|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
SERMON VI. WHY
SINNERS HATE GOD
|
|
Public Domain Text
Reformatted by Katie Stewart
CONTENTS.
SERMON I.
SINNERS BOUND TO CHANGE THEIR OWN HEARTS. (page 1) ---New Window
-- 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.
(this page)
-- 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 VI.
WHY SINNERS HATE GOD.
-- John xv. 25.--
"They have hated me without a cause."
This lecture was typed in by Paul J. DiBartolo
These are the words of our Lord Jesus Christ. In my two former discourses
on total depravity, I have endeavored to demonstrate, that all impenitent sinners,
hate God supremely. And having, as I suppose, established this doctrine beyond controversy
by an appeal to matters of fact; it now becomes a very solemn and important question,
why sinners hate God?
If sinners have a good reason for hating God, then they are not to blame for it;
but if they have no good reason, or if they hate him when they ought to love him;
then they have incurred great guilt by their enmity to God.
In speaking from this subject, I design
1st. To show what is not the reason of their hatred.
2nd. What is the reason of it.
3rd. That they hate him, for the very reasons, for which they ought to love him.
I. I am to show, what is not the reason of their hatred.
If any of you understand by disposition, a propensity, or temper; not an action, which is not a voluntary state of mind; but a quality, or attribute, that is part of the mind itself, I say,
It is doubtless administered solely for the benefit , and in support of moral government. It is so arranged, as to bring out and exert the highest moral influence, that such a government is capable of exerting. Many sinners talk, as if they supposed God might have administered his governments, both moral, and providential, in a manner vastly more judicious, and more highly calculated to secure perfection in the conduct of his subjects. They seem to think, that because God is almighty, he therefore can work any conceivable absurdity, or contradiction. That he can secure perfection in moral agents, by the exercise physical omnipotence; and that the existence of sin in our world, is proof conclusive, that, although on some accounts, he is opposed to sin, yet upon the whole, he prefers its existence to holiness in its stead. They seem to take it for granted, that the two governments which God exercises over the universe, moral, and providential; might have been so administered, as to have produced universal holiness throughout the universe. But this is a gratuitous, and most wicked assumption. It is no fair inference from the omnipotence and omniscience of God; and the assumption is founded upon an erroneous view of the nature of moral agency, and of moral government.
II. Sinners do hate God, because they are supremely selfish;
and he is, as he ought to be, infinitely opposed to their supreme object of pursuit.
The first thing that we discover, in the conduct of little children, is, the desire
of self-gratification. At what period of their existence, their desire becomes selfishness,
it is impossible for us to say. That a proper desire to gratify an appetite for food,
and drink, and all our constitutional appetites, is not sinful, is manifest. These
appetites, have no moral character; and their proper indulgence, is not sinful. But
whenever their indulgence is inordinate, or whenever the indulgence of our appetites,
comes in collision with the requirements of God; whenever, and wherever we indulge
our constitutional propensities, when we are under an obligation to abstain from
an indulgence, in every such case, we sin; for in all these cases we are selfish;
we make our own indulgence, the rule of our duty, instead of the requirement of God.
We consent to indulge ourselves, at the public expense, and in a way that is inconsistent
with the glory of God, and the highest good of his universe. This is the essence,
and the history of all sin. Now, at whatever period of our existence, we first prefer
self-gratification, to our duty to God, when we first make self-gratification the
supreme object of choice; at what particular moment self-gratification comes to be
the ruling principle of our conduct, and the highest aim of our lives, it is perhaps
impossible for us to determine.
But whenever this may be, this is the commencement of our depravity. It is our first
moral act. It constitutes our first moral character. Every thing, that has preceded
this, has had no moral character at all. The Bible assures us, that this occurs so
early in our history, that it may be said, that "the wicked are estranged from
the womb. That they go astray, as soon as they be born, speaking lies." This
language is not, of course, to be understood literally, because we do not speak at
all, as soon as we are born: but the wicked speak lies, as soon as they do speak.
Behold, says the Psalmist, "I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother
conceive me." This language also, is certainly figurative; for it cannot be
possible, that the substance of a conceived fetus should be sin! This would contradict
God's own definition of sin. He says, "sin is a transgression of the law;"
but the law prescribes a rule of action, and not a mode of existence. If the substance
of a conceived fetus is sin: if the child itself, previous to birth, is a sin, than
God has committed it. All that can possibly be meant, by this, and similar passages
without making utter nonsense of the word of God; without arraying different passages
in everlasting contradiction to each other, is, that we were always sinners from
the commencement of our moral existence. From the earliest moment of the exercise
of moral agency. And to insist upon the literal understanding of such passages as
these, is the most dangerous perversion of the Bible. Adopt the principle of interpretation,
that insists upon these passages being understood literally, and apply it, in the
exposition of the whole Bible, and you will prove, not only that sin and holiness,
are substances, but that God is, a material being. Indeed, here has been the great
error, on the subject of depravity. This grand rule of interpretation, that all language
is to be understood, according to the nature of the subject to which it is applied,
has been overlooked, and the same meaning has often been attached to the same word,
whether applied to matter, or to mind. For instance, to set aside God's definition
of sin, as consisting entirely in the transgression of law, and bring in those figurative
expressions, that would seem, unexplained by God's own definition, to represent sin,
as consisting in something else, than voluntary transgression; is to array the Scripture
in irreconcilable contradiction to itself, by overlooking one of the most important
rules of Biblical interpretation.
It is to trifle with the word of God. It is tempting the Holy Ghost. It is a stupid,
not to say a willful perversion of the truth of God. Now, the great reason why sinners
are opposed to God, is not, that there is any defect in their nature, rendering their
opposition physically necessary, but because he is irreconcilably opposed to their
selfishness. He is infinitely opposed to the supreme end of their pursuit, that is,
to their obtaining happiness, in a way, that is inconsistent with HIS glory, and
the happiness of other beings.
The supreme end, at which they aim, is to promote their own happiness, in a way that
is inconsistent with the public good. To this he is infinitely opposed. As they have
an unholy end, in view, the means which they use , to accomplish this end, are, of
course, as wicked as the end. God is therefore, as much opposed to the means, which
they use, as to the end, which they are endeavoring to accomplish by those means.
These means make up the history of their lives. They are all designed, directly,
or indirectly, to affect the all absorbing object, at which the sinner aims; the
promotion of his own happiness. God is therefore, as he ought to be, sincerely and
conscientiously, and infinitely opposed to every thing they do or say, while in a
state of inpenitency. They would make every thing subordinate to their own private
interests. He insists upon it, that they shall seek their happiness, in a way that
is consistent with, and calculated to promote the happiness of the whole. This is
after all the only way in which, in the very nature of things they can be happy.
He accordingly sets himself with full purpose of heart, to defeat every attempt which
they make to obtain happiness in their own way. He is the irreconcilable adversary
of all their selfish schemes. He embitters every cup of selfish joy, "turns
their" selfish "council headlong; and brings down their violent dealing
upon their own pate."
Thus you see that sinners hate God, because he is so holy. While they remain selfish,
and he is infinitely benevolent, their characters, their designs, their desires,
and all their ways are diametrically opposed to his, and his to theirs. They are
direct opposites; and until they change, it will always be true as he has said, "I
loathe them, and they abhor me."
Holiness, is a regard to right. God requires upon infinite penalties, that every
moral being in the universe should do and feel and say, that which is perfectly right;
less than this, he cannot require without injustice. But sinners are unwilling to
do right. They would be at liberty to consult their own private interest in every
thing, and they of course consider God as an enemy, because he insists upon their
unqualified obedience to the law of right, however perfectly it counteracts their
selfish schemes.
Again. Sinners hate God because he is so good. He is good and does good, and moves
on in the promotion of the public interest in a way that often overturns and scatters
to the winds, all their selfish projects and Babel-towers upon which they are attempting
to climb to heaven. His heart is so set upon doing good, that in the prosecution
of his great design, he has often overthrown families and nations that stood in his
way; and once, he overwhelmed a world of sinners in a flood to prevent their mischief,
and bring the world back into such a state, that, through the introduction of the
law and Gospel, he might reclaim mankind, and save a multitude from hell.
Again. Sinners hate God, because he is impartial. They view their own interest as
of supreme importance, and are laying themselves out to make everything in the universe
bend to it. They would have the weather, the winds, and the whole material and moral
universe, conform to the great object they have in view, to consummate and perpetuate
their own happiness. But as God has an end in view entirely diverse from theirs;
as his object is to promote the general happiness, and the happiness of individuals,
only so far as is consistent with the happiness and rights of other beings, he continually
thwarts them in their favorite projects. The very elements of the material universe,
are so arranged and governed, as often to make shipwreck of their fondest hopes,
and annihilate for even their most fondly cherished expectations.
But this is not all. Sinners hate God because he threatens to punish them for their
sins. He will not compromise with them; he insists upon their obedience, or their
damnation. He requests their repentance and reformation, or the everlasting destruction
of their souls. Now, either alternative is supremely hateful to an impenitent sinner.
To repent, heartily to confess that God is right, and he is wrong; to take God's
part against himself; to give up the pursuit of his own happiness, as the supreme
object of desire; to dedicate himself with all he is and has to the service of God
and the promotion of the public interest; is what he is utterly unwilling to do;
and inasmuch as God insists upon it, will make no compromise, but demands unqualified
and unconditional submission to his will, or the eternal damnation of his soul; the
sinner is entirely unreconciled to either. He considers God as his infinite and almighty
adversary, and makes war upon him with all his heart.
III. I am to show, that sinners hate God for the very reasons for which they ought
to love him.
They are the very reasons for which all holy beings do love him. His opposition to
all sin, and to all injurious conduct of every kind; his high regard to individual,
and general happiness; and in short, all the reasons for which selfish beings are
so much opposed to him, are the foundation of obligation to love him, and are the
reasons why reasonable beings, that have any regard to the moral fitness of things,
feel it right, and infinitely obligatory in them, to love their Maker. He deserves
to be loved for these reasons, and for no other. And it is for these, and no other
reasons that sinners hate him. They do not hate him because he deserves their hatred,
but because he deserves their love. It is not because he is wicked, but because he
is good. It is not because they have any good reason to hate him, but because they
have every possible reason to love him. I mean just as I say. Sinners not only hate
God, in spite of infinitely strong reasons for loving him; but for these very reasons.
Not only is it true, that these reasons for loving him do not prevent their hating
him, but they are the very reasons for which they hate him.
I shall conclude this discourse with several remarks.
1st. From this subject you can see the ridiculous hypocrisy of infidels. It is very
common for them to profess in their investigations and inquiries after truth, to
be impartial. They insist upon it that Christians are already committed, and are
therefore incapable of giving Christianity a candid and unbiased examination. Christians,
they say, cannot make up a judgment to be relied upon, because they are already committed
in favor of Christianity. But infidels seem to suppose that they are in circumstances
to make up an unbiased and enlightened judgment; and to examine and decide without
prejudice. But this is utterly absurd. They are not on neutral ground, as they suppose
themselves to be. They are committed against the Bible. That they are the enemies
of God, is demonstrated by their conduct, entirely irrespective of the Bible. That
their lives are such as no good being can approve; such as God if he is holy must
abhor, is a plain matter of fact. It needs no Bible to prove this. Now, here is a
book claiming to be a revelation from God, demanding of them holiness of heart and
life; and threatening them for their sins with eternal death. Now, is it not absurd?
Is it not ridiculous and hypocritical, for these enemies of God, committed as they
are against God, and against this revelation; to set themselves up as the only impartial
judges?
They can sit down to the investigation of the subject without bias. They are on neutral
ground. They feel no such prepossessions as to misguide their judgment. The fact
is; admitting that Christians are as much prejudiced in favor of Christianity, as
infidels say they are; still, unless infidels will admit that Christians are perfect,
that they are wholly sinless, and entirely devoted to God; it will appear after all,
that Christians are not so liable to be prejudiced in favor of Christianity, as infidels
are against it. Infidels are entirely opposed to God, and all impenitent sinners,
as I have shown in the two former discourses, are totally depraved; and until Christians
are entirely perfect, they will not be so completely biased in favor of God, as sinners
are in favor of the devil. They will not until then of course, be so liable to misjudge
in favor of the Bible, as sinners will be against it.
Christians, being upon the whole in favor of God, and therefore feeling a strong
attachment to the Bible, and yet, having much remaining sin about them; and therefore
liable to feel many objections to the strictness of its claims; are in the best circumstances,
and in the most favorable state of mind of any beings in the world, to judge impartially.
They are not so wicked as to reject what they see to be true, nor so obsequiously
disposed, as blindly to submit to every thing that pretends to have a claim upon
their obedience without investigation. By this I do not mean that Christians are
better qualified to judge of the truth of the Christian religion, than if they were
perfect; but I do mean to repel the absurd assertions of infidels, that the Christian's
faith, is nothing more than a blind credulity. There never was at any time, piety
enough in the church, to bear the restraints of pure Christianity, if the evidence
in its favor, did not come upon them, with the power of demonstration.
2nd. From this subject you can see, that the wicked conduct of sinners is no proof
that their nature is sinful. The universal sinfulness of men, has been supposed to
conduct to the inevitable conclusion, that the nature of man must be in itself sinful.
It has been said that in no other way, can the universal sinful conduct of men, be
accounted for. It has been maintained, that an effect must be of the same nature
of its cause; and that as the effects or actions of our nature are universally sinful,
that therefore the nature or cause must be sinful.
But if the effect must be of the same nature of its cause, if the cause must have
the same nature of the effect, then God must be a material being, for he is the cause
of the existence of all matter, and therefore he must himself be material. The soul
of man must also be material. It acts upon his material body, and causes his body
to act upon other material things around him, and as it is constantly effecting material
changes on every hand, the soul must be material. This would, indeed, be a short
hand method of disposing of the existence of all spirits. But who will after all
admit of this mode of argumentation, and adopt as a serious and grave truth, the
absurd dogma that the character of an effect, decides in all cases the character
or nature of its cause.
The universally sinful conduct of men is easily and naturally accounted for, upon
the principles of this discourse. They universally adopt in the outset, the principle
of selfishness as their grand rule of action, and this from the very laws of their
mental constitution, vitiates all their moral conduct, and gives a sinful character
to every moral action.
If it be asked how it happens that children universally adopt the principle of selfishness,
unless their nature is sinful. I answer, that they adopt this principle of self gratification
or selfishness; because they possess human nature, and come into being under the
peculiar circumstances in which all the children of Adam are born since the fall:
but not because human nature is itself sinful. The cause of their becoming sinners,
is to be found in their nature's being what it is, and surrounded by the peculiar
circumstances of temptation to which they are exposed in a world of sinners.
All the constitutional appetites and propensities of body and mind, are in themselves
innocent; but when strongly excited are a powerful temptation to prohibited indulgence.
To these constitutional appetites or propensities, so many appeals of temptation
are made, as universally to lead human beings to sin. Adam was created in the perfection
of manhood, certainly not with a sinful nature, and yet, an appeal to his innocent
constitutional appetites led him into sin. If adult Adam, without a sinful nature,
and after a season of obedience and perfect holiness, was led to change his mind
by an appeal to his innocent constitutional propensities; how can the fact that infants,
possessing the same nature with Adam and surrounded by circumstances of still greater
temptation, universally fall into sin, prove that their nature is itself sinful?
Is such an inference called for? Is it legitimate? What, holy and adult Adam, is
led, by an appeal to his innocent constitution to adopt the principle of selfishness,
and no suspicion is, or can be entertained, that he had a sinful nature; but if little
children under circumstances of temptation aggravated by the fall are led into sin,
we are to believe that their nature is sinful! This is wonderful philosophy; and
what heightens the absurdity is, that in order to admit the sinfulness of nature,
we must believe sin to consist in the substance of the constitution, instead of voluntary
action; which is a thing impossible.
And that which stamps the inference of a sinful nature with peculiar guilt is, that
in making it we reject God's own declaration that "sin is a transgression of
the law," and adopt a definition which is a perfectly absurd.
3rd. From the view of depravity presented in these discussions, it is easy to see
in what sense sin is natural to sinners; and what has led mankind to ascribe the
outbreakings of sin to their nature; as if their nature was itself sinful.
All experience shows, that from the laws of our constitution we are influenced in
our conduct directly or indirectly by the supreme preference of our minds. In other
words, when we desire a thing supremely, it is natural to us to pursue this object
of desire; we may have desires for an object which we do not pursue. But it is a
contradiction to say that we do not pursue the object of supreme desire. Supreme
desire is nothing else than a supreme or controlling choice, and as certain as the
will controls the actions; so certainly, and so naturally, shall we pursue that object
which we supremely desire. The fact therefore, that sinners adopt the principle of
supreme selfishness, renders it certain and natural, while their selfishness continues
to be predominant, that they will sin, and only sin, and this is in strict accordance
with, or rather the result of the laws of their mental constitution. While they maintain
their supreme selfishness, obedience is impossible. This is the reason why "the
carnal mind, or the minding of the flesh, is not subject to the law of God neither
indeed can be." No wonder therefore, that sinners, whose supreme preference
is selfish, should find it very natural for them to sin, and extremely difficult
to do anything else than sin. This being a fact of universal observation, has led
mankind to ascribe the sins of men to their nature; and a great deal of fault has
been found with nature itself; when the fact is, that sin is only an abuse of the
powers of nature. Men have very extensively overlooked the fact; that a deep seated,
but voluntary preference for sin, was the foundation and fountain and cause of all
other sins. The only sense in which sin is natural to men is, that it is natural
for mind to be influenced in its individual exercises by a supreme preference or
choice of any object. It will therefore, always be natural for a sinner to sin, until
he changes the supreme preference of his mind, and prefers the glory of God and the
interests of his kingdom to his own separate and opposing interests.
4th. Here you can see what a change of heart is. Its nature, its necessity, and the
obligation of the sinner immediately to change it. You can see also that the first
act which the sinner will, or can perform, that can be acceptable to God, must be
to change his heart, or the supreme controlling preference of his mind.
5th. Perhaps someone will object and say if infants are not born with a sinful nature,
how then are they saved by grace? But I ask in return, if they are born with a sinful
nature, how are they saved by grace? Does God create an infant a sinner, and then
call it grace to save him from the sinfulness of a nature of his own creation? Absurd
and blasphemous. What! represent the ever blessed God as either directly creating
a sinful nature, or as establishing such an order of things that a nature in itself
sinful would by physical necessity descend from Adam, and then call that grace by
which the infant is saved! (not from its conduct, but from its nature!)
But let us look at this. Here are two systems; the one maintains that infants have
no moral character at all, until they have committed actual transgression. That their
first moral actions are invariably sinful, but that previous to moral action they
are neither sinful nor holy. That as they have no moral character they deserve neither
praise nor blame; neither life nor death at the hand of God. God might annihilate
them without injustice, or he may bestow upon them eternal life as a free and unearned
gift.
The other system maintains that infants have a sinful nature which they have inherited
from Adam. The scriptures maintain that all who are ever saved of the human family,
must be saved by grace; and those who maintain the system that the nature of infants
is itself sinful, suppose that upon their system alone is it possible to ascribe
the salvation of infants, who die before actual transgression to grace. But let us
for a few moments examine these systems. Grace is evidently used in different senses
in the Bible. It is sometimes synonymous with holiness. To grow in grace, is to grow
in holiness. Its most common import seems to be that of unmerited favor. It is sometimes
used in a wider sense, and includes the idea of mercy or forgiveness. Now, when infants
die previous to actual transgression, it is impossible to ascribe their salvation
to grace, in any other sense, than that of undeserved, or unearned favor. If they
have never sinned, it is impossible that they should be saved by grace, if we include
in the term grace, the idea of mercy or forgiveness. To assert that a child can be
pardoned for having a sinful nature, is to talk ridiculous nonsense: and it is only
in the sense of undeserved favor, excluding the idea of mercy or pardon, that an
infant, dying before actual transgression, can be said to be saved by grace. In this
sense, his salvation is by grace. He has never earned eternal life; he has never
done anything, by which he has laid God under any obligation to save him, and God
might, without any injustice, annihilate him. But if it please him for the sake of
Christ, as I fully believe it does, to confer eternal life upon one whom he might
without any injustice annihilate, it is conferring upon him infinite favor. But let
us look at the other system for a moment. This denies that infants have a sinful
nature, and rejects the monstrous dogma that God has created the nature sinful, and
then pretends to save the infant from a nature of his own creation by grace, as if
the infant deserved damnation for being what God made it. Those that hold this scheme
insist that there is as much grace in the salvation of infants, upon their view of
the subject, as upon the impossible dogma of a sinful nature. The fact is, that the
very existence of the whole race of man, is a mere matter of grace; having reference
to the atonement of Jesus Christ. Had it not been for the contemplated atonement,
Adam and Eve would have been sent to hell at once, and never have had any posterity.
The race could never have existed. There never could have been any infants, or adults
(Adam and Eve excepted,) had it not been for the grace of Christ in interposing in
behalf of man by his atonement. it was doubtless in anticipation of this, and on
account of it, that Adam and Eve were spared and the sentence of the law not instantly
executed upon them. Now every infant owes its very existence to the grace of God
in Jesus Christ, and if it dies previous to actual transgression, it is just as absolutely
indebted to Christ for eternal life, as if it had been the greatest sinner on earth.
On neither of these schemes, does the grace which saves infants include the idea
of pardon - but on both of them they are saved by grace, inasmuch as they owe their
very existence to the atonement of Christ; and in both cases are delivered from circumstances
under which it is certain had they lived to form a moral character, they would have
sinned, and deserved eternal death. To think, therefore, of objecting to the view
of depravity that I have given in these discourses, that it denies the grace of God
in the salvation of infants, is either to misconceive, or willfully to misrepresent
the sentiments that I have advocated. I desire to ask, and I wish that it may be
answered, if it can be; wherein there is any more grace displayed in the salvation
of infants, upon the one system than upon the other. Will it be said that if the
nature of infants be sinful, grace must change their nature, and that there is this
difference; that although in neither case does the infant need a pardon, yet in the
one case his nature needs to be changed, and not in the other? But if his nature
needs to be changed. I deny that this is an act of grace; if God has made his nature
wrong and incapable of performing any but sinful actions, he is bound to change it.
It is consummate trifling to call this grace - to cause a being to come into existence
with a sinful or defective nature and then call it grace to alter this nature and
make it as it should have been at first, is to trifle with serious things and talk
deceitfully for God.
6th. Again. The hatred of sinners is cruel. It is as God says, "rendering hatred
for his love." He is love, and this is the reason and the only reason why they
hate him. Mark, it is not because they overlook the fact that he is infinitely benevolent.
It is not merely in the face of this fact, that for other reasons they hate him;
but it is because of this fact. It is literally and absolutely rendering hatred for
his love. He is opposed to their injuring each other. He desires their happiness
and is infinitely opposed to their making themselves miserable. He is infinitely
more opposed to their doing any thing that will prove injurious to themselves, than
an earthly parent was to that course of conduct in his beloved child, which he foresaw
would ruin him. His heart yearns with infinitely more than parental tenderness. He
expostulates with sinners and says, "O do not that abominable thing that I hate."
"How shall I give thee up Ephriam? How shall I deliver thee Israel? How shall
I make thee as Admah? How shall I set thee as Zeboim? My heart is turned within me,
and my repentings are kindled together."
He feels all the gushings of a father's tenderness, and all the opposition of a father
to any course that will injure his offspring, and as children will sometimes hate,
and revile their parents for opposing their wayward courses to destruction, so sinners
hate God, more than they hate all other beings, because he is infinitely more opposed
to their destroying their souls.
7th. The better God is, the more sinners hate him. The better he is, the more he
is opposed to their selfishness: and the more he opposes their selfishness, while
they remain selfish, the more they are provoked with him.
In my second discourse on depravity, I showed that men hate God supremely. The only
reason is because his excellence is supreme excellence. His goodness is unmingled
goodness, and therefore their hatred is unmingled enmity. If there were any defect
in his character, men would not hate him so much. If God were not perfectly ,yea
infinitely good, men might not be totally depraved, I mean, they might not be totally
opposed to his character; but because his character has no blemish, therefore they
sincerely, cordially, and perfectly hate him.
8th. Again. The more he tries to do them good, while they remain impenitent, the
more they will hate him. While they retain their selfishness, all his efforts to
restrain it, to hedge them in, to prevent the accomplishment of their selfish desires;
the more he interposes to tear away their idols; to wean them from the world, the
more he embitters every cup of joy with which they attempt to satisfy themselves,
the more means he uses to reclaim, and sanctify and save; if their selfishness remain
unbroken, the more deeply and eternally will they hate him.
9th. This conduct in sinners is infinitely blame worthy and deserves eternal death.
It is impossible to conceive of guilt more deep and damning than that of sinners
under the Gospel. They sin under circumstances so peculiar, than their guilt is more
aggravated than that of devils. Devils have broken the law and so have you sinners.
But devils never rejected the Gospel. They have been guilty of rebellion and so have
you. But they have never rejected the offer of pardon and spurned, as with their
feet, the offer of eternal life through the atoning blood of the Son of God. If you
sinners do not deserve eternal death, I cannot conceive that there is a devil in
hell that deserves it. And yet, strange to tell, sinners often speak as if it were
doubtful whether they deserve to be damned.
10th. It is easy to see from this subject, that saints and angels will be entirely
satisfied with the justice of God in the damnation of sinners. They will never take
delight in the misery of the damned, but in the display of justice, in the vindication
of his insulted majesty and injured honor, in the respect which punishment will create
for the law and character of God, they will have pleasure; they will see that the
display of his justice is glorious, and will cry halleluia, while "the smoke
of their torment shall ascend up for ever and ever."
.
SERMON 1 ---New Window
SERMON 2 ---New Window
SERMON 3 ---New Window
SERMON 4 ---New Window
SERMON 5 ---New Window
SERMON 6 (this page)
SERMON 7 ---New Window
SERMON 8 ---New Window
SERMON 9 ---New Window
SERMON 10 ---New Window
SERMON 11 ---New Window
SERMON 12 ---New Windo
Section Sub-Index for Finney: Voices
of Philadelphia
.
Homepage Holy Bible
.Jehovah Jesus
Timeline .Prophecy Philadelphia Fellowship Promises Stories Poetry Links
Purpose ||.What's New
|| Tribulation Topics || Download Page || Today's Entry
Topical Links:
Salvation || Catholicism || Sound Doctrine || Prayer
Privacy Policy
.