Lectures On Systematic Theology
By Charles G. Finney
1878 Edition
Edited by J.H. Fairchild
LECTURE 16: WHAT CONSTITUTES DISOBEDIENCE TO MORAL LAW
In discussing this question, I will,
Show in what disobedience to moral law cannot consist.
1. It cannot consist in malevolence, or in the choice of evil or misery
as an ultimate end. This will appear, if we consider, that the choice of
an end implies the choice of it, not for no reason, but for a reason, and
for its own intrinsic value, or because the mind prizes it on its own
account. But moral agents are so constituted, that they cannot regard
misery as intrinsically valuable. They cannot, therefore, choose it as
an ultimate end, nor prize it on its own account.
2. Disobedience to moral law cannot consist in the constitution of
soul or body. The law does not command us to have a certain
constitution, nor forbid us to have the constitution with which we came
into being.
3. It cannot consist in any unavoidable state, either of the sensibility
or of the intelligence; for these, as we have seen, are involuntary, and
are dependent upon the actings of the will.
4. It cannot consist in outward actions, independent of the design
with which they are put forth; for these, we have seen, are controlled
by the actions of the will, and, therefore, can have no moral character
in themselves.
5. It cannot consist in inaction; for total inaction is to a moral agent
impossible. Moral agents are necessarily active. That is, they cannot
exist as moral agents without choice. They must, by a law of
necessity, choose either in accordance with, or in opposition to, the
law of God. They are free to choose in either direction, but they are
not free to abstain from choice altogether. Choose they must. The
possession of free will, and the perception of opposing objects of
choice, either exciting desire, or developing the rational affirmation of
obligation to choose, render choice one way or the other inevitable.
The law directs how they ought to choose. If they do not choose thus,
it must be because they choose otherwise, and not because they do
not choose at all.
6. It cannot consist in the choice of moral evil, or sin, as an ultimate
end. Sin is but an element or attribute of choice or intention, or it is
intention itself. If it be intention itself, then to make sin an end of
intention, would be to make intention or choice terminate on itself, and
the sinner must choose his own choice, or intend his own intention as
an end: this is absurd.
7. Disobedience to moral law cannot consist in self-love. Self-love is
simply the constitutional desire of happiness. It is altogether an
involuntary state. It has, as a desire, no moral character, any more
than has the desire of food. It is no more sinful to desire happiness,
and properly to seek it, than it is wrong to desire food, and properly to
seek that.
What disobedience to moral law must consist in.
Disobedience to God's law must consist in the choice of
self-gratification as an end. In other words, it must consist essentially
in committing the will, and through the will committing the whole being,
to the indulgence of self-love, as the supreme and ultimate end of life.
This is selfishness. In other words, it is seeking to gratify the desire of
personal good, in a manner prohibited by the law of God.
It consists in choosing self-gratification as an end, or for its own
sake, instead of choosing, in accordance with the law of the reason
and of God, the highest well-being of God and of the universe as an
ultimate end. In other words still, sin or disobedience to the moral law,
consists in the consecration of the heart and life to the gratification of
the constitutional and artificial desires, rather than in obedience to the
law of the intelligence. Or, once more, sin consists in being governed
by impulses of the sensibility, instead of being governed by the law of
God, as it lies revealed in the reason.
That this is sin, and the whole of sin viewed in its germinating
principles, will appear, if we consider:
1. That this state of mind, or this choice, is the "carnal mind," or the
minding of the flesh, which the apostle affirms to be "enmity against
God" (Romans 8:7). It is the universal representation of scripture, that
sin consists in the spirit of self-seeking. This spirit of self-seeking is
always in the Bible represented as the contrast or opposite of
disinterested benevolence, or the love which the law requires.
"Ephraim bringeth forth fruit to himself" (Hosea 9:16), is the sum of
God's charges against sinners.
2. When we come to the consideration of the attributes of
selfishness, it will be seen that every form of sin, not only may, but
must resolve itself into selfishness, just as we have seen that every
form of virtue does and must resolve itself into love or benevolence.
3. From the laws of its constitution, the mind is shut up to the
necessity of choosing that, as an ultimate end, which is regarded by
the mind as intrinsically good or valuable in itself. This is the very idea
of choosing an end, to wit, something chosen for its own sake, or for
what it is in and of itself, or, because it is regarded by the mind as
intrinsically valuable to self, or to being in general, or to both.
4. Moral agents are, therefore, shut up to the necessity of willing the
good of being, either partially or impartially, either good to self, or good
to being in general. Nothing else can possibly be chosen as an end or
for its own sake. Willing the good of being impartially, we have seen,
is virtue. To will it partially is to will it, not for its own sake, except upon
condition of its relation to self. That is, it is to will good to self. In other
words, it is to will the gratification of self as an end, in opposition to
willing the good of universal being as an end, and every good, or the
good of every being, according to its intrinsic value.
5. But may not one will the good of a part of being as an end, or for
the sake of the intrinsic value of their good? This would not be
benevolence; for that, as we have seen, must consist in willing good
for its own sake, and implies the willing of every good, and of the
highest good of universal being. It would not be selfishness, as it
would not be willing good to, or the gratification of, self. It would be
sin, for it would be the partial love or choice of good. It would be
loving some of my neighbors, but not all of them. It would, therefore,
be sin, but not selfishness. If this can be, then there is such a thing
possible, whether actual or not, as sin that does not consist in
selfishness. But let us examine whether this supposition would not
resolve itself into selfishness.
To say that I choose good for its own sake, or because it is valuable
to being, that is, in obedience to the law of my reason, and of God,
implies that I choose all possible good, and every good according to its
relative value. If, then, a being chooses his own good, or the good of
any being as an ultimate end, in obedience to the law of reason, it
must be that he chooses, for the same reason, the highest possible
good of all sentient being.
The partial choice of good implies the choice of it, not merely for its
own sake, but upon condition of its relations to self, or to certain
particular persons. Its relations conditionate the choice. When its
relations to self conditionate the choice, so that it is chosen, not for its
intrinsic value, irrespective of its relations, but for its relations to self,
this is selfishness. It is the partial choice of good. If I choose the good
of others besides myself, and choose good because of its relations to
them, it must be either:
(1.) Because I love their persons with the love of fondness, and will
their good for that reason, that is, to gratify my affection for them,
which is selfishness; or:
(2.) Because of their relations to me, so that good to them is in some
way a good to me, which also is selfishness; or:
(3.) Upon condition that they are worthy, which is benevolence; for if
I will good to a being upon condition that he is worthy, I must value the
good for its own sake, and will it particularly to him, because he
deserves it. This is benevolence, and not the partial choice of good,
because it is obeying the law of my reason.
Again: If I will the good of any number of beings, I must do it in
obedience to the law either of my intelligence and of God, or of my
sensibility. But, if I will in obedience to the law of my intelligence, it
must be the choice of the highest good of universal being. But if I will
in obedience to the law or impulse of my sensibility, it must be to
gratify my feelings or desires. This is selfishness.
Again: As the will must either follow the law of the reason and of
God, or the impulses of the sensibility, it follows that moral agents are
shut up to the necessity of being selfish or benevolent, and that there
is no third way, because there is no third medium, through which any
object of choice can be presented. The mind can absolutely know
nothing as an object of choice, that is not recommended by one of
these faculties. Selfishness, then, and benevolence, are the only two
alternatives.
Let it be remembered, then, that sin is a unit, and always and
necessarily consists in selfish ultimate intention, and in nothing else.
This intention is sin; and thus we see that every phase of sin resolves
itself into selfishness. This will appear more and more, as we proceed
to unfold the subject of moral depravity.
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