Lectures On Systematic Theology
By Charles G. Finney
1878 Edition
Edited by J.H. Fairchild
LECTURE 27: REGENERATION
In the examination of this subject I will:
Point out the common distinction between regeneration and conversion.
1. Regeneration is the term used by some theologians to express the
divine agency in changing the heart. With them regeneration does not
include and imply the activity of the subject, but rather excludes it.
These theologians, as will be seen in its place, hold that a change of
heart is first effected by the Holy Spirit while the subject is passive,
which change lays a foundation for the exercise, by the subject, of
repentance, faith, and love.
2. The term conversion with them expresses the activity and turning
of the subject, after regeneration is effected by the Holy Spirit.
Conversion with them does not include or imply the agency of the Holy
Spirit, but expresses only the activity of the subject. With them the
Holy Spirit first regenerates or changes the heart, after which the
sinner turns or converts himself. So that God and the subject work
each in turn. God first changes the heart, and as a consequence, the
subject afterwards converts himself or turns to God. Thus the subject
is passive in regeneration, but active in conversion.
When we come to the examination of the philosophical theories of
regeneration, we shall see that the views of these theologians
respecting regeneration result naturally and necessarily from their
holding the dogma of constitutional moral depravity, which we have
recently examined. Until their views on that subject are corrected, no
change can be expected in their views of this subject.
The assigned reasons for this distinction.
1. The original term plainly expresses and implies other than the
agency of the subject.
2. We need and must adopt a term that will express the Divine
agency.
3. Regeneration is expressly ascribed to the Holy Spirit.
4. Conversion, as it implies and expresses the activity and turning of
the subject, does not include and imply any Divine agency, and
therefore does not imply or express what is intended by regeneration.
5. As two agencies are actually employed in the regeneration and
conversion of a sinner, it is necessary to adopt terms that will clearly
teach this fact, and clearly distinguish between the agency of God and
of the creature.
6. The terms regeneration and conversion aptly express this
distinction, and therefore should be theologically employed.
The objections to this distinction.
1. The original term gennao, with its derivatives, may be rendered,
(1.) To beget. (2.) To bear or bring forth. (3.) To be begotten. (4.) To
be born, or brought forth.
2. Regeneration is, in the Bible, the same as the new birth.
3. To be born again is the same thing, in the Bible use of the term,
as to have a new heart, to be a new creature, to pass from death unto
life. In other words, to be born again is to have a new moral character,
to become holy. To regenerate is to make holy. To be born of God,
no doubt expresses and includes the Divine agency, but it also
includes and expresses that which the Divine agency is employed in
effecting, namely, making the sinner holy. Certainly, a sinner is not
regenerated whose moral character is unchanged. If he were, how
could it be truly said, that whosoever is born of God overcometh the
world, doth not commit sin, cannot sin, etc? If regeneration does not
imply and include a change of moral character in the subject, how can
regeneration be made the condition of salvation? The fact is, the term
regeneration, or the being born of God, is designed to express
primarily and principally the thing done, that is, the making of a sinner
holy, and expresses also the fact, that God's agency induces the
change. Throw out the idea of what is done, that is, the change of
moral character in the subject, and he would not be born again, he
would not be regenerated, and it could not be truly said, in such a
case, that God had regenerated him.
It has been objected, that the term really means and expresses only
the Divine agency; and, only by way of implication, embraces the idea
of a change of moral character and of course of activity in the subject.
To this I reply:
(1.) That if it really expresses only the Divine agency, it leaves out of
view the thing effected by Divine agency.
(2.) That it really and fully expresses not only the Divine agency, but
also that which this agency accomplishes.
(3.) The thing which the agency of God brings about, is a new or
spiritual birth, a resurrection from spiritual death, the inducing of a new
and holy life. The thing done is the prominent idea expressed or
intended by the term.
(4.) The thing done implies the turning or activity of the subject. It is
nonsense to affirm that his moral character is changed without any
activity or agency of his own. Passive holiness is impossible.
Holiness is obedience to the law of God, the law of love, and of course
consists in the activity of the creature.
(5.) We have said that regeneration is synonymous, in the Bible, with
a new heart. But sinners are required to make to themselves a new
heart, which they could not do, if they were not active in this change.
If the work is a work of God, in such a sense, that He must first
regenerate the heart or soul before the agency of the sinner begins, it
were absurd and unjust to require him to make to himself a new heart,
until he is first regenerated.
Regeneration is ascribed to man in the gospel, which it could not be,
if the term were designed to express only the agency of the Holy Spirit.
"For though ye have ten thousand instructors in Christ, yet have ye not
many fathers; for in Christ Jesus I have begotten you through the
gospel" (1 Cor. 4:15).
(6.) Conversion is spoken of in the Bible as the work of another than
the subject of it, and cannot therefore have been designed to express
only the activity of the subject of it.
(a.) It is ascribed to the word of God. "The law of the Lord is perfect,
converting the soul: the testimony of the Lord is sure, making wise the
simple" (Psalms 19:7).
(b.) To man. "Brethren, if any of you do err from the truth, and one
convert him; let him know, that he which converteth the sinner from the
error of his way shall save a soul from death, and shall hide a
multitude of sins" (James 5:19, 20).
Both conversion and regeneration are sometimes in the Bible
ascribed to God, sometimes to man, and sometimes to the subject;
which shows clearly that the distinction under examination is arbitrary
and theological, rather than biblical. The fact is, that both terms imply
the simultaneous exercise of both human and Divine agency. The fact
that a new heart is the thing done, demonstrates the activity of the
subject; and the word regeneration, or the expression "born of the
Holy Spirit" (John 3:5), asserts the Divine agency. The same is true of
conversion, or the turning of the sinner to God. God is said to turn him
and he is said to turn himself. God draws him, and he follows. In both
alike God and man are both active, and their activity is simultaneous.
God works or draws, and the sinner yields or turns, or which is the
same thing, changes his heart, or, in other words, is born again. The
sinner is dead in trespasses and sins. God calls on him, "Awake thou
that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light"
(Eph. 5:14). God calls; the sinner hears and answers, Here am I, God
says, Arise from the dead. The sinner puts forth his activity, and God
draws him into life; or rather, God draws, and the sinner comes forth to
life.
(7.) The distinction set up is not only not recognized in the Bible, but
is plainly of most injurious tendency, for two reasons:
(a.) It assumes and inculcates a false philosophy of depravity and
regeneration.
(b.) It leads the sinner to wait to be regenerated, before he repents
or turns to God. It is of most fatal tendency to represent the sinner as
under a necessity of waiting to be passively regenerated, before he
gives himself to God.
As the distinction is not only arbitrary, but anti-scriptural and
injurious, and inasmuch as it is founded in, and is designed to teach a
philosophy false and pernicious on the subject of depravity and
regeneration, I shall drop and discard the distinction; and in our
investigations henceforth, let it be understood, that I use regeneration
and conversion as synonymous terms.
What regeneration is not.
It is not a change in the substance of soul or body. If it were, sinners
could not be required to effect it. Such a change would not constitute
a change of moral character. No such change is needed, as the
sinner has all the faculties and natural attributes requisite to render
perfect obedience to God. All he needs is to be induced to use these
powers and attributes as he ought. The words conversion and
regeneration do not imply any change of substance, but only a change
of moral state or of moral character. The terms are not used to
express a physical, but a moral change. Regeneration does not
express or imply the creation of any new faculties or attributes of
nature, nor any change whatever in the constitution of body or mind. I
shall remark further upon this point when we come to the examination
of the philosophical theories of regeneration before alluded to.
What regeneration is.
It has been said that regeneration and a change of heart are
identical. It is important to inquire into the scriptural use of the term
heart. The term, like most others, is used in the Bible in various
senses. The heart is often spoken of in the Bible, not only as
possessing moral character, but as being the source of moral action,
or as the fountain, from which good and evil actions flow, and of
course as constituting the fountain of holiness or of sin, or, in other
words still, as comprehending, strictly speaking, the whole of moral
character. "But those things which proceed out of the mouth come
forth from the heart; and they defile the man. For out of the heart
proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false
witness, blasphemies" (Matt. 15:18, 19). "O generation of vipers, how
can ye, being evil, speak good things? For out of the abundance of
the heart the mouth speaketh. A good man out of the good treasure of
the heart bringeth forth good things: and an evil man out of the evil
treasure bringeth forth evil things" (Matt. 12:34, 35). When the heart is
thus represented as possessing moral character, and as the fountain
of good and evil, it cannot mean,
1. The bodily organ that propels the blood.
2. It cannot mean the substance of the soul or mind itself: substance
cannot in itself possess moral character.
3. It is not any faculty or natural attribute.
4. It cannot consist in any constitutional taste, relish, or appetite, for
these cannot in themselves have moral character.
5. It is not the sensibility or feeling faculty of the mind: for we have
seen, that moral character cannot be predicated of it. It is true, and let
it be understood, that the term heart is used in the Bible in these
senses, but not when the heart is spoken of as the fountain of moral
action. When the heart is represented as possessing moral character,
the word cannot be meant to designate any involuntary state of mind.
For neither the substance of soul or body, nor any involuntary state of
mind can, by any possibility, possess moral character in itself. The
very idea of moral character implies, and suggests the idea of, a free
action or intention. To deny this, were to deny a first truth.
6. The term heart, when applied to mind, is figurative, and means
something in the mind that has some point of resemblance to the
bodily organ of that name, and a consideration of the function of the
bodily organ will suggest the true idea of the heart of the mind. The
heart of the body propels the vital current, and sustains organic life. It
is the fountain from which the vital fluid flows, from which either life or
death may flow, according to the state of the blood. The mind as well
as the body has a heart which, as we have seen, is represented as a
fountain, or as an efficient propelling influence, out of which flows good
or evil, according as the heart is good or evil. This heart is
represented, not only as the source or fountain of good and evil, but as
being either good or evil in itself, as constituting the character of man,
and not merely as being capable of moral character.
It is also represented as something over which we have control, for
which we are responsible, and which, in case it is wicked, we are
bound to change on pain of death. Again: the heart, in the sense in
which we are considering it, is that, the radical change of which
constitutes a radical change of moral character. This is plain from
Matt 12:34, 35, 15:18, 19 already considered.
7. Our own consciousness, then, must inform us that the heart of the
mind that possesses these characteristics, can be nothing else than
the supreme ultimate intention of the soul Regeneration is
represented in the Bible as constituting a radical change of character,
as the resurrection from a death in sin, as the beginning of a new and
spiritual life, as constituting a new creature, as a new creation, not a
physical, but a moral or spiritual creation, as conversion, or turning to
God, as giving God the heart, as loving God with all our heart, and our
neighbor as ourselves. Now we have seen abundantly, that moral
character belongs to, or is an attribute of, the ultimate choice or
intention of the soul.
Regeneration then is a radical change of the ultimate intention, and,
of course, of the end or object of life. We have seen, that the choice of
an end is efficient in producing executive volitions, or the use of means
to obtain its end. A selfish ultimate choice is, therefore, a wicked
heart, out of which flows every evil; and a benevolent ultimate choice
is a good heart, out of which flows every good and commendable
deed.
Regeneration, to have the characteristics ascribed to it in the Bible,
must consist in a change in the attitude of the will, or a change in its
ultimate choice, intention, or preference; a change from selfishness to
benevolence; from choosing self-gratification as the supreme and
ultimate end of life, to the supreme and ultimate choice of the highest
well-being of God and of the universe; from a state of entire
consecration to self-interest, self-indulgence, self-gratification for its
own sake or as an end, and as the supreme end of life, to a state of
entire consecration to God, and to the interests of His kingdom as the
supreme and ultimate end of life.
The universal necessity of regeneration.
1. The necessity of regeneration as a condition of salvation must be
coextensive with moral depravity. This has been shown to be
universal among the unregenerate moral agents of our race. It surely
is impossible, that a world or a universe of unholy or selfish beings
should be happy. It is impossible that heaven should be made up of
selfish beings. It is intuitively certain that without benevolence or
holiness no moral being can be ultimately happy. Without
regeneration, a selfish soul can by no possibility be fitted either for the
employments, or for the enjoyments, of heaven.
2. The scriptures expressly teach the universal necessity of
regeneration. "Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I say
unto thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of
God" (John 3:3). "For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth any
thing, nor uncircumcision, but a new creature" (Gal. 6:15).
Agencies employed in regeneration.
1. The scriptures often ascribe regeneration to the Spirit of God.
"Jesus answered, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born
of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.
That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the
Spirit is spirit" (John 3:5, 6). "Which were born, not of blood, nor of the
will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God" (John 1:15).
2. We have seen that the subject is active in regeneration, that
regeneration consists in the sinner changing his ultimate choice,
intention, preference; or in changing from selfishness to love or
benevolence; or, in other words, in turning from the supreme choice of
self-gratification, to the supreme love of God and the equal love of his
neighbor. Of course the subject of regeneration must be an agent in
the work.
3. There are generally other agents, one or more human beings
concerned in persuading the sinner to turn. The Bible recognizes both
the subject and the preacher as agents in the work. Thus, Paul says:
"I have begotten you through the gospel" (1 Cor. 4:15). Here the
same word is used which is used in another case, where regeneration
is ascribed to God.
Again: an apostle says, "Ye have purified your souls by obeying the
truth" (1 Peter 1:22). Here the work is ascribed to the subject. There
are then always two, and generally more than two agents employed in
effecting the work. Several theologians have held that regeneration is
the work of the Holy Spirit alone. In proof of this they cite those
passages that ascribe it to God. But I might just as lawfully insist that
it is the work of man alone, and quote those passages that ascribe it to
man, to substantiate my position. Or I might assert that it is alone the
work of the subject, and in proof of this position quote those passages
that ascribe it to the subject. Or again, I might assert that it is effected
by the truth alone, and quote such passages as the following to
substantiate my position: "Of His own will begat He us with the word of
truth, that we should be a kind of first fruits of His creatures" (James
1:18). "Being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible
by the word of God, which liveth and abideth forever" (1 Peter 1:23).
It has been common to regard the third person as a mere instrument
in the work. But the fact is, he is a willing, designing, responsible
agent, as really so as God or the subject is.
If it be inquired how the Bible can consistently ascribe regeneration
at one time to God, at another to the subject, at another to the truth, at
another to a third person; the answer is to be sought in the nature of
the work. The work accomplished is a change of choice, in respect to
an end or the end of life. The sinner whose choice is changed, must
of course act. The end to be chosen must be clearly and forcibly
presented; this is the work of the third person, and of the Holy Spirit.
The Spirit takes of the things of Christ and shows them to the soul.
The truth is employed, or it is truth which must necessarily be
employed, as an instrument to induce a change of choice.
Instrumentalities employed in the work.
1. Truth. This must, from the nature of regeneration, be employed in
effecting it, for regeneration is nothing else than the will being duly
influenced by truth.
2. There may be, and often are, many providences concerned in
enlightening the mind, and in inducing regeneration. These are
instrumentalities. They are means or instruments of presenting the
truth. Mercies, judgments, men, measures, and in short all those
things that conduce to enlightening the mind, are instrumentalities
employed in effecting it.
Those who hold to physical or constitutional moral depravity must
hold, of course, to constitutional regeneration; and, of course,
consistency compels them to maintain that there is but one agent
employed in regeneration, and that is the Holy Spirit, and that no
instrument whatever is employed, because the work is, according to
them, an act of creative power; that the very nature is changed, and of
course no instrument can be employed, any more than in the creation
of the world. These theologians have affirmed, over and over again,
that regeneration is a miracle; that there is no tendency whatever in
the gospel, however presented, and whether presented by God or
man, to regenerate the heart. Dr. Griffin, in his Park Street Lectures,
maintains that the gospel, in its natural and necessary tendency,
creates and perpetuates only opposition to, and hatred of God, until
the heart is changed by the Holy Spirit. He understands the carnal
mind to be not a voluntary state, not a minding of the flesh, but the
very nature and constitution of the mind; and that enmity against God
is a part, attribute, or appetite of the nature itself. Consequently, he
must deny the adaptability of the gospel to regenerate the soul. It has
been proclaimed by this class of theologians, times without number,
that there is no philosophical connection between the preaching of the
gospel and the regeneration of sinners, no adaptedness in the gospel
to produce that result; but, on the contrary, that it is adapted to
produce an opposite result. The favorite illustrations of their views
have been Ezekiel's prophesying over the dry bones, and Christ's
restoring sight to the blind man by putting clay on his eyes. Ezekiel's
prophesying over the dry bones had no tendency to quicken them,
they say. And the clay used by the Saviour was calculated rather to
destroy than to restore sight. This shows how easy it is for men to
adopt a pernicious and absurd philosophy, and then to find, or think
they find, it supported by the Bible. What must be the effect of
inculcating the dogma, that the gospel has nothing to do with
regenerating the sinner? Instead of telling him that regeneration is
nothing else than his embracing the gospel, to tell him that he must
wait, and first have his constitution recreated before he can possibly
do anything but oppose God! This is to tell him the greatest and most
abominable and ruinous of falsehoods. It is to mock his intelligence.
What! Call on him, on pain of eternal death, to believe; to embrace the
gospel; to love God with all his heart, and at the same time represent
him as entirely helpless, and constitutionally the enemy of God and of
the gospel, and as being under the necessity of waiting for God to
regenerate his nature, before it is possible for him to do otherwise than
to hate God with all his heart!
In regeneration the subject is both passive and active.
1. That he is active is plain from what has been said, and from the
very nature of the change.
2. That he is, at the same time, passive, is plain from the fact that he
acts only when and as he is acted upon. That is he is passive in the
perception of the truth presented by the Holy Spirit. I know that this
perception is no part of regeneration. But it is simultaneous with
regeneration. It induces regeneration. It is the condition and the
occasion of regeneration. Therefore the subject of regeneration must
be a passive recipient or percipient of the truth presented by the Holy
Spirit, at the moment, and during the act of regeneration. The Spirit
acts upon him through or by the truth: thus far he is passive. He
closes with the truth: thus far he is active. What a mistake those
theologians have fallen into who represent the subject as altogether
passive in regeneration! This rids the sinner at once of the conviction
of any duty or responsibility about it. It is wonderful that such an
absurdity should have been so long maintained in the church. But
while it is maintained, it is no wonder that sinners are not converted to
God. While the sinner believes this, it is impossible, if he has it in
mind, that he should be regenerated. He stands and waits for God to
do what God requires him to do, and which no one can do for him.
Neither God, nor any other being, can regenerate him, if he will not
turn. If he will not change his choice, it is impossible that it should be
changed. Sinners who have been taught thus and have believed what
they have been taught, would never have been regenerated had not
the Holy Spirit drawn off their attention from this error, and ere they
were aware, induced them to close in with the offer of life.
What is implied in regeneration.
1. The nature of the change shows that it must be instantaneous. It
is a change of choice, or of intention. This must be instantaneous.
The preparatory work of conviction and enlightening the mind may
have been gradual and progressive. But when regeneration occurs, it
must be instantaneous.
2. It implies an entire present change of moral character, that is, a
change from entire sinfulness to entire holiness. We have seen that it
consists in a change from selfishness to benevolence. We have also
seen that selfishness and benevolence cannot coexist in the same
mind; that selfishness is a state of supreme and entire consecration to
self; that benevolence is a state of entire and supreme consecration to
God and the good of the universe. Regeneration, then, surely implies
an entire change of moral character.
Again: the Bible represents regeneration as a dying to sin and
becoming alive to God. Death in sin is total depravity. This is
generally admitted. Death to sin and becoming alive to God, must
imply entire present holiness.
3. The scriptures represent regeneration as the condition of salvation
in such a sense, that if the subject should die immediately after
regeneration, and without any further change, he would go
immediately to heaven.
Again: the scriptures require only perseverance in the first love, as
the condition of salvation, in case the regenerate soul should live long
in the world subsequently to regeneration.
4. When the scriptures require us to grow in grace, and in the
knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ, this does not imply that there is
yet sin remaining in the regenerate heart which we are required to put
away by degrees. But the spirit of the requirement must be, that we
should acquire as much knowledge as we can of our moral relations,
and continue to conform to all truth as fast as we know it. This, and
nothing else, is implied in abiding in our first love, or abiding in Christ,
living and walking in the Spirit.
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