It sustains the mischievous practice of mystifying, or making the
Scriptures to have a secret or hidden meaning, in the plainest
texts.
This mischievous practice was brought into the church, almost as
soon as the Apostles had left the world. The converts from
heathenism seemed intent on uniting heathen philosophy with
christianity. Hence they must find an abundance of mysteries in the
Scriptures: and the practice of allegorizing, i.e. making the
language to contain something that does not appear in the words,
commenced and generally prevailed, before the third century. This
was done, doubtless, with a view to lead heathen philosophers to
embrace christianity, as affording them a fruitful field for their
researches. But it led the church astray into the wild fields of
conjecture; and every lively imagination could find hidden wonders
in the Bible; while the plain literal meaning of the text was
disregarded. That fatal practice increased from age to age, till the
simplicity of the gospel was totally eclipsed, and the obscuration
has not wholly disappeared to this day.
This practice has given occasion to honest people, as well as to
infidels, to say, "You can make any thing out of the Bible," or
"play any tune upon it." And this is true, if men are to be allowed
to take texts which have a plain, obvious, and literal
signification, and call them mystical or figurative, when there is
not a clear necessity for doing so. The Scriptures themselves often
notify us when the language is to be understood figuratively; and
frequently those figures are explained, and the literal
interpretation given.
The common method of making the terms life and death mystical, or
figurative, i.e. to mean something more, and far different from what
appears in the literal and obvious signification of the words, I
conceive is unwarranted by the Scriptures, and tends only to throw
confusion upon the plainest subjects of the Bible, and also to take
away the force and beauty of very many otherwise clear and
intelligible portions of God's word.
Let me now call your attention to texts, the beauty and force of
which are greatly weakened and obscured by such a course.
Deut.30:15, "I have set life and death before you, therefore choose
Life, that both thou and thy seed may live." Again, Ps.16:11, "Thou
wilt show me the path of life; in thy presence is fullness of joy;
at thy right hand there are pleasures forever more."
Now let us contemplate some portions of the New Testament, in view
of the theory I oppose, and the one I advocate, and see on which
they have most force and the clearest meaning. Look at the young man
who came to our Saviour with an important inquiry, Matt.19:16 - What
does he say? Is it his inquiry, "What shall I do to escape endless
misery or suffering?" No: but, "What shall I do that I may have
eternal life?" How plain the question, on the theory I advocate, and
how appropriate the answer, "If thou wilt enter into life," &c. Not,
- if thou wilt escape endless life in torments, -not, if thou wilt
have a "happy eternal life," but simply, - If thou wilt enter into
life. What simplicity, beauty, and force! all is natural, and easy
to be understood.
Again, John 3:15,16, "That whosoever believeth in him should not
perish, but have eternal life. For God so loved the world, that he
gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him might
not perish, but have everlasting life." All here, again, is natural,
easy, and forcible, on the theory that the wicked are actually to
die or perish if found rejecting Christ, who only has eternal life
to give. But on the theory I oppose, we must have a whole sermon to
explain the meaning of the term perish, and make it appear that it
does not mean "extinction of being," but eternal life in sin and
misery! I once heard a Doctor of Divinity in New York city preach a
whole sermon on that one point; and that, too, after he had admitted
that the primary meaning of the term is "extinction of being." It
seems to me it is taking quite too much pains to make obscure the
meaning of a word, that of itself is easy to be understood.
In the same chapter, at the 36th verse, it is said: "He that
believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God
abideth on him." He is already condemned to death, and is dying;
eternal life is offered in the Son of God, he that will not accept
it, through him, shall not possess life, but the wrath of God shall
abide on him to the full execution of the penalty, which is "death,
the wages of sin." Again, John 5:28,29, - "The hour is coming in
which all that are in the graves shall hear his voice, and shall
come forth: they that have done good to the resurrection of life;
and they that have done evil to the resurrection of damnation," or
condemnation: but to what? not to eternal life in sin and misery,
but to death - for that is the wages sin has earned. Here the
language is natural and forcible, on the view I advocate, and the
contrast of life and death is perfect; but I ask any candid man if
it is so on the view I oppose?
Again, at the 39th and 40th verses: "Search the Scriptures, for in
them ye think ye have eternal life; and they are they that testify
of me; and ye will not come to me, that ye might have life."
They were looking not for eternal happiness merely, or an escape
from eternal torments, but for eternal life. Yet when the only
physician who could give that priceless blessing calls them to come
to him for it, they would not come; and, as a matter of course, they
are not saved "from death." Look at the following texts, in the 6th
chapter of John: "Labor for the meat that endureth unto everlasting
life. For the bread of God is he which cometh down from heaven, and
giveth life, unto the world. I am the bread of life. And this is the
will of Him that sent me, that every one which seeth the Son and
believeth on him may have everlasting life. I am that bread of life.
This is that bread which cometh down from heaven, that a man may eat
thereof, and not die. If any man eat of this bread, he shall live
forever. The words I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are
life. Lord, to whom shall we go? thou hast the words of eternal
life."
That simple life and death are put in opposition, or clearly implied
in these texts, is too plain not to be seen by any person of common
attention. "Not die - eternal life." Now, a man shall "not die," if
the theory I oppose is true, whether he come to Christ or not; and
it would have been just as easy to have expressed the doctrine of
eternal being in sin and suffering by unequivocal language, as in
that, the literal interpretation of which must necessarily lead
astray, if that doctrine be true.
Again, John 8:12, "He that followeth me shall have the light of
life." And at the 51st verse, "If a man keep my sayings he shall
never see death." Again, in 10th chapter, "I am come that they might
have life. My sheep hear my voice and they follow me; and I give
unto them eternal life, - and they shall never perish," &c. Does not
this language clearly imply, that those who do not follow Christ
will perish? Yes, says the objector, their happiness will perish!
But I ask, if such an interpretation is not forced and unnatural?
Our Saviour says no such thing. Perish is put in opposition to life.
By the simple and natural meaning of the terms, there is great
beauty and force in the language. Besides, to admit of a departure
from the literal meaning of the term perish, throws us into the
regions of uncertainty; and if one man may say it means his
happiness shall perish, another may say it means his sins shall
perish, and so on. But if it signifies simply what the word imports
- a destruction of being - then his happiness and his sins perish
with him, as a matter of course, and there is no obscurity about it.
Again, John 11:25,26, "I am the resurrection and the life; he that
believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live; and
whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die." How forcible
and full of power are these words, literally understood! But say, to
die, means loss of happiness, though the person still lives, and you
at once strip the expression of our Lord of the energy which it
possesses in its plain and obvious meaning.
Again, John 14:6, - "I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man
cometh unto the Father but by me."
Also, Rom.5:17 - "If by one man's offence, death reigned by one,
much more they which receive abundance of grace, and of the gift of
righteousness, shall reign in life by one Jesus Christ; therefore,
as by the offence of one, judgment came upon all men to
condemnation, [i.e. unto death;] even so, by the righteousness of
one, the free gift came upon all men, [i.e. in its offer,] unto
justification of life. That as sin hath reigned unto death, [i.e.
unto condemnation to death,] even so might grace reign through
righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord."
That the death spoken of, here, is a literal death the context
clearly shows; it was that death that came into the world by one
man's sin (verse 12,) and which "reigned from Adam to Moses, even
over those that had not sinned after the similitude of Adam's
transgression:" (verse 14.) If then the death is literal so is the
life offered, and promised; and that life is only to be obtained
"through righteousness," or becoming righteous, and "by Jesus
Christ."
Now look at such expressions as the following: "The crown of life, -
The word of life, - The grace of life. He that hath the Son hath
life, - he that hath not the Son of God hath not life, - The water
of life, - Verily, verily, I say unto you, he that heareth my word
and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall
not come into condemnation, but is passed from death unto life, -
This do and thou shalt live, - Because I live ye shall live also, -
We shall also live with him, - Be in subjection unto the Father of
spirits, and live, - God sent his Son, that we might live through
him, - If one died for all, then were all dead," i.e., dying, doomed
to die; as the body is dead, because of sin, i.e., doomed to die,
though not yet actually dead. "Who died for us, that we should live
together with him." These, and a multitude of other texts of
Scripture, all speak in plain and unequivocal language, if the view
I take of the final destiny of the wicked is correct; otherwise, and
if figurative, the imagination must be employed to explain them; and
then we find ourselves let loose in the wild fields of fancy; and
who shall decide where we shall stop?
In these sermons I have endeavored to show that man by sin lost all
title to immortality; and had it not been for the "seed of the
woman" the race would have utterly perished, or ceased to be, and
would have been as though they never had been. There is not a
particle of evidence that the original threatening embraced a state
of eternal sin and suffering, that idea has puzzled our greatest and
most learned divines, to tell how an atonement could be made
adequate to redeem men from such a punishment. To meet the case,
they have gone to the idea that God, himself, suffered to make the
necessary atonement; and then they have started back from that
position, as being impossible that the Godhead could actually
suffer, and so have substituted the "human body and soul" of Jesus
Christ, as united with the Godhead, and the human nature of Christ
only suffering. This has led others to deny an atonement altogether,
as they have contended that the man Christ Jesus, while the Godhead
did not suffer, could not, by any sufferings he might endure, give
an equivalent for endless torments in the fire of hell. Pressed with
this difficulty, the advocates of the endless sin and suffering
theory have been led to say, it was not necessary to an atonement
that the sufferer should endure the very same punishment that the
guilty were liable to, but only such as should show that God would
not let sin go unpunished. Others have taken advantage of this
admission to deny the necessity of an atonement at all, and hence
have opposed the idea of one. This has resulted in a still further
departure from truth, and they have taken the position, that if man
suffers for his sins, himself, that is all sufficient; and that his
sufferings are bounded by this life, or at most, to a very limited
period in a future state, after which he will have an eternity of
happiness.
Now all this confusion and conjecture, for I can give it no higher
name, I conceive, arises from not clearly
understanding what man lost by the fall, for himself and posterity.
In order to understand this subject I shall conclude these
discourses, with general remarks on Adam's state, trial and failure.
The extravagant manner in which Adam's knowledge and holiness has
been insisted on by nearly all theologians, I am disposed to think,
is not sustained by either the works or words of God. Adam has been
represented as the very perfection of knowledge and holiness at his
creation. The facts stated in regard to his creation are so few,
that from those alone we might be left in doubt as to Adam's
perfection as an intelligent and moral being; yet we shall find by
observing God's order in his works in connection with revelation the
real state of Adam at creation.
GOD'S
WORKS HAVE
ALWAYS BEEN PROGRESSIVE
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