The Rule by Which the Guilt of Sin is Estimated
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
from "The
Oberlin Evangelist" Publication of Oberlin College
Lecture II
February 4, 1846
.
Text.--Acts 17:30-31: "And the times of this ignorance God winked at, but now commandeth all men everywhere to repent: because He hath appointed a day, in the which He will judge the world in righteousness, by that Man whom He hath ordained; whereof He hath given assurance unto all men, in that He hath raised Him from the dead."
I recently preached a sermon on impenitence in which I dwelt at length on the
guilt which attaches to sin committed against great light. I purpose now to
discuss this point still farther.
The text declares that God will judge the world in righteousness. I shall not at
this time dwell on the fact that God will judge the world, nor upon the fact
that this judgment will be in righteousness; but shall endeavor to ascertain
what is the rule by which our guilt is to be measured; or in other words what is
implied in judging the world in righteousness. What is the righteous rule by
which guilt is measured, and consequently the just punishment of the sinner
allotted?
In pursuing this subject, I shall deem it important:
I. To state briefly what the conditions of moral obligation are; and
II. Come directly to the main point, the rule by which guilt is measured.
I. State briefly what the conditions of moral obligation are.
This is a principle, which everybody admits when they understand it. The thing itself lies among the intuitive affirmations of every child's mind. No sooner has a child the first idea of right and wrong, but he will excuse himself from blame by saying that he did not mean to do it, and he knows full well, that if this excuse be true, it is valid and good as an excuse; and moreover he knows that you and everybody else both know this and must admit it. This sentiment thus pervades the minds of all men and none can intelligently deny it.
It must have some apprehension of the value of the end to be chosen, else there can be no responsible choice of that end, or responsible neglect to choose it. Everybody must see this, for if the individual when asked, why he did not choose a given end, could answer truly, "I did not know that the end was valuable and worthy of choice," all men would deem this a valid acquittal from moral delinquency.
These are substantially the conditions of moral obligation; the requisite mental powers for moral action; and a knowledge of the intrinsic value of the good of being.
Before leaving this topic, let me remark that very probably, no two creatures in the moral universe may have precisely the same degree of intelligence respecting the value of the end they ought to choose; yet shall moral obligation rest upon all these diverse degrees of knowledge, proportioned evermore in degree to the measure of this knowledge which any mind possesses. God alone has infinite and changeless knowledge on this point.
II. I come now to speak of the rule by which the guilt of refusing to will or intend according to the law of God must be measured.
Now the sinfulness of a selfish choice consists not merely in its choice of good to self, but in its implying a rejection of the highest well-being of God and of the universe as a supreme and ultimate end. If selfishness did not imply the apprehension and rejection of other and higher interests as an end, it would not imply any guilt at all. The value of the interests rejected is that in which the guilt consists. In other words the guilt consists in rejecting the infinitely valuable well-being of God and of the universe for the sake of selfish gratification.
Now it is plain that the amount of guilt is as the mind's apprehension of the value of the interests rejected. In some sense as I have said, every moral agent has and must of necessity have the idea that the interests of God and of the universe are of infinite value. He has this idea developed so clearly that every sin he commits deserves endless punishment, and yet the degree of his guilt may be greatly enhanced by additional light, so that he may deserve punishment not only endless in duration but indefinitely great in degree. Nor is there any contradiction in this. If the sinner cannot affirm that there is any limit to the value of the interests he refuses to will and to pursue, he cannot of course affirm that there is any limit to his guilt and desert of punishment. This is true and must be true of every sin and of every sinner; and yet as light increases and the mind gains a clearer apprehension of the infinite value of the highest well-being of God and of the universe, just in that proportion does the guilt of sin increase. Hence the measure of knowledge possessed of duty and its motives, is always and unalterably the rule by which guilt is to be measured.
The proof of this is two-fold.
The text affords a plain instance. The apostle alludes to those past ages when the heathen nations had no written revelation of God, and remarks that "those times of ignorance God winked at." This does not mean that God connived at their sin because of their darkness, but does mean that He passed over it with comparatively slight notice, regarding it as sin of far less aggravation than those which men would now commit if they turned away when God commanded them all to repent. True sin is never absolutely a light thing; but comparatively, some sins incur small guilt when compared with the great guilt of other sins. This is implied in our text.
I next cite James 4:17. "To him that knoweth to do good, and doeth it not, to him it is sin." This plainly implies that knowledge is indispensable to moral obligation; and even more than this is implied; namely, that guilt of any sinner is always equal to the amount of his knowledge on the subject. It always corresponds to the mind's perception of the value of the end which should have been chosen, but is rejected. If a man knows he ought in any given case to do good, and yet does not do it, to him this is sin--the sin plainly lying in the fact of not doing good when he knew he could do it, and being measured as to its guilt by the degree of that knowledge.
John 9:41. "Jesus said unto them, if ye were blind, ye should have no sin: but now ye say, we see; therefore your sin remaineth." Here Christ asserts that men without knowledge would be without sin; and that men who have knowledge, and sin notwithstanding, are held guilty. This plainly affirms that the presence of light or knowledge is requisite to the existence of sin, and obviously implies that the amount of knowledge possessed is the measure of the guilt of sin.
It is remarkable that the Bible everywhere assumes first truths. It does not stop to prove them, or even assert them--it always assumes their truth, and seems to assume that every one knows and will admit them. As I have been recently writing on moral government and studying the Bible as to its teachings on this class of subjects, I have been often struck with this remarkable fact.
John 15:22, 24. "If I had not come and spoken unto them, they had not had sin: but now they have no cloak for their sins. He that hateth Me, hateth My Father also. If I had not done among them the works which none other man did, they had not had sin: but now have they both seen and hated both Me and My Father." Christ holds the same doctrine here as in the last passage cited, light essential to constitute sin, and the degree of light, constituting the measure of its aggravation. Let it be observed, however, that Christ probably did not mean to affirm in the absolute sense that if He had not come, the Jews would have had no sin; for they would have had some light if He had not come. He speaks as I suppose comparatively. Their sin if He had not come would have been so much less as to justify His strong language.
Luke 12: 47-48. "And that servant which knew his Lord's will, and prepared not himself, neither did according to his will, shall be beaten with many stripes. But he that knew not and did commit things worthy of stripes, shall be beaten with few stripes. For unto whomsoever much is given, of him shall be much required; and to whom men have committed much, of him they will ask the more."
Here we have the doctrine laid down and the truth assumed that men shall be punished according to knowledge. To whom much light is given, of him shall much obedience be required. This is precisely the principle that God requires of men according to the light they have.
1 Tim. 1:13. "Who was before a blasphemer, and a persecutor, and injurious: but I obtained mercy, because I did it ignorantly in unbelief." Paul had done things intrinsically as bad as well they could be; yet his guilt was far less because he did them under the darkness of unbelief; hence he obtained mercy, when otherwise, he might not. The plain assumption is that his ignorance abated from the malignity of his sin, and favored his obtaining mercy.
In another passage, (Acts 26:9) Paul says of himself--"I verily thought with myself, that I ought to do many things contrary to the name of Jesus of Nazareth." This had everything to do with the degree of his guilt in rejecting the Messiah, and also with his obtaining pardon.
Luke 23:34. "Then said Jesus, Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do." This passage presents to us the suffering Jesus, surrounded with Roman soldiers and malicious scribes and priests, yet pouring out His prayer for them, and making the only plea in their behalf which could be made--"for they know not what they do." This does not imply that they had no guilt, for if that were true they would not have needed forgiveness; but it did imply that their guilt was greatly palliated by their ignorance. If they had known Him to be Messiah, their guilt might have been unpardonable.
Matt. 11:20-24. "Then began He to upbraid the cities wherein most of His mighty works were done, because they repented not. Woe unto thee Chorazin! Woe unto thee, Bethsaida! For if the mighty works which were done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes. But I say unto you it shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at the day of judgment than for you. And thou, Capernaum, which art exalted unto heaven, shalt be brought down to hell; for if the mighty works which have been done in thee, had been done in Sodom, it would have remained until this day. But I say unto you, that it shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom, in the day of judgment, than for thee." Buy why does Christ thus upbraid these cities? Why denounce so fearful a woe on Chorazin and Capernaum? Because most of His mighty works had been wrought there. His oft-repeated miracles which proved Him the Messiah had been wrought before their eyes. Among them He had taught daily, and in their synagogues every Sabbath day. They had great light--hence their great--their unsurpassed guilt. Not even the men of Sodom had guilt to compare with theirs. The city most exalted, even as it were to heaven, must be brought down to the deepest hell. Guilt and punishment, evermore, according to light enjoyed but resisted.
Luke 11:47-51. "Woe unto you! for ye build the sepulchers of the prophets, and your fathers killed them. Truly ye bear witness that ye allow the deeds of your fathers; for they indeed killed them, and ye build their sepulchers. Therefore also said the wisdom of God, I will send them prophets and apostles, and some of them they shall slay and persecute: that the blood of all the prophets, which was shed from the foundation of the world, may be required of this generation. From the blood of Abel, unto the blood of Zacharias, which perished between the altar and the temple: verily I say unto you it shall be required of this generation." Now here, I ask, on what principle was it that all the blood of martyred prophets ever since the world began was required of that generation? Because they deserved it; for God does no such thing as injustice. It never was known that He punished any people or any individual beyond their desert.
But why and how did they deserve this fearful and augmented visitation of the wrath of God for past centuries of persecution?
The answer is two-fold: they sinned against accumulated light: and they virtually endorsed all the persecuting deeds of their fathers, and concurred most heartily in their guilt. They had all the oracles of God. The whole history of the nation lay in their hands. They knew the blameless and holy character of those prophets who had been martyred; they could read the guilt of their persecutors and murderers. Yet under all this light, themselves go straight on and perpetrate deeds of the same sort, but of far deeper malignity.
Again, in doing this they virtually endorse all that their fathers did. Their conduct towards the Man of Nazareth, put into words would read thus--"The holy men whom God sent to teach and rebuke our fathers, they maliciously traduced and put to death; they did right, and we will do the same thing towards Christ." Now it was not possible for them to give a more decided sanction to the bloody deeds of their fathers. They underwrote for every crime--assume upon their own consciences all the guilt of their fathers. In intention, they do those deeds over again. They say, "if we had lived then we should have done and sanctioned all they did."
On the same principle the accumulated guilt of all the blood and miseries of Slavery since the world began rests on this nation now. The guilt involved in every pang, every tear, every blood-drop forced out by the knotted scourge--all lies at the door of this generation. Why? Because the history of all the past is before the pro-slavery men of this generation, and they endorse the whole by persisting in the practice of the same system and of the same wrongs. No generation before us ever had the light on the evils and the wrongs of Slavery that we have; hence the guilt exceeds that of any former generation of slave-holders; and, moreover, knowing all the cruel wrongs and miseries of the system from the history of the past, every persisting slave-holder endorses all the crimes and assumes all the guilt involved in the system and evolved out of it since the world began.
Romans 7:13. "Was then that which is good made death unto me? God forbid. But sin, that it might appear sin, worketh death in me by that which is good, that sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful." The last clause of this verse brings out clearly the principle that under the light which the commandment, that is, the law, affords, sin becomes exceeding guilty. This is the very principle, which, we have seen, is so clearly taught and implied in numerous passages of Scripture.
The diligent reader of the Bible knows that these are only a part of the texts which teach the same doctrine: we need not adduce any more.
There can be no other criterion by which guilt can be measured. It is the value of the end chosen which constitutes sin guilty, and the mind's estimate of that value measures its own guilt. This is true according to the Bible as we have seen; and every man needs only consult his own consciousness faithfully and he will see that it is equally affirmed by the mind's own intuition to be right.
A few inferences may be drawn from our doctrine.
Satan sinned in betraying Judas, and Judas sinned in betraying Christ. Yet God so overruled these sins that most blessed results to the universe followed from Christ's betrayal and consequent death. Shall the sins of Satan and Judas be estimated by the evils actually resulting from them? If it should appear that the good immensely overbalanced the evil, does their sin thereby become holiness--meritorious holiness? Is their guilt at all the less for God's wisdom and love in overruling it for good?
It is not therefore the amount of resulting good or evil which determines the amount of guilt, but is the degree of light enjoyed, under which the sin is committed.
REMARKS.
1. We see from this subject the principle on which many passages of scripture
are to be explained. It might seem strange that Christ should charge the blood
of all the martyred prophets of past ages on that generation. But the subject
before us reveals the principle upon which this is done and ought to be done.
Whatever of apparent mystery may attach to the fact declared in our text--"The
times of this ignorance God winked at"--finds in our subject an adequate
explanation. Does it seem strange that for ages God should pass over almost
without apparent notice the monstrous and reeking abominations of the Heathen
world? The reason is found in their ignorance. Therefore God winks at those
odious and cruel idolatries. For all, taken together, are a trifle compared with
the guilt of a single generation of enlightened men.
2. One sinner may be in such circumstances as to have more light and knowledge
than the whole Heathen world. Alas! how little the Heathen know! How little
compared with what is known by sinners in this land, even by very young sinners!
Let me call up and question some impenitent sinner of Oberlin. It matters but
little who--let it be any Sabbath School child.
What do you know about God?
I know that He is infinitely great and good. But the Heathen thinks some of his
gods are both mean and mischievous--wicked as can be and the very patrons of
wickedness among men.
What do you know about salvation? I know that God so loved the world as to give
His only begotten Son to die that whosoever would believe on Him might live
forever. O, the Heathen never heard of that. They would faint away methinks in
amazement if they should hear and really believe the startling, glorious fact.
And that Sabbath School child knows that God gives His Spirit to convince of
sin. He has perhaps often been sensible of the presence and power of the Spirit.
But the Heathen know nothing of this.
You too know that you are immortal--that beyond death there is still a conscious
unchanging state of existence, blissful or wretched according to the deeds done
here. But the Heathen have no just ideas on this subject. It is to them as if
all were a blank.
The amount of it then is that you know everything--the Heathen almost nothing.
You know all you need to know to be saved, to be useful--to honor God and serve
your generation according to His will. The Heathen sit in deep darkness, wedded
to their abominations, groping, yet finding nothing.
As your light therefore, so is your guilt immeasurably greater than theirs. Be
it so that their idolatries are monstrous--your guilt in your impenitence under
the light you have is vastly more so. See that Heathen mother dragging her
shrieking child and tumbling it into the Ganges? See her rush with another to
throw him into the burning arms of Moloch. Mark; see that pile of wood flashing,
lifting up its lurid flames toward heaven. Those men are dragging a dead
husband--they heave his senseless corpse on to that burning pile. There comes
the widow--her hair disheveled and flying--gaily festooned for such a sacrifice;
she dances on; she rends the air with her howls and her wailings; she shrinks
and yet she does not shrink--she leaps on the pile, and the din of music with
the yell of spectators buries her shrieks of agony; she is gone! O, my blood
curdles and runs cold in my veins; my hair stands on end; I am horrified with
such scenes--but what shall we say of their guilt? Ah yes--what do they know of
God--of worship--of the claims of God upon their heart and life? Ah, you may
well spare your censure of the Heathen for their fearful orgies of cruelty and
lust, and give it where light has been enjoyed and resisted.
3. You see then that often a sinner in some of our congregations may know more
than all the Heathen world know. If this be true, what follows from it as to the
amount of his comparative guilt? This, inevitably, that such a sinner deserves a
direr and deeper damnation than all the Heathen world! This conclusion may seem
startling; but how can we escape from it? We cannot escape. It is as plain as
any mathematical demonstration. This is the principle asserted by Christ when He
said--"That servant which knew his Lord's will and prepared not himself, neither
did according to His will shall be beaten with many stripes; but he that knew
not and did commit things worthy of stripes; shall be beaten with few stripes."
How solemn and how pungent the application of this doctrine would be in this
congregation! I could call out many a sinner in this place and show him that
beyond question his guilt is greater than that of all the Heathen world. Yet how
few ever estimated their own guilt thus.
Not long since an ungodly young man, trained in this country, wrote back from
the Sandwich Islands a glowing and perhaps a just description of their horrible
abominations, moralizing on their monstrous enormities and thanking God that he
had been born and taught in a Christian land. Indeed! He might well have spared
this censure of the dark-minded Heathen! His own guilt in remaining an
impenitent sinner under all the light of Christian America was greater than the
whole aggregate guilt of all those Islands.
So we may all well spare our expressions of abhorrence at the guilty
abominations of idolatry. You are often perhaps saying in your heart--Why does
God endure these horrid abominations another day? See that rolling car of
Juggernaut. Its wheels move axle deep in the gushing blood and crushed bones of
its deluded worshipers! And yet God looks on and no red bolt leaps from His
right hand to smite such wickedness. They are indeed guilty; but O how small
their guilt compared with the guilt of those who know their duty perfectly, yet
never do it! God sees their horrible abominations, yet does He wink at them
because they are done in so much ignorance.
But see that impenitent sinner. Convicted of his sin under the clear gospel
light that shines all around him, he is driven to pray. He knows he ought to
repent, and almost thinks he wants to, and will try. Yet still he clings to his
sins, and will not give up his heart to God. Still he holds his heart in a state
of impenitence. Now mark here; his sin in thus withholding his heart from God
under so much light, involves greater guilt than all the abominations of the
heathen world. Put together the guilt of all those widows who immolate
themselves on the funeral pile--of those who hurl their children into the
Ganges, or into the burning arms of Moloch--all does not begin to approach the
guilt of that convicted sinner's prayer who comes before God under the pressure
of his conscience, and prays a heartless prayer, determined all the while to
withhold his heart from God. O, why does this sinner thus tempt God, and thus
abuse His love, and thus trample on His known authority? O, that moment of
impenitence, while his prayers are forced by conscience from his burning lips,
and yet he will not yield the controversy with his Maker--that moment involves
direr guilt than rests on all the Heathen world together! He knows more than
they all, yet sins despite of all his knowledge. The many stripes belong to
him--the few to them.
4. This leads me to remark again, that the Christian world may very well spare
their revilings and condemnations of the Heathen. Of all the portions of earth's
population, Christendom is infinitely the most guilty--Christendom, where the
gospel peals from ten thousand pulpits--where its praises are sung by a thousand
choirs, but where many thousand hearts that know God and duty, refuse either to
reverence the one or perform the other! All the abominations of the Heathen
world are a mere trifle compared with the guilt of Christendom. We may look down
upon the filth and meanness and degradation of a Heathen people, and feel a most
polite disgust at the spectacle--and far be it from me, to excuse these
degrading, filthy or cruel practices; but how small their light and consequently
their guilt compared with our own! We therefore ask the Christian world to turn
away from the spectacle of Heathen degradation, and look nearer home, upon the
spectacle of Christian guilt! Let us look upon ourselves.
5. Again, let us fear not to say what you must all see to be true, that the
nominal church is the most guilty part of Christendom. It cannot for a moment be
questioned, that the church has more light than any other portion; therefore has
she more guilt. Of course I speak of the nominal church--not the real church
whom He has pardoned and cleansed from her sins. But in the nominal church,
think of the sins that live and riot in their corruption. See that backslider.
He has tasted the waters of life. He has been greatly enlightened. Perhaps he
has really known the Lord by true faith--and then see, he turns away to beg the
husks of earthly pleasure! He turns his back on the bleeding Lamb! Now, put
together all the guilt of every Heathen soul that has gone to hell--of every
soul that has gone from a state of utter moral darkness, and your guilt,
backsliding Christian, is greater than all theirs!
Do you, therefore say--may God then, have mercy on my soul? So say we all; but
we must add, if it be possible; for who can say that such guilt as yours can be
forgiven! Can Christ pray for you as he prayed for His murderers--"Father,
forgive them, for they know not what they do?" Can He plead in your behalf, that
you know not what you are doing? Awful! Awful!! Where is the sounding line that
shall measure the ocean-depth of your guilt!
6. Again, if our children remain in sin, we may cease to congratulate ourselves
that they were not born in Heathenism or slavery! How often have I done this!
How often, as I have looked upon my sons and daughters, have I thanked God that
they were not born to be thrown into the burning arms of a Moloch, or to be
crushed under the wheels of Juggernaut! But if they will live in sin, we must
suspend our self-congratulations for their having Christian light and
privileges. If they will not repent, it were infinitely better for them to have
been born in the thickest Pagan darkness--better to have been thrown in their
tender years into the Ganges, or into the fires which idolatry kindles--better
be anything else, or suffer anything earthly, than have the gospel's light only
to shut it out and go to hell despite of its admonitions.
Let us not, then be hasty in congratulating ourselves, as if this great light
enjoyed by us and by our children, were of course a certain good to them; but
this we may do--we may rejoice that God will honor Himself--His mercy if He can,
and His justice if He must. God will be honored, and we may glory in this. But
oh, the sinner, the sinner! Who can measure the depth of his guilt, or the
terror of his final doom! It will be more tolerable for all the heathen world
together than for you.
7. It is time that we all understood this subject fully, and appreciated all its
bearings. It is no doubt true, that however moral our children may be, they are
more guilty than any other sinners under heaven, if they live in sin, and will
not yield to the light under which they live. We may be perhaps congratulating
ourselves on their fair morality; but if we saw their case in all its real
bearings, our souls would groan with agony--our bowels would be all liquid with
anguish--our very hearts within us would heave as if volcanic fires were kindled
there--so deep a sense should we have of their fearful guilt and of the awful
doom they incur in denying the Lord that bought them, and setting at naught a
known salvation. O, if we ever pray, we should pour out our prayers for our
offspring as if nothing could ever satisfy us or stay our importunity, but the
blessings of a full salvation realized in their souls.
Let the mind contemplate the guilt of these children. I could not find a Sabbath
school child, perhaps not one in all Christendom who could not tell me more of
God's salvation than all the Heathen world know. That dear little boy who comes
from his Sabbath school knows all about the gospel. He is almost ready to be
converted, but not quite ready; yet that little boy, if he knows his duty, and
yet will not do it, is covered with more guilt than all the Heathen world
together. Yes, that boy, who goes alone and prays, yet holds back his heart from
God, and then his mother comes and prays over him, and pours her tears on his
head, and his little heart almost melts, and he seems on the very point of
giving up his whole heart to the Savior; yet if he will not do it, he commits
more sin in that refusal than all the sin of all the Heathen world--his guilt is
more than the guilt of all the murders, all the drownings of children and
burnings of widows, and deeds of cruelty and violence in all the heathen world.
All this combination of guilt shall not be equal to the guilt of the lad who
knows his duty, but will not yield his heart to its righteous claims.
8. "The Heathen," says an apostle, "sin without law, and shall therefore perish
without law." In their final doom they will be cast away from God; this will be
perhaps about all. The bitter reflection, "I had the light of the gospel and
would not yield to it--I knew all my duty, yet did it not"--this cannot be a
part of their eternal doom. This is reserved for those who gather themselves
into our sanctuaries and around our family altars, yet will not serve their own
Infinite Father.
9. One more remark. Suppose I should call out a sinner by name--one of the
sinners of this congregation, a son of pious parents, and should call up the
father also. I might say, Is this your son" Yes. What testimony can you bear
about this son of yours? I have endeavored to teach him all the ways of the
Lord. Son, what can you say? I know my duty. I have heard it a thousand times. I
know I ought to repent, but I never would.
O, if we understood this matter in all its bearings, it would fill every bosom
with consternation and grief. How would our bowels burn and heave as a volcano.
There would be one universal outcry of anguish and terror at the awful guilt and
fearful doom of such a sinner!
Young man, are you going away this day in your sins? Then, what angel can
compute your guilt? O, how long has Jesus held out His hands, yes, His bleeding
hands, and besought you to look and live! A thousand times, and in countless
varied ways has He called, but you have refused; stretched out His hands, and
you have not regarded. O, why will you not repent? Why not say at once; It is
enough that I have sinned so long. I cannot live so any longer! O, sinner, why
will you live so? Would you go down to hell--ah, to the deepest hell--where, if
we would find you, we must work our way down a thousand years through ranks of
lost spirits less guilty than you, ere we could reach the fearful depth to which
you have sunk! O, sinner, what a hell is that which can adequately punish such
guilt as thine!
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