SERMON VI.
CONSCIENCE AND THE BIBLE IN HARMONY.
June 6, 1855
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
Text.--2 Cor. 4:2: "By manifestation of the truth commending ourselves to every
man's conscience in the sight of God."
The context shows that these words of Paul refer to his manner of preaching, and to the aim which he had in those labours.
I. Conscience is a moral function of the reason, or intellect.
II. The Bible and the human conscience are at one and entirely agree in all their moral decisions and teachings.
I. Conscience is a moral function of the reason, or intellect.
II. The Bible and the human conscience are at one and entirely agree in all their moral decisions and teachings.
What a remarkable fact is this! Here is a book containing myriads of precepts--that is, if you enumerate all the specific applications; yet they are comprised under two great principles--supreme love to God, and equal love to our fellow man. But in all these countless specific applications of these great principles, whatever the Bible affirms, conscience endorses. This is a most remarkable fact. It never has been true of any other book, that all its moral precepts without exception are approved and endorsed by the human conscience. This book, so endorsed, must be inspired of God. It is impossible to suppose that a book so accredited of conscience can be uninspired. It is the greatest absurdity to deny its inspiration. A book so perfectly in harmony with conscience must come from the author of conscience.
Men said of Christ when he taught--"Never man spake like this man"--so wonderfully did the truths taught commend themselves to every man's conscience. He spake "with authority," and "not as the scribes;"--for every word went home to man's conscience, and every precept revealing duty, was recognized and endorsed as right by the hearer's own convictions. This striking feature characterized all his teachings.
There never was a sinner, awakened to see his sins truly, who did not go into despair unless he saw the atonement. I could give you many cases of this sort which have fallen under my own observation, in which, persons, long denying the need of any atonement, have at length had conscience fully aroused, and have then invariably felt that God could not forgive unless in some way his insulted majesty were vindicated.
Indeed, God might be perfectly ready to forgive so far as his feelings are concerned, for he is not vindictive, neither is he implacable; but he is a moral governor and has a character, as such, to sustain. The interests of his created universe rest on his administration, and he must take care what impression he makes on the minds of beings who can sin.
In this light we can appreciate the propensity always felt by the human mind to put some Mediator between a holy God and itself. Catholics interpose saints and the Virgin--supposing that these will have a kind of access to God which they, in their guilt, cannot have. Thus, conscience recognizes the universal need of an atonement.
The Bible every where reveals the adequacy of the atonement made by Christ; and it is remarkable that the human conscience also promptly accepts it as sufficient. You may arouse the conscience as deeply as you please--may set it all on fire, and yet as soon as the atonement of Christ is revealed, and the mind understands what it is, and what relations it sustains to law and government, suddenly conscience is quiet; the sense of condemnation is gone; the assurance of an adequate atonement restores peace to the troubled soul. Conscience fully accepts this atonement as amply sufficient, even as the Bible also does.
But nothing else than this atonement can satisfy conscience. Not good works, ever so many or so costly; not penance, not any amount of self-imposed suffering and sacrifice. Let a sinner attempt to substitute ever so much prayer and fasting, in place of Christ as an atoning sacrifice, it is all of no avail. The more he tries, the more he is dissatisfied. Conscience will not accept it. Neither will the Bible. Most wonderfully, we find it still true, to whatever point we turn, that conscience and the Bible bear the same testimony--take the same positions.
Conscience affirms that there can be no other conceivable way of justifying the sinner except by faith in Christ. You may try ever so much to devise some other scheme, yet you cannot. You may try to get peace of mind on any other scheme than this--as some of you have--but all is of no avail. I once said to a Roman Catholic--"When you went to confessional, you hoped to be accepted and to get peace?" "Yes." "But did you find it to your full satisfaction?" "Not certainly. I cannot say that I knew I was accepted."
There never was a Catholic who had been through all their ceremonies, and afterwards, being converted to faith in Christ alone, experienced the deep peace of the gospel, who did not see the wide difference between his experience as a papist and his experience as a gospel believer. His conscience so completely accepts his faith in the latter case, and gives him such deep, assured peace;--while in the former case there could be nothing of this sort.
Yet each agree in teaching that God can forgive the penitent through faith in Christ, but can extend forgiveness to no sinner on any other ground.
REMARKS.
1. We see why the Bible is so readily received as from God. Few have ever read
any treatise of argument on this subject; but as soon as one reads those parts
which relate to morals, conscience at once affirms and endorses all. You need no
higher evidence that he who speaks in the Bible is very God. The truth commends
itself to every man's conscience, and needs no other endorser of its divine
origin. Probably in all this congregation not one in fifty ever sat down to read
through a treatise on the evidences of a divine revelation; and you can give
perhaps no other reason for your belief in the Bible than the fact that it
commends itself to your conscience.
2. You see why one who has seen this harmony between conscience and the Bible,
cannot be reasoned out of his belief in the Bible by any amount of subtle
sophistry. Perhaps he will say to his opponent--"I cannot meet your sophistries;
I have never speculated in that direction; but I know the Bible is true, and the
whole gospel is from God; I know it by the affirmations of my own mind. I know
it by its perfect fitness to meet my wants. I know it has told me all I ever
felt, or have ever needed, and it has brought a perfect supply for all my need."
This he can say in reply to sophistry which he may have no other logic to
withstand. But this is amply sufficient.
In my own case, I know it was the beauty and intrinsic evidence of the Bible
which kept me from being an infidel. I should have been an infidel if I could,
and I should have been a Universalist if I could have been, for I was wicked
enough to have been either. But I knew the Bible to be true; and when I set
myself to make out an argument against it, I could not divest myself of an ever
present conviction that this was the wrong side. Just as a lawyer who sits down
to examine a case and finds at every turn that his evidence is weak or
irrelevant, and is troubled with a growing conviction that he is on the wrong
side; and the more he examines his case and his law books, the more he sees that
he must be wrong--so I found it in my investigations into the evidences of
revelation, and in my readings of the Bible. In those times I was wicked enough
for anything, and used to go out among the plain Christian people and talk to
them about the Bible, and puzzle them with my questions and hard points. I could
confound, even though I could not convince them, and then I would try to enjoy
my sport at their expense. Sometimes afterwards, I would go and tell them I
could show them how they settled this question of the divine authority of the
Bible, although they could not tell me.
I don't believe there ever was, or ever can be, a candid man who shall candidly
examine the Bible, compare its teachings with the affirmations of his own
conscience, and then deny its authority.
3. Neither Paul nor Jesus Christ preached sermons on the evidences of a
revelation from God;--how was it then that Christ brought out the truth in such
a way as to reach the conscience, wake up its energies, and make it speak out in
fearful tones? He manifested the truth in such a way as to commend it to every
man's conscience.
4. Just in proportion as a man fails to develop his conscience, or blinds,
abuses, or silences it, can he become skeptical. It will always be so far only
as his conscience becomes seared and blind; while, on the other hand, as his
conscience has free scope and speaks out truthfully will his conviction become
irresistible that the Bible is true and from God.
5. The Bible is sometimes rejected because misunderstood. I once fell in with an
infidel who had read much (not in the Bible) and who, after his much reading,
settled down upon infidelity. I inquired of him as to his views of the
inspiration of the Bible, when he promptly replied--"I know it is not true, and
is not from God, for it teaches things contrary to my conscience." Ah, said I,
and pray tell me in what particulars! What are these things, taught in the
Bible, that are contrary to your conscience?
He began thus:
(1.) "It teaches the imputation of Adam's sin to his posterity." But stop, said I, is that Bible, or is it only catechism? He soon found that he had to look in his catechism to find it, for it was not in his Bible.
(2) "It teaches that human nature, as made by God, is itself sinful." I soon showed him that the Bible said no such thing. He declared that this doctrine was contrary to his conscience; I admitted it, but vindicated the Bible from such impiety as ascribing the creation of sin to God.
(3) "But," said he, "the Bible certainly does teach that men are naturally unable to obey God, and, especially, are unable to repent and believe the gospel."
I replied, that is neither taught nor implied in the Bible, in the sense in which you urge it; but, on the contrary, the Bible both teaches and implies that sinners can obey God and are for that very reason responsible, and guilty if they refuse.
(4) There was one other point on which all the books were clear and strong, but which was utterly against his conscience--namely, "that Christ was punished for our sins. This punishing the innocent instead of the guilty," he said, "was one of the most unjust things that could be imagined." Well, said I, that is just what the Bible does not teach. It nowhere holds the doctrine that Christ was punished as a criminal. Punishment implies guilt, and is inflicted as penalty for crime,--neither of which is true in the case of Christ. He only suffered as an innocent being, and of his own free accord. You cannot say that this is wrong. If one man in his benevolence chooses to suffer for another, no principle of justice is violated. This he conceded.
(5) "According to the Bible," said he, "none can be saved without having their natures constitutionally changed. But no man can be held responsible for changing his own constitution."
Here, too, I showed him his misapprehension of the Bible. The change is only that which pertains primarily to the voluntary powers, and of course is just that which man is made capable of doing, and which he must do himself.
(6) He urged, I think, but one point more--namely, "that God has elected some to be saved, and some to be damned, and that none can escape their foreordained destiny."
To this you know I would reply that the Bible did not teach such an election, nor authorize such an inference, but everywhere implied the opposite. Such was our discussion.
You doubtless all know that such mistakes as these have led some men to reject the Bible. It is not strange that they should. I could never have received the Bible as from God if I had believed it to teach these things. I had to learn first that those things were not in the Bible, and then I was prepared to accept it in accordance with my conscience and reason, and from God.
6. Skepticism always evinces either great wickedness,
or great ignorance as to what the Bible teaches, and as to the evidence on which
its claims rest. Both the nature of the case and the testimony of observation
conspire to prove this.
7. All the truths of natural religion are taught and affirmed both in the
conscience and in the Bible. This is a most remarkable fact; yet easily shown in
the fullest detail.
8. The conscience recognizes the Bible as its own book--the book of the heart--a
sort of supplement to its own imperfect system--readily answering those
questions which lie beyond the range of vision, which conscience enjoys. There
are questions which conscience must ask, but cannot answer. It must ask whether
there is any way in which God can forgive sin, and if so, what is it. Such
questions conscience cannot answer without help from revelation. It is striking
to observe how conscience grasps these glorious truths when they are presented,
and the heart has come to feel its need of God's light and love. Mark how, when
the moral nature of man has sent forth its voice abroad over the universe, far
as its notes can reach, imploring light, and crying aloud for help, and
listening to learn if any response is made;--then when it catches these
responsive notes from God's written revelation, it shouts amen! AMEN! that
brings me salvation! Let God be praised!
9. The skeptic is obliged to ignore the teachings of his own nature and the
voice of his conscience. All those moral affirmations must be kept out of sight
or he could not remain an infidel. It will not do for him to commune with his
own heart and ask what testimony conscience bears as to duty, truth, and his
God. All he can do to smother the spontaneous utterance of his conscience, he
must needs do for the sake of peace in his sin and skepticism.
10. But these efforts must be ultimately vain, for, sooner or later, conscience
will speak out. Its voice, long smothered, will break forth with redoubled
force, as if in retribution for being abused so long. Many may live skeptics;
few can die such. To that few you cannot hope to belong;--you already know too
much on this subject. You cannot satisfy yourself that the Bible is false, and
make yourself disbelieve its divine authority, so that it will stay disbelieved.
Such a notion, resting on no valid evidence, but starting up under the stimulus
of a corrupt heart, will disappear when moral realities shall begin to press
hard on your soul. I am aware that in these latter times some young men make the
discovery that they know more and are wiser than all the greatest and best men
that have ever lived. They think so, but they may, in divine mercy, live long
enough to unlearn this folly, and to lay off this self-conceit. One thing I must
tell you,--you cannot die skeptics. You cannot die believing that God can accept
you without faith in Christ. Do you ask, Why? Because you have heard too much
truth. Even this afternoon you have heard too much to allow you to carry such a
delusion to your graves. No! you cannot die in darkness and delusion. I beg you
to remember when you come to die, that I told you, you could not die a skeptic.
Mark my words then, and prove them false if you can. Write it down for a
memorandum, and treasure it for a test in the trying hour--that I told you
solemnly, you could not die a skeptic. It will do you no hurt to remember this
one thing from me; for if you should in that hour find me mistaken, you can have
none the less comfort of your infidelity. It is not improbable that I shall be
at the death-bed of some of you this very summer. Not a summer has passed yet
since I have been here that I have not stood by the dying bed of some dear young
man. And shall I find you happy in the dark discomfort of infidelity? There is
no happiness in it;--and if there were, you cannot have it, for not one of you
can die an infidel! Dr. Nelson once informed me that he said this same thing to
a young infidel. Not long after, this infidel was sick, and thought himself
dying, yet his infidelity remained unshaken; and when he saw the Doctor next, he
cast into his teeth that prediction, which he thought had been triumphantly
disproved. "Dr. N.," said he, "I was dying last month; and, contrary to your
strange prediction, my infidelity did not forsake me." Ah! said the Doctor, but
you were not dying then! And you never can die an infidel! When that young man
came to die, he did not die an infidel. His conscience spake out in awful
thunders, and his soul trembled exceedingly as it passed from this to another
world.
But such fears may come too late! The door perhaps is shut, and the soul is
lost! Alas that you should lose eternal life for a reason so poor--for a
compensation so insignificant.
[Index] -
[Index
of Sermons]
The Way Of Salvation Sermon Collection by Charles G. Finney - Public
Domain [Copy Freely]