The Eyes Opened to the Law of God-
No. 2
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
from "The
Oberlin Evangelist" Publication of Oberlin College
Lecture III
July 31, 1844
.
Text.--Ps. 119: 18:
"Open Thou mine eyes that I may behold wondrous things out of Thy law."
V. The conditions on which an answer to the request in the text may be
expected.
Now you must feel as Bartimeus did, you must have the confidence that he had--for see the confidence Bartimeus had, he believed Jesus could heal him, and he wished to afford Him the opportunity. O, if he could but find Him, and when Jesus came that way how he cried out. And so you must feel as to your spiritual sight--that it must be obtained.
REMARKS.
1. I notice the danger there is in preaching some of the spiritual truths of the
Bible. Not that they tend in themselves to produce mischief, but, men being as
they are, those truths will by very many, certainly be perverted. This has
always been true, and it is true in respect to many doctrines. Justification by
faith--salvation by grace--have they not been sadly perverted? Yet they are most
precious doctrines. So the doctrine of spiritual illumination. Many will go
straight into delusion under such a discourse as I have preached, or make it the
occasion of confirming their minds in a previous delusion. Many will seize hold
of some one or other of the consequences I have enumerated of spiritual
illumination, and finding such a fact in their own case, they will conclude they
are surely divinely enlightened. I said that those who are divinely illuminated
will differ much in their views from others, that their views will be reckoned
peculiar and wonderful, that they will be thought deranged, that they will be
persecuted. Now we differ from those about us--we are counted strange and
fanatical--they call us crazy or chatter-brained--we are persecuted for our
opinions and conduct--therefore we are spiritually enlightened. The doctrines of
spiritual religion will certainly be abused--but that is no reason why they
should not be preached. They are the food of the saints--the bread of their
souls--and shall it be withheld? If others will abuse them, who can help it?
They must not be withheld from the true saints who are panting after them,
because some will abuse them, and so be lost thereby. It is the less of two
evils to preach them for the good of the true saints, though incidental evils
result to some, than to withhold them and starve the souls of the faithful and
thus curse the world. I have often seen persons confirming themselves in
delusion in this way. I know not how many times in reference to this very
subject, when I have met with persons laboring under curious delusions, and have
expostulated with them, they have quoted my own sermons and writings in support
of their fantasies. They will say, you used to preach that men might be taught
of God. Yes, I preach the same doctrine now. But because a man may be taught of
God, does it follow that you are taught of God in your strange vagaries? Because
you may have your eyes opened so as to behold wondrous things out of God's law,
is it certain that your wondrous things are contained in the Bible? A certain
class of minds will almost surely be deluded, and this most likely to their
ruin. To such God says by the prophet, "Behold, all ye that kindle a fire, that
compass yourselves about with sparks, walk in the light of your fire, and in the
sparks which ye have kindled. This shall ye have of my hand--ye shall lie down
in sorrow."
2. Many persons will be led astray in another direction by this subject.
Becoming greatly wrought upon, they get a wrong idea, and seek for immense
excitement. You are to seek with all earnestness, but the thing which you are to
seek is not feeling, but light, substantial light shed upon the pages of the
Bible.
3. Where persons give themselves up to seek states of feeling, and to be carried
away by a flood of emotion, it will always react, and create abundant mischief.
Men need to be baptized with the Holy Ghost, and if they give themselves to
anything else, it may cause much noise and vociferation, but it will never lead
them to the state in which they are "light in the Lord."
4. I understand this divine illumination to be a special gift from God--not the
gift of miracles--not conversion. The Apostles had it on the day of Pentecost.
It is generally included in the Baptism of the Holy Spirit. It is given in
different degrees, and at different times. Men need it again and again, and more
and more of it. Persons who have been enlightened need still greater
illuminations as they go forward.
5. Those whose eyes are not opened are very liable to speak "evil of things
which they understand not," and thus wound their own souls and grieve the Spirit
of God. It grieves me much to see persons stumbled at things, merely because
they are in advance of their experience. I will mention a case. A man, an elder
in the Presbyterian church, who had been such for nearly half a century, and who
thought all religious excitement fanaticism, was present at a meeting during a
revival in a neighboring church. The Spirit of God came down with power. The
elder was much disturbed. At the close, a person in the assembly sank down to
the earth, overcome with the power of conviction. The elder cried out angrily,
"Get thee behind me Satan." Where is that man now? He opposes everything that is
good--all reformations, all progress of good, in a most obstinate and
self-willed spirit, and is left apparently to his own destruction. Many do not,
I know, go so far as this; but it is astonishing to see how men will speak evil
of things which they understand not. It will be well for such to read the solemn
words of the Apostle Peter. "These as natural brute beasts, made to be taken and
destroyed, speaking evil of the things they understand not, and shall utterly
perish in their own corruption, and shall receive the reward of their
unrighteousness." It is one of the great dangers to which men are exposed, to
oppose, and reject, and speak evil of things simply because the things are
beyond their own experience. They seem to think they know all that can be known,
and anything else is fanaticism of course. Persons often treat as foolish, and
visionary, and childish, and contemptible, the higher states of Christian
experience, and only because they themselves have not advanced so far. You
should be careful, brethren, lest you speak evil of and reject those very things
which you must know if you are ever saved.
6. The spiritual members of the Church have always been persecuted by the body
of the church. The Bible will tell you so, and all history declares the same
thing. The most spiritual ministers and members have always been misunderstood
and persecuted by those who are not spiritual.
7. This should not discourage you from seeking spirituality, nor from being
spiritual. And, moreover, spiritual persons will neither be surprised nor
offended thereby. They can understand very well why others speak evil and
oppose. The spiritual man discerneth all things, but he himself is discerned by
no man. The Bible teaches this, and he sees why it is so; he sees why they
account him a heretic, and are afraid of him; he sees where they are, but they
do not see where he is; he understands their darkness better than they
understand his light.
8. The subject accounts for much of the difference of opinion as the meaning of
the Bible. There always will be differences of opinion. It is absurd to think
that there can be any system of opinions stereo-typed, and believed alike by the
young convert and the adult Christian. What, must men have the full knowledge of
the Bible when they are first converted? Are men to make no advances in
knowledge of divine things? How are stewards to bring from their treasure things
new and old? Then, must nothing new be brought forward? O no. You must learn
nothing new--must find nothing which is not in the standards. It is to be taken
for granted that a thing is wrong of course, if it is not in the standards. It
is true, indeed that all will agree in certain doctrines. But it by no means
follows that everyone will hold all that is taught in the Bible; neither is it
true that men may not be real Christians, and yet be ignorant of many very
precious truths taught in the Bible.
9. We all see why so many persons are not deeply interested in the Bible. They
have not their eyes opened, have not the divine light shining upon it to make it
interesting to them. They are like persons passing a most beautiful region in
the dark. They see no beauty, they have no light. Without this light from God,
the Bible is a sealed book, and for all spiritual matters of no benefit. And the
reading of it for such a purpose, is as dull a work as one can well be engaged
in. A man will read his chapter, and five minutes afterwards he knows nothing of
what he read. But with the Spirit, the Bible is a world of wonders; it is a mine
of gold, exhaustless; you may dig, and dig, and the deeper you do, only the
richer will it become.
10. You may see the reason why ministers, and young men preparing for the
ministry are so little interested in making the Bible their study. They lack the
divine light that makes it all glorious within, that leads them into the depths
of its hidden meaning.
11. Where men possess this divine light, you will never hear them pleading the
necessity of reading other books to give the mind proper recreation. If they
read other literature at all, it will be not for amusement, but for information.
Such a man will not feel bound to read Shakespeare and Scott. He will draw away
from them as from an ocean of filth. I may say without extravagance, that to him
whose eyes are opened, the Bible will prove a more fertile source of
improvement, both moral and intellectual, a more powerful spring of mental
action than all other books put together. It opens up a world of thoughts on
almost every subject, it starts ten thousand trains; you tread as it were upon
enchanted ground, whole masses of thought constantly rising from the bosom of
the great ocean of truth; the Psalms, the Prophets, all point you to every part
of the universe, the heaven, the earth, and the sea. But without the Spirit, the
Bible is bereft of this power.
12. It is true, I believe, that the more of the divine illumination Christians
enjoy, the less they read of any thing else than the Bible. Or if they read
other things, it is because it will throw light upon, or because the spirit of
the works is like the spirit of the blessed Bible. Ask the oldest saint, if he
is not tired of his Bible. Tired of my Bible? My Bible? It is more and more my
book every year I live. But have you not read it through and through? Yes, but
it grows richer and richer every time I go through it. But do you not understand
it all? Ah, I learn something continually. I learn more now at a reading than
when I first began. Now I know no end to this progression in divine knowledge,
for the spiritual mind. The Spirit keeps bringing up without end, new and more
exquisite and glorious displays of the things of God's law. The soul drinks and
drinks, and drinks again, and the ocean is never exhausted.
13. Spiritual guides whose eyes are not opened are blind leaders of the blind. I
do not mean that a man must have all light in order to be a guide at all, a man
may guide as far as he knows the way himself, but without enlightenment he can
lead but a little way. A vast many ministers are so blind that they can lead but
a little way. Many cannot even bring sinners into the kingdom, they have not
knowledge enough of the way to carry a sinner into the kingdom and set him down
within the gate. Others can take them through the gate, but can guide them
little further. Ministers will labor in their way for years and years, and their
church will make little progress or none at all. The reason is, their own eyes
are not open, and what they do not know they cannot tell to others.
14. You see the importance that ministers shall insist that God shall open their
eyes, to enable them to behold wondrous things out of His law. A young man who
is called to preach, may urge that call before the Lord as a valid reason for
the illumination of the Spirit, and he is bound to urge his call. O God, hast
thou set me a watchman upon Zion's wall, and wilt thou not open my eyes. O, how
blind I am! How blind the flock are! How they need enlightenment, my Father open
thou mine eyes. A minister ought to press this, and insist on it, and every
candidate for the ministry should press it. The Church ought to pray with
earnestness that God will open the eyes of their spiritual guides. And every
Christian too, ought to pray for enlightenment, that he for himself, may
understand the holy word.
15. Many pray to be enlightened who will not fulfill the conditions, who will
not give up their own ends, and cast away their prejudices. Of course they
remain in the dark.
16. Many mistake and suppose they are enlightened when they are not. They do
thus--They desire a certain thing to be true. They take the Bible and endeavor
to make it support their loved doctrine, till at length they seem to see its
truth written every where. By long labor the doctrine has become coupled by
association with a multitude of passages. Now they are enlightened. O yes, it's
as clear as day. No, but they are not enlightened. They are much mistaken. Let
me give an illustration, a curious case enough. I received a book, not long
since, directed to me with all gravity, as if a revelation from heaven itself.
The book is the work of some of the people called Shakers, and it claims to be a
revelation from God, to the effect that Christ has come the second time, and
that in the person of Ann Lee. In that book a great many passages are adduced to
maintain the proposition that Christ's second advent must be in the person of a
woman! And all this by the teaching of the divine Spirit! Men think they have
the witness of the Holy Ghost to a thing when they have no witness of the Holy
Ghost to that thing. Bro. Charles Fitch professed to have the witness of the
Spirit that the second advent of Christ with the end of the world would occur in
1843. But he was mistaken, as he also is in respects to the doctrine of the
annihilation of the wicked. O brethren, do not mistake the persuasions of a
heart set in falsehood, nor the vagaries of a fanatical brain for the teachings
of the Holy Ghost.
17. Many persons do not care enough about understanding the Bible, to give
themselves to pray for the light of the Spirit. They have no longing to know
what is in the Bible. I know what that indifference is, and I know too what it
is to cry out from the bottom of my soul, O God, open my eyes. Listen to the
Psalmist. As the hart panteth after the water brooks so panteth my soul after
Thee, O God. My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God, when shall I come to
appear before God! Is there any fanaticism there, my brethren? Look at that
figure--the poor, tired hart, its tongue out, panting, leaping, and panting in
the desert, and no water. Is there not earnestness there? So interested must you
be, your heart panting after God, crying out after Him.
Brethren, there are glorious things in the Bible--wondrous things in God's
law--we need the Spirit to open our eyes that we may behold them. To obtain that
light we need to pray the prayer of our text--Open thou mine eyes that I may
behold wondrous things out of thy law." Will you give yourselves to pray and
seek the Lord, for the light of his Spirit to shine upon the word, to enlighten
our eyes, and make us know God's holy truth?
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