HOLINESS OF CHRISTIANS IN THE PRESENT LIFE --No. 10
Fulness There is in Christ
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
from "The
Oberlin Evangelist" Publication of Oberlin College
Lecture X
July 5, 1843
.
Text.--Col. 2:9, 10:
"For in Him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily. And ye are
complete in Him, which is the head of all principality and power."
The connection in which this text stands, shows that the Apostle is laboring
to establish the distinction between an outside legal religion, and religion by
faith in Christ. For this purpose, he warns them in verse eight to "beware lest
any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of
men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ." And in the
twentieth verse, by an earnest and solemn appeal, he strives to tear them away
from "subjection to ordinances after the commandments and doctrines of men."
Indeed the main design of the whole epistle was to shut up the Colossians to the
religion of faith, and cut them off from that of legality.
In the present discussion it is my design to show--
I. What is not intended by the declaration that Christians are complete
in Christ.
II. What is intended.
III. To point out some things which are demanded by our nature, circumstances,
and character, in order to complete well-being.
IV. The conditions on which this completeness may be realized in our own
experience.
I. What is not intended by the declaration that Christians are complete in
Christ.
- 1. When it is said we are complete in Him it is not intended that we are
complete in the sense of an imputed righteousness. The other evening, you will
recollect, I labored to show that the doctrine of imputation is at once an
absurd and pernicious dogma. It is not necessary here to dwell on that point
again. It is enough to say that God could no more perform works of
supererogation than any other moral being, and that therefore there could be
no righteousness to impute. Moreover, a transfer of moral character is
naturally impossible.
- 2. It is not intended that all Christians have, as a matter of fact, so
received Christ, as to realize this completeness in their own character and
experience; nor is it asserted in the text that any body ever did or ever
will.
II. What is intended.
It is intended that in Him all the demands of our being are met--that a full
provision is made, and set forth by God to meet all our wants, and make us all
that God desires we should be.
III. Some things which are demanded by our nature, circumstances, and
character, in order to complete well being.
The question is, what do men really need--what must belong to a Savior in order
to his being a Savior to us such as we need?
- 1. Our nature and circumstances expose us to innumerable trials and
temptations. I have dwelt, in these lectures, to a great extent on the trials
arising from our peculiar nature in the circumstances in which we are placed.
None are exempt from them. Even in the garden of Eden, man's nature and
circumstances occasioned trial. Nor is this, on the whole, to be regretted.
Such trials are to our advantage if we use the help afforded us in meeting
them. They "work out for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory."
But as a matter of fact, the circumstances are such, and men have so abused
their nature, that the trials which they endure are extremely great, and the
help which they need must be both adapted and adequate to meet all their wants
in this respect.
- 2. Our frailties and infirmities are great, in consequence of our long
abuse of ourselves. All the appetites and passions are greatly aggravated in
their demands; the nervous system rasped up to the highest pitch; the habits
inveterate; each successive generation placed under some additional
besetments: until like the reed, man is liable to be swayed by every breeze,
or carried adrift on the ocean of life, like a vessel torn from its moorings,
and driven by a tempest. Hence, we need strength for our frailty, and grace
sufficient for our infirmity.
- 3. Our ignorance is very great, and since men are influenced by motives,
they can be influenced towards God and holiness, only in proportion as they
are enlightened. The motives to sin are bold and obtrusive and seen by the
ignorant, but the reverse is true of motives to holiness. Hence men must have
a Savior able to enlighten and charm them away from the influence of things
seen and temporal, and bring them under the influence of things unseen and
eternal. The longer I live, the more I am astonished at the ignorance of men
in reference of religious truths. Even Christians scarcely know their A, B, C.
Very few of them are able to give any good reason for the doctrines of their
faith. Hence, the great mass of them readily receive dogmas published by the
press, and promulgated from the pulpit, which, to thinking minds, are palpably
at war with human reason. Take, for example, the doctrine of imputed
righteousness. Is it not astonishing that it was not at once seen that there
can be no work of supererogation and of course no righteousness to be imputed?
What more could God do than benevolence demanded of Him? The Atonement and all
his other works are virtuous, only because they are carrying out the law of
benevolence. Jesus Christ was bound to be benevolent as much as any other
being, and of course his righteousness could no more be imputed, than that of
any other holy moral agent--no more than Gabriel's. Now, how does it happen,
how can it be that men should believe such an absurd dogma as this, unless
from sheer ignorance? Why the whole gospel is another gospel if this doctrine
be true. It was Christ's object to save men from their sins, and not to throw
over their filthy, ulcerated backs, a robe of imputed righteousness. I call it
ignorance to hold such a dogma, because an intelligent being understanding it,
and the objections to it, can't believe it. And this is but a specimen of many
other things equally gross which are sanctified in the creeds and common faith
of the mass of the Church. It is full of superstition, errors, and ignorance
on a thousand subjects. The reformation cast off many, but many were left,
some of which time has outgrown, and others yet remain. Now, we only get
right, by getting an insight into the gospel. It is truth coming in that
thrusts error out, and we therefore need somebody to deliver us, to teach us
the very A, B, C, of religion. We want some patient instructer [sic.] who will
be willing to teach us over and over even the same things. "What's that?" "A."
"What's that?" "B." Now go back to A again, and ask, "What's that?" "I don't
know," says the pupil. "Well," says the kind hearted teacher, "That's A," and
thus, again and again, till he remembers it. Thus Christians need to be
instructed by some kind agent who will not tear their souls, and sternly frown
them away, but who will sooth them all down into love, and then gently remove
their errors, and ingraft the word of truth.
- 4. We have a subtle adversary of great power and malignity. It has become
unpopular to say much about the devil, people have become so incredulous
respecting his existence. This state of things is doubtless the result of his
infernal agency, since, if men doubt his existence, they will the more readily
become his prey. But the Bible holds other language. It requires men to pass
the time of their sojourning here with fear--"to be sober and vigilant;
because our adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking
whom he may devour." It represents him as possessing great subtlety, and being
ready to take ten thousand advantages, even turning himself into an angel of
light, to delude and destroy souls. And what man is able to resist him?--to
detect all the villanies and sophistries of a mind as old and malevolent as
his? I have often felt that the devil would just as certainly have my soul, in
spite of all my endeavors against him, if Christ did not save me, as I
existed. As well expect to escape a devouring lion, whose strong power had
already encompassed you about. Who has not found that sometimes the devil has
made a lie appear so much like truth, that we would be ready to take an oath
it was truth. No doubt ten thousand times, persons have thought the Lord was
leading them, when in fact, it was the devil who had involved them in a web of
lies and sophistries, and was hurrying them on to the precipice of ruin. Now,
a man who does not know these things, will never make much effort to get away
from him. From him? From thousands of them, all leagued to destroy. Who can
protect us? Our Christian journey lies all the way through an enemy's country,
and throngs of devils are prowling about on all sides, and if the Lord does
not deliver us the devil will have the whole of us.
- 5. Our education, habits, and prejudices all give him a decided advantage
over us. He has been weaving his web of villanies and lies for thousands of
years, and with all his profound experience, great mental capacity, and
legions of compeers, he is able to weave his devilish plots into everything.
You cannot have a benevolent society, but he must have a hand in it--even if
you are getting up a Bible Society, his counsel and agency must have a place.
He has a corner at every Missionary meeting and carefully watches its
workings. Any one who will look narrowly into those which are professedly the
most benevolent projects of the day can scarcely fail to see that the devil
has a hand in them, and is exercising his infernal craft to pervert them to
evil.
If I had time to take up the habits, opinions, &c., of society generally, I
could show snares and pitfalls, and ambushes arranged with wonderful subtlety
and adaptation, and awfully effective for the ruin of mankind. These are not
less manifest in family and even individual relations, and at all peculiar
crises of life, taking advantage of habits and education and susceptibilities
to work out the endless overthrow of men.
Again, I ask how can we escape him? Who can deliver us? We need a wiser and a
mightier than he to defeat him and to effect our escape.
- 6. We need a propitiation for our sins who will render it consistent for
God to pardon us. What is the reason that the governor of this state felt a
difficulty in pardoning Colt? Because it feared the influence it would have to
loosen the bands of society. It was not an unwillingness to gratify him, nor a
desire to gratify any malevolent feelings, but lest it should thereby
strengthen the bands of wickedness. So in the government of God. Pardon must
not be extended to sinners unless on such grounds as will not impair, but
uphold the influence of the government. Something must be done to propitiate
as the gospel calls it--there must be an atonement, or sin could not be
forgiven without the greatest danger to the public interests, and God could
not be just in exercising pardon. There must then be a Savior who could make
an atonement and thus meet this necessity.
- 7. We need an influence that can break our hearts and bring us to
repentance--not only to atone for, but to reclaim us. That is a very slim
gospel, which merely pardons men, and then leaves them to achieve their own
victories over the world, the flesh, and the devil. It would never save any
man. We need a gospel which will come to us where we are, break up the deep
foundations of our selfishness, and transform us to love.
- 8. Not only do we need thus to be initiated into the spirit of the gospel,
but kept all along the way to glory. We need a Savior who will watch over us
till He gets us within the sacred enclosure. Should He forsake us, even at
Heaven's golden gate, we should turn away and go back to hell. We must be
placed safely within to be secure.
- 9. But, in order thus to keep us, He must possess such surpassing
loveliness, and radiate such charms, as to draw away the soul from all other
fascinations and lovers. He must be able, as it were, to make us sick of love,
so that we would follow Him through any trials, and all seductive influences,
unattracted by any of them, from our stedfast devotion to his love. We need
somebody to draw us. If God should flash his livid lightnings, and hurl his
blazing thunderbolts upon us; if He should roll up into our faces the lurid
fires of perdition, it might amaze and horrify us, but it would do no good--it
would not draw us to Him--it would not call out our love. When Elijah passed
by Elisha, he cast his mantle upon him, and forth with, Elisha left the oxen
and all, and went after Elijah. I have often thought it seemed to charm him.
So Christ, as He passes by a soul, seems, shall I say, so to bewitch it, that
it would seem as if He could lead it even through hell. I do not know but He
could. If circumstances demand the sacrifice, it would kiss his cross, and
say, drive your nails and crucify me. I willingly endure it for Christ's sake,
"who loved me and gave Himself for me." Oh, we do not want a legal Savior, but
one "in whom dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily," in whom we are
complete, whose beauties can ravish and enchain our hearts. What is a
Unitarian Savior good for? Pooh! Not such do we need, but one who can so
captivate us, that if a thousand racks and gibbets stood in the way, they
would not deter us from following Him whithersoever He goeth.
- 10. In short, we need a Savior able and willing to save us, and not only
in eternity, but here in this world. We need Him daily, and unless we have
such a one, we must constantly wallow in the gutters of iniquity, and its
consequent misery. We need our every want met, and our souls made complete in
all the will of God--to be filled with his fulness.
IV. The conditions on which this completeness may be received and realized
by us, in our own experience.
- 1. One condition is a realization of our necessities. The Lord Jesus
Christ said to one of the churches of Asia--"Because thou sayest--I am rich,
and increased with goods, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou
art wretched and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked; I counsel thee to
buy of me gold tried in the fire, that thou mayest be rich; and white raiment
that thou mayest be clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not
appear; and anoint thine eyes with eye-salve, that thou mayest see." Now
observe, one grand defect in the way of people, is that they are so full in
themselves, and so increased in goods in their own estimation, as to fail
wholly to discover that they are in need of Christ in all things--that their
necessities are as vast as the wants of their whole being. This they must
realize.
- 2. Another condition is, that we must realize, that in Him we have all we
need. Now people often admit this in words, but not in fact. They often think
there is something so peculiar in their case, in their habits, education,
relations, or trials, that Christ cannot save them. They seem to think Christ
can save everybody else but them. But they must understand that they are
complete in Him whatever are their relations, trials, habits and
circumstances. This they must realize.
- 3. Another condition, is the renunciation of self-dependence in all
respects. A man must not depend on his learning, his own philosophical
insight, or anything else, or He will never depend on Christ. He must become a
fool that he may be wise. Just as far as he thinks he can get along without
Christ, he will get along without Him, but it will be away from God. When an
individual has so much of self-dependence, he really has no faith in the
existence of God, nor in his attributes. Self-dependence is allied to
infidelity. "Every good, and every perfect gift, cometh down from the Father
of light." Should God withhold from us that which we are dependent on Him for,
nothing but certain destruction would ensue. This dependence runs through all
moral as well as natural life, and it must be felt and acknowledged.
- 4. You must despair of finding help anywhere else. While a man runs to any
and everybody, and puts more confidence in men than in God, he may go to the
best man on earth, to an apostle, or an angel, and it will avail him nothing.
He might as well go to a child, as far as any efficient help is concerned. I
have told sinners sometimes, I won't pray for you, nor have anything to do
with you, if you are going to depend on me, and put me in the place of the
Savior. Away with you to Christ if you want help. Some of the last years that
I labored as an evangelist, the church depended on me so much, that it cost me
more effort to get them to look to God, than to perform the requisite labor to
convert sinners, and it is so now. I was afraid to come here on this account,
and feel now, brethren, that you have depended on me, more than you have any
right to. It is a species of trusting in an arm of flesh which God abhors.
Many will flee to books, to anything, and sometimes even to the Bible, and put
it in the place of God, and cleave to such vain help, until God compels them
to look to Himself alone.
- 5. You must cease to rest in means of any kind. I do not mean that we must
cease to use means as means, but they are not to be put in the place of God,
or substituted for a Savior. I wish I could impress it on you, how much
professors of religion and all men, trust to means more than God, and put them
in the place of Christ. You must cease from this entirely, if you wish for
completeness in Him.
- 6. You must give up your cowardly unbelief, and dare to trust Christ
wholly. Do you know that unbelief is a form of cowardice? I try sometimes to
make people see that they dare not trust Him, and to show them that they must
have more courage, or they never can be complete in Christ. Venture on Him, if
you would be filled with his love.
- 7. You must give up your love of reputation with men. When you really come
to Christ indeed, you will see what Christ meant, when He said--"If they have
called the master of the house Beelzebub, how much more shall they call them
of his household." "They will cast out your names as evil." You must bear all
this--be content to hear them misrepresent you--impute evil motives--look
contemptuously--slight your company--stare at you, to see if the dilation of
the pupil of your eye does not indicate insanity--just as certainly as you
give yourselves up to be led by Him in all things. Care not for them. They
need your pity more than your frown. They, poor souls, know not what they do.
- 8. You must forsake all that you have. You must spare no lust, have no
sinister end, but give up all, be crucified unto the world. I know this is a
great step to take, but you must do it or die. You must thus reckon yourselves
to be dead indeed unto sin, in order to reckon yourself alive unto God,
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
- 9. You must confide in Him for all you want--believe that you are complete
in Him, not partly so. No matter what new want you discover, or what new
circumstances you come into, believe that in Christ, there is grace sufficient
for every emergency, however great, otherwise He is not a full Savior to you.
REMARKS.
1. See why Christians are so imperfect. It is because they don't realize their
wants, and do not take Him as a complete Savior.
2. They are always like to be, while they know so little of Jesus. I was
conversing with one of the principal men in the state, on sanctification. He
agreed with me in theory as to its attainability, and then said, that as a
matter of fact, no body would realize it in this world. I replied, if you knew
what you ought to know about Jesus Christ, you would as soon cut off your right
hand as say that. It is a want of a knowledge of Jesus, which leaves men in sin,
and makes them weak against it. I have often thought of the sons of Sceva the
Jew, who attempted to cast out devils in the name of Jesus, "whom Paul
preached," and when they had bidden an evil spirit come out, he replied, "Jesus
I know, and Paul I know, but who are ye? And the man in whom the evil spirit
was, leaped on them, and overcame them, and prevailed against them, so that they
fled out of that house naked and wounded." They did not know Christ, and
consequently experienced only defeat. Suppose they had told their experience
afterwards, to prove that no body ever did or could cast out devils! Ah! It is
one thing to hear and read about Christ, and quite another to trust Him, know
Him, and become complete in Him.
3. While they place so much reliance on human, and so little on divine teaching,
they are like to remain imperfect. Let them stand in that relation in which God
has placed them, and both profit the soul; but when men hear the minister or one
another and depend on what he says more than on what God says by his word and
Spirit, it is fatal to a growth in divine things. As many as are led by the
Spirit of God, they are the sons of God.
4. While men rest in the letter and overlook the spirit of the gospel, they will
of course remain imperfect.
5. The same will be true as long as they put their works in the place of Christ,
or their watchings, their resolutions, and legal efforts.
6. Also, while their guides and leaders are blind, and while the shepherds
frighten away the sheep from their pastures.
7. Many professors don't know Christ, because, as it were, they have only been
converted and baptized unto Moses. Others have received John's baptism unto
repentance; and others still know Christ as an atoning Savior. They began in the
Spirit, and are now trying to become perfect by the flesh.
8. Wherever there is an imperfection in Christian character, there must be
ignorance or unbelief, for the text is a promise that covers the whole field of
our necessities. It is remarkable how the Bible abounds with promises both
general and specific. Some cover our whole necessity--others point to specific
wants. The specific promises seem to be given in accommodation to our ignorance
and infirmities, lest our general confidence should not suffice in hours of
trial; and yet to some minds, a general declaration implying a promise like that
in the text affords greater strength than any specific promise.
9. How few realize that if they are not complete in Him it is because of
unbelief. The truth is, it is because they have never known the exercise and
power of faith.
10. Doubts respecting the doctrine of entire sanctification, are unbelief, for
it is impossible that any one should doubt this who has implicit faith in what
Christ says. If grace sufficient is promised, the doubts are unbelief.
11. Many deceive themselves by saying--"I believe the promise but I don't
believe I shall fulfill the condition." The truth is, believing the promise is
fulfilling the condition. How many nullify the promises in this way. They say
they believe that the promise would be fulfilled if they complied with the
condition, but this they know they do not do, and have no confidence that they
shall. And instead of blaming themselves for it, they really turn it into a
virtue, by calling it self-distrust. Its real name is unbelief.
12. If Christ is the depositary of all we need, we see why we are commanded to
"come boldly to a throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to
help in time of need." But true faith is almost universally regarded as
presumption, and such boldness as Jacob, Moses, and others exercised exclaimed
against as profane. How shocking this is, when, as a matter fact, it is
presumption not to come boldly. It is disobedience to a divine requisition.
13. There is no real difficulty in the fact that the promises are conditioned on
faith. For faith in promise depends upon confidence in the general character of
the promisor, and not to give full credit to the promise is to impeach the
character of him who made it. Suppose a man of great wealth and veracity should
make a promise with this condition, as indeed every promise necessarily implies
it. Would there be any difficulty in the condition? Not the least. So long as we
had confidence in his character, we should regard it as absurd to make a
difficulty of the condition of faith. But if the man was known, or supposed to
be unable or unwilling, or that his general character was bad, then truly the
condition would be a stumbling block. Nay, to believe implicitly would be absurd
and impossible.
14. It is impossible that unbelief should fail to make the soul wretched, or
that faith should not bring it deep repose.
15. What a foundation have we for universal repose in Christ. He is a Savior who
exactly and perfectly meets our case and necessities as they are. In Him dwells
all the fulness of the Godhead bodily. Oh, how important that we should know
Him--that our acquaintance with Him should be full. We need a more thorough
acquaintance with Christ than with any body else. There is such a thing as
knowing more of Jesus, as having a more intimate acquaintance with Him than that
which exists between a husband and his wife, or the dearest friends. Whoever is
ignorant of that, is ignorant of the very marrow and fatness of the gospel. A
personal acquaintance with Christ strengthens our confidence more and more in
Him. Yes, and such an acquaintance removes our filth and makes us clean. James
Brainard Taylor exclaimed--"I am clean." Brethren are you clean? Are you
complete in Christ? Let us go to Him and receive of his fulness, until we are
"filled with all the fulness of God."
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