SERMON VIII.
THE SALVATION OF SINNERS IMPOSSIBLE.
September 29, 1852
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
Text.--1 Pet. 4:18: "If the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly
and the sinner appear?"
I said in a former sermon--that the doctrine of the
text is that the salvation of the righteous is difficult and that of the sinner
impossible. In that sermon I discussed at length the first part of this subject,
showing how and why the salvation of the righteous is difficult. I am now to
take up the remaining part and show how and why the salvation of the wicked is
impossible.
Here let me premise in general that by the righteous is not meant those who have
never sinned. It could not be difficult to save such as had not sinned against
God. They are in fact already saved. But these righteous ones are those who
having been sinners, now come to exercise faith in Christ, and of course become
"heirs of that righteousness which is by faith." Vitally important to be
considered here is the fact that the governmental difficulty in the way of being
saved, growing out of your having sinned, even greatly, is all removed by
Christ's atonement. No matter now how great your guilt, if you will only have
faith in Jesus and accept of his atonement as the ground of pardon for your
sins.
Hence the difficulty in the way of saving sinners is not simply that they have
sinned, but that they will not now cease from sinning and believe on the Lord
Jesus Christ.
II. The salvation of sinners is therefore impossible,
When I say it is impossible for God to convert them, I do not imply that God lacks physical power to do anything which is the proper subject of such power. On this point there can be no question. But how can physical omnipotence be brought to bear directly upon mind and upon the heart?
Again, let us consider, that it may not be wise for God to bring all the moral power of his universe to bear upon the sinner in this world. If this were wise and practicable, it might avail--for ought we can know;--but since He does not do it, we infer that He refrains for some wise reason.
Certain limitations are fixed in the divine wisdom to the amount of moral influence which God shall employ in the case of a sinner. It is in view of this fact that I say--God finds it impossible to gain the sinner's consent to the gospel by any means that He can wisely employ. He goes as far as is really wise and as far as is on the whole good. This is undoubtedly the fact in the case. Yet all this does not avail. Hence it becomes impossible that the sinner should be saved.
He knows also that he does not want to have anything to do with God--is afraid of God--both dreads and hates his presence--is afraid to die and go so near to God as death bears all men. He knows that all his relations to God are unpleasant in the extreme: how certainly then may he know that he is utterly unprepared for heaven.
Now the sinner must be saved from this guilty and abominable state of mind. No change is needed in God, neither in his character, government, or position towards sin; but the utmost possible change and all the needed change is requisite on the part of the sinner. If salvation implies fitness for heaven, and if this implies ceasing from sin, then of course it is naturally and forever impossible that any sinner can be saved without holiness.
Your pious mother in heaven--O how changed! You heard her last words on earth--for they were words of prayer for your poor guilty soul; but now she shines and sings above, all holy and pure. What sympathy could there be between you and her in heaven? Remember what Christ said when some one told him that his mother and his brethren stood without, desiring to see him. "Who," said he, "is my mother and who are my brethren? He that doeth the will of my Father, the same is my brother, and sister, and mother." The law of sympathy therefore in heaven turns not on earthly relationship, but on oneness of heart--on the common and mutual spirit of love and obedience towards their great common Father.
Do you then expect that your mother would be glad to see you--that she would spread her mantle over you and take you up to heaven? Oh, if she were told that you were at the gate, she would hasten down to say--O my sinning child, you cannot enter heaven. Into this holy place nothing can by any means enter that "worketh abomination or maketh a lie." You cannot--no, you cannot come!
If it were left to your own mother to decide the question of your admission, you could not come in. She would not open heaven's gate for your admission. She knows you would disturb the bliss of heaven. She knows you would mar its purity and be an element of discord in its sympathies and in its songs.
You know it need not have been so. You might have given your heart to God in season, and then He would have shed his love abroad in your soul, and given you the Holy Ghost, and made you ripe for heaven. But you would not. All was done for you that God could wisely do; all that Christ could do; all that the spirit of God could consistently do: but all was vain: all came to naught and availed nothing because you would not forego your sins--would not renounce them, even for everlasting life. And now will heaven let you in? No. Nothing that worketh abomination can by any means go in there.
Let me tell you--it will be just as bad--nay much worse for you in heaven. That can be no place for you, sinner, since you hate worst of all things on earth, those places and scenes which are most like heaven.
His sense of propriety forbids that he should give you a place among his pure and trustful children. It would be so unfitting--so unsuitable! It would throw such discord into the sweet songs and sympathies of the holy!
Besides, as already hinted, it could be no kindness to you. It could not soothe, but only chafe and fret your spirit. O if you were obliged to be there, how would it torment and irritate your soul!
If then, the sinner cannot be saved and go to heaven, where shall he appear?
The question is a strong negation. They shall not appear among the righteous and the saved. This is a common form of speaking. Nehemiah said--"Shall such a man as I flee?" No, indeed. This form of question is one of the strongest forms of negation that can be expressed in our language.
Where then shall the ungodly and the sinner appear? In no desirable place or position--certainly. Not with the righteous in the judgment, for so God's word has often and most solemnly affirmed. Christ himself affirms that, when all nations shall be gathered before him for judgment He will separate them, one from another, as a shepherd divideth the sheep from the goats. This separation, as the description shows, brings the righteous on the right hand and the wicked on the left. And it should be considered that this statement is made by Christ Himself and that if any being in the universe knows, it must be He to whom is "given authority to execute judgment." He says He will separate them one from another according not to their national relations, or their family connections, but according to their character as friends or enemies to God.
O, what a separation must this be in families and among dear earthly friends! On this side will be a husband--on that a wife; here a brother and there a sister; here one of two friends and there the other--parted forever--forever! If this great division were to be struck between you today according to present character, how fearful the line of separation it would draw! Ask yourselves where it would pass through your own families and among the friends you love. How would it divide College classes--and O, how would it smite many hearts with terror and consternation!
III. Answer the question of the text--Where shall
the ungodly and the sinner appear?
It is asked, where shall the ungodly appear? I answer, certainly not in heaven,
nor on the heavenly side. But they must be in the judgment, for God has said, He
would bring all the race into judgment, and every secret thing, whether it be
good, or whether it be evil. All are to be there, but some are on the right hand
and some on the left.
1. The ungodly and the sinner will appear in that day among the damned--among
lost angels, doomed to the place prepared of old for their eternal abode. So
Jesus has Himself told us. The very words of their sentence are on record: "Then
will He say to them on his left hand--Depart from me, ye cursed, into
everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels." This is indeed the
only place for which they are prepared; and this the only society to which their
hearts are congenial. They have of choice belonged to Satan's government on
earth: at least in the sense of doing precisely what he would have them do. Now
therefore, after such a training in selfishness and sin, they are manifestly fit
for no other and better society than that of Satan and his angels.
Let it not surprise any of you to be told that the amiable sinners of earth are
preparing themselves--(remaining enemies to God and radically selfish)--for the
society of the arch spirit of evil. Just observe what restraints are thrown
around sinners here. Mark how obviously they feel restrained, and show that they
are restive and ill at ease. It may be read out of their very hearts that they
would be glad to be vastly more wicked and selfish, that is, in their external
life--if they might. It is wonderful to see in how many ways God's providence
has walled around the sinner's pathway and hedged him in from outbreaking sin.
But let these walls be torn away; let all regard to his reputation among the
good perish forever from his soul; let despair of ever gaining God's favor take
full possession of his heart, and rivet its iron grasp upon him: then what will
he become? Take away all the restraints of civil society--of laws and
customs--of Christian example, and of Christian society; let there be no more
prayer made for him by pitying Christian friends--no more counsel given, or
entreaty used to persuade him towards the good,--then tell me, where is the
sinner? How terribly will sin work out its dreadful power to corrupt and madden
the soul! Bring together myriads of desperate wretches, in the madness of their
despair and rage and wrath against God and all the good, and O what a fearful
world would they make! What can be conceived more awful! Yet this is the very
world for which sinners are now preparing, and the only one for which they will
be found in the judgment to be prepared.
2. As this is the only world for which the sinner is prepared, so is it the only
one which is appropriate and fitting, the case being viewed in respect to his
influence for mischief. Here only, here in this prison-house of woe and despair,
can sinners be effectually prevented from doing any further mischief in God's
kingdom. Here they are cut off from all possibility of doing any more harm in
God's universe.
In this earthly state one sinner destroys much good, Each and every sinner does
much evil. God looks on, not unconcerned, but with amazing patience, He suffers
a great deal of evil to be done, for the sake of securing an opportunity to try
the power of forbearance and love upon the sinner's heart. You are abusing his
love and defeating all its kind designs, but still God waits, till the point is
reached where forbearance ceases to be virtue. Beyond this point, how can God
wait longer?
Here you find ample room for doing mischief. Many are around you whom you
influence to evil and urge on towards hell. Some of them would be converted but
for your influence to hold them back and ensnare their souls. If this were the
place, I could name and call out some of you who are exerting a deadly influence
upon your associates. Ah to think of the souls you may ruin forever! God sees
them and sees how you are playing into the devil's hands to drag them down with
you to an eternal hell. But ere long He will take you away from this sphere of
doing evil. He will for ever cut off your connection with those who can be
influenced to evil, and leave around you only those associates who are ruined,
despairing, and maddened in sin like yourself. There He will lock you up, throw
away the key, and let you rave on, and swear on, and curse on, and madden your
guilty soul more and more forever! O what inmates are those in this prison-house
of the guilty and the lost! Why should not God fit up such a place for such
beings, so lost to all good, and so given up to all the madness and guilt of
rebellion?
There alone can sinners be made useful. They refused to make themselves useful
by their voluntary agency on earth; now God will make use of them in hell for
some good. Do you ask me if I talk about sin being made useful? Yes, to be sure
I do. God never permits anything to occur in his universe, but He extracts some
good from it, overruling its influence, or making the correction and punishment
of it a means of good. This is a great consolation to the holy, that no sinner
can exist from whom God will not bring out some good. This principle is
partially developed in society here, under civil government. The gallows is not
the greatest evil in the world, nor the most unmixed evil. Murder is much worse.
States prisons are not the greatest earthly evils. Government can make great use
of those men who will not obey law. It can make them examples and lift them up
as beacons of warning to show the evil of disobeying wholesome laws. A great
many men have had strong and useful impressions made on their minds as riding
through Auburn on the Rail Road, they have marked those lofty frowning walls and
battlements which enclose and guard the culprits immured within. Many a hard
heart has quailed before those walls, and the terrors of those cells behind. If
the outside view does not avail to awe the spirit of transgression, give them
the inside view and some of its heart-desolating experience. These things do
good. They tame the passion for evil-doing and impress a salutary fear on the
hardened and reckless. If so under all the imperfections of human government,
how much more under the perfect administration of the divine!
God cannot afford to lose your influence in his universe. He will rejoice to use
you for the glory of his mercy, if you will; O yes, He will put away your sins
far as the East is from the West, and will put a robe of beauty and glory upon
you, and a sweet harp in your hands, and a song of praise on your lips, and the
melody of heaven's love in your heart, all these, if you will;--but if you will
not, then He has other attributes besides mercy that need to be illustrated.
Justice will come in for its claim, and to illustrate this He will make you an
example of the bitter misery of sinning. He will put you deep in hell; and the
holy, beholding you there, will see that God's kingdom is safe and pure, and in
their everlasting song they will shout, "Great and marvelous are thy works, Lord
God Almighty; just and true are thy ways, thou King of Saints. Who shall not
fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? for thy judgments are made manifest."
This is the only way in which God can make you useful in his kingdom, if you
will not repent. He has tried every means of bringing you to repentance, but all
in vain; He cannot get your consent. Of course there is no alternative but to
make you an example to deter all other moral agents from sinning.
There is no other way for God to meet the demands of the public weal, but to
make you an example to show his abhorrence of sin. God is most thoroughly
economical of his resources. He husbands every thing to the very best account.
Every thing must, under his hand, be made conducive in some way to the general
good. Even of your misery He will be as economical as He can, and will carefully
turn it all to the very best account. Every groan and every throb and pang of
your agonized soul will be turned to use. Yes, rely upon it, all this agony,
which does you no good, but is to you only unmingled and unalleviated woe, will
be a warning beacon, under God's hand, crying out in tones of thunder--Stand
away! stand away! lest you come into this place of torment; stand afar from
sin--fear this awful sin--watch against it, for it is an awful thing to sin
against Jehovah. I have tried it, and here I am in woe unutterable! O what a
testimony, when all hell shall roll up one mighty accumulated groan--a groan,
whose awful voice shall be--Stand in awe and sin not, for God is terrible in his
judgments upon the guilty.
O sinner, think of it. God wants you now to cry out to every fellow-sinner, and
warn him away from the brink of hell. Will you do it? What are you in fact
doing? Are you preparing yourself to go out as a missionary of light and love
and mercy to the benighted? Are you pluming your wings as an angel of mercy to
bear the messages of salvation? O no! you refuse to do this, or anything of the
sort. You disdain to preach such a gospel and to preach it so! But God will make
you preach it in another way; for as I said, He is thoroughly economical of the
resources of his kingdom, and all must do something in some way for his glory.
He will have everything preach--saints preach and sinners preach; yea, sinners
in hell must preach for God and for his truth. He will make your very groans and
tears--those "tears that ever fall, but not in Mercy's sight"--they will preach,
and will tell over and over the dreadful story of mercy abused and sin persisted
in, and waxing worse and worse, till the bolts of vengeance broke at last upon
your guilty head! Over and over will those groans, and tears repeat the fearful
story, so that when the angels shall come from the remotest regions of the
universe, they shall cry out--What is here? What mean those groans? What mean
those flames, wreathing around their miserable victims? Ah! the story told then
will make them cry aloud--Why will God's creatures sin against his throne? Can
there be such madness in beings gifted with reason's light?
These angels know that the only thing that can secure public confidence in a
ruler is fidelity in the execution of his law. Hence it is to them no wonder
that, there being sin to punish, God should punish it with most exemplary
severity. They expect this, and seeing its awful demonstrations before their
eyes only serves to impress the more deeply on their souls the holiness and
justice of the great and blessed God.
REMARKS.
1. From this standpoint we can easily see what we are to understand by the
doctrine of election--a doctrine often mis-stated, and often perverted to a
stone of stumbling and a rock of offence. The simple and plain view of it is,
that God, foreseeing all the future of your existence as perfectly as if all
were in fact present, determined to deal with you according to your voluntary
course; determined to offer you the gospel, and on your refusal of it, to give
you over to the doom of those who deny the Lord that bought them. Election is no
new or different plan of divine administration, aside from and unlike what the
Bible reveals as the plan of saving men through the gospel. It is this very plan
of which the Bible is full, only that it contemplates this plan as framed by the
divine Mind "before the world began."
2. If you will now consent to give your heart to God, you can be saved. No
election will hinder you. The doctrine of election is simply the fact that God
sends forth his Spirit to save as many as by the best system of influences He
wisely can save; and surely this never can hinder any sinner from repenting and
gaining salvation, for the very good reason that this plan contemplates saving
and not damning men, as its object, and is in fact the sinner's only hope.
Come then, repent and believe the gospel if you would be saved. No election will
hinder you, and neither will it save you without your own repentance unto life.
How then shall the case turn with you? Almost all who are ever converted are
brought in, early in life. Not one in a hundred is converted after the age of
forty. The old among the converts are always few--only one among a host--one in
a long space of time; like scattering beacon lights upon the mountain tops, that
the aged may not quite despair of salvation. But God is intensely interested in
saving the young, for He needs and loves to use them in his service. O how his
heart goes forth after the young! How often has my soul been affected as I have
thought of his parental interest for the salvation of this great multitude of
youth! They come here from pious homes, freighted with the prayers of pious
fathers and mothers,--and what shall be the result? What has been the result, as
thus far developed, with you? Has any thing been really secured as yet? Is any
thing fixed and done for eternity? How many times have you been called to
decide, but have decided wrong--all wrong? You have been pressed earnestly with
God's claims, and many a time have prayers and groans gone forth from the
Christian heart of this whole community; but ah! where are you still? Not yet
safe; ah, in greater peril than ever. Often reproved, hardening your neck; and
what next? Suddenly destroyed, and that without remedy. Suppose even now the
curtain should drop--you are dead! And whither, then, goes the undying, guilty
soul?
3. How great the mistake made by Universalists, that all men will be saved, when
the Bible holds that even the salvation of the righteous is difficult, and that
of the sinner, impossible. How strangely they misread the whole Bible! Go not in
their ways, O ye youth of Oberlin!
But what are you doing? Do you flatter yourselves that the work of salvation is
all so easy that it may be safely and surely done during a few of life's last
moments? Will you presume, as the man did who said he should need but five
minutes to prepare to die? Hear his story. What was the result of his system?
Disease came on. It smote him with its strong hand. Delirium set in. Reason
tottered and fell from her throne, and so he died! Go on, thou young man; drive
on, headlong and reckless; make a bold business of sinning, and bear it on with
bold front and high hand; but know thou that for all these things God will bring
thee into judgment! Consider what tidings we hear of our former pupils who once
sat as you now sit, and once heard the gospel as you may hear it now. There, one
is dead; and now another--and now another. In rapid succession they drop from
the stage of mortal life--and what next? What more? Soon we shall meet them in
the fearful judgment!
Brethren, what will the universe say of us, if we neglect to labour for the
salvation of these precious youth? What will the parents of these dear youth say
to us when we shall meet them at the Saviour's bar?
I have spoken to you of the difficulties and the struggles of the
Christian--more and greater far than the ungodly are usually aware of;--those
agonies of prayer, those conflicts against temptation; out of all which it is
only great grace that can bring him forth, conqueror and more than conqueror. If
he is saved with so much difficulty, how does it become you to strive to enter
in at the strait gate? Are you aware that the smooth sea of temptation bears you
on to the breakers of death? Were you ever at Niagara? How smooth and deceitful
those waters, as they move along quite up above the draft of the suction from
below. But lower down, see how those same waters roar, and dash, and foam, and
send up their thick mists to the heavens above you. Yet in the upper stream you
glide gently and noiselessly along, dreaming of no danger, and making no effort
to escape. In a moment you are in the awful current, dashing headlong down; and
where are you now?
And what should you do? Like Bunyan's Christian pilgrim, put your fingers in
both ears, and run, shouting, Life! life! eternal LIFE! How many of you are
sliding along on the smooth, deceitful stream, above, yet only just above the
awful rapids and the dreadful cataract of death! What if, this night, delirium
should seize upon you? Or what if the Spirit should leave you forever, and it
should be said of you, "He is joined to his idols, let him alone?"
What do you say? Do I hear you saying, "If salvation is possible for me--if by
putting forth the whole energy of my will I can ensure it, O let me do so! Help
me, O ye ministers of Christ's gospel! Help me, ye Christians, who pray between
the porch and the altar! Help me, O ye heavens of heavens, for this is a thing
of life and death, and the redemption of the soul is most precious!"
Surely, O ye sinners, it is time that you should set down your foot in most
fixed determination, and say, "I must and I will have heaven! How can I ever
bear the doom of the damned!
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