|
CHAPTER III.
MAN'S PRESENT STATE.
The evils consequent on the disobedience of our first parents were not confined to them personally, but have fallen on their descendants also. Adam had been created in the image of God; but when that image had been lost by transgression, he begat a son in his own likeness.1 So all his descendants since have borne the image of the earthly, fallen progenitor, and have been like him, not only in character, but in condition. The subject will be examined further in the following sections.
SECTION I.--ACTUAL SIN.
MEN OF ALL AGES AND NATIONS, HAVE, IN
THEIR ACTIONS, VIOLATED THE LAW OF GOD.2
The sacred volume, in describing the state of the world before the flood, says that
"the earth was filled with violence."3
The history of the period before the flood is very brief; yet we find, in the beginning of
it, the murder of Abel by this brother;4
in the progress of it, the bigamy of Lamech,5
and the murder which he confessed to his wives; and, in the close of it, this account of
the complete corruption of the earth, and the general prevalence of violence. The flood
was sent in wrath for the transgressions of men; but its waters did not cleanse the earth
from sin. Iniquities prevailed after the flood, as they had done before; and the condition
of mankind, in all nations, was such as Paul has described in the first chapter of his
Epistle to the Romans. The children of Abraham were separated from the rest of mankind,
and made a peculiar people to God; but, notwithstanding the religious advantages which
they enjoyed, their history is little else than a record of rebellions against God; and
judgments inflicted on them for their provocations. So common is wickedness in the earth,
that it is called "the course of this world,"6 and it is said, "the whole world lieth in
wickedness."7
From this universal corruption no man is exempt. "There is no man which
sinneth not."8 All whom the
Spirit of God brings to a knowledge of themselves confess, "In many things we offend
all;"9 and they pray,
"Forgive us our sins."10 If
others make no confessions of sin, and no petitions for pardon, it is because of the
blindness and hardness of their hearts.
He who looks into the state of society around him, finds proof of man's wickedness.
Crimes abound everywhere; and the earth is filled with violence, as it was of old. Laws
restrain the crimes and violence of men; but the very necessity of laws demonstrates the
wickedness of mankind. War and oppression make up, in great measure, the history of our
race; and innumerable deeds of wickedness, which never find a place in the historic
record, are written in God's book of remembrance, and will be brought to light in that
day, when men shall be judged according to the deeds done in the body.
The actual transgressions of men consist in doing what God has forbidden, and in
leaving undone what he has commanded. The latter are called sins of omission; the former,
sins of commission. With both these kinds of transgression all men are more or less
chargeable. They who abstain from grosser crimes have, nevertheless, committed many sins,
and omitted many duties. But sin, in the overt act, constitutes only a very small part of
man's sinfulness, as will appear in the next section.
SECTION II.--DEPRAVITY.
ALL MEN ARE BY NATURE TOTALLY DEPRAVED.11
The depravity which we have to lament in mankind, respects their principles of
action as moral beings. As merely sentient beings, external objects produce on them the
proper effects; and, as rational beings, they draw conclusions in science with
correctness. The disease and debility which are the consequence of moral evil, may impair
both sense and reason; but we cannot affirm of these powers that they are totally
depraved. Moral depravity shows itself in outward acts of transgression; but, atrocious as
these often are, it is chiefly in the heart that God beholds and hates it. "God saw
that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the
thoughts of his heart was only evil continually."12 In the heart it was that God saw the great
wickedness of the earth. The heart is a metaphorical term, denoting those mental
affections which are the principles or beginnings of action. Here depravity exists at the
very fountain from which all human action flows.
The depravity of man is total. We do not mean by this that his conduct is as bad as
it could be, or that no amiable affections have a place in his heart. The young man who
addressed our Redeemer with most respectful inquiry how to attain eternal life, appears to
have been unconverted, yet he possessed so amiable qualities that it is recorded,
"Jesus, beholding him, loved him."13
The goodness of God is great, even to the unthankful and evil; and he has been pleased to
implant natural affections in hearts which desire not to retain him in their knowledge,
and so to balance the propensities, even where there is no holiness, that life and human
society have many enjoyments. When our first parents permitted natural desire to prevail
over the authority of God, human depravity began to flow, and what it was at the
fountain-head, it has been in all the streams that have spread through the earth. Men seek
good at their own choice, and walk in their own ways, regardless of the authority of God.
The love of God is dethroned from the heart, and therefore the grand principle of morality
is wanting, and no true morality exists. A total absence of that by which the actions
should be controlled and directed, is total depravity. Hence the strong language of
Scripture, already quoted, is properly descriptive of human nature in its fallen state;
"Every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually."
Human depravity is universal. In heathen nations, men did not delight to retain God
in their knowledge, and their very religion became filled with abominable rites. In lands
blessed with the light of revelation, men love darkness rather than light, and give
melancholy proof that they have not the love of God in them. The rich and poor, the
learned and the unlearned, the young and the old, all give evidence that, to serve and
please God, is not their chief delight, their meat and their drink. A few, converted by
divine grace, differ from the rest of mankind, and esteem it their pleasure and honor to
obey God; but these very men testify that they are like other men. "Such were some of
you; but ye are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified, in the mane of the
Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God."14
"I know that in me, that is, in my flesh, dwelleth no good thing."15
Depravity is natural to man; it is born with him, and not acquired in the progress
of life. It is not to be ascribed to evil habit, or evil example. Evil habits are formed
by evil doing; and evil doing would not be, if there were no evil propensity. Evil example
would not everywhere exist, if human nature were not everywhere corrupt; and the tendency
to follow evil example would not be so common, and so much to be guarded against, if it
were not natural to man. The Scriptures clearly teach this doctrine. "Behold, I was
shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me."16 The psalmist did not mean to charge his mother
with crime in these his humble confessions, but manifestly designs them to be an
acknowledgment that his depravity was in-woven in his nature, and bore date from the very
origin of his being. The Saviour taught, that which is born of the flesh, is flesh.17 The term flesh, which is here
opposed to spirit, signifies, as it does in other places, our depraved nature. It traces
human depravity up to our very birth.
As every individual of our race is born of depraved parents, and brings depravity
with him into the world, we are led to conceive of it as propagated from parent to child.
This accords with the representations of Scripture; "Adam begat a son in his own
likeness."18 It accords also
with analogies to which we are familiar.
Plants and animals propagate their like; diseases are often hereditary, and
peculiarities of temper and mind by which parents were distinguished, often appear in
their children. In our proneness to find fault with God's arrangements, we ask, why was
the fallen nature of Adam propagated, rather than the original nature which he received
from the hand of God.. But we might as well complain that the ascent from the state of sin
to that of innocence, is not as easy as the descent was found to be. Virtue fits the
creatures of God for society, and for its most beautiful exhibitions opportunity is
presented in the social relations. All these give one creature an influence over another,
according to the character of the relation between them. Even angels, who were created
independent of each other, had an influence on each other, so that the chief apostate in
the great rebellion led followers after him. When man was created, it appeared good, in
the view of Infinite Wisdom, to institute closer social relations than subsisted among
angels. From these resulted a more extend influence than was known in angelic ranks. Now,
if Adam had transmitted his original nature, as created by God, the effect would have been
the same as if the son had been immediately created by the divine hand, and the
peculiarity designed to distinguish the human race would have been virtually abolished.
Another complaint which sometimes rises in our murmuring minds is, that pious men
do not propagate their piety, but their natural depravity. We might as well complain that
men of great scientific attainments do not transmit their knowledge to their children as a
natural inheritance. This complaint would have even greater appearance of propriety, for
their attainments are, in a sense, their own; but whatever of holiness is found in man, is
not a natural endowment or attainment, but a special gift of divine grace.
When we have discovered that the propagation of depravity in the human race accords
the analogies found in nature, our minds seem to obtain relief; but, in reality, the
matter has not been explained. Nature is not some superior rule to which God was compelled
to conform, but it is an institution of his own, and cannot be right in the whole, if its
parts are not right. If the propagation of human depravity is not in itself right, all the
analogies of nature could not make it so. The true benefit of tracing these analogies is,
that we may perceive all the arrangements to be from the same divine mind, and may the
more reverently bow our judgment to the decision of Infinite Wisdom, and hush our murmurs
into the more profound silence.
Our natural inquisitiveness takes occasion from this subject to indulge in
unprofitable speculations. As the depravity which is propagated belongs more properly to
the soul than to the material frame, we ask whether the soul is propagated. Some have
preferred to consider the soul as a production immediately proceeding from the creating
power of God. They suppose this to be intended when the Scriptures say, that he formeth
the spirit of man within him.19
They regard the body as all that is propagated, and suppose the Creator to form a spirit
within it, as he breathed the spirit of life into the inanimate body of Adam, when he
became a living soul. They view propagation as belonging to the material part of our
nature, and consider it impossible, in the nature of things, that this should generate an
immaterial spirit. The latter argument, which is merely philosophical, has to struggle
with the fact that all animals generate something more than mere matter, in the powers
with which they are endowed, and which bear a strong resemblance, in many respects, to the
mental endowments of man. The preceding argument, from Scripture, fails in this, that God
is equally said to form the body of the child in the womb of the mother,20 and yet we never regard that body as a
production of immediate creation. It is true that the body of Adam was lifeless for a
time; but it was not, as lifeless, that be begat a son in his likeness. We would not
argue, from this case, that all life, whether in plants or animals, is a production of
immediate creation, and not of propagation; and it does not appear that a more valid
argument can be deduced from it, to prove the immediate creation of every human soul.
After all, what does the question amount to? If the preservation of all things is strictly
a perpetual creation, the distinction is wholly annihilated; for the soul is, at the first
moment of its being, and at every subsequent moment throughout its whole existence, an
immediate creation. But if this view be not admitted, it is still true that preservation
is as dependent on the efficacious will of God, as creation. God willed that the soul of
Adam should propagate a son, and that this son should, like the father, have both a soul
and a body. The progeny came into being according to the will of God. This work differs
from the former, in that it is not singular, but conforms to what we call a law of nature;
but nature's laws have no efficacy in themselves; and when we attribute the work to the
efficacious will of God, it is a mere question of classification, whether we refer it to
creation or Providence.
An objection to the doctrine of natural depravity is founded on the fact, that
Jesus referred to little children, as examples for is disciples. This fact, however, will
not authorize the inference, that little children are not depraved. The same teacher said
to his disciples, "Be ye wise as serpents, and harmless as doves."21 As something may exist, proper to
be imitated in animals which have no moral character, and even in serpents,
notwithstanding their venom, so, something for imitation could be pointed out in children,
notwithstanding their depravity. Another objection is drawn from the statement of
Scripture, concerning children that had not done either good or evil.22 But the doctrine does not affirm that all have
committed overt acts of transgression. It refers to the first spring of action in the
heart; and a fountain may be corrupt, before it has sent forth streams, as truly as
afterwards. No objection, worthy of consideration, can be drawn from Paul's statement,
that the children of the Corinthian Christians were holy;23 for this manifestly relates to their fitness for
familiar intercourse.
Vain it will be, to receive the doctrine of human depravity into our creed, if it
is not received into our hearts. A thorough conviction of our total depravity is necessary
to humble us before God, and drive us to the fountain opened for sin and uncleanness. No
genuine Christian experience can exist, where this is not felt and operative.
SECTION III.--CONDEMNATION.
ALL MEN ARE BORN UNDER THE JUST
CONDEMNATION OF GOD.24
The depravity of mankind unfits them for the favor and enjoyment of God; and that
separation from him, in which the death of the soul consists, would be the necessary
result, even if no declaration to that effect were declared. The voice of Providence
loudly declares it. The pain with which our first breath is drawn; the sickness and
suffering which attend on the cradle; the sorrows and toils of our best years; the
infirmities of age; and lastly death, which, if it does not terminate our course earlier,
after threatening us at every step, and keeping us all our life-time in bondage, finally
triumphs over us; all these proclaim, in language not to be misunderstood, that we are
under the displeasure of God. The curse of God rests on the very ground that we tread; and
his wrath is poured out on our race in the wars, famines, and pestilence, with which the
nations are often visited. The sentence is pronounced by the voice of conscience
within us, which is to us as the voice of God; "for if our heart condemn us, God is
greater than our heart, and knoweth all things."25 God speaks in his holy word, proclaiming
the sentence; "Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are
written in the book of the law to do them."26
"What things the law saith, it saith to them who are under the law, that every mouth
may be stopped, and all the world become guilty before God."27 The view which is here presented of man's
condition, relates not merely to his transgressions, but to his natural state, Hence it is
said, "And were by nature, the children of wrath."28
These manifestations of God's displeasure are of early date, commencing with the
first woes of mankind. They may be traced to the first sentence pronounced on our guilty
parents, when they were expelled from Eden. Paul has explained, that we were all included
in this sentence, and this is the proper date of our condemnation. "By the offence of
one, judgment came upon all men to condemnation."29 From that hour, the descendants of Adam,
their habitation, their employments, and their enjoyments, have all been under the curse.
Blessings have, indeed, been poured out in rich profusion on our guilty race; but our very
basket and store have been cursed, and the cup of mercies has been mingled with
bitterness. The forbearance and long-suffering of God are manifested; but the hand of his
wrath is uplifted.
The condemnation under which we are born is just. It is God's sentence; and all his
judgments are righteous. It is not unusual for those who are condemned by human laws, to
complain of their sentence; and we show our want of reconciliation to the justice of God,
by our hard thoughts of God, when we either suffer or fear his displeasure against us.
Our rebellious hearts deny the justice of our condemnation, on the ground that God
made us, and not we ourselves. If he did not create our souls directly with depraved
propensities, he brought them into being, in circumstances which made their depravity
certain. He gave us existence at his own pleasure; and over the circumstances of our
origin we had no manner of control. It is therefore unjust, says the carnal heart, to
condemn and punish us, for the sinful propensities which we bring with us into the world,
or for the sinful deeds which naturally and necessarily proceed from them. In this manner,
we are prone to transfer the blame of our iniquities from ourselves to our Maker. So did
Adam; "The woman whom thou gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and
I did eat,"30 and so do all
his descendants. Every one is probably conscious that such reasonings have at some time
had a place in his mind; and that it is difficult to exclude them wholly. On this account,
they need a full and sober examination.
A consideration which ought to silence our accusing thoughts of God, is, that
however much we may condemn him, we do not thereby acquit ourselves. If we admit that Adam
would not have eaten the forbidden fruit had not God given him a wife; and if we even
admit that God was to blame for giving him a wife who might become his tempter: still this
does not exculpate Adam. His wife was certainly to blame for tempting him; and yet the
guilt of his transgression is not the less on that account. Every agent is responsible for
himself. Distributive justice, which gives to every man his due, has no other rule, and
can have no other. Human courts do not excuse culprits, because of the corrupting
influences which have led them to violate the law. The law takes direct cognizance of the
agent and his deed. This accords with the common sense of mankind. So divine justice
condemns the wicked man, and cannot do otherwise than condemn him, however he may have
become wicked, and whoever else may be to blame for his being so. This principle we should
hold fast in our reasonings on that subject.
A difficulty in holding fast the principle just laid down, and applying it steadily
to the case, arises from the circumstance that the Judge by whom we are condemned is also
our Creator. To free our thoughts from embarrassment on this account, let us suppose the
case were otherwise. Let us imagine that, after "the Sons of God had shouted for
joy," at seeing the foundations of the earth laid, and its finished surface covered
with verdure and beauty, the Most High was pleased to appoint one of this joyful choir to
the honorable service of populating this new world, and to confer on him creative power
for this purpose. Let us imagine that, just as this chosen agent was proceeding to execute
his commission, he conceived the thought of making himself the god of the world he was
about to people; and, for this purpose, filled it with unholy inhabitants, willing to join
him in rebellion against the Supreme Ruler. This case, though merely imaginary, will serve
to test the principle under consideration; and the question which it presents for
adjudication, is, how, according to the rule of eternal and immutable justice, ought this
world of rebels to be treated.
Perhaps it will be said, that the agent who abused the creative power conferred on
him ought to be punished, and that the creatures that he had brought into being ought to
be annihilated. But this is not the plea which is set up for the human race. The plea
which the sons of Adam present before the Judge of the earth, is, not that we ought to be
annihilated, but that we ought not to be condemned and punished; this new order of
creatures might object to annihilation, and think themselves as much entitled to life and
impunity as we do. They might say, that annihilation is only a scheme to get the question
out of court, and to free the Judge from difficulty; but they might insist on right, and
claim, as they were created immortal by the commission granted to him by whom they were
made, they have a right to immortality; and that this immortality, since their depravity
is natural to them, ought to be free from all punishment. Now, the Judge might, for wise
reasons, not chose to evade the responsibility of adjudicating the case; What, then, would
the righteous sentence be? Even to annihilate them against their will, would be a
punishment; that ought not to be inflicted, if the plea not guilty, because depravity is
natural, can be sustained. The plea before on earthly judge would not stand a moment. Who
could bear that a criminal should be acquitted and turned loose on the community, because
he was born wicked, and grown up wicked, and it was as natural for him to commit theft,
murder, and all manner of crimes, as it was to breathe? Such a plea, which the justice of
men will not admit, the justice of God will not admit. The new order of creatures must be
treated as they deserve; and Infinite Wisdom, instead of annihilating them, must adopt
some other expedient, to counteract the diabolical intentions of the agent that created
them.
The case which has been supposed is not so wholly imaginary as at first view it may
have appeared. Though it is not true that an angel of light was commissioned to create a
population for the earth, something else was done which, for all the purposes of the
present discussion, amounts to the same. Adam and Eve, while yet in innocence, were
commissioned to procreate a race of immortals, that should people the new world. This
power, Satan, ambitious of divine honor, availed himself of to make himself the god of the
world. By temptation he gained over the first pair to his design; and so completely is the
procreating power with which they were invested, turned to his account, that the offspring
of it are called the "children of the devil."31 So complete is his control of them, that he is
called "the spirit that worketh in the children of disobedience,"32 and they "are taken captive by him at his
will;"33 and the death which
comes on them for disobedience is attributed to his power: "That through death he
might destroy him that had the power of death, that is the devil."34 The imaginary case, therefore, is substantially
our own; and, if rebellion against God, subserviency to Satan, and confederacy with him to
overthrow the government of the King Eternal, cannot be justified at the tribunal of
divine justice, we are verily guilty, and justly condemned.
But our accusing thoughts of God are suppressed with difficulty. We have seen that
the whole world is guilty before him; and yet every mouth is not stopped. We still
entertain hard thoughts, and vent hard words against him; and the thing formed says to him
that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?35
Of such impiety it becomes us to beware. We should feel that our depravity is our own,
however we came by it; that it renders us wholly unfit for the society and enjoyments of
the holy place where God dwells, and for his favor, service, and communion; and that it
ought to be loathsome in our own view, and must be so in the view of the holy God. If our
own hearts condemn it, we shall be ready to admit, without complaint, that God also
condemns it. And what can we say against God in the matter? What wrong has he done? His
distributive justice does no wrong in treating the unholy according to their character. If
he has done any wrong, it must relate to the department of public justice, which, as
formerly explained, seeks the greatest good, and is the same as universal benevolence.
Now, who will say that God's plan will not produce the greatest good? Who is wiser and
better than God, to teach him a preferable way? When Satan gained his conquest over our
first parents, God could have confined him at once in the pit, and inflicted on him the
full torment yet in store for him; and he might have annihilated the whole race of man in
the original pair. This would have terminated the difficulty by an act of power; but who
will affirm that it would have been wisest or best? God would have appeared disappointed
and defeated. Distributive justice would have appeared relieved rather than developed.
Satan triumphed by artifice, and God has chosen to defeat him by the counsel of his
wisdom. Satan exalted himself to dominion over the world; God chose to overcome him, not
by power, but by humiliation. Satan gained his success by means of the first Adam; God, in
the second Adam, bruised the serpent's head. Satan, by his success, gained the power of
death; God, by death, the death of Jesus Christ, has destroyed him and his power.36 Who will dare affirm that God's way
is not best? It becomes us to feel assured, whatever darkness may yet remain on this
subject, that God would not have given up his Son to free us from condemnation, if that
condemnation had not been just; and that he would not have made so great a gift, so costly
a sacrifice, if the scheme had not been worthy of his infinite wisdom; or if some other,
by which the sacrifice might have been spared, would have been preferable.
When the question has been settled, and the principle established, that men may be
held responsible for their own sins, without inquiring how they became sinners, a
difficulty still remains as to the date of the condemnation under which we all lie, and
the ground of the original sentence. When the mind becomes perplexed with subtle
reasonings, it is well to keep facts steadily in view, and to hold fast the plain
testimony of inspired truth. It is expressly said, in the unerring word, "By the
offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation;" and again, "The
judgment was by one offence to condemnation."37
It is here clearly taught that one judgment, one sentence, included all men, and that this
judgment was made up and the sentence pronounced on one offence of one man. With this
express teaching of Scripture facts agree. The indications of God's displeasure against
the race are not postponed until each individual has been born into the world. Every
mother is not carried back to Eden before she brings forth a son, that he may, in his own
person, receive the sentence of condemnation, be denied access to the tree of life, driven
from the garden of delights, and doomed to sorrow, toil, and death. Whatever our
reasonings may say on the subject, it is fully ascertained to be the will of God, before
an individual is born into the world, that, when born, he shall be in the condition in
which the curse left the father of the race. The Bible, and the voice of Nature, speak
alike on this point; and if our reasonings say that he Author of Nature and the Bible has
done wrong, we should suspect that we have erred in our inferences, or in the premises
from which they are drawn. And if it could be shown that a separate sentence is pronounced
on each individual as he comes into the world, his condition would be no better. Being
depraved by nature, we are "by nature children of wrath."38 Wrath is still our inheritance; and if the
antiquity of the sentence which appointed it be admitted, the measure of that wrath is not
thereby increased, nor the endurance of it made earlier. As to these results, the question
is one of no importance whatever. Its relation, as exhibited in Scripture, to the doctrine
of justification by the obedience of Christ, constitutes its chief claim to our careful
consideration.
The sentence, "Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return," was
pronounced on Adam in the singular number; yet he appears to stand under this sentence as
the representative of his descendants, on all of whom the sentence takes effect. So Eve
was addressed in the singular number, "In sorrow shalt thou bring forth
children;" but she stood, in this sentence, as the representative of all her
daughters, on whom this penalty falls. As the natural parents, Adam and Eve stood together
as the head of the race; but there was a peculiar sense in which that headship pertained
to Adam. Though Eve was first in the transgression, it is not said by one woman, but
"by one man sin entered into the world." The judgment was not by the two
offences of the two natural parents of the race, but by one offence of the one man; the
previous offence of the woman being left out of the account. In this headship Adam is
contrasted with Christ, being called "the figure of him that was to come."39 This comparison is further brought
to view in 1 Cor. xv. 45, 47, where Christ is called the second Adam; and in verse 22,
where it is said, "As in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made
alive." On Adam, who was first formed, the responsibility of peopling the new world
with a race of holy immortals specially rested; and, though Satan artfully directed his
first assault against the woman, his scheme would have failed had not Adam been gained
over to his interest. This divinely appointed headship of Adam made his disobedience the
turning point on which the future condition of his posterity depended; and Paul takes
occasion from this to illustrate the dependence of believers on the obedience of the
second Adam, for justification and life.
To this view it is objected, that, according to the principles of justice, the
guilt of one man cannot be transferred to another, and no man can be justly condemned for
that of which it is impossible for him to repent. No man living can repent of Adam's sin,
and the guilt of Adam's sin cannot justly be imputed to any other person.
What are here so confidently assumed as axioms, may well be called in question. We
must believe the Scriptures, when they say, "The Lord hath laid on him the iniquity
of us all."40 "He bore
our sin in his own body on the tree."41
And we know that men cannot repent of deeds which they have wholly forgotten, and yet they
are responsible for them. But there is a much shorter way of getting at this question,
than by a tedious examination of these assumed axioms. No man understands that the guilt
of Adam was transferred. It still remained his, and was closely and inseparably bound
about him. But every one knows that there may be union and confederacy in crime. In
commercial affairs, if twenty men owe one hundred dollars, each may pay five dollars, and
obligation of the whole will be cancelled. But in morals, if twenty subjects confederate
to assassinate their king, each one is guilty of the whole crime, because each one has the
full intention of it. Only one of the band may plunge the dagger to the monarch's heart;
but his crime may be justly imputed to them all, though his guilt may not be transferred
to another. Now, we may inquire, whether such union does not exist between Adam and his
descendants, as justifies the imputation of his sin to them; or, in comparing Adam and
Christ as public heads, has, in the fifth chapter of Romans, pointed out disagreements as
well as agreements. Death comes from the disobedience of the one; and life from the
obedience of the other; and in Rom. vi. 23, he teaches that there is an importance
difference as to the mode in which these results follow. Death is wages, a thing deserved;
life is a gift. The benefits of righteousness and life, received from Christ, are by
faith; and "It is of faith, that it might be by grace."42 The condemnation and death which are from Adam,
are not gratuitous and arbitrary, but come on us justly. We inquire, then, whether there
is such a connection between Adam and his descendant, as renders the imputation of his sin
to them, an act of justice.
1. There is a moral union between Adam and his descendants. His disobedience
unfurled the banner of rebellion, and we all rally around it. We approved the deed of our
father, and take arms in maintaining the war against heaven, which his disobedience
proclaimed. He is the chief in this conspiracy of treason, but we are all accessories. As
to the outward act, the eating of the forbidden fruit, we did not commit it; but,
regarding it as a declaration of independence and revolt, we have made it our own, and it
may be as justly set to our account, as if we had personally committed the deed. In this
view, if we cannot, strictly speaking, repent of Adam's sin, we may most cordially
disapprove the whole revolt from God, in which our race is engaged; may most bitterly
regret that it was ever commenced; and may take guilt and shame to ourselves in deep
humiliation before God, that we have been engaged in it. With such feelings pervading our
hearts, the doctrine that Adam's sin is imputed to us, will not be rejected as
inconsistent with justice. If we cannot, strictly speaking, repent of it, we may at least
take the guilt of it to ourselves, in a sense which perfectly accords with the feelings of
true penitence; and when the Holy Spirit has taught us to impute it to ourselves, we shall
not complain that God imputes it.
2. There is a natural union between Adam and his descendants. He is their natural
parent; and, because of this relation, they inherit a depraved nature. Our moral union
with him renders our condemnation just, from the moment we possess separate existence,
because of our personal depravity; and our natural union with him rendered it proper, that
our condemnation should be included in the general sentence.
3. There is a federal union between Adam and his descendants. We have before seen
that a covenant, not in the common, but the Scripture sense of the term, was made with
Adam. This covenant, this arrangement or constitution of things, made the future character
and condition of his descendants dependent on his obedience. He was, in this respect,
their federal head. Some maintain that the covenant with Adam was the covenant of nature,
and that there was no federal headship, different from the natural headship which belonged
to him as the first parent. Happily for us, a decision of this question is not
indispensable to our present discussion. The natural and moral union which we have already
considered, is a just ground for the divine sentence against the whole race, in the person
of their first parent; but a further examination of this question may be conducive to a
better understanding of the subject.
Since nature is not something different from God operating, it cannot be of much
importance to determine how much of the transaction with Adam was natural, and how much
beyond the proper province of nature. The revelation of God's will in the garden was as
much above nature, as the subsequent revelation from Sinai; and so also was the judgment
pronounced after the transgression. But the including of children with their parents, in
the penalty inflicted for the sins of their parents, is seen in the providence of God,
both in ordinary and extraordinary dispensations. Every one knows that poverty and
suffering are brought on children by the intemperance and other crimes of their parents.
The evils of war, famine, and pestilence, judgments inflicted for the sins of men, fall on
children as well as their parents. In the deluge, and the burning of Sodom, children were
destroyed with their parents. On this point, the word of God agrees with his providence.
We are sometimes jealous for the Lord's reputation, and are afraid to speak of his
visiting the sins of parents on their children, but we are more cautious than the Lord
himself. He proclaimed from Sinai, with his own voice, and recorded in stone with his own
finger, "I, the Lord thy God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers
upon the children, unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me."43 And when he showed his glory to
Moses, and proclaimed his name, instead of being jealous to conceal this fact, he was
jealous rather to make it known; "Visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the
children."44
God's solemn declarations on this point not only explain his providence, but, in
the most impressive manner, exhibit the great responsibility of parents. To bring an
immortal into being, and to form his character for time and eternity, is a responsibility
most momentous. This responsibility devolves on men, and it is proper they should feel it.
To awaken them to a sense of it, God addresses them in the solemn language which has been
quoted.
While the Scriptures stir up parents to a sense of their responsibility, they leave
to children no pretext with which to cover their iniquities. Some have said, "the
Lord's ways are not equal. Our fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children's teeth
are set on edge."45 To these
complainers God said, "Behold all souls are mine; as the soul of the father, so also
the soul of the son is mine; the soul that sinneth, it shall die."46 This is not a law repealing the decalogue, but
is to be explained in harmony with it. The sins of parents affect both the character and
the condition of their children, and for all this they are responsible; but the condition
of the children is not worse than their character, and therefore the Lord's ways are
equal, and their complaints against him groundless.
The case of Adam differed from that of all fathers since. These may transmit
peculiar tempers and propensities, and may influence their children by instruction and
example, but they cannot bring them into the world free from the depravity and
condemnation which the transgression of Adam brings upon them. But, though the
responsibility on Adam was greater, it is still true, as in the other cases, that his
descendants are responsible for themselves, and not one of them will suffer beyond the
demerit of his personal character. Such is the union between Adam and his descendants,
that depravity and condemnation pass from him to them, not separately, but as one
inheritance. This sin, for which they suffer, is their own as well as his, and it is
imputed to them because it belongs to them--is justly theirs.
After all the explanations that have been made, it may be that our hearts still
accuse God, and secretly say that, had we been in his stead, we should have dealt more
kindly with the human race than he has done. These accusations of God, he hears; these
most secret whispers of the heart, he fully understands. What impiety does he see therein!
That we, who know so little of his ways, should presume to be wiser or better than he, is
daring impiety; and if nothing else will convince us that we deserve the wrath of God, let
this impiety suffice. Let us accuse no more, but lay our hands on our mouths, and in deep
silence before him, confess our guilt.
SECTION IV.--HELPLESSNESS
MEN ARE UNABLE TO SAVE THEMSELVES.47
The inability of men to save themselves,
respects both their condemnation and their depravity.
1. Men are unable to free themselves from condemnation.
The justice by which we are all condemned is immutable. It is an attribute in the
nature of God, who is not only the first cause of all things, but the very standard of all
perfection. When we inquire whether God's ways are right, we have only to ask whether they
correspond with his own perfections, for there is not higher standard by which they may be
tried. As the perfections of God are immutable, the standard of right is immutable. A
change in the law by which we are condemned is therefore impossible. God has sometimes,
from regard to the peculiar circumstances of some men, given special commands to them,
which have not been obligatory on all; but the obligation to obey him, whatever his
commands may be, is universal and perpetual, and no act of disobedience can ever by
justified under his righteous government.
The sentence of condemnation has been duly pronounced. It was not a rash decision,
needing to be revised. The Omniscient Judge knew well all the facts in the case, all the
circumstances which may be pleaded in extenuation, all the effects of his decision on us,
and all the bearings of it on his own character and government. His determination to
create the world was not made with greater deliberation, or on surer ground; and we may as
soon expect him to annihilate all the creatures that he has made, as to reverse the
sentence by which we are condemned.
The Scriptures affirm, that by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be
justified.48 The law requires
perfect and perpetual obedience, and can be satisfied with nothing less. Law is converted
into mere advice, when its requirements are not obligatory. To claim the privilege of
violating the law, or coming short of its requirements, is to claim, so far, exemption
from its authority, and therefore from the moral government of God. Such exemption divine
justice will not allow. Its language is, "Cursed is every one that continueth not in
all things which are written in the book of the law to do them.49 "What things the law saith, it saith to
them who are under the law, that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world become
guilty before God."50 The view
which is here presented of man's condition, relates not merely to his transgressions, but
to his natural state. Hence it is said, "And were by nature the children of
wrath."51 So much has God the
maintenance of his law at heart, that he who was in the bosom of the father, and well
understood all his counsels, has with solemnity assured us; "Verily I say unto you,
till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law till
all be fulfilled."52
There is a method of rescue from condemnation; but it is not one of man's devising
or executing. To effect it requires a display of wisdom, power and love, infinitely beyond
the highest efforts of man. It is God's work, challenging the admiration of angels, and
demanding gratitude, praise, and joyful acceptance from every human being.
2. Men are unable to free themselves from depravity.
The first element of this inability is seen in the fact that men lack the necessary
disposition. By nature we love darkness rather than light, sin rather than holiness. To be
free from depravity is to be holy, and no man can desire holiness or perfect conformity to
the law of God, who does not delight in that law. But experience and Scripture unite in
teaching us that the carnal mind is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be.53 The cause of this exists in the
fact, that the carnal mind is enmity against God. Men love the ways of transgression, and
desire not the knowledge of God's ways; and therefore, they lack the disposition necessary
to free themselves from depravity, and render themselves strictly conformed to the law of
God.
Another element which renders the inability complete, is, that if men had the
disposition, they have not the power. Men have the power to perform such external acts as
the law of God requires of them. If they were wholly disposed to perform such acts, and
failed through mere physical inability, that inability would be a valid excuse. God
accepteth according to what a man hath.54
We are commanded not to forsake the assembling of ourselves together; but the man who is
fastened to his bed by palsy is not required to meet in the house of God. Depravity does
not consist in external acts, but belongs to the heart; and the affections of the heart
are not subject to volition, as the motions of the limbs are. Hence the Apostle says,
"Ye cannot do the things that ye would."55
Every converted man knows the meaning of this language. The current of depraved affections
in our hearts, which has been flowing in the wrong direction from the beginning of our
being, and gathering strength by the power of habit, does not stop at our bidding. A
volition cannot stop it with as much ease as when it moves a finger. If any man thinks he
has the power to be holy at will, let him try it, and he will find his mistake.
The inability last described, which is usually called moral, must be distinguished
carefully from that physical inability which excuses outward acts. Physical inability
would prevent the action, even if the whole heart were bent on performing it. It excuses
the failure to act; but it will not excuse a corrupt or a divided heart. The paralytic may
be excused for not attending at the house of God; but he is not excused for preferring to
be absent, or for possessing no longing for the courts of the Lord. The moral inability of
men consists in having either a divided heart, or a heart fully set in them to do evil.
The former every converted man laments, and blames himself for; and the latter is
descriptive of unconverted or natural men. This includes the lack, both of disposition and
power, and renders the inability complete. This inability is not an excuse for the
depravity, but is the depravity itself, in its full influence over all the powers of the
soul.
The Scripture representations of men's inability are exceedingly strong. They are
said to be without strength,56
captives,57 in bondage,58 asleep,59 dead,60
&c. The act by which they are delivered from the natural state, is called
regeneration, quickening or giving life, renewing, resurrection, translation, creation;
and it is directly ascribed to the power of God, the power that called light out of
darkness, and raised up Christ from the dead.
Our views concerning our character and condition by nature are wholly incorrect, if
we imagine that a little work, which we can effect at pleasure, will set all right.
Thousands postpone the concerns of the soul from this vain imagination. A true sense of
our inability would drive us to him who is able to save.
1 Gen. v. 3.
2 Rom. iii. 9--19; 1 John v. 19; Eph. ii. 2, 3.
3 Gen. vi. 11.
4 Gen. iv. 8.
5 Gen. iv. 19--23.
6 Eph. ii.2.
7 1 John v. 19.
8 2 Ch. vi. 36.
9 James iii. 2.
10 Luke xi. 4.
11 Gen. vi. 5; viii. 21; Ps. xiv. 2, 3; li. 5; Rom. i. 21--25; iii. 9--23; vi. 17, viii. 5, 6, 7, 8; Eph. ii. 1; 1 John v. 19.
12 Gen. vi. 5.
13 Mark x. 21.
14 1 Cor. vi. 11.
15 Rom. vii. 18.
16 Ps. li. 5
17 John iii. 6.
18 Gen. v. 3.
19 Zech. xii. 1.
20 Job xxxi. 15; Is. xliv. 2.
21 Matt. x. 16.
22 Rom. ix. 11.
23 1 Cor. vii. 14.
24 Ps. vii. 11; Mark xvi. 16; John iii. 36; Rom. i. 18. ii. 5, 6; iii. 19; v. 12--21.
25 1 John iii. 20.
26 Gal. iii. 10.
27 Rom. iii. 19.
28 Eph. ii. 3.
29 Rom. v. 18.
30 Gen. iii.12.
31 1 John iii. 10; John viii. 44.
32 Eph. ii. 2.
33 2 Tim. ii. 26.
34 Heb. ii. 14.
35 Rom. ix. 20.
36 Heb. ii. 14.
37 Rom. v. 16, 18.
38 Eph. ii. 3.
39 Rom. v. 14.
40 Is. liii. 6.
41 1 Pet. ii. 24.
42 Rom. iv. 16.
43 Ex. xx. 5.
44 Ex. xxxiv. 7.
45 Ez. xviii. 2.
46 Ezek. xviii. 4.
47 Jer. xiii. 23; John iii. 3; vi. 44; Rom. iii. 19, 20; viii. 7,8; Gal. iii. 10; Heb. x. 4; xii. 14.
48 Rom. iii. 20.
49 Gal. iii. 10.
50 Rom. iii. 19.
51 Eph. ii. 3.
52 Matt. v. 18.
53 Rom. viii. 7.
54 2 Cor. viii. 12.
55 Gal. v. 17.
56 Rom. v. 6.
57 2 Tim. ii. 26.
58 2 Pet. ii. 19; Rom vi. 16, 17.
59 1 Thes. v. 6.
60 Eph. v. 14; Col. ii. 13.
The Reformed Reader Home Page
Copyright 1999, The Reformed Reader, All Rights Reserved |