Lectures On Systematic Theology
By Charles G. Finney
1878 Edition
Edited by J.H. Fairchild
APPENDIX A: VARIOUS CLASSES OF TRUTHS
(From the 1847 edition)
Before we proceed further in these investigations, I must call your
attention to a subject that properly belongs at the beginning of this
course of study, and which will be found there should these lectures
ever be published in their proper order: I allude to the various classes
of truths to come under consideration in this course of instruction, with
the manner in which we arrive at a knowledge or belief of them. All
human investigations proceed upon the assumption of the existence
and validity of our faculties, and that their unequivocal testimony may
be relied upon. To deny this is to set aside at once the possibility of
knowledge or rational belief, and to give up the mind to universal
skepticism. The classes of truths to which we shall be called upon to
attend in our investigations may be divided, with sufficient accuracy for
our purpose, into truths that need no proof, nd truths that need proof.
The human mind is so constituted that by virtue of its own laws it
necessarily perceives, recognizes, or knows some truths without
testimony from without. It takes direct cognizance of them, and cannot
but do so.
The first class, that is, truths that need no proof, may be subdivided
into truths of the pure reason and truths of sensation. These two
classes are in some sense self-evident, but not in the same sense.
Truths of the pure reason are intuitions of that faculty, and truths of
sensation are intuitions of the senses. I shall therefore speak of
self-evident truths of reason and self-evident truths of sensation. I
must assume that you possess some knowledge of psychology, and
take it for granted that you understand the difference between the
intuitions of reason and the intuitions of sense.
By self-evident truths of reason, then, I mean that class of truths that
are directly intuited and affirmed by that faculty in the light of their own
evidence, and by virtue of its own laws, whenever they are so stated
that the terms of the proposition in which they are conveyed are
understood. They are not arrived at by reasoning, or by evidence of
any kind except what they have in themselves. As soon as the terms
of the propositions in which they are stated are understood, the reason
instantly and positively affirms their truth. It is unnecessary and
preposterous to attempt any other proof of this class of truths than to
frame a perspicuous statement of them. Nay, it is positively injurious,
because absurd, to attempt to prove in the common acceptation of the
term prove a self-evident truth of reason. All attempts to prove such
truths by reasoning involve an absurdity, and are as much a work of
supererogation as it would be to attempt to prove that you see an
object with your eyes fully open and set upon it.
The mathematical axioms belong to this class.
The self-evident truths of reason are truths of certain knowledge.
When once so stated, or in any way presented to the mind as to be
understood, the mind does not merely believe them, it knows them to
be absolutely true. That is, it perceives them to be absolute truths,
and knows that it is impossible that they should not be true. Although
this class of truths are never arrived at by reasoning, yet much use is
made of them in reasoning, since the major premise of a syllogism is
often a self-evident truth of reason.
This class of truths is affirmed by a faculty entirely distinct from the
understanding, or that power that gains all its knowledge from sense.
It takes cognizance of a class of truths that from their nature forever lie
concealed from the senses and consequently from the understanding.
Sensation can never give us the abstract truths of mathematics. It can
never give us the absolute or the infinite. It cannot give moral law or
law at all. Sensation can give facts, but not laws and principles.
That God and space and duration are infinite, that all God's attributes
must be infinite, are self-evident truths of reason; that is, they are
truths of a priori affirmation and assumption. They are never arrived at
by reasoning, or by induction, and never can be. The mind only knows
them by virtue of its own laws, and directly assumes and intuits them
whenever they are suggested. The eye of reason sees them as
distinctly as the mind sees objects of vision presented to the fleshly
organ of vision. The mind is so constructed that it sees some things
with the natural fleshy eye, and some truths it sees directly with its own
eye without the use of an eye of flesh. All the self-evident truths of
reason belong to this class; that is, they are truths which the mind
sees and knows, and does not merely believe. In reasoning, the bare
statement of a self-evident truth is enough, provided, as has been
said, that it is so perspicuously stated that the terms of the proposition
are understood. It should be borne in mind, in reasoning, that all men
have minds, and that the laws of knowledge are physical, and, of
course, fixed and common to all men. The conditions of knowledge
are in all men the same. We are therefore always to assume that
self-evident truths cannot but be known as soon as they are stated
with such perspicuity as that the terms in which they are expressed
are understood. Our future inquiries will present many illustrations of
the truth of these remarks.
It should be also remarked that universality is an attribute of the
self-evident truths of reason. That is, they are universal in the sense:
1. That all men affirm them to be true when they understand them.
2. They all affirm them to be true in the same way; that is, by direct
intuition. Or they perceive them in their own light, and not through the
medium of reasoning, demonstration, or sense.
3. Self-evident truths of reason are true without exception, and in this
sense also universal.
4. Necessity is also an attribute of self-evident truths. That is, they are
necessarily true and cannot but be so regarded. And when the
conditions which have been named are fulfilled, they cannot but be so
known to every moral agent.
Self-evident truths of reason may be again divided into truths merely
self-evident, and first-truths of reason. This class of truths possess all
the characteristics of self-evident truths, to wit: they are universal
truths; they are necessary truths; they are truths of direct intuition; they
are truths of certain knowledge.
Their peculiarity is this: they are truths that are necessarily and
universally known by moral agents. That is, they are not distinguished
from mere self-evident truths of reason, except by the fact that from
the laws of moral agency they are known universally, and all moral
agents do and must possess certain knowledge of them.
They are truths of necessary and universal assumption. Whether they
are at all times, or at any time, directly thought of or made the
particular object of the mind's attention or not, they are nevertheless at
all times assumed by a law of universal necessity. Suppose, for
example, that the law of causality should not be at all times or at any
time a subject of distinct thought and attention. Suppose that the
proposition in words should never be in the mind, that "every event
must have a cause." Still, the truth is there in the form of absolute
knowledge, a necessary assumption, an a priori affirmation, and the
mind has so firm a hold of it as to be utterly unable to overlook, forget,
or practically deny it.
Every mind has it as a certain knowledge long before it can
understand the language in which it is expressed, and no statement or
evidence whatever can give the mind any firmer conviction of its truth
than it had from necessity at first. This is true of all the truths of this
class. They are always and necessarily assumed by all moral agents
whether distinctly thought of or not. And for the most part this class of
truths are assumed without being frequently, or at least, without being
generally the object of thought or direct attention. The mind assumes
them without a direct consciousness of the assumption.
For example, we act every moment, judge, reason, and believe, upon
the assumption that every event must have a cause, and yet we are
not conscious of thinking of this truth, nor that we assume it, until
something calls the attention to it. First-truths of reason, then, let it be
distinctly remembered, are always and necessarily assumed though
they may be seldom thought of. They are universally known before
the words are understood by which they may be expressed, and
although they may never be expressed in a formal proposition, yet the
mind has as certain a knowledge of them as it has of its own
existence.
But it is proper to inquire whether there are any conditions of this
assumption, and if so, what they are? Does the intelligence make this
assumption upon certain conditions, or independent of all or any
conditions? The true answer to this inquiry is that the mind makes the
assumption only upon the fulfillment of certain conditions. These
conditions being fulfilled, the intelligence instantly and necessarily
makes the assumption by a law of its own nature, and makes it
whether the assumption be a distinct object of consciousness or not.
The only condition of this assumption that needs to be mentioned is
the perception of that by the mind to which the first truth sustains the
relation of a logical antecedent or of a logical condition. For example,
to develop and necessitate the assumption that every event must have
a cause, the mind only needs to perceive or to have the conception of
an event, whereupon the assumption in question instantly follows by a
law of the intelligence. This assumption is not a logical deduction from
any premise whatever, but upon the perception of an event, or upon
the mind's having the idea or notion of an event, the intelligence
irresistibly, by virtue of its own laws, assumes the first-truth of causality
as the logical and necessary condition of the event; that is, it assumes
that an event and every event must have a cause.
The condition upon which the first-truths of reason are assumed or
developed is called the chronological condition of their development,
because it is prior in time and in the order of nature to their
development. The mind perceives an event. It thereupon assumes
the first-truth of causality. It perceives body, and thereupon assumes
the first-truth, space is and must be. These first-truths, let it be
repeated, are not assumed in the form of a proposition, thought of or
expressed in words, nor is the mind at the time always, or perhaps
ever, at first, distinctly conscious of the assumption, yet the truth is
from that moment within the mind's inalienable possession, and must
forever after be recognized in all the practical judgments of the mind.
Thus, it should be distinctly said, the first-truths of reason lie so deep
in the mind as perhaps seldom to appear directly on the field of
conscious thought, and yet so absolutely does the mind know them
that it can no more forget, overlook, or practically deny them, than it
can forget, overlook, or in practice deny its own existence.
I have said that all reasoning proceeds upon the assumption of these
truths. It must do so of necessity. It is preposterous to attempt to
prove first-truths to a moral agent:
for if a moral agent, he must absolutely know them already, and if he
did not, in no possible way could he be put in possession of them
except by presenting to his perception the chronological condition of
their development, and in no case could any thing else be needed, for
upon the occurrence of this perception, the assumption or
development follows by a law of absolute and universal necessity.
And until these truths are actually developed, no being can be a moral
agent.
There is no reasoning with one who calls in question the first-truths of
reason, and demands proof of them. All reasoning must, from the
nature of mind and the laws of reasoning, assume the first-truths of
reason as certain, and admitted, and as the a priori condition of all
logical deductions and demonstrations. Some one of these must be
assumed as true, directly or indirectly, in every syllogism and in every
demonstration.
In all our future investigations in the line of truth we shall pursue, we
shall have abundant occasions for the application and illustration of
what has now been said of first-truths of reason. If, at any stage of our
progress, we light upon a truth of this class, let it be borne in mind that
the nature of the truth is the preclusion, or as lawyers would express it,
the estoppel of all controversy.
To deny the reality of this class of truths is to deny the validity of our
most perfect knowledge and of course it is a denial of the validity of
our faculties. The only question to be settled in respect to this class of
truths, is, does the truth in question belong to this class? There are
many of this class that have not been generally recognized as
belonging to it. Of this we shall have abundant instances fall in our
way as we proceed in our investigations. There are many truths which
men, all sane men, certainly know, of which they not only seldom
think, but which, in theory, they strenuously deny.
Before I dismiss this branch of our subject, I will mention some of the
many truths that undeniably belong to this class, leaving others to be
mentioned as we proceed and fall in with them in future investigations.
I have already noticed three of this class, to wit; the truth of causality
the existence of space and of time. That the whole of any thing is
equal to all its parts, is also a truth of this class, universally and
necessarily known and assumed by every moral agent. Also, that a
thing cannot be and not be at the same time.
A third class of self-evident truths are particular truths of reason. The
reason directly intuits and affirms them. They are truths of certain
knowledge, but have not the attributes of universality or infinity. To
this class belong the truths of our own existence, of personal identity,
and individuality. These are not truths of sensation, nor are they first
or self-evident truths according to the common use of those terms.
Yet they are truths of rational intuition, and are seen to be true in the
light of their own evidence, and as such are given to us as
undoubtable verities by consciousness.
All the truths that come within the pale of our own experience, that is,
all our mental exercises and states are truths self-evident to us. We
need no proof of them. Whether they are phenomena or states of the
Intellect, of the Will, or of the Sensibility. When thus spoken of, in
mass, they cannot be called self-evident truths except in the sense
that to ourselves they appear on the field of consciousness as facts or
realities, and we know or affirm them with undoubting certainty.
Truths of sensation, I have said, are in a certain sense self-evident
truths. That is, they are facts of which the mind has direct knowledge
through the medium of the senses. In speaking of truths of sensation
as in some sense self-evident, I mean of course truths or facts of our
own senses, or those revealed directly to us by our senses. I know it
is not common to speak of this class of truths as self-evident; and they
are not so in the sense in which simple rational intuitions are. Yet they
are facts or truths which need no proof to establish them to us. The
fact that I hold this pen in my hand is as really self-evident to me as
that three and two are five. I as really know or perceive the one as the
other, and neither the one nor the other needs any proof. It is not my
design to exhaust this subject, nor to enter upon nice and highly
metaphysical distinctions, but only to give hints and make suggestions
that will call your attention to the subject, and meet our necessities
during our present course of study, leaving it to your convenience to
enter upon a more critical analysis of this subject.
Of truths that require proof, the first class to which I must call attention
is the truths of demonstration. This class of truths admit of so high a
degree of proof that when the demonstration is complete, the
intelligence affirms that it is impossible that they should not be true.
This class when truly demonstrated, are known to be true with no less
certainty than self-evident truths: but the mind arrives not at the
perception and knowledge of them in the same way. That class is
arrived at universally, directly and a priori, that is, by direct intuition
without reasoning. This class is arrived at universally by reasoning.
The former are obtained without any logical processes, while this last
class is always and necessarily obtained as a result of a logical
process. We often get these truths by a process strictly logical without
being at all aware of the way in which we came to be possessed of
them. This class, then, unlike the other, are not to be communicated
and established without reasoning, but by reasoning. In this class of
truths the mind from its own laws will not rest unless they be
demonstrated. They admit of demonstration, and from their nature
and the nature of the intelligence, they must be demonstrated before
they can be known and rested in as certain knowledge. Many of them
may be received in the sense of being believed without an absolute
demonstration. But the mind cannot properly be said to know them
until it has gone through with the demonstration, and then it cannot but
know them.
To possess the mind of a first-truth of reason you need only to present
the chronological condition of its development. To reveal a
self-evident truth of reason, you need only to state it in terms of
sufficient perspicuity. But to prove a truth belonging to the class now
under consideration you must fulfill the logical conditions of the
intellect's affirming it. That is, you must demonstrate it.
The next class to be considered are truths of revelation. I mean truths
revealed by divine Inspiration. All truths are in some way revealed to
the mind, but not all by the Inspiration of the Holy Spirit. Some of this
class are known and some only believed by the mind. That is, some
of these truths are objects or truths of knowledge or of intuition when
brought by the Holy Spirit within the field of vision or intuition. Others
of them are only truths of faith or truths to be believed. The divinity of
the Lord Jesus Christ is a truth of revelation of the first class, that is, a
truth of intuition or of certain knowledge when revealed to the mind by
the Holy Spirit. This truth, when thus revealed, the pure reason
directly intuits. It knows that Jesus is the true God and eternal life by
the same law by which it knows the first-truths of reason. The only
account the soul can give of this truth is, that it knows it to be true. It
sees or perceives it to be true. But this perception or intuition is
conditionated upon the revelation of the Holy Spirit. "He shall take of
mine," said Jesus, "and shew it unto you." More on this topic in its
proper place. The facts and truths connected with the humanity of the
Lord Jesus are of the second class of truths of revelation, that is, they
are only truths of belief or of faith, as distinct from truths of the pure
reason or of intuition.
This class of truths, from their nature, are not susceptible of intuition.
They may be so revealed that the soul will have no doubt of them, and
hardly distinguish them from truths of certain knowledge; nevertheless,
they are only believed and not certainly known as truths of intuition
are.
The Bible is not of itself, strictly and properly a revelation to man. It is,
properly speaking, rather a history of revelations formerly made to
certain men. To be a revelation to us, its truths must be brought by
the Holy Spirit within the field of spiritual vision. This is the condition of
our either knowing or properly believing the truths of revelation. `No
man can say that Jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Spirit.' `No man
can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me, draw him.'
`They shall all be taught of God.' `The natural man receiveth not the
things of the Spirit of God, neither can he know them, because they
are spiritually discerned.' `He that is spiritual [has the Spirit,] judgeth
all things.'
But I must not in this place dwell longer upon this subject. I would only
add now that those who call in question the divinity of Christ exhibit
conclusive evidence that Christ has never been revealed to them by
the Holy Spirit. Those who hold his divinity as a theory or opinion are
not at all benefitted by it, for Christ is not savingly known to any except
by the revelation of the Holy Spirit.
To the classes of truths already considered might be added several
others, such as Probable Truths, Possible Truths, etc.
But I have carried this discussion far enough to answer the purposes
of this course of instruction, and I trust far enough to impress your
minds with a sense of the importance of attending to the classifying of
truths and of ascertaining the particular class to which a truth belongs
as the condition of successfully attempting to gain the possession of it
yourself, or of possessing the minds of others with it. As religious
teachers you cannot be too deeply impressed with the importance of
attending to this classification. I am fully convinced that much of the
inefficiency of religious teachers is owing to the fact that they do not
sufficiently study and comply with the laws of knowledge and belief to
carry conviction to the minds of their hearers. They seem not to have
considered the different classes of truths, and how the mind comes to
possess a knowledge or belief of them. Consequently they either
spend time in worse than useless efforts to prove first or self-evident
truths, or expect truths susceptible of demonstration to be received
and rested in without such demonstration. They often make little or no
distinction between the different classes of truths, and seldom or never
call the attention of their hearers to this distinction. Consequently,
they confuse and often confound their hearers by gross violations of all
the laws of logic, knowledge, and belief. I have often been pained and
even agonized at the faultiness of religious teachers in this respect.
Study to show yourselves approved, workmen that need not be
ashamed, and able to commend yourselves to every man's
conscience in the sight of God.
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