Charles G. Finney's
Systematic Theology
LECTURE 30
EVIDENCES
OF REGENERATION
Wherein saints and sinners must differ.
1. Let it be distinctly remembered, that all unregenerate persons,
without exception, have one heart, that is, they are selfish. This is their whole
character. They are universally and only devoted to self-gratification. Their unregenerate
heart consists in this selfish disposition, or in this selfish choice. This choice is the
foundation of, and the reason for, all their activity. One and the same ultimate reason
actuates them in all they do, and in all they omit, and that reason is either presently or
remotely, directly or indirectly, to gratify themselves.
2. The regenerate heart is disinterested benevolence. In other words, it
is love to God and our neighbor. All regenerate hearts are precisely similar. All true
saints, whenever they have truly the heart of the saints of God, are actuated by one and
the same motive. They have only one ultimate reason for all they do, and suffer, or omit.
They have one ultimate intention, one end. They live for one and the same object, and that
is the same end for which God lives.
3. The saint is governed by reason, the law of God, or the moral law; in
other words still, the law of disinterested and universal benevolence is His law. This law
is not only revealed and developed in his intelligence, but it is written in his heart. So
that the law of his intellect is the law of his heart. He not only sees and acknowledges
what he ought to do and be, but he is conscious to himself, and gives evidence to others,
whether they receive it and are convinced by it or not, that his heart, his will, or
intention, is conformed to his convictions of duty. He sees the path of duty, and follows
it. He knows what he ought to will, intend, and do, and does it. Of this he is conscious.
And of this others may be satisfied, if they are observing, charitable, and candid.
4. The sinner is contrasted with this, in the most important and
fundamental respects. He is not governed by reason and principle, but by feeling, desire,
and impulse. Sometimes his feelings coincide with the intelligence, and sometimes they do
not. But when they do so coincide, the will does not pursue its course out of respect or
in obedience to the law of the intelligence, but in obedience to the impulse of the
sensibility, which, for the time being, impels in the same direction as does the law of
the reason. But for the most part the impulses of the sensibility incline him to worldly
gratifications, and in an opposite direction to that which the intelligence points out.
This leads him to a course of life that is too manifestly the opposite of reason, to leave
any room for doubt as to what his true character is.
5. The saint is justified, and he has the evidence of it in the peace of
his own mind. He is conscious of obeying the law of reason and of love. Consequently he
naturally has that kind and degree of peace that flows from the harmony of his will with
the law of his intelligence. He sometimes has conflicts with the impulses of feeling and
desire. But unless he is overcome, these conflicts, though they may cause him inwardly,
and, perhaps audibly, to groan, do not interrupt his peace. There are still the elements
of peace within him. His heart and conscience are at one, and while this is so, he has
thus far the evidence of justification in himself. That is, he knows that God cannot
condemn his present state. Conscious as he is of conformity of heart to the moral law, he
cannot but affirm to himself, that the Lawgiver is pleased with his present attitude. But
further, he has also within the Spirit of God witnessing with his spirit, that he is a
child of God, forgiven, accepted, adopted. He feels the filial spirit drawing his heart to
exclaim, Father, Father. He is conscious that he pleases God, and has God's smile of
approbation.
He is at peace with himself, because he affirms his heart to be in
unison with the law of love. His conscience does not upbraid, but smile. The harmony of
his own being is a witness to himself, that this is the state in which he was made to
exist. He is at peace with God, because he and God are pursuing precisely the same end,
and by the same means. There can be no collision, no controversy between them. He is at
peace with the universe, in the sense, that he has no ill-will, and no malicious feelings
or wish to gratify, in the injury of any one of the creatures of God. He has no fear, but
to sin against God. He is not influenced on the one hand by the fear of hell, nor on the
other by the hope of reward. He is not anxious about his own salvation, but prayerfully
and calmly leaves that question in the hands of God, and concerns himself only to promote
the highest glory of God, and the good of being. "Being justified by faith, he has
peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ" (Romans 5:1). "There is now no
condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the
Spirit" (Romans 8:1).
6. The sinner's experience is the opposite of this. He is under
condemnation, and seldom can so far deceive himself, even in his most religious moods, as
to imagine that he has a consciousness of acceptance either with his own conscience or
with God. There is almost never a time in which he has not a greater or less degree of
restlessness and misgiving within. Even when he is most engaged in religion, as he
supposes, he finds himself dissatisfied with himself. Something is wrong. There is a
struggle and a pang. He may not exactly see where and what the difficulty is. He does not,
after all, obey reason and conscience, and is not governed by the law and will of God. In
not having the consciousness of this obedience, his conscience does not smile. He
sometimes feels deeply, and acts as he feels, and is conscious of being sincere in the
sense of feeling what he says, and acting in obedience to deep feeling. But this does not
satisfy conscience. He is more or less wretched after all. He has not true peace.
Sometimes he has a self-righteous quiet and enjoyment. But this is neither peace of
conscience nor peace with God. He, after all, feels uneasy and condemned, notwithstanding
all his feeling, and zeal, and activity. They are not of the right kind. Hence they do not
satisfy the conscience. They do not meet the demands of his intelligence. Conscience does
not approve. He has not, after all, true peace. He is not justified; he cannot be fully
and permanently satisfied that he is.
7. Saints are interested in, and sympathize with, every effort to reform
mankind, and promote the interests of truth and righteousness in the earth. The good of
being is the end for which the saint really and truly lives. This is not merely held by
him as a theory, as an opinion, as a theological or philosophical speculation. It is in
his heart, and precisely for this reason he is a saint. He is a saint just because the
theory, which is lodged in the head of both saint and sinner, has also a lodgment and
reigning power in his heart, and consequently in his life.
As saints supremely value the highest good of being, they will, and
must, take a deep interest in whatever is promotive of that end. Hence, their spirit is
necessarily that of the reformer. To the universal reformation of the world they stand
committed. To this end they are devoted. For this end they live, and move, and have their
being. Every proposed reform interests them, and naturally leads them to examine its
claims. The fact is, they are studying and devising ways and means to convert, sanctify,
reform mankind. Being in this state of mind, they are predisposed to lay hold on whatever
gives promise of good to man. True saints love reform. It is their business, their
profession, their life to promote it; consequently, they are ready to examine the claims
of any proposed reform; candid and self-denying, and ready to be convinced, however much
self-denial it may call them to. They have actually rejected self-indulgence, as the end
for which they live, and are ready to sacrifice any form of self-indulgence, for the sake
of promoting the good of men and the glory of God. The saint is truly and greatly desirous
and in earnest, to reform all sin out of the world, and just for this reason is ready to
hail with joy, and to try whatever reform seems, from the best light he can get, to bid
fair to put down sin, and the evils that are in the world. Even mistaken men, who are
honestly endeavoring to reform mankind, and denying their appetites, as many have done in
dietetic reform, are deserving of the respect of their fellow men. Suppose their
philosophy to be incorrect, yet they have intended well. They have manifested a
disposition to deny themselves, for the purpose of promoting the good of others. They have
been honest and zealous in this. Now no true saint can feel or express contempt for such
reformers, however much mistaken they may be. No: his natural sentiments and feelings will
be, and must be, the reverse of contempt or censoriousness in respect to them. If their
mistake has been injurious, h may mourn over the evil, but will not, cannot, severely
judge the honest reformer. War, slavery, licentiousness, and all such like evils and
abominations, are necessarily regarded by the saint as great and sore evils, and he longs
for their complete and final overthrow. It is impossible that a truly benevolent mind
should not thus regard these abominations of desolation.
The saints in all ages have been reformers. I know it is said, that
neither prophets, Christ, nor apostles, nor primitive saints and martyrs declaimed against
war and slavery, etc. But they did. The entire instructions of Christ, and of apostles and
prophets, were directly opposed to these and all other evils. If they did not come out
against certain legalized forms of sin, and denounce them by name, and endeavor to array
public sentiment against them, it is plainly because they were, for the most part,
employed in a preliminary work. To introduce the gospel as a divine revelation; to set up
and organize the visible kingdom of God on earth; to lay a foundation for universal
reform, was rather their business, than the pushing forward of particular branches of
reform. The overthrow of state idolatry, the great and universal sin of the world in that
age; the labor of getting the world and the governments of earth to tolerate and receive
the gospel as a revelation from the one only living and true God; the controversy with the
Jews, to overthrow their objections to Christianity; in short, the great and indispensable
and preliminary work of gaining for Christ and His gospel a hearing, and an acknowledgment
of its divinity, was rather their work, the pushing of particular precepts and doctrines
of the gospel to their legitimate results and logical consequences. This work once done,
has left it for later saints to bring the particular truths, precepts, and doctrines of
the blessed gospel to bear down every form of sin. Prophets, Christ, and His apostles,
have left on the pages of inspiration no dubious testimony against every form of sin. The
spirit of the whole Bible breathes from every page blasting and annihilation upon every
unholy abomination, while it smiles upon everything of good report that promises blessings
to man and glory to God. The saint is not merely sometimes a reformer; he is always so.
8. The sinner is never a reformer in any proper sense of the word. He is
selfish and never opposed to sin, or to any evil whatever, from any such motive as renders
him worthy the name of reformer. He sometimes selfishly advocates and pushes certain
outward reforms; but as certain as it is that he is an unregenerate sinner, so certain is
it, that he is not endeavoring to reform sin out of the world from any disinterested love
to God or to man. Many considerations of a selfish nature may engage him at times in
certain branches of reform. Regard to his reputation may excite his zeal in such an
enterprise. Self-righteous considerations may also lead him to enlist in the army of
reformers. His relation to particular forms of vice may influence him to set his face
against them. Constitutional temperament and tendencies may lead to his engaging in
certain reforms. For example, his constitutional benevolence, as phrenologists call it,
may be such that from natural compassion he may engage in reforms. But this is only giving
way to an impulse of the sensibility, and it is not principle that governs him. His
natural conscientiousness may modify his outward character, and lead him to take hold of
some branches of reform. But whatever other motives he may have, sure it is that he is not
a reformer; for he is a sinner, and it is absurd to say that a sinner is truly engaged in
opposing sin as sin. No, it is not sin that he is opposing, but he is seeking to gratify
an ambitious, a self-righteous, or some other spirit, the gratification of which is
selfishness.
But as a general thing, it is easy to distinguish sinners, or deceived
professors from saints by looking steadfastly at their temper and deportment in their
relations to reform. They are self-indulgent, and just for the reason that they are
devoted to self-indulgence. Sometimes their self-indulgent spirit takes on one type, and
sometimes another. Of course they need not be expected to ridicule or oppose every branch
of reform, just because it is not every reformer that will rebuke their favorite
indulgences, and call them to reform their lives. But as every sinner has one or more
particular form of indulgence to which he is wedded, and as saints are devising and
pushing reforms in all directions, it is natural that some sinners should manifest
particular hostility to one reform, and some to another. Whenever a reform is proposed
that would reform them out of their favorite indulgences, they will either ridicule it,
and those that propose it, or storm and rail, or in some way oppose or wholly neglect it.
Not so, and so it cannot be, with a true saint. He has no indulgence that he values when
put in competition with the good of being. Nay, he holds his all and his life at the
disposal of the highest good. Has he, in ignorance of the evils growing out of his course,
used ardent spirits, wine, tobacco, ale, or porter? Has he held slaves; been engaged in
any traffic that is found to be injurious; has he favored war through ignorance; or, in
short, has he committed any mistake whatever? Let but a reformer come forth and propose to
discuss the tendency of such things; let the reformer bring forth his strong reasons; and,
from the very nature of true religion, the saint will listen with attention, weigh with
candor, and suffer himself to be carried by truth, heart, and hand, and influence with the
proposed reform, if it be worthy of support, how much soever it conflict with his former
habits. This must be true, if he has a single eye to the good of being, which is the very
characteristic of a saint.
9. The true saint denies himself. Self-denial must be his
characteristic, just for the reason that regeneration implies this. Regeneration, as we
have seen, consists in turning away the heart or will from the supreme choice of
self-gratification, to a choice of the highest well-being of God and of the universe. This
is denying self. This is abandoning self-indulgence, and pursuing or committing the will,
and the whole being to an opposite end. This is the dethroning of self, and the enthroning
of God in the heart. Self-denial does not consist, as some seem to imagine, in acts of
outward austerity, in an ascetic and penance-doing course of starvation, and mere legal,
and outward retrenchment, in wearing a coat with one button, and in similar acts of
"will worship and voluntary humility, and neglecting the body"; but self-denial
consists in the actual and total renunciation of selfishness in the heart. It consists in
ceasing wholly to live for self, and can be exercised just as truly upon a throne,
surrounded with the paraphernalia of royalty, as in a cottage of logs, or as in rags, and
in caves and dens of the earth.
The king upon his throne may live and reign to please himself. He may
surround himself with all that can minister to his pleasure, his ambition, his pride, his
lusts, and his power. He may live to and for himself. Self-pleasing, self-gratification,
self-aggrandizement, may be the end for which he lives. This is selfishness. But he may
also live and reign for God, and for his people. That is, he may be as really devoted to
God, and render this as a service to God, as well as anything else. No doubt his
temptation is great; but, nevertheless, he may be perfectly self-denying in all this. He
may not do what he does for his own sake, nor be what he is, nor possess what he possesses
for his own sake, but, accommodating his state and equipage to his relations, he may be as
truly self-denying as others in the humbler walks of life. This is not an impossible,
though, in all probability, a rare case. A man may as truly be rich for God as poor for
him, if his relations and circumstances make it essential to his highest usefulness that
he should possess a large capital. He is in the way of great temptation; but if this is
plainly his duty, and submitted to for God and the world, he may have grace to be entirely
self-denying in these circumstances, and all the more commendable, for standing fast under
these circumstances.
So a poor man may be poor from principle, or from necessity. He may be
submissive and happy in his poverty. He may deny himself even the comfort of life, and do
all this to promote the good of being, or he may do it to promote his own interest,
temporal or eternal, to secure a reputation for piety, to appease a morbid conscience, to
appease his fears, or to secure the favor of God. In all things he may be selfish. He may
be happy in this, because it may be real self-denial: or he may be murmuring at his
poverty, may complain, and be envious at others who are not poor. He may be censorious,
and think everybody proud and selfish who dresses better, or possesses a better house and
equipage than he does. He may set up his views as a standard, and denounce as proud and
selfish all who do not square their lives by his rule. This is selfishness, and these
manifestations demonstrate the fact. A man may forego the use of a coat, or a cloak, or a
horse, or a carriage, or any and every comfort and convenience of life, and all this may
proceed from either a benevolent or a selfish state of mind. If it be benevolence and true
self-denial, it will be cheerfully and happily submitted to, without murmuring and
repining, without censoriousness, and without envy towards others, without insisting that
others shall do and be, just what be does and is. He will allow the judge his ermine, the
king his robes of state, and the merchant his capital, and the husbandman his fields and
his flocks, and will see the reasonableness and propriety of all this.
But if it be selfishness and the spirit of self-gratification instead of
self-denial, he will be ascetic, caustic, sour, ill-natured, unhappy, severe, censorious,
envious, and disposed to complain of, and pick at, the extravagance and self-indulgence of
others.
Especially does the true saint deny his appetites and passions. His
artificial appetites he denies absolutely, whenever his attention is called to the fact
and the nature of the indulgence. The Christian is such just because he has become the
master of his appetites and passions, has denied them, and consecrated himself to God. The
sinner is a sinner just because his appetites and passions and the impulses of his desires
are his masters, and he bows down to them, and serves them. They are his masters instead
of his servants, as they are made to be. He is consecrated to them and not to God. But the
saint has ceased to live to gratify his lusts. Has he been a drunkard, a rake, a tobacco
user? Has he been in self-indulgent habits of any kind? He is reformed: old things are
past away, and behold all things are become new. Has he still any habit the character of
which he has either mistaken or not considered; such as smoking, chewing, or snuffing
tobacco, using injurious stimulants of any kind, high and unwholesome living, extravagant
dressing or equipage, retiring late at night and rising late in the morning, eating too
much, or between meals, or in short, has there been any form of self-indulgence about him
whatever? Only let his attention be called to it, he will listen with candor, be convinced
by reasonable evidence, and renounce his evil habits without conferring with flesh and
blood. All this is implied in regeneration, and must follow from its very nature. This
also the Bible everywhere affirms to be true of the saints. "They have crucified the
flesh with its affections and lusts" (Gal. 5:24). It should be forever remembered,
that a self-indulgent Christian is a contradiction. Self-indulgence and Christianity are
terms of opposition.
10. The sinner does not deny himself. He may not gratify all his
desires, because the desires are often contradictory, and he must deny one for the sake of
indulging another. Avarice may be so strong as to forbid his indulging in extravagance in
eating, drinking, dressing, or equipage. His love of reputation may be so strong as to
prevent his engaging in anything disgraceful, and so on.
But self-indulgence is his law notwithstanding. The fear of hell, or his
desire to be saved, may forbid his outward indulgence in any known sin. But still he
lives, and moves, and has his being only for the sake of indulging himself. He may be a
miser, and starve and freeze himself, and deny himself the necessaries of life; yet
self-indulgence is his law. Some lusts he may and must control, as they may be
inconsistent with others. But others he does not control. He is a slave. He bows down to
his lusts and serves them. He is enslaved by his propensities, so that he cannot overcome
them. This demonstrates that he is a sinner and unregenerate, whatever his station and
profession may be. One who cannot, because he will not, conquer himself and his lusts this
is the definition of an unregenerate sinner. He is one over whom some form of desire, or
lust, or appetite, or passion has dominion. He cannot, or rather will not, overcome it.
This one is just as certainly in sin, as that sin is sin.
11. The truly regenerate soul overcomes sin.
Let the Bible be heard upon this subject. "And hereby we do know
that we know Him, if we keep His commandments. He that saith I know Him, and keepeth not
His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him" (1 John 2:3, 4). "And
every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself, even as He is pure. Whosoever
committeth sin transgresseth also the law: for sin is the transgression of the law. And ye
know that He was manifested to take away our sins: and in Him is no sin. Whosoever abideth
in Him sinneth not: whosoever sinneth hath not seen Him, neither known Him. Little
children, let no man deceive you: he that doeth righteousness is righteous, even as He is
righteous. He that committeth sin, is of the devil; for the devil sinneth from the
beginning. For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that He might destroy the works
of the devil. Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for His seed remaineth in him:
and he cannot sin, because he is born of God. In this the children of God are manifest,
and the children of the devil; whosoever doth not righteousness is not of God, neither he
that loveth not his brother" (1 John 3:3-10). "Whosoever believeth that Jesus is
the Christ, is born of God, and every one that loveth Him that begat, loveth him also that
is begotten of Him. By this we know that we love the children of God, when we love God and
keep His commandments. For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments; and His
commandments are not grievous. For whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world: and
this is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith" (1 John 5:1-4).
These passages, understood and pressed to the letter, would not only
teach, that all regenerate souls overcome and live without sin, but also that sin is
impossible to them. This last circumstance, as well as other parts of scripture, forbid us
to press this strong language to the letter. But this much must be understood and
admitted, that to overcome sin is the rule with every one who is born of God, and that sin
is only the exception; that the regenerate habitually live without sin, and fall into sin
only at intervals, so few and far between, that in strong language it may be said in truth
they do not sin. This is surely the least which can be meant by the spirit of these texts,
not to press them to the letter. And this is precisely consistent with many other passages
of scripture, several of which I have quoted; such as these: "Therefore, if any man
be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are
become new" (2 Cor. 5:17). "For in Jesus Christ, neither circumcision availeth
anything nor uncircumcision; but faith which worketh by love." (Gal. 6:6). "For
in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new
creature" (Gal. 6:15). "There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are
in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit. For the law of the
Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death. For what
the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God sending His own Son in
the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh: that the
righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after
the Spirit" (Romans 8:1-4). "What shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin,
that grace may abound? God forbid. How shall we that are dead to sin, live any longer
therein? Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized
into His death? Therefore, we are buried with Him by baptism into death: that like as
Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk
in newness of life. For if we have been planted together in the likeness of His death, we
shall be also in the likeness of His resurrection: knowing this, that our old man is
crucified with Him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not
serve sin. For he that is dead is freed from sin. Now if we be dead with Christ, we
believe that we shall also live with Him; knowing that Christ being raised from the dead,
dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over Him. For in that He died, He died unto sin
once: but in that He liveth, He liveth unto God. Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be
dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Let not sin
therefore reign in you mortal body, that ye should obey it in the lusts thereof. Neither
yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin: but yield yourselves
unto God, as those that are alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of
righteousness unto God. For sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are not under the
law but under grace" (Romans 6:1-14).
The fact is, if God is true, and the Bible is true, the truly regenerate
soul has overcome the world, the flesh, and Satan, and sin, and is a conqueror, and more
than a conqueror. He triumphs over temptation as a general thing, and the triumphs of
temptation over him are so far between, that it is said of him in the living oracles, that
he does not, cannot sin. He is not a sinner, but a saint. He is sanctified; a holy person;
a child and son of God. If at any time he is overcome, it is only to rise again, and soon
return like the weeping prodigal. "The steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord:
and he delighteth in his way. Though he fall he shall not be utterly cast down: for the
Lord upholdeth him with his hand" (Psalms 37:23, 24).
12. The sinner is the slave of sin. The seventh of Romans is his
experience in his best estate. When he has the most hope of himself, and others have the
most hope of his good estate, he goes no further than to make and break resolutions. His
life is but a death in sin. He has not the victory. He sees the right, but does it not.
Sin is his master, to whom he yields himself a servant to obey. He only tries, as he says,
to forsake sin, but does not in fact forsake it, in his heart. And yet because he is
convicted, and has desires, and forms resolutions of amendment, he hopes he is
regenerated. O, what a horrible delusion! Stop short with conviction, with the hope that
he is already a Christian! Alas! How many are already in hell who have stumbled at this
stumbling stone!
13. The subject of regeneration may know, and if honest he must know,
for what end he lives. There is, perhaps, nothing of which he may be more certain than of
his regenerate or unregenerate state; and if he will keep in mind what regeneration is, it
would seem that he can hardly mistake his own character, so far as to imagine himself to
be regenerate when he is not. The great difficulty that has been in the way of the
regenerate soul's knowing his regeneration, and has led to so much doubt and embarrassment
upon this subject, is that regeneration has been regarded as belonging to the sensibility,
and hence the attention has been directed to the ever-fluctuating feelings for evidence of
the change. No wonder that this has led conscientious souls into doubt and embarrassment.
But let the subject of regeneration be disenthralled from false philosophy, and let it be
known that the new heart consists in supreme disinterested benevolence, or in entire
consecration to God, and then who cannot know for what end he lives, or what is the
supreme preference or intention of his soul? If men can settle any question whatever
beyond all doubt by an appeal to consciousness, it would seem that this must be the
question. Hence the Bible enjoins it as an imperative duty to know ourselves, whether we
are Christians. We are to know each other by our fruits. This is expressly given in the
Bible as the rule of judgment in the case. The question is not so much, What are the man's
opinions?, but, What does he live for? Does he manifest a charitable state of mind? Does
he manifest the attributes of benevolence in the various circumstances in which he is
placed? O, shall the folly of judging men more by their opinions and feelings, by the
tenor of their lives cease? It seems difficult to rid men of the prejudice that religion
consists in feelings and in experiences in which they are altogether passive. Hence they
are continually prone to delusion upon the most momentous of all questions. Nothing can
break this spell but the steady and thorough inculcation of the truth, in regard to the
nature of regeneration.
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