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CHAPTER
XIII.
THE FULL ASSURANCE OF FAITH
I.
Salvation from Doubt.
"I know
not what it is to doubt;
My heart is ever gay."-- Faber.
The most
surprising fact which came to the knowledge of Jesus was the
weakness of his disciples' faith. Descended from heaven,
written all over with proofs of his divinity, and bearing
the great seal of God in his right hand -- the
miracle-working power -- he stood unrecognized in the world.
A little band of a dozen or more attach themselves to his
fortunes, and avow faith in him; but often their perception
of the wonderful beauty of his character was so dim, and
their glimpses of his divinity were so brief, that they
relapsed into distressing doubt, and were on the point of
abandoning him forever. We often wonder at their skepticism
and spiritual stupor, as if we, standing in their place,
would have had eyes to pierce the clouds of doubt, and to
behold and adore the full-orbed sun in its first rising upon
the world's darkness; but we are by no means sure that if we
had been the companions of Christ's earthly wanderings,
listened to his words, and witnessed his works, we should
have escaped the oft-repeated rebuke, "O ye of little faith!
wherefore do ye doubt!" Should Jesus today step into our
Christian assemblies, and tell us his view of our spiritual
condition, he would find a sentence in his gospels just
adapted to the state of the modern Church, "O ye of little
faith."
We have
somewhere met with a quaint, but exhaustive classification
of mankind in respect to Christ; namely, believers,
half-believers, make-believers, and unbelievers. There is no
fifth class. Nor can they be reduced to three. Some persons
deny the existence of half-believers. They assert that there
are no degrees of faith; that it is not possible that a soul
should be in such an equivocal attitude toward Christian
truth; that there is either full belief or unbelief. But
half-believers have existed all along the history of the
Church; and they throng our churches today, and they make up
the majority of disciples now as they did in the days of the
Son of man. It is interesting to trace the boundary between
half-believers, or doubters -- we use the term synonymously
-- and unbelievers. Unbelief has no positive element of
faith, and hence is always the ground of condemnation. It is
always fatal to right practice. The unbeliever cannot
perform Christian duties with any sincerity, for there is no
motive power. Unbelief is spiritual paralysis, voluntarily
induced and retained. Its inner essence and culpability lie
in the obstinacy of the will against the truth. The secret
reason why the intellect does not assent to the truth is,
that the will refuses to obey. Unbelief has always a moral
and not an intellectual cause. It arises, not from a lack of
evidence, but from an unwillingness to follow wherever the
truth may lead. Hence, Jesus applies his antidote directly
to the will when he would prescribe an infallible remedy.
"If any
man
wills1
to do His will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be
of God, or whether I speak of myself."
Perfect
consecration is the doorway out of the most inveterate
unbelief. This is also the perfect cure for doubt. There is
this difference between unbelief and doubt. In all doubt
there is a positive element of faith toward which the soul
moves, when it is met by a counter current of objections and
difficulties. These two opposing forces -- faith and doubt
-- distract the soul; but if the result is progress toward
Christ, the doubt, though it has weakened, has not
destroyed, the Christian. The positive element in it has
triumphed. Jesus always upbraided doubt, but he never sends
the doubter to hell, because it is possible for the will to
be in an attitude of obedience despite the doubts. It is
possible for a Christian to live on the right side of doubt;
that is, to act as if he had no doubts. When Naaman was told
to bathe seven times in Jordan, his reason immediately
questioned the efficacy of this prescription for the
leprosy. At first he was a positive unbeliever, and turned
his face toward Damascus; but at the suggestion of his
servants, and in view of the greatness of the benefit and
the simplicity of the remedy, he was induced to turn the
head of his cavalcade toward the despised Jordan. He was
still brimful of doubt, but he had faith enough to move him
in the right direction. He dipped himself once, and
examining his skin, found no change. His doubts increased
with each plunge; but he still had faith sufficient to go on
till the seventh plunge, when his flesh became like a little
child's. This is living on the right side of doubt. He went
to the Jordan a doubter, and was healed, instead of going to
Damascus an unbeliever, to linger out his days in abhorred
loathsomeness.
In
Bunyan's immortal allegory there is a scene which strikingly
portrays unbelief, doubt, and faith. Christian and Pliable
tumble together into the Slough of Despond. Pliable wallows
till he gets out "on that side of the slough which is next
to his own house; so away he went, and Christian saw him no
more." This is living on the wrong side of doubt, and going
into the darkness of confirmed unbelief. Christian
"struggled to that side of the slough which was farthest
from his own house, and next to the wicket gate." He lived
on the right side of doubt, and reached the Celestial City,
while Pliable perished in the City of destruction. Christian
did nobly, but he might have done much better. There was
another pilgrim, named Faithful, who, on coming to the same
slough, looked carefully, and found "substantial steps
placed, even through the very midst of this slough," and
walked in safety upon them. These steps are the Divine
promises, and this character, Faithful, represents all
perfect believers in Christ Jesus, lifted by faith above the
quagmire while planting their feet upon the immutable
granite of God's word.
Such a
life is possible. It begins with the moment when the
half-believer "knows the exceeding greatness of his power to
usward who believe" fully in "the working of his mighty
power, which he wrought in Christ, when he raised him from
the dead." This is salvation from doubt. There are witnesses
on earth today who testify to this salvation as the blessed
experience of years, yea, scores of years. Harassed and
weakened by doubts, they opened the Bible and found it a
vast magazine of promises. Among these, one promise rose
like Mont Blanc, and fixed their gaze: it was "the Promise
of the Father." the Comforter, who should glorify Christ by
a revelation of his power to save. They appropriated this
great promise of the greatest gift that men can wish, or
heaven can send, and suddenly their feet were lifted from
the plane of their past experience, and planted on that
serene and cloudless summit, where each might sing: --
"Rejoicing now in earnest hope
I stand, and from the mountain top
See all the land below;
Rivers of milk and honey rise,
And all the fruits of Paradise
In endless plenty grow."
It is not
surprising that many, believing the testimony of their
brethren and sisters, are earnestly crying,
"O, that
I might at once go up;
No more on this side Jordan stop,
But now the land possess;
This moment end my legal years,
Sorrows, and sins, and doubts, and fears, --
A howling wilderness."
But many
are kept back from seeking salvation from doubt by the
suggestion that this whole question of assurance is
determined by our mental and physical constitutions. They
say that this salvation is for the sanguine, the ardent
style of minds, with whom faith is easy. But bilious and
phlegmatic temperaments, when they fully trust in Jesus, the
complete Saviour, are just as easily lifted to the sunlit
summits of assurance, and they become far more stable in
their experience. Read the Acts of the Apostles, and you
will find that after the pentecostal outpouring of the
Spirit, there was great joy, betokening that the shadows of
the night of doubt were dispelled by the rising of the
daystar within their hearts. New Testament Christians are
abounding in joy as soon as they receive the Holy Ghost in
full measure. Temperament makes no difference.
2. The
Psychology of Christian assurance.2
Man's
cognitive or knowing powers are few in number. Through his
senses or perceptions he knows the qualities of matter. By
his internal perception he knows also the inner world. By
his faculty of relations, discursive or elaborative power,
he infers the unknown from the known. But lying back of
these faculties, and existing before them all in the order
of nature, but not in the order of development, is the power
of original suggestion, the faculty of intuition. This term,
from the Latin intueor, "look directly at," is used
to designate the ability of the mind under certain
conditions to gaze immediately upon certain truths
independent of the perceptive or the elaborative faculties.
These truths have various designations, as first,
self-evident, or intuitive truths, first principles, native
notions, etc.3
The
notions grasped by this faculty are space, time, cause,
substance, right and wrong, personal existence, personal
identity, the axioms of mathematics, etc. When the mind is
brought into activity by the presentation of the external
world to the senses, or by sensation and perception, these
notions start into being as if from the very groundwork of
the mind. They may be known by the following criteria: 1.
Incomprehensibility -- We do not comprehend how or why
the thing is. 2. Simplicity -- It cannot be resolved
into several other notions or cognitions. 3. Necessity,
and consequent universality -- The nonexistence of a
first cause cannot be conceived; hence it is said to be
necessary, and, of course, universal. 4. Comparative
evidence and certainty -- This strictly pertains
to the thinking subject rather than to the primary truth.
The mind has the highest degree of certitude in
contemplating these truths.
The
interesting question now arises, whether the notion of a
personal God is given by intuition. The intuitional Deists
of India, constituting the Brahmo Somaj, teach that the idea
of God, and all other religious truths, are given by the
faculty of original suggestion, intuition, or pure reason.
Hence a revelation is a superfluity. The American
transcendentalists agree with these Asiatic philosophers in
ascribing to man, as innate in his soul, all truth necessary
to his proper religious development. But neither Scripture,
experience, nor observation justifies this system. The
notion of cause is given by this faculty, and, by
implication, a first cause. But this is not a personal God.
It is disputed that the notion of right and wrong given by
the ethical sense, added to that of first cause, develops
the notion of a personal God. If it could, the notion would
violate the second criterion, and, consequently, would not
be a primary truth. And yet if God is ever known, it must be
through intuition that this knowledge is reached. The
analysis of the human soul discloses the anomalous fact that
it has a faculty for a class of ideas of which it is
destitute. The only explanation of this anomaly must be
found in the absence of the proper conditions under which
this kind of truths is developed. The abstract notion of
space can never arise in one born blind till he gazes upon
objects in space.
We
believe that the distinction between right and wrong arises
only after intercourse with human beings in whom rights
inhere. Hence the wolf-reared men found at different times
in India evinced no moral sense. Now the lacking requisite
for spiritual perception is the presence and illumination of
the Holy Ghost in the soul. This was the natural and normal
state of the unfallen man in Eden. God was immediately
apprehended as a personality through a sense of his love
flowing like a river through Adam's consciousness. There was
an interior light, the Holy Spirit, within the human spirit.
Sin extinguished that light, and the religious intuitions
ceased, leaving a yearning -- a painful yet
ill-defined-sense of want, unrest, and forebodings of ill,
sufficient to produce a blind activity of the religious
nature. St. Paul has truthfully portrayed this condition:
"But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit,
for they are foolishness unto him; neither can he know them
for they are spiritually discerned."
In marked
contrast is the clear vision of the believer. "Eye hath not
seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of
man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love
him. But God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit. Which
things also we speak, not in the words which man's wisdom
teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost teacheth, comparing
spiritual things with spiritual," or, more properly,
"explaining spiritual things to spiritual minds." The soul,
when thus filled with the light of the Spirit, immediately
apprehends the existence of God in Christ, and his great
love to me, individualizing me in his regards, and also it
has an intuitive conviction of immortal life. "For we
know that if the earthly house of this tabernacle be
dissolved, we have a house not made with hands, eternal in
the heavens." That the person thus coming into communication
with the believer in this exalted state of spiritual
illumination is Jesus Christ, apprehended as the Supreme
Deity, is evident from the testimony of all advanced
believers. Christ stands forth before them, the chief among
ten thousand, and the one altogether lovely. They speak of
an ineffable joy and assurance arising from an inexpressible
love to him. Their language is,
"On
Christ, the solid rock, I stand;
All other ground is sinking sand."
He is, as
never before, the sovereign of their hearts. His divinity
impresses itself upon the soul, which despite all former
doubts, now cries out, "My Lord and my God." How exactly
does this experience harmonize with the Scripture, "No man
can say" (truly from the heart, not dogmatically from the
head) "that Jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost." Not
only does experience assert that Jesus is Lord, but the Son
of God expressly assured his disciples that the Paraclete
should glorify him, "for he shall receive of mine,
and shall show it unto you."
Thus the
humblest, most illiterate mind, by the exercise of perfect
faith in Jesus, grasps the only key to the fortress of
unbelief, the citadel of antiChrist -- modern Rationalism,
the sum of whose faith, or rather unfaith, is, the only God
is the Father; Jesus Christ is dead and gone in the same
sense that Julius Cesar is in his grave, and influences this
world only through history. That key is the immediate,
intuitive knowledge of Jesus as a living and almighty
Saviour, reigning within the soul without a rival. The
question has been asked, whether this knowledge of Christ is
independent of the testimony of the evangelists, and of the
women who saw Jesus alive after his death? We reply, that
their testimony is the appointed means used by the modern
believer to the attainment of the end, an inward
manifestation on of Christ. He who climbs up the stairs
leading to the dome of St. Peter's, uses every stair to
increase his elevation. But he is not using every stair when
he stands upon the summit of the dome, and the magnificent
landscape of the Eternal City, the Campagna, the Apennines,
the Albanian hills, and the Mediterranean, lie in entrancing
beauty before his eyes. So faith in the statements
respecting the historic Christ, constitutes the staircase up
which we mount to reach the summit of Hermon, where that
historic Christ is gloriously transfigured before our
spiritual vision. In an important sense, the testimony of
the believer of today is independent of the record of the
evangelists, and is a new confirmation of its truth. The
fact of the resurrection rests upon historic proofs. The
fact that Jesus lives a king, and reigns over the believer,
rests on intuitive evidence.
The
contents of that assurance afforded by the spiritual
perceptions are CHRIST JESUS OUR LORD. Dogmatic truths are
not discovered in their abstract form. They are concrete in
Him, the Alpha and Omega -- pardon, purity, life eternal. He
is made unto us wisdom, sanctification, and redemption.
It
remains to prove that this apprehension of Christ sustains
all the tests which are the peculiar criteria of intuitive
knowledge. It is incomprehensible. We can give no
account of the rationale. It lies beyond the range of our
powers. The Scriptures assert that the manifestation of
Christ is by the medium of the Holy Ghost. But he himself is
not apprehended. The eye does not apprehend the light, but
the object manifested by the light as a medium. We do
apprehend the personality of Jesus, but not that of the
Divine torchbearer who pours illumination upon the spiritual
eye. The trinal distinctions of the Divine Persons is not
manifested, nor their separate offices in the salvation of
the soul.4
Christ fills the vision. The source of the light in which he
stands radiant is not cognized. By faith in the words of
Jesus we know it is the Holy Spirit.
The
knowledge has the second characteristic, simplicity.
It cannot be resolved into constituent elements. Though
concrete, it is not complex. The fullness of blessing in
Christ is the fullness of an indivisible person, not of a
thing separable into its elements.
The third
criterion is necessity, and hence, universality.
The testimony of advanced believers under the illumination
of the abiding Comforter is full on this point. The
nonexistence of Christ's love to them is something as
unthinkable as the annihilation of space. He is to them all
and in all. They find him the center of their thoughts,
around which they revolve by the constraining power of his
love. He fills all things, all their thoughts. Praise and
prayer to him are involuntary, and unconsciously offered,
even while the intellect and the hands are busy with the
cares of life, so perfectly has Christ's personality
pervaded theirs. "I will make my abode in you." The
criterion of universality accompanies, of course,
necessity. If a notion is necessary it must be
universal. The only exception is, where the conditions of
any intuitive notion do not exist. The abstract idea of
space does not exist in a person who has never had eyesight.
To the
trained mathematician there are intuitive truths relating to
numbers and quantities which do not exist in the savage. Dr.
M'Cosh teaches, that the intuitional faculty is capable of
cultivation. Hence the universality exists wherever
the proper conditions are found. It is just so with the
knowledge of Christ in high Christian experience. It is
universal with those who have perfect faith in Jesus.
That a majority of the inhabitants of the world, including
some great writers on mental philosophy, are destitute of
this intuitive apprehension of Christ and the joyful
assurance of his love, does not disprove this criterion, for
the majority do not perform the conditions, they do not
fully trust Christ. It gives great pleasure to state that
the experience of perfect love sustains the fourth test of
primary truth -- certainty. Of nothing is the mature
believer under the holy unction more certain, than he is
that his Redeemer lives. Doubt, which haunted the beginning
of his Christian life, has been dispelled by the rising of
the Sun of Righteousness. The darkness is past, the true
light now shines. He can sooner doubt the solid earth or the
shining sun than his sonship to God, and joint heirship with
Christ
"O love,
thou bottomless abyss!
My sins are swallowed up in thee;
Cover'd is my unrighteousness,
Nor spot of guilt remains on me:
While Jesus' blood, through earth and skies,
Mercy, free, boundless mercy, cries."
The
conclusion to which we have arrived is, that in his unfallen
state, man had and fully exercised the power of intuition
Godward, and spiritual truth flooded his soul as the
sunbeams fill the raindrop. Sin shrouded the soul with a
pall of blackness, excluding the glorious sunlight; but
perfect faith in Jesus Christ removes the pall, and the
long-lost light again fills all that spirit. The soul, amid
the intensity of this spiritual illumination, enjoys an
assurance of salvation which could not be increased were
that fact written by Gabriel in letters of fire across the
arches of the sky. No amount of testimony, human or angelic,
can increase the certitude of the soul lit up by the
presence of the Comforter. We do not need lanterns to see
the sun rise. He brings his own self-revealing light.
3. The
Spiritual Manifestation of Christ not Illusory but Real.
There is
in many minds, even among believers, a grave misapprehension
of the grounds of certainty with respect to spiritual
things. It is tacitly conceded that there is more room for
doubt with respect to Christian experience than there is in
the affairs of this life. It is the purpose of this chapter
to demonstrate that this concession is unnecessary, and to
show that we may, under the full illumination of the Holy
Spirit, as certainly know God in Jesus Christ as we know any
facts in this world. Let us take the fact of the existence
of an external world. Ordinary minds regard an outer world
as a certainty the highest possible for the mind to
entertain. But when we begin to look for the ground of this
certainty we find our selves afloat on a broad sea of
conflicting opinions on which we are so tossed that our
indisputable certainty becomes very uncertain, and in some
minds vanishes altogether.
The two
grand divisions of opinion are, 1) that our consciousness of
external objects is mediate, and, 2) that it is
immediate. Philosophers adhering to the first view
reason thus: The mind, imprisoned in the body, cannot travel
out of it and grasp external objects. It must always remain
in its appropriate sphere. It is conscious only of what is
taking place within itself. It is unextended, and cannot
grasp matter which has extension. It is immaterial, and
cannot lay hold of the qualities of the material world. Yet
in some way we are quite sure of an external world. But how?
Here we find philosophers dividing again into two classes:
1. That there is a third thing between the material object
and the immaterial mind, which constitutes the medium of
perception. What this third something is, it puzzles the
philosophers to tell. If it is material, it is in need of a
medium itself in order to come into contact with the mind.
But if it is purely immaterial, the mind in cognizing it is
gaining no knowledge of matter, and hence no certainty.
2. The
other way of explaining this difficulty is to assert that in
perception we perceive neither the material objects nor
their images, called by the ancients, "skins of things," the
media above described, but we perceive only certain
modifications of our own minds which we are perpetually
mistaking for external objects. Both classes of these
philosophers are Idealists. Their fundamental assumption is,
that only the mind itself can be immediately known as an
ultimate fact in consciousness. The logical sequence is,
that the external world is a groundless and unnecessary
assumption. This is pure idealism. But some, the
hypothetical Realists, who start with the same assumption,
try hard to save the external world from vanishing into
cloudland by making it an inference from the third
thing spoken of, or from the modification of itself. But an
inference is not worth any thing unless certain proved
premises lie back of it. In this case the logical premises
are lacking, and we have no certainty of the existence of
any thing external to mind. The material world is logically
annihilated by the philosophy which assumes that in
consciousness the ego, or self, is all that is
immediately known. Yet this is the philosophy which is
dominant in Germany today, and is widely prevalent
throughout civilization wherever the modern school of the
Natural Realists or natural Dualists does not
prevail.
This
school, of which Sir William Hamilton is the chief, assumes
that both the self, or ego, and the non-self, or non-ego,
are immediately known in consciousness. This is the second
grand division of philosophers. They are called Realists.
Sir William Hamilton boldly enlarged the sphere of
consciousness to include not only the modifications of mind,
but the outward object which produces the inward change.
According to him, I am not conscious of the idea of this
writing desk as a third thing between the material desk and
the purely spiritual mind, but I am conscious of the desk
itself. Hence the Hamiltonians -- a minority of these
philosophers -- are certain of an external world; the rest
of them are either in great perplexity on this subject, or
they have settled down upon the airy foundation of pure
Idealism, and are content with the belief that matter is a
stupendous illusion. I do not say that a majority of mankind
are in this predicament, for happily the mass of the human
family are not metaphysicians, they have not ventured to
turn over the cornerstone of their knowledge to see what it
rests upon: they have the good sense to act upon their
experience of realities as natural realists, and have no
difficulties with the grounds of their knowledge. We shall
proceed to show that Christians act in the same way with
their knowledge of spiritual realities. They are spiritual
realists, those of them who have become acquainted with the
Spirit of truth, or the Spirit of reality, as it might be
correctly translated. We will now endeavor to show the
philosophic grounds of certainty in regard to the spiritual
manifestation of the Son of God to the perfect believer.
The
subtle suggestion is sometimes presented that this whole
matter of Christian experience is all illusory -- a
phenomenon of our own minds under the influence of causes
wholly within itself. The thoughtful believer is sometimes
annoyed by the thought that God has nothing to do with
inward religious emotions -- that what seems to come from
without, and to move so marvelously within the soul,
assuring of pardon and cleansing from sin, really arises
from the hidden depths of our mysterious nature while
intently contemplating religious ideas, and that there is no
manifestation of God at all as an objective existence.
To this
we have two answers. In the first place, if this illusion
leaves permanent beneficial effects upon the character,
gives victory over sin, fills the soul with love toward God
and the purest philanthropy, destroys the fear of death, and
adorns and beautifies the spirit with all excellences, it is
infinitely better than any reality to be found on earth, and
it should be earnestly coveted and diligently sought by
every person.
2. But we
may know that God manifests himself in Christian experience
by the testimony of consciousness the same testimony that
assures us of the existence of the external world. To
demonstrate the existence of the material world, as we have
shown, has been for ages "the puzzle of philosophers," as
Tyndall styles it, many contending that the sphere of
consciousness is limited to the operations of mind itself,
and that it cannot directly cognize any thing external. The
most that it can do it to infer that its sensations have an
external, unknown, and forever unknowable cause. Those who
deny the correctness of this inference deny the existence of
matter, and resolve it into ideas. With idealists, the
ego only exists; the mountain, river, and plain are only
so many different modifications of the ego, or self.
At length Sir William Hamilton arose, and cut this
metaphysical knot by boldly enlarging the sphere of
consciousness to include the outer world. So we reply that
the soul illumined by the Holy Spirit is conscious, not only
of its own subjective religious exercises, but of God, their
external cause, impressing himself mysteriously upon the
Spirit. In other words, we may have, when our perceptions
are quickened by the Holy Spirit, the same knowledge of God
as we have of the external world. Christians in advanced
experience universally testify that they all know God.
It is
fundamental in philosophy that consciousness cannot lie. To
deny this would be to nullify mental science by throwing
discredit upon the source of its facts. For it is a law of
evidence that one proved falsehood destroys the credibility
of a witness. "Falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus" --
false in one instance, false in all. Consciousness testifies
in Christian experience that a power from without the soul
enters in and subdues all things to itself, and that this
power is a person, since it does the work of a person,
certifies to the penitent believer his pardon, and awakens
an intense love toward the worker -- an affection directed
toward persons only. That this person is Christ, or rather,
the Holy Spirit revealing him, is also directly apprehended
by our spiritual perceptions in a manner wholly inexplicable
to reason. But it ought not to be strange that He who
created the infant with power to interpret its mother's
smile should endow the human spirit with power to recognize
its Creator's presence. But there are persons who cannot
accept Sir William Hamilton's widening of the sphere of
consciousness to include the external world. It is not our
purpose to defend any system of philosophy. If you admit the
certainty of an external world as attainable by the mind
without its direct cognition by consciousness, you must
assume that it is an irresistible inference from
modifications of mind through sensation and external
perception. In other words, the sudden pain which shoots
through the nerves to the sensorium carries with it the
feeling of certainty that some cause outside of the mind,
some thorn or needle, is the cause of this sensation. In
like manner, we argue that certainty which the Christian
feels, that the changes occurring in his experience are not
from some cause from within, but from without, and that this
cause is not material but spiritual in its nature. We are
endowed with the ability to discriminate between the
objective and the subjective. If it were not so we could not
distinguish our perceptions from the images of our fancy. In
like manner we are enabled to discriminate between religious
emotions having an objective cause, and mere subjective
phantasies. Hence, advanced Christians, especially, speak
with the utmost assurance of their communion with God, and
of the joy of the Holy Ghost. The Christian under the full
illumination of the Spirit, as certainly knows God as either
the Hamiltonian, or the non-Hamiltonian may know matter.
Consciousness testifies to no greater certainty in the
apprehension of the external world than she does in the
knowledge of Christ. The direct intuition, or the inference,
if it be an inference, amounts to an absolute certainty in
both cases.
But we
utterly despair of convincing the Idealist of the agency of
God in Christian experience, since he invalidates the
testimony of consciousness to the existence of any thing
except the operations of his own mind. He resolves into the
omnivorous ego the earth and sky, and the God who
fills them. To attempt to prove to the Idealist the agency
of God in regeneration and sanctification by assuming that
he is immanent in the human soul would be only confounding
the subject with the object, and affording the premises from
which Pantheism, with all its disastrous moral sequences, is
the logical inference. This book is written for people of
common sense, who believe that consciousness attests that we
live in a world of realities, and not of illusions. To such
persons we would say that the field of internal Christian
experience affords the groundwork for a philosophy as
positive as any based upon the facts of physics or civil
history. The moral and religious intuitions furnish us with
utterances as authoritative as those which arise in the
field of pure intellect. Of course the advocates of
Positivism, and the other various forms of Materialism, will
not expect the Christian to demonstrate the reality of the
work of the Divine Spirit from a standpoint so low as the
denial of the separate existence of the human soul, and the
rejection of the Divine personality. For if the universal
testimony that the ego, the thinking subject, is not
the body, but a distinct substance, be discarded, it is
scarcely reasonable to suppose that the attestations of
millions of Christians to a supernatural change wrought in
their consciousness, and transforming their characters, will
be received by these miscalled philosophers. For that only
is a genuine philosophy which recognizes all the facts in
the world of mind, and constructs some rational hypothesis
for their explanation. The facts for the truth of which
Christian believers vouch are as stubborn as any in the
domain of science. It is certainly very unscientific to
refuse to put them to the test of experiment, and to
discredit the testimony of the vast body of competent
witnesses who had done so, with the assertion that they are
deceived or deceiving.
In our
reference to these systems of philosophy it is not our
purpose to prove one or disprove others, but simply to show
that if any of them admit a certainty of any one fact in the
outer or inner world, the facts of Christian experience are
just as certainly known, resting on the same basis --the
testimony of consciousness. The Christian can give just as
good an account of his experimental knowledge of Jesus
Christ, as the philosopher can give of his knowledge of the
external world.
It is to
be regretted that the writers on mental philosophy have with
so great unanimity deemed the psychology of Christian
experience unworthy of their notice5.We
know of no better explanation of this fact than the absence
of a marked spiritual experience of conscious salvation in
the hearts of these writers. If they had been made conscious
"partakers of the Holy Ghost, and had tasted the powers of
the world to come," they would not have failed to describe
the marvelous phenomena attendant upon that transformation
of the entire man which is called a "translation from
darkness to light, a new creation, a resurrection from the
dead." No modification of mind is more sharply defined in
the consciousness, and more tenaciously grasped by the
memory. Hence these religious transitions and uplifts of the
soul present an attractive field for the lover of
intellectual science.
Rauch, in
his Psychology, has devoted a chapter to religion, styling
it "a peculiar activity of God in the human soul,
differing from all his other operations, by which it is
converted, renewed, and purified, by a power which manifests
itself to the consciousness, needing no other light." He
writes like a man of Christian experience, or like a candid
philosopher who attaches importance to the testimony of
multitudes who have had such an experience. But Cousin has
touched upon this subject, in one of his lectures, in a far
different spirit from Rauch, indicating his utter ignorance
of the spiritual power of the Gospel in affecting
transformations of the character. With him Christianity is
not a glorious life within the soul, but a set of facts and
a list of dogmas apprehended by the intellect. Cousin's
fundamental error his proton pseudos, lies in this
proposition: "The only faculty of knowledge is reason." All
the negations of Rationalism lie folded in this acorn. The
Infinite Being can never be "the direct object of love."
"Such a love cannot sustain itself save by superhuman
efforts, which terminate in folly." All this would be true
were there no supernatural Agent to "shed abroad the love of
God" in the believer's heart, and to attest directly to my
soul that he loves me, even me. With an utter destitution of
the spirit of true philosophy, this celebrated psychologist
slurs over all Christian experience within, as the dreamy
vagaries of mysticism, "chimerical and mischievous,"
overlooking entirely the amazing activities and heroic
labors and sacrifices which have made all the Christian
centuries illustrious and none more brilliant than the
missionary century in which he lived. To refute the
declaration that "reason is the only faculty of knowledge,"
we quote the utterance of another French philosopher, whose
fame will outlive that of Cousin. Pascal says, "The things
of this world must be known in order to be loved, but Jesus
Christ must be loved in order to be known." This is only
another form of the inspired utterance of St. John, teaching
that the heart is a faculty of knowledge: "Whosoever loveth
not knoweth not God, for God is love." As a painting is
known only through the eye, a symphony through the ear, and
an odor through the smell, so God is known only through the
heart in holy love. We may hear words about a painting, we
may read the notes of the music, we may discourse about an
odor, and we may reason about God, but we can have a
knowledge of none of them except through the appropriate
faculty.
A
description of Niagara awakens no emotion, but a view from
beneath Table Rock overwhelms the soul with emotions of
sublimity. The cataract is now for the first time known,
because the right perceptive faculty is applied. We do not
know God when reason apprehends a first cause, and
conscience demands an executive of the moral law. He may
still be a nondescript impersonality. The wrong faculties
are in exercise. To know him as a person we must know
him through that department of our nature which always has a
person for the object of its activity. Our affections go out
only toward persons. When the heart voluntarily moves toward
God in perfect love, the soul is deluged with that flood of
joyful emotions which announce the advent of the personal
God in the consciousness. This is the only
"God-consciousness' of which we are capable. It is one thing
to have notions about God, and it is quite a different thing
to know him.
John
Stuart Mill, the great logician and oracle of Materialism,
has most signally failed in his attempt, not to invalidate
the testimony of Christians, but to explain their unanimous
assertion that the Holy Spirit abides within them, "to
witness God's eternal love." His interpretation of the
experience of believers in Christ is, "that it is neither
more nor less than ascribing outward existence to the inward
creations of our own faculties -- to ideas or feelings of
the mind -- and believing that, by watching and
contemplating these ideas of its own making, it can read in
them what takes place in the world without." Hence the
witness of the Spirit is, to him, an illusion, and communion
with God is a pleasing hallucination, and victory over death
through faith in Jesus is the happy delusion of the sailor
dreaming of safety while approaching the rocks, lured by a
false light. But is Mr. Mill competent to philosophize on
this subject? Have his spiritual intuitions been called into
activity by the quickening Spirit? If not, then he is
reasoning as wisely as one born blind who asserts that
colors are purely subjective, "the inward creations of our
own faculties." So long as consciousness is the source of
all the facts of psychology, and the basis of all correct
conclusions, just so long will one spiritually blind be
incompetent either to testify or to theorize truthfully
respecting spiritual experience!
In 1866
an operator at Valencia sat at the end of the broken cable
while search was made for the other end in the depths of the
Atlantic. While he was, at midnight, intently watching the
delicate magnet disturbed by the influences of the sea,
suddenly the tiny spot of light flashed out the words, "God
save the Queen." How many metaphysicians as great as Stuart
Mill would it take to prove to that operator that this
message was not from the other world, mind answering to mind
in clear majestic thought, but that it was a lucky
combination of the incoherent pulsations of the sea? Just as
many such philosophers will it require to prove to the
newborn soul that the "Abba, Father," suddenly resounding in
his soul, originates in the depths of his own nature, and
that it is not the voice of Him who sitteth on the throne
above and sends down assurances of pardon and adoption to
penitent believers below. Mr. Mill's groundless assertion
will become an argument worthy of consideration when he has
demonstrated --
1. That
he has a similar Christian experience, and that it bore the
marks of an origin purely subjective and internal.
2. That
just such experiences arise in the devotees of false
religions when intently contemplating Buddha, Brahma,
Jupiter, Woden, Thor, or any African fetich, as are attested
by believers in Jesus Christ.
3. That
these experiences are attended by a moral transformation, a
victory over sin, an assurance of the Divine favor, and an
adornment of the character with the whole constellation of
Christian virtues, love, joy, peace, longsuffering,
gentleness, goodness, fidelity, meekness, and temperance.
Until
these propositions are proved, Christians are not to be
charged with folly for persisting in a faith which works by
love, purifies the heart, overcomes the world, brings life
and immortality to light, and enables the believer to cry,
"O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy
victory?"
We have
made the statement that the Holy Ghost communicates no
theological truth. He adds no article to the Apostles'
Creed, but he gives reality to the truths lying cold and
inoperative in the intellect. The vague becomes definite,
the obscure becomes clear, the distant is brought nigh.
Especially is Jesus Christ presented as a real, living,
and DIVINE PERSON. It is the great mission of the Comforter
to disclose the Deity of Christ. "He shall take of mine and
show unto you." If the Son of God were a creature, the
Spirit of truth would reveal him as a creature. What is the
universally attested fact in that high Christian experience,
the conscious abiding of the Comforter? It is the
manifestation of Christ as a living, loving, and almighty
Saviour, able to save to the uttermost. Henceforth all
speculative difficulties subside. As spiders' webs are swept
away by the mighty rushing wind, intellectual objections to
the Deity of Christ are wiped out by the pentecostal breath
of God, the ever-blessed Spirit. This result of the coming
of the Comforter to the disciples was distinctly foretold by
Jesus. "At that day ye shall know that I am in my
Father." This immediately became the subject matter of
the Apostles' preaching. "And he hath given to us the
ministry of reconciliation; to wit, that God was (is) in
Christ reconciling the world unto himself."
It is the coming of the Comforter which is the only power
that can lift the yoke of Rationalism from the skeptic's
soul. Logic fails. There are in the human mind naturally
strong proclivities toward Unitarianism. We long to carry
our knowledge up to unity. We delight to discover to hen
in ta polla, the one in the many -- one principle
binding up into unity many phenomena. This tendency of our
minds lies at the basis of classification and induction. If
allowed its full scope in theological speculations it ends
in Deism -- in plucking the crown of Divinity from the head
of Christ. Hence our love of unity is a prolific source of
error. Says Sir William Hamilton,
to this
love of unity -- to this desire of reducing the objects
of our knowledge to harmony and system -- a source of
truth and discovery if subservient to observation, but
of error and delusion if allowed to dictate to
observation what phenomena are to be perceived -- we may
refer the influence which preconceived opinions exercise
upon our perceptions and judgments, by inducing us to
see and require only what is in unison with them. 'What
we wish,' says Demosthenes, 'that we believe.' 'What we
expect,' says Aristotle, 'that we find:' truths which
have been re-echoed by a thousand confessors and
confirmed by ten thousand examples.
Not only
does the natural man, devoid of spiritual illumination,
strongly drift toward Unitarian views of Christ; but the
Christian Church, under high intellectual culture and low
spirituality, tends in the same direction. Hence the only
salvation of orthodoxy is in the baptism of the Holy Spirit
-- the anointing that abideth and teacheth -- poured by the
Divine hand upon the mass of believers. "What the world
needs is not a mere teacher to communicate something
about God, but to know God himself by his own
personal manifestation to each heart.
This
personal and loving manifestation of God to the soul
required two steps: First, the incarnation, to bring God
into the sphere of our sympathies in that most affecting way
in which he is presented by the manger, the garden, and the
cross. But born into the world a helpless infant, unfolding
in physical, mental, and spiritual power under the laws of
normal development, subject to the limitations and ills of
humanity, his Godhead was not so conspicuous as his
humanity. The Divine glory which he had with the Father
before the world was, was eclipsed by the robe of clay in
which it was wrapped. Only a subdued brightness gleamed
through the earthly vesture. But the time came when it was
expedient for Jesus to take the second step, when his deity
should burst forth, a full-orbed sun upon this dark world.
To this end Christ withdraws the visible, material form, in
order that it may no more divert the eye from the full
splendors of his Godhead (Godhood). He goes up on high and
is glorified, and sends down the proof in the gift of the
Comforter, whose great mission on earth is to "glorify,"
exalt, deify, the Son of God by a revelation of his divinity
in the inmost consciousness of every one who loves him. This
undoubted, assured knowledge of Jesus Christ as "God over
all, blessed for ever," emboldened the apostles to preach,
and to suffer shame joyfully, for his sake. This knowledge
is described by St. John as comprising "all things." "But ye
have an unction from the Holy One and ye know all things."
All spiritual truth is centered in Jesus Christ. To know him
by the anointing is to know "all things pertaining to life
and godliness." To know Christ is to know the law, for love
is the fulfilling of the law "And ye need not that any man
should teach you." The highest and most trustworthy
cognitions are those of the intuitions. The logic of
Aristotle and Bacon cannot reach up to this knowledge of the
Divine Jesus revealed in the very sanctuary of the soul by
the Holy Spirit. Gal. 1:16. We cannot agree with Dean
Alford, that those strong expressions of St. John are "so
many ideal statements on Christian perfection," implying
that believers in his day did not "have in living and
working reality what they had in the ideal depth of their
Christian life." We cannot conceive of an assertion more
positive and explicit of the perfect spiritual knowledge
possessed by those whom he addresses in this epistle. They
had what St. Paul craved for the Ephesians, "the love of
Christ which passeth knowledge," or intellectual
comprehension or logical statement. |