GraciousCall.org - Freedom of the Will Part II. Section XI.
On the Freedom of the Will
by Jonathan Edwards
PART II. - SECTION XI.
The evidence of Gods certain Foreknowledge of the volitions of moral Agents.
THAT the acts of the Wills of moral Agents are not contingent events, in such a sense, as to
be without all necessity, appears by God's certain Foreknowledge of such events.
In handling this argument, I would in the first place
prove, that God has a certain Foreknowledge of the voluntary acts of moral Agents; and
secondly, show the consequence, or how it follows from hence, that the Volitions of
moral Agents are not contingent, so as to be without necessity of connexion and consequence.
First, I am to prove, that God has an absolute and
certain Foreknowledge of the free actions of moral Agents.
One would think it wholly needless to enter on such an
argument with any that profess themselves Christians: but
so it is; God's certain Foreknowledge of the free acts of
moral Agents, is denied by some that pretend to believe
the Scriptures to be the Word of God; and especially of
late. I therefore shall consider the evidence of such a
prescience in the Most High, as fully as the designed
limits of this essay will admit; -supposing myself herein
to have to do with such as own the truth of the Bible.
Arg. I. My first argument shall be taken from God's
prediction of such events. Here I would, in the first place,
lay down these two things as axioms. 1. If God does not foreknow, He cannot foretell such
events; that is, He cannot peremptorily and certainly foretell them. If God has no more than an
uncertain guess concerning events of this kind, then he can declare no more
than an uncertain guess. Positively to foretell, is to profess
to foreknow, or declare positive Foreknowledge.
If God does not certainly foreknow the future Volitions of moral Agents, then neither can
he certainly foreknow those events which are dependent on these Volitions.
The existence of the one depending on the existence of the
other, the knowledge of the existence of the one depends on
the knowledge of the existence of the other; and the one
cannot be more certain than the other.
Therefore, how many, how great, and how extensive
soever the consequences of the Volitions of moral Agents
may be; though they should extend to an alteration of the
state of things through the universe, and should be continued in a series of successive events to
all eternity, and
should in the progress of things branch forth into an infinite number of series, each of them
going on in an endless
chain of events; God must be as ignorant of all these consequences, as he is of the Volition
whence they first take
their rise: and the whole state of things depending on
them, how important, extensive, and vast soever, must be
hid from him.
These positions being such as, I suppose, none will deny,
I now proceed to observe the following things.
1. Men's moral conduct and qualities, their virtues and
vices, their wickedness and good practice, things rewardable and punishable, have often been
foretold by God.--
Pharaoh's moral conduct, in refusing to obey God's command, in letting his people go, was
foretold. God says to
Moses, Exod. iii. 19. " I am sure that the king of Egypt
will not let you go." Here. God professes not only to
guess at, but to know Pharaoh's future disobedience. In
chap. vii. 4. God says, " but Pharaoh shall not hearken
unto you; that I may lay mine hand upon Egypt," &c.
And chap. ix. 30. Moses says to Pharaoh, " as for thee,
and thy servants, I Know that ye will not fear the Lord."
See also chap. xi. 9.-- The moral conduct of Josiah, by
name, in his zealously exerting himself to oppose idolatry,
in particular acts, was foretold above three hundred years
before he was born, and the prophecy sealed by a miracle,
and renewed and confirmed by the words of a second
prophet, as what surely would not fail, (1 Kings xiii. 1 -- 6,
32.) This prophecy was also in effect a prediction of the
moral conduct of the people, in upholding their schismatical and idolatrous worship until that
time, and the idolatry
of those priests of the high places, which it is foretold
Josiah should offer upon that altar of Bethel. Micah
foretold the foolish and sinful conduct of Ahab, in refusing
to hearken to the word of the Lord by him, and choosing
rather to hearken to the false prophets, in going to RamothGilead to his ruin, (1 King's xxi. 20
-- 22.) The moral
conduct of Hazael was foretold, in that cruelty he should
be guilty of; on which Hazael says, "what, is thy servant
a dog, that he should do this thing!" The prophet speaks
of the event as what be knew, and not what he conjectured, 2 Kings viii. 12. "I know the evil
that thou wilt do
unto the children of Israel: Thou wilt dash their children,
and rip up their women with child." The moral conduct
of Cyrus is foretold, long before he had a being, in his
mercy to God' people, and regard to the true God, in
turning the captivity of the Jew's, and promoting the building of the temple, (Isa. xliv. 28. and
lxv. 13. compare
2 Chron. xxxvi. 22, 23. and Ezra i. 1 -- 4.) How many
instances of the moral conduct of the kings of the North
and South, particular instances of the wicked behaviour of
the kings of Syria and Egypt, are foretold in the 11th
chapter of Daniel! Their corruption, violence, robbery,
treachery, and lies. And particularly, how much is foretold
of the horrid wickedness of Antiochus Epiphanes, called
there " a vile person," instead of Epiphones, or illustrious!
In that chapter, and also in chap. viii. ver. 9, 14, 23, to the
end, are foretold his flattery, deceit, and lies, his having
"his heart set to do mischief," and set "against the holy
covenant," his "destroying and treading under foot the
holy people," in a marvellous manner, his "having indignation against the holy covenant, setting
his heart against
it, and conspiring against it," his " polluting the sanctuary
of strength, treading it under foot, taking away the daily
sacrifice, and placing the abomination that maketh desolate;" his great pride, " magnifying
himself against God,
and uttering marvellous blasphemies against Him," until
God in indignation should destroy him. Withal, the moral
conduct of the Jews, on occasion of his persecution, is
predicted. It is foretold, that " he should corrupt many by
flatteries," (chap. xi. 32 -- 34.) But that others should
behave with a glorious constancy and fortitude, in opposition to him, (ver. 32.) And that
some good men should
fall and repent, (ver. 35,) Christ foretold Peter's sin, in
denying his Lord, with its circumstances, in a peremptory
manner. And so, that great sin of Judas, in betraying his
master, and its dreadful and eternal punishment in hell,
was foretold in the like positive manner, Matt. xxvi.
21 -- 25, and parallel places in the other Evangelists.
2. Many events have been foretold by God, which are
dependent on the moral conduct of particular persons,
and were accomplished, either by their virtuous or vicious
actions. Thus, the children of Israel's going down into
Egypt to dwell there, was foretold to Abraham,, (Gen. xv.)
which was brought about by the wickedness of Joseph.'s
brethren in selling him, and the wickedness of Joseph's
mistress, and his own signal virtue in resisting her temptation. The accomplishment of the
thing prefigured in
Joseph's dream, depended on the same moral conduct.
Jotham's parable and prophecy, (Judges ix. 15 -- 20.) was
accomplished by the wicked conduct of Abimelech, and
the men of Shechem. The prophecies against the house of
Eli, (1 Sam. chap. ii. and iii.) were accomplished by the
wickedness of Doeg the Elomite, in accusing the priests;
and the great impiety, and extreme cruelty of Saul in
destroying the priests at Nob (1 Sam. xxii.) Nathan's
prophecy against David, (2 Sam. xii. 11, 12.) was fulfilled
by the horrible wickedness of Absalom, in rebelling against
his father, seeking his life, and lying with his concubines in
the sight of the sun. The prophecy against Solomon,
(1 Kings xi. 11 -- 13.) was fulfilled by Jeroboam's rebellion
and usurpation, which are spoken of as his wickedness,
(2 Chron. xiii. 5, 6. compare ver. 18.) The prophecy
against Jeroboam's family, (1 Kings xiv.) was fulfilled by
the conspiracy, treason, and cruel murders of Bassha,
(2 Kings 15.27 &c.). The predictions of the prophet
Jehu against the house of Bassha, (1 Kings xvi. at the
beginning,) were fulfilled by the treason and parricide of
Zimri, (1 Kings xvi. 9 -- 13, 20.)
3. How often has God foretold the future moral conduct of nations and people, of numbers,
bodies, and successions of men; with God's judicial proceedings, and
many other events consequent and dependent on their virtues and vices; which could not be
foreknown, if the
Volitions of men, wherein they acted as moral Agents,
had not been foreseen! The future cruelty of the Egyptians in oppressing Israel, and God's
judging and punishing them for it, was foretold long before it came to pass,
(Gen. xv. 13, 14.) The continuance of the iniquity of
the Amorites, and the increase of it until it should be full,
and they ripe for destruction, was foretold above four hundred years before, (Gen. xv. 16. Acts
vii. 6, 7.) The
prophecies of the destruction of Jerusalem, and the land of
Judah, were absolute; (2 Kings xx. 17 -- 19. chap. xxii.
15, to the end ). It was foretold in Hezekiah's time, and
was abundantly insisted on in the book of the prophet
Isaiah, who wrote nothing after Hezekiah's days. It was
foretold in Josiah's time, in the beginning of a great reformation, (2 Kings xxii.) And it is
manifest by innumerable things in the predictions of the prophets, relating
to this event, its time, its circumstances, its continuance,
and end; the return from the captivity, the restoration of
the temple, city, and land, &c. I say, these show plainly,
that the prophecies of this great event were absolute. And
yet this event was connected with, and dependent on, two
things in men's moral conduct: first, the injurious rapine
and violence of the king of Babylon and his people, as the
efficient cause; which God often speaks of as what He
Highly resented, and would severely punish; and secondly, the final obstinacy of the Jews.
That great event is
often spoken of as suspended on this, ( Jer. iv. 1 and v. 1,
vii. 1 -- 7. xi. 1 -- 6. xvii. 24, to the end, xxv. 1 -- 7. xxvi.
1 -- 8, 13. and xxxviii. 17, 18.) Therefore this destruction
and captivity could not be foreknown, unless such a moral
conduct of the Chaldeans and Jews had been foreknown.
And then it was foretold, that the people should he finally
obstinate, to the utter desolation of the city and land,
(Isa. vi. 9 -- 11 Jer. i. 18, 19. vii. 27 -- 29. Ezek. iii. 7.
and xxiv. 13, 14.)
The final obstinacy of those Jews who were left in the
land of Israel, in their idolatry and rejection of the true
God, was foretold by him, and the prediction confirmed
with an oath, (Jer. xliv. 26, 27.) And God tells the people, (Isa. xlviii. 3, 4 -- 8.) that he had
predicted those
things which should be consequent on their treachery and
obstinacy, because he knew they would be obstinate; and
that he had declared these things beforehand, for their conviction of his being the only true God,
&c.
The destruction of Babylon, with many of the circumstances of it, was foretold, as the
judgment of God for the
exceeding pride and haughtiness of the heads of that
monarchy, Nebuchadnezzar and his successors, and their
wickedly destroying other nations, and particularly for
their exalting themselves against the true God and his
people, before any of these monarchs had a being; (Isa.
chap. xiii. xiv. xlvii. compare Habak. ii. 5, to the end,
and Jer. chap. l. and li.) That Babylon's destruction was
to be "a recompense, according to the works of their own
hands," appears by Jer. xxv. 14.-- The immorality of which
the people of Babylon, and particularly her princes and
great men, were guilty, that very night that the city was
destroyed, their reveling and drunkenness at Belshazzar's
idolatrous feast, was foretold, Jer. li. 39, 57.)
The return of the Jews from the Babylonish captivity is
often very particularly foretold, with many circumstances,
and the promises of it are very peremptory: (Jer. xxxi.
35 -- 40. and xxxii. 6 -- 15, 41 -- 44. and xxxiii. 24 -- 26.)
And the very time of their return was prefixed; (Jer. xxv.
11, 12. and xxix. 10, 11. 2 Chron. xxxvi. 21. Ezek. iv. 6.
and Dan. ix. 2.) And yet the prophecies represent their
return as consequent on their repentance. And their repentance itself is very expressly and
particularly foretold,
(Jer. xxix. 12, 13, 14. xxxi. 8, 9, 18 -- 31. xxxiii. 8. l. 4,
5. Ezek. vi. 8, 9, 10. vii. 16. xiv. 22, 23. and xx. 43, 44.)
It was foretold under the Old Testament, that the Messiah should suffer greatly through the
malice and cruelty
of men; as is largely and fully set forth, Psal. xxii. applied to Christ in the New Testament,
(Matt. xxvii. 35,
43. Luke xxiii. 34. John xix. 24. Heb. ii. 12.) And likewise in Psal. lxix. which, it is also evident
by the New
Testament, is spoken of Christ; (John xv. 25. vii. 5, &c.
and ii. 17. Rom. xv. 3. Matt. xxvii. 34, 48. Mark xv. 23.
John xix. 29.) The same thing is also foretold, Isa. liii.
and l. 6. and Mic. v. 1. This cruelty of men was their
sin, and what they acted as moral Agents. It was foretold, that there should be an union of
heathen and Jewish
rulers against Christ, (Psal. ii. 1, 2. compared with Acts
iv. 25 -- 28.) It was foretold, that the Jew should generally
reject and despise the Messiah, (Isa. xlix. 5, 6, 7. and liii.
1 -- 3. Psal. xxii. 6, 7 and lxix. 4, 8, 19, 20.) And it was
foretold, that the body of that nation should be rejected in
the Messiah's days, from being God's people, for their obstinacy in sin; (Isa. xlix. 4 -- 7. and viii.
14, 15, 16. compared with Rom. x. 19. and Isa. 1xv at the beginning,
compared with Rom. x. 20, 21.) It was foretold, that
Christ should be rejected by the chief priests and rulers
among the Jews, (Psal. cxviii. 22. compared with Matt. xxi.
42. Acts iv. 11. 1 Pet. ii. 4, 7.)
Christ himself foretold his being delivered into the
hands of the elders, chief priests, and scribes, and his being
cruelly treated by them, and condemned to death; and
that he by them should be delivered to the Gentiles: and
that he should be mocked and scourged, and crucified,
(Malt. xvi. 21. and xx. 17 -- 19. Luke ix. 22. John viii.
28.) and that the people should be concerned in and consenting to his death, (Luke xx. 13 -- 18.)
especially the inhabitants of Jerusalem; ( Luke xiii. 33 -- 35.) He foretold,
that the disciples should all be offended because of him,
that night in which he was betrayed, and should forsake
him; (Matt. xxvi. 31. John xvi. 32.) He foretold, that
he should be rejected of that generation, even the body of
the people, and that they should continue obstinate to their
ruin; (Matt. xii. 45. xxi. 33 -- 42. and xxii. 1 -- 7. Luke
xiii. 16, 21, 24. xvii. 25. xix. 14,27, 41 44. xx. 13 -- 18.
and xxiii. 34 -- 39.)
As it was foretold in both the Old Testament and the
New that the Jews should reject the Messiah, so it was
foretold that the Gentiles should receive him, and so be
admitted to the privileges of God's people; in places too
many to be now particularly mentioned. It was foretold
in the Old Testament, that the Jews should envy the
Gentiles on this account; (Deut. xxxii. 21. compared
with Rom. x. 19.) Christ himself often foretold, that the
Gentiles would embrace the true religion, and become his
followers and people; (Matt. viii. 10, 11, 12. xxi. 41 -- 43.
and xxii. 8 -- 10. Luke xiii. 28. xiv. 16 -- 24. and xx. 16.
John x. 16.) He also foretold the Jews envy of the Gentiles on this occasion; (Matt. xx. 12 --
16. Luke xv. 26,
to the end.) He foretold, that they should continue in
this opposition and envy, and should manifest it in the
cruel persecutions of his followers, to their utter destruction; (Matt. xxi. 33 -- 42. xxii. 6. and xxiii.
34 -- 39 Luke
xi. 49 -- 51.) The obstinacy of the Jews is also foretold,
(Acts xxii. 18.) Christ often foretold the great persecutions his followers should meet with, both
from Jews and
Gentiles; (Matt. x. 16 -- 18, 21, 22, 34 -- 36. and xxiv. 9.
Mark xiii. 9. Luke x. 3. xii. 11, 49 -- 53. and xxi. 12, 16,
17. John xv. 18 -- 21. and xvi. 1 -- 4, 20 -- 22, 23.) He
foretold the martyrdom of particular persons; (Matt. xx.
23. John xiii. 36. and xxi. 18, 19, 22.) He foretold the
great success of the gospel in the city of Samaria, as near
approaching; which afterwards was fulfilled by the preaching of Philip, (John iv. 35 -- 38.) He
foretold the rising of
many deceivers after his departure, (Matt. xxiv. 4, 5, 11.)
and the apostasy of many of his professed followers;
(Matt. xxiv. 10, 12.)
The persecutions, which the apostle Paul was to meet
with in the world, were foretold; (Acts ix. 16. xx. 23, and
xxi. 11.) The apostle says, to the Christian Ephesians,
Acts xx. 29, 30.) "I know, that after my departure shall
grievous wolves enter in among you, not sparing the Rock;
also of your own selves shall men arise, speaking perverse
things, to draw away disciples after them." The apostle
says, he knew this: but he did not know it, if God did
not know the future actions of moral Agents.
4. Unless God foreknows the future acts of moral
Agents, all the prophecies we have in Scripture concerning
the great Antichristian apostasy; the rise, reign, wicked
qualities, and deeds of "the man of sin," and his instruments and adherents; the extent and long
continuance of
his dominion, his influence on the minds of princes and
others, to corrupt them, and draw them away to idolatry,
and other foul vices; his great and cruel persecutions; the
behaviour of the saints under these great temptations, &c.
&.c. I say, unless the Volitions of moral Agents are foreseen,
all these prophecies are uttered without knowing the things
foretold.
The predictions relating to this great apostasy are all of
a moral nature, relating to men's virtues and vices, and
their exercises, fruits, and consequences, and events depending on them; and are very
particular; and most of
them often repeated, with many precise characteristics, descriptions, and limitations of qualities,
conduct, influence,
effects, extent, duration, periods, circumstances, final issue,
&c. which it would be tedious to mention particularly.
And to suppose, that all these are predicted by God,
without any certain knowledge of the future moral behaviour of free Agents, would be to the
utmost degree absurd.
5. Unless God foreknow the future acts of men's Wills,
and their behaviour as moral Agents, all those great things
which are foretold both in the Old Testament and the New,
concerning the erection, establishment, and universal extent
of the kingdom of the Messiah, were predicted and promised while God was in ignorance
whether any of these
things would come to pass or no, and did but guess at
them. For that kingdom is not of this world, it does not
consist in things external, but is within men, and consists
in the dominion of virtue in their hearts, in righteousness,
and peace, and joy in the Holy ghost; and in these things
made manifest in practice, to the praise and glory of God.
The Messiah came " to save men from their sins, and deliver
them from their spiritual enemies; that they might serve
him in righteousness and holiness before Him: he gave
himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity,
and purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good
works." And therefore his success consists in gaining
men's hearts to virtue, in their being made God's willing
people in the day of his power. His conquest of his enemies consists in his victory over men's
corruptions and
vices. And such a victory, and such a dominion is often
expressly foretold: that his kingdom shall fill the earth;
that all people, nations, and languages should serve and
obey him; and so that all nations should go up to the
mountain of the house of the Lord, that he might teach
them his ways, and that they might walk in his paths; and
that all men should be drawn to Christ, and the earth be
full of the knowledge of the Lord (true virtue and religion)
as the waters cover the seas; that God's laws should be
put into men's inward parts, and written in their hearts;
and that God's people should be all righteous, &c. &c.
A very great part of the Old-Testament prophecies is
taken up in such predictions as these.-- And here I would
observe, that the prophecies of the universal prevalence of
the kingdom of the Messiah, and true religion of Jesus
Christ, are delivered in the most peremptory manner, and
confirmed by the oath of God, Isa. xlv. 22, to the end,
"Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the
earth; for I am God, and there is none else. I have SWORN
by my Self, the word is gone out of my mouth in righteousness, and shall not return, that unto
Me every knee shall
bow, and every tongue shall swear. Surely, shall one
say, in the Lord have I righteousness and strength: even
to Him shall men come," &c. But, here, this peremptory
declaration and great oath of the Most High, are delivered
with such mighty solemnity, respecting things which God
did not know, if he did not certainly foresee the Volitions
of moral Agents.
And all the predictions of Christ and his apostles, to the
like purpose, must be without knowledge: as those of our
Saviour comparing the kingdom of God to a grain of mustard-seed, growing exceeding great,
from a small beginning; and to leaven, hid in three measures of meal, until
the whole was leavened, &c.-- And the prophecies in the
epistles concerning the restoration of the Jewish nation to
the true church of God, and bringing in the fulness of the
Gentiles; and the prophecies in all the Revelation concerning the glorious change in the moral
state of the world
of mankind, attending the destruction of Antichrist, " the
kingdoms of the world becoming the kingdoms of our
Lord and of his Christ;" and its being granted to the
church to be " arrayed in that fine linen, white and clean,
which is the righteousness of saints," &c.
Corol. 1. Hence that great promise and oath of God to
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, so much celebrated in Scripture, both in the Old Testament and
the New, namely,
" That in their seed all the nations and families of the earth
should be blessed," must be made on uncertainties, if
God does not certainly foreknow the Volitions of moral
Agents. For the fulfilment of this promise consists in
that success of Christ in the work of redemption, and that
setting up of his spiritual kingdom over the nations of the
world, which has been spoken of. Men are " blessed in
Christ" no otherwise than as they are brought to acknowledge him, trust in him, love and
serve him, as is represented and predicted in Psal 1xxii. 11. " All kings
shall fall down before Him; all nations shall serve him."
With ver. 17. "Men shall be blessed in him; all nations shall call him blessed." This oath
to Jacob and
Abraham is fulfilled in subduing men's iniquities; as is
implied in that of the prophet Micah, chap. vii. 19, 20.
Corol. 2. Hence also it appears, that the first gospel promise that ever was made to mankind,
that great prediction of the salvation of the Messiah, and his victory over
Satan, made to our first parents, (Gen. iii. 15.) if there be
no certain Prescience of the volitions of moral Agents,
must have no better foundation than conjecture. For
Christ's victory over Satan consists in men's being saved
from sin, and in the victory of virtue and holiness over
that vice and wickedness which Satan by his temptations
has introduced, and wherein his kingdom consists.
6. If it be so, that God has not a Prescience of the future
actions of moral Agents, it will follow, that the prophecies
of Scripture in general are without Foreknowledge. For
Scripture prophecies, almost all of them, if not universally,
are either predictions of the actings and behaviour of
moral Agents, or of events depending on them, or some
way connected with them; judicial dispensations, judgments on men for their wickedness, or
rewards of virtue
and righteousness, remarkable manifestations of favour to
the righteous, or manifestations of sovereign mercy to
sinners, forgiving their iniquities, and magnifying the riches
of divine grace; or dispensations of Providence, in some
respect or other, relating to the conduct of the subjects of
God's moral government, wisely adapted thereto; either
providing for what should be in a future state of things,
through the Volitions and voluntary actions of moral
Agents, or consequent upon them, and regulated and
ordered according to them. So that all events that are
foretold, are either moral events, or others which are connected with and accommodated to them.
That the predictions of Scripture in general must be
without knowledge, if God does not foresee the Volitions
of men, will further appear, if it be considered, that almost
all events belonging to the future state of the world of
mankind, the changes and revolutions which come to pass
in empires, kingdoms, and nations, and all societies, depend, in ways innumerable, on the acts
of men's Wills;
yea, on an innumerable multitude of millions of Volitions.
Such is the state and course of things in the world of
mankind, that one single event, which appears in itself
exceeding inconsiderable, may, in the progress and series
of things, occasion a succession of the greatest and most
important and extensive events; causing the state of mankind to be vastly different from what it
would otherwise
have been, for all succeeding generations.
For instance, the coming into existence of those particular men, who have been the great conquerors
of the world,
which, under God, have had the main hand in all the
consequent state of the world, in all after-ages; such as
Nebuchadnezzar, Cyrus, Alexander, Pompey, Julius Caesar, &c. undoubtedly depended on many
millions of acts
of the will, in their parents. And perhaps most of these
Volitions depended on millions of Volitions in their contemporaries of the same generation; and most
of these on
millions of millions of Volitions in preceding generations.--
As we go back, still the number of Volitions, which were
some way the occasion of the event, multiply as the
branches of a river, until they come at last, as it"were, to
an infinite number. This will not seem strange to any one
who well considers the matter; if we recollect what philosophers tell us of the innumerable multitudes
of those
things which are the
principia,
or
stamina vitce,
concerned in
generation; the animalcula in semine masculo, and the ova
in the womb of the female; the impregnation or animating
of one of these in distinction from all the rest, must depend
on things infinitely minute relating to the time and circumstances of the act of the parents, the state of
their bodies,
&c. which must depend on innumerable foregoing circumstances and occurrences; which must
depend, infinite ways,
on foregoing acts of their wills; which are occasioned
by innumerable things that happen in the course of their
lives, in which their own and their neighbor's behaviour
must have a hand, an infinite number of ways. And as
the Volitions of others must be so many ways concerned in
the conception and birth of such men; so, no less, in their
preservation, and circumstances of life, their particular
determinations and actions, on which the great revolutions
they were the occasions of, depended. As, for instance,
when the conspirators in Persia, against the Magi, were
consulting about a succession to the empire, it came into
the mind of one of them, to propose, that he whose horse
neighed first, when they came together the next morning,
should be king. Now, such a thing coming into his mind,
might depend on innumerable incidents, wherein the Volitions of mankind had been concerned. But,
in consequence of this accident, Darius, the son of Hystaspes, was
king. And if this had not been, probably his successor
would not have been the same, and all the circumstances
of the Persian empire might have been far otherwise:
Then perhaps Alexander might never have conquered that
empire; and then probably the circumstances of the world
in all succeeding ages, might have been vastly otherwise.
I might further instance in many other occurrences; such
as those on which depended Alexander's preservation, in
the many critical junctures of his life, wherein a small trifle
would have turned the scale against him; and the preservation and success of the Roman people, in
the infancy of
their kingdom and commonwealth, and afterwards; upon
which all the succeeding changes in their state, and the
mighty revolutions that afterwards came to pass in the
habitable world, depended. But these hints may be sufficient for every discerning considerate person,
to convince
him, that the dhole state of the world of mankind, in all
ages, and the very being of every person who has ever lived
in it, in every age, since the times of the ancient prophets,
has depended on more Volitions, or acts of the Wills of
men, than there are sands on the sea-shore.
And therefore, unless God does most exactly and perfectly foresee the fixture acts of men's Wills, all
the predictions which he ever uttered concerning David, Hezekiah,
Josiah, Nebuchadnezzar, Cyrus, Alexander; concerning
the four monarchies, and the revolutions in them; and
concerning all the wars, commotions, victories, prosperity,
and calamities, of any kingdoms, nations, or communities
in the world, have all been without knowledge.
So that, according to this notion, God not foreseeing the
Volitions and free actions of men, he could foresee nothing
appertaining to the state of the world of mankind in future ages; not so much as the being of one
person that
should live in it: and could foreknow no events, but only
such as he would bring to pass himself by the extraordinary interposition of his immediate power; or
things
which should come to pass in the natural material world,
by the laws of motion, and course of nature, wherein that
is independent on the actions or works of mankind: that
is, as he might, like a very able mathematician and astronomer, with great exactness calculate the
revolutions of the
heavenly bodies, and the greater wheels of the machine of
the external creation.
And if we closely consider the matter, there will appear reason to convince us, that he could not, with
any
absolute certainty, foresee even these. As to the first,
namely, things done by the immediate and extraordinary
interposition of God's power, these cannot be foreseen,
unless it can be foreseen when there shall be occasion for
such extraordinary interposition. And that cannot be foreseen, unless the state of the moral world can
be foreseen.
For whenever God thus interposes, it is with regard to the
state of the moral world, requiring such divine interposition.
Thus God could not certainly foresee the universal deluge,
the calling of Abraham, the destruction of Sodom and
Gomorrah, the plagues on Egypt, and Israel's redemption
out of it, the expelling of the seven nations of Canaan,
and the bringing Israel into that land; for these all are
represented as connected with things belonging to the state
of the moral world. Nor can God foreknow the most
proper and convenient time of the day of judgment and
general conflagration; for that chiefly depends on the
course and state of things in the moral World.
Nor, Secondly, can we on this supposition reasonably
think, that God can certainly foresee what things shall
come to pass, in the course of things, in the natural and
material world, even those which in an ordinary state of
things might be calculated by a good astronomer. For
the moral world is the end of the natural world; and the
course of things in the former, is undoubtedly subordinate
to God's designs with respect to the latter. Therefore he,
has seen cause, from regard to the state of things in the
moral world, extraordinarily to interpose, to interrupt, and
lay an arrest on the course of things in the natural world;
and unless he can foresee the Volition of men, and so
know something of the future state of the moral world, he
cannot know but that he may still have as great occasion to
interpose in this manner, as ever he had: nor can he foresee how, or when, he shall have occasion thus
to interpose.
Corol. 1. It appears from the things observed, that unless God foresees the Volition of moral
Agents, that cannot be true which is observed by the apostle James, (Acts
xv. 18.) "Known unto God are all his works from the beginning of the world."
Corol. 2. It appears, that unless God foreknows the Volition of moral Agents, all the prophecies of
Scripture
have no better foundation than mere conjecture; and that,
in most instances, a conjecture which most have the utmost uncertainty; depending on an
innumerable multitude of Volition, which are all, even to God, uncertain
events: however, these prophecies are delivered as absolute
predictions, and very many of them in the most positive
manner, with asseverations; and some of them with the
most solemn oaths.
Corol. 3. It also follows, that if this notion of God's
ignorance of future Volition' be true, in vain did Christ
say, after uttering many great and important predictions,
depending on men's moral actions, (Matt. xxiv. 35.)
" Heaven and earth shall pass away; but my words shall
not pass away."
Corol. 4. From the same notion of God's ignorance, it
would follow, that in vain has he himself often spoken of
the predictions of his word, as evidences of Foreknowledge; of that which is his prerogative as GOD,
and his
peculiar glory, greatly distinguishing him from all other
beings; (as in Isa. xli. 22.-- 26 xliii. 9, 10. xliv. 8. xlv.
21. xlvi. 10. and xlviii. 14.)
Arg. II. If God does not foreknow the Volitions of
moral Agents, then he did not foreknow the fall of man,
nor of angels, and so could not foreknow the great things
which are consequent on these events; such as his sending
his Son into the world to die for sinners, and all things
pertaining to the great work of redemption; all the things
which were done for four thousand years before Christ
came, to prepare the way for it; and the incarnation, life,
death, resurrection, and ascension of Christ; setting Him
at the head of the universe as King of heaven and earth,
angels and men; and setting up his church and kingdom
in this world, and appointing him the Judge of the world;
and all that Satan should do in the world in opposition to
the kingdom of Christ: and the great transactions of the
day of judgment, &c. And if God was thus ignorant, the
following scriptures, and others like them, must be without any meaning, or contrary to truth.
(Eph. i. 4.) " According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation
of the world." (1 Pet. i. 20.)" Who verily was foreordained before the foundation of the world."
(2 Tim. i. 9.)
" who hath saved us, and called us with an holy calling;
not according to our works, but according to his own purpose, and grace, which was given us in
Christ Jesus before
the world began." So ( Eph. iii. 11.) speaking of the wisdom of God in the work of redemption, "
according to the
eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus." (Tit.
i. 2.)" In hope of eternal life, which God that cannot lie,
promised before the world began." (Rom. viii. 29.)
"Whom he did foreknow, them he also did predestinate,"
&c. (1 Pet. i. 2.)" Elect, according to the foreknowledge
of God the Father."
If God did not foreknow the fall of man, nor the redemption by Jesus Christ, nor the
Volitions of man since
the fall; then he did not foreknow the saints in any sense;
neither as particular persons, nor as societies or nations;
either by election, or by mere foresight of their virtue or
good works; or any foresight of any thing about them relating to their salvation; or any benefit
they have by Christ,
or any manner of concern of theirs with a Redeemer.
Arg. III. On the supposition of God's ignorance of the
future Volitions of free Agents, it will follow, that God
must in many cases truly repent what he has done, so as
properly to wish he had done otherwise: by reason that
the event of things in those affairs which are most important, viz. the affairs of his moral
kingdom, being uncertain and contingent, often happens quite otherwise than he
was before aware of. And there would be reason to understand that, in the most literal sense,
(Gen. vi. 6.) " It repented the Lord, that he had made man on the earth, and
it grieved him at his heart," (and 1 Sam. xv. 11.) contrary
to Num. xxiii. 19. " God is not the son of Man, that he
should repent;" and 1 Sam. xv. 29. "Also the Strength
of Israel will not lie, nor repent; for he is not a man that
he should repent." Yea, from this notion it would follow,
that God is liable to repent and be grieved at his heart, in
a literal sense, continually; and is always exposed to an
infinite number of real disappointments in governing the
world; and to manifold, constant, great perplexity and
vexation: but this is not very consistent with his title of
" God over all, blessed for evermore;" which represents
him as possessed of perfect, constant, and uninterrupted
tranquillity and felicity, as God over the universe, and in
his management of the affairs of the world, as supreme
and universal ruler. (See Rom. i. 25. ix. 5. 2 Cor. xi. 31.
1 Tim. vi. 15.)
ARG. IV. It will also follow from this notion, that as
God is liable to be continually repenting of what he has
done; so he must be exposed to be constantly changing
his mind and intentions, as to his future conduct; altering
his measures, relinquishing his old designs, and forming
new schemes and projects. For his purposes, even as to
the main parts of his scheme, such as belong to the state
of his moral kingdom, must be always liable to be broken,
through want of foresight; and he must be continually
putting his system to rights, as it gets out of order, through
the contingence of the actions of moral Agents: he must.
be a Being, who, instead of being absolutely immutable,
must necessarily be the subject of infinitely the most
numerous acts of repentance, and changes of intention, of
any being whatsoever; for this plain reason, that his vastly
extensive charge comprehends an infinitely greater number
of those things which are to him contingent and uncertain.
In such a situation, he must have little else to do, but to
mend broken links as well as he can, and be rectifying his
disjointed frame and disordered movements, in the best
manner the case will allow, The Supreme Lord of all
things must needs be under great and miserable disadvantages, in governing the world
which he has made, and
of which he has the care, through his being utterly unable to
find out things of chief importance, which hereafter shall
befall his system; for which, if he did but know, he might
make seasonable provision. In many cases, there may be
very great necessity that he should make provision, in the
manner of his ordering and disposing things, for some
great events which are to happen, of vast and extensive
influence, and endless consequence to the universe; which
he may see afterwards, when it is too late, and may wish
in vain that he had known before, that he might have ordered his affairs accordingly. And it is
in the power of
man, on these principles, by his devices, purposes, and
actions, thus to disappoint God, break his measures, make
him continually change his mind, subject him to vexation,
and bring him into confusion.
But how do these things consist with reason, or with the
word of God? Which represents, that all God's works,
all that he has ever to do, the whole scheme and series of
his operations, are from the beginning perfectly in his view;
and declares, that whatever devices and designs are in the
hearts of men, " the counsel of the Lord shall stand, and
the thoughts of his heart to all generations," (Prov. xix. 21.
Psal. xxxiii. 10, 11.) And a " that which the Lord of hosts
hath purposed, none shall disannul," (Isa. xiv. 27.) And
that he cannot be frustrated in one design or thought, (Job
xlii. 2.) And" that which God doth, it shall be for ever,
that nothing can be put to it, or taken from it," (Eccl. iii.
14.) The stability and perpetuity of God's counsels are
expressly spoken of as connected with his foreknowledge,
(Isa. xlvi. 10.) " Declaring the end from the beginning,
and from ancient times the things that are not yet done;
saying, My counsel shall stand, and I will do my pleasure."
-- And how are these things consistent with what the
Scripture says of God's immutability, which represents him
as "without variableness, or shadow of turning;" and
speaks of him, most particularly, as unchangeable with regard to his purposes, (Mal. iii. 6.)" I
am the Lord; I
change not; therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed."
(Exod. iii. 14.) " I AM THAT I AM. (Job xxiii. 13, 14.)
"He is in one mind; and who can turn him? And what
his soul desireth, even that he doth: for he performeth the
thing that is appointed for me."
Arg. V. If this notion of God's ignorance of future Volitions of moral Agents be thoroughly
considered in its
consequences, it will appear to follow from it, that God,
after he had made the world, was liable to be wholly frustrated of his end in the creation of it; and
so has been, in
like manner, liable to be frustrated of his end in all the
great works he had wrought. It is manifest, the moral
world is the end of the natural: the rest of the creation is
but a house which God hath built, with furniture, for
moral Agents: and the good or bad state of the moral
world depends on the improvement they make of their
natural Agency, and so depends on their Volitions. And
therefore, if these cannot be foreseen by God, because they
are contingent, and subject to no kind of necessity, then
the affairs of the moral world are liable to go wrong, to any
assignable degree; yea, liable to be utterly ruined. As on
this scheme, it may well be supposed to be literally said,
when mankind, by the abuse of their mortal Agency, became very corrupt before the flood, "
that the Lord repented that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him
at his heart;" so, when he made the universe, he did not
know but that he might be so disappointed in it, that it
might grieve him at his heart that he had made it. It actually proved, that all mankind became
sinful, and a very
great part of the angels apostatized: and how could God
know before, that all of them would not? And how could
God know but that all mankind, notwithstanding means
used to reclaim them, being still left to the freedom of
their own Will, would continue in their apostasy, and
grow worse and worse, as they of the old world before the
flood did?
According to the scheme I am endeavouring to confute,
the Fall of neither men nor angels could be foreseen, and
God must be greatly disappointed in these events; and so
the grand contrivance for our redemption, and destroying
the works of the devil, by the Messiah, and all the great
things God has done in the prosecution of these designs,
must be only the fruits of his own disappointment; contrivances to mend, as well as he could,
his system, which
originally was all very good, and perfectly beautiful; but
was broken and confounded by the free Will of angels and
men. And still he must be liable to be totally disappointed a second time: he could not know,
that he should
have his desired success, in the incarnation, life, death, resurrection, and exaltation of his
only-begotten Son, and
other great works accomplished to restore the state of
things: he could not know, after all, whether there would
actually be any tolerable measure of restoration; for this
depended on the free Will of man. There has been a general great apostasy of almost all the
Christian world, to
that which was worse than heathenism; which continued
for many ages. And how could God, without foreseeing
men's Volitions, know whether ever Christendom would
return from this apostasy? And which way would he
foretell how soon it would begin? The apostle says, it
began to work in his time; and how could it be known
how far it would proceed in that age? Yea, how could it
be known that the gospel which was not effectual for the
reformation of the Jews, would ever be effectual for the
turning of the heathen nations from their heathen apostasy,
which they had been confirmed in for so many ages?
It is represented often in Scripture, that God, who made
the world for himself, and created it for his pleasure, would
infallibly obtain his end in the creation, and in all his
works; that as all things are of him, so they would all be
to him; and that in the final issue of things it would appear that he is " the first, and the last."
(Rev. xxi. 6.)
" And he said unto me, It is done. I am Alpha and Omega,
the beginning and the end, the first and the last." But
these things are not consistent with God's liability to be
disappointed in all his works, nor indeed with his failing of
his end in any thing that he has undertaken.
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