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GraciousCall.org - Bondage of the Will: The Necessity of Knowing God and His Power
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THE NECESSITY OF KNOWING GOD AND HIS POWER.
Sect. 7. - BUT I will set
your theology before your eyes by a few similitudes. - What if any one, intending to
compose a poem, or an oration, should never think about, nor inquire into his abilities,
what he could do, and what he could not do, nor what the subject undertaken required; and
should utterly disregard that precept of Horace, "What the shoulders can sustain, and
what they must sink under;" but should precipitately dash upon the undertaking and
think thus - I must strive to get the work done; to inquire whether the learning I have,
the eloquence I have, the force of genius I have, be equal to it, is curious and
superfluous:- Or, it any one, desiring to have a plentiful crop from his land, should not
be so curious as to take the superfluous care of examining the nature of the soil, (as
Virgil curiously and in vain teaches in his Georgics,) but should rush on at once,
thinking of nothing but the work, and plough the seashore, and cast in the seed wherever
the soil was turned up, whether sand or mud:- Or if any one, about to make war, and
desiring a glorious victory, or intending to render any other service to the state, should
not be so curious as to deliberate upon what it was in his power to do; whether the
treasury could furnish money, whether the soldiers were fit, whether any opportunity
offered; and should pay no regard whatever to that of the historian, "Before you act,
there must be deliberation, and when you have deliberated, speedy execution;" but
should rush forward with his eyes blinded, and his ears stopped, only exclaiming war! war!
and should be determined on the undertaking:- What, I ask you, Erasmus, would you think of
such poets, such husbandmen, such generals, and such heads of affairs? I will add also
that of the Gospel - If any one going to build a tower, sits not down first and counts the
cost, whether he has enough to finish it, - What does Christ say of such an One? (Luke
xiv. 28-32).
Thus you also enjoin us works only. But you forbid us to examine,
weigh, and know, first, our ability, what we can do, and what we cannot do, as being
curious, superfluous, and irreligious. Thus, while with your over-cautious prudence you
pretend to detest temerity, and make a show of sobriety, you go so far, that you even
teach the greatest of all temerity. For, although the Sophists are rash and mad in reality
while they pursue their curious inquiries, yet their sin is less enormous than yours; for
you even teach and enjoin men to be mad, and to rush on with temerity. And to make your
madness still greater, you persuade us, that this temerity is the most exalted and
Christian piety, sobriety, religious gravity, and even salvation. And you assert, that if
we exercise it not, we are irreligious, curious, and vain: although you are so great an
enemy to assertions. Thus, in steering clear of Charybdis, you have, with excellent grace,
escaped Scylla also. But into this state you are driven by your confidence in your own
talents. You believe, that you can by your eloquence, so impose upon the understandings of
all, that no one shall discover the design which you secretly hug in your heart, and what
you aim at in all those your pliant writings. But God is not mocked, (Gal. vi. 7,) upon
whom it is not safe to run.
Moreover, had you enjoined us this temerity in composing poems, in
preparing for fruits, in conducting wars or other undertakings, or in building houses;
although it would have been intolerable, especially in so great a man, yet you might have
been deserving of some pardon, at least from Christians, for they pay no regard to these
temporal things. But when you enjoin Christians themselves to become rash workers, and
charge them not to be curious about what they can do and what they cannot do, in obtaining
eternal salvation; this, evidently, and in reality, is the sin unpardonable. For while
they know not what or how much they can do, they will not know what to do; and if they
know not what to do, they cannot repent when they do wrong; and impenitence is the
unpardonable sin: and to this, does that moderate and sceptical theology of yours lead us.
Therefore, it is not irreligious, curious, or superfluous, but
essentially wholesome and necessary, for a Christian to know, whether or not the will does
any thing in those things which pertain unto Salvation. Nay, let me tell you, this is the
very hinge upon which our discussion turns. It is the very heart of our subject. For our
object is this: to inquire what "Free-will" can do, in what it is passive, and
how it stands with reference to the grace of God.
If we know nothing of these things,
we shall know nothing whatever of Christian matters, and shall be far behind all People
upon the earth.
He that does not feel this, let him confess that he is no Christian.
And he that despises and laughs at it, let him know that he is the Christian's greatest
enemy. For, if I know not how much I can do myself, how far my ability extends, and what I
can do God-wards; I shall be equally uncertain and ignorant how much God is to do, how far
His ability is to extend, and what He is to do toward me: whereas it is "God that
worketh all in all." (1 Cor. xii. 6.) But if I know not the distinction between our
working and the power of God,I know
not God Himself. And if I know not God, I cannot worship Him, praise Him, give Him thanks,
nor serve Him; for I shall not know how much I ought to ascribe unto myself, and how much
unto God. It is necessary, therefore, to hold the most certain distinction, between the
power of God and our power, the working of God and our working, if we would live in His
fear.
Hence you see, this point, forms another part of the whole sum of
Christianity; on which depends, and in which is at stake, the knowledge of ourselves, and
the knowledge and glory of God. Wherefore, friend Erasmus, your calling the knowledge of
this point irreligious, curious, and vain, is not to be borne in you. We owe much to you,
but we owe all to the fear of God. Nay you yourself see, that all our good is to be
ascribed unto God, and you assert that in your Form of Christianity: and in asserting
this, you certainly, at the same time assert also, that the mercy of God alone does all
things, and that our own will does nothing, but is rather acted upon: and so it must be, otherwise the
whole is not ascribed unto God. And yet, immediately afterwards, you say, that to assert
these things, and to know them, is irreligious, impious, and vain. But at this rate a
mind, which is unstable in itself, and unsettled and inexperienced in the things of
godliness, cannot but talk.
Sect. 8. - ANOTHER part
of the sum of Christianity is, to know, whether God foreknows any thing by contingency, or
whether we do all things from necessity. This part also you make to be irreligious,
curious, and vain, as all the wicked do: the devils , and the damned also, make it
detestable and execrable. And you shew your wisdom in keeping yourself clear from such
questions, wherever you can do it. But however, you are but a very poor rhetorician and
theologian, if you pretend to speak of "Free-will" without these essential parts
of it. I will therefore act as a whetstone, and though no rhetorician myself, will tell a
famed rhetorician what he ought to do - If, then, Quintilian, purposing to write on
Oratory, should say, "In my judgment, all that superfluous nonsense about invention,
arrangement, elocution, memory, pronunciation, need not be mentioned; it is enough to
know, that Oratory, is the art of speaking well" - would you not laugh at such a
writer? But you act exactly like this: for pretending to write on "Free-will,"
you first throw aside, and cast away, the grand substance and all the parts of the subject
on which you undertake to write. Whereas, it is impossible that you should know what
"Free-will" is, unless you know what the human will does, and what God does or
foreknows.
Do not your rhetoricians teach, that he who undertakes to speak upon
any subject, ought first to show, whether the thing exist; and then, what it is, what its
parts are, what is contrary to it, connected with it, and like unto it, &c.? But you
rob that miserable subject in itself, "Free will," of all these things: and
define no one question concerning it, except this first, viz., whether it exist: and even
this with such arguments as we shall presently see: and so worthless a book on
"Free-will" I never saw, excepting the elegance of the language. The Sophists,
in reality, at least argue upon this point better than you, though those of them who have
attempted the subject of "Free-will," are no rhetoricians; for they define all
the questions connected with it: whether it exists, what it does, and how it stands with
reference to, &c.: although they do not effect what they attempt. In this book,
therefore, I will push you, and the Sophists together, until you shall define to me the
power of "Free-will," and what it can do: and I hope I shall so push you,
(Christ willing) as to make you heartily repent that you ever published your Diatribe.
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