Lectures On Systematic Theology
By Charles G. Finney
1878 Edition
Edited by J.H. Fairchild
LECTURE 32: GRACIOUS ABILITY
Grace is unmerited favor. Its exercise consists in bestowing that
which, without a violation of justice, might be withheld.
Ability to obey God, as we have seen, is the possession of power
adequate to the performance of that which is required. If, then, the
terms are used in the proper sense, by a gracious ability must be
intended that the power which men at present possess to obey the
commands of God, is a gift of grace relatively to the command; that is,
the bestowment of power adequate to the performance of the thing
required, is a matter of grace as opposed to justice.
I will show what is intended by the term gracious ability.
The abettors of this scheme hold that by the first sin of Adam, he,
together with all his posterity, lost all natural power and all ability of
every kind to obey God; that therefore they were, as a race, wholly
unable to obey the moral law, or to render to God any acceptable
service whatever; that is, that they became, as a consequence of the
sin of Adam, wholly unable to use the powers of nature in any other
way than to sin. They were able to sin or to disobey God, but entirely
unable to obey Him; that they did not lose all power to act, but that
they had power to act only in one direction, that is, in opposition to the
will and law of God. By a gracious ability they intend, that in
consequence of the atonement of Christ, God has graciously restored
to man ability to accept the terms of mercy, or to fulfil the conditions of
acceptance with God; in other words, that by the gracious aid of the
Holy Spirit which, upon condition of the atonement, God has given to
every member of the human family, all men are endowed with a
gracious ability to obey God. By a gracious ability is intended, then,
that ability or power to obey God, which all men now possess, not by
virtue of their own nature or constitutional powers, but by virtue of the
indwelling and gracious influence of the Holy Spirit, gratuitously
bestowed upon man in consequence of the atonement of Christ. The
inability, or total loss of all natural power to obey God into which men
as a race fell by the first sin of Adam, they call original sin; perhaps
more strictly, this inability is a consequence of that original sin into
which man fell; which original sin itself consisted in the total corruption
of man's whole nature. They hold, that by the atonement Christ made
satisfaction for original sin, in such a sense that the inability resulting
from it is removed, and that now men are by gracious aid able to obey
and accept the terms of salvation. That is, they are able to repent and
believe the gospel. In short, they are able, by virtue of this gracious
ability, to do their duty, or to obey God. This, if I understand these
theologians, is a fair statement of their doctrine of gracious ability.
This doctrine of a gracious ability is an absurdity.
The question is not whether, as a matter of fact, men ever do obey
God without the gracious influence of the Holy Spirit. I hold that they
do not. So the fact of the Holy Spirit's gracious influence being
exerted in every case of human obedience, is not a question in debate
between those who maintain, and those who deny the doctrine of
gracious ability, in the sense above explained. The question in debate
is not whether men do, in any case, use the powers of nature in the
manner that God requires, without the gracious influence of the Holy
Spirit, but whether they are naturally able so to use them. Is the fact,
that they never do so use them without a gracious divine influence, to
be ascribed to absolute inability, or to the fact that, from the beginning,
they universally and voluntarily consecrate their powers to the
gratification of self, and that therefore they will not, unless they are
divinely persuaded, by the gracious influence of the Holy Spirit, in any
case turn and consecrate their powers to the service of God? If this
doctrine of natural inability and of gracious ability be true, it inevitably
follows:
1. That but for the atonement of Christ, and the consequent
bestowment of a gracious ability, no one of Adam's race could ever
have been capable of sinning. For in this case the whole race would
have been wholly destitute of any kind or degree of ability to obey
God. Consequently they could not have been subjects of moral
government, and of course their actions could have had no moral
character. It is a first truth of reason, a truth everywhere and by all
men necessarily assumed in their practical judgments, that a subject
of moral government must be a moral agent, or that moral agency is a
necessary condition of any one's being a subject of a moral
government. And in the practical judgment of men, it matters not at all
whether a being ever was a moral agent, or not. If by any means
whatever he has ceased to be a moral agent, men universally and
necessarily assume, that it is impossible for him to be a subject of
moral government any more than a horse can be such a subject.
Suppose he has by his own fault made himself an idiot or a lunatic; all
men know absolutely, and in their practical judgment assume, that in
this state he is not, and cannot be a subject of moral government.
They know that in this state, moral character cannot justly be
predicated of his actions. His guilt in thus depriving himself of moral
agency may be exceeding great, and his guilt in thus depriving himself
of moral agency may equal the sum of all the default of which it is the
cause, but be a moral agent, be under moral obligation, in this state
of dementation or insanity, he cannot. This is a first truth of reason,
irresistibly and universally assumed by all men. If therefore Adam's
posterity had by their own personal act cast away and deprived
themselves of all ability to obey God, in this state they would have
ceased to be moral agents, and consequently they could have sinned
no more. But the case under consideration is not the one just
supposed, but is one where moral agency was not cast away by the
agent himself. It is one where moral agency was never, and never
could have been possessed. In the case under consideration, Adam's
posterity, had he ever had any, would never have possessed any
power to obey God, or to do anything acceptable to him.
Consequently, they never could have sustained to God the relation of
subjects of His moral government. Of course they never could have
had moral character; right or wrong, in a moral sense, never could
have been predicated of their actions.
2. It must follow from this doctrine of gracious ability and natural
inability, that mankind lost their freedom, or the liberty of will in the first
sin of Adam; that both Adam himself, and all his posterity would and
could have sustained to God only the relation of necessary, as
opposed to free, agents, had not God bestowed upon them a gracious
ability.
But that either Adam or his posterity lost their freedom or free
agency by the first sin of Adam, is not only a sheer but an absurd
assumption. To be sure Adam fell into a state of total alienation from
the law of God, and lapsed into a state of supreme selfishness. His
posterity have unanimously followed his example. He and they have
become dead in trespasses and sins. Now that this death in sin either
consists in, or implies, the loss of free agency, is the very thing to be
proved. But this cannot be proved. I have so fully discussed the
subject of human moral depravity or sinfulness on a former occasion,
as to render it unnecessary to enlarge upon it here.
3. Again, if it be true, as these theologians affirm, that men have
only a gracious ability to obey God, and that this gracious ability
consists in the presence and gracious agency of the Holy Spirit, it
follows that, when the Holy Spirit is withdrawn from man, he is no
longer a free agent, and from that moment he is incapable of moral
action and of course can sin no more. Hence, should he live any
number of years after this withdrawal, neither sin nor holiness, virtue
nor vice, praiseworthiness nor blameworthiness could be predicated of
his conduct. The same will and must be true of all his future eternity.
4. If the doctrine in question be true, it follows, that from the
moment of the withdrawal of the gracious influence of the Holy Spirit,
man is no longer a subject of moral obligation. It is from that moment
absurd and unjust to require the performance of any duty of him. Nay
to conceive of him as being any longer a subject of duty; to think or
speak of duty as belonging to him, is as absurd as to think or speak of
the duty of a mere machine. He has, from the moment of the
withholding of a gracious ability, ceased to be a free and become a
necessary agent, having power to act but in one direction. Such a
being can by no possibility be capable of sin or holiness. Suppose he
still possesses power to act contrary to the letter of the law of God;
what then? This action can have no moral character, because, act in
some way he must, and he can act in no other way. It is nonsense to
affirm that such action can be sinful in the sense of blameworthy. To
affirm that it can, is to contradict a first truth of reason. Sinners, then,
who have quenched the Holy Spirit, and from whom he is wholly
withdrawn, are no longer to be blamed for their enmity against God,
and for all their opposition to Him. They are, according to this
doctrine, as free from blame as are the motions of a mere machine.
5. Again, if the doctrine in question be true, there is no reason to
believe that the angels that fell from their allegiance to God ever
sinned but once. If Adam lost his free agency by the fall, or by his first
sin, there can be no doubt that the angels did so too. If a gracious
ability had not been bestowed upon Adam, it is certain, according to
the doctrine in question, that he never could have been the subject of
moral obligation from the moment of his first sin, and consequently,
could never again have sinned. The same must be true of devils. If
by their first sin they fell into the condition of necessary agents, having
lost their free agency, they have never sinned since. That is, moral
character cannot have been predicable of their conduct since that
event, unless a gracious ability has been bestowed upon them. That
this has been done cannot, with even a show of reason, be pretended.
The devils, then, according to this doctrine, are not now to blame for
all they do to oppose God and to ruin souls. Upon the supposition in
question, they cannot help it; and you might as well blame the winds
and the waves for the evils which they sometimes do, as blame Satan
for what he does.
6. If this doctrine be true, there is not, and never will be, any sin in
hell, for the plain reason, that there are no moral agents there. They
are necessary agents, unless it be true, that the Holy Spirit and a
gracious ability be continued there. This is not, I believe, contended
for by the abettors of this scheme. But if they deny to the inhabitants
of hell freedom of the will, or, which is the same thing, natural ability to
obey God, they must admit, or be grossly inconsistent, that there is no
sin in hell, either in men or devils. But is this admission agreeable
either to reason or revelation? I know that the abettors of this scheme
maintain, that God may justly hold both men, from whom a gracious
ability is withdrawn, and devils, responsible for their conduct, upon the
ground that they have destroyed their own ability. But suppose this
were true that they had rendered themselves idiots, lunatics, or
necessary as opposed to free agents, could God justly, could
enlightened reason still regard them as moral agents, and as morally
responsible for their conduct? No, indeed! God and reason may justly
blame, and render them miserable, for annihilating their freedom or
their moral agency, but to hold them still responsible for present
obedience, were absurd.
7. We have seen that the ability of all men of sane mind to obey
God, is necessarily assumed as a first truth, and that this assumption
is from the very laws of mind, the indispensable condition of the
affirmation, or even the conception, that they are subjects of moral
obligation; that, but for this assumption, men could not so much as
conceive the possibility of moral responsibility, and of praiseworthiness
and blameworthiness. If the laws of mind remain unaltered, this is and
always will be so. In the eternal world and in hell, men and devils must
necessarily assume their own freedom or ability to obey God, as the
condition of their obligation to do so, and, consequently of their being
capable of sin or holiness. Since revelation informs us that men and
devils continue to sin in hell, we know that there also it must be
assumed as a first truth of reason, that they are free agents, or that
they have natural ability to obey God.
8. But that a gracious ability to do duty or to obey God is an
absurdity, will further appear, if we consider that it is a first truth of
reason, that moral obligation implies moral agency, and that moral
agency implies freedom of will; or in other words, it implies a natural
ability to comply with obligation. This ability is necessarily regarded by
the intelligence as the sine qua non of moral obligation, on the ground
of natural and immutable justice. A just command always implies an
ability to obey it. A command to perform a natural impossibility would
not, and could not, impose obligation. Suppose God should command
human beings to fly without giving them power; could such a
command impose moral obligation? No, indeed! But suppose He
should give them power, or promise them power, upon the
performance of a condition within their reach; then He might in justice
require them to fly, and a command to do so would be obligatory. But
relatively to the requirement, the bestowment of power would not be
grace, but justice. Relatively to the results or the pleasure of flying,
the bestowment of power might be gracious. That is, it might be grace
in God to give me power to fly, that I might have the pleasure and
profit of flying; so that relatively to the results of flying, the giving of
power might be regarded as an act of grace. But, if God requires me
to fly as a matter of duty, He must in justice supply the power or ability
to fly. This would in justice be a necessary condition of the command
imposing moral obligation.
Nor would it at all vary the case if I had ever possessed wings, and
by the abuse of them had lost the power to fly. In this case,
considered relatively to the pleasure, and profit, and results of flying,
the restoring of the power to fly might and would be an act of grace.
But if God would still command me to fly, He must, as a condition of
my obligation, restore the power. It is vain and absurd to say, as has
been said, that in such a case, although I might lose the power of
obedience, this could not alter the right of God to claim obedience.
This assertion proceeds upon the absurd assumption that the will of
God makes or creates law, instead of merely declaring and enforcing
the law of nature. We have seen in former lectures, that the only law
or rule of action that is, or can be obligatory on a moral agent, is the
law of nature, or just that course of willing and acting, which is for the
time being, suitable to his nature and relations. We have seen that
God's will never makes or creates law, that it only declares and
enforces it. If therefore, by any means whatever, the nature of a moral
agent should be so changed that his will is no longer free to act in
conformity with, or in opposition to, the law of nature, if God would
hold him still obligated to obey, He must in justice, relatively to His
requirement, restore His liberty or ability. Suppose one had by the
abuse of his intellect lost the use of it, and become a perfect idiot,
could he by any possibility be still required to understand and obey
God? Certainly not. So neither could he be required to perform
anything else that had become naturally impossible to him. Viewed
relatively to the pleasure and results of obedience, the restoring of
power would be an act of grace. But viewed relatively to his duty or to
God's command, the restoring of power to obey is an act of justice and
not of grace. To call this grace were to abuse language, and confound
terms.
In what sense is a gracious ability possible?
1. Not, as we have just seen, in the sense that the bestowment of
power to render obedience to a command possible, can be properly a
gift of grace. Grace is undeserved favor, something not demanded by
justice, that which under the circumstances might be withholden
without injustice. It never can be just in any being to require that which
under the circumstances is impossible. As has been said, relatively to
the requirement and as a condition of its justice, the bestowment of
power adequate to the performance of that which is commanded, is an
unalterable condition of the justice of the command. This I say is a
first truth of reason, a truth everywhere by all men necessarily
assumed and known. A gracious ability to obey a command, is an
absurdity and an impossibility.
2. But a gracious ability considered relatively to the advantages to
result from obedience is possible. Suppose, for example, that a
servant who supports himself and his family by his wages, should by
his own fault render himself unable to labor and to earn his wages.
His master may justly dismiss him, and let him go with his family to the
poor-house. But in this disabled state his master cannot justly exact
labor of him. Nor could he do so if he absolutely owned the servant.
Now suppose the master to be able to restore to the servant his former
strength. If he would require service of him, as a condition of the
justice of this requirement, he must restore his strength so far at least
as to render obedience possible. This would be mere justice. But
suppose he restored the ability of the servant to gain support for
himself and his family by labor. This, viewed relatively to the good of
the servant, to the results of the restoration of his ability to himself and
to his family, is a matter of grace. Relatively to the right of the master
in requiring the labor of the servant, the restoration of ability to obey is
an act of justice. But relatively to the good of the servant, and the
benefits that result to him from this restoration of ability, and making it
once more possible for him to support himself and his family, the
giving of ability is properly an act of grace.
Let this be applied to the case under consideration. Suppose the
race of Adam to have lost their free agency by the first sin of Adam,
and thus to have come into a state in which holiness and consequent
salvation were impossible. Now, if God would still require obedience
of them, He must in justice restore their ability. And viewed relatively
to His right to command, and their duty to obey, this restoration is
properly a matter of justice. But suppose He would again place them
in circumstances to render holiness and consequent salvation possible
to them: viewed relatively to their good and profit, this restoration of
ability is properly a matter of grace.
A gracious ability to obey, viewed relatively to the command to be
obeyed, is impossible and absurd. But a gracious ability to be saved,
viewed relatively to salvation, is possible. There is no proof that
mankind ever lost their ability to obey, either by the first sin of Adam,
or by their own sin. For this would imply, as we have seen, that they
had ceased to be free, and had become necessary agents. But if they
had, and God had restored their ability to obey, all that can be justly
said in this case, is, that so far as his right to command is concerned,
the restoration of their ability was an act of justice. But so far as the
rendering of salvation possible to them is concerned, it was an act of
grace.
3. But it is asserted, or rather assumed by the defenders of the
dogma under consideration, that the Bible teaches the doctrine of a
natural inability, and of a gracious ability in man to obey the
commands of God. I admit, indeed, that if we interpret scripture
without regard to any just rules of interpretation, this assumption may
find countenance in the word of God, just as almost any absurdity
whatever may do, and has done. But a moderate share of attention to
one of the simplest and most universal and most important rules of
interpreting language, whether in the Bible or out of it, will strip this
absurd dogma of the least appearance of support from the word of
God. The rule to which I refer is this, "That language is always to be
interpreted in accordance with the subject matter of discourse."
When used of acts of will, the term "cannot," interpreted by this
rule, must not be understood to mean a proper impossibility. If I say, I
cannot take five dollars for my watch, when it is offered to me, every
one knows that I do not and cannot mean to affirm a proper
impossibility. So when the angel said to Lot, "Haste thee, for I cannot
do anything until thou be come thither" (Gen. 19:22), who ever
understood him as affirming a natural or any proper impossibility? All
that he could have meant was, that he was not willing to do anything
until Lot was in a place of safety. Just so when the Bible speaks of our
inability to comply with the commands of God, all that can be intended
is, that we are so unwilling that, without divine persuasion, we, as a
matter of fact, shall not and will not obey. This certainly is the sense in
which such language is used in common life. And in common
parlance, we never think of such language, when used of acts of will,
as meaning anything more than unwillingness, a state in which the will
is strongly committed in an opposite direction.
When Joshua said to the children of Israel, "Ye cannot serve the
Lord, for He is a holy God" (Joshua 24:19), the whole context, as well
as the nature of the case, shows that he did not mean to affirm a
natural, nor indeed any kind of impossibility. In the same connection,
he requires them to serve the Lord, and leads them solemnly to pledge
themselves to serve Him. He undoubtedly intended to say, that with
wicked hearts they could not render Him an acceptable service, and
therefore insisted on their putting away the wickedness of their hearts,
by immediately and voluntarily consecrating themselves to the service
of the Lord. So it must be in all cases where the term "cannot," and
such-like expressions which, when applied to muscular action, would
imply a proper impossibility, are used in reference to acts of will; they
cannot, when thus used, be understood as implying a proper
impossibility, without doing violence to every sober rule of interpreting
language. What would be thought of a judge or an advocate at the bar
of an earthly tribunal, who should interpret the language of a witness
without any regard to the rule, "That language is to be understood
according to the subject-matter of discourse." Should an advocate in
his argument to the court or jury, attempt to interpret the language of a
witness in a manner that made "cannot," when spoken of an act of will,
mean a proper impossibility, the judge would soon rebuke his stupidity,
and remind him that he must not talk nonsense in a court of justice;
and might possibly add, that such nonsensical assertions were
allowable only in the pulpit. I say again, that it is an utter abuse and
perversion of the laws of language, so to interpret the Bible as to make
it teach a proper inability in man to will as God directs. The essence of
obedience to God consists in willing. Language, then, used in
reference to obedience must, when properly understood, be
interpreted in accordance with the subject-matter of discourse.
Consequently, when used in reference to acts of will, such expressions
as "cannot," and the like, can absolutely mean nothing more than a
choice in an opposite direction.
But it may be asked, Is there no grace in all that is done by the
Holy Spirit to make man wise unto salvation? Yes, indeed, I answer.
And it is grace, and great grace, just because the doctrine of a natural
inability in man to obey God is not true. It is just because man is well
able to render obedience, and unjustly refuses to do so, that all the
influence that God brings to bear upon him to make him willing, is a
gift and an influence of grace. The grace is great, just in proportion to
the sinner's ability to comply with God's requirements, and the
strength of his voluntary opposition to his duty. If man were properly
unable to obey, there could be no grace in giving him ability to obey,
when the bestowment of ability is considered relatively to the
command. But let man be regarded as free, as possessing natural
ability to obey all the requirements of God, and all his difficulty as
consisting in a wicked heart, or, which is the same thing, in an
unwillingness to obey, then an influence on the part of God designed
and tending to make him willing, is grace indeed. But strip man of his
freedom, render him naturally unable to obey, and you render grace
impossible, so far as his obligation to obedience is concerned.
But it is urged in support of the dogma of natural inability and of a
gracious ability, that the Bible everywhere represents man as
dependent on the gracious influence of the Holy Spirit for all holiness,
and consequently for eternal life. I answer, it is admitted that this is
the representation of the Bible, but the question is, in what sense is he
dependent? Does his dependence consist in a natural inability to
embrace the gospel and be saved? Or does it consist in a voluntary
selfishness in an unwillingness to comply with the terms of salvation?
Is man dependent on the Holy Spirit to give him a proper ability to
obey God or is he dependent only in such a sense that, as a matter of
fact, he will not embrace the gospel unless the Holy Spirit makes him
willing? The latter, beyond reasonable question, is the truth. This is
the universal representation of scripture. The difficulty to be overcome
is everywhere in the Bible represented to be the sinner's unwillingness
alone. It cannot possibly be anything else; for the willingness is the
doing required by God. "If there is first a willing mind, it is accepted
according to that a man hath, and not according to that he hath not" (2
Cor. 8:12).
But it is said, if man can be willing of himself, what need of divine
persuasion or influence to make him willing? I might ask, suppose a
man is able but unwilling to pay his debts, what need of any influence
to make him willing? Why, divine influence is needed to make a sinner
willing, or to induce him to will as God directs, just for the same reason
that persuasion, entreaty, argument, or the rod, is needed to make our
children submit their wills to ours. The fact therefore that the Bible
represents the sinner as in some sense dependent upon divine
influence for a right heart, no more implies a proper inability in the
sinner, than the fact that children are dependent for their good
behavior, oftentimes, upon the thorough and timely discipline of their
parents, implies a proper inability in them to obey their parents without
chastisement.
The Bible everywhere, and in every way, assumes the freedom of
the will. This fact stands out in strong relief upon every page of divine
inspiration. But this is only the assumption necessarily made by the
universal intelligence of man. The strong language often found in
scripture upon the subject of man's inability to obey God, is designed
only to represent the strength of his voluntary selfishness and enmity
against God, and never to imply a proper natural inability. It is,
therefore, a gross and most injurious perversion of scripture, as well
as a contradiction of human reason, to deny the natural ability, or
which is the same thing, the natural free agency of man, and to
maintain a proper natural inability to obey God, and the absurd dogma
of a gracious ability to do our duty.
1. The question of ability is one of great practical importance. To
deny the ability of man to obey the commandments of God, is to
represent God as a hard master, as requiring a natural impossibility of
His creatures on pain of eternal damnation. This necessarily begets in
the mind that believes it hard thoughts of God. The intelligence cannot
be satisfied with the justice of such a requisition. In fact, so far as this
error gets possession of the mind and gains assent, just so far it
naturally and necessarily excuses itself for disobedience, or for not
complying with the commandments of God.
2. The moral inability of Edwards is a real natural inability, and so it
has been understood by sinners and professors of religion. When I
entered the ministry, I found the persuasion of an absolute inability on
the part of sinners to repent and believe the gospel, almost universal.
When I urged sinners and professors of religion to do their duty
without delay, I frequently met with stern opposition from sinners,
professors of religion, and ministers. They desired me to say to
sinners, that they could not repent, and that they must wait God's time,
that is, for God to help them. It was common for the classes of
persons just named to ask me, if I thought sinners could be Christians
whenever they pleased, and whether I thought that any class of
persons could repent, believe, and obey God without the strivings and
new-creating power of the Holy Spirit. The church was almost
universally settled down in the belief of a physical moral depravity,
and, of course, in a belief in the necessity of a physical regeneration,
and also of course in the belief, that sinners must wait to be
regenerated by divine power while they were passive. Professors also
must wait to be revived, until God, in mysterious sovereignty, came
and revived them. As to revivals of religion, they were settled down in
the belief to a great extent, that man had no more agency in producing
them than in producing showers of rain. To attempt to effect the
conversion of a sinner, or to promote a revival, was an attempt to take
the work out of the hands of God, to go to work in your own strength,
and to set sinners and professors to do the same. The vigorous use of
means and measures to promote a work of grace, was regarded by
many as impious. It was getting up an excitement of animal feeling,
and wickedly interfering with the prerogative of God. The abominable
dogmas of physical moral depravity, or a sinful constitution, with a
consequent natural, falsely called moral, inability, and the necessity of
a physical and passive regeneration, had chilled the heart of the church,
and lulled sinners into a fatal sleep. This is the natural tendency of
such doctrines.
3. Let it be distinctly understood before we close this subject, that
we do not deny, but strenuously maintain, that the whole plan of
salvation, and all the influences, both providential and spiritual, which
God exerts in the conversion, sanctification, and salvation, of sinners,
is grace from first to last, and that I deny the dogma of a gracious
ability, because it robs God of His glory. It really denies the grace of
the gospel. The abettors of this scheme, in contending for the grace of
the gospel, really deny it. What grace can there be, that should
surprise heaven and earth, and cause "the angels to desire to look into
it" (1 Peter 1:12), in bestowing ability on those who never had any,
and, of course, who never cast away their ability to obey the
requirements of God? According to them all men lost their ability in
Adam, and not by their own act. God still required obedience of them
upon pain of eternal death. Now He might, according to this view of
the subject, just as reasonably command all men, on pain of eternal
death, to fly, or to undo all that Adam had done, or perform any other
natural impossibility, as to command them to be holy, to repent and
believe the gospel. Now, I ask again, what possible grace was there,
or could there be, in His giving them power to obey Him? To have
required the obedience without giving the power had been infinitely
unjust. To admit the assumption, that men had really lost their ability
to obey in Adam, and call this bestowment of ability for which they
contend, grace, is an abuse of language, an absurdity and a denial of
the true grace of the gospel not to be tolerated. I reject the dogma of
a gracious ability, because it involves a denial of the true grace of the
gospel. I maintain that the gospel, with all its influences, including the
gift of the Holy Spirit, to convict, convert, and sanctify the soul, is a
system of grace throughout. But to maintain this, I must also maintain,
that God might justly have required obedience of men without making
these provisions for them. And to maintain the justice of God in
requiring obedience, I must admit and maintain that obedience was
possible to man.
Let it not be said then, that we deny the grace of the glorious
gospel of the blessed God, nor that we deny the reality and necessity
of the influences of the Holy Spirit to convert and sanctify the soul, nor
that this influence is a gracious one; for all these we most strenuously
maintain. But I maintain this upon the ground, that men are able to do
their duty, and that the difficulty does not lie in a proper inability, but in
a voluntary selfishness, in an unwillingness to obey the blessed
gospel. I say again, that I reject the dogma of a gracious ability, as I
understand its abettors to hold it, not because I deny, but solely
because it denies the grace of the gospel. The denial of ability is
really a denial of the possibility of grace in the affair of man's salvation.
I admit the ability of man, and hold that he is able, but utterly unwilling
to obey God. Therefore I consistently hold that all the influences
exerted by God to make him willing, are of free grace abounding
through Christ Jesus.
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