WHY IMPARTIAL GRACE
IS AN
OCCASION OF REPROACH.
From "Counsel and Encouragement: Discourses on the
Conduct of Life"
by Hosea Ballou, 2D., D.D.
1866
"For therefore we both labor and suffer reproach, because we trust in
the living God who is the saviour of all men, specially of those that
believe." (1 Tim. 4:10)
If we were to compare the apostle's doctrine, here, with the views that are
commonly entertained at the present day, we should find one thing, in this
present age, which is received in every quarter without hesitation and without
modification.
1. All agree that "God is the Saviour of those who believe." And here people
commonly stop. It should be observed, however, that our text does not stop here;
our text asserts, that God is indeed the Saviour of believers, in some special
sense, but this is not all, it goes further. It asserts that he is also the
Saviour of all men; that he is the universal Saviour! in distinction from his
being, nothing more than the special Saviour of a particular class, -- "the
living God, who is the Saviour of all men, specially of those that believe." If
we inquire, what it is that makes the "specialty " here mentioned in the case of
believers, it is very easily answered. It is because that, to believers, God has
already given the first-fruits of their salvation. In some degree they have
already come into possession of the joy set before them, and realized the
inheritance that awaits them. As St. Paul says, in another place, "Believing,
they rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory." But then, we must not
forget, my friends, that even these believers, who are at present distinguished
with this specialty, were once unbelievers themselves. They
once belonged to the common mass, and they were taken out of it and converted,
only because "God would have all men to be saved," and because he had instituted
the dispensation of the gospel for this purpose. These believers had been
brought into the faith at that early stage of the great enterprise. But if God
had not purposed and undertaken the salvation of the whole world, there would
have been no gospel given, and of course there would have been no
believers. As St. Paul says again , "God hath concluded all in unbelief, that he
might have mercy upon all." The same Divine Power, who has already brought
multitudes to believe, and saved them by the washing of regeneration and the
renewing of the Holy Spirit, is continually carrying on the work with those who
belong as yet to the class of unbelievers. He is daily bringing them over, one
by one, or in greater numbers. Unbelievers, sinners, are as the raw material out
of which God makes all his saints. Pardon the homeliness of the expression, for
its truth. For you know, there never was a believer but was taken out of the
mass of unbelievers, never a saint but was taken out of the mass of sinners.
Unconverted sinners are like one in the mine, loathsome, perhaps, and unfit for
use in their present condition. But there is one who "sits as a refiner and
purifier of silver," who knows the value of the crude mass, as the metallurgist
knows the value of those unsmelted heaps of rubbish, which the simple, in their
ignorance, would be for throwing away. But the all-wise Creator knows a better
use to which he can put sinners, than to throw them away. He can make saints of
them. And it should be remembered that this is the very purpose for which he
instituted the whole economy of the gospel. As St. Paul said once more, "This is
a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Jesus Christ came into
the world to save sinners." They were precious in his sight; not so much for
what they now are, as for what they may be made. He gave himself for them; he
never will throw them utterly away. We know that he is every day, adding new
subjects to his kingdom from among them; and the great enterprise of redeeming
them can never stop in its victorious progress, till all are brought in.
2. We see, then, the strict propriety of the proposition in the text. That
"God is the Saviour of all men." This is the idea that stands foremost, and
gives. character to all the rest. We see likewise that there is a specialty in
the case of believers. They have already received the salvation, in some
measure, which is in progress for the whole human race.
It is not our design, however, to dwell, at present, on the proofs of the
final result; nor even to enter on a consideration of the facts. It is a
different train of thought that we propose, now, to enter upon. If you look into
the text, you with see that the direct object of St. Paul, was, to speak of the
hardships which he and his brethren underwent, for maintaining this truth before
the world. The doctrine of God the Saviour of all men, was a matter of reproach
in those times. ''For therefore we both labor and suffer reproach, because we
trust in the living God, who is the Saviour of all men, specially of those that
believe." For this trust, for this faith, and for their open maintenance of it,
they lay under a popular odium. It was not agreeable to the feelings and
prejudices of the world, at that day. And you know it continues to be the case,
in some measure, down to our day. Notwithstanding many exceptions that we find
at present, it would still be very appropriate for us to repeat the language
with reference to ourselves, and to say, we both labor and suffer reproach, on
the same account.
3. And now we wish to inquire, from what cause, or causes,
does this general reproach arise? Why is it that the world continues from age to
age, to dislike the truth that God is the Saviour of all men?
There are two remarkable circumstances with respect to the matter which I
will mention. In the first place, it is a common saying that the doctrine of
"God the Saviour of all men," is very pleasing to the carnal heart; though we
read that it is the will of God. There have been great pains taken to show that
it accords perfectly with the corrupt and ungodly passions of the unregenerate
world. And yet, when we turn to matter of fact, we see that there is no
doctrine, to which this same unregenerate world is so much opposed. How do we
account for that? Somehow, and from some cause, there is an instinctive
hostility against it, in the mass of the unsanctified. They do not like it, and
I think we shall discover the reason to be this, -- its very nature conflicts
with certain wicked feelings that rise in their hearts; and no wonder it is not
pleasing to them. In the second place, among all the several doctrines that are
current, this is the one and the only one which every good man wishes at least
might be true. It is what all his better feelings harmonize with. The spirit of
this doctrine is that in which every good man lives, and by which he strives to
govern his practice. The final salvation of all men, is what Christians of every
name and creed have prayed for, ever since the gospel was first preached on
earth; they are praying for it, all over the world, this day. They are pouring
forth their souls before the altar of divine grace, and beseeching God to make
it true. And now, why is it that they treat it with so much repugnance, and may
I not add, often with downright abuse, when it is presented to them as the truth
of the living God, with the assurance that what they pray for will be
accomplished. There is a great deal of short-sightedness and inconsistency in
the religious world, with respect to this point. No doubt, one reason why the
cause of this truth has been frequently reproached, is found in the unworthy
conduct of some of its professors. And so far as this has been the case, the
blame must be borne by these professors themselves, rather than by those who
censured them. But this reproach does not relate exclusively to the truth we are
now considering; it is common to all truth which has ever been disparaged by the
imperfections, follies, and vices of its advocates.
II. In order to account for so long-continued and general a repugnance, as
has appeard among mankind to the truth of infinite grace and universal
salvation, we must look for some cause lying very deep in the human character,
one that operates nearly the same, the world over, under all changes of mere
circumstance.
1. It may be well for us to begin, by looking back into the apostolic age,
and observing the reasons why this gospel was treated with so much reproach, at
that time. ''We both labor and suffer reproach," says St. Paul. Why?
From whom? Now, you are aware of the quarter, from which the contempt and abuse
came, in his case. Among the Jews, it was from the Priests, doctors of the law,
Scribes and Pharisees; in one word, from the foremost patrons of the religion
which had long occupied every town and village in that country. Among the
Gentiles, the opposition came from the zealots and devotees of the heathen
system of worship. It is a circumstance which I wish were more generally taken
notice of, that the common people, especially those who were then called the
sinners, heard Christ and his apostles gladly, and were by far the most disposed
to receive the truth while, on the other hand, the whole body, speaking in
general terms, of those who were regarded as the righteous, stood up in
opposition to the gospel, warned the community against it, pronounced it an
imposition, a dreadful delusion, cast its believers out of the synagogues, and
roused up the public prejudices.
I am not disposed to liken the older sects, in our times and country, to the
ancient Pharisees; for that would be unjust, and in many respects untrue. But I
think you will see, that, considering how the case was in the age of the
apostles, it is not strange, in the least, that a strong tide of reproach
against the doctrine of God the Saviour of all men, should be found to come, in
our day, from a religious quarter. Pharisaism, alas! did not wholly die out with
the old Jews. It has found an entrance into the Christian Church. Who, among
ourselves even, can claim to be entirely free from it! And all the Pharisaism,
which there is in the older and prevailing forms of religion around us will act
now just as it did then, will oppose and despise the idea of impartial grace and
salvation. Wherever there is a taint of Phariasaism, even if it be in the heart
of an otherwise good man, it will show itself on this point. It cannot bear that
all mankind should be received to the equal mercy of our common Father. And so
long as such a spirit continues in our world, there must be this reproach.
2. There is another consideration. Keeping in view the quarter whence much of
this hostility arises, we can see a very natural cause for it, in the grounds on
which the gospel of God, the Saviour of all men, places religion, experimental
and practical; grounds that are of a very different kind from those on which
every other form of the gospel must place it. The doctrine of universal grace
and salvation makes experimental religion to rest on the love of God. It cannot
say to the sinner, "There is eternal torment for you, if you do not speedily
repent," nor on the other hand can it say to the sinner, "There is eternal glory
for you, if you will only secure it now." This doctrine cannot drive people to
serve God, at the point of the bayonet, as it were, by the fear of endless
punishment. Nor can it make a mere traffic of their affections, and hire them to
love God, by the offer of heaven as wages. The gospel, must speak in the
language of free grace, and not of barter, if it speaks at all. Its voice must
always be turned to accordance with the annunciation of the angels, "Fear not,"
&c. That is its keynote, and, through all its variations, from encouragement to
admonition and warning, it cannot change that grand tone. It appeals to the
goodness of God to lead men to repentance. Though it presents the divine
goodness as manifesting itself in judgments as well as in mercies, yet back of
all inflictions, back of all punishments and sufferings, here or hereafter, it
opens to our view time unchangeable principle of infinite love, as a boundless
expanse of sunshine that swallows up the transient clouds which sometimes darken
our horizon for a while. All begins in love; all is conducted in love; all ends
in love. This is the influence which it relies upon to convert
sinners, and to secure obedience. While it denounces the retributions of Heaven
on all sin, it still holds them up as the retributions of a father and
unchangeable friend.
3. Now, a person who has been brought up and indoctrinated in the idea, that
all which religion in this world is good for, is to save us from hell, and
introduce us into heaven, hereafter, cannot understand how it is possible there
should be any religion at all in the gospel of which we have just spoken,
because it recognizes no eternal perdition to terrify. He says that it is
irreligious in its tendency, and immoral, corrupting; and he thinks so. Why?
Because it does not present the love of God to the sinner? No; not on this
account; but there it does present this love, in its infinite fulness, to all
men, and because it acknowledges no punishment but such as is paternal in its
nature, no endless perdition by the fear of which to drive mankind to obedience.
What would Nebuchadnezzar have said, when he set up his burning fiery furnace,
on the plain of Dura, to make the people bow down to his image, had some one
proposed to quench the furnace, and dispense with its aid in the work?
Nebuchadnezzar knew very well that the peculiar kind of homage that he wished to
secure for his golden image, was not to be had, without his terrible apparatus
of torment; and that if he gave this up, the whole service would stop at once.
You can easily fancy how he would have abhorred the proposition, as fatal to the
kind of worship he was engaged in promoting. And, even within own our days, I
can remember the time when it was a common remark, that, on our ground, there
was no use in religion; that if all were to be saved at last, there was no
reason why we should trouble ourselves to serve God any more; that we might, in
that case, just as well give ourselves full license in sin, and take our
pleasure, as we live. Now, wherever this notion of religion prevails, there must
be felt a very strong and deep-seated antipathy to the gospel of universal
grace. For it is plain that if the service of God, in the present life, were
such an intolerable burden that nothing but the fear of endless damnation would
drive people into it, and keep them steadfast; if it were true that religion
consists in obeying God, not through love, but by the constraint of terror, and
that the chief value of it, is, that it is the means of securing our everlasting
welfare; then indeed we should have to acknowledge that our views of the gospel
are irreligious in their influence. But I need not remind you that there neither
is, nor can be, any true religion but what flows from the love of God, and is
its own reward. Says St. John, "We love him, because he first loved us." And he,
whom we profess to follow, has given us this example, that we should regard it
as "Our meat and our drink to do the will of our Father which is heaven."
4. We have now pointed out one cause which has operated, more or less, in all
ages, to occasion the reproach spoken of. But there is another set of causes,
which lie still deeper, and occupy a wider space in the human heart. There are
elements of vanity, proud exclusiveness, revenge, and all hateful passions,
lurking in every mans bosom; and the principle of impartial favor comes in
direct conflict with all these, and meets reproach from them. It is unwelcome,
offensive to them. Go to a man who really loves his race with unbounded
philanthropy; make him believe that all share in the equal love of God, and are
heirs of immortal blessedness, and he will rejoice in the conviction with joy
unspeakable and full of glory; for it is what his heart yearns to behold
realized. Give the same assurance to a man who is at enmity with his neighbor,
and he does, not like it; there is a repugnance to the idea, here, in the
elements at work in his breast. It is not agreeable to his feelings that his
neighbor should be included; he would rather that he were shut out.
Other evil propensities within us operate in a similar manner. Our vanity, or
rather our ambitious love of distinction, cannot very well submit to the thought
that all mankind shall be raised to an equality with ourselves. We want that
some should be placed below us, to give us prominence, and the pleasure of
looking down upon them; or that they should be wholly shut out, so that we may
have the gratification of exclusive privilege. I believe that most people have a
love of aristocracy in its worst sense, aristocracy for themselves; they like to
bring those who are above them down to their level, but not those who are below
them, up to it. You may detect this disposition working in all classes; and in
none more than in those who cry out against it the most bitterly. Now, wherever
this feeling exists, it naturally inclines people to prefer a religion that will
gratify it with the promise of an exclusive share in God's regards, at present,
and an exclusive heaven hereafter. You remember that our Saviour charged much of
the opposition of the Pharisees to this cause, and held up a representation of
their envious spirit, in the parables of the elder brother, and the murmuring
laborers in the vineyard.
5. To this list of evil passions which stand in hostile array against the
gospel, we must add all the lusts of the world, from whence come wars and
fightings among men; the elements of cruelty in the human heart, the destructive
propensities, the eagerness to witness the sufferings of others, an eagerness so
widely diffused that, on any occasion when there is a prospect of its being
gratified, it will bring tens of thousands together, from city and country, to
feast their eyes on time sight; the love of martial glory, which exults in
fields of carnage, to say nothing of the passion of private revenge which plays
its part on a narrower field. How can we expect that all or any of these will
harmonize with the doctrine of infinite love, impartial goodness, universal
salvation. How can we expect but that they will incline towards a very different
system of faith? It is a great mistake, my friends, to suppose that the
unsanctified passions of men lead them to prefer mercy rather than sacrifice,
either in our faith or our practice; they lead us to prefer sacrifice rather
than mercy.
6. I have thus endeavored to lay open the general as well as the particular
causes of the reproaches which have so long been cast on the "Trust in the
living God, as the Saviour of all men, specially of those that believe." I
commit the whole subject to you, entreating you to remember that the grace of
God, which bringeth salvation to all men, teacheth us that, denying ungodliness
and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, and righteously, and godly, in this
present world.
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