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1856
Lecture VI
The Sinner's Natural Power and Moral Weakness
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Text.--2 Pet. 2:19: "Of whom a man is overcome, of the same is he brought in bondage."
I propose in my present discourse to discuss the moral state of the sinner.
I. All men are naturally free, and none the less so for being sinners.
II. Men have this attribute of moral liberty, it is equally true that they are morally enslaved.
I. The first important fact to be noted is that all men are naturally free, and
none the less so for being sinners.
It deserves special notice here that every man knows that he has a conscience which tells him how he ought to act, as well as a moral power in the exercise of which he can either heed or repel its monitions.
The difference to which I now refer is one of every day consciousness. Sometimes a man can not tell whence his thoughts come. Impressions are made upon his mind the origin of which he cannot trace. They may be from above -- they may be from beneath: he knows but little of their source, and little about them, save that they are not his own free volitions. Of his own acts of will there can be no such uncertainty. He knows their origin. He knows that they are the product of an original power in himself, for the exercise of which he is compelled to hold himself primarily responsible.
Not only has he this direct consciousness, but he has, as already suggested, the testimony of his own conscience. This faculty, by its very nature, takes cognizance of his moral acts, requiring certain acts of will and forbidding others. This faculty is an essential condition of free moral agency. Possessing it, and also man's other mental powers, he must be free and under moral obligation.
As conscience implies moral agency, so, where there is a conscience, it is impossible for men really to deny moral responsibility. Men cannot but blame themselves for wrong doing. Conscious of the forewarning of conscience against the wrong act, how can they evade the conviction that the act was wrong?
Again, the Bible always treats men as free agents, commanding them to do or not to do as if of course they had all the power requisite to obey such commands. A young minister once said to me, "I preach that men ought to repent, but never that they can." "Why not preach also that they can?" said I. He replies, "The Bible does not affirm that they can." To this I replied that it would be most consummate trifling for a human legislature, having required certain acts, to proceed to affirm that its subjects have the power to obey. The very requirement is the strongest possible affirmation, that in the belief of the enacting power, the subjects are able to do the things required. If the lawmakers did not believe this, how in reason could they require it? The very first assumption to be made concerning good rulers is, that they have common sense and common honesty. To deny, virtually, that God has these qualities, is blasphemous.
II. While it is true, past a rational denial, that men have this attribute of moral liberty, it is equally true that they are morally enslaved -- in moral bondage.
So when a man is in bondage to alcohol, and so with every form of sensual indulgence. Satan helps on the influence of sensuality, and does not care much what the particular form of it may be, provided its power be strong enough to ruin the soul. It all plays into his hand and promotes his main purpose.
So men are in bondage to the love of money; to the fashions of the world; to the opinions of mankind. By these they are enslaved and led on in the face of the demands of duty. Every man is really enslaved who is in fact led counter to his convictions of duty. He is free only when he acts in accordance with those convictions. This is the true idea of liberty. Only when reason and conscience control the will is a man free -- for God made man, intelligent and moral beings to act normally, under the influence of their own enlightened conscience and reason. This is such freedom as God exercises and enjoys; none can be higher or nobler. But when a moral agent is in bondage to his low appetites and passions, and is led by them to disregard the dictates of his conscience and of his reason, he is simply a galley slave, and to a very hard and cruel master.
God made men to be free, giving them just such mental powers as they need in order to control their own activities as a rational being should wish to. Their bondage, then, is altogether voluntary. They choose to resist the control of reason, and submit to the control of appetite and passion.
This is a most guilty state, because so altogether voluntary -- so needless, and so opposed to the convictions of his reason and of his understanding and withal so opposed to his convictions of God's righteous demands. To go counter to such convictions, he must be supremely guilty.
Of course such conduct must be most suicidal. The sinner acts in most decided opposition to his own best interests, so that if he has the power to ruin himself this course must certainly do it. The course he pursues is of all others best adapted to destroy both body and soul; how then can it be anything but suicidal? He practically denies all moral obligation. And yet he knows the fact of his moral obligation, and denies it in the face of his clearest convictions. How can this be otherwise than suicidal? I have many times asked sinners how they could account for their own conduct. The honest ones answer, "I cannot at all -- I am an enigma to myself." The real explanation is, that while by created constitution they are free moral agents; yet, buy the infatuation of sin, they have sold themselves into moral bondage, and are really slaves to Satan and their own lusts.
This is a state of deep moral degradation. Intrinsically it is most disgraceful. Everybody feels this in regard to certain forms of sin and classes of sinners. We all feel that drunkenness is beastly. A drunkard we regard as a long way towards beast hood. See him reeling about, mentally besotted, and reeking in his own filth! Is not he almost a beast? Nay, rather must we not ask pardon of all beasts for this comparison, for not one is so mean and so vile -- not one excites in our bosom such a sense of voluntary degradation. Compared with the self-besotted drunkard, any one of them is a noble creature.
So we all say, looking only from our human standpoint. But there is another and a better standpoint. How do angels look upon this self-made drunkard? They see in him one made only a little lower than themselves, and one who might have aspired to companionship with them; yet he chose rather to sink himself down to a level with swine! O how their souls must recoil from the sight of such self-made degradation! To see the noble quality of intellect discarded; and yet nobler moral qualities disowned, and trodden under foot as if they were only an encumbrance -- this is too much for angels to bear. How they must feel!
Nor is the drunkard alone in the contempt which his sensual degradation entails. See the tobacco-smoker. The correct taste of community demands that by conventional laws he be excluded from parlors, steamboat-cabins, first class rail-cars, churches, and indeed all really decent places. Yet, for the sake of this low indulgence, the smoker is willing to descend into places not decent. See him steal out of his place among respectable people in the rail-car, and herd with rowdies in the smoking car, for the sake of his filthy indulgence. If he were only obliged to ride all day in the society to which he sinks himself by this indulgence, it might admonish him of the cost of his sensuality! It might help to open his eyes!
Yes, that is precisely his difficulty and his guilt. He does not care how little he pleases God! That is the least of his concern. The very lowest class of motives sways his will and his life. He stands entirely afar from the reach of the highest and noblest. In this consists his self-made degradation and his exceeding great guilt.
So of the miser when he gets beyond all motives but the love of hoarding; when his practical question is; not, how shall I honor my race, or bless my generation, or glorify my Maker; but how can I make a few coppers? Even when urged to pray, he would ask, "What profit shall I have if I do pray unto Him?" When you find a man thus incapable of being moved by noble motives, what a wretch he is! How ineffably mean!
So I might bring before you the ambitious scholar, who is too low in his aims to be influenced by the exalted motive of doing good, and who feels only that which touches his reputation. Is not this exceedingly low and mean? What would you think of the preacher who should lose all regard for the welfare of souls, and think only of fishing for his reputation? What would you say of him? You would declare that he was too mean and too wicked to live, and fit only for hell! What would you think of one who might shine like Lucifer among the morning stars of intellect and genius, but who should debase himself to the low and miserable vocation of snuffing round after applause, and fishing for compliments to his talents? Would you not say that such self-seeking is unutterably contemptible? With all heaven from above beckoning them on to lofty purpose and efforts, there they are, working their "muck-rake," and nosing after some little advantage to their small selves!
See that ambitious man who so longs to please everybody that he conforms his own to everybody's opinions, and never has one that is really his own? Must not he be low enough to satisfy any of those whose ambition seems strangely reversed, so that they only aspire to dive and sink -- never to soar; whose impulses all tend downwards and never up? One would suppose they would have degradation enough to satisfy any ordinary ambition.
All this comes of bondage to base selfishness. Alas, that there should be so much of this in our world that public sentiment rarely estimates it anywise according to its real nature!
REMARKS.
1. Our subject reveals the case of those who are convicted of the right, but cannot
be persuaded to do it.
For example, on the subject of temperance, he is convicted as to duty -- knows he
ought to reform absolutely, but yet he will not change. Every temperance lecture
carries conviction, but the next temptation sweeps it by the board, and he returns
like the dog to his vomit. But mark this, -- every successive process of temperance-conviction
and temptation's triumph, leaves him weaker than before, and very soon will find
him utterly prostrate. Miserable man! How certainly he will die in his sins!
2. No matter what the form of the temptation may be, he who, when convinced of his
duty, yet takes no corresponding action, is on the high road to perdition. Inevitably
this bondage grows stronger and stronger with every fresh trial of its strength.
Every time you are convinced of duty and yet resist that conviction, and refuse to
act in accordance with it, you become more and more helpless; you commit yourself
more and more to the control of your iron-hearted master. Every fresh care renders
you only the more fully a helpless slave.
3. There may be some young men here who have already made themselves a moral wreck.
There may be lads not yet sixteen who have already put their conscience effectually
beneath their feet. Already you have learned perhaps, to go against all your convictions
of duty. How horrible! Every day your bands are growing stronger. With each day's
resistance, your soul is more deeply and hopelessly lost. Poor, miserable, dying
sinner! "He that, being often reproved, hardeneth his neck, shall suddenly be
destroyed, and that without remedy!" Suddenly, you dash upon the breakers and
are gone! Your friends move solemnly along the shore, and look out upon those rocks
of damnation on which your soul is wrecked, and weeping as they go, they mournfully
say, "There is the wreck of one who knew his duty but did it not. Thousands
of times the appeals of conviction came home to his heart -- but he learned to resist
them -- he made it his business to resist, and alas, he was only too successful!"
4. How insane the delusion, that the sinner's case, while yet in his sins, is growing
better. As well might the drunkard fancy he is growing better because every temperance
lecture convicts him of his sin and shame, while yet every next day's temptation
leaves him drunk as ever! Growing better! There can be no delusion so false and so
fatal as this!
You see the force of this delusion in clearer light when you notice how slight are
the considerations that sway the soul against all the vast motives of God's character
and kingdom. Must not that be a strong and fearful delusion which can make considerations
so slight outweigh motives so vast and momentous?
5. The guilt of this state is to be estimated by the insignificance of the motives
which control the mind. What would you think of the youth who could murder his father
for a sixpence? What! you would exclaim, for so mean a pittance be bribed to murder
his father! You would account his guilt the greater by how much less the temptation.
6. Our subject shows the need of the Holy Spirit to impress the truth on the hearts
of sinners.
7. You may also see how certainly sinners will be lost if they grieve the Spirit
of God away. Your earthly friends might be discouraged, and yet you might be saved;
but if the Spirit of God becomes discouraged and leaves you, your doom is sealed
forever. "Woe unto them when I depart from them!" This departure of God
from the sinner gives the signal for tolling the knell of his lost soul. Then the
mighty angel begins to toll, toll, TOLL! the great bell of eternity; -- one more
soul going to its eternal doom!
GLOSSARY
of easily misunderstood terms as defined by Mr. Finney himself.
Compiled by Katie Stewart
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