SERMON XIX.
ON SELF-DENIAL.
April 27, 1859
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
Text.--Luke 9:23: "And He said to them all, 'If any
man will come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and
follow Me."
In order to understand this solemn declaration of our
Lord, the first important point to be ascertained is this --
I. What is the true idea of taking up the cross
and denying one's self?
II. Why does Christ demand of us self-denial?
III. Our text says -- 'Take up your cross daily."
I. What is the true idea of taking up the cross and denying one's self?
- 1. This question presupposes the existence of
appetites and propensities which call for indulgence, and then it means,
obviously, that in some cases this indulgence must be refused. This is the
precise point of the text -- a man who will follow Christ must deny himself in
the sense of denying the gratification of all appetites and propensities
whenever and how far soever such gratifications are forbidden by the law of
benevolence. All impulses towards self indulgence, whether in the line of
avoiding things we fear, or seeking things we love, must be denied, and ruled
down by a determined will whenever indulgence is not demanded but is forbidden
by the law of love. Within the limits of God's law, these constitutional
appetites may be indulged; beyond those limits, they must be denied. At
whatever point they run counter to the law of love to God or love to man, they
must be put down.
- 2. The thing demanded therefore by this law of
Christ's kingdom is, that you consult and obey the will of Christ in this
whole matter of self-indulgence; that you obey neither desire nor appetite --
that you never gratify your love of approbation -- never seek any forms of
personal enjoyment in disobedience to Christ. You must never do this where
duty is known, lest you displease God, for plainly He has rightful control
over all your powers.
- 3. Under this principle you must do all your duty to
your fellow men -- whether to their bodies or to their souls, denying all
those worldly desires and propensities which would conflict with this duty,
making Jesus Christ Himself your model and His expressed will your perpetual
rule.
II. The question will arise in many minds -- Why
does Christ demand of us self-denial?
- 1. Is it because God loves to see us self-mortified
-- because He takes pleasure in crucifying the sensibilities to enjoyment
which He has given us? By no means. But the true answer is to be found in the
fact that He has made us rational and moral beings -- our rational faculties
being intended for the control of our entire voluntary activities, and our
moral nature rendering us properly responsible for the self-control which God
requires. In the lower orders of creation around us, we see animals void of
moral responsibility because they are constituted irrational and incapable of
responsible moral action. To them, propensity must be law, because they can
know no other. But we have a higher law to obey than they. Their highest good
is promoted by their obedience to mere physical law; but not so with us. Our
sensibilities are blind, and therefore were never intended to be our rule of
life. To supply such a rule, God has given us intelligence and conscience.
Appetite therefore cannot be our rule, while it can and must be the rule of
all the lower, irrational animals.
- 2. Now it is a fact that our sensibilities are out
of harmony with our conscience, often clamoring for indulgence which both
reason and conscience forbid.
If we give ourselves up to the sway of appetite and
unguided sensibility, we are surely misled. These appetites grow worse by
indulgence, a fact which of itself shows that God never intended them to be
our rule. Often artificial appetites are formed, of such a nature, moreover,
as to be exceedingly pernicious in their effects.
Hence we are thrown into a state of warfare. Constant appeals are made to us
to arouse our propensities to indulgence; and over against these, constant
appeals are made by the law of God and the voice of our reason, urging us to
deny ourselves and find our highest good in obeying God. God and reason
require us to withstand the claims of appetite sternly and firmly. Note here
that God does not require this withstanding, without vouchsafing His aid in
the conflict. It is remarkable how the resolute opposition of any appetite, in
the name of Christ and under the demands of conscience will readily overcome
it. Cases often occur in which the most clamorous and despotic of these
artificial appetites are ruled down by the will, under the demands of
conscience and with the help of God. At once they lie, all subdued, and the
mind remains in sweet peace.
- 3. Here let us consider more attentively that we are
conscious of having a spiritual and moral nature as well as a physical. We
have a conscience, and we have affections correlated to God, as truly as we
have affections correlated to earthly things. There is a beauty in holiness,
and there are things correlated to our spiritual tastes as truly as to our
physical. Under proper care and effort, our religious nature may be developed
towards God, even as our physical nature is towards earthly objects. We are
social beings in our earthly relations and not less so in our spiritual
nature. We are social spiritually as well as physically, though we may not be
aware of it, because our spiritual sociality may have been utterly
uncultivated and undeveloped. But we really need divine communion with God and
social fellowship with our Infinite Maker. Prior to regeneration this moral
capacity of ours is a waste. All men have a conscience and may be aware of it,
but they have no spiritual affections towards God, and hence they assume that
religion must be a very dry thing. They cannot see how they can enjoy God's
presence and prayer. They are all awake to earthly fellowship and friendship,
but dead to fellowship and friendship with God. Their love in the form of
affection has been drawn out towards man but not towards God. They seem not
aware that they have a nature capable of being developed in loving affections
towards their divine Father. Hence they do not see how they can ever enjoy
religion and religious duties. The coldness of death comes over their souls
when they think of it.
- 4. This spiritual side of our nature needs to be
cultivated. It has been so long kept back and crushed down, it greatly needs
to be brought up. But in order to do this and develop the spiritual side of
our nature, it is indispensable that the worldly side be crushed and brought
under. For flesh is a dangerous foe to grace. There is no harmony, but only
repellency and antagonism between the earthly affections and the heavenly.
Unless we subdue the flesh we shall die. It is only when, through the Spirit,
we mortify the deeds of the body that we can live.
The Roman church has in past ages distinguished
itself for its mortifications of the flesh -- externally considered. These
mortifications have thrown off the Protestant world into the opposite extreme.
Among all the Protestant sermons I have heard, I do not recollect one on the
subject of bearing the cross and denying one's self. I must think that this
subject is exceedingly neglected among our Protestant churches. Papal Rome
having run wild with this idea, Protestants have taken fright and run off into
the opposite extreme. Therefore we need a special effort to guard against this
tendency and to bring us back to reason, sense and scripture.
Until I was converted I never knew that I had any religious affections. I did
not even know that I had any capacity for spontaneous, deep, outgushing
emotions towards God. This was indeed a dark and fearful ignorance, and you
may readily suppose I knew little of real joy while my soul was so perfectly
ignorant of the very idea of real spiritual joy. But I take it this absence of
all right ideas of God is by no means uncommon. If you search, you will find
this to be the common experience of unconverted men.
- 5. We all know that the gratification of our animal
nature is pleasure -- not the highest sort indeed, yet is a kind of pleasure.
How much more must the gratification of our nobler moral affections be joyful!
When the soul comes to feast on its spiritual affections, it begins to taste
real happiness -- a bliss like that of heaven! I fear many have never
comprehended what the Bible means by "blessedness."
- 6. Now let it be well considered that the spiritual
side of our nature can be developed and gratified only by a benevolent
crossing of our appetites -- a crossing of them, I mean, under the demands of
real benevolence towards our fellow men and towards God. This must be our aim,
for if we make our personal happiness the end, we can never attain to the
exalted joy of true fellowship with God.
It is curious to see how the sensibility is related
to self-denial, so that denying ourselves from right motives becomes the
natural and necessary means of developing our spiritual affections. Beginning
with taking up the cross, one goes on from step to step, ruling down
self-indulgences and self-gratification, and opening his heart more and more
to fellowship with God and to the riper experience of His love.
- 7. A further reason why men should deny themselves,
is that it is intrinsically right. The lower appetites ought not to govern us;
the higher laws of our nature ought to. The evidence of this is simply the
evidence which proves it to be the duty of beings created rational to use
their reason and not degrade themselves down to the level of beasts.
- 8. Another reason is that we can well afford it, for
we are surely the gainers by it. I admit that when we resist and deny the
demands of self-indulgence, it goes a short way and on a small scale, against
happiness; but on the spiritual side we gain immensely, and immensely more
than we lose. The satisfaction which arises from real self-denial is precious.
It is rich in quality and deep and broad as the ocean in amount.
- 9. Many think that if they would find pleasure they
must seek it directly and make it their direct object, seeking it moreover in
the gratification of their appetites. They seem to know no other form of
happiness but this. It would seem that they never have conceived the idea that
the only way to enjoy themselves really is to deny self, fully up to the
demands of right, reason, and of God's revealed will. Yet this is the most
essential law of real happiness. Where shunning the cross begins, true
religion ends. You may pray in your family; you may sternly rebuke sin
wherever it is disagreeable to yourself, and do all this without Christian
self-denial; but while living in habits of self-indulgence, you cannot stand
up for Christ and do your duty everywhere manfully, and especially you will be
all weakness when the path of duty leads you where your feelings will be
wounded. And no man can expect to escape such emergencies always. If then you
would maintain the path of duty without swerving, and enjoy real life and
blessedness, you must determine to deny yourself wherever God and reason
demand it, and fully up to the extent of those demands. So will you gain more
than you can lose. If you are firm and determined, your path will be easy and
joyous.
- 10. It often happens that the entire drift of a
Christian's feelings is towards self-indulgence, so that if he allowed himself
to be guided by his feelings he would surely make shipwreck of his soul. God,
on His part, shuts him up to simple faith. Then if he follows the Lord's
guidance, he will triumph, and all suddenly his "soul is like the chariots of
Amminadab." A case in point is now before my mind of a man who once lived
here. After a period of Christian life, he went from our place, backslid from
God sorely, became almost an infidel, quite a Swedenborgian, became wealthy,
and just when you might suppose him to have gained the heights of earthly
happiness, and when he supposed so himself, he became, instead completely
wretched. He was forced to fall back upon himself and say -- I must return to
God and do His will -- the whole of it, whatever it may be, or I shall utterly
perish. I will, said he, put an extinguisher upon every worldly affection.
Nothing that is hostile to God's will shall be tolerated a moment. No sooner
had he done this than all his religious life and joys came back again. Then
his wife and neighbors began to say of him, "He is indeed a new man in Christ
Jesus." From that day, the peace of God ruled in his heart and his cup of joy
was full to overflowing. Any man, therefore, can afford to deny himself, since
thereby he opens his heart to the joys of immortal life and peace. This is the
only way of real happiness.
- 11. This subject explains many of the otherwise
strange facts of Christian experience. Here is one man who cannot pray before
his family. Enquire more deeply into his case and you will probably find that
he cannot enjoy anything in religious duty. Enquire yet further into the cause
and you will find that he does not deny himself, but lives under the laws of
self-indulgence. Poor man, he cannot please God so!
- 12. Another cannot come out and confess Christ
before men. The truth probably is that he has not made up his mind to deny
himself at all. On the contrary, he really denies Christ. He shuns the cross.
Ah, that is not the way to heaven. In that path you can have no communion with
God. Try it a thousand times and you will still find the same result, no
peace, and no communion with God.
III. Our text says -- 'Take up your cross daily."
- 1. So you must. This is the only possible way of
holy living. And it must be done firmly, sternly and continually. It must be
made your life-work, save as you gain a respite by substantial victory over
your propensities to self-indulgence. Let a man attempt to rule down the
appetite for alcoholic drinks, and do it at special seasons only, say once a
day, or once in a week, while all the rest of the time he gives himself to
full indulgence, he must utterly fail. He never can succeed unless he takes up
his cross daily and bears it all the time. Absolutely he must persevere, or
his efforts are all for nought. Precisely in proportion as we sternly take up
our cross, it grows light and we grow strong to bear it. When a man indulges
himself in tobacco, each day's indulgence makes him more a slave. On the
contrary, each successive day's abstinence makes him more a conqueror. If a
man resolutely declares -- By the help of God, no lust, no appetite, shall
have dominion over me -- then holding on, he comes off conqueror. The more
firmly you adhere to this principle and the more steadily you rule down the
clamors for self-indulgence, so much the more speedily and surely do you gain
the victory. Although at first you take up this work tremblingly, if you hold
on, you will gain ground. These appetites will take less and less hold upon
you. Bearing your cross will itself make you strong for your toil in the
Christian life.
- 2. Shunning the cross grieves the Spirit. If you
neglect duty, if you fail to pray in your family, omitting it perhaps because
you have company present, you may be very sure the Spirit of God is grieved.
Satan throws these temptations in your path, and you give him every advantage
against you. You will perhaps try to pray while in this state; but, oh! God is
not with you! You have been placed where you should have done some things
unpleasant to flesh and blood; you evaded the claims of present duty; you went
to bed at night without doing your duty. How was it then with your soul? Did
not dark clouds shut off the light of God's face? Did you have any comfort of
His presence? Or any communion with your Savior? Pause and ask your heart for
the answer.
REMARKS.
1. So long as the religious sensibilities are not developed, men will of course
feel a strong demand for worldly affections. What do they know about the
religious affections of the heart? What do they know of real love to God, or of
the consciousness of the Spirit's witness to their hearts that they are God's
children? Really nothing. They have never crossed their sensual propensities. Of
course they have not taken the first step towards developing the heavenly
affections of the heart. Consequently all their enjoyments are earthly. Their
hearts are only below. But just in proportion as they deny themselves do they
fall into adjustment to their spiritual nature.
2. It is a great and blessed thing for the Christian to find his nature
conformed progressively more and more to God; to find it manifestly coming round
right and adjusting itself under divine grace, to the demands of benevolence.
3. Cross bearing, persisted in, brings out a ripe spiritual culture. The soul
longs intensely for spiritual manifestations and loves communion with God. Hear
him say -- How sweet the memory of those scenes when my soul lay low before God!
How did my heart enjoy His presence! Now I am always sensible of an aching void
unless God be there.
4. When men go about to seek enjoyment as an end, they surely miss it. All such
seeking must certainly be in vain. Benevolence leads the soul out of itself, and
sets it upon making others happy. So real blessedness comes.
5. Your usefulness as Christians will be as your cross bearing and as your
firmness in this course of life. For your knowledge in spiritual things, your
spiritual vitality, your communion with God and, all in one word, your aid from
the Holy Ghost, must turn upon the fidelity with which you deny yourself.
6. If you have once known the blessedness of spiritual life, and your heart has
been molded into the image of the heavenly, you can no longer return to the
miserable flesh-pots of Egypt. There is no longer any possibility of your
enjoying earthly things as the portion of your soul. Let that be considered
settled. Abandon at once and forever all further thought of finding your joys in
worldly, selfish indulgences.
7. To the young, let me say, your sensibilities are quick and lean to worldly
things. Now is the time for you to be stern in dealing with your self-indulgent
spirit before you have gone too far ever to succeed. Are you strongly tempted to
give way to self-indulgence? Remember it is an unalterable law of your nature
that you must seek your peace and blessedness in God. You cannot find it
elsewhere. You must have Jesus for your friend, or be eternally friendless. Your
very nature demands that you seek God as your God -- the King of your life --
the Portion of your soul for happiness. You cannot find Him such to you save as
you deny yourself, take up your daily cross, and follow Jesus.
8. To those of you who being yet in your sins, cannot conceive how you can ever
enjoy God, and cannot even imagine how your heart can cleave to God, and call
Him a thousand endearing names, and pour out your heart in love to Jesus, let me
beg of you to consider that there is such communion with God -- there is such
joy of His presence, and you may have it at the price of self-denial and
whole-hearted devotion to Jesus; not otherwise. And why should you not make this
choice? Already you are saying -- every cup of worldly pleasure is blasted --
dried up and worthless. Then let them go. Bid them away, and make the better
choice of pleasures that are purer far and better and which endure forever.
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