GraciousCall.org - Freedom of the Will Part III. Section IV.
On the Freedom of the Will
by Jonathan Edwards
PART III. - SECTION IV.
Command and Obligation to Obedience, consistent with moral Inability to obey.
IT being so much insisted on by Arminian writers, that
necessity is inconsistent with law or command, and particularly, that it is absurd to suppose God
by his command should require that of men which they are unable to do; not allowing in this case for any difference between natural and moral Inability; I would therefore now particularly consider this matter.-- And for greater clearness I would distinctly lay down the following things.
I. The Will itself, and not only those actions which are
the effects of the will, is the proper object of Precept or
Command. That is, such a state or acts of men's Wills,
are in many cases properly required of them by Commands; and not only those alterations
in the state of their
bodies or minds that are the consequences of volition.
This is most manifest; for it is the soul only that is properly and directly the subject of
Precepts or Commands;
that only being capable of receiving or perceiving Commands. The motions or state of
the body are matter of
Command, only as they are subject to the soul, and connected with its acts. But now the
soul has no other
faculty whereby it can, in the most direct and proper sense,
consent, yield to, or comply with any Command, but the
faculty of the Will; and it is by this faculty only, that the
soul can directly disobey, or refuse compliance: for the
very notions of consenting, yielding, accepting, complying,
refusing, rejecting, &c. are, according to the meaning of
the terms, nothing but certain acts of the will. Obedience,
in the primary nature of it, is the submitting and yielding
of the Will of one, to the will of another. Disobedience
is the not consenting, not complying of the Will of the
commanded, to the manifested Will of the commander.
Other acts that are not the acts of the Will, as certain
motions of the body and alterations in the soul, are Obedience or Disobedience only
indirectly, as they are connected with the state or actions of the will, according to
an established law of nature. So that it is manifest, the
Will itself may be required: and the being of a good Will
is the most proper, direct, and immediate subject of Command; and if this cannot be
prescribed or required by
Command or Precept, nothing can; for other things can
be required no otherwise than as they depend upon, and
are the fruits of a good Will.
Corol. 1. If there be several acts of the Will, or a series
of acts, one following another, and one the effect of another, the first and determining act is
properly the subject
of Command, and not only the consequent acts, which are
dependent upon it. Yea, this more especially is that to
which Command or Precept has a proper respect; because
it is this act that determines the whole affair: in this act
the Obedience or Disobedience lies, in a peculiar manner;
the consequent acts being all governed and determined by
it. This governing act must be the proper object of Precept, or none.
Corol. 2. It also follows, from what has been observed,
that if there be any act, or exertion of the soul, prior to all
free acts of choice in the case, directing and determining
what the acts of the Will shall be; that act of the soul
cannot properly be subject to any Command or Precept,
in any respect whatsoever, either directly or indirectly,
immediately or remotely. Such acts cannot be subject to
Commands directly, because they are no acts of the Will;
being by the supposition prior to all acts of the Will, determining and giving rise to all its acts:
they not being acts
of the Will, there can be in them no consent to or compliance with any Command.
Neither can they be subject
to Command or Precept indirectly or remotely; for they
are not so much as the sects or consequences of the Will,
being prior to all its acts. So that if there be any Obedience in that original act of the soul,
determining all volitions, it is an act of Obedience wherein the Will has no
concern at all; it preceding every act of Will. And therefore, if the soul either obeys or
disobeys in this act, it is
wholly involuntarily; there is no willing Obedience or
rebellion, no compliance or opposition of the Will in
the affair: and what sort of Obedience or rebellion is
this?
And thus the Arminian notion of the freedom of the
will consisting in the soul's determining its own acts of
Will, instead of being essential to moral agency, and to men
being the subjects of moral government, is utterly inconsistent with it. For if the soul
determines all its acts of
Will, it is therein subject to no Command or moral government, as has been now
observed; because its original
determining act is no act of Will or choice, it being prior,
by the supposition, to every act of Will. And the soul
cannot be the subject of Command in the act of the Will
itself, which depends on the foregoing determining act, and
is determined by it; in as much as this is necessary, being
the necessary consequence and effect of that prior determining act, which is not
voluntary. Nor can the man be
the subject of Command or government in his external
actions; because these are all necessary, being the necessary effects of the acts of the Will
themselves. So that
mankind, according to this scheme, are subjects of Command or moral government in
nothing at all; and all their
moral agency is entirely excluded, and no room is left for
virtue or vice in the world.
So that the Arminian scheme, and not that of the Calvinists, is utterly inconsistent with
moral government, and
with all use of laws, precepts, prohibitions, promises, or
threatenings. Neither is there any way whatsoever to make
their principles consist with these things. For if it be said,
that there is no prior determining act of the soul, preceding the acts of the Will, but that
volitions are events that
come to pass by pure accident, without any determining
cause, this is most palpably inconsistent with all use of
laws and precepts; for nothing is more plain than that
laws can be of no use to direct and regulate perfect accident: which, by the supposition of
its being pure accident,
is in no case regulated by any thing preceding; but happens, this way or that, perfectly
by chance, without any
cause or rule. The perfect uselessness of laws and precepts also follows from the Arminian
notion of indifference,
as essential to that liberty, which is requisite to virtue or
vice. For the end of laws is to bind to one side; and the
end of Commands is to turn the Will one way: and therefore they are of no use, unless
they turn or bias the Will
that way. But if liberty consists in indifference, then their
biassing the Will one way only, destroys liberty; as it puts
the Will out of equilibrium. So that the will, having a bias,
through the influence of binding law, laid upon it, is not
wholly left to itself, to determine itself which way it will,
without influence from without.
II. Having shown that the Will itself, especially in those
acts which are original, leading and determining in any
case, is the proper subject of Precept and Command -- and
not only those alterations in the body, &c. which are the
effects of the Will -- I now proceed, in the second place, to
observe, that the very opposition or defect of the Will itself,
in its original and determining act in the case, to a thing
proposed or commanded, or its failing of compliance, implies a moral inability to that
thing: or, in other words,
whenever a Command requires a certain state or act of the
Will, and the person commanded, notwithstanding the
Command and the circumstances under which it is exhibited, still finds his will opposite
or wanting, in that,
belonging to its state or acts, which is original and determining in the affair, that man is
morally unable to obey
that Command.
This is manifest from what was observed in the first
part concerning the nature of moral Inability, as distinguished from natural: where it was
observed, that a man
may then be said to be morally unable to do a thing, when
he is under the influence or prevalence of a contrary inclination, or has a want of
inclination, under such circumstances and views. It is also evident, from what has been
before proved, that the Will is always, and in every individual act, necessarily
determined by the strongest
motive; and so is always unable to go against the
motive, which, all things considered, has now the greatest
strength and advantage to move the Will.-- But not further
to insist on these things, the truth of the position now laid
down, viz. that when the Will is opposite to, or failing of
a compliance with, a thing, in its original determination or
act, it is not able to comply, appears by the consideration
of these two things.
1. The Will in the time of that diverse or opposite
leading act or inclination, and when actually under its
influence, is not able to exert itself to the contrary, to make
an alteration, in order to a compliance. The inclination
is unable to change itself; and that for this plain reason,
that it is unable to incline to change itself. Present choice
cannot at present choose to be otherwise: for that would
be at present to choose something diverse from what is at
present chosen. If the will, all things now considered,
inclines or chooses to go that way, then it cannot choose,
all things now considered, to go the other way, and so
cannot choose to be made to go the other way. To suppose
that the mind is now sincerely inclined to change itself to
a different inclination, is to suppose the mind is now truly
inclined otherwise than it is now inclined. The Will may
oppose some future remote act that it is exposed to, but
not its own present act.
2. As it is impossible that the Will should comply with
the thing commanded, with respect to its leading act, by
any act of its own, in the time of that diverse or opposite
leading and original act, or after it has actually come
under the influence of that determining choice or inclination; so it is impossible it should
be determined to a
compliance by any foregoing act; for, by the very supposition, there is no foregoing act;
the opposite or noncomplying act being that act which is original and determining in the
case. Therefore it must be so, that if this
first determining act be found non-complying, on the
proposal of the command, the mind is morally unable to
obey. For to suppose it to be able to obey, is to suppose
it to be able to determine and cause its first determining
act to be otherwise, and that it has power better to govern
and regulate its first governing and regulating act, which
is absurd; for it is to suppose a prior act of the Will, determining its first determining act; that
is, an act prior to
the first, and leading and governing the original and
governing act of all; which is a contradiction.
Here if it should be said, that although the mind has
not any ability to will contrary to what it does will, in the
original and leading act of the Will, because there is supposed to be no prior act to determine
and order it otherwise,
and the will cannot immediately change itself, because it
cannot at present incline to a change; yet the mind has
an ability for the present to forbear to proceed to action,
and taking time for deliberation; which may be an occasion
of the change of the inclination.
I answer, (1.) In this objection, that seems to be forgotten which was observed before, viz.
that the determining
to take the matter into consideration, is itself an act of
the Will: and if this be all the act wherein the mind
exercises ability and freedom, then this, by the supposition,
must be all that can be commanded or required by precept. And if this act be the
commanding act, then all
that has been observed concerning the commanding act of
the Will remains true, that the very want of it is a moral
Inability to exert it, &c. (2.) We are speaking concerning
the first and leading act of the will about the affair; and
if determining to deliberate, or, on the contrary, to proceed
immediately without deliberating, be the first and leading
act; or whether it be or no, if there be another act before
it, which determines that; or whatever be the original and
leading act; still the foregoing proof stands good, that the
non-compliance of the leading act implies moral Inability
to comply.
If it should be objected, that these things make all
moral Inability equal, and suppose men morally unable
to will otherwise than they actually do will, in all cases,
and equally so in every instance.-- In answer to this objection, I desire two things may be
observed.
First, That if by being equally unable, be meant, as
really unable; then, so far as the Inability is merely moral,
it is true; the will, in every instance, acts by moral necessity, and is morally unable to act
otherwise, as truly
and properly in one case as another; as, I humbly conceive, has been perfectly and
abundantly demonstrated by
what has been said in the preceding part of this essay.
But yet, in some respect, the Inability may be said to be
greater in some instances than others: though the man
may be truly unable, (if moral inability can truly be called
Inability.) yet he may be further from being able to do
Some things than others. As it is in things, which men
are naturally unable to do. A person, whose strength is no
more than sufficient to lift the weight of one hundred
pounds, is as truly and really unable to lift one hundred
and one pounds, as ten thousand pounds; but yet he is
further from being able to lift the latter weight than the
former; and so, according to the common use of speech,
has a greater Inability for it. So it is in moral Inability.
A man is truly morally unable to choose contrary to a
present inclination, which in the least degree prevails;
or, contrary to that motive, which, all things considered,
has strength and advantage now to move the Will, in the
least degree, superior to all other motives in view: but
yet he is further from ability to insist a very strong habit,
and a violent and deeply rooted inclination, or a motive
vastly exceeding all others in strength. And again, the
Inability may, in some respects, be called greater in some
instances than others, as it may be more general and extensive to all acts of that kind. So
men may be said to be
unable in a different sense, and to be further from moral
ability, who have that moral Inability which is general
and habitual, than they who have only that Inability which
is occasional and particular. Thus in cases of natural
inability; he that is born blind may be said to be unable
to see, in a different manner, and is, in some respects,
further from being able to see, than he whose sight is
hindered by a transient cloud or mist.
And besides, that which was observed in the first part of
this discourse, concerning the Inability which attends a
strong and settled habit, should be there remembered; viz.
that a fixed habit is attended with this peculiar moral
inability, by which it is distinguished from occasional volition, namely, that endeavours to avoid
future volitions of
that kind, which are agreeable to such a habit, much more
frequently and commonly prove vain and insufficient. For
though it is impossible there should be any sincere endeavours against a present choice, yet
there may be against
volitions of that kind, when viewed at a distance. A
person may desire and use means to prevent future exercises of a certain inclination; and, in
order to it, may wish
the habit might be removed; but his desires and endeavours may be ineffectual. The man
may be said in some
sense to be unable; yea, even as the word unable is a relative term, and has relation to
ineffectual endeavours; yet
not with regard to present, but remote endeavours.
Secondly, It must be borne in mind, according to what
was observed before, that indeed no Inability whatsoever,
which is merely moral, is properly called by the name of
Inability; and that in the strictest propriety of speech, a
man may be said to have a thing in his power, if he has it
at his election, and he cannot be said to be unable to do a
thing, when he can, if he now pleases, or whenever he has
a proper, direct, and immediate desire for it. As to those
desires and endeavours, that may be against the exercises
of a strong habit, with regard to which men may be said
to be unable to avoid those exercises, they are remote desires and endeavours in two
respects. first, as to time;
they are never against present volitions, but only against
volitions of such a kind, when viewed at a distance.
Secondly, as to their nature; these opposite desires are not
directly and properly against the habit and inclination itself, or the volitions in which it is
exercised; for these, in
themselves considered, are agreeable: but against something else that attends them, or is
their consequence; the
opposition of the mind is leveled entirely against this; the
volitions themselves are not at all opposed directly, and for
their own sake; but only indirectly and remotely, on the
account of something foreign.
III. Though the opposition of the Will itself, or the
very want of Will to a thing commanded, implies a moral
inability to that thing; yet, if it be, as has been already
shown, that the being of a good state or act of will, is a
thing most properly required by Command; then, in some
cases, such a state or act of Will may properly be required,
which at present is not, and which may also be wanting
after it is commanded. And therefore those things may
properly be commanded, for which men have a moral
Inability.
Such a state or act of the Will, may be required by
Command, as does not already exist. For if that volition
only may be commanded to be, which already is, there
could be no use of precept: Commands in all cases
would be perfectly vain and impertinent. And not only
may such a Will be required, as is wanting before the
Command is given, but also such as may possibles be
wanting afterwards; such as the exhibition of the Command may not be effectual to
produce or excite. Otherwise, no such thing as disobedience to a proper and rightful
Command is possible in any case; and there is no
case possible, wherein there can be a faulty disobedience.
Which Arminians cannot affirm, consistently with their
principle: for this makes obedience to just and proper
Commands always necessary, and disobedience impossible. And so the Arminian
would overthrow himself,
yielding the very point we are upon, which he so strenuously denies, viz. that Law and
Command are consistent
with necessity.
If merely that Inability will excuse disobedience, which
is implied in the opposition or defect of inclination, remaining after the Command is
exhibited, then wickedness
always carries that in it which excuses it. By how much
the more wickedness there is in a man's heart, by so much
is his inclination to evil the stronger, and by so much the
more, therefore, has he of moral Inability to the good required. His moral Inability consisting
in the strength of
his evil inclination, is the very thing wherein his wickedness consists; and yet, according to
Arminian principles,
it must be a thing inconsistent with wickedness; and by
how much the more he has of it, by so much is he the further from wickedness.
Therefore, on the whole, it is manifest, that moral Inability alone (which consists in
disinclination) never renders any thing improperly the subject matter of Precept
or Command, and never can excuse any person in disobedience, or want of conformity to
a command.
Natural Inability, arising from the want of natural capacity, or external hindrance, (which
alone is properly called
Inability,) without doubt wholly excuses, or makes a thing
improperly the matter of Command. If men are excused
from doing or acting any good thing, supposed to be commanded, it must be through
some defect or obstacle that is
not in the Will itself, but either in the capacity of understanding, or body, or outward
circumstances.-- Here two
or three things may be observed, 1. As to spiritual acts, or any good thing in the state or
imminent acts of the will itself, or of the affections, (which
are only certain modes of the exercise of the Will,) if persons
are justly excused, it must be through want of capacity in
the natural faculty of understanding. Thus the same
spiritual duties, or holy affections and exercises of heart,
cannot be required of men, as may be of angels; the capacity of understanding being so
much inferior. So men
cannot be required to love those amiable persons, whom
they have had no opportunity to see, or hear of, or know
in any way agreeable to the natural state and capacity of
the human understanding. But the insufficiency of motives will not excuse; unless
their being insufficient
arises not from the moral state of the Will or inclination itself, but from the state of the
natural understanding. The
great kindness and generosity of another may be a motive
insufficient to excite gratitude in the person that receives
the kindness, through his vile and ungrateful temper: in
this case, the insufficiency of the motive arises from the
state of the Will or inclination of heart, and does not at all
excuse. But if this generosity is not sufficient to excite
gratitude, being unknown, there being no means of information adequate to the state
and measure of the person's
faculties, this insufficiency is attended with a natural Inability, which entirely excuses it.
2. As to such motions of body, or exercises and alterations of mind, which do not consist
in the iniminent acts or
state of the Will itself -- but are supposed to be required as
effects of the will, in cases wherein there is no want of a
capacity of understanding that inability, and that only,
excuses, which consists in want of connexion between
them and the Will. If the will fully complies, and the
proposed effect does not prove, according to the laws of
nature, to be connected with his volition, the man is perfectly excused; he has a natural
Inability to the thing required. For the Will itself, as has been observed, is all
that can be directly and immediately required by Command; and other things only
indirectly, as connected with
the Will. If therefore, there be a full compliance of Will,
the person has done his duty; and if other things do not
prove to be connected with his volition, that is not criminally owing to him.
3. Both these kinds of natural Inability, and all Inability that excuses, may be resolved
into one thing; namely,
want of natural capacity or strength; either capacity of understanding, or external strength.
For when there are external defects and obstacles, they would be no obstacles,
were it not for the imperfection and limitations of understanding and strength.
Corol. If things for which men have a moral Inability
may properly be the matter of Precept or Command, then
they may also of invitation and counsel. Commands and
invitations come very much to the same thing; the difference is only circumstantial:
Commands are as much a
manifestation of the will of him that speaks, as invitations, and as much testimonies of
expectation of compliance. The difference between them lies in nothing that
touches the affair in hand. The main difference between
Command and invitation consists in the enforcement of the
Will of him who commands or invites. In the latter it is his
kindness, the goodness from which his Will arises: in the
former it is his authority. But whatever be the ground of
Will in him that speaks, or the enforcement of what he says,
yet, seeing neither his Will, nor his expectation, is any
more testified in the one case than the other; therefore, a
person being directed by invitation, is no more an evidence of insincerity in him that
directs -- in manifesting
either a Will or expectation which he has not -- than a person being known to be morally
unable to do what he is directed by command is an evidence of insincerity. So that
all this grand objection of Arminians against the Inability
of fallen men to exert faith in Christ, or to perform other
spiritual duties, from the sincerity of God's counsels and
invitations, must be without force.
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