By Charles G. Finney
LECTURE XII. - The moral attributes of God (continued).
11. FIRMNESS.
Firmness is that quality of the benevolence
of God that disposes him to abide by that which he sees to be wise and
good at all events. The love of God seems to be regarded by some as what
we call mere good nature. It is spoken of as if it were an emotion of fondness,
a state of mind that paid comparatively little regard to moral discriminations
and distinctions, or to moral principle; a disposition to gratify all classes;
and a kind of tenderness that cannot endure to be severe and firm in the
execution of law, even though severity and firmness be demanded by the
public good. We are sometimes asked, Would a parent execute such wrath
upon his children? Could a parent punish forever? And thus the love of
God is supposed to be parental really in the sense of parental weakness;
but it is perfectly apparent on the face of the universe that God's love
is not a weakness, as that of parents often is. Who does not perceive on
the face of the world's history a succession of events that show that God
is anything but weak, and yielding, and undiscriminating in his love and
dealings with his creatures?
Skeptics have stumbled at the Bible
because of its representations of the severity with which God deals with
his creatures. There is an aspect of inflexibility, firmness, and even
sternness, sometimes presented in the Bible representations of God, from
which they turn away. They seem disposed to represent God as all mercy.
Indeed, it is plain that they so understand his love to consist in a disposition
rather to pet and indulge sinners, than in a disposition thoroughly to
administer a moral government for the public good. But how strikingly is
the firmness of God manifested in the administration of physical government,
and in the history of earthquakes, of pestilences, or shipwrecks, of storms.
If physical law is violated the chariot of his providence is driven axle-deep
through the blood and bones of those who have thus thrown themselves before
it in the violation of the laws of the material universe. What earthly
parent has firmness enough to see a ship freighted with his own children
dash upon the rocks, or go to the bottom in a storm! What earthly parent
could endure to see among his own offspring, or even among human beings
anywhere, what God is witnessing every day and every hour! And these desolations
only evince his inflexible firmness in the execution of the laws of his
providential government. Skeptics who reject the Bible because of its representations
of the inflexibility and severity of God, would do well to take lessons
of him in the administration of his physical government. They confounded
the parental with the governmental relation.
It is perfectly plain that it is the
same God who rules in the material universe, that has revealed himself
in the Bible. His love is not a weakness. It can endure the trial of doing
what is necessary to be done to sustain his government, cost what it may.
It required great firmness to support his own authority by sending his
Son to make an atonement for sin. It required great firmness to destroy
the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, to destroy Jerusalem, to destroy the
old world with a flood; but his love is equal to it. It is not cruelty
in a ruler to sustain wholesome laws and order, and secure the public good,
if need be, by severe measures. It is an infirmity and a weakness in a
ruler when he cannot endure to take the measures that are essential to
the public weal.
From the very nature of God's benevolence
and omniscience, it must be true that he will not yield a point where the
public good demands action. He is a ruler; he cannot consult private feelings
at the public expense. His compassion is great; his forbearance is great;
he delighteth in mercy and judgment is his strange work; yet his firmness
is equal to the trial of executing vengeance and carrying out the measures
necessary to secure the good upon which his heart is set at any cost.
12. SEVERITY.
This term is used sometimes in a bad,
and sometimes in a good sense. When in a bad sense it implies selfishness,
when in a good sense it is an attribute of benevolence. As applied to God,
severity is that quality of his benevolence that causes him to take stringent
but benevolent measures in promoting the public good, where these are needed.
We often see occurrences around us that to us appear to be severe. They
are, however, never so in a bad sense. They are only strong and decided
measures demanded by the exigencies of his moral government. It should
be remembered that God's benevolence is a righteous benevolence, a holy,
sacred benevolence, a sin-hating benevolence, a law-sustaining benevolence.
Severity, then, in a good sense, must be one of its attributes. There is
a point beyond which forbearance is no virtue in a ruler; these are occasions
on which hesitance and holding back the bolt of justice were ruin.
What striking instances we sometimes
see in providence. A little neglect on the part of a mother, a little ignorance
or indiscretion in the nursing of her child, and the result is that it
expires in agony in her arms. A slight carelessness and a habitation is
burned with all its inmates. A ship is sunk freighted with missionaries,
or with multitudes of souls in no way implicated in the carelessness. Nevertheless,
they had committed themselves to the conduct, superintendence and providence
of the captain and the crew, and they must abide the consequences. No words
can adequately describe the apparent severity of some of the dispensations
of providence. Now these are facts in the universe of God; and they are
quite as difficult to reconcile with our ideas of benevolence and goodness
as any recorded in the Bible. Why, then, should the Bible be rejected,
and yet the existence and government of God in the universe be admitted?
Cases have occurred in which the radically
orthodox views have been rejected because of the severe aspect in which
they represent the character of God. But logical necessity forced the same
persons to reject the Bible for the same reason; and then to reject the
providence of God for the same reason; and ultimately of course to reject
the very existence of God. Facts are facts. The world is; these facts are;
God is; God is love; these facts are consistent with his love. They are
accounted for only by the fact that his love is disinterested benevolence;
a law-promulgating, law-sustaining, just, holy, as well as merciful love.
It is often necessary for a parent to exercise wholesome severity, a benevolent
severity, in the treatment of his children. It is often so with rulers
of states and nations; it must be so in every government; and a good ruler
must have firmness, and sometimes must exercise severity.
Severity does not imply injustice,
does not imply cruelty, but the reverse. It were unjust to the public not
to execute laws, and to deal sternly and severely when laws are set at
naught and efforts made to upturn the foundations of society and government,
and destroy all good. Sometimes Universalists appeal to the prejudices
and selfishness of men by inquiring, Would you banish one of your children
forever? Would you be so cruel as that? What earthly parent would do it?
And do you represent God as worse than human beings? I answer, No; but
he is infinitely better. Earthly parents are too weak and often too wicked
to take the needed measures to control their children, even for their own
good. But suppose a parent to have a large family of children, and suppose
his oldest son to be exceedingly profligate, and to set himself deliberately
to debauch and ruin the morals of the whole family. He persuaded the younger
sons to drunkenness, the daughters to indelicacy and uncleanness, and the
whole of them to rebellion against parental authority. Suppose that no
entreaty or influence that the parent can use can restrain this son. Now
it is no want of benevolence in the parent to banish this son from his
house. It were cruelty to retain him; if he cannot be restrained he must
be banished. The father has no right to indulge his parental feelings toward
him to the injury and ruin of all the rest of his children. How absurd
to appeal to him and ask, Are you so cruel as to banish this son from your
house forever? It is more pertinent to ask, Are you so cruel as to allow
this son to ruin the whole family?
Just so it is under the government
of God. His government is moral, not physical and a government of force.
It is a government of moral law, moral considerations and persuasions.
Now if moral considerations will not restrain, then sinners must be destroyed.
It is cruelty to the universe at large to let them go unpunished, when
all appropriate means have been used for their reformation. In such a case,
longer forbearance were a crime and not a virtue. Love that would not punish
is a weakness and an infirmity, and not that which becomes a ruler.
13 EFFICIENCY.
Efficiency is that quality of the divine
benevolence that disposes God to be active, energetic, and zealous in the
promotion of the great interests of the universe. God's love, remember,
is benevolence and not an emotion. Emotions may have no efficiency; and
the same is true of passive affections and feelings of fondness. They may
expend themselves in feelings, in tears, or smiles, or petting; but such
is not the nature of God's love. It is the infinite will in a state of
committal to the public good. It is infinite energy; and it is the energizing
of this love that hung out the heavens, created the entire universe, and
that rolls the wheels of his government, both natural and moral, with an
almighty power and energy.
The benevolence of God is an ultimate
choice, or committal to the promotion of good. The attribute of efficiency
gives existence to the executive volitions that create and govern. The
volitions of God that appear in time, that create, sustain, and govern
the entire universe, are nothing but expressions of the efficiency of his
benevolence. He is spoken of in Scripture as being clothed with zeal in
the execution of his purposes as with a cloak; and when great and wonderful
things have been predicated, it is said that the zeal of the Lord of Hosts
will do this.
By efficiency, then, as an attribute
of the divine benevolence I mean, that it is the quality of his benevolence
to be infinitely active and persevering in the accomplishment of his great
designs. He does not say, Be ye warmed and clothed, and make no efforts;
he does not pity, and exhaust himself in feeling that produces no good;
but his executive volitions flash with infinite power over the entire universe;
and the forked lightings are only the faintest glimmerings and expressions
of the infinite energy with which he pursues his course.
14. SIMPLICITY.
Simplicity is the quality of unity.
There is no mixture in the benevolence of God. He is said to be love. He
has but one end to which he is devoted; thus ultimate choice and purpose
are a unit, always one, always the same.
All the forms of virtue of which we
speak resolve themselves, in their last analysis, into qualities or attributes
of benevolence, as we have seen in these lectures on the moral attributes
of God. Virtue, then is one. It consists in benevolence; and its various
expressions and manifestations are but expressions and manifestations of
one state of mind, to wit, goodwill. That God's benevolence is unmixed,
we know by an irresistible conviction. We cannot conceive of God as being
otherwise than perfect.
15. IMMUTABILITY.
Immutability is one of the moral attributes.
Choice is conditioned upon some object of choice. When the will has made
its election and committed itself, it cannot change its position except
upon the condition of some motive, or at least apparent reason for doing
so; or perhaps it is more correct to say, that the will receives all the
considerations and influences which are conditions of its action, either
through the intellect or the sensibility. When the will has chosen, either
the intellectual views must be changed, or the feelings must be changed,
as a condition of the will's changing; otherwise the will would change
its purpose, choice, or preference, without any conceivable or possible
object. Now while it is true that no feeling, no desire, no thought, no
intellectual discovery or consideration can force the will; yet some feeling,
desire, thought, or intellectual apprehension or consideration is a condition
of choice. In other words, the will's actions are conditioned upon some
consideration presented through the sensibility or intellect as an inducement
to choose. If it be a feeling, the will may act to gratify it; if it be
a thought or intellectual perception, an object then is presented as a
reason for its action. All creatures are finite. The intellectual perceptions
and the feelings of finite beings are subject to continual change; so that
immutability can be no attribute of their goodness or of their sinfulness.
But it is not so with God. God, as we have seen and shall soon farther
observe, is infinite in all his natural attributes and in all his moral
perfections. He is naturally omniscient; and no new thought or intellectual
view can ever be present as a condition of his change of choice. Being
omniscient, all the considerations that make him feel are eternally present
necessarily considered, and are seen with all the force with which they
ever can be seen. Hence, there is infinite fullness, stability, and immutability
in all his feelings. His consciousness is one.
Now, if God be absolutely infinite,
his mind has from eternity been made up, and that too in view of every
possible or conceivable consideration presented either through his intelligence
or his sensibility, that can be conditions of his change of mind. Now as
his whole being is a unit and present, his whole experience and consciousness
an infinite and present fullness, change with him is a contradiction. Nor
is this inconsistent with his eternal goodness. If in view of every conceivable
reason for choice, he has chosen once for all, and his choice is forever
immutable, his virtue is all the greater for that. He has committed himself
without any variableness or shadow of turning, with a certain knowledge
that he never should change, and with a solemn intention never to change.
Now to speak after the manner of men
and say, that his continuing in this state is no virtue if change is impossible
to him, is absurd. For the only reason why change is impossible to him
is because every conceivable reason for action has been taken into the
account, and his mind unalterably settled. The stability, therefore, and
immutability of his goodness is one of its infinite excellencies, for the
reason that it actually embraces and acts in accordance with every possible
consideration that ought to influence mind.
But strictly and properly speaking,
God does not live on as we do through successive periods of his own existence
without change. Change in us is change in consciousness. We are aware of
change only by the changes in our consciousness. Did not our consciousness
change we should have no conception of the passage of time. Time to us
would be only present, did our consciousness always remain the same. But
for changes in consciousness, time past, present, and future would have
no signification. It should be understood that the absolute omniscience
of God renders it certain that his consciousness is invariable. The conception
is of course beyond our comprehension, as the infinity of all his attributes
is. We know that so it must be, but when we attempt to grasp it, it must
be true, it is higher than heaven; we cannot attain unto it. We know it
must be true, and yet we cannot conceive how it can be true.
Should it be asked, since God is a
moral agent and therefore free, is not change possible to him? I answer,
that the freedom of the will does not imply power to change a choice without
any possible or conceivable object or reason for choice, existing either
in the feelings or in the intellect. Choice is preference. The choice of
a single object is preferring its existence to its non-existence. The choice
of one of many things is the preference of that one to others. Choice being
preference always implies comparison; the existence of a thing is compared
with its non-existence, or one thing is compared with another. Now, the
will's action is always conditioned upon there being some reason for preference,
or change of will. And this reason may be an impulse of the sensibility,
or a thought in the intellect. But where no objects are brought into comparison;
where the existence of one object cannot be compared with its non-existence;
where the intellectual views cannot by possibility change, as in the case
of absolute omniscience; where feelings cannot by possibility change, as
is also the case with absolute omniscience - in such cases freedom of will
does not imply power to change when the will is committed in view of all
the considerations possible or conceivable that might be the conditions
of change.
I have spoken of the immutability of
God as consisting in the impossibility of change. This inability to change
is found in this, that there can be no conceivable reason for change. The
most capricious being cannot change his choice except upon the condition
of some change of thought or feeling. So that the certainty that God will
not change is owing to the fact that he is committed with infinite strength
and there is no conceivable or possible reason ever existing in the intellect
or sensibility that can be conditions of change. Strictly speaking, God
is immutably good because he fills eternity and has no time to change.
16. INFINITY.
By infinity is intended that there
is absolutely no limit to his benevolence. It is not partial, it is universal;
it is not merely to finite creatures but to himself as the infinite; it
is goodwill to universal being; it is eternal; it is the choice of his
whole mind; it is the devotion of all his attributes, by the act of his
will, to this end. It is therefore an ocean, having neither shore nor bound;
it is as illimitable as his nature. We know that infinity, immutability,
and all theses attributes, must be attributes of the divine benevolence,
because he is infinite. We intuitively affirm that as his natural attributes
are infinite, so his moral attributes must be infinite.
17. HOLINESS.
The last attribute that I shall name
is holiness. Holiness is that quality of benevolence which is often represented
as moral purity; the infinite opposite of all blemish, impropriety, or
inconsistency. Holiness is sometimes spoken of as if it comprised the whole
character of God; and it must be a quality of all and each of his other
attributes. It seems to me that, strictly speaking, it is the quality of
symmetry or harmony in his attributes; that quality that adjusts them to
each other. For example, God's character is that of perfect moral excellence.
We are so constituted that we could not recognize a character as perfect
that was all justice or all mercy, all forbearance or all severity, all
meekness or all firmness. Indeed, all these qualities of benevolence must
be adjusted one to the other; and there must be a law of adjustment, of
harmony, of proportion and symmetry pervading the whole of them, else the
character would be out of balance. There would be a want; it could not
to us realize our ideal of moral beauty and perfection. Should we see a
man who was all justice and sternness, we might call him a just man, but
should not conceive of him as a perfect character, as a holy man. Should
we see a man all compassion, we should feel that he was not a perfect man.
Were he all meekness, or all mercy - or take any one of the moral attributes
of goodness, it would make a moral monster rather than a symmetrical goodness.
We conceive of that character as holy that is symmetrical; and we can conceive
of no other character as perfect in holiness except that of symmetry.
Some writer has compared holiness in
character to the law of harmony in music. Musical sounds to make harmony
need to be adjusted to the subjective laws of harmony that belong to our
nature. These sounds must sustain certain relations to each other to be
agreeable to us, and to make harmony. Throw them out of this relation,
and they produce discord, dissonance, and not harmony. But when these relations
are perfect in respect to their distances, and their volume and quality
of sound, then the harmony is perfect; our ideal of perfect music is realized,
and there is nothing left to desire. So in regard to moral character; there
must be harmony; there must be a law of adjustment, proportion, and symmetry
in all the moral elements or attributes that make up the character. These
must be adjusted to our subjective ideal of perfect goodness. When this
symmetry is seen, when this perfect adjustment of moral perfections stands
revealed to the mind, our ideal of moral perfection and beauty is realized;
and there is no greater joy than results from standing in the presence
of unlimited holiness. In the descriptions of heaven in the Bible, it is
remarkable that it is the holiness of God that excites their enthusiasm,
that inspires their awe, that inspires their praises; and the cry of "Holy,
holy, holy," while they veil their faces, thunders throughout the
upper sanctuary.
But how do we know that God is holy?
I reply, we cannot conceive of God as being other than infinite in moral
goodness, and we cannot conceive of infinite moral goodness as of God as
other than infinitely holy. We therefore, by the very laws of our nature,
irresistibly assume the holiness of God. Our consciences ever recognize
him as the perfection of moral purity; hence we are shocked at the suspicion
of his being otherwise than perfectly and infinitely holy. We revolt at
the conception, and cannot for a moment admit the possibility.
REMARKS.
The foregoing are some of the moral
attributes of God. These qualities of benevolence are most of them indicated
either in his moral or providential government. They are clearly revealed
to us in our irresistible convictions of what he must be. The progress
of his kingdom will no doubt reveal to his creatures many moral attributes
or qualities of his benevolence never yet suggested to finite beings. Neither
his justice nor his mercy, as they are now understood, may have been so
much as thought of in their appropriate signification, until the occasion
of their manifestation existed in the universe. So in the progress of his
dispensations occasions may arise that may develop in the thought of his
intelligences qualities inherent in his benevolence never yet suggested
to the mind of a finite being. Of this we may rest assure, that nothing
can ever occur in the eternity to come that shall not find in the benevolence
of God some quality that will cause it to meet the emergency, and adapt
the dispensations to the occasions.
Thus there are many forms of beauty,
yet undeveloped in action, before the minds of creatures; and there may
be no end absolutely in the eternal future to the new and striking revelation
of the moral attributes of God. In these consist his true glory. When Moses
prayed, "Show me thy glory," he passes by and proclaimed the
name of the Lord, and suggested to Moses several of his moral attributes
as constituting his peculiar glory: "The Lord, the Lord God, gracious
and merciful, long-suffering, abundant in goodness and truth, keeping mercy
for thousands, forgiving iniquity, transgression, and sin, and that will
by no means clear the guilty." Exod. 34:6.
From this short view taken of the natural
and moral attributes of God, it is clear that his eternity and infinity
are devoted to the promotion of the highest possible good. As he requires
us to do, so he does. If he requires us to will and do good, he wills and
does good himself; if he requires us to be self-denying, he is so himself,
He leads the way in every virtue by his own example.
And what inconceivable results are yet to be seen by the universe of creatures!
What an infinite privilege to be under such a government! To have such
a Father, possessing infinite natural attributes, with a heart unalterable
to wield them for the highest good of his creatures, and the highest interests
of the whole universe!
Again, it is plain that the government
of the entire universe is safe in his hands. Nothing can surprise, nothing
can defeat him. He will do all his pleasure, in the sense that he will
accomplish all the good that he has proposed to himself, and will not be
defeated. There is ground of infinite security for the righteous, and of
infinite terror on the part of the ungodly who persist in wickedness.
The study of theology is the study
of God and his attributes; of his laws, dealings, providential arrangements
- indeed, all truth that can be known to us is but a part of theological
truth, or truth respecting God and his affairs, either moral or material.
A theological student will make but little progress unless he views everything
in a theological light. All truth is symmetrical; all truth emanates from
one common center; its relations, proportions, and beauty cannot be seen
out of adjustment with the system of truth.
Our finite capacities cannot take in
the whole field of truth in its symmetrical adjustment; and yet it will
be the study of ages upon ages to all eternity. Its unity, simplicity,
symmetry, will be more and more felt, as it is more and more perceived
by the progress we shall make in study to all eternity. God the infinite
and perfect, the First Cause, the Supreme Ruler, the great natural and
spiritual Center of all being, is the object of our study. Every truth
has a sacredness about it, every question a solemnity and meaning; every
line of theological instruction has an importance and a sacredness to awe,
and stimulate, and sanctify.