion that whosoever is born of God does
not and cannot commit sin.
VIII. What is intended by it.
IX. How a Christian may be distinguished from a sinner.
I. What sin is not.
- 1. Sin is not a part of the soul or body.
- 2. It is nothing infused into either soul or body. Some talk as if they
supposed the whole being, soul and body to be saturated with sin, than which,
nothing can be more absurd.
- 3. It is no taint of corruption in, nor a lapsed state of the
constitution. The Bible does not make it so, and reason certainly affirms it
to be something entirely different from this.
- 4. It is nothing which is or can be transmitted from parents to children
by natural generation.--This would contradict the Bible definition of sin, and
the supposition is in itself a ridiculous absurdity.
- 5. Nor does it consist in any weakness, debility, or inability, either
natural or moral, to obey God. The Bible no where makes it consist in this,
and certainly common sense does not.
- 6. Nor does it consist in any appetite, passion, or mere feeling. These we
have already seen, in a former lecture, are constitutional, involuntary, and
in themselves wholly destitute of all moral character.
- 7. Nor does it consist in any degree of excitement of these in appropriate
circumstances; for in the appropriate circumstances, they are excited of
necessity.
- 8. Nor does it consist in any state or act of the intelligence; for this
also acts of necessity, and we can only be responsible for its operations just
so far as we can regulate it by willing.
- 9. Nor does it consist in any outward actions; for these are necessitated
by the supreme end chosen, and in themselves are wholly destitute of all moral
character.
II. What sin is.
- 1. As was said in a former lecture, the primary faculties of the mind are
Intelligence, Sensibility, and Free Will. This we know from consciousness. The
Intelligence is that power which thinks, affirms, reasons, and reflects. The
Sensibility, is the power of feeling. To this power are referred all
appetites, desires, passions, or emotions whatever. The Free Will, is the
power which wills.
- 2. The will is always influenced by motives originating either in the
intelligence or the sensibility. The will always chooses some object, or acts
in reference to some motive; and we know by consciousness that these motives
are either duties perceived by the intelligence, or the awakened
susceptibilities of the sensibility, which always invite the mind to seek the
gratification of its appetites and passions for their own sake. I do not mean
that the action of the intelligence and the sensibility are so isolated from
each other, that either of them acts in perfect independence of the other; for
we know that every thought and affirmation of the intelligence is accompanied
by some feeling of the sensibility, and on the contrary that every feeling
awakens in the intelligence, affirmations, thoughts, and reasonings to a
greater or less extent. But what I mean is, that some motives originate in,
and are addressed to the will by the intelligence, and some on the contrary,
originate in the sensibility, and as such, influence the will. The distinction
of which I am speaking is just what every one means, when speaking of the
difference between being led by propensity or passion, and reason.--The
intelligence and sensibility mutually influence each other, but one or the
other takes the lead. In other words, the mind, which is a unity, in thinking
feels, and in feeling, thinks. When the intelligence reveals and imposes
obligation, it is always echoed by the sensibility; and on the contrary, when
some appetite or desire is excited in the sensibility, the intelligence is
awakened into thought respecting it. In the one case the sensibility follows
in the wake of the intelligence, and in the other, the intelligence in the
wake of the sensibility, but in all cases the action both of the sense and
intelligence is indirectly under the control of the will, which by its
sovereign power always determines which shall be the ascendant.
- 3. The mind affirms itself to be under obligation to obey the law of the
reason just as I suppose the mind of God imposes obligation on Him. The
holiness of God consists in his obeying the law revealed and imposed on Him by
his own infinite and eternal reason, and so the holiness of all moral beings
must consist in their voluntary conformity to whatever their own reason
affirms to be obligatory. Holiness then is that state of the will or heart
which consists in the voluntary consecration of the whole being to God.
- 4. Sin is the exact opposite of this, and consists in the consecration, by
the will or heart, of the whole being to the gratification of self. This is
selfishness, which we have already endeavored to show is the substance of all
the sin in the universe.--Whatever, in the action of the will or heart, is not
conformed to the law of love, as perceived by the reason, is sin, whether it
be omission of duty or the commission of that which is positively prohibited.
Entire conformity of heart and life, therefore, to all known truth is
holiness, and nothing short of this is, or can be. If persons deny this, it is
because they do not know what they say, and have not the idea of holiness
before their mind at all. The law of God is one--a unity, and to talk of being
partly conformed to it, and partly not, is to overlook the very nature both of
the law and of conformity to it. The law of God requires perfect conformity of
life and heart to all the truth perceived, and this is moral perfection in any
being, and is the only sense in which any being can be morally perfect in any
world. Suppose there is a moral pigmy whose standard of truth is No. 1. Now if
he fully conforms to that, he does his whole duty. So you may increase the
scale to 2, 5, 10, 20, and moral perfection will still consist in conformity
to the light possessed. Suppose you ascend the scale to ten thousand or a
million, it is still the same until you arrive at God Himself, and this is
just what constitutes the moral perfection of God. All the truths in the
universe are known to Him with absolute certainty, and He conforms to all He
knows. Since his knowledge admits of no increase, his holiness admits of none,
while that of all finite beings does and will to all eternity. Angels
doubtless sustain innumerable relations of which they are totally ignorant,
and to which they are not morally conformed, but their state of will is such,
that as fast as they learn them they conform to them , and hence their
holiness is constantly increasing; and so it must be from the lowest to the
highest degree of moral capacity. Every thing, then, short of living up to the
light we have, is sin, and every moral act is either right or wrong.
III. What to be born of God is not.
- 1. Regeneration does not consist in the creation of any new faculties. We
have faculties enough, more than we use well, and do not need any more.
- 2. Nor does it consist in a constitutional change. A constitutional, would
be far enough from a moral change, and it would be hard to tell what good it
would do.
- 3. Nor does it consist in implanting, or infusing any piece, parcel, or
physical principle of holiness into the soul. What can be meant by a principle
of holiness, when such language is used to designate something aside from
holiness itself?
- 4. Nor does it consist in a change of the constitutional appetites and
propensities. These have no moral character in themselves and need no change.
They only need to be rightly regulated.
- 5. Nor does it consist in the introduction or implantation of a new taste.
There could be no virtue in regeneration if it consisted in any of these
things, and they all are mistakes overlooking the nature of virtue. But,
IV. What is it to be born of God?
- 1. To be born of God is to have a new heart.
- 2. We have seen that the old or wicked heart is the same as the carnal
mind, and that the carnal mind or wicked heart consists in the devotion of the
will to self gratification. Self gratification is the ultimate end chosen.
- 3. Now to be born again, or of God, is to make a radical change in the
ultimate intention, or choice of an end. It is called being born again because
it is a change of the whole moral character and course of life. Christ says,
"except ye be converted and become as little children, ye shall, in no case,
enter into the kingdom of heaven." The phraseology is figurative and emphatic,
because when a moral being has changed his ultimate intention, he must of
necessity live an entirely new life, perfectly the reverse of what it was
before.
- 4. It is called, a being born of God, or from above; because sinners are
influenced to make this voluntary change by the word and Spirit of God. I say
voluntary change, because every one is perfectly conscious that he was
voluntary in it, and because it must of necessity be voluntary, if it has any
moral character in it; and I might add, that unless it is voluntary,
backsliding from it would be naturally impossible, and obedience necessary,
which are as false in fact, as they are absurd in theory.
V. What the seed which remaineth in Christians is not.
- 1. It is not a physical germ, root, sprout or taste, inserted into the
soul. If so, then falling from grace is naturally impossible, and perseverance
naturally necessary. This theory robs religion of all virtue whatever.
- 2. It is not love nor any other holy exercise. In other words, it is not
religion at all. Religion is voluntary conformity to the law of God, and to
say that this remains in the Christian could have no meaning. The truth is,
the Apostle, in the text, is asserting why this voluntary conformity is
continued. It then cannot be the seed.
- 3. It does not consist in any new principle implanted in the soul.
VI. What this seed is.
- 1. It is the word or truth which re-generated him--that is, in view of
which he changed his ultimate intention or heart. Truth is frequently called
seed in the bible,--"Being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of
incorruptible, by the word of God, which liveth and abideth forever." "Of his
own will begat He us with the word of truth, that we should be a kind of first
fruits of his creatures."
- 2. This word or truth is called the seed of God, because it is introduced
and made known to the mind by the Holy Ghost. Hence we are said to be
"begotten of God." It is his truth that quickens the mind into right voluntary
action. Now every one knows, by his own consciousness, that this is the way in
which he was born again. Hear a young convert tell his experience. He begins
to tell of some truth which arrested his attention, and convicted him; how he
thought of one thing after another, that he perceived this, and that and the
other thing to be true as he never did before, and that finally he made up his
mind, in view of what he thus saw was true, to repent. Now what is he doing?
Why, he is giving the history of his regeneration, and giving it in the
detail. But does he know the history of his regeneration? As well as he knows
any thing else under Heaven. To be sure he did not see the Spirit, no[r] did
he perceive that it was the Spirit, because the Spirit directs to Christ, but
he is conscious that he did see the truth as he never saw it before. And he is
conscious that he was perfectly voluntary under its influence.
- 3. This seed, which has once broken the power of selfishness, remains in
him, that is, in his memory, so that he can sin only by letting it slip. "Let
that therefore abide in you which ye have heard from the beginning. If that
which ye have heard from the beginning shall remain in you, ye shall ask what
ye will, and it shall be done unto you." This truth, as I said before, is not
a piece of something which God puts into you, nor is it religion, nor love,
but it is that which once subdued your will and will not cease to influence
you, only as you let it slip.
VII. What is not intended by the assertion that whosoever is born of God
does not and cannot commit sin.
- 1. It cannot mean that a holy being has not power to commit sin. Adam was
a holy being and he sinned, as did also the "Angels that kept not their first
estate." If there were a lack of natural power to sin, there would be no
virtue in obedience. This position would contradict facts innumerable. Perhaps
very few have ever been born of God who have not afterwards been guilty of
sin. This is a matter of consciousness. Most of the histories recorded in the
Bible of good men, show that they did fall into sin, and the Bible everywhere
assumes that there is danger of this. It would destroy free agency and the
possibility of being sinful or holy.
- 2. It would make John contradict himself, for he was writing to regenerate
persons, but he all along assumes that they could sin, and were in danger of
sinning. Nor can it mean that one who is born of God never does in any
instance sin under the force of temptation. This would contradict all the rest
of the Bible.
VIII. What is intended by it.
- 1. It is intended that since the truth has once broken the power of
passion, and appetite, and gained the consent of his will, and since it
remains in him, that is, in his memory, he will not, as a matter of fact,
consent to indulge himself in any form of sin.
- 2. Cannot is here used in its popular sense, as it generally is in the
Bible. Such language must not be strained nor cut to the quick. It is used
just as it is now used in popular conversation. Suppose I say I cannot take
twenty-five dollars for my watch. What do I mean? Not that I have not power to
take it, but that I am unwilling to take it. If I say I cannot throw this
table across the room, the nature of the case shows that I use cannot, to
indicate a natural impossibility, but in the former case I use it merely in
the sense of a strong unwillingness. It is in this sense that it is used in
the text, just as it is used everyday in every store on Broadway.
- 3. It is intended then that with all Christians, holiness is the rule and
sin the exception--if there be sin at all, that sin is only occasional as
opposed to habitual, that it is so unfrequent, that, in the strong language of
John, it may be truly said, that they do not sin. If sin is not so rare as to
be merely occasional instead of habitual, the text is absolutely false. For
example; suppose I should say that such a man is not a drunkard. I should not
be understood to say that he had never been drunk in his life, but I should
certainly be understood to say that at most his fits of intoxication were
extremely rare. John, as a writer, expresses himself very strongly, and I
might read many passages from his writings, showing that he does not intend
such terms in an absolute sense, but to state, that, in Christians, their
aversion to sin, and their purpose of obedience are so strong and fixed, that
it may be said in strong language they cannot sin. "And every man that hath
this hope in him purifieth himself, even as he is pure. Whosoever committeth
sin transgresseth also the law: For sin is the transgression of the law. And
ye know that He was manifested to take away our sins; and in Him is no sin.
Whosoever abideth in Him sinneth not; whosoever sinneth hath not seen Him
neither known Him. Little children, let no man deceive you: he that doeth
righteousness is righteous, even as he is righteous. He that committeth sin is
of the devil; for the devil sinneth from the beginning. For this purpose the
Son of God was manifested, that He might destroy the works of the devil.
Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for his seed remaineth in him:
And he cannot commit sin, because he is born of God."
- 4. It must be intended that Christians only sin by being diverted from the
consideration of the truth by the force of temptation. This is the least that
this and similar passages can mean. It is not intended to assert what ought to
be true of Christians, but what is so as a matter of fact. He is drawing the
very portrait of a Christian and hanging it up for all the Church in all ages
to look at.
IX. How a Christian may be distinguished from a sinner.
- 1. They cannot be distinguished by profession. For doubtless many sinners
make profession and some Christians do not.
- 2. Nor can they be distinguished by their observance of the forms of
religion, nor by their creeds or opinions, nor by their church standing, nor
by the emotions or feelings which they manifest. Emotions are as natural to
the impenitent as to Christians, and are no distinguishing test. But,
- 3. The Christian is benevolent, while the sinner is selfish. These are
their ultimate states of mind, and will manifest themselves in both by a
natural necessity.
- 4. The Christian is influenced by reason, and the sinner by mere feeling.
If you wish to influence a sinner, you must appeal to his feelings, for
nothing else will move him. He has not learned to yield his will to the
dominion of truth. But the Christian has devoted himself to truth, and is
always influenced by it. He knows that the feelings effervesce, boil or
freeze, just as circumstances vary; while truth is forever the same. Said a
brother to me not long since, "I am distressed about my wife. She is very full
of feeling, and can be affected by appeals which are calculated to awaken it;
but I cannot influence her by truth." I replied, that this was truly a dark
sign; and I now say, that I should have no hope for my wife nor anyone else,
who cannot be influenced to duty, by the simple truth, unaided by appeals to
the Sensibility.
- 5. The Christian obeys all known truth, on all subjects, while sinners
conform to truth only on those subjects that are enforced by public opinion.
Truth is the Christian's law, and he conforms to it as fully in opposition to,
as in conformity to public opinion. But mark! a sinner will conform to some
truths outwardly, but not to all, nor really to any in his heart. Public
sentiment is a god which most people obey and worship.
- 6. Christians adhere to principle in the face of all opposition, while
sinners quail before it. Let opposition rise ever so high, you will see the
true Christian stand like a rock, and breast the dashing wave--he will not
shrink or quail. Not so with the sinner. He will go along well enough, while
all is smooth, but when the tide begins to rise, you see him yield to its
force and drive along with it withersoever it goes. "By and by he is
offended."
- 7. It can never be said of a true Christian, that, "sin has dominion over
him." But some form of sin has dominion over sinners universally. Sometimes it
assumes one type and sometimes another, but sin is their master.
- 8. Christians obey the spirit and letter of the moral law, but sinners
obey only the letter, even if they do that.
- 9. Cause a Christian to see the truth on any subject and he will obey it;
but a sinner will see and acknowledge it, and continue on in his sins. His
appetites, and not his conscience, are his master.
REMARKS.
1. Every real Christian lives habitually without sin. Nothing is more common
than to find large classes of professors of religion who acknowledge that they
are living in sin. You ask them--Do you not know that this is wrong? Yes, they
say, but no person is expected to live without sin in this world. We must sin
some. Now, as the Bible is true, such persons are deceived, and in the way to
hell. If that is religion, what is Christianity? But, you will say--"I know what
you say of this text cannot be the meaning, for it is not my experience." Poor
soul! this excuse will do you no good, for God's word is true, whatever your
experience is, and in the day of eternity, where will you be if you rely on
this? Now do you cry out and say, "why this is awful; for if it be true what
will become of the great mass of Christians?" Let me tell you all true
Christians will be saved, but hypocrites God will judge. Said a woman to a
minister not long since, "Do you confess your sins?" confess your sins! What did
she mean by that? Why, she meant to inquire whether every time he prayed he
confessed, not that he had been a sinner in times past, but, that he was now
actually sinning against God? She, with many other professors, actually seemed
to think that Christians should sin a little all the while in order to keep them
humble, and to have something to confess. Indeed!
2. It is a dangerous error to inculcate that Christians sin daily and hourly. It
sets the door wide open for false hopes, and the effect on the Church is that it
is thronged with the victims of delusion.
3. Equally dangerous is it, to say that their most holy duties are sinful--that
"sin is mixed with all we do." What! Then John should have said--"Whosoever is
born of God commits sin daily and hourly, notwithstanding the seed of God
remaineth in him, for sin is mixed with all he does!" It is a palpable matter of
fact that whatever is holy is not sinful. Holiness is conformity to all
perceived obligation--it is an act of the will, and must be a unity. If then
holiness be a unity, a compliance with all perceived obligation, there is not
and cannot be sin mixed in it. Says Christ, "Ye cannot serve God and Mammon."
And James says--"For whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one
point, he is guilty of all." A person therefore, knowing obligation to rest on
him, and not discharging it, is living in sin and is not a Christian. It is in
vain to appeal to experience against the Bible.
4. All who live in the omission of duty or commission of what is contrary to
known truth, are living in habitual sin and are not Christians.
5. How infinitely different is the doctrine of this discourse, from the common
view, and what is generally inculcated. Said a celebrated minister in giving the
definition of a Christian--"He has a little grace and a great deal of devil."
Now where did such a sentiment as that come from? From the Bible? No. But from a
ruinous accommodation of the Bible to a false standard. And yet so current is
such a sentiment, that if you deny it, they look astonished, and say--"Why, I
guess you are a perfectionist." Now read the language of the Confession of Faith
of the Presbyterian Church, right along side of what John says. Says the
Confession of Faith--"No mere man since the fall, is able, either of himself, or
by any grace received in this life, perfectly to keep the commandments of God,
but doth daily break them in thought, word, and in deed."--And to this almost
all the standards of the Church agree. It is the common sentiment of the Church.
Now I would ask how this accords with what John says, in the text and in many
other places in this epistle? Let me say he is not here speaking of some
Christians who have made rare attainments, but of the common attainment. Now,
which is right? By which will you be tried at the Judgment? By the Bible or the
common standards? You know very well which.
6. When any, therefore, live in the omission of known duty, or commission of
what they know to be contrary to truth, we are bound to say they are not
Christians. This is not a want of charity but a love of the truth. Suppose an
infidel should meet you with the Bible in his hand and should point out what it
describes a Christian to be, and should ask you, "do you believe the Bible
speaks the truth?" And should then point to those Christians who live daily and
hourly in the omission of known duty, in a violation of perceived obligation,
and ask you if you believe they are Christians, what would you say? What would
you feel bound to say to maintain the honor of the Bible? The answer is plain.
The truth is, the common views on this subject are a flat denial of the Bible,
and are a ruinous accommodation to the experience of carnal professors.
7. Now, beloved, if this is so it becomes us, to ask ourselves, whether our
experience accords with the Bible or the popular standard. Not whether we think
we were converted some time ago, not what feelings we may have had: but are we
at present conformed to all the truth we know. Does the seed remain in us? The
test is a habitual perfection of moral character. He who has it is a Christian.
He who has it not is not a Christian. Now where are you? Where would you be to
night if summoned to the Judgment? Could you lay your hand on your heart and
say, "Lord Thou knowest all things, thou knowest that I love Thee?" Thou knowest
that my life is a life of conformity to all thy known will?
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