GraciousCall.org - Freedom of the Will Part III. Section V.
On the Freedom of the Will
by Jonathan Edwards
PART III. - SECTION V.
Is is much insisted on by many, that some men, though
they are not able to perform spiritual duties, such as repentance of sin, love to God, a cordial acceptance of Christ
as exhibited and offered in the gospel, &c. yet may sincerely
desire and endeavor after these things; and therefore must
be excused; it being unreasonable to blame them for the
omission of those things, which they sincerely desire and
endeavour to do, but cannot. Concerning this matter, the
following things may be observed.
1. What is here supposed, is a great mistake, and gross
absurdity; even that men may sincerely choose and desire
those spiritual duties of love, acceptance, choice, rejection,
&c. consisting in the exercise of the Will itself, or in the
disposition and inclination of the heart; and yet not able
to perform or exert them. This is absurd, because it is
absurd to suppose that a man should directly, properly, and
sincerely incline to have an inclination, which at the same
time is contrary to his inclination: for that is to suppose
him not to be inclined to that which he is inclined to. If
a man, in the state and acts of his will and inclination,
properly and directly falls in with those duties, he therein
performs them: for the duties themselves consist in that
very thing; they consist in the state and acts of the Will
being so formed and directed. If the soul properly and
sincerely falls in with a certain proposed act of Will or
choice, the soul therein makes that choice its own. Even
as when a moving body falls in with a proposed direction
of its motion, that is the same thing as to move in that
direction.
2. That which is called a Desire and Willingness for those
inward duties, in such as do not perform them, has respect
to these duties only indirectly and remotely, and is improperly so called; not only because
(as was observed before) it respects those good volitions only in a distant view,
and with respect to future time; but also because evermore, not these things themselves,
but something else that
is foreign, is the object that terminates these volitions and
Desires.
A drunkard, who continues in his drunkenness, being
under the power of a violent appetite to strong drink, and
without any love to virtue; but being also extremely
covetous and close, and very much exercised and grieved
at the diminution of his estate, and prospect of poverty,
may in a sort desire the virtue of temperance; and though
his present Will is to gratify his extravagant appetite, yet
he may wish he had a heart to forbear future acts of intemperance, and forsake his
excesses, through an unwillingness to part with his money: but still he goes on with
his drunkenness; his wishes and endeavours are insufficient and ineffectual: such a man
has no proper, direct,
sincere Willingness to forsake this vice, and the vicious
deeds which belong to it; for he acts voluntarily in continuing to drink to excess: his
Desire is very improperly
called a willingness to be temperate; it is no true Desire of
that virtue; for it is not that virtue, that terminates his
wishes; nor have they any direct respect at all to it. It is
only the saving of his money, or the avoiding of poverty,
that terminates and exhausts the whole strength of his Desire. The virtue of temperance is
regarded only very indirectly and improperly, even as a necessary means of gratifying the
vice of covetousness.
So, a man of an exceedingly corrupt and wicked heart,
who has no love to God and Jesus Christ, but, on the contrary, being very profanely and
carnally inclined, has the
greatest distaste of the things of religion, and enmity against
them; yet being of a family, that, from one generation to
another, have most of them died, in youth, of an hereditary consumption; and so having
little hope of living
long; and having been instructed in the necessity of a
supreme love to Christ, and latitude for his death and
sufferings, in order to his salvation from eternal misery; if
under these circumstances he should, through fear of eternal torments, wish he had such a
disposition; but his profane and carnal heart remaining, he continues still in his
habitual distaste of; and enmity to God and religion, and
wholly without any exercise of that love and gratitude, (as
doubtless the very devils themselves, notwithstanding all
the devilishness of their temper, would wish for a holy
heart, if by that means they could get out of hell:) in this
case, there is no sincere Willingness to love Christ and
choose him as his chief good: these holy dispositions and
exercises are not at all the direct object of the Will: they
truly share no part of the inclination or desire of the soul;
but all is terminated on deliverance from torment: and
these graces and pious volitions, notwithstanding this
forced consent, are looked upon as in themselves undesirable; as when a sick man
desires a dose he greatly
abhors, in order to save his life. From these things it
appears, 3. That this indirect Willingness is not that exercise of
the Will which the command requires; but is entirely a
different one; being a volition of a different nature, and
terminated altogether on different objects; wholly falling
short of that virtue of Will, to which the command has
respect, 4. This other volition, which has only some indirect
concern with the duty required, cannot excuse for the want
of that good will itself, which is commanded; being not
the thing which answers and fulfils the command, and
being wholly destitute of the virtue which the command
seeks.
Further to illustrate this matter: If a child has a most
excellent father that has ever treated him with fatherly
kindness and tenderness, and has every way, in the highest
degree, merited his love and dutiful regard, and is withal
very wealthy; but the son is of so vile a disposition, that
he inveterately hates his father; and yet, apprehending
that his hatred of him is like to prove his ruin, by bringing
him finally to those abject circumstances, which are exceedingly adverse to his avarice
and ambition; he, therefore, wishes it were otherwise: but yet remaining under
the invincible power of his vile and malignant disposition,
he continues still in his settled hatred of his father. Now,
if such a son's indirect willingness to love and honour his
father, at all acquits or excuses before God, for his failing
of actually exercising these dispositions towards him,
which God requires, it must be on one of these accounts.
(1.) Either, That it answers and fulfils the command.
But this it does not by the supposition; because the thing
commanded is love and honour to his worthy parent. If
the command be proper and just, as is supposed, then it
obliges to the thing commanded; and so nothing else but
that can answer the obligation. Or, (2.) It must be at
least, because there is that virtue or goodness in his indirect willingness, that is equivalent to
the virtue required;
and so balances or countervails it, and makes up for the
want of it. But that also is contrary to the supposition.
The willingness the son has merely from a regard to money
and honour, has no goodness in it, to countervail the want
of the pious filial respect required.
Sincerity and reality, in that indirect Willingness, which
has been spoken of, does not make it the better. That
which is real and hearty is often called sincere; whether
it be in virtue or vice. Some persons are sincerely bad;
others are sincerely good; and others may be sincere and
hearty in things, which are in their own nature indifferent;
as a man may be sincerely desirous of eating when he is
hungry. But being sincere, hearty, and in good earnest,
is no virtue, unless it be in a thing that is virtuous. A
man may be sincere and hearty in joining a crew of pirates,
or a gang of robbers. When the devils cried out, and
besought Christ not to torment them, it was no mere pretense; they were very hearty in
their desires not to be tormented: but this did not make their Will or Desire virtuous. And
if men have sincere Desires, which are in
their kind and nature no better, it can be no excuse for
the want of any required virtue.
And as a man's Sincerity in such an indirect Desire or
willingness to do his duty, as has been mentioned, cannot
excuse for the want of performance; so it is with Endeavours arising from such a
Willingness. The Endeavours
can have no more goodness in them, than the Will of which
they are the effect and expression. And, therefore, however sincere and real, and
however great a person's Endeavours are; yea, though they should be to the utmost
of his ability; unless the Will from which they proceed
be truly good and virtuous, they can be of no avail or
weight whatsoever in a moral respect. That which is not
truly virtuous is, in God's sight, good for nothing: and so
can be of no value, or influence, in his account, to make up
for any moral defect. For nothing can counterbalance evil,
but good. If evil be in one scale, and we put a great deal
into the other of sincere and earnest Desires, and many and
great endeavours; yet, if there be no real goodness in all,
there is no weight in it; and so it does nothing towards
balancing the real weight, which is in the opposite scale.
It is only like subtracting a thousand noughts from
before a real number, which leaves the sum just as it was.
Indeed such Endeavours may have a negatively good
influence. Those things, which have no positive virtue,
have no positive moral influence; yet they may be an
occasion of persons avoiding some positive evils. As if a
man were in the water with a neighbor to whom he had
ill will, and who could not swim, holding him by his hand;
this neighbor was much in debt to him,-- the man is
tempted to let him sink and drown -- but refuses to comply
with the temptation; not from love to his neighbor, bet
from the love of money, and because by his drowning he
should lose his debt; that which he does in preserving his
neighbor from drowning, is nothing good in the sight of
God: yet hereby he avoids the greater guilt that would
have been contracted, if he had designedly let his neighbor sink and perish. But when
Arminians, in their disputes with Calvinists, insist so much on sincere Desires
and Endeavours, as what must excuse men, must be accepted of God, &c. it is
manifest they have respect to some
positive moral weight or influence of those Desires and
Endeavours. Accepting, justifying, or excusing on the
account of sincere Endeavours, (as they are called,) and
men doing what they can, &c. has relation to some moral
value, something that is accepts as good, and as such,
countervailing some defect.
But there is a great and unknown deceit, arising from
the ambiguity of the phrase, sincere Endeavours. Indeed
there is a vast indistinctness and unfixedness in most, or
at least very many of the terms used to express things
pertaining to moral and spiritual matters. whence arise
innumerable mistakes, strong prejudices, inextricable confusion, and endless controversy.--
The word sincere is most
commonly used to signify something that is good: men are
habituated to understand by it the same as honest and upright; which terms excite an idea
of something good in
the strictest and highest sense; good in the sight of him,
who sees not only the outward appearance, but the heart.
And, therefore, men think that if a person be sincere, he
will certainly be accepted. If it be said that any one is
sincere in his endeavours, this suggests, that his heart is
good, that there is no defect of duty, as to virtuous inclination; he honestly and uprightly
desires and endeavours to
do as he is required; and this leads them to suppose, that it
would be very hard and unreasonable to punish him, only
because he is unsuccessful in his endeavours, the thing
endeavored after being beyond his power.-- Whereas it
ought to be observed, that the word sincere has these different significations.
1. Sincerity, as the word is sometimes used, signifies no
more than reality of will and Endeavour, with respect to
any thing that is professed or pretended; without any
consideration of the nature of the principle or aim, whence
this real Will and true endeavour arises. If a man has
some real Desire either direct or indirect to obtain a thing,
or does really endeavour after it, he is said sincerely to desire or endeavour, without any
consideration of the goodness
of the principle from which he acts, or any excellency or
worthiness of the end for which he acts. Thus a man who
is kind to his neighbour's wife, who is sick and languishing, and very helpful in her case,
makes a show of desiring
and endeavouring her restoration to health and vigor; and
not only makes such a show, but there is a reality in his
pretense, he does heartily and earnestly desire to have her
health restored, and uses his true and utmost Endeavours
for it: he is said sincerely to desire and endeavour after it,
because he does so truly or really; though perhaps the
principle he acts from, is no other than a vile and scandalous passion; having lived in
adultery with her, he earnestly
desires to have her health and vigor restored, that he may
return to his criminal pleasures. Or,
2. By Sincerity is meant, not merely a reality of will
and Endeavour of some sort, and from some consideration
or other, but a virtuous Sincerity. That is, that in the performance of those particular acts,
that are the matter of
virtue or duty, there be not only the matter, but the form
and essence of virtue, consisting in the aim that governs
the act, and the principle exercised in it. There is not only
the reality of the act, that is as it were the body of the duty;
but also the soul, which should properly belong to such a
body. In this sense, a man is said to be sincere, when he
acts with a pure intention; not from sinister views: he not
only in reality desires and seeks the thing to be done, or
qualification to be obtained, for some end or other; but he
wills the thing directly and properly, as neither forced nor
bribed; the virtue of the thing is properly the object of the
Will.
In the former sense, a man is said to be sincere, in opposition to a mere pretense, and
show of the particular
thing to be done or exhibited, without any real Desire or
Endeavour at all. In the latter sense, a man is said to be
sincere, in opposition to that show of virtue there is in
merely doing the matter of duty, without the reality of the
virtue itself in the soul. A man may be sincere in the
former sense, and yet in the latter be in the sight of God,
who searches the heart, a vile hypocrite.
In the latter kind of sincerity, only, is there any thing
truly valuable or acceptable in the sight of God. And
this is what in Scripture is called Sincerity, uprightness,
integrity, "truth in the inward parts," and "heirs of a
perfect heart." And if there be such a Sincerity, and such
a degree of it as there ought to be, and there be any thing
further that the man is not able to perform, or which does
not prove to be connected with his sincere Desires and
Endeavours, the man is wholly excused and acquitted in
the sight of God; his Will shall surely be accepted for his
deed: and such a sincere Will and Endeavour is all that
in strictness is required of him, by any command of God,
but as to the other kind of Sincerity of Desires and Endeavours, having no virtue in it, (as was
observed before,)
it can be of no avail before God, in any case, to recommend, satisfy, or excuse, and has no
positive moral weight
or influence whatsoever.
Corol. 1. Hence it may be inferred, that nothing in the
reason and nature of things appears from the consideration
of any moral weight in the former kind of Sincerity,
leading us to suppose, that God has made any positive
promises of salvation, or grace, or any saving assistance,
or any spiritual benefit whatsoever, to any Desires, prayers,
Endeavours, striving, or obedience of those, who hitherto
have no true virtue or holiness in their hearts; though we
should suppose all the Sincerity, and the utmost degree
of Endeavour, that is possible to be in person without
holiness.
Some object against God requiring, as the condition of
salvation, those holy exercises, which are the result of a
supernatural renovation; such as a supreme respect to
Christ, love to God, loving holiness for its own sake, &c.
that these inward dispositions and exercises are above
men's power, as they are by nature; and therefore that we
may conclude, that when men are brought to be sincere in
their Endeavours, and do as well as they can, they are
accepted; and that this must be all that God requires, in
order to their being received as the objects of his favour,
and must be what God has appointed as the condition of
salvation. Concerning this, I would observe, that in such
manner of speaking as "men being accepted because they
are sincere, and do as well as they can," there is evidently
a supposition of some virtue, some degree of that which
is truly good; though it does not go so far as were to be
wished. For if men do what they can, unless their so
doing be from some good principle, disposition, or exercise
of heart, some virtuous inclination or act of the will;
their so doing what they can, is in some respect not a
whit better than if they did nothing at all. In such a
case, there is no more positive moral goodness in a man
doing what he can, than in a windmill doing what it can;
because the action does no more proceed from virtue:
and there is nothing in such Sincerity of Endeavour, or
doing what we can, that should render it any more a fit
recommendation to positive favour and acceptance, or the
condition of any reward or actual benefit, than doing nothing; for both the one and the other are
alike nothing, as
to any true moral weight or value.
Corol. 2. Hence also it follows, there is nothing that
appears in the reason and nature of things, which can
justly lead us to determine, that God will certainly give
the necessary means of salvation, or some way or other
bestow true holiness and eternal life on those heathens,
who are sincere (in the sense above explained) in their
Endeavours to find out the Will of the Deity, and to
please him, according to their light, that they may escape
his future displeasure and wrath, and obtain happiness in
the future state, through his favour
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