HOLINESS OF CHRISTIANS IN THE PRESENT LIFE --No. 5
Christian Warfare
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
from "The
Oberlin Evangelist" Publication of Oberlin College
Lecture V
March 1, 1843
.
Text.--Gal. 5:16, 17: "This I say
then, walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh. For
the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh: and
these are contrary the one to the other; so that ye cannot do the things ye
would."
This passage has been greatly misunderstood, or else the Apostle has
contradicted himself. Leaving out of view the 16th verse, and that the design of
the 17th is to assign the grounds of the assertion in the 16th, many of the
expounders of the Scriptures have understood the 17th to declare, that in
consequence of the flesh lusting against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the
flesh, persons who really wish to be holy cannot. So it has all along been
generally understood. Now I repeat, that if this interpretation be true, the
Apostle contradicts himself. The 16th positively asserts that those who walk in
the Spirit shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh. This interpretation of the
17th verse, makes him say, that in consequence of the opposition between the
flesh and the Spirit, those who walk in the Spirit, after all, cannot but
fulfill the lusts of the flesh. But this interpretation entirely overlooks the
fact, that the 17th verse is designed to establish the assertion made in the
16th. In the 16th, the Apostle says, "walk in the Spirit and ye shall not
fulfill the lusts of the flesh." Why? "Because," says he, "the flesh lusteth
against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh, and these are contrary the
one to the other," that is, they are opposites. What then? Why the obvious
inference, "that ye (that is, who walk in the Spirit,) cannot do the things that
ye would," in case you were not walking in the Spirit. In other words, you who
are walking in the Spirit cannot fulfill the lusts of the flesh. The simple
principle is, that you cannot walk after the Spirit, and fulfill the lusts of
the flesh at the same time, because it is impossible to perform two opposites at
once.
In further remarking on this text, I design to show,
I. What the Christian warfare does not consist in.
II. What it does consist in.
III. The difference between careless and convicted sinners.
IV. The difference between saints and convicted, but unconverted professors.
V. That a warfare would have existed if man had never sinned.
VI. To point out the causes of the aggravation of this warfare since the fall.
VII. How it may be modified and abated.
VIII. That it will, under a more or less modified form, continue while we are
in the body.
I. What the Christian warfare does not consist in.
- 1. It does not consist in a conflict between the will or heart, and the
conscience: for the Christian has a new heart, and the new heart and the
conscience are at one. The new birth consists in the will's rejection of
self-gratification as the supreme end, and adoption of the law of reason.
Therefore regeneration harmonizes the will and the conscience, for the
conscience is nothing else but the reason in a given function.
- 2. It does not consist in a war with inward sin, but with temptation. Some
persons talk about fighting with inbred sin. But what do they mean by such
language? I have no objection to such persons using such language, if they
will only tell what they mean, but the truth is, to talk of a Christian's
fighting with inbred sin, is to talk stark nonsense. What is sin? Sin is an
act of the will. It is choosing self-gratification in preference to the will
of God. This, and nothing else is sin. To talk therefore of fighting inbred
sin, is to talk of the will fighting itself. It is a choice warring upon
itself, than which nothing can be more absurd. We may fight with temptation,
but not with sin in ourselves.
II. In what the Christian warfare does consist.
- 1. It consists in a conflict between the will and the sensibility. By the
sensibility, as I have repeatedly said, is intended that primary faculty of
the mind to which all feelings, desires, and passions belong. The desires and
passions of the sensibility are generally called propensities. The Christians
warfare, is a warfare kept up between the will and these. For example: the
appetite for food seeks its own gratification, and so do all the other
propensities of the mind. Inasmuch as gratification is the only end at which
the sensibility aims, it of course is blind to every thing else. It knows
nothing of measure or degree. To give the will up to the gratification of
these, therefore, is to subject it to a lawless power, and wholly to set aside
the law of God as revealed in the reason. This is sin, it is giving the will
up, to seek gratification for its own sake. This is the whole business of
sinners. But in regeneration, the will rejects the gratification of these for
its own sake, as an end, and gives itself up to the end demanded by the
reason: that is, to universal well-being. It takes ground right over against
these. But they still exist, and must be resisted. That the sensibility and
its susceptibilities still need a curb, after regeneration, is a matter of
universal experience with Christians, and is directly asserted in the Bible.
In the text the Apostle says, addressing Christians, "Walk in the Spirit and
ye shall not obey the lusts of the flesh." The term flesh in the Apostle's
time, represented what we now mean by the sensibility. The reason why I use
the term sensibility rather than the term flesh, is I think it expresses the
idea intended more definitely at the present time. When a term which once
definitely expressed an idea, has, in the wear of time, become less exact, it
is our duty to adopt modern language representing the same idea. To express
the idea of the text, I would say, "Walk in the Spirit and ye shall not
fulfill the propensities of the sensibility."
- 2. The Christian warfare is a war between the will and Satan. It is his
great object to keep the will in subjection to the propensities of the
sensibility. Hence he directs all his efforts to arouse these propensities,
and through them to enslave the will.
- 3. This warfare is a warfare between the heart and the world. The world
presents ten thousand allurements on every hand, adapted to arouse the
propensities and to lead the will to gratify them. Against these allurements,
therefore, a war must be kept up.
- 4. It is a warfare against constitutional temperament. How many
temptations originate in peculiar temperaments; for example, in persons of
peculiarly sanguine and impetuous temperament, or of a nervous temperament.
Few have failed to observe the influence of temptation arising from this
source.
- 5. It is a warfare with habit. When habits have been formed, every one
knows the difficulty of overcoming them. Why is this? Because habit naturally
originates temptation and this temptation is great in proportion to the
strength of the habit.
- 6. It is a warfare with a polluted imagination. Many persons have kept
their imagination upon such objects, and brooded over them so long, that it
almost spontaneously creates the most polluting pictures and presents to the
will the most seductive conceptions. Who does not know this? A warfare must be
steadily maintained against all these creations of a polluted imagination.
- 7. It is a warfare with temptations arising from the law of association.
By the law of association, I mean that capacity of the mind by which one
thought suggests another, and that again another, until a whole series have
passed before the mind. Now where the associations are corrupt, they present
powerful temptations to the will, and with these a warfare must be maintained.
- 8. It is a warfare for the control of the attention and thoughts. How many
things there are in a world like this, within and without, to catch the
attention and carry off the thoughts and through them to arouse clamorous
temptations. Every one is aware, to a greater or less extent, of the effort
which it costs, in certain circumstances and relations, to restrain and keep
under control the thoughts and attention. All these temptations, in the last
analysis, arise in the sensibility, and Satan, the world, constitutional
temperament, polluted imagination, the law of association, and vagrant
thoughts are but different forms in which the susceptibilities of the
sensibility are peculiarly aroused and inflamed.
III. The difference between careless and convicted sinners.
- 1. The careless sinner has no warfare between his will and his sensibility
at all. He is not convicted of the evils of self gratification, and sees not
where his propensities are leading him. Hence he is led along without even
attempting resistance. The convicted sinner, on the contrary, sees the evil of
sin--that the reign of his propensities is a ruinous despotism from which he
must have deliverance. Hence he attempts to resist their demands, but is
continually overcome. All his efforts are unsuccessful and his resolutions are
blown away as chaff before the wind.
- 2. The careless sinner does not know what temptation is. While floating
upon the current he is unconscious of its strength, and because he moves with
it, even fancies that he does not move at all. But the convicted sinner has
learned its nature. He has become aware that he is floating on the stream of
death, and of the necessity of escaping from its current. He therefore
attempts to stem it, but finds it all in vain. He finds that when he would do
good, evil is present with him.
- 3. Careless sinners make no effort to amend, and consequently do not know
what resistance they would meet with if they should. They are like a man who
has been bound in his sleep, who even when he awakes remains ignorant of what
has been done and consequently makes no attempt to break his bonds. But the
convicted sinner does make strenuous efforts. He sees himself standing on a
slippery place from which he must immediately escape or perish. He is on an
inclined plane, moving rapidly towards the verge, from which he must plunge to
the depths of hell. He therefore makes mighty resolutions of amendment; but
without success. He slides downward with an accelerated ratio, finding that
the commandment which was ordained to life, is unto death, for sin taking
occasion by it, deceives and slays him.
- 4. Both are slaves, but the careless sinner is not aware of his bondage.
He knows not to what an imperious tyrant he is subject; but a convicted sinner
does. He sees that he is a captive sold under sin. He is alarmed, and exerts
himself to escape from his bondage. He arises to flee, but is overtaken by his
master, and dragged back to his service.
Such are the prominent differences between careless and convicted sinner.
The 7th of Romans is an illustration of the warfare of a convicted sinner.
IV. The difference between saints, and convicted but unconverted
professors and backsliders.
- 1. Both have constitutional appetites, passions, and propensities, which
are liable to be excited in the presence of those objects to which they are
correlated. Hence both are liable to temptation from these sources. These
appetites and propensities have in themselves, no moral character in either
case. Since they are wholly involuntary, how should they be sinful. A man
would be called deranged, who should talk of the appetite for food being
sinful. But it is as much so as any other appetite, desire, or propensity
whatever. Sin, therefore, neither in the true nor deceived professor, consists
in these, but in consenting to indulgence under forbidden circumstances.
- 2. Both see the necessity of resisting their excited appetites and
propensities, and both make resistance of some sort. But the Christian's
resistance is effectual. He holds them in subjection. This is the uniform
representation of the Bible. The text says, "walk in the Spirit, and ye shall
not fulfill the lusts of the flesh." So in Romans 6:14, it is said, "sin shall
not have dominion over you, for ye are not under the law, but under grace." On
the contrary, the unconverted professor or backslider's efforts are
ineffectual, and his temptations continually overcome him. In the 7th of
Romans, the Apostle is speaking of exactly this state. He is there putting a
case to show the ineffectual struggles of the mind attempting to overcome sin
by resolutions, but without love, and therefore uniformly overcome. Nothing
can be more certain than that the Apostle here designed to show that the law
could not sanctify the mind. He is manifestly speaking, all along in the
chapter, of the relations of the law to the selfish mind. When he says I, he
merely supposes it to be his own case as an illustration, just as any other
speaker or writer often does. We say I, not intending to describe our present
actual state, but to set the case before the mind of those we address. The
representation undeniably is, that he is continually overcome of temptation,
which in the 8th chapter, and in numberless other places in the Bible, is
denied to be true of a real Christian. The truth is, this chapter is an exact
history of the experience of every mind laboring under conviction, and I may
add, it is the exact opposite of the gospel experience.
- 3. The unconverted professor or backslider's heart is with the temptation.
This is the real difficulty with him, and his conscience only distresses and
leads him to wish and resolve, in opposition to the real choice of his heart.
Now while his heart remains devoted to self-gratification, of course all the
resolutions and efforts which he makes in opposition to it, must be without
love, and therefore legal. They are wrung out of him by the action of his
conscience arousing his fears, and since his heart remains unchanged, and
since the heart or ultimate intention always governs the conduct, his
resolutions always fail of course. It is impossible that any resolution or
effort should stand and be effectual against the supreme preference of the
will. But the Christian's heart, on the contrary, is with his conscience, and
therefore his resistance is effectual. Since he really chooses what his reason
demands, temptation is in direct opposition to his supreme choice, and if he
yield to it, it must be by a radical change of his ultimate intention. He is
therefore able to put down temptation, and to keep it under his feet.
- 4. The convicted professor resolves and tries in the absence of love, and
of course fails and is overcome, but the Christian does not make resolutions.
He has tried them effectually and found that they avail nothing. Perhaps there
never was a sinner converted, nor a backslider restored, until he had tried
his resolutions and legal efforts so thoroughly as to be compelled to give
them up, absolutely despairing of ever escaping by them. But when he has used
up all his own stock, and finds himself totally bankrupt, then he will come to
Christ for capital--he goes directly to Him as the only deliverer. This leads
him away from himself, renders him benevolent, and makes him free. While,
therefore, the legalist depends on watchfulness, prayer, and resolutions, to
keep him from falling under temptation, the Christian knows better and depends
wholly on the strength of Christ.
- 5. The unconverted professor or backslider calls upon Christ, and thinks
he depends upon Him, but in fact, he really knows not what dependence is,
while the true Christian actually depends on Christ. It is remarkable that
those who have no faith call themselves in their prayers, poor creatures, make
their promises, tell Christ they will trust Him, and yet after all do not
overcome. But the true Christian knows he once made this mistake, and now
makes it no more. He now knows what it is to depend on Christ by faith, and by
love to serve Him. He is sustained by the love of God shed abroad in his heart
by the Holy Spirit.
V. A warfare would have existed had man never sinned.
- 1. Because the constitutional appetites and susceptibilities would have
existed. They did exist before the fall, otherwise our first parents could not
have fallen. In our mother Eve, for example, these appetites could be excited
into a temptation by their appropriate objects; otherwise, objects of
temptation might as well be presented to this table. These excited
susceptibilities had no moral character in themselves, they were excited in
her, in her pure state, and if she had resisted them she would not have
sinned. So they would have existed in all the race if we never had fallen, and
in presence of their appropriate objects would have invited the will to seek
their gratification. They are an inherent part of the constitution, and all
moral beings, doubtless, find it necessary to curb them in conformity to the
demands of their higher nature. Satan and all his angels actually fell under
the temptation which they presented to them; and, as I showed in my last
lecture, every child, in beginning to act morally, does the same.
- 2. Temptation, under some form, may, and doubtless will exist forever. As
long as moral beings have constitutions, this must be so always, and in all
worlds. As we have already said, Satan and all his angels, and our first
parents were actually tempted in their holy state, and we know that Jesus
Christ was, and had a mighty warfare--to such a degree as to have no appetite
for food, and to seek the wilderness in his distress, just as you and I have
often, under similar circumstances, gone into the woods or some other
seclusion to be alone. What Christians has not often felt so? They are beset
so tremendously, and such a struggle created, that they can have no peace day
nor night, and often seek a place where they can give vent to their prayers or
groans alone. Thus was Christ tempted, and thus, in his warfare, did He fly
from the face of man and seek the solitude of the wilderness, where He might
contest the point even unto death. He seems to have been assaulted in all the
weakest points of human nature, and when, in his agony, He had fasted till He
was well nigh famished, then He was besieged through his appetite for food,
and in every other way the devil could invent, until he saw it was all in vain
and left Him. The apostle says, "He was tempted in all points like as we are,
yet without sin." It is in vain then, to think that temptation is peculiar to
a fallen state, and if men had understood this, they never would have fallen
into the ridiculous blunder, of calling their constitutional susceptibilities
indwelling sin. They would have taught men to control and regulate, rather
than call the nature God has given them, sinful.
VI. Several causes that have aggravated this warfare.
- 1. The sensibility originally responded with equal integrity to all the
perceptions of the mind, whether of sense or reason. It was alike susceptible
to all its objects. We all know that when we look at certain objects,
corresponding feelings begin to glow in the sensibility. For example, if we
look at a beautiful object, the corresponding feelings will naturally be
awakened. Now all the susceptibility of the constitution, were naturally
equally linked to their objects, and excited with equal ease, by the
perception of these objects. The sensibility responded with equal readiness,
to an affirmation of duty, as to an object of sensual desire. It was not
clamorous, and uproarous, in any thing, but duly and sweetly balanced.
- 2. But it is capable of sudden and monstrous developments in any given
direction. To explain myself; Suppose a mother loses her child. There is a
sudden crash, and in a moment her little blooming babe, lies before her face
pale in death. Now what will be the effects of this? Why, always afterwards,
the sight of a dead child will produce a greater effect on her sensibility,
than it ever did before. She indeed used to be affected--even to tears; but
now such a sight seems to absorb her whole sensibility--she stands convulsed
whenever she looks upon it, and sobs, and pours forth her scalding tears like
rain. Now why is this? Because there is such a development of her sensibility
in that direction as to overbalance every thing else. She sits, thinking and
weeping, and goes sighing about the house, and every object her eye rests on
connected with her darling, opens up anew the subject of her grief. Just so it
is in other things. The susceptibility to fear may be instanced. A man is
thrown from a horse, or run away with his wagon, in circumstances of great
danger, and he is peculiarly fearful in similar circumstances all his life
after. Perhaps his house is enveloped in flames when he awakes in the night,
and it is with great difficulty he makes his escape. Now this event may bring
his sensibility into such a relation to fires, that all his life after,
whenever the fire bells ring, he is thrown into a tempest of agitation, and
finds it as much as he can do to control himself. It is said of a young man,
one of those who escaped from the Erie, which was burnt on Lake Erie several
months since, that he cannot even hear it named, without going well nigh
distracted. I am now speaking of facts which every one knows respecting
monstrous developments of the sensibility, and these facts incontestably prove
that the balance of the sensibility may be destroyed. Now whenever such a
development exists, it seems to put out the eyes of the sensibility on the
other subjects, so that such persons don't feel as much respecting them as
formerly. The mother, in the case supposed, will never feel towards multitudes
of other things as she formerly did, and so it is in every case, in exact
proportion to the strength of this absorbing peculiarity of feeling.
- 3. In most cases, the sensibility is greatly developed in respect to
objects of sense, and very slightly in respect to truths revealed by the
reason. In presence of objects of sense, every one knows how readily the
feelings respond to such objects. I need not stop to illustrate this. On the
other hand, it is equally known that the Reason itself is but slightly
developed, and the sensibility which was originally designed to wake up and
respond, with instant readiness, to reason's voice, is scarcely disturbed into
unquietness by its loudest utterance. Now why is this? Because the monstrous
development of the sensibility, respecting objects of sense, has turned its
eyes away from the reason and its demands. It has given all its love to
sensual objects; and this has greatly aggravated the power of temptation
arising from such objects.
- 4. In some, one appetite or passion is more largely developed, and in
others, some other; hence, one has, as we say, a passion for one thing, and
another, for another. One, for example, has a passion for money, or for
company, or for novel reading, or for gaming; but cares very little for
traveling, or intemperance, or licentiousness; but almost every one has some
ruling object of gratification to which his sensibility peculiarly responds,
and the stronger this passion, or monstrous [its] development becomes, the
more certain it is mightily to influence the will, and of course to be an
aggravated temptation.
- 5. The imagination of some is greatly polluted. They allowed themselves to
read such books, to converse on such subjects, and to muse on, or perhaps
mingle in, such scenes, as have filled their associations with the most fiery
combustibles, and the least incident kindles the sensibility, through these,
into a flame, and temptation is thus greatly aggravated.
- 6. A diseased nervous system is often the source of great temptations.
Perhaps there is scarcely any one whose nervous system is not, in some degree,
diseased, but in some it is peculiarly so. Now, since the mind developes
itself through the nervous system, and an intimate connection exists between
them, it often happens, that the nerves become the source of the fiercest
temptations. Cases have come under my observation most strikingly illustrating
this point.
- 7. Another source of aggravated temptation is, that the will has not
subjected the thoughts, appetites, desires, and passions to its control.
Instead of controlling, it has consented to them in almost all their demands,
except where they conflicted one with the other, so that the mind was
compelled to choose between them. Now it is of vast importance that the will
should early acquire the ascendency and control of all the susceptibilities,
and this it may be taught to do as readily as any thing else that will
accomplishes. Many do not seem to see this. Now how is it that the will of a
human being gets possession of any of his own powers and susceptibilities? The
process is easily seen. See the child--at first it hardly knows how to move
any of its muscles, and it is not till after sundry efforts that it can
control its little hands. Next it undertakes to walk, but it dont[sic.] know
how, and must learn how to control its voluntary muscles. But by many efforts
it at last succeeds in getting them under its voluntary control. So with the
use of its tongue. All the various uses and movements to which the tongue is
appropriated are actually learned, and to control it by the will, is as much
an art, as the movement of an organist's fingers is an art. Thus a continual
effort is going on in the child, to get itself under its own control, and its
succeeds respecting its physical powers, but does not get the control of its
mental susceptibilities. Now why is this? Because there is a defect in its
training, and not because there is naturally an insuperable difficulty in the
one case more than the other. That he can, to some extent, acquire control of
his mental powers, is well known. What is the object of sending the child to
school? To discipline his mind. One of the great difficulties with
undisciplined minds is that they have not mastered themselves, but in process
of time they will acquire such self-control as to concentrate attention for
hours on the driest mathematical problems. But having never attempted, nor
acquired the art of controlling the various propensities of the sensibility,
the full grown man finds himself at as great a puzzle to regulate them, as the
infant is to control his muscles. He has not learned the art, and hence in
their turbulent outbreaks, they are continual temptations.
- 8. As I have already intimated, the fact that the reason is so very
slightly developed, gives the sensibility with all its monstrous developments
full swing. By the reason I mean that power of the mind by which it reveals
and imposes the law of benevolence upon itself, and also the application of
this law as fast as new relations are discovered. Now where moral relations
are not sought after, nor the attention given to the affirmations of the
reason, of course, it must remain in very slight development. I wish here to
notice a subject which every body sees, but which is peculiarly delicate. It
is said that females generally are influenced by feelings, but not by reason.
A certain gentleman said of his wife, if I wish to carry her will, I can never
do it by reasoning with her, but must always appeal to her feelings. The
question is, why is this? Not because they have not reason, not because it
cannot be developed in them to operate as powerfully as in the other sex, but
because for ages, their whole training has been directly calculated to develop
their sensibility, until, as it is said, they are a bundle of nerves, and
their reason left to remain uncultivated and undeveloped. Now the same is true
of men. Were their reason but developed as it should be, you might throw off a
string of self-evident propositions, as fast as an auctioneer would knock off
articles under the hammer, and they would without difficulty, at once perceive
their truth. But as things are, they dont[sic.] perceive them. Why? Because,
while there is a monstrous development of their sensibility, their rational
development is almost wholly neglected, and now instead of influencing them by
simply appealing to their reason, you find such labor all in vain, unless you
can also powerfully arouse their sensibility in favor of the object you are
enforcing.
- 9. Another thing which has aggravated this warfare, is the manner in which
parents train their children. In most cases, their training is exactly adapted
to monstrously develop certain appetites and passions. Instead of parents, and
others who have the care of children watching over them and keeping them from
circumstances, and conduct calculated to arouse their sensibility unduly, they
give them up to just about as much excitement as possible, until the
sensibility becomes so outrageous in its demands as to carry the will in favor
of whatever it demands.
- 10. These and other things which I might mention, show how fearfully that
warfare is aggravated, which the Christian, in becoming such, enters upon with
temptation. I may add to the above specifications the fact that parents have
entailed diseases on their children, which continually operate to tempt their
will to sin.
VII. How this warfare may be modified and abated.
- 1. By restoring health. If health be restored, of course all the
temptations arising from disease will disappear.
- 2. By the development of the Reason. As the Reason wakes up, the
sensibility begins also to be developed in the same direction. This is the
very way in which persons become awakened and convicted, and after conversion,
in proportion as the Reason lays cross breaks in the way of the sensual
propensities, is their strength and tendency broken and subdued.
- 3. This warfare may be especially abated and modified by a great
development of the sensibility, produced by a revelation of the love of
Christ. It is often the case when the character of God in Christ comes to be
apprehended in its true light it leaves no room for any thing else. The Reason
stands on tip-toe, gazing steadfastly with its intuitive eye, and the
sensibility turns its whole surface right out to receive the full impress of
such a glorious vision. I recollect the case of a very ungodly man, who seemed
to take delight in manifesting the highest contempt for religion. His wife was
a professor of religion, but he opposed and forbade her attending meeting at a
time of a revival in the church. He went so far, and things came to such a
pass, that he could no longer find material and opportunity to keep himself in
sport, and finally one day thought he would go to meeting that evening, and
see if he could find something there to make sport about, especially as he
heard a great many things about the meeting that seemed to him to promise such
a result. Just before meeting time his wife went to her closet and poured out
all her heart to God, and prayed Him to open the way for her to go to meeting.
As she came out she met her husband, and he asked her if she wanted to go to
meeting that night. Astonished, and rejoiced, she was soon ready, and they
were off. While the minister was preaching, the man's attention was arrested,
and about the middle of the sermon, he groaned out and fell down in his seat.
He was in such agony, it seemed as if he would die, and the sermon was
arrested. He exclaimed, over and over, "Oh Jesus, how I have abused
Thee!"--until at last, his agitation passed off, leaving him in a state of
most perfect submission. Now here was a case, where by the manifestation of
his character, God as it were, almost immediately revolutionized a man. He
said it was a view of the character of God in Christ which produced the
effect. By degrees his convictions rapidly arose, until he could endure it no
longer, and when he bowed his will, it seemed as though God said to all the
propensities which formerly ruled him--"peace, be still"--and he has been a
flaming light ever since. His tongue seems to be tuned with the praises of
God. I have known him long and he seems always the same. Doubtless his warfare
was greatly abated by that apprehension of the character of God in Christ. I
know the effect of this by my own experience. When I was converted, for some
time I did not know that I had any appetite left, all my susceptibilities
seemed so perfectly absorbed in the things of the gospel. And in all this
there is nothing strange. It is perfectly natural and just what might be
expected.
- 4. There is one truth particularly which when the Spirit has revealed it
to the mind, seems forever after to exert a powerful influence on the
sensibility, and that is the relation of the death of Christ to our sins.
People often talk about the Atonement, without seeming to understand its real
meaning, and especially its relation to their own sins. But let them once see
that their own sins actually caused his death, and where's the mind that can
contemplate the fact unmoved? I have known that single thought to excite all
the nerves into a quiver, and as it were, set the sensibility all on fire, so
as to throw a strong man almost in a fit of apoplexy.
VIII. This warfare will, under a more or less modified form, continue
while we are in the body.
Some have supposed that when persons are entirely sanctified, all the passions,
desires and appetites of the sensibility will impel the will in the same
direction that the reason does, invariably; but such persons do not know what
they say, for all their propensities seek their objects for their own sake, and
are blind to every thing else. They always and necessarily urge the will to seek
their respective objects for the sake of the gratification. This is temptation,
and creates a warfare. The appetite for food, for example, seeks food for its
own sake, and so does the desire of knowledge. It is nonsense, then, to say that
they will not solicit the will to gratify them under improper circumstances. But
when the mind is entirely sanctified, instead of the various propensities
creating such a fiery and turbulent warfare when excited, the will will have
them under such control as to easily keep their places, so that all the actions
will be bland and tranquilized. The most that will or can be done is to
harmonize them, and it is by no means desirable that they should be annihilated.
Suppose, for example, the desire for knowledge were annihilated. What a calamity
would that be? Or the desire for food. The truth is, all the constitutional
desires should remain. They were all given for useful purposes, and all call for
their appropriate objects, for food, for knowledge, &c., and are thus constantly
feeling after those things which are essential to our existence, and that of our
race. Besides to regulate them is a good exercise for the will, and it is
difficult to see how a mind could be virtuous at all, were all the
susceptibilities of its sensibility destroyed; and were any of them removed, it
would doubtless be a great evil, otherwise God was not benevolent in our
creation, and did not make us in the best way.
REMARKS.
1. The common notion of warring with inward sin is nonsensical and impossible.
Those who use such language confound temptation with sin. They call their
natural appetites and propensities sinful, and when resisting these, they say
they are indwelling sin, and multitudes, doubtless, mistake the actions of the
conscience, its warnings and reproofs, for the resistance of the heart to
temptation. The truth is, the Christian warfare consists in a struggle between
the will and temptations from without and within, and in nothing else.
2. The deceived professor's warfare is between his heart and his reason or
conscience. His heart is devoted to self-gratification, and the reason
constantly disapproves of and denounces the service as wrong, and thus a
continual struggle is kept up within, between his heart and reason, and this he
calls the Christian warfare. If so, every sinner has the Christian warfare, and
doubtless the devil also.
3. The Christian overcomes in his warfare. This is an habitual fact. Rom. 6:14.
"For sin shall not have dominion over you, for ye are not under the law but
under grace." Also 8:1-4. See also the text and context, besides numberless
other passages directly asserting the same thing.
4. What a ruinous mistake it is to suppose the 7th of Romans to be Christian
experience. I hesitate not to say that it has been the occasion of the
destruction of more souls than almost any other mistake in the world. It is
fundamentally to mistake the very nature of true religion.
5. The warfare of the true Christian greatly strengthens his virtue. When he is
greatly tried and obligated to gather up all his energy to maintain his
integrity, when he wrestles, until he is all in a perspiration, with some fiery
trial, as it is sometimes necessary for him to do, it must be that when he comes
out from such a scene as this, his virtue is greatly strengthened and improved.
6. We can see, from this subject, why sinners often doubt the reality of
temptation, and when they hear Christians talk of their temptations, they think
that Christians must be worse than they, for they do not experience such. But
the reason why they are not conscious of temptations is because they have not
attempted to regulate their propensities by the law of God. A man floating on a
current is not conscious of its strength until he turns round and attempts to
stem it. The same principle applies to those professors of religion who
entertain the same doubts. Talk about temptation! Why, they say, I am not so
tempted. Indeed! Perhaps you have never done any thing else but to yield to it.
7. See why the Apostle said so much about the opposition of the flesh and
Spirit. He represents them as at hostility, throughout his epistles, especially
in the 6th, 7th, and 8th chapters of Romans.
8. Many struggle for a while in their own strength, and, through continued
failures, become discouraged, and give it up. The temptations of their appetites
and propensities are too strong for them, while they have not leamed by faith to
derive strength from Christ.
9. Many despair of ever becoming sanctified, because they suppose their
constitutional propensities are, in themselves, sinful. They say it is in vain
to talk of entire sanctification in this life, and well they may say so, if
their constitutional appetites and propensities are sinful, for we know of no
promise that our nature shall be revolutionized in this life or the next.
10. Others are brought into distress and despair because they cannot control
their thoughts when their will is weary. The will is that power of the mind
which originates all that control which it is possible for the mind to exert
over itself. But it becomes weary, or perhaps it would be more correct to say,
that the brain, through which it acts, grows weary and wants rest. In sleep, the
will is suspended, and hence in dreams the thoughts run lawless and without
direction. It is a matter of experience with students who study hard, and for a
long time, that they find it extremely difficult, after long and severe
application to keep their attention and thoughts on their studies. Why? Because
their will is wearied out, and needs rest. So it is with Christians who
undertake to pray when they are jaded out with weariness. Their thoughts fly
every where. They try to restrain their wanderings; they struggle, and, for a
moment seem to get the control, and then they lose it again. They try it over
and over again, but with no better success, until they are well nigh in despair.
Now, what is the matter? They need rest, and ought to take it rather than
attempt to force their jaded will into action. Let your will rest. God will have
mercy and not sacrifice. What's the use, when a man has walked sixty miles in a
day, and his will can scarcely force his exhausted muscles into further action,
of his attempting to use them further, and blaming himself because he cannot?
Suppose a man should never go to sleep for fear he should dream and his thoughts
ramble heedless of his will! Why call such things sin? Don't mistify forever and
mix up sin and holiness, light and darkness, heaven and hell, so that people
cannot tell which is which.
11. Some bring forward, the fact that this warfare is presented as continuing,
as an argument against the doctrine of sanctification. Just as if a soul in
order to be sanctified must get beyond a warfare! What! Then Adam was not
sanctified before he sinned, nor Satan; nor was Jesus Christ while on earth, for
it is a simple matter of fact that He had temptation. What would you think of
the argument, if it should be said that Jesus Christ had a warfare and therefore
he was not wholly sanctified? And yet it would be just as good as this.
12. However sharp the conflict, if the soul prevails there is no sin. What
trials had Jesus Christ? But He prevailed. "He was tempted in all points like we
are, yet without sin." So if temptation should rush like a tornado upon any of
you, if you will only hold on, and fight it out, you have not sinned. Nay the
sharper the conflict, the greater the virtue of resistance.
13. The saints are no doubt preparing in this world for some high stations of
usefulness, and where they may be exposed to strong temptations. I infer this
from the fact that they are placed here in such circumstances as are exactly
calculated to ripen and fit them for such a destiny. God never acts without
design, and He surely has some design in this.
14. The sanctified are sometimes in heaviness through manifold temptations if
need be. Now don't infer, if you see them so, that they are not holy. Christ had
His sorrows, and knew what it was to resist even unto blood, striving against
temptation to sin; and the servant need not expect to fare better than his Lord.
The truth is, these trials are useful--they are but for a moment, but they
prepare for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory. Sorrows endure
for the night but joy cometh in the moming. Under the pressure of the
temptations the soul is in an agony, and cries out "Help, Oh Lord, help," and He
comes forth and scatters the insulting foe, and the soul bounds up like a
rocket, giving glory to God.
15. Many have supposed for a time their enemies were dead, but were mistaken.
The fact is they are never dead in such a sense, that we do not need to watch
lest we enter into temptation. But let us never overlook the distinction between
temptation and sin, and ever keep in mind that the Christian warfare in not with
sin, but temptation. Nor forget that Christ alone can give us the victory. O for
the Spirit of Christ to baptize the Ministers and the Churches.
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