LECTURE XIX
INSTRUCTIONS TO CONVERTS
Feed My lambs. - John 2:15.
Those who read their Bibles will recollect the connection in which these words
occur, and by whom they were spoken. They were addressed by the Lord Jesus
Christ to Peter, after he had denied his Lord, and had subsequently professed
repentance. Our Lord asked him this question, to remind him, in an affecting
manner, at once of his sin and of the love of Christ: "Simon, son of Jonas,
lovest thou Me more than these?" - strongly implying a doubt whether he did love
Him. Peter answers: "Yea, Lord; Thou knowest that I love Thee." Then Christ said
unto Him: "Feed My lambs"; and repeated the question, as if He would read his
inmost soul: "Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou Me?" Peter was still firm, and
promptly answered again: "Yea, Lord; Thou knowest that I love Thee."
Jesus still asked him the question again, the third time, emphatically. He
seemed to urge the point, as if He would search his inmost thoughts, to see
whether Peter would ever deny Him again. Peter was touched; he was "grieved," it
is said; he did not fly into a passion, nor did he boast, as formerly: "Though I
should die with Thee, yet will I not deny Thee"
(Matthew 26:35); but he was grieved; he was subdued; he spoke tenderly; he
appealed to the Savior Himself, as if he would implore Him not to doubt his
sincerity any longer: "Lord, Thou knowest all things; Thou knowest that I love
Thee." Christ then gave him his final charge: "Feed My sheep" (v. 17).
By the terms "sheep" and "lambs" the Savior undoubtedly designated Christians,
members of His Church; the lambs probably represent young converts, those that
have but little experience and but little knowledge of religion, and therefore
need to have special attention and pains taken with them, to guard them from
harm, and to train them for future usefulness.
And when our Savior told Peter to feed His sheep, He doubtless referred to the
important part which Peter was to perform in watching over the newly-formed
Churches in different parts of the world, and in training the young converts,
and leading them along to usefulness and happiness.
My last Lecture was on the subject of giving right instruction to anxious
sinners; this naturally brings me to consider the manner in which young converts
should be treated, and the instructions that should be given to them.
In speaking on this subject it is my design to state:
I. Several things that ought to be considered, in regard to the hopes of young
converts.
II. Several things respecting their making a profession of religion, and joining
the Church.
III. The importance of having correct instruction given to young converts.
IV. What should not be taught to young converts.
V. What particular things are specially necessary to be taught to young
converts.
I. THE HOPES OF YOUNG CONVERTS.
- 1. Nothing should be said to create a hope.
That is to say, nothing should ordinarily be intimated to persons under
conviction calculated to make them think they have experienced religion, till
they find it out themselves.
- I do not like this term, "experienced
religion," and I use it only because it is a phrase in common use. It is an
absurdity in itself What is religion?
Obedience to God. Suppose you should hear a good citizen say he had
experienced obedience to the Government of the country! You see that it is
nonsense. Or suppose a child should talk about experiencing obedience to his
father. If he knew what he was saying, he would say he had obeyed his father;
just as the apostle Paul says to the Roman believers: "Ye have obeyed from the
heart that form of doctrine which was delivered you" (Romans. 6:17).
What I mean to say is that ordinarily it is best to let their hope or belief
that they are converted spring up spontaneously in their own minds.
Sometimes it will happen that persons may be really converted, but, owing to
some notions which they have been taught about religion, they do not realize
it. Their views of what religion is, and its effect upon the mind, are so
entirely wide of the truth that they do not think they have it.
I will give you an illustration on this point.
Some years since, I labored in a place where a revival was in progress, and
there was in the place a young lady from Boston. She had been brought up a
Unitarian. She was a person of considerable education, and was intelligent on
many subjects; but on the subject of religion she was very ignorant. At length
she was convicted of sin. She became awfully convinced of her horrible enmity
against God. She had been so educated as to have a sense of propriety; but her
enmity against God became so great, and broke out so frightfully, that it was
horrible to hear her talk. She used to come to the anxious meetings, where we
conversed with each person separately; and her feelings of opposition to God
were such that she used to create disturbance. By the time I came within two
or three seats of her, where she could hear what I said in a low voice to the
others, she would begin to make remarks in reply, so that they could be heard.
And she would say the most bitter things against God, against His providence,
and His method of dealing with mankind, as if God were an infinite tyrant. I
would try to hush her, and make her keep still, because she distracted the
attention of others. Sometimes she would stop and command her temper for a
time, and sometimes she would rise and go out. I have seldom seen a case where
the enmity of the heart rose so high against God. One night, at the anxious
meeting, after she had been very restless, as I went towards her, she began as
usual to reply, but I hushed her, and told her I could not converse with her
there. I invited her to see me the next morning, when I told her I would talk
with her. She promised to come; but, said she: "God is unjust - He is
infinitely unjust. Is He not almighty? Why, then, has He never shown me my
enmity before? Why has He let me run on so long?
Why does He let my friends at Boston remain in this ignorance? They are the
enemies of God as much as I am, and they are going to hell. Why does He not
show them the truth in regard to their condition?" And in this temper she left
the room.
The next morning she came to see me, as she had promised. I saw, as soon as
she came in, that her countenance was changed, but I said nothing about it.
"Oh," said she, "I have changed my mind, as to what I said last night about
God; I do not think He has done me any wrong, and I think I shall 'get
religion' some time, for now I love to think about God. I have been all wrong;
the reason why I had never known my enmity before was that I would not. I used
to read the Bible, but I always passed over the passages that would make me
feel as if I were a lost sinner; and those passages that spoke of Jesus Christ
as God I passed over without consideration; but now I see that it was my
fault, not God's fault, that I did not know any more about myself; I have
changed my mind now." She had no idea that this was religion, but she was
encouraged now to expect religion at some future time, because she loved God
so much. I said nothing to make her imagine that I thought her a Christian,
but left her to find it out. And, for a time, her mind was so entirely
occupied with thinking about God that she never seemed to ask whether she "had
religion" or not.
It is a great evil, ordinarily, to encourage persons to hope they are
Christians. Very likely you may judge prematurely. Or if not, it is better, in
any case, that they should find it out for themselves - that is, supposing
they do not see it at once.
- 2. When persons express a hope, and yet
express doubts, too, it is generally because the work is not thorough. If they
are converted, they need breaking up. They are still lingering around the
world, or they have not broken off effectually from their sins, and they need
to be pushed back, rather than urged forward. If you see reason to doubt, or
if you find that they have doubts, most probably there is some good reason to
doubt.
- Sometimes persons express a hope in Christ,
and afterwards remember some sin that needs to be confessed to men; or some
case where they have slandered, or defrauded, where it is necessary to make
satisfaction, and where either their character, or their purse, is so deeply
implicated that they hesitate, and refuse to perform their duty. This grieves
the Spirit, brings darkness over their minds, and justly leads them to doubt
whether they are truly converted. If a soul is truly converted, it will
generally be found that, where there are doubts, there is on some point a
neglect of duty. They should be searched as with a lighted candle, and brought
up to the performance of duty, and not suffered to hope until they do it.
Ordinarily, it is proper just there to throw in some plain and searching
truth, that will go through them, something that will wither their false
hopes. Do it while the Spirit of God is dealing with them, and do it in a
right way, and there is no danger of its doing harm.
To illustrate this: I knew a person who was a member of the Church, but an
abominable hypocrite - proved to be so by her conduct, and afterwards fully
confessed to be so. In a revival of religion she was awakened and deeply
convicted, and after a while she got a hope. She went to a minister to talk
with him about her hope, and he poured the truth into her mind in such a
manner as to annihilate all her hopes. She then remained under conviction many
days, and at last she broke out in hope again. The minister knew her
temperament, and knew what she needed, and he tore away her hope again. Then
she broke down. So deeply did the Spirit of God PROBE her heart that, for a
time, it took away all her bodily strength. Then she came out subdued. Before,
she had been one of the proudest of rebels against God's government, but now
she became humbled, and was one of the most modest, tender, and lovely of
Christians. No doubt that was just the way to deal with her. It was just the
treatment that her case required.
It is often useful to deal with individuals in this way. Some persons are
naturally unamiable in their temper, and unlovely in their deportment. And it
is particularly important that such persons should be dealt with most
thoroughly whenever they first begin to express hope in Christ. Unless the
work with them is, in the first place, uncommonly deep and thorough, they will
be vastly less useful, and interesting, and happy, than they would have been
had the probe been thoroughly and skillfully applied to their hearts. If they
are encouraged at first, without being thoroughly dealt with; if they are left
to go on as though all were well; if they are not sufficiently probed and
broken down, these unlovely traits of character will remain unsubdued, and
will be always breaking out, to the great injury both of their personal peace
and their general influence and usefulness as Christians.
It is important to take advantage of such characters while they are just in
these peculiar circumstances, so that they can be molded into proper form.
Do not spare, though it should be a child, or a brother, or a husband, or a
wife. Let it be a thorough work. If they express a hope, and you find they
bear the image of Christ, they are Christians. But if it should appear
doubtful - if they do not appear to be fully changed, just tear away their
hope, by searching them with discriminating truth, and leave the Spirit to do
the work more deeply. If still the image is not perfect, do it again - break
them down into a childlike spirit, and then let them hope. They will then be
clear and thorough Christians. By such a mode of treatment I have often known
people of the crookedest and most hateful natural character so transformed, in
the course of a few days, that they appeared like different beings. You would
think the work of a whole life of Christian cultivation had been done at once.
Doubtless this was the intent of our Savior's dealing with Peter. He had been
converted, but became puffed up with spiritual pride and self confidence, and
then he fell. After that, Christ broke him down again by three times searching
him with the inquiry: "Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou Me?" After which he
seems to have been a stable and devoted saint the rest of his days.
- 3. There is no need of young converts
having or expressing doubts as to their conversion. There is no more need of a
person doubting whether he is now in favor of God's government than there is
for a man to doubt whether he is in favor of our Government or another. It is,
in fact, on the face of it, absurd for a person to talk of doubting on such a
point, if he is intelligent and understands what he is talking about. It has
long been supposed to be a virtue, and a mark of humility, for a person to
doubt whether he is a Christian, but this notion that there is virtue in
doubting is a device of the devil. "I say, neighbor, are you in favor of our
Government, or do you prefer that of Russia?" "Why, I have some hopes that I
love our own Government, but I have many doubts." Wonderful! "Woman, do you
love your children?" "Why, sir, I sometimes have a trembling hope that I love
them, but you know the best have doubts." "Wife, do you love your husband?" "I
do not know - I sometimes think I do, but you know the heart is deceitful, and
we ought to be careful and not be too confident."
- Who would have such a wife? "Man, do you
love your wife, do you love your family?" "Ah, you know we are poor creatures,
we do not know our own hearts. I think I do love them, but perhaps I am
deceived."
Ridiculous!
Ordinarily, the very idea of a person expressing doubts renders his piety
truly doubtful. A real Christian has no need to doubt; and when one is full of
doubts, ordinarily you ought to doubt for him and help him doubt.
Affection to God is as much a matter of consciousness as any other affection.
A woman knows she loves her child. How? By consciousness.
She is conscious of the exercise of this affection. And she sees it carried
into action every day. In the same way a Christian may know that he loves God;
by his consciousness of this affection, and by seeing that it influences his
daily conduct.
In the case of young converts, truly such, these doubts generally arise from
their having been wrongly dealt with, and not sufficiently taught, or not
thoroughly humbled. In any case they should never be left in such a state, but
should be brought to such a thorough change that they will doubt no longer.
It is inconsistent with usefulness for a Christian to be always entertaining
doubts; it not only makes him gloomy, but it makes his religion a stumbling
block to sinners. What do sinners think of such a religion? They say: "These
converts are afraid to think they have got anything real; they are always
doubting whether it is a reality, and they ought to know whether there is
anything in it or not. If it is anything, these people seem to have it, but I
am inclined to think it rather doubtful. At any rate, I will let it pass for
the present; I do not believe God will condemn me for not attending to that
which appears so uncertain." No, a settled hope in Christ is indispensable to
usefulness; and therefore you should deal so with young converts, as to lead
them to a consistent, well-grounded, stable hope. Ordinarily, this may be
done, if pursued wisely, at the proper time, and that is at the commencement
of their religious life. They should not be left till it is done.
I know there are exceptions; there are cases where the best instructions will
be ineffectual; but these depend on the state of the health, and the condition
of the nervous system. Sometimes you find a person incapable of reasoning on a
certain topic, and so his errors will not yield to instruction. But most
commonly they mistake the state of their own hearts, because they judge under
the influence of a physical disease.
Sometimes persons under a nervous depression will go almost into despair.
Persons who are acquainted with physiology would easily explain the matter.
The only way to deal with such cases is first to recruit their health, and get
their nervous system into a proper tone, and thus remove the physical cause of
their gloom and depression; then they will be able to receive and apply your
instructions. But if you cannot remove their gloom and doubts and fears in
this way, you can at least avoid doing the positive harm that is wrought by
giving wrong instructions.
I have known even experienced Christians to have fastened upon them the error
of thinking it was necessary, or was virtuous, or a mark of humility, to be
always in doubt; and Satan would take advantage of it, and of the state of
their health, and drive them almost to despair. You ought to guard against
this, by avoiding the error when teaching young converts. Teach them that
instead of there being any virtue in doubting, it is a sin to have any reason
to doubt, and a sin if they doubt without any reason, and a sin to be gloomy
and to disgust sinners with their despondency. And if you teach them
thoroughly what religion is, and make them SEE CLEARLY what God wishes to have
them do, and lead them to do it promptly and decidedly, ordinarily they will
not be harassed with doubts and fears, but will be clear, openhearted,
cheerful, and growing Christians - an honor to the religion they profess, and
a blessing to the Church and the world.
II. MAKING A PROFESSION OF RELIGION.
I proceed to mention some things worthy of consideration in regard to young
converts making a profession of religion, or joining the Church.
- 1. Young converts should, ordinarily, offer
themselves for admission to some Church of Christ immediately. By
"immediately," I mean that they should do it the first opportunity they have.
They should not wait. If they set out in religion by waiting, most likely they
will always be waiting, and never do anything to much purpose. If they are
taught to wait under conviction, before they give themselves to Christ; or if
they are taught to wait after conversion, before, by joining the Church, they
give themselves publicly to God, they will probably go halting and stumbling
through life. The first thing they should be taught, always is: NEVER WAIT,
WHERE GOD HAS POINTED OUT YOUR DUTY. We profess to have given up the waiting
system; let us carry it through and be consistent.
- 2. While I say it is the duty of young
converts to offer themselves to the Church immediately, I do not say that, in
all cases, they should be received immediately. The Church has an undoubted
right to assume the responsibility of receiving them immediately or not. If
the Church is not satisfied in the case, it has the power to bid candidates
wait till inquiries can be made as to their character and their sincerity.
This is more necessary in large cities than it is in the country, because so
many applications are received from persons who are entire strangers. But if
the Church thinks it necessary to postpone an applicant, the responsibility is
not his. He has not postponed obedience to the dying command of Christ, and so
he has not grieved the Spirit, and so he may not be essentially injured if he
is faithful in other respects. Whereas, if he had neglected the duty
voluntarily, he would soon have got into the dark, and would very likely have
backslidden.
- If there is no particular reason for delay,
ordinarily the Church ought to receive them when they apply. If they are
sufficiently instructed on the subject of religion to know what they are
doing, and if their general character is such that they can be trusted as to
their sincerity and honesty in making a profession, I see no reason why they
should be delayed. But if there are sufficient reasons, in the view of the
Church, for making them wait a reasonable time, let the Church so decide, on
its responsibility to Jesus Christ. It should be remembered, however, what is
the responsibility which the Church thereby assumes, and that if those are
kept out of the Church who ought to be in it, the Holy Spirit is grieved.
It is impossible to lay down particular rules on this subject, applicable to
all cases. There is so great a variety of reasons which may warrant keeping
persons back, that no general rules can reach them all. Our practice, in this
Church, is to propound persons for a month after they make application, before
they are received into full communion. The reason of this is, that the Session
may have opportunity to inquire respecting individuals who offer themselves,
as so many of them are strangers. But in the country, where there are regular
congregations, and all the people have been instructed from their youth in the
doctrines of religion, and where everybody is perfectly known, the case is
different, and ordinarily I see no reason why persons of good character should
not be admitted immediately. If a person has not been a drunkard, or otherwise
of bad character, let him be admitted at once, as soon as he can give a
rational and satisfactory account of the hope that is in him.
That is evidently the way the apostles did. There is not the least evidence in
the New Testament that they ever put off a person who wanted to be baptized
and to join the Church. I know this does not satisfy some people, because they
think the case is different. But I do not see it so.
They say the apostles were inspired. That is true; but it does not follow that
they were so inspired to read the characters of men, as to be prevented from
making mistakes in this matter. On the other hand, we know they were not
inspired in this way, for we know they did make mistakes, just as ministers
may do now; and, therefore, it is not true that their being inspired men
alters the case on this point. Simon Magus was supposed to be a Christian, and
was baptized and admitted into communion, remaining in good standing until he
undertook to purchase the Holy Ghost with money.
The apostles used to admit converts from heathenism immediately, and without
delay. If they could receive persons who, perhaps, never heard more than one
Gospel sermon, and who never had a Bible, nor ever attended a Sabbath School
or Bible Class in their lives, surely it is not necessary to create an outcry
and alarm, if a Church should think proper to receive persons of good
character, who have had the Bible all their lives, and have been trained in
the Sabbath School, and have sat under the preaching of the Gospel, and who,
therefore, may be supposed to understand what they are about, and not to
profess what they do not feel.
I know it may be said that persons who make a profession of religion now, are
not obliged to make such sacrifices for their religion as the early believers
were, and, consequently, people may be more ready to play the hypocrite. And,
to some extent, that is true. But then, on the other hand, it should be
remembered that, with the instructions which they have on the subject of
religion, they are not so easily led to deceive themselves, as those who were
converted without the precious advantages of a religious education. They may
be strongly tempted to deceive others, but I insist that, with the
instructions which they have received, the converts of these great revivals
are not half so liable to deceive themselves, and take up with a false hope,
as were those in the days of the apostles. And on this ground I believe that
those Churches that are faithful in dealing with young converts, and that
exhibit habitually the power of religion, are not likely to receive so many
unconverted persons as the apostles did.
It is important that the Churches should act wisely on this point. Great evil
has been done by this practice of keeping persons out of the Church a long
time in order to see if they were Christians. This is almost as absurd as it
would be to throw a young child out into the street, to see whether it will
live; to say: "If it lives, and promises to be a healthy child, we will take
care of it," when that is the very time it wants nursing and taking care of,
the moment when the scale is turning whether it shall live or die. Is that the
way to deal with young converts? Should the Church throw her new-born children
out to the winds, and say: "If they live there, let them be taken care of; but
if they die there, then they ought to die"? I have not a doubt that thousands
of converts, in consequence of this treatment, have gone through life without
joining any Church, but have lingered along, full of doubts and fears, and
darkness, and in this way have spent their days, and gone to the grave without
the comforts and usefulness which they might have enjoyed, simply because the
Church, in her folly, has suffered them to wait outside the pale, to see
whether they would grow and thrive, without those ordinances which Jesus
Christ established particularly for their benefit.
Jesus Christ says to His Church: "Here, take these lambs, and feed them, and
shelter them, and watch over them, and protect them": and what does the Church
do? Why, turn them out alone upon the cold mountains, among the wild beasts,
to starve or perish, to see whether they are alive or not!
The whole system is as unphilosophical as it is unscriptural. Did Jesus Christ
tell His Churches to do so? Did the God of Abraham teach any such doctrine as
this, in regard to the children of Abraham? Never. He never taught us to treat
young converts in such a barbarous manner. The very way to lead them into
doubts and darkness, is to keep them away from the Church, from its
fellowship, and its ordinances.
I have understood there is a Church which has passed a resolution that no
young converts shall be admitted till they have "had a hope" for at least six
months. Where did they get any such rule? Not from the Bible, nor from the
example of the early Churches.
- 3. In examining young converts for
admission their consciences should not be ensnared by examining them too
extensively or minutely on doctrinal points. From the manner in which
examinations are conducted in some Churches, it would seem as if they expected
that young converts would be all at once acquainted with the whole system of
divinity, and able to answer every puzzling question in theology. The effect
of it is that young converts are perplexed and confused, and give their assent
to things they do not understand, and thus their conscience is ensnared, and
consequently weakened. Why, one great design of receiving young converts into
the Church is to teach them doctrines; but if they are to be kept out of the
Church until they understand the whole system of doctrines, this end is
defeated. Will you keep them out till one main design of receiving them is
accomplished by other means? It is absurd. There are certain cardinal
doctrines of Christianity, which are embraced in the experience of every true
convert; and these young converts will testify to them, on examination, if
questioned in such a way as to draw out knowledge, and not in such a way as to
puzzle and confound. The questions should be such as are calculated to draw
out from them what they have learned by experience, and not what they may have
got in theory before or since their conversion. The object is, not to find out
how much they know, or how good scholars they are in divinity, as you would
examine a school; it is to find out whether they have a change of heart, to
learn whether they have experienced the great truths of religion by their
power in their own souls. You see therefore how absurd, and injurious too, it
must be, to examine, as is sometimes done, like a lawyer at the bar
cross-examining a suspicious witness. It should rather be like a faithful
physician anxious to find out his patient's true condition, and therefore
leading him, by inquiries and hints, to disclose the real symptoms of the
case.
- You will always find, if you put your
questions rightly, that real converts will see clearly those great fundamental
points - the Divine authority of the Scriptures, the necessity of the
influences of the Holy Spirit, the Deity of Christ, the doctrines of total
depravity and regeneration, the necessity of the atonement, justification by
faith, and the justice of the eternal punishment of the wicked. By a proper
course of inquiries you will find all these points come out, if you put your
questions in such a way that they are understood.
A Church Session in this city has, as we are informed, passed a vote, that no
person shall join that Church till he will give his assent to the whole
Presbyterian Confession of Faith, and adopt it as his "rule of faith and
practice and Christian obedience." That is, they must read the book through,
which is about three times as large as this hymn-book which I hold, and must
understand it, and agree to it all, before they can be admitted to the Church,
before they can make a profession of religion, or obey the command of Christ.
By what authority does a Church say that no one shall join their communion
till he understands all the points and technicalities of this long Confession
of Faith? Is that their charity, to cram this whole Confession of Faith down
the throat of a young convert, before they let him so much as come to the
Communion? He says: "I love the Lord Jesus Christ, and wish to obey His
command." "Very well, but do you understand and adopt the Confession of
Faith?" He says: "I do not know, for I never read that, but I have read the
Bible, and I love that, and wish to follow the directions in it, and to come
to the table of the Lord."
"Do you love the Confession of Faith? If not, you SHALL NOT COME,"
is the reply of this charitable Session; "you shall not sit down at the Lord's
table till you have adopted all this Confession of Faith." Did Jesus Christ
ever authorize a Church Session to say this - to tell that child of God, who
stands there with tears, and asks permission to obey his Lord, and who
understands the grounds of his faith, and can give a satisfactory reason of
his hope - to tell him he cannot join the Church till he understands the
Confession of Faith? Shut the door against young converts till they swallow
the Confession of Faith! Will such a Church prosper? Never!
No Church on earth has a right to impose its extended Confession of Faith on a
young convert who admits the fundamentals of religion. They may let the young
convert know their own faith on ever so many points, and they may examine him,
if they think it necessary, as to his belief; but suppose he has doubts on
some points not essential to Christian experience, - the doctrine of Infant
Baptism, or of Election, or the Perseverance of the Saints; and suppose he
honestly and frankly tells you he has not made up his mind concerning these
points? Has any minister or Church a right to say, he shall not come to the
Lord's table till he has finished all his researches into these subjects, that
he shall not obey Christ till he has fully made up his mind on such points, on
which Christians, and devoted ones too, differ among themselves? I would
sooner cut off my right hand than debar a convert under such circumstances. I
would teach a young convert as well as I could in the time before he made his
application, and I would examine him candidly as to his views, and after he
was in the Church I would endeavor to make him grow in knowledge as he grows
in grace. And by just as much confidence as I have that my own doctrines are
the doctrines of God, I should expect to make him adopt them, if I could have
a fair hearing before his mind. But I never would bid one whom I charitably
believed to be a child of God, to stay away from his Father's table, because
he did not see all I see, or believe all I believe, through the whole system
of divinity. The thing is utterly irrational, ridiculous, and wicked.
- 4. Sometimes persons who are known to
entertain a hope dare not make a profession of religion for fear they should
be deceived. I would always deal decidedly with such cases. A hope that will
not warrant a profession of religion is manifestly worse than no hope, and the
sooner it is torn away the better. Shall a man hope he loves God, and yet not
obey Jesus Christ? Preposterous! Such a hope had better be given up at once.
- 5. Sometimes persons professing to be
converts will make an excuse for not joining the Church, that they can enjoy
religion just as well without it.
- This is always suspicious. I should look
out for such characters. It is almost certain they have no religion.
Ordinarily, if a person does not desire to be associated with the people of
God, he is rotten at the foundation. It is because he wants to keep out of the
responsibilities of a public profession. He has a feeling within him that he
had rather be free, so that he can, by and by, go back to the world again, if
he likes, without the reproach of instability or hypocrisy. Enjoy religion
just as well without obeying Jesus Christ! It is false on the face of it. He
overlooks the fact that religion consists in obeying Jesus Christ.
III. THE IMPORTANCE OF GIVING RIGHT
INSTRUCTION.
Ordinarily, the Christian character of converts throughout life is molded and
fashioned according to the manner in which they are dealt with when first
converted. There are many who have been poorly taught at first, but have been
afterwards re-converted, and if they are then properly dealt with, they may be
made something of. But the proper time to do this is when they are first brought
in, when their minds are soft and tender, and easily yield to the truth. Then
they may be led with a hair, if they think it is the truth of God. And whatever
notions in religion they then get, they are apt to cleave to forever afterwards.
It is almost impossible to get a man away from the notions he acquires when he
is a young convert. You may reason him down, but he cleaves to them. How often
is it the case where persons have been taught certain things when first
converted, that if they afterwards get a new minister who teaches somewhat
differently, they will rise up against him as if he were going to subvert the
faith, carry away the Church into error, and throw everything into confusion.
Thus you see that young converts are thrown into the hands of the Church, and it
devolves upon the Church to mold them, and form them into Christians of the
right stamp. To a large extent, their future comfort and usefulness depend on
the manner in which they are instructed at the outset. The future character of
the Church, the progress of revivals, the coming of the millennium, depend on
right instruction being imparted, and a right direction of thought and life
given, to those who are young converts.
IV. THINGS WHICH SHOULD NOT BE TAUGHT.
- 1. "You will not always feel as you do
now." When the young convert is rejoicing in his Savior, and calculating to
live for the glory of God and the good of mankind, how often is he met with
this reply: "You will not always feel so." Thus, his mind is prepared to
expect that he shall backslide, and not to be much surprised when he does.
This is just the way the devil wants young converts dealt with, to have old
Christians tell them: "Your feelings will not last, but, by and by, you will
be as cold as we are." It has made my heart bleed to see it. When the young
convert has been pouring out his warm heart to some old professor, and
expecting the warm burstings of a kindred spirit responding to his own, what
does he meet with? This cold answer, coming like a northern blast over his
soul: "You will not always feel so." SHAME! Just preparing the young convert
to expect that he shall backslide as a matter of course; so that when he
begins to decline, as under the very influences of this instruction it is most
likely he will, it produces no surprise or alarm in his mind, but he looks at
it just as a thing of course, doing as everybody else does.
- I have heard it preached as well as
expressed in prayer, that seasons of backsliding are "necessary to test the
Church." They say: "When it rains, you can find water anywhere: it is only in
seasons of drought that you can tell where the deep springs are." Wonderful
logic! And so you would teach that Christians must get cold and stupid, and
backslide from God - and for what reason? Why, forsooth, to show that they are
not hypocrites.
Amazing! You would prove that they are hypocrites in order to show that they
are not.
Such doctrine as this is the very last that should be taught to young
converts. They should be told that they have only begun the Christian life,
and that their religion is to consist in going on in it. They should be taught
to go forward all the time, and "grow in grace" continually. Do not teach them
to taper off their religion - to let it grow smaller and smaller till it comes
to a point. God says: "The path of the just is as the shining light, that
shineth more and more unto the perfect day" (Proverbs 4:18). Now, whose path
is that which grows dimmer and dimmer into the perfect night? They should be
brought to such a state of mind that the first indications of decay in
spirituality or zeal will alarm them and spur them up to duty. There is no
need that young converts should backslide as they do. Paul did not backslide.
And I do not doubt that this very doctrine: "You will not always feel so," is
one of the grand devices of Satan to bring about the result which it predicts.
- 2. "Learn to walk by faith and not by
sight." This is sometimes said to young converts in reference to their
continuing to exhibit the power of religion, and is a manifest perversion of
Scripture. If they begin to lose their faith and zeal, and get into darkness,
some old professor will tell them: "Ah, you cannot expect to have the Savior
always with you, you have been walking by sight; you must learn to walk by
faith and not by sight." That is, you must learn to get as cold as death, and
then hang on to the doctrine of the Saints' Perseverance, as your only ground
of hope that you shall be saved. And that is walking by faith! Cease to
persevere, and then hold on to the doctrine of Perseverance! "One of guilt's
blunders, and the loudest laugh of hell." Living in the enjoyment of God's
favor and the comforts of the Holy Ghost is what they call "walking by sight"!
Do you suppose young converts see the Savior at the time they believe on Him?
- When they are so full of the enjoyments of
heaven, do you suppose they see heaven, and so walk by sight? It is absurd on
the face of it. It is not faith, it is presumption, that makes the backslider
hold on to the doctrine of Perseverance, as if that would save him, without
any sensible exercises of godliness in his soul. Those who attempt to walk by
faith in this way had better take care, or they will walk into hell with their
"faith." Faith indeed! "Faith without works is dead" (James 2:20). Can dead
faith make the soul live?
- 3. "Wait till you see whether you can hold
out." When a young convert feels zealous and warm-hearted, and wants to lay
himself out for God, some prudent old professor will caution him not to go too
fast. "You had better not be too forward in religion, till you see whether you
can hold out; for if you take this high ground and then fall, you will
disgrace religion."
- That is, in plain English: "Do not do
anything that constitutes religion, till you see whether you have religion."
Religion consists in obeying God.
Now, these wise teachers tell a young convert: "Do not obey God till you see"
- what? - till you see whether you have obeyed Him - or, till you see whether
you have obtained that substance, that mysterious thing which they imagine is
created and put into man, like a lump of new flesh, and called "religion."
This waiting system is all wrong. There is no Scripture warrant for telling a
person to wait, when the command of God is upon him, and the path of duty is
before him. Let him go ahead.
Young converts should be fully taught that this is the only consistent way to
find out whether they have any religion, to find that they are heartily
engaged in doing the will of God. To tell the convert to wait, therefore,
before he does these things, till he first gets his evidence, is reversing the
matter, and is absurd.
- 4. "Wait till you get strength, before you
take up the cross." This is applied to various religious duties. Sometimes it
is applied to prayer: just as if prayer were a cross. I have known young
converts advised not to attempt to pray in their families, or "not to attempt
quite yet" to pray in meetings and social circles. "Wait till you get
strength." Just as if they could get strength without exercise. Strength comes
by exercise. You cannot get strength by lying still. Let a child lie in a
cradle continually, and he would never have any strength; he might grow in
size, but he never could be anything more than a great baby. This is a law of
nature. There is no substitute for exercise in producing strength. It is so in
the body; and it is just so with the mind. It is so with the affections; so
with the judgment; so with conscience. All the powers of the soul are
strengthened by exercise. I need not now enter into the philosophy of this.
Everybody knows it is so. If the mind is not exercised, the brain will not
grow, and the man will become an idiot. If the affections are not exercised,
he will become a stoic. To talk to a convert about neglecting Christian action
till he gets strength, is absurd. If he wants to gain strength, let him go to
work.
- 5. Young converts should not be made
sectarian in their feelings. They should not be taught to dwell upon sectarian
distinctions, or to be sticklish about sectarian points. They ought to examine
these points, according to their importance, at a proper time, and in a proper
way, and make up their minds for themselves. But they should not be taught to
dwell upon them, or to make much of them at the outset of their religious
life. Otherwise there is great danger that their whole religion will run into
sectarianism. I have seen most sad and melancholy exhibitions of the effects
of this upon young converts. And whenever I see professed converts taking a
strong hold of sectarian peculiarities, no matter of what denomination of
Christians, I always feel in doubt about them. When I hear them asking: "Do
you believe in the doctrine of Election?" or: "Do you believe in sprinkling?"
or: "Do you believe in immersing?" I feel sad. I never knew such converts to
be worth much. Their sectarian zeal soon sours their feelings, eats out all
the heart of their religion, and molds their whole character into sinful,
sectarian bigotry. They generally become mighty zealous for the traditions of
the elders, and very little concerned for the salvation of souls.
V. THINGS WHICH IT IS IMPORTANT SHOULD BE
TAUGHT.
- 1. One of the first things young converts
should be taught is to distinguish between emotion and principle in religion.
I want you to get hold of the words, and have them fixed in your mind; to have
you distinguish between emotion and principle.
- By emotion, I mean that state of mind of
which we are conscious, and which we call feeling - an involuntary state of
mind, that arises, of course, when we are in certain circumstances or under
certain influences.
There may be high-wrought feelings, or they may subside into tranquillity, or
disappear entirely. But these emotions should be carefully distinguished from
religious principle. By principle, I do not mean any substance or root or seed
or sprout implanted in the soul. But I mean the voluntary decision of the
mind, the firm determination to fulfill duty and to obey the will of God, by
which a Christian should always be governed.
When a man is fully determined to obey God, because it is RIGHT that he should
obey God, I call that principle. Whether he feels any lively religious emotion
at the time or not, he will do his duty cheerfully, readily, and heartily,
whatever may be the state of his feelings. This is acting upon principle, and
not from emotion. Many young converts hold mistaken views upon this subject,
and depend almost entirely on the state of their feelings to go forward in
duty. Some will not lead a prayer meeting, unless they feel as if they could
make an eloquent prayer. Multitudes are influenced almost entirely by their
emotions, and they give way to this, as if they thought themselves under no
obligation to duty, unless urged on by some strong emotion. They will be very
zealous in religion when they feel like it, when their emotions are warm and
lively, but they will not act out religion consistently, and carry it into all
the concerns of life. They are religious only as they are impelled by a gush
of feeling. But this is not true religion.
Young converts should be carefully taught that when duty is before them they
are to do it. However dull their feelings may be, if duty calls, DO IT.
Do not wait for feeling, but DO IT. Most likely the very emotions for which
you would wait will be called into exercise when you begin to do your duty. If
the duty be prayer, for instance, and you have not the feelings you would
wish, do not wait for emotions before you pray, but pray, and "open thy mouth
wide" (Psalm 81:10); and in doing it, you are most likely to have the emotions
for which you were inclined to wait, and which constitute the conscious
happiness of religion.
- 2. Young converts should be taught that
they have renounced the ownership of all their possessions, and of themselves,
and that if they have not done this they are not Christians. They should not
be left to think that anything is their own; their time, property, influence,
faculties, body or soul. "Ye are not your own" (1 Corinthians 6:19); they
belong to God; and when they submitted to God they made a free surrender of
all to Him, to be ruled and disposed of at His pleasure. They have no right to
spend one hour as if their time were their own; no right to go anywhere, or do
anything, for themselves, but should hold all at the disposal of God, and
employ all for the glory of God. If they do not, they ought not to call
themselves Christians, for the very idea of being a Christian is to renounce
self and become entirely consecrated to God. A man has no more right to
withhold anything from God than he has to rob or steal. It is robbery in the
highest sense of the term. It is an infinitely higher crime than it would be
for a clerk in a store to go and take the money of his employer, and spend it
on his own lusts and pleasures. I mean, that for a man to withhold from God is
a higher crime against HIM than a man can commit against his fellow-man,
inasmuch as God is the Owner of all things in an infinitely higher sense than
man can be the owner of anything. If God calls on them to employ anything they
have, their money, or their time, or to give their children, or to dedicate
themselves in advancing His Kingdom, and they refuse, because they want to use
them in their own way, or prefer to do something else, it is vastly more
blamable than for a clerk or an agent to go and embezzle the money that is
entrusted him by his employer.
- God is, in an infinitely higher sense, the
Owner of all, than any employer can be said to be the owner of what he has.
And the Church of Christ never will take high ground, never will be
disentangled from the world, never will be able to go forward without these
continual declensions and backslidings, until Christians, and the Churches
generally, take the ground, and hold to it, that it is just as much a matter
of discipline for a Church member practically to deny his stewardship as to
deny the Deity of Christ; and that covetousness, fairly proved, shall just as
soon exclude a man from the Communion as adultery.
The Church is mighty orthodox in notions, but very heretical in practice; but
the time must come when the Church will be just as vigilant in guarding
orthodoxy in practice as orthodoxy in doctrine, and just as prompt to turn out
heretics in practice, as heretics that corrupt the doctrines of the Gospel. In
fact, it is vastly more important. The only design of doctrine is to produce
practice, and it does not seem to be understood by the Church that true faith
"works by love and purifies the heart," that heresy in practice is proof
conclusive of heresy in sentiment.
The Church is very sticklish for correct doctrine, but very careless about
correct living. This is preposterous. Has it come to this, that the Church of
Jesus Christ is to be satisfied with correct notions on some abstract points,
and never reduce her orthodoxy to practice? Let it be so no longer.
It is high time these matters were set right. And the only way to set them
right is to begin with those who are just entering upon religion. Young
converts must be told that they are just as worthy of condemnation (and that
the Church can hold no fellowship with them), if they show a covetous spirit,
and turn a deaf ear when the whole world is calling for help, as if they were
living in adultery, or in the daily worship of idols.
- 3. Teach them how to cultivate a tender
conscience. I am often amazed to find how little conscience there is even
among those whom we hope are Christians. And here we see the reason of it.
Their consciences were never cultivated. They never were taught how to
cultivate a tender conscience.
- They have not even a natural conscience.
They have dealt so rudely with their conscience, and resisted it so often,
that it has got blunted, and does not act. The usefulness of a Christian
greatly depends on his knowing how to cultivate his conscience. Young converts
should be taught to keep their conscience just as tender as the apple of the
eye. They should watch their conduct and their motives, and let their motives
be so pure and their conduct so disinterested as not to offend, or injure, or
stifle conscience.
They should maintain such a habit of listening to conscience, that it will
always be ready to give forth a stern verdict on all occasions.
It is astonishing to see how much the conscience may be cultivated by a proper
course. If rightly attended to, it may be made so pure, and so powerful, that
it will always respond exactly to the Word of God. Present any duty to such a
Christian, or any self-denial, or suffering, and only show him the Word of
God, and he will do it without a word of objection.
In a few months, if properly taught, young converts may have a conscience so
delicately poised that the weight of a feather will turn them.
Only bring a "Thus saith the Lord," and they will be always ready to do that,
be it what it may.
- 4. Young converts should be taught to pray
without ceasing. That is, they should always keep a watch over their minds,
and be all the time in a prayerful spirit. They should be taught to pray
always, whatever may take place. For the want of right instruction on this
point many young converts suffer loss and get far away from God. For instance,
sometimes it happens that a young convert will fall into some sin, and then he
feels as if he could not pray, and instead of overcoming this he feels so
distressed that he waits for the keen edge of his distress to pass away.
Instead of going right to Jesus Christ in the midst of his agony, and
confessing his sin out of the fullness of his heart, and getting a renewed
pardon, and peace restored, he waits till all the keenness of his feelings has
subsided; and then his repentance, if he does repent, is cold and
half-hearted. Let me tell you, beloved, never to do this; but when your
conscience presses you, go then to Christ, confess your sin fully, and pour
out your heart to God.
- Sometimes people will neglect to pray
because they are in the dark, and feel no desire to pray. But that is the very
time when they need prayer.
That is the very reason why they ought to pray. You should go right to God and
confess your coldness and darkness of mind. Tell Him just how you feel. Tell
Him: "O Lord, I have no desire to pray, but I know I ought to pray." And
immediately the Spirit may come and lead your heart out in prayer, and all the
dark clouds will pass away.
- 5. Young converts should be faithfully
warned against adopting a false standard in religion. They should not be left
to fall in behind old professors, or keep such before their minds as a
standard of holy living.
- They should always look at Christ as their
model. Not aim at being as good Christians as the old Church members, and not
think they are doing pretty well because they are as much awake as the old
members of the Church; but they should aim at being holy. The Church has been
greatly injured for the want of attention to this matter. Young converts have
come forward, and their hearts were warm, and their zeal ardent enough to aim
at a high standard, but they were not directed properly, and so they soon
settled down into the notion that what was good enough for others was good
enough for them, and therefore they ceased to aim higher than those who were
before them. And in this way the Church, instead of rising, with every
revival, higher and higher in holiness, is kept nearly stationary.
- 6. Young converts should be taught to do
all their duty. They should never make a compromise with duty, nor think of
saying: "I will do this as an offset for neglecting that." They should never
rest satisfied till they have done their duties of every kind, in relation to
their families, the Church, Sabbath Schools, the impenitent around them, the
disposal of their property, and the conversion of the world. Let them do their
duty, as they feel it when their hearts are warm; and never attempt to pick
and choose among the commandments of God.
- 7. They should be made to feel that they
have no separate interest. It is time Christians were made actually to feel
that they have no interest whatever, separate from the interests of Jesus
Christ and His Kingdom.
- They should understand that they are
incorporated into the family of Jesus Christ, as members in full, so that
their whole interest is identified with His. They are embarked with Him, they
have gone on board, and taken their all; and henceforth they have nothing to
do, nor anything to say, except as it is connected with this interest, and
bearing on the cause and Kingdom of Christ.
- 8. They should be taught to maintain
singleness of motive. Young converts should not begin to have a double mind on
any subject, nor let selfish motives mingle with good motives in anything they
do. But this can never be so long as Christians are allowed to hold a separate
interest of their own, distinct from the interest of Jesus Christ. If they
feel that they have a separate interest, it is impossible to keep them from
regarding it, and having an eye to it as well as to Christ's interest, in many
things that they do. It is only by becoming entirely consecrated to God, and
giving up all to His service, that they can ever keep their eye single and
their motives pure.
- 9. They should set out with a determination
to aim at being useful in the highest degree possible. They should not rest
satisfied merely with being useful, or remaining in a situation where they can
do some good. But if they see an opportunity where they can do more good, they
must embrace it, whatever may be the sacrifice to themselves. No matter what
it may cost them; no matter what danger or what suffering may be involved; no
matter what change in their outward circumstances, or habits, or employments,
it may lead to; if they are satisfied that they will on the whole do more
good, they should not even hesitate. How else can they be like God? How can
they think to bear the image of Jesus Christ, if they are not prepared to do
all the good that is in their power? When a man is converted he comes into a
new world, and should consider himself as a new man. If he finds he can do
most good by remaining in his old employment, let it be so; but if he can do
more good in some other way, he is bound to change. It is for the want of
attention to this subject, at the outset, that Christians have got such low
ideas on the subject of duty; and that is the reason why there are so many
useless members in our Churches.
- 10. They must be taught, not to aim at
comfort but usefulness, in religion.
- There are a great many spiritual epicures
in the Churches, who are all the while seeking to be happy in religion, white
they are taking very little pains to be useful. They had much rather spend
their time in singing joyful hymns, and pouring out their happy feelings in a
gushing tide of exultation and triumph, than in an agonizing prayer for
sinners, or in going about pulling dying men out of the fire. They seem to
feel as if they were born to enjoy themselves. But I do not think such
Christians show such fruits as to make their example one to be imitated. Such
was not the temper of the apostles; they travailed for souls; they labored in
weariness and painfulness, and were "in deaths oft," to save sinners (2
Corinthians 11:23). Ordinarily, Christians are not qualified to drink deep at
the fountain of joy. In ordinary cases, a deep agony of prayer for souls is
more profitable than high flights of joy. Let young converts be taught plainly
not to calculate upon a life of joy and triumph. They may be called to go
through fiery trials; Satan may sift them like wheat. But they must go
forward, not calculating so much to be happy as to be useful; not talking
about comfort but duty; not desiring flights of joy and triumph, but hungering
and thirsting after righteousness; not studying how to create new flights of
rapture, but how to know the will of God and do it. They will be happy enough
in heaven. There they may sing the song of Moses and the Lamb. And they will
in fact enjoy a more solid and rational happiness here, by thinking nothing
about it, but patiently devoting themselves to do the will of God.
- 11. They should be taught to have moral
courage, and not to be afraid of going forward in duty. The Bible insists
fully on Christian boldness and courage in action, as a duty. I do not mean
that they should indulge in bravado, like Peter, telling what they will do,
and boasting of their courage.
- The boaster is generally a coward at heart.
But I mean moral courage - a humble and fixed decision of purpose, that will
go forward in any duty, unangered and unawed, with the meekness and firmness
of the Son of God.
- 12. They should be so instructed as to be
sound in the faith. That is, they should be early made, as far as possible,
complete and correct in regard to their doctrinal belief. As soon as may be,
without turning their minds off from their practical duties in promoting the
glory of God and the salvation of men, they should be taught fully and plainly
all the leading doctrines of the Bible. Doctrinal knowledge is indispensable
to growth in grace.
- Knowledge is the food of the mind. "That
the soul be without knowledge," says the wise man, "it is not good" (Proverbs
19:2). The mind cannot grow without knowledge any more than the body without
food. And therefore it is important that young converts should be thoroughly
indoctrinated, and made to understand the Bible. By "indoctrinating," I do not
mean teaching them the catechism, but teaching them to draw knowledge from the
fountain-head. Create in their minds such an appetite for knowledge that they
will eat the Bible up - will devour it - will love it, and love it all. "All
Scripture... is profitable,... that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly
furnished unto all good works" (2 Timothy 3:16, 17).
- 13. Great pains should be taken to guard
young converts against censoriousness. Young converts, when they first come
out on the Lord's side, and are all warm and zealous, sometimes find old
professors so cold and dead, that they are strongly tempted to be censorious.
This should be corrected immediately, otherwise the habit will poison their
minds and destroy their religion.
- 14. They must learn to say "NO." This is a
very difficult lesson to many.
- See that young woman. Formerly she loved
the gay circle, and took delight in its pleasures; she joined the Church, and
then found herself aloof from all her old associates. They do not ask her now
to their balls and parties, because they know she will not join them; and
perhaps they keep entirely away for a time, for fear she should converse with
them about their souls.
But, by and by, they grow a little bold, and some of them venture to ask her
just to take a ride with a few friends. She does not like to say "No."
They are her old friends, only a few of them are going, and surely a ride is
so innocent a recreation that she may accept the invitation. But, now she has
begun to comply, the ice is broken, and they have her again as one of them. It
goes on, and she begins to attend their social visits - "only a few friends,
you know," - till, by and by, the carpet is taken up for a dance; and the next
thing, perhaps, she has gone for a sleigh ride on Saturday night, coming home
after midnight, and then sleeping all the forenoon on the Sabbath to make up
for it - perhaps Communion Sabbath, too. All for the want of learning to say
"No."
See that young man. For a time he was always in his place in the Sabbath
School and in the prayer meeting. But, by and by, his old friends begin to
treat him with attention again, and they draw him along, step by step.
He reasons that if he refuses to go with them in things that are innocent, he
will lose his influence with them. And so he goes on, till prayer meeting,
Bible class, and even private Bible reading and prayer are neglected. Ah,
young man, stop there! If you do not wish to expose the cause of Christ to
scorn and contempt, learn to resist the beginnings of temptation.
- 15. They should be taught, what is, and
what is not, Christian experience.
- It is necessary, both for their comfort and
their usefulness, that they should understand this, so that they need not run
themselves into needless distress for the want of that which is by no means
essential to Christian experience, nor flatter themselves that they have more
religion than they really exercise.
- 16. Teach them not to count anything a
sacrifice which they do for God.
- Some persons are always telling about the
sacrifices they make in religion.
I have no confidence in such piety. Why keep telling about their sacrifices,
as if everything they do for God is a sacrifice? If they loved God they would
not talk so. If they considered their own interests and the interest of Christ
identical, they would not talk of making sacrifices for Christ: it would be
like talking of making sacrifices for themselves.
- 17. It is of great importance that young
converts should be taught to be strictly honest. I mean more by this than
perhaps you would think. It is a great thing to be strictly honest. It is
being very different from the world at large, and different even from the
great body of professors of religion. The holiest man I ever knew, and one who
had been many years a Christian and a minister, once made the remark to me:
"Brother, it is a great thing to be strictly honest and straight in
everything, so that God's pure eye can see that the mind is perfectly
upright."
- It is of great importance that young
converts should understand what it is to be strictly honest in everything, so
that they can maintain "a conscience void of offense toward God, and toward
men" (Acts 24:16). Alas, alas, how little conscience there is! How little of
that real honesty, that pure, simple uprightness, which ought to mark the life
of a child of God. How little do many regard even an express promise. I heard
the other day that of a number of individuals who subscribed to the
Anti-Slavery Society, not half will pay their subscriptions. The plea is, that
they signed when they were under excitement, and do not choose to pay. Just as
if their being excited released them from the obligation to keep their
promise.
Why, it is just as dishonest as it would be to refuse payment of a note of
hand. They promised, signed their names, and now will not pay? And they call
that honesty!
I have heard that a number of men signed for hundreds of dollars for the
Oneida Institute, promising to pay the money when called on; and when they
were called on, they refused to pay the money. And the reason is that all in
the Institute have turned Abolitionists! Very well. Suppose they have. Does
that alter your promise? Did you sign on the condition that if abolitionism
were introduced you should be clear? If you did, then you are clear. But if
you gave your promise without any condition, it is just as dishonest to refuse
as if you had given a note of hand. And yet some of you might be almost angry
if anybody were to charge you with refusing to pay money that you had
promised.
Look at this seriously. Who does God say will go to heaven? Read the fifteenth
psalm, and see. "He that sweareth to his own hurt, and changeth not." What do
you think of that? If a man has promised anything, except it be to commit sin,
let him keep his promise, if he means to be honest and to go to heaven. But
these people will make promises, and because they cannot be prosecuted, will
break them as if they were nothing. They would not let a cheque of theirs be
returned from the bank. Why? Because they would lose credit, and would be
sued. But the Oneida Institute, and the Anti-Slavery Society, and other
societies, will not sue for the money, and therefore these people take offense
at something, and refuse to pay. Is this honest? Will such honesty as this get
them admitted to heaven? What?
Break your promises, and go up and carry a lie in your hand before God?
If you refuse or neglect to fulfill your promises, and go up and carry a lie
in your hand before God? If you refuse or neglect to fulfill your promise you
are a liar; and if you persist in this, you shall have your part in the lake
that burns with fire and brimstone. I would not for ten thousand worlds die
with money in my hands that I had unrighteously withheld from any object to
which I had promised it. Such money will "eat as doth a canker" (2 Timothy
2:17).
If you are not able to pay the money, that is a good excuse. But then, say so.
But if you refuse to pay what you have promised, because you have altered your
mind, rely upon it, you are guilty. You cannot pray till you pay that money.
Will you pray: "O Lord, I promised to give that money, but I altered my mind,
and broke my promise; but still, O Lord, I pray Thee to bless me, and forgive
my sin, although I keep my money, and make me happy in Thy love"? Will such
prayers be heard? Never.
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Revival Lectures by Charles G. Finney - Public Domain [Copy Freely]