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SERMON I. SINNERS
BOUND TO CHANGE THEIR OWN HEARTS
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BY REV. C. G. FINNEY.
NEW.YORK
PUBLISHED BY JOHN S. TAYLOR,
THEOLOGICAL AND SUNDAY SCHOOL BOOKSELLER,
Brick Church Chapel, corner of Park Row and Nassau-street,
opposite the City Hall.
D. PANSHAW, PRINTER.
The only source for these lectures came from the printed book SERMONS ON IMPORTANT
SUBJECTS by Charles Finney.
This is 100% Finney with no deletions or additions.
Public Domain Text
Reformatted by Katie Stewart
CONTENTS.
SERMON I.
SINNERS BOUND TO CHANGE THEIR OWN HEARTS. (this page)
-- Ezek. 18-31.--
"Make you a new heart, and a new spirit,
for why will ye die?"
SERMON II.
HOW TO CHANGE YOUR HEART. (page 2) ---New Window
-- Ezek. 18-31.--
"Make you a new heart, and a new spirit, for why will ye die?"
SERMON III.
TRADITIONS OF THE ELDERS. (page 3) ---New Window
-- Matthew, 15-6.--
"Thus have ye made the commandment of God of none effect, by your tradition."
SERMON IV.
TOTAL DEPRAVITY.
(page 4) ---New Window
-- John, 15:42.--
"But I know you, that ye have not the love of God in you."
SERMON V.
TOTAL DEPRAVITY.
(page 5) ---New Window
-- Romans, 8:7.--
"The carnal mind is enimity against God, for it is not subject to the law of
God, neither indeed can be."
SERMON VI.
WHY SINNERS HATE GOD. (page 6) ---New Window
-- John, 15:25.--
"They have hated me without a cause."
SERMON VII.
GOD CANNOT PLEASE SINNERS. (page 7) ---New Window
-- Luke, 7:31-35.--
"And the Lord said, Whereunto then shall I liken the men of this generation?
and to what are they like? They are like unto children sitting in the marketplace,
and calling one to another, and saying, We have piped unto you, and ye have not danced;
we have mourned to you, and ye have not wept. For John the Baptist came neither eating
bread nor drinking wine; and ye say, He hath a devil. The Son of man is come eating
and drinking; and ye say, Behold a gluttonous man, and a winebibber, a friend of
publicans and sinners! But wisdom is justified of all her children."
SERMON VIII.
CHRISTIAN AFFINITY.
(page 8) ---New Window
-- Amos, 3:3.--
"Can two walk together except they be agreed?"
SERMON IX.
STEWARDSHIP.
(page 9) ---New Window
-- Luke, 16:2.--
"Give an account of thy stewardship."
SERMON X.
DOCTRINE OF ELECTION. (page 10) ---New Window
-- Ephesians, 1:45.--
"According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world, that
we should be holy and without blame before him in love: Having predestinated us unto
the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure
of his will."
SERMON XI.
REPROBATION.
(page 11) ---New Window
-- Jeremiah, 6:30.--
"Reprobate silver shall men call them, because the lord hath rejected them."
SERMON XII.
LOVE OF THE WORLD.
(page 12) ---New Window
-- I John, 2:15.--
"Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love
the world, the love of the Father is not in him."
SERMON I.
SINNERS BOUND TO CHANGE THEIR OWN HEARTS.
-- Ezekiel xviii. 31.--
"Make you a new heart, and a new spirit,
for why will ye die?"
This lecture was typed in by Pastor Art Ferry, Jr.
and edited by Terry Deckard
These words were addressed to the house of Israel, who, from their history and from
the verses in connexion with the text, were evidently in a state of impenitency;
and the requirement to make them a new heart and a new spirit, was enforced by the
weighty penalty of death. The death mentioned in the text cannot mean natural death;
for natural death is common both to those who have, and to those who have not, a
new heart. Nor can it mean spiritual death, which is a state of entire sinfulness;
for then it should have read, Why are ye already dead! The death here spoken of must
mean eternal death, or that state of banishment from God and the glory of his power,
into which the soul shall be cast, that dies in its iniquities.
The command here addressed to the Israelites, is binding upon every impenitent sinner,
to whom the Gospel shall be addressed. He is required to perform the same duty, upon
the same penalty. It becomes, therefore, a matter of infinite importance that we
should well understand, and fully and immediately obey, the requirement. The questions
that would naturally arise to a reflecting mind on reading this text, are the following.
1. What are we to understand by the requirement to make a new heart and a new spirit?
2. Is it reasonable to require the performance of this duty on pain of eternal death?
3. How is this requirement, that we should make to us a new heart and a new spirit, consistent with the often repeated declarations of the Bible that a new heart is the gift and work of God?
Does God require of us the performance of this duty, without expecting
its fulfillment, merely to show us our impotency and dependence upon him? Does he
require us to make to ourselves a new heart, on pain of eternal death, when at the
same time he knows we have no power to obey; and that if ever the work is done, he
must himself do the very thing which he requires of us?
In order to answer these questions satisfactorily, I will attempt to show,
I. What is not the meaning of this requirement; and
II. What is.
I. What is not the meaning of this requirement.
It should here be observed, that although the Bible was not given to teach us mental
philosophy, yet we may rest assured, that all its declarations are in accordance
with the true philosophy of mind. The term spirit, in the Bible, is used in different
senses: it sometimes means a spiritual being, or moral agent; in other places it
is used in the sense in which we often employ it in conversation. In speaking of
the temper of a man, we say he has a good or bad spirit, a lovely or hateful spirit.
It is evidently used in this sense in the text. The term heart is also employed in
various senses: sometimes it appears to be used as synonymous with soul; sometimes
it evidently means the will; sometimes the conscience, sometimes it seems to be used
in such an extensive sense, as to cover all the moral movements of the mind; sometimes
it expresses the natural or social affections. The particular sense in which it is
to be understood in any place, may easily be determined by the connexion in which
it stands. Our present business is, to ascertain its meaning as used in the text;
for it is in this sense, that we are required to make us a new heart and a new spirit.
I begin, therefore, by saying,
But this implantation of a new principle, which dispenses with the necessity of the special influences of the Spirit in after life, is contrary to experience; for those who have a new heart, find that his constant agency is as indispensable to their perseverance in holiness, as it was to their conversion.
II. But I come now to show what we are to understand by the
command of the text.
The Bible often speaks of the heart, as a fountain, from which flow the moral affections
and actions of the soul, as in Matt. xv.19, "Out of the heart proceed evil thoughts,
murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies." The
term heart, as applied to mind, is figurative, and recognizes an analogy between
the heart of the body, and the heart of the soul. The fleshly organ of the body called
the heart, is the seat and fountain of animal life, and by its constant action, diffuses
life through the animal system. The spiritual heart, is the fountain of spiritual
life, is that deep seated but voluntary preference of the mind, which lies back of
all its other voluntary affections and emotions, and from which they take their character.
A change of heart, then, consists in changing the controlling preference of the mind in regard to the end of pursuit. The selfish heart is a preference of self-interest to the glory of God and the interests of his kingdom. A new heart consists in a preference of the glory of God and the interests of his kingdom to one's own happiness. In other words, it is a change from selfishness to benevolence, from having a supreme regard to one's own interest to an absorbing and controlling choice of the happiness and glory of God and his kingdom.
Thus the world is divided into two great political parties; the
difference between them is, that one party choose Satan as the god of this world,
yield obedience to his laws, and are devoted to his interest. Selfishness is the
law of Satan's empire, and all impenitent sinners yield it a willing obedience. The
other party choose Jehovah for their governor, and consecrate themselves, with all
their interests, to his service and glory. Nor does this change imply a constitutional
alteration of the powers of body or mind, any more than a change of mind in regard
to the form or administration of a human government.
There are certain things in regard to mind, with which we become familiar by experience.
Do not understand me to affirm, that any considerable time elapsed between the creation of Adam and his possessing a moral character. It is presumed, that as soon as he awoke into being, and had knowledge of the existence and character of his Maker, the evidences of which doubtless shone all around him, he chose Him as his supreme ruler, and voluntarily dedicated all his powers to his service. This preference of God, and his glory, and service, over his own self-interest and every thing else, constituted his disposition, or his moral character; in other words, it was a perfectly holy heart. Out of this heart, or preference, flowed as from a fountain the pure waters of obedience. All the subordinate movements, affections, choices, and purposes of the mind, and all the outward actions, flowed from this strong and governing preference for God and his service. Thus he went forth to dress God's garden, and keep it. Now, for a time, this preference of Adam was strong and abiding enough to insure perfect obedience in all things; for mind will act in consistency with an abiding preference.
The proposal of the serpent was, that he should change his mind in regard to the supreme end of pursuit; and this change his heart, or his whole moral character. "Yea, hath God said, ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?" and the woman said unto the serpent, we may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden, but of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, God hath said, ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it, lest ye die. And the serpent said unto the woman, ye shall not surely die: for God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil."
A change of heart, therefore, is to prefer a different end. To
prefer supremely the glory of God and the public good, to the promotion of his own
interest; and whenever this preference is changed, we see of course a corresponding
change of conduct. If a man change sides in politics, you will see him meeting with
those that entertain the same views and feelings with himself; devising plans and
using his influence to elect the candidate which he has now chosen. He has new political
friends on the one side, and new political enemies on the other. So with a sinner;
if his heart is changed, you will see that Christians become his friends -- Christ
his candidate. He aims at honoring him and promoting his interest in all his ways.
Before, the language of his conduct was, "Let Satan govern the world."
Now, the language of his heart and of his life is, "Let Christ rule King of
nations, as he is King of saints." Before, his conduct said, "O Satan,
let thy kingdom come, and let thy will be done." Now, his heart, his life, his
lips cry out, "O Jesus, let thy kingdom come, let thy will be done on earth
as it is in heaven."
In proof that the change which I have described constitutes a change of heart, if
any proof is necessary --
The fundamental difference lies in this ruling preference, this fountain, this heart, out of which flows their emotions, their affections, and actions. As the difference between them consists not in the substance of their minds or bodies, but in the voluntary state of mind in which they are, it is just as unphilosophical, absurd, and unnecessary, to suppose that a physical or constitutional change has taken place in him who has the new heart, as to infer, that because a man has changed his politics, therefore his nature is changed. Further, this new preference needs only to become deep and energetic enough in its influence, to stamp the perfection of heaven upon the whole character. From long cherished habits of sin, and acting under the dominion of an opposite preference, when it comes really to be changed, it is often weak and measurably inefficient; and consequently the mind often acts in inconsistency with this general preference. Accordingly, God says to Israel, "How weak is thine heart!" Like a man who is so little under the influence either of principle or of affection for his wife, that although upon the whole, and in general, he prefers her to any other woman, yet he may occasionally be guilty of an act of infidelity to her. Now what is needed in the case of a Christian is, that his old habits of thought, and feeling, and action, should be broken up; that his new preference should gain strength, stability, firmness, and perpetuity; and thus take the control of the whole man. This process constitutes sanctification. Every act of obedience to God strengthens this preference, and renders future obedience more natural. The perfect control of this preference over all the moral movements of the mind, brings a man back to where Adam was previous to the fall, and constitutes perfect holiness.
Once more -- If a change of heart was physical, or a change in the constitution of the mind, it would have no moral character. The change, to have moral character, must be voluntary. To constitute a change of heart, it must not only be voluntary, but must be a change in the governing preference of the mind. It must be a change in regard to the supreme object of pursuit.
Finally, it is a fact in the experience of every Christian, that the change through which he has passed is nothing else than that which I have described. In speaking from experience, he can say, Whereas I once preferred my own separate interest to the glory of my Maker, now I prefer his glory and the interests of his kingdom, and consecrate all my powers to the promotion of them for ever.
Suppose God should command a man to fly; would the command impose upon him any obligation, until he was furnished with wings? Certainly not. But suppose, on his failing to obey, God should require him to repent of his disobedience, and threaten to send him to hell if he did not heartily blame himself, and justify the requirement of God. He must cease to be a reasonable being before he can do this. He knows that God never gave him power to fly, and therefore he had no right to require it of him. His natural sense of justice, and of the foundation of obligation, is outraged, and he indignantly and conscientiously throws back the requirement into his Maker's face. Repentance, in this case, is a natural impossibility; while he is a reasonable being, he knows that he is not to blame for not flying without wings; and however much he may regret his not being able to obey the requirement, and however great may be his fear of the wrath of God, still to blame himself and justify God is a natural impossibility. As, therefore, God requires men to make to themselves a new heart, on pain of eternal death, it is the strongest possible evidence that they are able to do it. To say that he has commanded them to do it, without telling them they are able, is consummate trifling. Their ability is implied as strongly as it can be, in the command itself.
From all this it will be seen, that the answer to the question, whether the requirement in the text is just, must turn upon the question of man's ability; and the question of ability must turn upon the nature of the change itself. If the change is physical, it is clearly beyond the power of man; it is something over which he has no more control than he had over the creation of his soul and body. But if the change is moral -- in other words, if it be voluntary, a change of choice or preference, such as I have described, then the answer to the question, Is the requirement of the text just and reasonable? clearly is, Yes, it is entirely reasonable and just;
Again -- These powers are as well suited to obedience as to disobedience. Your wickedness consists in a wrong but obstinate choice of sin. But is it not as easy to choose right as wrong? Are not the motives to a right choice infinitely greater than to a wrong one? Could Adam reasonably have objected that he was unable to change his choice? Could Satan object that he had no power to change the governing preference of his mind, and to prefer the glory of his Maker to rebellion against his throne? If Satan, or Adam, or you, can reasonably bring forward this objection, then there is no such thing as sin in earth or hell.
Again -- God only requires of you to choose and act reasonably, for certainly it is in accordance with right reason to prefer the glory of God, and the interest of his immense kingdom, to your own private interest. It is an infinitely greater good; therefore you, and God, and all his creatures, are bound to prefer it. But I said the motives to a right preference are infinitely greater than to a wrong one. Sinners often complain that they are so influenced by motives, that they cannot resist iniquity. They often excuse their sins, by pleading that the temptation was too strong for them. Sinner, why is it, while you are so easily influenced by motives as to complain that you cannot resist them; that you are too weak to resist their influence to sin; that you are strong enough to resist the world of motives that come rolling upon you like a wave of fire, to do right and obey your Maker?
The fact is, that the actual turning, or change, is the sinner's own act. The agent who induces him, is the Spirit of God. A secondary agent, is the preacher, or individual who presents the truth. The truth is the instrument, or motive, which the Spirit uses to induce the sinner to turn. Suppose yourself to be standing on the bank of the Falls of Niagara. As you stand upon the verge of the precipice, you behold a man lost in deep reverie, approaching its verge unconscious of his danger. He approaches nearer and nearer, until he actually lifts his foot to take the final step that shall plunge him in destruction. At this moment you lift your warning voice above the roar of the foaming waters, and cry out, Stop. The voice pierces his ear, and breaks the charm that binds him; he turns instantly upon his heel, all pale and aghast he retires, quivering, from the verge of death. He reels, and almost swoons with horror; turns and walks slowly to the public house; you follow him; the manifest agitation in his countenance calls numbers around him: and on your approach, he points to you, and says, That man saved my life. Here he ascribes the work to you; and certainly there is a sense in which you had saved him. But, on being further questioned, he says, Stop! how that word rings in my ears. Oh, that was to me the word of life. Here he ascribes it to the word that aroused him, and caused him to turn. But, on conversing still further, he said, had I not turned at that instant, I should have been a dead man. Here he speaks of it, and truly, as his own act; but directly you hear him say, O the mercy of God; if God had not interposed, I should have been lost. Now the only defect in this illustration is this: In the case supposed, the only interference on the part of God, was a providential one: and the only sense in which the saving of the man's life is ascribed to him, is in a providential sense. But in the conversion of a sinner there is something more than the providence of God employed; for here not only does the providence of God so order it, that the preacher cries, Stop, but the Spirit of God forces the truth home upon him with such tremendous power as to induce him to turn.
Not only does the preacher cry, Stop, but, through the living voice of the preacher, the Spirit cries, Stop. The preacher cries, "Turn ye, why will ye die." The Spirit pours the expostulation home with such power, that the sinner turns.
Now, in speaking of this change, it is perfectly proper to say,
that the Spirit turned him, just as you would say a man, who had persuaded another
to change his mind on the subject of politics, that he had converted him, and brought
him over. It is also proper to say that the truth converted him: as in a case when
the political sentiments of a man were changed by a certain argument, we should say,
that argument brought him over. So also with perfect propriety may we ascribe the
change to the living preacher, or to him who had presented the motives; just as we
should say of a lawyer who had prevailed in his argument with a jury; he has got
his case, he has converted the jury. It is also with the same propriety ascribed
to the individual himself whose heart is changed; we should say that he had changed
his mind, he has come over, he has repented.
Now it is strictly true, and true in the most absolute and highest sense; the act
is his own act, the turning is his own turning, while God by the truth has induced
him to turn; still it is strictly true that he has turned and has done it himself.
Thus you see the sense in which it is the work of God, and also the sense in which
it is the sinner's own work. The Spirit of God, by the truth, influences the sinner
to change, and in this sense is the efficient cause of the change. But the sinner
actually changes, and is therefore himself, in the most proper sense, the author
of the change. There are some who, on reading their Bibles, fasten their eyes upon
those passages that ascribe the work to the Spirit of God, and seem to overlook those
that ascribe it to man, and speak of it as the sinner's own act. When they have quoted
Scripture to prove it is the work of God, they seem to think they have proved that
it is that in which man is passive, and that it can in no sense be the work of man.
Some months since a tract was written, the title of which was, "Regeneration
is the effect of Divine Power." The writer goes on to prove that the work is
wrought by the Spirit of God, and there he stops.
Now it had been just as true, just as philosophical, and just as Scriptural, if he
had said, that conversion was the work of man. It was easy to prove that it was the
work of God, in the sense in which I have explained it. The writer therefore tells
the truth so far as he goes; but he has told only half the truth. For while there
is a sense in which it is the work of God, as he has shown, there is also a sense
in which it is the work of man, as we have just seen. The very title to this tract
is a stumbling block. It tells the truth, but it does not tell the whole truth. And
a tract might be written upon this proposition that "conversion or regeneration
is the work of man;" which would be just as true, just as Scriptural, and just
as philosophical, as the one to which I have alluded. Thus the writer, in his zeal
to recognize and honor God as concerned in this work, by leaving out the fact that
a change of heart is the sinner's own act, has left the sinner strongly intrenched,
with his weapons in his rebellious hands, stoutly resisting the claims of his Maker,
and waiting passively for God to make him a new heart. Thus you see the consistency
between the requirement of the text, and the declared fact that God is the author
of the new heart. God commands you to do it, expects you to do it, and if it ever
is done, you must do it.
I shall conclude this discourse with several inferences and remarks.
1st. Sinners make their own wicked hearts. Their preference
of sin is their own voluntary act. They make self-gratification the rule to which
they conform all their conduct. When they come into being, the first principle that
we discover in their conduct, is their determination to gratify themselves. It soon
comes to pass that any effort to thwart them in the gratification of their appetites,
is met by them with strong resistance, they seem to set their hearts full to purpose
their own happiness, and gratify themselves, come what will; and thus they will successively
make war on their nurse, their parents, and their God, when ever they find that their
requirements prohibit the pursuit of this end. Now this is purely a voluntary state
of mind. This state of mind is not a subject of creation, it is entirely the result
of temptation to selfishness, arising out of the circumstances under which the child
comes into being. This preference to selfishness is suffered by the sinner to grow
with his growth and strengthen with his strength, until this desperately wicked heart
bears him onward to the gates of hell.
2nd. From what has been said, the necessity of a change of heart is most manifest.
The state of mind in which impenitent sinners are, is called by the
apostle the "carnal mind;" or as it should have been rendered, "the
minding of the flesh is enmity against God." The child at first gives up the
rein to the bodily appetites. God requires him to keep under his body, and to make
it the instrument of his soul in the service of God -- to subject and subordinate
all its passions to the will of its Maker. But instead of this, he makes the gratification
of his appetites and passions, the law of his life. It is that law in his members,
of which the apostle speaks, as warring against the law of his mind. This state of
mind, is the direct opposite of the character and requirements of God. With this
heart, the salvation of the sinner is a manifest impossibility.
3rd. In the light of this subject, you can see the nature and degree of the sinner's
dependence on the Spirit of God. The Spirit's agency is not
needed to give him power, but to overcome his voluntary obstinacy. Some persons seem
to suppose that the Spirit is employed to give the sinner power -- that he is unable
to obey God, without the Spirit's agency. I am alarmed when I hear such declarations
as these; and were it not, that I suppose there is a sense in which a man's heart
may be better than his head, I should feel bound to maintain, that persons holding
this sentiment, were not Christians at all. I have already shown that a man is under
no obligation to do what he has no ability to do; in other words that his obligation,
is only commensurate with his ability. That he cannot blame himself for not having
exerted a power, that he never possessed. If he believes, therefore, that he has
no power to obey his Maker, it is impossible that he should blame himself for not
doing it. And if he believes that the Spirit's agency is indispensable to make him
able; consistency must compel him to maintain, that without this superadded agency,
he is under no obligation to obey. This giving the sinner power, by the aid of the
Holy Spirit, to obey God, is what the Arminians call a gracious ability, which terms
are a manifest absurdity. What is grace? It is undeserved favor; something to which
we have no claim in justice. That which may be withheld without injustice. If this
is a true definition, it is plain that a gracious ability to do our duty is absurd.
It is a dictate of reason, of conscience, of common sense, and of our natural sense
of justice, that if God require of us the performance of any duty or act, he is bound
in justice to give us power to obey; i. e. he must give us the faculties and strength
to perform the act. But if justice require this, why call it a gracious ability.
Natural ability to do our duty cannot be a gracious ability. To call it so, is to
confound grace and justice as meaning the same thing. The sin of disobedience then
must lie, not in his having broken the law of God, but solely in his not having complied
with the striving of the Spirit. Accordingly the definition of sin should be, upon
these principles, not that "sin is a transgression of the law," but that
it consists in not yielding to the influence of the Spirit. While therefore he is
not sensible that the Spirit is giving him power, he can feel under no obligation
to be converted; nor can he, upon any principles of reason, blame himself. How, I
would ask, is it possible that with these views he can repent? And how, upon these
principles, is he to blame for not having repented and turned to the Lord?
But, to illustrate both the nature and degree of man's dependence on the Spirit,
suppose a man to be bent upon self-murder; in the absence of his wife he loads his
pistols, and prepares to commit the horrid deed. His little child observes the disorder
of his mind, and says, Father, what are you going to do? Be still, he replies, I
am going to blow my brains out. The little one weeps, spreads out its little beggar
hands, beseeches him to desist, and pours out his little prayers, and tears, and
agonizing entreaties, to spare his life. Now if the eloquence of this child's grief,
his prayers, and tears, could prevail to change the obstinacy of his purpose, he
would need no other influence to subdue and change his mind. But the parent persisting,
the child screams to his mother, who flies at the voice of its entreaty, and on being
told the cause of its anguish, hastens, upon the wings of terror, to her husband's
apartment, and conjures him to change his purpose. By his love for his family --
by their love for him -- by their dependence upon him -- in view of the torn heart,
and distraction of the wife of his bosom -- by the anguish, the tears, the helplessness
of his babes -- by the regard he has for his own soul -- by the hope of heaven --
by the terrors of hell -- by every thing tender and persuasive in life -- by all
that is solemn in the final judgment, and terrible in the pains of the second death,
she conjures him, over and over again, not to rush upon his own destruction. Now
if all this can move him, he needs no other and higher influence to change his mind.
But when she fails in her efforts, suppose she could summon all the angels of God,
and they also should fail to move and melt him by their unearthly eloquence; here,
then, some higher power must interfere, or the man is lost. But just as he puts his
pistol to his ear, the Spirit of God, who knows perfectly the state of his mind,
and understands all the reasons that have led him to this desperate determination,
gathers such a world of motive, and pours them in such a focal blaze upon his soul,
that he instantly quails, drops the weapon from his nerveless hand, relinquishes
his purpose of death for ever, falls upon his knees, and gives glory to God.
Now it was the strength of the man's voluntary purpose of self-destruction alone,
that made the Spirit's agency at all necessary in the case. Would he have yielded
to all the motives that had been before presented, and should have subdued him, no
interposition of the Holy Spirit had been necessary. But it was the wickedness, and
the obstinacy of the wretch, that laid the only foundation for the Spirit's interference.
Now this is the sinner's case. He has set his heart fully to do evil, and if the
prayers and tears of friends, and of the church of God -- the warning of ministers
-- the rebukes of Providence -- the commands, the expostulations, the tears, and
groans, and death of God's dear Son: if the offer of heaven, or the threatening of
hell could overcome his obstinate preference of sin, the Spirit's agency would be
uncalled for. But because no human persuasion, no motive that man or angel can get
home upon his mind, will cause him to turn; therefore the Spirit of God must interpose
to shake his preference, and turn him back from hell. The degree of his dependence
upon the Spirit, is just the degree of his obstinacy; were he but slightly inclined
to pursue the road to death, men could change him without calling upon God for help;
but just in proportion to the strength of his preference for sin, is it necessary
that the Spirit should interpose or he is lost. Thus you see, the sinner's dependence
upon the Spirit of God, instead of being his excuse, is that which constitutes his
guilt.
4th. Again -- You see from this subject the NATURE of the Spirit's agency.
That he does not act by direct physical contact upon the mind, but
that he uses the truth as his sword to pierce the sinner; and that the motives presented
in the Gospel are the instruments he uses to change the sinner's heart. Some have
doubted this, and supposed that it is equivalent to denying the Spirit's agency altogether
to maintain that he converts sinners by motives. Others have denied the possibility
of changing the heart by motives. But did not the serpent change Adam's heart by
motives; and cannot the Spirit of God with infinitely higher motives exert as great
power over mind as he can? Can the old serpent change a heart from a perfectly holy
to a perfectly sinful one by the power of motives, and cannot the infinitely wise
God, do as much as Satan did? Verily, to deny this, looks much like detracting from
the wisdom and power of God. But that the Scripture abundantly declares that the
Spirit converts sinners by the power of motive is most manifest -- "Of his own
will begat he us with the word of truth," is one out of the many express declarations
upon this subject. The philosophy of this subject is settled by the Bible; it is
a subject upon which we are not at liberty to speculate, and from our own philosophical
theories, and maintain that by direct physical contact, irrespective of truth, God
interposes and changes the sinner's heart. When God says, "Of his own will he
has begotten us with the word of truth," this settles the question; and is equivalent
to saying, that he has not begotten us in any other manner.
The very terms used by our Saviour in the promise of the Spirit to reprove the world
of sin, of righteousness, and of a judgment to come, strongly imply the mode of his
agency. The term rendered Comforter in our translation of the Bible, is Parakletos;
it is the same term which, in one of the epistles of John, is rendered Advocate.
The term is there applied to Jesus Christ. It is there said, "If any man sin,
we have a Parakletos, or an Advocate with the Father, even Jesus Christ the righteous."
In this passage Jesus Christ is spoken of as the Advocate of men with God. The Parakletos,
or Comforter, promised by our Savior, is represented as God's Advocate, to plead
His cause with men. The term rendered reprove or convince in our translation is a
law term, and signifies the summing up of an argument, and establishing or demonstrating
the sinner's guilt. Thus the strivings of the Spirit of God with men, is not a physical
scuffling, but a debate; a strife not of body with body, but of mind with mind; and
that in the action and reaction of vehement argumentation. From these remarks, it
is easy to answer the question sometimes put by individuals who seem to be entirely
in the dark upon this subject, whether in converting the soul the Spirit acts directly
on the mind, or on the truth. This is the same nonsense as if you should ask, whether
an earthly advocate who had gained his cause, did it by acting directly and physically
on the jury, or on his argument.
5th. Again -- It is evident from this subject that God never does, in changing the
sinner's heart, what he requires the sinner to do. Some persons,
as I have already observed, seem disposed to be passive, to wait for some mysterious
influence, like an electric shock, to change their hearts. But in this attitude,
and with these views, they may wait till the day of judgment, and God will never
do their duty for them. The fact is, sinners, that God requires you to turn, and
what he requires of you, he cannot do for you. It must be your own voluntary act.
It is not the appropriate work of God to do what he requires of you. Do not wait
then for him to do your duty, but do it immediately yourself, on pain of eternal
death.
6th. This subject shows also, that if the sinner ever has a new heart, he must obey
the command of the text, and make it himself. But here some
one may interpose and say, Is not this taking the work out of God's hands, and robbing
him of the glory? No. It is the only view of the subject that gives the glory to
God. Some in their zeal to magnify the grace of the Gospel, entirely overthrow it.
They maintain the sinner's inability, and thereby do away his guilt. Instead of considering
him a guilty, voluntary rebel, and worthy of eternal death, they make him a helpless,
unfortunate creature, unable to do what God requires of him. Instead of making his
only difficulty to consist in an unwillingness, they insist upon his inability, and
thus destroy his guilt, and of course the grace displayed in his salvation. For what
grace can there be in helping an unfortunate individual? If sinners are unable to
obey God, precisely in proportion to their inability, are they guiltless. But if
they are unwilling, if their cannot is a will not, we have already seen that their
guilt is in proportion to the strength of their unwillingness, and grace in their
salvation must be equal to their guilt. Nor does it detract from the glory of God
that the act of turning is the sinner's own act. The fact is, he never does, and
never will turn, unless God induces him to do it; so that although the act is the
sinner's own, yet the glory belongs to God, inasmuch as he caused him to act. If
a man had made up his mind to take his own life, and you should, by taking the greatest
pains, and at great expense, prevail upon him to desist, would you deserve no credit
for the influences you exerted in the case? Though changing his mind and relinquishing
his purpose of self-destruction was his own act, inasmuch as you was the sole cause
of his turning, and as it was certain that had you not interfered he would have done
the horrid deed, are you not entitled to just as much praise as if his own agency
had not been at all concerned in turning? Might it not in truth be said that you
had turned him?
7th. But again -- The idea that the Spirit converts sinners by the truth, is the
only view of the subject that honours either the Spirit, or the truth of God.
The work of conversion is spoken of in the Bible as a work of exceeding
great power; and I once heard a clergyman, expatiating upon the great powers of God
in conversion -- although he appeared to view it as a physical alteration of the
constitution of man, as the implantation of a new principle, or taste -- assert that
it was a greater exertion of power than that which hung out the heavens. The reason
which he assigned for its being such a great exertion of power was, that in the creation
of the material universe, he had no opposition, but in the conversion of a soul,
he had all the powers of hell to oppose him. Now this is whimsical and ridiculous
enough. As if the opposition of hell could oppose any obstacle in the way of physical
Omnipotence. The power which God exerts in the conversion of a soul, is moral power;
it is that kind of power by which a statesman sways the mind of a senate; or by which
an advocate moves and bows the heart of a jury; by which "David bowed the heart
of all Israel, as the heart of one man." Now when we consider the deep-rooted
selfishness of the sinner; his long cherished habits of sin; his multifarious excuses
and refuges of lies; it is a most sublime exhibition of wisdom and of moral power
to pursue him step by step with truth, to hunt him from his refuges of lies, to constrain
him by the force of argument alone, to yield up his selfishness and dedicate himself
to the service of God. This reflects a glory and a lustre over the truth of God and
the agency of the Holy Spirit, that at once delights and amazes the beholder.
8th. But again -- The idea that the Spirit uses motives to change the heart, is the
only view that gives consistency, and meaning to the often repeated injunction, not
to resist the Holy Ghost -- not to strive with his Maker. For
if the Spirit operated upon the mind by direct physical contact, the idea of effectually
resisting physical omnipotence is ridiculous. The same thought applies to those passages
that caution us against grieving and quenching the Spirit.
9th. Again -- You see from this subject that a sinner, under the influence of the
Spirit of God, is just as free as a jury under the arguments of an advocate.
Here also you may see the importance of right views on this point.
Suppose a lawyer, in addressing a jury, should not expect to change their minds by
any thing he could say, but should wait for an invisible and physical agency, to
be exerted by the Holy Ghost upon them. And suppose, on the other hand, that the
jury thought that in making up their verdict, they must be passive, and wait for
a direct physical agency to be exerted upon them. In vain might the lawyer plead,
and in vain might the jury hear, for until he pressed his arguments as if he was
determined to bow their hearts, and until they make up their minds, and decide the
question, and thus act like rational beings, both his pleading and their hearing
is in vain. So if a minister goes into a desk to preach to sinners, believing that
they have no power to obey the truth, and under the impression that a direct physical
influence must be exerted upon them before they can believe, and if his audience
be of the same opinion, in vain does he preach, and in vain do they hear, "for
they are yet in their sins;" they sit and quietly wait for some invisible hand
to be stretched down from heaven, and perform some surgical operation, infuse some
new principle, or implant some constitutional taste; after which they suppose they
shall be able to obey God. Ministers should labour with sinners, as a lawyer does
with a jury, and upon the same principles of mental philosophy; and the sinner should
weigh his arguments, and make up his mind as upon oath and for his life, and give
a verdict upon the spot, according to law and evidence.
But here perhaps some one will ask, If truth, when seen in all its bearings and relations,
is the instrument of converting the sinner, why will he not be converted in hell,
where it is supposed that all the truth will burst upon his mind in all its burning
reality? In answer to this, I observe, that the motive that prevails to turn the
convicted rebel to God, will, in hell, be wanting. When the sinner is crowded with
conviction and ready to go to despair, and ready to flee and hide himself from the
presence of his Maker, he is met by the offer of reconciliation, which, together
with the other motives that are weighing like a mountain upon his mind, sweetly constrain
him to yield himself up to God. But in hell the offer of reconciliation will be wanting;
the sinner will be in despair; and while in despair it is a moral impossibility to
turn his heart to God. Let a man in this life so completely ruin his fortune as to
have no hope of retrieving it; in this state of absolute despair, no motive can reach
him to make him put forth an effort; he has no sufficient motive to attempt it; so
if his reputation is so completely gone that he has no hope of retrieving it, in
this state of despair, there is no possibility of reclaiming him; no motive can reach
him and call forth an effort to redeem his character, because he is without hope.
So in hell, the poor dying sinner will be shut up in despair; his character is gone;
his fortune for eternity is lost; there is no offer, no hope of reconciliation; and
punishment will but drive him further and further from God for ever and ever.
10th. But, says the objector, if right apprehensions of truth presented by the Spirit
of God convert a sinner, does it not follow that his ignorance is the cause of his
sin? I answer, No! Had Adam kept what truth he knew steadily
before his mind, he doubtless would have resisted the temptation; but suffering his
mind to be diverted from the reasons for obedience to the motives to disobedience,
he failed, of course. When he had fallen, and selfishness had become predominant,
he was averse to knowing and weighing the reasons for turning again to God; and if
ever he was turned the Spirit of God must have pressed the subject upon him. So with
every sinner: he at first sins against what knowledge he has by overlooking the motives
to obedience, and yielding himself up to the motives to disobedience, and when once
he has adopted the selfish principle, his ignorance becomes wilful and sinful, and
unless the Spirit of God induce him, he will not see. He knows the truth to a sufficient
extent to leave him without excuse, but he will not consider it and let it have its
effect upon him.
But the objector may still ask, Is it not true, after all, if a full and sufficiently
impressive knowledge of truth is all that is necessary to subdue the sinner, that
he only needs to know the true character of God to love it, and that his enmity against
God arises out of his false notions of him? Is it not a false and not the true character
of God that he hates? I answer, No! It is the true character of God that he hates.
He hates God for what he is, and not for what he is not. The sinner's character is
selfishness: God's character is benevolence. These are eternal opposites. The sinner
hates God because he is opposed to his selfishness. While the man remains selfish,
it is absurd to say that he is reconciled to the true character of God. But is not
his ignorance the cause of his selfishness? No! he knows better than to be selfish.
It is true he does not, nor will he unless compelled by the Holy Spirit, consider
the unreasonableness of selfishness. The work of the Holy Spirit does not consist
merely in giving instruction, but in compelling him to consider truths which he already
knows -- to think upon his ways and turn to the Lord. He urges upon his attention
and consideration those motives which he hates to consider and feel the weight of.
It is probable, if not certain, that had all the motives to obedience been broadly
before the mind of Adam, or any other sinner, and had the mind duly considered them
at the time, he would not have sinned. But the fact is, sinners do not set what truth
they know before the mind, but divert the attention and rush on to hell.
Will any one still reply that although it is true that the sinner's wilful inconsideration
and diverting his attention lays the only foundation for the necessity of the Spirit's
influences, yet, is it not His great business to remove this ignorance occasioned
by the sinner's wilful rejection of light? What does consideration do, but to bring
the sinner to a juster knowledge of himself, of God, and of his duty, and thus, by
force of truth, constrain him to yield? If by ignorance be meant a wilful perverse
rejection of light and knowledge, I suppose that it is this state of mind which is
not merely the cause of his sin, but it is his sin itself. The Apostle views the
subject in this light: in speaking of sinners, he says, "Having their understanding
darkened, being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them,
because of the blindness of their heart."
It is indeed the pressing of truth upon the sinner's consideration that induces him
to turn. But it is not true that he is ignorant of these truths before he thus considers
them. He knows he must die -- that he is a sinner -- that God is right and he is
wrong -- that there is a heaven and a hell -- but, as the prophet says, "They
will not see" -- and again, "My people will not consider." It is not
mainly then to instruct, but to lead the sinner to think upon his ways, that the
Spirit employs his agency. I have already shown why he will not be converted when
truth is forced upon him in hell.
11th. But here some one may say, Is not this exhibition of the subject inconsistent
with that mystery of which Christ speaks, when he says, "The wind bloweth where
it listeth, thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh nor
whither it goeth; so is every one that is born of the Spirit?"
Says the objector, I have been in the habit of considering the subject
of a new heart, as a very mysterious one: but you make it very plain. How is this?
Does not Christ, in the text I have quoted, represent it as mysterious? In answer
to this I would ask, Wherein does Christ, in that text, represent the mystery of
the new birth as consisting? Not in the effects which the Spirit produces, for the
effects are matters of experience and observation. Not in the instrumentality used,
for this is often revealed in the Bible. But the mystery lies in the manner of the
Spirit's communicating with mind. How disembodied spirits communicate with each other,
we are unable to say -- or how a disembodied spirit can communicate with one that
wears a body, we do not know. We know that we communicate with each other through
the medium of our bodily senses. The particular manner in which the Spirit of God
carries on his debates and strivings with the mind, is what, in this life, we shall
probably never know. Nor is it important that we should. Every Christian knows that
in some way the truth was kept before his mind, and made to bear, and press upon
him, and hedge him in, until he was constrained to yield. These are matters of experience;
but in what particular manner the Holy Spirit did this, is just as mysterious as
millions of other facts, which we daily witness, but cannot explain.
12th. But here perhaps another objection may arise -- If the sinner is able to convert
himself, why does he need the Spirit of God? Suppose a man
owed you one hundred dollars, was abundantly able, but wholly unwilling to pay you;
you obtain a writ, and prepare, by instituting a suit against him, to ply him with
a motive that will constrain him to be honest and pay his debts. Now suppose that
he should say, I am perfectly able to pay this hundred dollars, of what use then
is this writ, and a sheriff, and a lawsuit? The answer is, It is to make him willing
-- to be sure, he is able but he is unwilling. Just so with the sinner -- he is able
to do his duty, but is unwilling, therefore the Spirit of God plies him with motives
to make him willing.
13th. Again -- You see that sinners should not content them selves with praying for
a new heart. It has been common for those who believe that
sinners are unable to change their own heart, when sinners have inquired what they
should do to be saved, to substitute another requirement for that contained in the
text, and instead of commanding them to make to them a new heart, have told them
to pray that God would change their heart. They have used language like the following:
"You must remember that you are dependent on God for a new heart. Do not attempt
to do any thing in your own strength -- attend to your Bible, use the means of grace,
call upon God to change your heart, and wait patiently for the answer."
A few years since, a lawyer, under deep conviction of sin, came to my room to inquire
what he should do to be saved. He informed me that when in college, he, with two
others were deeply anxious for their souls; that they waited on the president, and
inquired what they should do. His directions were, in substance, that they should
read their Bibles, keep clear of vain company, use the means of grace, and pray for
a new heart, and that ere long they would either be converted, or would give up reading
their Bibles and using means for their salvation. On being questioned how the matter
terminated, he replied, that it turned out as the president told them it would; they
soon gave up reading their Bibles, and using means. He said that the directions of
the president relieved his mind, and that the more he prayed and used the means,
the less distress he felt. That as he thought he was now doing his duty, and in a
hopeful way, the more he read his Bible and prayed, the more acceptable he thought
himself to God, and the more likely to be converted. The more diligent he was in
using means, the more self-complacent and contented he became -- and thus prayed
and waited for God to change his heart till his convictions had entirely worn away,
and with a burst of grief he added, thus it turned out with us all. The other two
are confirmed drunkards, and I have well nigh ruined myself by drink. Now if there
is any hope in my case, tell me what I shall do to be saved. On being told to repent,
and pressed to the immediate performance of the duty, he, to all appearance, yielded
up himself to God upon the spot. Now the result of the directions given by the president,
was strictly philosophical. The advice was just such as would please the devil. It
would answer his purpose infinitely better than to have told them to abandon all
thoughts of religion at once, for this would have shocked and frightened them, and,
anxious as they were, they would have turned with abhorrence from such advice; but
setting them upon this sanctimonious method of praying and waiting for God to do
what he required of them, was soothing to their consciences; substituting another
requirement in the place of the command of God, fostering their spirit of delay,
confirming them in self-righteousness, and one of two results must have been expected
-- either that they would embrace a false hope, or no hope at all. For it was perfectly
natural and reasonable, if this was their duty, to pray, and use the means, and wait
for God, for them to suppose that, as they were doing what God required of them,
they were growing better. That the more diligent they were in their impenitent endeavours,
the more safely might they rely upon God's converting them. Therefore of course the
further they proceeded in this way, the less knowledge would they have of themselves,
their danger, and their deserts; and the more certainly would they grieve away the
Spirit of God.
Sinner! instead of waiting and praying for God to change your heart, you should at
once summon up your powers, put forth the effort, and change the governing preference
of your mind. But here some one may ask, Can the carnal mind, which is enmity against
God, change itself: I have already said that this text in the original reads, "The
minding of the flesh is enmity against God." This minding of the flesh, then,
is a choice or preference to gratify the flesh. Now it is indeed absurd to say, that
a choice can change itself; but it is not absurd to say, that the agent who exercises
this choice, can change it. The sinner that minds the flesh, can change his mind,
and mind God.
14th. From this subject it is manifest that the sinner's obligation to make to himself
a new heart, is infinite. Sinner! your obligations to love
God is equal to the excellence of his character, and your guilt in not obeying him
is of course equal to your obligation. You cannot therefore for an hour or a moment
defer obedience to the commandment in the text, without deserving eternal damnation.
15th. You see it is most reasonable to expect sinners, if they are converted at all,
to be converted under the voice of the living preacher, or while the truth is held
up in al its blaze before the mind. An idea has prevailed in
the church, that sinners must have a season of protracted conviction, and that those
conversions that were sudden were of a suspicious character. But certainly "this
persuasion cometh not from God." We nowhere in the Bible read of cases of lengthened
conviction. Peter was not afraid on the day of Pentecost that his hearers had not
conviction enough. He did not tell them to pray and labour for a more impressive
sense of their guilt, and wait for the Spirit of God to change their hearts, but
urged home their immediate duty upon them. If he had suffered them to escape, to
go from under his voice while yet in their sins, it is probable that hundreds, if
not thousands of them had not be converted at all. It is as reasonable and philosophical
to expect the sinner to turn, if he does it at all, while listening to the arguments
of the living preacher, as it is to expect a juror to be convinced, and make up his
mind, under the arguments of the advocate. The advocate expects if they are convinced
at all, that they will be so while he is addressing them. He does not act upon the
absurd and preposterous supposition, that it is more likely they will be convinced
and make up their verdict in his favour when they shall have retired, and calmly
considered the subject. His object is so thoroughly to convince, so completely to
imbue their minds with the subject, as to get their intellect, and conscience, and
heart to embrace his views of the subject. This is wise, and verily, in this respect,
"the children of this world, are in their generation wiser than the children
of light." And now, sinner, if you go away without making up your mind, and
changing your heart, it is most probable that your mind will be diverted -- you will
forget many things that you have heard -- many of the motives and considerations
that now press upon you may be abstracted from your mind -- you will lose the clear
view of the subject that you now have -- may grieve the Spirit, defer repentance,
and push your unbroken footsteps to the gates of hell.
16th. You see the importance of presenting those truths, and in such connexions and
relations, as are calculated to induce the sinner to change his heart. Few more mischievous sentiments have ever been broached, than that there
is no philosophical connexion between means and end in the conversion of sinners;
that there is no natural adaptedness in the motives of the Gospel to annihilate the
sinner's selfishness, and lead him to submit to God. This idea is a part of the scheme
of physical depravity. It considers regeneration as a change in the substance of
the mind; as effected by the direct physical agency of the Spirit of God, irrespective
of truth. If this were a correct view of regeneration, it would be manifest that
there could be no connexion between the means and the end. For if the work be a physical
creation, performed by the direct and physical power of the Holy Ghost, then certainly
it is effected by no means whatever. But so far is this from truth, that no sinner
ever was or ever will be converted, but by means wisely and philosophically adapted
to this end.
The Spirit selects such considerations, at such times and under such circumstances,
as are naturally calculated to disarm and confound the sinner; to strip him of his
excuses, answer his cavils, humble his pride, and break his heart. The preacher should
therefore acquaint himself with his refuges of lies, and as far as possible take
into consideration his whole history, including his present views and state of mind;
should wisely select a subject; so skillfully arrange, so simply and yet so powerfully
present it, as to engage the sinner's whole attention, and then lay himself out to
the utmost to bring him to yield upon the spot. He who deals with souls should study
well the laws of mind, and carefully and prayerfully adapt his matter and his manner
to the state and circumstances, views and feelings, in which he may find the sinner
at the time. He should present that particular subject, in that connexion and in
that manner, that shall have the greatest natural tendency to subdue the rebel at
once. If men would act as wisely and as philosophically in attempting to make men
Christians, as they do in attempting to sway mind upon other subjects; if they would
suit their subject to the state of mind, conform "the action to the word and
the word to the action," and press their subject with as much address, and warmth,
and perseverance, as lawyers and statesmen do their addresses; the result would be
the conversion of hundreds of thousands, and converts would be added to the Lord
"like drops of the morning dew." Were the whole church and the whole ministry
right upon this subject; had they right views, were they imbued with a right spirit,
and would they "go forth with tears, bearing precious seed, they would soon
reap the harvest of the whole earth, and return bearing their sheaves with them."
The importance of rightly understanding that God converts souls by motives, is inconceivably
great. Those who do not recognize this truth in their practice at least, are more
likely to hinder than to aid the Spirit in his work. Some have denied this truth
in theory, but have happily admitted it in practice. They have prayed, and preached,
and talked, as if they expected the Holy Spirit to convert sinners by the truth.
In such cases, notwithstanding their theory, their practice was owned and blessed
of God. But a want of attention to this truth in practice has been the source of
much and ruinous error in the management of revivals and in dealing with anxious
souls. Much of the preaching, conversation and exhortation have been irrelevant,
perplexing and mystical. Sufficient pains have not been taken to avoid a diversion
of public and individual attention. Sinners have been kept long under conviction,
because their spiritual guides withheld those particular truths which at the time
above all others they needed to know. They have been perplexed and confounded by
abstract doctrines, metaphysical subtleties, absurd exhibitions of the sovereignty
of God, inability, physical regeneration, and constitutional depravity, until the
agonized mind, discouraged and mad from contradiction from the pulpit, and absurdity
in conversation, dismissed the subject as altogether incomprehensible, and postponed
the performance of duty as impossible.
17th. From this subject you may see the importance of pressing every argument, and
every consideration, that can have any weight. And now, sinner,
while the subject is before you, will you yield! To keep yourself away from under
the motives of the Gospel, by neglecting church, and neglecting your Bible, will
prove fatal to your soul. And to be careless when you do attend, or to hear with
attention and refuse to make up your mind and yield, will be equally fatal. And now,
"I beseech you, by the mercies of God, that you at this time render your body
and soul, a living sacrifice to God, which is your reasonable service." Let
the truth take hold upon your conscience -- throw down your rebellious weapons --
give up your refuges of lies -- fix your mind steadfastly upon the world of considerations
that should instantly decide you to close in with the offer of reconciliation while
it now lies before you. Another moment's delay, and it may be too late for ever.
The Spirit of God may depart from you -- the offer of life may be made no more, and
this one more slighted offer of mercy may close up your account, and seal you over
to all the horrors of eternal death. Hear, then, O sinner, I beseech you, and obey
the word of the Lord -- "Make you a new heart and a new spirit, for why will
ye die?"
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