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GraciousCall.org - Bondage of the Will: Discussion - First Part
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DISCUSSION: FIRST PART
Sect. 41. - AND, first of all, let us begin regularly with your
definition:
according to which, you define "Free-will" thus,
- "Moreover I consider Free-will in this light: that it is a power in the human
will, by which, a man may apply himself to those things which lead unto eternal salvation,
or turn away from the same."
-
With a great deal of policy indeed, you have here stated a mere naked definition,
without declaring any
part
of it, (as all others do); because, perhaps, you feared
more shipwrecks than one. I therefore am compelled to state the several parts myself. The
thing defined itself, if it be closely examined, has a much wider extent than the
definition of it: and such a definition, the Sophists would call faulty: that is, when the
definition does not fully embrace the thing defined. For I have shown before, that
"Free-will" cannot be applied to any one but to God only. You may, perhaps,
rightly assign to man some kind of will, but to assign unto him "Free-will" in
divine things, is going too far. For the term "Free-will," in the judgment of
the ears of all, means, that which can, and does do God-ward, whatever it pleases,
restrainable by no law and no command. But you cannot call him
Free,
who is a
servant acting under the power of the Lord. How much less, then, can we rightly call men
or angels
free,
who so live under the all-overruling command of God, (to say
nothing of sin and death,) that they cannot consist one moment by their own power.
Here then, at the outset, the definition of
the term,
and the definition of
the
thing
termed, militate against each other: because the term signifies one thing, and
the thing termed is, by experience, found to be another. It would indeed be more properly
termed "Vertible-will," or "Mutable-will." For in this way Augustine,
and after him the Sophists, diminished the glory and force of the term,
free;
adding
thereby this detriment, that they assign
vertibility
to "Free-will." And
it becomes us thus to speak, lest, by inflated and lofty terms of empty sound, we should
deceive the hearts of men. And, as Augustine also thinks, we ought to speak according to a
certain rule, in sober and proper words; for in teaching, simplicity and propriety of
argumentation is required, and not highflown figures of rhetorical persuasion.
Sect. 42. - BUT that we might not seem to delight in a mere war
of words, we cede to that abuse, though great and dangerous, that "Free-will means
"Vertible-will." We will cede also that to Erasmus, where he makes
"Free-will" 'a power of the human will:' (as though angels had not a
"Free-will" too, merely because he designed in this book to treat only on the
"Free-will" of men!) We make this remark, otherwise, even in this part, the
definition would be too narrow to embrace the thing defined.
We come then to those parts of the definition, which are the hinge upon which the
matter turns. Of these things some are manifest enough; the rest shun the light, as if
conscious to themselves that they had every thing to fear: because, nothing ought to be
expressed more clearly, and more decisively, than a definition; for to define obscurely,
is the same thing as defining nothing at all.
The clear parts of the definition then are these: - 'power of human will:' and 'by
which a man can:' also, 'unto eternal salvation.' But these are Andabatae: - 'to apply:'
and, 'to those things which lead:' also, 'to turn away.' What shall we divine that this
'to apply' means? And this 'to turn away,' also? And also what these words mean, 'which
pertain unto eternal salvation?' Into what dark corner have these withdrawn their meaning?
I seem as if I were engaged in dispute with a very Scotinian, or with Heraclitus himself,
so as to be in the way of being worn out by a twofold labour. First, that I shall have to
find out my adversary by groping and feeling about for him in pits and darkness, (which is
an enterprise both venturous and perilous,) and if I do not find him, to fight to no
purpose with ghosts, and beat the air in the dark. And, secondly, if I should bring him
out into the light, that then, I shall have to fight with him upon equal ground, when I am
already worn out with hunting after him.
I suppose, then, what you mean by the 'power of the human will' is this: - a power, or
faculty, or disposition, or aptitude, to will or not to will, to choose or refuse, to
approve or disapprove, and what other actions soever belong to the will. Now then, what it
is for this same power 'to apply itself,' or 'to turn away,' I do not see: unless it be
the very, willing or not willing, choosing or refusing, approving or disapproving; that
is, the very action itself of the will. But may we suppose, that this power is a kind of
medium, between the will itself and the action itself; such as, that by which the will
itself allures forth the action itself of willing or not willing, or by which the action
itself of willing or not willing is allured forth? Any thing else beside this, it is
impossible for one to imagine or think of. And if I am deceived, let the fault be my
author's who has given the definition, not mine who examine it. For it is justly said
among lawyers, 'his words who speaks obscurely, when he can speak more plainly, are to be
interpreted against himself.' And here I wish to know nothing of our moderns and their
subtleties, for we must come plainly to close quarters in what we say, for the sake of
understanding and teaching.
And as to those words, 'which lead unto eternal salvation,' I suppose by them are meant
the words and works of God, which are offered to the human will, that it might either
apply itself to them, or turn away from them. But I call both the Law and the Gospel the
words of God. By the Law, works are required; and by the Gospel, faith. For there are no
other things which lead either unto the grace of God, or unto eternal salvation, but the
word and the work of God: because grace or the spirit is the life itself, to which we are
led by the word and the work of God.
Sect. 43. - BUT this life or salvation is an eternal matter,
incomprehensible to the human capacity: as Paul shews, out of Isaiah, (1 Cor. ii. 9.)
"Eye hath not seen nor ear heard, neither hath it entered into the heart of man to
conceive, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him." For when we
speak of eternal life, we speak of that which is numbered among the chiefest articles of
our faith. And what "Freewill" avails in this article Paul testifies, (1 Cor.
ii. 10.) Also: "God (saith he) hath revealed them unto us by His Spirit." As
though he had said, the heart of no man will ever understand or think of any of those
things, unless the Spirit shall reveal them; so far is it from possibility, that he should
ever apply himself unto them or seek after them.
Look at experience. What have the most exalted minds among the nations thought of a
future life, and of the resurrection? Has it not been, that the more exalted they were in
mind, the more ridiculous the resurrection and eternal life have appeared to them? Unless
you mean to say, that those philosophers and Greeks at Athens, who, (Acts xvii. 18.)
called Paul, as he taught these things, a "babbler" and a "setter forth of
strange gods," were not of exalted minds. Portius Festus, (Acts xxvi. 24.) calls out
that Paul is "mad," on account of his preaching eternal life. What does Pliny
bark forth, Book vii.? What does Lucian also, that mighty genius? Were not they men
wondered at? Moreover to this day there are many, who, the more renowned they are for
talent and erudition, the more they laugh at this article; and that openly, considering it
a mere fable. And certainly, no man upon earth, unless imbued with the Holy Spirit, ever
secretly knows, or believes in, or wishes for, eternal salvation, how much soever he may
boast of it by his voice and by his pen. And may you and I, friend Erasmus, be free from
this boasting leaven. So rare is a believing soul in this article! - Have I got the sense
of this definition?
Sect. 44. UPON the authority of Erasmus, then,
"Free-will,"
is a power of the human will, which can, of itself, will and not will to embrace the word
and work of God, by which it is to be led to those things which are beyond its capacity
and comprehension.
If then, it can will and not will, it can also love and hate. And
if it can love and hate, it can, to a certain degree, do the Law and believe the Gospel.
For it is impossible, if you can will and not will, that you should not be able by that
will to begin some kind of work, even though, from the hindering of another, you should
not be able to perfect it. And therefore, as among the works of God which lead to
salvation, death, the cross, and all the evils of the world are numbered, human will can
will its own death and perdition. Nay, it can will all things while it can will the
embracing of the word and work of God. For what is there that can be any where beneath,
above, within, and without the word and work of God, but God Himself? And what is there
here left to grace and the Holy Spirit? This is plainly to ascribe
divinity
to
"Free-will." For to will to embrace the Law and the Gospel, not to will sin, and
to will death, belongs to the power of God alone: as Paul testifies in more places than
one.
Wherefore, no one, since the Pelagians, has written more rightly concerning
"Free-will" than Erasmus. For I have said above, that "Free-will" is a
divine term, and signifies a divine power. But no one hitherto, except the Pelagians, has
ever assigned to it that power. Hence, Erasmus by far outstrips the Pelagians themselves:
for they assign that divinity to the whole of "Free-will," but Erasmus to the
half of it only. They divide "Free-will" into two parts;
the power of
discerning,
and
the power of choosing;
assigning the one to reason, and the
other to will; and the Sophists do the same. But Erasmus, setting aside the power of
discerning, exalts the power of choosing alone, and thus makes a lame, half-membered
"Free-will," God himself! What must we suppose then he would have done, had he
set about describing the whole of "Free-will."
But, not contented with this, he outstrips even the philosophers. For it has never yet
been settled among them, whether or not any thing can give motion to itself; and upon this
point, the Platonics and Peripatetics are divided in the whole body of philosophy. But
according to Erasmus, "Freewill" not only of its own power gives motion to
itself, but 'applies itself' to those things which are eternal; that is, which are
incomprehensible to itself! A new and unheard-of definer of "Freewill," truly,
who leaves the philosophers, the Pelagians, the Sophists, and all the rest of them, far
behind him! Nor is this all. He does not even spare himself, but dissents from, and
militates against himself, more than against all the rest together. For he had said
before, that 'the human will is utterly ineffective without grace:' (unless perhaps this
was said only in joke!) but here, where he gives a serious definition, he says, that 'the
human will has that power by which it can effectively apply itself to those things which
pertain unto eternal salvation;' that is, which are incomparably beyond that power. So
that, in this part, Erasmus outstrips even himself!
Sect. 45. - DO you see, friend Erasmus, that by this definition,
you (though unwittingly I presume,) betray yourself, and make it manifest that you either
know nothing of these things whatever, or that, without any consideration, and in a mere
air of contempt, you write upon the subject, not knowing what you say nor whereof you
affirm? And as I said before, you say less about, and attribute more to
"Free-will," than all others put together; for you do not describe the whole of
"Free-will," and yet you assign unto it all things. The opinion of the Sophists,
or at least of the father of them, Peter Lombard, is far more tolerable: he says,
'"Free-will" is the faculty of discerning, and then choosing also good, if with
grace, but evil if grace be wanting.' He plainly agrees in sentiment with Augustine, that
'"Freewill," of its own power, cannot do any thing but fall, nor avail unto any
thing but to sin.' Wherefore Augustine also, Book ii., against Julian, calls
"Free-will" 'under bondage,' rather than 'free.' - But you make the power of
"Free-will" equal in both respects: that it can, by its own power, without
grace, both apply itself unto good, and turn itself from evil. For you do not imagine how
much you assign unto it, by this pronoun
itself,
and
by itself,
when you say
'can apply itself:' for you utterly exclude the Holy Spirit with all His power, as a thing
superfluous and unnecessary. Your definition, therefore, is condemnable even by the
Sophists; who, were they not so blinded by hatred and fury against me, would be enraged at
your book rather than at mine. But now, as your intent is to oppose Luther, all that you
say is holy and catholic, even though you speak against both yourself and them, - so great
is the patience of holy men!
Not that I say this, as approving the sentiments of the Sophists concerning
"Free-will," but because I consider them more tolerable, for they approach
nearer to the truth. For though they do not say, as I do, that "Free-will" is
nothing at all, yet since they say that it can of itself do nothing without grace, they
militate against Erasmus, nay, they seem to militate against themselves, and to be tossed
to and fro in a mere quarrel of words, being more earnest for contention than for the
truth, which is just as Sophists should be. But now, let us suppose that a Sophist of no
mean rank were brought before me, with whom I could speak upon these things apart, in
familiar conversation, and should ask him for his liberal and candid judgment in this way:
- 'If any one should tell you, that that was
free,
which of its own power could
only go one way, that is, the bad way, and which could go the other way indeed, that is,
the right way, but not by its own power, nay, only by the help of another - could you
refrain from laughing in his face, my friend?' - For in this way, I will make it appear,
that a stone, or a log of wood has "Freewill," because it can go upwards and
downwards; although, by its own power, it can go only downwards, but can go upwards only
by the help of another. And, as I said before, by meaning at the same time the thing
itself, and also something else which may be joined with it or added to it, I will say,
consistently with the use of all words and languages - all men are no man, and all things
are nothing!
Thus, by a multiplicity of argumentation, they at last make "Free-will," free
by accident;
as being that, which may at some time be set free by another. But our
point in dispute is concerning the thing itself, concerning the reality of
"Free-will." If this be what is to be solved, there now remains nothing, let
them say what they will, but the empty name of "Free-will."
The Sophists are deficient also in this - they assign to "Free-will," the
power of discerning good from evil. Moreover, they set light by regeneration, and the
renewing of the Spirit, and give that other
external aid,
as it were, to
"Freewill:" but of this hereafter. - Let this be sufficient concerning the
definition. Now let us look into the arguments that are to exalt this empty thing of a TERM.
Sect. 46. - FIRST of all, we have that of Ecclesiasticus xv.
15-18. - "God from the beginning made man, and left him in the hand of his own
counsel. He gave him also His commandments, and His precepts: saying, If thou wilt keep My
commandments, and wilt keep continually, the faith that pleaseth Me, they shall preserve
thee. He hath set before thee fire and water; and upon which thou wilt, stretch forth
thine hand. Before man is life and death, good and evil; and whichsoever pleaseth him,
shall be given unto him." -
Although I might justly refuse this book, yet, nevertheless, I receive it; lest I
should, with loss of time, involve myself in a dispute concerning the books that are
received into the canon of the Hebrews: which canon you do not a little reproach and
deride, when you compare the Proverbs of Solomon, and the Love-song, (as, with a
double-meaning sneer, you call it,) with the two books Esdras and Judith, the History of
Susannah, of the Dragon, and the Book of Esther, though they have this last in their
canon, and according to my judgment, it is much more worthy of being there, than any one
of those that are considered not to be in the canon.
But I would briefly answer you here in your own words, 'The Scripture, in this place,
is obscure and ambiguous;' therefore, it proves nothing to a certainty. But however, since
I stand in the negative, I call upon you to produce that place which declares, in plain
words, what "Free-will" is, and what it can do. And this perhaps you will do by
about the time of the Greek Calends. - In order to avoid this necessity, you spend many
fine sayings upon nothing; and moving along on the tip-toe of prudence, cite numberless
opinions concerning "Free-will," and make of Pelagius almost an Evangelist.
Moreover, you vamp up a four-fold grace, so as to assign a sort of faith and charity even
to the philosophers. And also that new fable, a three-fold law; of nature, of works, and
of faith, so as to assert with all boldness, that the precepts of the philosophers agree
with the precepts of the Gospel. Again, you apply that of Psalm iv. 6. "The light of
Thy countenance is settled upon us," which speaks of the knowledge of the very
countenance of the Lord, that is, of faith, to blinded reason. All which things together,
if taken into consideration by any Christian, must compel him to suspect, that you are
mocking and deriding the doctrines and religion of Christians: For to attribute these
things as so much ignorance to him, who has illustrated all our doctrines with so much
diligence, and stored them up in memory, appears to me very difficult indeed. But however,
I will here abstain from open exposure, contented to wait until a more favourable
opportunity shall offer itself. Although I entreat you, friend Erasmus, not to tempt me in
this way like one of those who say - who sees us? For it is by no means safe in so great a
matter, to be continually mocking every one with Vertumnities of words. But to the
subject.
Sect. 47. OUT of the ONE opinion
concerning "Free-will" you make THREE. You say - 'that
THE FIRST OPINION, of those who deny that man can will good without special grace, who
deny that it can begin, who deny that it can make progress, perfect, &c., seems to you
severe,
though it may be VERY PROBABLE.' And this you prove,
as leaving to man the desire and the effort, but not leaving what is to be ascribed to his
own power. 'That THE SECOND OPINION of those who contend, that "Free-will"
avails unto nothing but to sin, and that grace alone works good in us, &c. is
more
severe still.'
And THIRDLY 'that the opinion of those who say that
"Free-will" is an empty term, for that God works in us both good and evil, is
most
severe.
And, that, it is against these last that you profess to write.' -
Do you know what you are saying, friend Erasmus? You are here making three different
opinions as if belonging to three different sects: because you do not know that it is the
same subject handled by us same professors of the same sect, only by different persons, in
a different way and in other words. But let me just put you in remembrance, and set before
you the yawning inconsiderateness, or stupidity of your judgment.
How does that definition of "Free-will," let me ask you, which you gave us
above, square with this first opinion which you confess to be, 'very probable?' For you
said that "Free-will" is a power of the human will, by which a man can apply
himself unto good;' whereas here, you say and approve the saying, that 'man, without
grace, cannot will good!' The definition, therefore, affirms what its example denies. And
hence there are found in your "Free-will" both a YEA and
a NAY:" so that, in one and the same doctrine and article, you
approve and condemn us, and approve and condemn yourself. For do you think, that to 'apply
itself to those things which pertain unto eternal salvation,' which power your definition
assigns to "Free-will," is not to do good, when, if there were so much good in
"Free-will," that it could apply itself unto good, it would have no need of
grace? Therefore, the "Free-will" which you define is one, and the
"Free-will" you defend is another. Hence then, Erasmus, outstripping all others,
has two "Free-wills;" and they, militating against each other!
Sect. 48. - BUT, setting aside that "Freewill" which
the definition defines, let us consider that which the opinion proposes as contrary to it.
You grant, that man, without special grace, cannot will good: (for we are not now
discussing what the
grace of God can do, but what man can do without grace:) you grant, then, that
"Free-will" cannot will good. This is nothing else but granting that it cannot
'apply itself to those things which pertain unto eternal salvation,' according to the tune
of your definition. Nay, you say a little before, 'that the human will after sin, is so
depraved, that having lost its liberty, it is compelled to serve sin, and cannot recall
itself into a better state.' And if I am not mistaken, you make the Pelagians to be of
this opinion. Now then I believe, my Proteus has here no way of escape: he is caught and
held fast in plain words: - ' that the will, having lost its liberty, is tied and bound a
slave to sin.' O noble Free-will! which, having lost its liberty, is declared by Erasmus
himself, to be the slave of sin! When Luther asserted this, 'nothing was ever heard of so
absurd;' 'nothing was more useless than that this paradox should be proclaimed abroad!' So
much so, that even a Diatribe must be written against him!
But perhaps no one will believe me, that these things are said by Erasmus. If the
Diatribe be read in this part, it will be admired: but I do not so much admire it. For he
who does not treat this as a serious subject, and is not interested in the cause, but is
in mind alienated from it, and grows weary of it, cold in it, and disgusted with it, how
shall not such an one everywhere speak absurdities, follies, and contrarieties, while, as
one drunk or slumbering over the cause, he belches out in the midst of his snoring, It is
so! it is not so! just as the different words sound against his ears? And therefore it is,
that rhetoricians require a feeling of the subject in the person discussing it. Much more
then does theology require such a feeling, that it may make the person vigilant, sharp,
intent, prudent, and determined.
If therefore "Free-will" without grace, when it has lost its liberty, is
compelled to serve sin and cannot will good, I should be glad to know, what that desire
is, what that endeavour is, which that first 'probable opinion' leaves it. It cannot be a
good desire or a good endeavour, because it cannot will good, as the opinion affirms, and
as you grant. Therefore, it is an evil desire and an evil endeavour that is left, which,
when the liberty is lost, is compelled to serve sin. - But above all, what, I pray, is the
meaning of this saying: 'this opinion leaves the desire and the endeavour, but does not
leave what is to be ascribed to its own power.' Who can possibly conceive in his mind what
this means? If the desire and the endeavour be left to the power of "Free-will,"
how are they not ascribed to the same? If they be not ascribed to it, how can they be left
to it? Are then that desire and that endeavour before grace, left to grace itself that
comes after, and not to "Free-will" so as to be at the same time left, and not
left, to the same "Free-will?" If these things be not paradoxes, or rather
enormities, then pray what are enormities?
Sect. 49. - BUT perhaps the Diatribe is dreaming this, that
between these two 'can will good' and 'cannot will good' there may be a medium; seeing
that,
to will
is absolute, both in respect of good, and evil. So that thus, by a
certain logical subtlety, we may steer clear of the rocks, and say, in the will of man
there is a certain
willing,
which cannot indeed will good without grace, but which,
nevertheless, being without grace, does not immediately will nothing but evil, but is a
sort of
mere abstracted willing,
vertible, upwards unto good by grace, and
downwards unto evil by sin. But then, what will become of that which you have said, that,
'when it has lost its liberty it is compelled to serve sin?' What will become of that
desire and endeavour which are left? Where will be that power of 'applying itself to those
things which pertain unto eternal salvation?' For that power of applying itself unto
salvation, cannot be a mere
willing,
unless the salvation itself be said to be a
nothing. Nor, again, can that desire and endeavour be a mere
willing;
for
desire
must strive and attempt something, (as good perhaps,) and cannot go forth into
nothing, nor be absolutely inactive.
In a word, which way soever the Diatribe turns itself, it cannot keep clear of
inconsistencies and contradictory assertions; nor avoid making that very
"Free-will" which it defends, as much a bond-captive as it is a bond-captive
itself. For, in attempting to liberate "Free-will," it is so entangled, that it
is bound, together with "Free-will," in bonds indissoluble.
Moreover, it is a mere logical figment that in man there is a medium,
a mere
willing,
nor can they who assert this prove it; it arose from an
ignorance
of
things
and an
observance
of
terms.
As though the thing were always in reality,
as it is set forth in terms; and there are with the Sophists many such misconceptions.
Whereas the matter rather stands as Christ saith, "He that is not with Me is against
Me." (Matt. xii. 30.) He does not say, He that is not with Me is yet not
against
Me
,
but
in the medium.
For if God be in us, Satan is from us, and it is present
with us to will nothing but good. But if God be not in us, Satan is in us, and it is
present with us to will evil only, Neither God nor Satan admit of a
mere abstracted
willing
in us; but, as you yourself rightly said, when our liberty is lost we are
compelled to serve sin: that is, we
will
sin and evil, we
speak
sin and
evil, we
do
sin and evil.
Behold then! invincible and all-powerful truth has driven the witless Diatribe to that
dilemma, and so turned its wisdom into foolishness, that whereas, its design was to speak
against me, it is compelled to speak
for
me
against
itself; just in the same
way as "Free-will" does any thing good; for when it attempts so to
do,
the
more it acts against evil the more it acts against good. So that the Diatribe is, in
saying,
exactly what "Freewill" is in
doing.
Though the whole Diatribe
itself, is nothing else but a notable effort of "Free-will," condemning by
defending, and defending by condemning: that is, being a twofold fool, while it would
appear to be wise.
This, then, is the state of the first opinion compared with itself: - it
denies that
a man can will any thing good; but yet that a desire remains; which desire, however, is
not his own!
Sect. 50. - NOW let us compare this opinion with the remaining
two.
The next of these, is that opinion 'more severe still,' which holds, that
"Free-will" avails unto nothing but to sin. And this indeed is Augustine's
opinion, expressed, as well in many other places, as more especially, in his book
"Concerning the Spirit and the Letter;" in (if I mistake not) the fourth or
fifth chapter, where he uses those very words.
The third, is that 'most severe' opinion; that "Free-will" is a mere empty
term, and that every thing which we do, is done from necessity under the bondage of sin. -
It is with these two that the Diatribe conflicts.
I here observe, that perhaps it may be, that I am not able to discuss this point
intelligibly, from not being sufficiently acquainted with the Latin or with the German.
But I call God to witness, that I wish nothing else to be said or to be understood by the
words of the last two opinions than what is said in the first opinion: nor does Augustine
wish any thing else to be understood, nor do I understand any thing else from his words,
than that which the first opinion asserts: so that, the
three opinions
brought
forward by the Diatribe are with me nothing else than my
one sentiment.
For when it
is granted and established, that "Free-will," having once lost its liberty, is
compulsively bound to the service of sin, and cannot will any thing good: I, from these
words, can understand nothing else than that "Free-will" is a mere empty term,
whose reality is lost. And a lost liberty, according to my grammar, is no liberty at all.
And to give the name of liberty to that which has no liberty, is to give it an empty term.
If I am wrong here, let him set me right who can. If these observations be obscure or
ambiguous, let him who can, illustrate and make them plain. I for my part, cannot call
that health which is lost, health; and if I were to ascribe it to one who was sick, I
should think I was giving him nothing else than an empty name,
But away with these enormities of words. For who would bear such an abuse of the manner
of speaking, as that we should say a man has "Free-will," and yet at the same
time assert, that when that liberty is once lost, he is compulsively bound to the service
of sin, and cannot will any thing good? These things are contrary to common sense, and
utterly destroy the common manner of speaking. The Diatribe is rather to be condemned,
which in a drowsy way, foists forth its own words without any regard to the words of
others. It does not, I say, consider what it is, nor how much it is to assert, that man,
when his liberty is lost, is compelled to serve sin and cannot will any thing good. For if
it were at all vigilant or observant, it would plainly see, that the sentiment contained
in the three opinions is one and the same, which it makes to be diverse and contrary. For
if a man, when he has lost his liberty, is compelled to serve sin, and cannot will good,
what conclusion concerning him can be more justly drawn, than that he can do nothing but
sin, and will evil? And such a conclusion, the Sophists themselves would draw, even by
their
syllogisms. Wherefore, the Diatribe, unhappily, contends against the last two
opinions, and approves the first; whereas, that is precisely the same as the other two;
and thus again, as usual, it condemns itself and approves my sentiments, in one and the
same article.
Sect. 51. - LET us now come to that passage in Ecclesiasticus,
and also with it compare that first 'probable opinion.' The opinion saith, 'Freewill
cannot will good.' The passage in Ecclesiasticus is adduced to prove, that
"Free-will" is something, and can do something. Therefore, the opinion which is
to be proved by Ecclesiasticus, asserts one thing; and Ecclesiasticus, which is adduced to
prove it, asserts another. This is just as if any one, setting about to prove that Christ
was the Messiah, should adduce a passage which proves that Pilate was governor of Syria,
or any thing else equally discordant. It is in the same way that "Free-will" is
here proved. But, not to mention my having above made it manifest, that nothing clear or
certain can be said or proved concerning "Free-will," as to what it is, or what
it can do, it is worth while to examine the whole passage thoroughly.
First he saith, "God made man in the beginning.'' Here he speaks of the creation
of man; nor does he say any thing, as yet, concerning either "Free-will" or the
commandments.
Then he goes on, "and left him in the hand of his own counsel." And what is
here? Is "Freewill" built upon this? But there is not here any mention of
commandments, for the doing of which "Free-will" is required; nor do we read any
thing of this kind in the creation of man. If any thing be understood by "the hand of
his own counsel," that should rather be understood which is in Genesis i. and ii.:
that man was made lord of all things that he might freely exercise dominion over them: and
as Moses saith, "Let us make man, and let him have dominion over the fishes of the
sea:" nor can any thing else be proved from those words: for it is in these things
only that man may act of his own will, as being subject unto him. And moreover, he calls
this
man's counsel,
in contradiction as it were to the
counsel of God.
But
after this, when He has said, that man was made and left thus in the hand of his own
counsel - he adds,
"He added moreover His commandments and His precepts." Unto what did He add
them? Certainly unto that counsel and will of man, and over and above unto that
constituting of His dominion over other things. By which commandments He took from man the
dominion over one part of His creatures, (that is, over the tree of knowledge of good and
evil,) and willed rather that he should
not
be free. - Having added the
commandments, He then comes to the will of man towards God and towards the things of God.
"If thou wilt keep the commandments they shall preserve thee," &c. From
this part, therefore, "If thou wilt," begins the question concerning
"Free-will." So that, from Ecclesiasticus we learn, that man is constituted as
divided into two kingdoms. - The one, is that in which he is led according to his own will
and counsel, without the precepts and the commandments of God: that is, in those things
which are beneath him. Here he has dominion and is lord, as "left in the hand of his
own counsel." Not that God so leaves him to himself, as that He does not co-operate
with him; but He commits unto him the free use of things according to his own will,
without prohibiting him by any laws or injunctions. As we may say, by way of similitude,
the Gospel has left us in the hands of our own counsel, that we may use, and have dominion
over all things as we will. But Moses and the Pope left us not in that counsel, but
restrained us by laws, and subjected us rather to
their
own will. - But in the
other kingdom, he is not left in the hand of his own counsel, but is directed and led
according to the Will and Counsel of God. And as, in his own kingdom, he is led according
to his own will, without the precepts of another; so, in the kingdom of God, he is led
according to the precepts of another, without his own will. And this is what
Ecclesiasticus means, when he says, "He added moreover His commandments and His
precepts: saying, If thou wilt," &c.
If, therefore, these things be satisfactorily clear, I have made it fully evident, that
this passage of Ecclesiasticus does not make for "Freewill," but directly
against it: seeing that, it subjects man to the precepts and will of God, and takes from
him his "Free-will." But if they be not satisfactorily clear, I have at least
made it manifest, that this passage cannot make for "Freewill;" seeing that, it
may be understood in a sense different from that which they put upon it, that is, in my
sense already stated, which is not absurd, but most holy and in harmony with the whole
Scripture. Whereas, their sense militates against the whole Scripture, and is fetched from
this one passage only, contrary to the tenor of the whole Scripture. I stand therefore,
secure in the good sense, the negative of "Free-will," until they shall have
confirmed their strained and forced affirmative.
When, therefore, Ecclesiasticus says, "If thou wilt keep the commandments, and
keep the faith that pleaseth Me, they shall preserve thee," I do not see that
"Free-will" can be proved from those words. For, "if thou wilt," is a
verb of the subjunctive mood, which asserts nothing: as the logicians say, 'a conditional
asserts nothing indicatively:' such as, if the devil be God, he is deservedly worshipped:
if an ass fly, an ass has wings, so also, if there be "Free-will," grace is
nothing at all. Therefore, if Ecclesiasticus had wished to assert "Free-will,"
he ought to have spoken thus: - man
is able
to keep the commandments of God, or,
man,
has the power
to keep the commandments.
Sect. 52. - BUT here the Diatribe will sharply retort -
"Ecclesiasticus by saying, "if thou wilt keep," signifies that there is a
will in man, to keep, and not to keep: otherwise, what is the use of saying unto him who
has no will, "if thou wilt?" Would it not be ridiculous if any were to say to a
blind man, if thou wilt see, thou mayest find a treasure? Or, to a deaf man, if thou wilt
hear, I will relate to thee an excellent story? This would be to laugh at their
misery"
I answer: These are the arguments of human reason, which is wont to shoot forth many
such sprigs of wisdom. Wherefore, I must dispute now, not with Ecclesiasticus, but with
human reason concerning a conclusion; for she, by her conclusions and syllogisms,
interprets and twists the Scriptures of God just which way she pleases. But I will enter
upon this willingly, and with confidence, knowing, that she can prate nothing but follies
and absurdities; and that more especially, when she attempts to make a shew of her wisdom
in these divine matters.
First then, if I should demand of her how it can be proved, that the freedom of the
will in man is signified and inferred, wherever these expressions are used, 'if thou
wilt,' 'if thou shalt do,' 'if thou shalt hear;' she would say, because the nature of
words, and the common use of speech among men, seem to require it. Therefore, she judges
of divine things and words according to the customs and things of men; than which, what
can be more perverse; seeing that, the former things are heavenly, the latter earthly.
Like a fool, therefore, she exposes herself, making it manifest that she has not a thought
concerning God but what is human.
But, what if I prove, that the nature of words and the use of speech even among men,
are not always of that tendency, as to make a laughing stock of those to whom it is said,
'if thou wilt,' 'if thou shalt do it.' 'if thou shalt hear?' - How often do parents thus
play with their children, when they bid them come to them, or do this or that, for this
purpose only, that it may plainly appear to them how unable they are to do it, and that
they may call for the aid of the parent's hand? How often does a faithful physician bid
his obstinate patient do or omit those things which are either injurious to him or
impossible, to the intent that, he may bring him, by an experience, to the knowledge of
his disease or his weakness? And what is more general and common, than to use words of
insult or provocation, when we would show either enemies or friends, what they can do and
what they cannot do?
I merely go over these things, to shew Reason her own conclusions, and how absurdly she
tacks them to the Scriptures: moreover, how blind she must be not to see, that they do not
always stand good even in human words and things. But the case is, if she see it to be
done once, she rushes on headlong, taking it for granted, that it is done generally in all
the things of God and men, thus making, according to the way of her wisdom, of a
particularity an universality.
If then God, as a Father, deal with us as with sons, that He might shew us who are in
ignorance our impotency, or as a faithful physician, that He might make our disease known
unto us, or that He might insult His enemies who proudly resist His counsel; and for this
end, say to us by proposed laws (as being those means by which He accomplishes His design
the most effectually) 'do,' 'hear,' 'keep,' or, 'if thou wilt,' 'if thou wilt do,' 'if
thou wilt hear;' can this be drawn herefrom as a just conclusion - therefore, either we
have free power to act, or God laughs at us? Why is this not rather drawn as a conclusion
- therefore, God tries us, that by His law He might bring us to a knowledge of our
impotency, if we be His friends; or, He thereby righteously and deservedly insults and
derides us, if we be His proud enemies.' For this, as Paul teaches, is the intent of the
divine legislation. (Rom. iii. 20; v. 20. Gal. iii. 19, 24.) Because human nature is
blind, so that it knows not its own powers, or rather its own diseases. Moreover, being
proud, it self-conceitedly imagines, that it knows and can do all things. To remedy which
pride and ignorance, God can use no means more effectual than His proposed law: of which
we shall say more in its place: let it suffice to have thus touched upon it here, to
refute this conclusion of carnal and absurd wisdom: - 'if thou wilt' - therefore thou art
able to will freely.
The Diatribe dreams, that man is whole and sound, as, to human appearance, he is in his
own affairs; and therefore, from these words, 'if thou wilt,' 'if thou wilt do,' 'if thou
wilt hear,' it pertly argues, that man, if his will be not free, is laughed at. Whereas,
the Scripture describes man as corrupt and a captive; and added to that, as proudly
contemning and ignorant of his corruption and captivity: and therefore, by those words, it
goads him and rouses him up, that he might know, by a real experience, how unable he is to
do any one of those things.
Sect. 53. - BUT I will attack the Diatribe itself. If thou
really think, O Madam Reason! that these conclusions stand good, 'If thou wilt - therefore
thou hast a free power,' why dost thou not follow the same thyself? For thou sayest,
according to that 'probable opinion,' that "Free-will" cannot will any thing
good. By what conclusion then can such a sentiment flow from this passage also, 'if thou
wilt keep,' when thou sayest that the conclusion flowing from this, is, that man can will
and not will freely? What! can bitter and sweet flow from the same fountain? Dost thou not
here much more deride man thyself, when thou sayest, that he can keep that, which he can
neither will nor choose? Therefore, neither dost thou, from thy heart, believe that this
is a just conclusion, 'if thou wilt - therefore thou hast a free power,' although thou
contendest for it with so much zeal, or, if thou dost believe it, then thou dost not, from
thy heart, say, that that opinion is 'probable,' which holds that man cannot will good.
Thus, reason is so caught in the conclusions and words of her own wisdom, that she knows
not what she says, nor concerning what she speaks: nay, knows nothing but that which it is
most right she should know - that "Free-will" is defended with such arguments as
mutually devour, and put an end to each other; just as the Midianites destroyed each other
by mutual slaughter, when they fought against Gideon and the people of God. Judges vii.
Nay, I will expostulate more fully with this wisdom of the Diatribe. Ecclesiasticus
does not say, 'if thou shalt have the desire and the endeavour of keeping,' (for this is
not to be ascribed to that power of yours, as you have concluded) but he says, "if
thou wilt keep the commandments they shall preserve thee." Now then, if we, after the
manner of your wisdom, wish to draw conclusions, we should infer thus: - therefore, man is
able to keep the commandments. And thus, we shall not here make a certain small degree of
desire, or a certain little effort of endeavour to be left in man, but we shall ascribe
unto him the whole, full, and abundant power of keeping the commandments. Otherwise,
Ecclesiasticus will be made to laugh at the misery of man, as commanding
him
to
'keep,' who, he knows, is not able to 'keep.' Nor would it have been sufficient if he had
supposed the desire and the endeavour to be in the man, for he would not then have escaped
the suspicion of deriding him, unless he had signified his having the full power of
keeping.
But however, let us suppose that that desire and endeavour of "Free-will" are
a real something. What shall we say to those, (the Pelagians, I mean) who, from this
passage, have denied grace
in toto,
and ascribed all to "Free-will?" If
the conclusion of the Diatribe stand good, the Pelagians have evidently established their
point. For the words of Ecclesiasticus speak of
keeping,
not of
desiring
or
endeavouring.
If, therefore, you deny the Pelagians their conclusion concerning
keeping,
they,
in reply, will much more rightly deny you your conclusion concerning
endeavouring.
And
if you take from them the whole of "Free-will," they will take from you your
remnant particle of it: for you cannot assert a remnant particle of that, which you deny
in
toto.
In what degree soever, therefore, you speak against the Pelagians, who from this
passage ascribe the whole to "Freewill," in the same degree, and with much more
determination, shall we speak against that certain small remnant desire of your
"Free-will." And in this, the Pelagians themselves will agree with us, that, if
their opinion cannot be proved from this passage, much less will any other of the same
kind be proved from it: seeing, that if the subject be to be conducted by conclusions,
Ecclesiasticus, above all makes the most forcibly for the Pelagians: for he speaks in
plain words concerning
keeping
only, "If thou wilt
keep
the
commandments:" nay, he speaks also concerning
faith,
"If thou wilt
keep
the faith:"
so that, by the same conclusion, keeping the faith ought also to be
in our power, which, however, is the peculiar and precious gift of God.
In a word, since so many opinions are brought forward in support of
"Free-will," and there is no one that does not catch at this passage of
Ecclesiasticus in defence of itself; and since they are diverse from, and contrary to each
other, it is impossible but that they must make Ecclesiasticus contradictory to, and
diverse from themselves in the self same words; and therefore, they can from him prove
nothing. Although, if that conclusion of yours be admitted, it will make for the Pelagians
against all the others; and consequently, it makes against the Diatribe; which, in this
passage, is stabbed by its own sword!
Sect. 54. - BUT, as I said at first, so I say here: this passage
of Ecclesiasticus is in favour of no one of those who assert "Free-will," but
makes against them all. For that conclusion is not to be admitted, 'If thou wilt -
therefore thou art able;' but those words, and all like unto them, are to be understood
thus: - that by them man is admonished of his impotency; which, without such admonitions,
being proud and ignorant, he would neither know nor feel.
For he here speaks, not concerning the first man only, but concerning any man: though
it is of little consequence whether you understand it concerning the first man, or any
others. For although the first man was not impotent, from the assistance of grace, yet, by
this commandment, God plainly shews him how impotent he would be without grace. For if
that man, who had the Spirit, could not by his new will, will good newly proposed, that
is, obedience, because the Spirit did not add it unto him, what can we do without the
Spirit toward the good that is lost! In this man, therefore, it is shewn, by a terrible
example for the breaking down of our pride, what our "Free-will" can do when it
is left to itself, and not continually moved and increased by the Spirit of God.
He
could do nothing to increase the Spirit who had its first-fruits, but fell from the
first-fruits of the Spirit. What then can
we
who are fallen, do towards the
first-fruits of the Spirit which are taken away? Especially, since Satan now reigns in us
with full power, who cast
him
down, not then reigning in him, but by temptation
alone! Nothing can be more forcibly brought against "Free-will," than this
passage of Ecclesiasticus, considered together with the fall of Adam. But we have no room
for these observations here, an opportunity may perhaps offer itself elsewhere. Meanwhile,
it is sufficient to have shewn, that Ecclesiasticus, in this place, says nothing whatever
in favour of "Free-will" (which nevertheless they consider as their principal
authority), and that these expressions and the like, 'if thou wilt,' 'if thou hear,' 'if
thou do,' shew, not what men
can do,
but what they
ought to do!
Sect. 55. - ANOTHER passage is adduced by our Diatribe out of
Gen. iv. 7.: where the Lord saith unto Cain, "Under thee shall be the desire of sin,
and thou shalt rule over it." - "Here it is shewn (saith the Diatribe) that the
motions of the mind to evil can be overcome, and that they do not carry with them the
necessity of sinning.
" -
These words, 'the motions of the mind to evil can be overcomes' though spoken with
ambiguity, yet, from the scope of the sentiment, the consequence, and the circumstances,
must mean this: - that "Free-will," has the power of overcoming its motions to
evil; and that, those motions do not bring upon it the necessity of sinning. Here, again;
what is there excepted which is not ascribed unto "Free-will?" What need is
there of the Spirit, what need of Christ, what need of God, if "Free-will" can
overcome the motions of the mind to evil! And where, again, is that 'probable opinion'
which affirms, that "Free-will" cannot so much as will good? For here, the
victory over evil is ascribed unto that, which neither wills nor wishes for good. The
inconsiderateness of our Diatribe is really - too - too bad!
Take the truth of the matter in a few words. As I have before observed, by such
passages as these, it is shewn to man what he
ought to do,
not what he
can do.
It
is said, therefore, unto Cain, that he ought to rule over his sin, and to hold its desires
in subjection under him. But this he neither did nor could do, because he was already
pressed down under the contrary dominion of Satan. - It is well known, that the Hebrews
frequently use the
future indicative
for the
imperative:
as in Exod. xx.
1-17. "Thou shalt, have none other gods but Me," "Thou shalt not
kill," "Thou shalt not commit adultery," and in numberless other instances
of the same kind. Otherwise, if these sentences were taken indicatively, as they really
stand, they would be
promises
of God; and as He cannot lie, it would come to pass
that no man could sin; and then, as
commands,
they would be unnecessary; and if
this were the case, then our interpreter would have translated this passage more correctly
thus: - "let its desire be under thee, and rule thou over it," (Gen. iv. 7.)
Even as it then ought also to be said concerning the woman, "Be thou under thy
husband, and let him rule over thee," (Gen. iii. 16.) But that it was not spoken
indicatively unto Cain is manifest from this: - it would then have been a
promise.
Whereas,
it was not a promise; because, from the conduct of Cain, the event proved the contrary.
Sect. 56. THE third passage is from Moses, (Deut. xxx.
19.) "I have set before thy face life and death, choose what is good, &c." -
"What words (says the Diatribe) can be more plain? It leaves to man the liberty of
choosing." -
I answer: What is more plain, than, that you are blind? How, I pray, does it leave the
liberty of choosing? Is it by the expression 'choose'? - Therefore, as Moses saith
'choose,' does it immediately come to pass that they do choose? Then, there is no need of
the Spirit. And as you so often repeat and inculcate the same things, I shall be justified
in repeating the same things also. - If there be a liberty of choosing, why has the
'probable opinion' said that "Freewill" cannot will good? Can it choose
not
willing
or
against its will?
But let us listen to the similitude, -
- "It would be ridiculous to say to a man standing in a place where two ways met,
Thou seest two roads, go by which thou wilt, when one only was open." -
This, as I have before observed, is from the arguments of human reason, which thinks,
that a man is mocked by a command impossible: whereas I say, that the man, by this means,
is admonished and roused to see his own impotency. True it is, that we are in a place
where two ways meet, and that one of them only is open, yea rather neither of them is
open. But by the law it is shewn how impossible the one is, that is, to good, unless God
freely give His Spirit; and how wide and easy the other is, if God leave us to ourselves.
Therefore, it would not be said ridiculously, but with a necessary seriousness, to the man
thus standing in a place where two ways meet, 'go by which thou wilt,' if he, being in
reality impotent, wished to seem to himself strong, or contended that neither way was
hedged up.
Wherefore, the words of the law are spoken, not that they might assert the power of the
will, but that they might illuminate the blindness of reason, that it might see that its
own light is nothing, and that the power of the will is nothing. "By the law
(saith Paul) is the knowledge of sin," (Rom. iii. 20.): he does not say - is the
abolition of, or the escape from sin. The whole nature and design of the law is to give
knowledge only, and that of nothing else save of sin, but not to discover or communicate
any power whatever. For knowledge is not power, nor does it communicate power, but it
teaches and shows how great the impotency must there be, where there is no power. And what
else can the knowledge of sin be, but the knowledge of our evil and infirmity? For he does
not say - by the law comes the knowledge of strength or of good. The whole that the law
does, according to the testimony of Paul, is to make known sin.
And this is the place, where I take occasion to enforce this my general reply: - that
man, by the words of the law, is admonished and taught what
he ought to do,
not
what
he can do:
that is, that he is brought to know his sin, but not to believe
that he has any strength in himself. Wherefore, friend Erasmus, as often as you throw in
my teeth the Words of the law, so often I throw in yours that of Paul, "By the law is
the knowledge of sin," - not of the power of the will. Heap together, therefore, out
of the large Concordances all the imperative words into one chaos, provided that, they be
not words of the promise but of the requirement of the law only, and I will immediately
declare, that by them is always shewn what men
ought to do,
not what they
can
do,
or
do do.
And even common grammarians and every little school-boy in the
street knows, that by verbs of the imperative mood, nothing else is signified than that
which ought to be done, and that, what is done or can be done, is expressed by verbs of
the indicative mood.
Thus, therefore, it comes to pass, that you theologians, are so senseless and so many
degrees below even school-boys, that when you have caught hold of one imperative verb you
infer an indicative sense, as though what was commanded were immediately and even
necessarily done, or possible to be done. But how many
slips
are there
between
the cup and the lip!
So that, what you command to be done, and is therefore quite
possible to be done, is yet never done at all. Such a difference is there, between verbs
imperative and verbs indicative, even in the most common and easy things. Whereas you, in
these things which are as far above those, as the heavens are above the earth, so quickly
make indicatives out of imperatives, that the moment you hear the voice of him commanding,
saying, "do," "keep," "choose," you will have, that it is
immediately kept, done, chosen, or fulfilled, or, that our powers are able so to do.
Sect. 57. - IN the fourth place, you adduce from Deuteronomy
xxx. many passages of the same kind which speak of choosing, of turning away from, of
keeping; as, 'If thou shalt keep,' 'if thou shalt turn away from,' 'if thou shalt choose.'
- "All these expressions (you say) are made use of preposterously if there be not a
"Free-will" in man unto good" -
I answer: And you, friend Diatribe, preposterously enough also conclude from these
expressions the freedom of the will. You set out to prove the
endeavour
and
desire
of "Free-will" only, and you have adduced no passage which proves such an
endeavour. But now, you adduce those passages, which, if your conclusion hold good, will
ascribe
all
to "Free-will."
Let me here then again make a distinction, between the words of the Scripture adduced,
and the conclusion of the Diatribe tacked to them. The words adduced are imperative, and
they say nothing but what
ought to be
done. For, Moses does not say, 'thou hast the
power and strength to choose.' The words 'choose,' 'keep,' 'do,' convey the precept 'to
keep,' but they do not describe the ability of man. But the conclusion tacked to them by
that wisdom-aping Diatribe, infers thus: - therefore, man can do those things, otherwise
the precepts are given in vain. To whom this reply must be made: - Madam Diatribe, you
make a bad inference, and do not prove your conclusion, but the conclusion and the proof
merely
seem
to be right to your blind and inadvertent self. But know, that these
precepts are not given preposterously nor in vain; but that proud and blind man might, by
them, learn the disease of his own impotency, if he should attempt to do what is
commanded. And hence your similitude amounts to nothing where you say.
- "Otherwise it would be precisely the same, as if any one should say to a man who
was so bound that he could only stretch forth his left arm, - Behold! thou hast on thy
right hand excellent wine, thou hast on thy left poison; on which thou wilt stretch forth
thy hand" -
These your similitudes I presume are particular favourites of yours. But you do not all
the while see, that if the similitudes stand good, they prove much more than you ever
purposed to prove, nay, that they prove what you deny and would have to be disproved: -
that "Free-will" can do
all things.
For by the whole scope of your
argument, forgetting what you said, 'that "Free-will" can do nothing without
grace,' you actually prove that "Free-will" can do all things without grace. For
your conclusions and similitudes go to prove this: - that either "Free-will" can
of itself do those things which are said and commanded, or they are commanded in vain,
ridiculously, and preposterously. But these are nothing more than the old songs of the
Pelagians sung over again, which even the Sophists have exploded, and which you have
yourself condemned. And by all this your forgetfulness and disorder of memory, you do
nothing but evince how little you know of the subject, and how little you are affected by
it. And what can be worse in a rhetorician, than to be continually bringing forward things
wide of the nature of the subject, and not only so, but to be always declaiming against
his subject and against himself?
Sect. 58. - WHEREFORE I observe, finally, the passages of
Scripture adduced by you are imperative, and neither prove any thing, nor determine any
thing concerning the ability of man, but enjoin only what things are to be done, and what
are not to be done. And as to your conclusions or appendages, and similitudes, if they
prove any thing they prove this: - that "Free-will" can do all things without
grace. Whereas this you did not undertake to prove, nay, it is by you denied. Wherefore,
these your proofs are nothing else but the most direct confutations.
For, (that I may, if I can, rouse the Diatribe from its lethargy) suppose I argue thus
- If Moses say, 'Choose life and keep the commandment', unless man be able to choose life
and keep the commandment, Moses gives that precept to man ridiculously. - Have I by this
argument proved my side of the subject, that "Free-will" can do nothing good,
and that it has no external endeavour separate from its own power? Nay, on the contrary, I
have proved, by an assertion sufficiently forcible, that either man can choose life and
keep the commandment as it is commanded, or Moses is a ridiculous law-giver? But who would
dare to assert that Moses was a ridiculous law-giver? It follows therefore, that man can
do the things that are commanded.
This is the way in which the Diatribe argues throughout, contrary to its own purposed
design; wherein, it promised that it would not argue thus, but would prove a certain
endeavour of "Freewill;" of which however, so far from proving it, it scarcely
makes mention in the whole string of its arguments; nay, it proves the contrary rather; so
that it may itself be more properly said to affirm and argue all things ridiculously.
And as to its making it, according to its own adduced similitude, to be ridiculous,
that a man 'having his right arm bound, should be ordered to stretch forth his right hand
when he could only stretch forth his left.' - Would it, I pray, be ridiculous, if a man,
having both his arms bound, and proudly contending or ignorantly presuming that he could
do any thing right or left, should be commanded to stretch forth his hand right and left,
not that his captivity might be derided, but that he might be convinced of his false
presumption of liberty and power, and might be brought to know his ignorance of his
captivity and misery?
The Diatribe is perpetually setting before us such a man, who either
can do
what
is commanded, or at least
knows
that he
cannot do
it. Whereas, no such man
is to be found. If there were such an one, then indeed, either impossibilities would be
ridiculously commanded, or the Spirit of Christ would be in vain.
The Scripture, however, sets forth such a man, who is not only bound, miserable,
captive, sick, and dead, but who, by the operation of his lord, Satan, to his other
miseries, adds that of blindness: so that he believes he is free, happy, at liberty,
powerful, whole, and alive. For Satan well knows that if men knew their own misery he
could retain no one of them in his kingdom: because, it could not be, but that God would
immediately pity and succour their known misery and calamity: seeing that, He is with so
much praise set forth, throughout the whole Scripture as, being near unto the contrite in
heart, that Isaiah lxi. 1-3, testifies, that Christ was sent "to preach the Gospel to
the poor, and to heal the broken hearted."
Wherefore, the work of Satan is, so to hold men, that they come not to know their
misery, but that they presume that they can do all things which are enjoined. But the work
of Moses the legislator is the contrary, even that by the law he might discover to man his
misery, in order that he might prepare him, thus bruised and confounded with the knowledge
of himself, for grace, and might send him to Christ to be saved. Wherefore, the office of
the law is not ridiculous, but above all things serious and necessary.
Those therefore who thus far understand these things, understand clearly at the same
time, that the Diatribe, by the whole string of its arguments effects nothing whatever;
that it collects nothing from the Scriptures but imperative passages, when it understands,
neither what they mean nor wherefore they are spoken; and that, moreover, by the
appendages of its conclusions and carnal similitudes it mixes up such a mighty mass of
flesh, that it asserts and proves more than it ever intended, and argues against itself.
So that there were no need to pursue particulars any further, for the whole is solved by
one solution, seeing that the whole depends on one argument. But however, that it may be
drowned in the same profusion in which it attempted to drown me, I will proceed to touch
upon a few particulars more.
Sect. 59. - THERE is that of Isaiah i. 19., "If ye be
willing and obedient, ye shall eat the fat of the land:" - 'Where, (according to the
judgment of the Diatribe,) if there be no liberty of the will, it would have been more
consistent, had it been said, If I will, if I will not.'
The answer to this may be plainly found in what has been said before. Moreover, what
consistency would there then have been, had it been said, 'If I will, ye shall eat the fat
of the land?' Does the Diatribe from its so highly exalted wisdom imagine, that the fat of
the land can be eaten contrary to the will of God? Or, that it is a rare and new thing,
that we do not receive of the fat of the land but by the will of God.
So also, that of Isaiah xxx. 21. "If ye will inquire, inquire ye: return,
come." - "To what purpose is it (saith the Diatribe) to exhort those who are not
in any degree in their own power? It is just like saying to one bound in chains, Move
thyself to this place." -
Nay, I reply, to what purpose is it to cite passages which of themselves prove nothing,
and which, by the appendage of your conclusion, that is, by the perversion of their sense,
ascribe all unto "Free-will," when a certain endeavour only was to be ascribed
unto it, and to be proved?
- "The same may be said (you observe) concerning that of Isaiah xlv. 20.
"Assemble yourselves and come." "Turn ye unto me and ye shall be
saved." And that also of Isaiah lii. 1-2. "Awake! awake!" "shake
thyself from the dust," "loose the bands of thy neck." And that of Jeremiah
xv. 19. "If thou wilt turn, then will I turn thee; and if thou shalt separate the
precious from the vile, thou shalt be as My mouth." And Malachi more evidently still,
indicates the endeavour of "Free-will" and the grace that is prepared for him
who endeavours, "Turn ye unto Me, saith the Lord of hosts, and I will turn unto you,
saith the Lord.' (Mal. iii. 7.)
Sect. 60. - IN these passages, our friend Diatribe makes no
distinction whatever, between the voice of the Law and the voice of the Gospel: because,
forsooth, it is so blind and so ignorant, that it knows not what is the Law and what is
the Gospel. For out of all the passages from Isaiah, it produces no one word of the law,
save this, 'If thou wilt;' all the rest is Gospel, by which, as the word of offered grace,
the bruised and afflicted are called unto consolation. Whereas, the Diatribe makes them
the words of the law. But, I pray thee, tell me, what can that man do in theological
matters, and the Sacred Writings, who has not even gone so far as to know what is Law and
what is Gospel, or, who, if he does know, condemns the observance of the distinction
between them? Such an one must confound all things, heaven with hell, and life with death;
and will never labour to know any thing of Christ. Concerning which, I shall put my friend
Diatribe a little in remembrance, in what follows.
Look then, first, at that of Jeremiah and Malachi "If thou wilt turn, then will I
turn thee:" and, "turn ye unto me, and I will turn unto you." Does it then
follow from "turn ye" - therefore, ye are able to turn? Does it follow also from
"Love the Lord thy God with all thy heart" - therefore, thou art able to love
with all thine heart? If these arguments stand good, what do they conclude, but that
"Free-will" needs not the grace of God, but can do all things of its own power?
And then, how much more right would it be that the words should be received as they stand
- 'If thou shalt turn, then will I also turn thee?' That is; - if thou shalt cease from
sinning, I also will cease from punishing; and if thou shalt be converted and live well, I
also will do well unto thee in turning away thy captivity and thy evils. But even in this
way, it does not follow, that man can turn by his own power, nor do the words imply this;
but they simply say, "If thou wilt turn;" by which, a man is admonished of what
he ought to do. And when he has thus known and seen what he
ought to do
but
cannot
do,
he would ask
how he is to do it,
were it not for that Leviathan of the
Diatribe (that is, that appendage, and conclusion it has here tacked on) which comes in
and between and says, - 'therefore, if man cannot turn of his own power, "turn
ye" is spoken in vain:' But, of what nature all such conclusion is, and what it
amounts to, has been already fully shewn.
It must, however, be a certain stupor or lethargy which can hold, that the power of
"Free-will" is confirmed by these words "turn ye," "if thou wilt
turn," and the like, and does not see, that for the same reason, it must be confirmed
by this Scripture also, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart,"
seeing that, the meaning of Him who commands and requires is the same in both instances.
For the loving of God, is not less required than our conversion, and the keeping of all
the commandments; because, the loving of God is our real conversion. And yet, no one
attempts to prove "Free-will" from that command 'to love,' although from those
words "if thou wilt," "if thou wilt hear," "turn ye", and
the like, all attempt to prove it. If therefore from that word, "love the Lord thy
God with all thy heart," it does not follow that "Free-will" is any thing
or can do anything, it is certain that it neither follows from these words, "if thou
wilt," "if thou wilt hear," "turn ye," and the like, which either
require less, or require with less force of importance, than these words "Love
God!" "Love the Lord!"
Whatever, therefore, is said against drawing a conclusion in support of
"Free-will" from this word "love God," the same must be said against
drawing a conclusion in support of "Free-will" from every other word of command
or requirement. For, if by the command 'to love,' the nature of the law only be shewn, and
what we
ought to do,
but not the power of the will or what we
can do,
but
rather, what we
cannot do,
the same is shewn by all the other Scriptures of
requirement. For it is well known, that even the schoolmen, except the Scotinians and
moderns, assert, that man cannot love God with all his heart. Therefore, neither can he
perform any one of the other precepts, for all the rest, according to the testimony of
Christ, hang on this one. Hence, by the testimony even of the doctors of the schools, this
remains as a settled conclusion: - that the words of the law do not prove the
power of
"Free-will,"
but shew what we
ought to do,
and what we
cannot do.
Sect. 61. - BUT our friend Diatribe, proceeding to still greater
lengths of inconsiderateness, not only infers from that passage of Malachi iii. 7.,
"turn ye unto me," an indicative sense, but also, goes on with zeal to prove
therefrom,
the endeavour of "Free-will," and the grace prepared for the person
endeavouring.
Here, at last, it makes mention of the endeavour and by a new kind of grammar, 'to
turn
,'
signifies, with it, the same thing as 'to
endeavour
:' so that the sense is,
"turn ye unto me," that is, endeavour ye to turn; "and I will turn unto
you," that is, I will endeavour to turn unto you: so that, at last, it attributes an
endeavour even unto God, and perhaps, would have grace to be prepared for Him upon His
endeavouring: for if turning signify endeavouring in one place, why not in every place?
Again, it says, that from Jeremiah xv. 19., "If thou shalt separate the precious
from the vile," not the endeavour only, but the liberty of choosing is proved; which,
before, it declared was 'lost,' and changed into a 'necessity of serving sin.' You see,
therefore, that in handling the Scriptures the Diatribe has a "Free-will" with a
witness: so that, with it, words of the same kind are compelled to prove
endeavour
in
one place, and
liberty
in another, just as the turn suits.
But, to away with vanities, the word TURN is used in the
Scriptures in a twofold sense, the one
legal,
the other
evangelical.
In the
legal sense, it is the voice of the exactor and commander, which requires, not an
endeavour, but a change in the whole life. In this sense Jeremiah frequently uses it,
saying, "Turn ye now every one of you from his evil way:" and, "Turn ye
unto the Lord:" in which, he involves the requirement of all the commandments; as is
sufficiently evident. In the evangelical sense, it is the voice of the divine consolation
and promise, by which nothing is demanded of us, but in which the grace of God is offered
unto us. Of this kind is that of Psalm cxxvi. 1, "When the Lord shall turn again the
captivity of Zion;" and that of Psalm cxvi. 7, "Turn again into thy rest, O my
soul." Hence, Malachi, in a very brief compendium, has set forth the preaching both
of the law and of grace. It is the whole sum of the law, where he saith, "Turn ye
unto me;" and it is grace, where he saith, "I will turn unto you."
Wherefore, as much as "Free-will" is proved from this word, "Love the
Lord," or from any other word of particular law, just so much is it proved from this
word of summary law,
"TURN YE." It becomes a wise reader of the Scriptures,
therefore, to observe what are words of the law and what are words of grace, that he might
not be involved in confusion like the unclean Sophists, and like this sleepily-yawning
Diatribe.
Sect. 62. NOW observe, in what way the Diatribe handles that
single passage in Ezekiel xviii. 23, "As I live, saith the Lord, I desire not the
death of a sinner, but rather that he should turn from his wickedness and live." In
the first place - "if (it says) the expressions "shall turn away,"
"hath done," "hath committed," be so often repeated in this chapter,
where are they who deny that man can do any thing?" -
Only remark, I pray, the excellent conclusion! It set out to prove the endeavour and
the desire of "Free-will," and now it proves the whole work, that all things are
fulfilled by "Free-will! "Where now, I pray, are those who need grace and the
Holy Spirit? For it pertly argues thus: saying, 'Ezekiel says, "If the wicked man
shall turn away, and shall do righteousness and judgment, he shall live." Therefore,
the wicked man does that immediately and can do it.' Whereas Ezekiel is signifying,
what
ought to be done,
but the Diatribe understands it as
being done,
and
having
been done.
Thus teaching us, by a new kind of grammar, that
ought to be
is the
same as
having been, being exacted
the same as
being performed, and being
required
the same as
being rendered.
And then, that voice of the all-sweet Gospel, "I desire not the death of a
sinner," &c., it perverts thus: - "Would the righteous Lord deplore that
death of His people which He Himself wrought in them? If, therefore, He wills not our
death, it certainly is to be laid to the charge of our own will, if we perish. For, what
can you lay to the charge of Him, who can do nothing either of good or evil?"
It was upon this same string that Pelagius harped long ago, when he attributed to
"Free-will" not a desire nor an endeavour only, but the power of doing and
fulfilling all things. For as I have said before, these conclusions prove that power, if
they prove any thing; so that, they make with equal, nay with more force against the
Diatribe which denies that power of "Free-will," and which attempts to establish
the endeavour only, than they do, against us who deny "Free-will" altogether. -
But, to say nothing of the ignorance of the Diatribe, let us speak to the subject.
It is the Gospel voice, and the sweetest consolation to miserable sinners, where
Ezekiel saith, "I desire not the death of a sinner, but rather, that he should be
converted and live," and it is in all respects like unto that of Psalm xxx. 5.;
"For His wrath is but for a moment, in His willingness is life." And that of
Psalm xxxvi. 7., "How sweet is thy loving-kindness, O God." Also, "For I am
merciful," And that of Christ, (Matt. xi. 28.) "Come unto me, all ye that labour
and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." And also that of Exodus xx. 6,
"I will shew mercy unto thousands of them that love me."
And what is more than half of the Holy Scripture, but mere promises of grace, by which,
mercy, life, peace, and salvation, are extended from God unto men? And what else is the
whole word of promise but this: - "I desire not the death of a sinner?" Is not
His saying, "I am merciful," the same as saying, I am not angry, I am unwilling
to punish, I desire not your death, My will is to pardon, My will is to spare? And if
there were not these divine promises standing, by which consciences, afflicted with a
sense of sin and terrified at the fear of death and judgment might be raised up, what
place would there be for pardon or for hope! What sinner would not sink in despair! But as
"Free-will" is not proved from any of the other words of mercy, of promise, and
of comfort, so neither is it from this: - "I desire not the death of a sinner,"
&c.
But our friend Diatribe, again making no distinction between the words of the law, and
the words of the promise, makes this passage of Ezekiel the voice of the law, and expounds
it thus: - "I desire not the death of a sinner:" that is, I desire not that he
should sin unto death, or should become a sinner guilty of death; but rather, that he
should be converted from sin, if he have committed any, and thus live. For if it do not
expound the passage thus, it will make nothing to its purpose. But this is utterly to
destroy and take away that most sweet place of Ezekiel, "I desire not the
death." If we in our blindness will read and understand the Scriptures thus, what
wonder if they be 'obscure and ambiguous.' Whereas God does not say, "I desire not
the sin of man, but, I desire not the death of a sinner," which manifestly shews that
He is speaking of the punishment of sin, of which the sinner has a sense on account of his
sin, that is, of the fear of death; and that He is raising up and comforting the sinner
lying under this affliction and desperation, that He might not "break the bruised
reed nor quench the smoking flax," but raise him to the hope of pardon and salvation,
in order that he might be further converted, that is, by the conversion unto salvation
from the fear of death, and that he might live, that is, might be in peace and rejoice in
a good conscience.
And this is also to be observed, that as the voice of the law is not pronounced but
upon those who neither feel nor know their sins, as Paul saith, "By the law is the
knowledge of sin;" (Rom. iii. 20,) so, the word of grace does not come but unto
those, who, feeling their sins, are distressed and exercised with desperation. Therefore,
in all the words of the law, you will find sin to be implied while it shews what we ought
to do; as on the contrary, in all the words of the promise, you will find the evil to be
implied under which the sinners, or those who are raised up, labour: as here, "I
desire not the death of a sinner," clearly points out the death and the sinner, both
the evil itself which is felt, and the sinner himself who feels it. But by this, 'Love God
with all thine heart,' is shewn what
good
we
ought to do,
not what
evil
we
feel,
in order that we might know, how far we are
from doing good.
Sect. 63. - NOTHING, therefore, could be more absurdly adduced
in support of "Free-will" than this passage of Ezekiel, nay, it makes with all
possible force directly against "Free-will." For it is here shewn, in what state
"Free-will" is, and what it can do under the knowledge of sin, and in turning
itself from it: - that is, that it can only go on to worse, and add to its sins
desperation and impenitency, unless God soon come in to help, and to call back, and raise
up by the word of promise. For the concern of God in promising grace to recall and raise
up the sinner, is itself an argument sufficiently great and conclusive, that
"Free-will," of itself, cannot but go on to worse, and (as the Scripture saith)
'fall down to hell:' unless, indeed, you imagine that God is such a trifler, that He pours
forth so great an abundance of the words of promise, not from any necessity of them unto
our salvation, but from a mere delight in loquacity! Wherefore, you see, that not only all
the words of law stand against "Free-will," but also, that all the words of the
promise utterly confute it; that is, that, the whole Scripture makes directly against it.
Hence, you see, this word, "I desire not the death of a sinner," does nothing
else but preach and offer divine mercy to the world, which none receive with joy and
gratitude but those who are distressed and exercised with the fears of death, for they are
they in whom the law has now done its office, that is, in bringing them to the knowledge
of sin. But they who have not yet experienced the office of the law, who do not yet know
their sin nor feel the fears of death, despise the mercy promised in that word.
Sect. 64. - BUT,
why it is,
that some are touched by the
law and some are not touched, why some receive the offered grace and some despise it, that
is another question which is not here treated on by Ezekiel; because, he is speaking of THE
PREACHED AND OFFERED MERCY OF GOD, not of
that SECRET AND TO BE FEARED WILL OF GOD,
who, according to His own counsel, ordains whom, and such as He will, to be receivers and
partakers of the preached and offered mercy: which WILL, is not to
be curiously inquired into, but to be adored with reverence as the most profound SECRET of the divine Majesty, which He reserves unto Himself and keeps
hidden from us, and that, much more religiously than the mention of ten thousand Corycian
caverns.
But since the Diatribe thus pertly argues - "Would the righteous Lord deplore that
death of His people, which He Himself works in them? This would seem quite absurd" -
I answer, as I said before, - we are to argue in one way, concerning the WILL OF GOD preached, revealed, and offered unto us, and worshipped by
us; and in another, concerning GOD HIMSELF not preached, not
revealed, not offered unto us, and worshipped by us. In whatever, therefore, God hides
Himself and will be unknown by us, that is nothing unto us' and here, that sentiment'
stands good - 'What is above us, does not concern us.'
And that no one might think that this distinction is my own, I follow Paul, who,
writing to the Thessalonians concerning Antichrist, saith, (2 Thess. ii. 4.) "that he
should exalt himself above all that is God, as preached and worshipped:" evidently
intimating, that any one might be exalted above God as He is preached and worshipped, that
is, above the word and worship of God, by which He is known unto us and has intercourse
with us. But, above God not worshipped and preached, that is, as He is in our own nature
and majesty, nothing can be exalted, but all things are under His powerful hand.
God, therefore, is to be left to remain in His own Nature and Majesty; for in this
respect, we have nothing to do with Him, nor does He wish us to have, in this respect,
anything to do with Him: but we have to do with Him, as far as He is clothed in, and
delivered to us by, His Word; for in that He presents Himself unto us, and that is His
beauty and His glory, in which the Psalmist celebrates Him as being clothed. Wherefore, we
say, that the righteous God does not 'deplore that death of His people which He Himself
works in them;' but He deplores that death which He finds in His people, and which He
desires to remove from them. For GOD PREACHED desires this: - that,
our sin and death being taken away, we might be saved; "He sent His word and healed
them." (Psalm cvii. 20.) But GOD HIDDEN IN MAJESTY neither
deplores, nor takes away death, but works life and death and all things: nor has He, in
this Character, defined Himself in His Word, but has reserved unto Himself, a free power
over all things.
But the Diatribe is deceived by its own ignorance, in not making a distinction between
GOD PREACHED and GOD HIDDEN: that is,
between the word of God and God Himself. God does many things which He does not make known
unto us in His word: He also wills many things which He does not in His word make known
unto us that He wills. Thus, He does not '
will
the death of a sinner,' that is,
in
His word;
but He
wills
it by that
will inscrutable.
But in the present
case, we are to consider His word only, and to leave that will inscrutable; seeing that,
it is by His word, and not by that will inscrutable, that we are to be guided; for who can
direct himself according to a will inscrutable and incomprehensible? It is enough to know
only, that there is in God a certain will inscrutable: but
what, why,
and
how
far
that will wills, it is not lawful to inquire, to wish to know, to be concerned
about, or to reach unto - it is only to be feared and adored!
Therefore it is rightly said, 'if God does not desire our death, it is to be laid to
the charge of our own will, if we perish:' this, I say, is right, if you speak of GOD PREACHED. For He desires that all men should be saved, seeing that, He
comes unto all by the word of salvation, and it is the fault of the will which does not
receive Him: as He saith. (Matt. xxiii. 37.) "How often would I have gathered thy
children together, and thou wouldest not!" But WHY that
Majesty does not take away or change this fault of the will IN ALL,
seeing that, it is not in the power of man to do it; or why He lays that to the charge of
the will, which the man cannot avoid, it becomes us not to inquire, and though you should
inquire much, yet you will never find out: as Paul saith, (Rom. ix, 20,) "Who art
thou that repliest against God!" - Suffice it to have spoken thus upon this passage
of Ezekiel. Now let us proceed to the remaining particulars.
Sect. 65. - THE Diatribe next argues - "If what is
commanded be not in the power of every one, all the numberless exhortations in the
Scriptures, and also all the promises, threatenings, expostulations, reproofs,
asseverations, benedictions and maledictions, together with all the forms of precepts,
must of necessity stand coldly useless." -
The Diatribe is perpetually forgetting the subject point, and going on with that which
is contrary to its professed design: and it does not see, that all these things make with
greater force against itself than against us. For from all these passages, it proves the
liberty and ability to fulfil all things, as the very words of the conclusion which it
draws necessarily declare: whereas, its design was, to prove
'that
"Free-will" is that, which cannot will any thing good without grace, and is a
certain endeavour that is not to be ascribed to its own powers.'
But I do not see that
such an endeavour is proved by any of these passages, but that as I have repeatedly said
already, that only is required which ought to be done' unless it be needful to repeat it
again, as often as the Diatribe harps upon the same string, putting off its readers with a
useless profusion of words.
About the last passage which it brings forward out of the Old Testament, is that of
Deut. xxx. 11-14. "This commandment which I command thee this day, is not above thee,
neither is it far off. Neither is it in heaven, that thou shouldest say, Who of us shall
ascend up into heaven and bring it down unto us, that we may hear it and do it. But the
word is very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth and in thy heart, that thou mayest do it."
The Diatribe contends - 'that it is declared by this passage, that what is commanded is
not only placed in us, but is down-hill work, that is, easy to be done, or at least, not
difficult.' -
I thank the Diatribe for such wonderful erudition! For if Moses so plainly declare,
that there is in us, not only an ability, but also a power to keep all the commandments
with ease, why have I been toiling all this time! Why did I not at once produce this
passage and assert "Free-will" before the whole world! What need now of Christ!
What need of the Spirit! We have now found a passage which stops the mouths of all, and,
which not only plainly asserts the liberty of the will, but teaches that the observance of
all the commandments is easy! - What need was there for Christ to purchase for us, even
with His own blood, the Spirit, as though necessary, in order that He might make the
keeping of the commandments easy unto us, when we were already thus qualified by nature!
Nay, here, the Diatribe itself recants its own assertions, where it affirmed, that
'"Freewill" cannot will any thing good without grace,' and now affirms, that
"Free-will" is of such power, that it can, not only will good, but keep the
greatest, nay, all the commandments, with ease.
Only observe, I pray, what a mind does, where the heart is not in the cause, and how
impossible it is that it should not expose itself! And can there still be any need to
confute the Diatribe? Who can more effectually confute it, than it confutes itself! This
truly, is that beast that devours itself! How true is the proverb, that 'A liar should
have a good memory!'
I have already spoken upon this passage of Deuteronomy, I shall now treat upon it
briefly; if indeed, there be any need so far to set aside Paul, who, Rom. x. 5-11, so
powerfully handles this passage. - You can see nothing here to be said, nor one single
syllable to speak, either of the ease or difficulty, of the power or impotency of
"Free-will" or of man, either to keep or not to keep the commandments. Except
that those, who entangle the Scriptures in their own conclusions and cogitations, make
them obscure and ambiguous to themselves, that they might thus make of them what they
please. But, if you cannot turn your eyes this way, turn your ears, or feel out what I am
about to say with your hands. - Moses saith, "it is not above thee,"
"neither is it far from thee," "neither is it in heaven,"
"neither is it beyond the sea." Now, what is the meaning of this, "above
thee?" What, of this "far from thee?" What, of this "in heaven?"
What, of this "beyond the sea?" Will they then make the most commonly used
terms, and even grammar so obscure unto us, that we shall not be able to speak any thing
to a certainty, merely that they might establish their assertion, that the Scriptures are
obscure?
According to my grammar, these terms signify neither the quality nor the quantity of
human powers, but the distance of places only. For "above thee" does not signify
a certain power of the will, but a certain place which is above us. So also "far from
thee," "in heaven," "beyond the sea," do not signify any thing of
ability in man, but a certain place at a distance above us, or on our right hand, or on
our left hand, or behind us, or over against us. Some one may perhaps laugh at me for
disputing in so plain a way, thus setting, as it were, a ready-marked-out lesson before
such great men, as though they were little boys learning their alphabet, and I were
teaching them how to put syllables together - but what can I do, when I see darkness to be
sought for in a light so clear, and those studiously desiring to be blind, who boastingly
enumerate before us such a series of ages, so much talent, so many saints, so many
martyrs, so many doctors, and who with so much authority boast of this passage, and yet
will not deign to look at the syllables, or to command their cogitations so far, as to
give the passage of which they boast one consideration? Let the Diatribe now go home and
consider, and say, how it can be, that one poor private individual should see that, which
escaped the notice of so many public characters, and of the greatest men of so many ages.
This passage surely, even in the judgment of a school-boy, proves that they must have been
blind not very unfrequently!
What therefore does Moses mean by these most plain and clear words, but, that he has
worthily performed his office as a faithful law-giver; and that therefore, if all men have
not before their eyes and do not know all the precepts which are enjoined, the fault does
not rest with him; that they have no place left them for excuse, so as to say, they did
not know, or had not the precepts, or were obliged to seek them elsewhere; that if they do
not keep them, the fault rests not with the law, or with the law-giver, but with
themselves, seeing that the law is before them, and the law-giver has taught them; and
that they have no place left for excusation of ignorance, only for accusation of
negligence and disobedience? It is not, saith he, necessary to fetch the laws down from
heaven, nor from lands beyond the sea, nor from afar, nor can you frame as an excuse, that
you never had them nor heard them, for you have them nigh unto you; they are they which
God hath commanded, which you have heard from my mouth, and which you have had in your
hearts and in your mouths continually; you have heard them treated on by the Levites in
the midst of you, of which this my word and book are witnesses; this, therefore only
remains - that you do them. - What, I pray you, is here attributed unto
"Free-will?" What is there, but the 'demanding that it would do the laws which
it has, and the taking away from it the excuse of ignorance and the want of the laws?
These passages are the sum of what the Diatribe brings forward out of the Old Testament
in support of "Free-will," which being answered, there remains nothing that is
not answered at the same time, whether it have brought forward, or wished to bring forward
more; seeing that, it could bring forward nothing but imperative, or conditional, or
optative passages, by which is signified, not what we
can do,
or
do do,
(as
I have so often replied, to the so often repeating Diatribe) but what we
ought to do,
and
what
is required of us,
in order that we might come to the knowledge of our
impotency, and that there might be wrought in us the knowledge of our sin. Or, if they do
prove any thing, by means of the appended conclusions and similitudes invented by human
reason, they prove this: -
that "Free-will" is not a certain small degree of endeavour or desire only,
but a full and free ability and power to do all things, without the grace of God, and
without the Holy Spirit.
Thus, nothing less is proved by the whole sum of that copious, and again and again
reiterated and inculcated argumentation, than that which was aimed at to be proved, that
is, the PROBABLE OPINION; by which, "Free-will" is
defined to be of that impotency, 'that it cannot will any thing good without grace, but is
compelled into the service of sin; though it has an endeavour, which, nevertheless, is not
to be ascribed to its own powers.' - A monster truly! which, at the same time, can do
nothing by its own power, and yet, has an endeavour within its own power: and thus, stands
upon the basis of a most manifest contradiction!
Sect. 66. - We now come to the NEW TESTAMENT, where again, are marshalled up in defence
of that miserable bondage of "Free-will," an host of imperative sentences,
together with all the auxiliaries of carnal reason, such as, conclusions, similitudes,
&c., called in from all quarters. And if you ever saw represented in a picture, or
imagined in a dream, a king of flies attended by his forces armed with lances and shields
of straw or hay, drawn up in battle array against a real and complete army of veteran
warriors - it is just thus, that the human dreams of the Diatribe are drawn up in battle
array against the hosts of the words of God!
First of all, marches forth in front, that of Matt. xxiii. 37-39, as it were the
Achilles of these flies, "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, how often would I have gathered thy
children together, and thou wouldest not." - "If all things be done from
necessity (says the Diatribe) might not Jerusalem here have justly said in reply to the
Lord, Why dost thou weary thyself with useless tears? If thou didst not will that we
should kill the prophets, why didst thou send them? Why dost thou lay that to our charge,
which, from
will
in thee, was done of
necessity
by us?" - thus the
Diatribe. -
I answer: Granting in the mean time that this conclusion and proof of the Diatribe is
good and true, what, I ask, is proved thereby? - that 'probable opinion,' which affirms
that "Freewill" cannot will good? Nay, the will is proved to be free, whole, and
able to do all things which the prophets have spoken; and such a will the Diatribe never
intended to prove. But let the Diatribe here reply to itself. If "Free-will"
cannot will good, why is it laid to its charge, that it did not hear the prophets, whom,
as they taught good, it could not hear by its own powers? Why does Christ in useless tears
weep over those as though they could have willed that, which He certainly knew they could
not will? Here, I say, let the Diatribe free Christ from the imputation of madness,
according to its 'probable opinion,' and then my opinion is immediately set free from that
Achilles of the flies. Therefore, that passage of Matthew either forcibly proves
"Free-will" altogether, or makes with equal force against the Diatribe itself,
and strikes it prostrate with its own weapon!
But I here observe as I have observed before, that we are not to dispute concerning
that SECRET WILL of the divine Majesty; and that, that human
temerity, which, with incessant perverseness, is ever leaving those things that are
necessary, and attacking and trying this point, is to be called off and driven back, that
it employ not itself in prying into those secrets of Majesty which it is impossible to
attain unto, seeing that, they dwell in that light which is inaccessible; as Paul
witnesseth. (1 Tim. vi. 16.) But let the man acquaint himself with the God Incarnate, or,
as Paul saith, with Jesus crucified, in whom are all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge
- but hidden! for in Him, there is an abundance both of that which he ought to know, and
of that which he ought not to know.
[See Note
]The God Incarnate,
then, here speaks thus - "I WOULD and THOU
WOULDST NOT!" The God Incarnate,- I say, was sent for this purpose - that He
might desire, speak, do, suffer, and offer unto all, all things that are necessary unto
salvation, although He should offend many, who, being either left or hardened by that
secret will of Majesty, should not receive Him thus desiring, speaking, doing, and
offering: as John i. 5, saith, "The light shineth in darkness, and the darkness
comprehended it not." And again, "He came unto His own, and His own received Him
not." (11.) It belongs also to this same God Incarnate, to weep, to lament, and to
sigh over the perdition of the wicked, even while that will of Majesty, from purpose,
leaves and reprobates some, that they might perish. Nor does it become us to inquire
why
He does so, but to revere that God who can do, and wills to do, such things.
Nor do I suppose that any one will cavillingly deny, that that will which here saith,
"How often would I!" was displayed to the Jews, even before God became
Incarnate; seeing that, they are accused of having slain the prophets, before Christ, and
having thus resisted His will. For it is well known among Christians, that all things were
done by the prophets in the name of Christ to come, who was promised that He should become
Incarnate: so that, whatever has been offered unto men by the ministers of the word from
the foundation of the world, may be rightly called, the Will of Christ.
Sect. 67. - BUT here Reason, who is always very knowing and
loquacious, will say, - This is an excellently invented scape-gap; that, as often as we
are pressed close by the force of arguments, we might run back to that to-be-revered will
of Majesty, and thus silence the disputant as soon as he becomes troublesome; just as
astrologers, do, who, by their invented epicycles, elude all questions concerning the
motion of the whole heaven. -
I answer: It is no invention of mine, but a command supported by the Holy Scriptures.
Paul, (Rom. ix. 19,) speaks thus: "Why therefore doth God find fault; for who hath
resisted His will? Nay, but O man, who art thou that contendest with God?" "Hath
not the potter power?" And so on. And before him, Isaiah lviii. 2, "Yet they
seek Me daily, and desire to know My ways, as a nation that did righteousness: they ask of
Me the ordinances of justice, and desire to approach unto God."
From these words it is, I think, sufficiently manifest that it is not lawful for men to
search into that will of Majesty. And this subject is of that nature, that perverse men
are here the most led to pry into that to-be-revered will, and therefore, there is here
the greatest reason why they should be exhorted to silence and reverence. In other
subjects, where those things are handled for which we can give a reason, and for which we
are commanded to give a reason, we do not this. And if any one still persist in searching
into the reason of that will, and do not choose to hearken to our admonition, we let him
go on, and, like the giants, fight against God; while we look on to see what triumph he
will gain, persuaded in ourselves, that he will do nothing, either to injure our cause or
to advance his own. For it will still remain unalterable, that he must either prove that
"Free-will" can do all things, or that the Scriptures which he adduces must make
against himself. And, which soever of the two shall take place, he vanquished, lies
prostrate, while we as conquerors "stand upright!"
Sect. 68. - ANOTHER passage is that of Matt. xix. 17,) "If
thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments." - "With what face, (says the
Diatribe,) can "if thou wilt" be said to him who has not a Free-will?' -
To which I reply: - Is, therefore, the will, according to this word of Christ, free?
But you wish to prove, that "Free-will" cannot will any thing good; and that,
without grace, it of necessity serves sin. With what face, then, do you now make will
wholly free?
The same reply will be made to that also - "If thou wilt be perfect,"
"If any one will come after me," "He that will save his life,"
"If ye love me," "If Ye shall continue." In a word, as I said before,
(to ease the Diatribe's labour in adducing such a load of words) let all the
conditional
ifs
and all the
imperative verbs
be collected together. - "All these
precepts (says the Diatribe) stand coldly useless, if nothing be attributed to the human
will. How ill does that conjunctive
if
accord with mere necessity?" -
I answer: If they stand coldly useless, it is your fault that they stand coldly
useless, who, at one time, assert that nothing is to be attributed to
"Free-will," while you make "Free-will" unable to will good, and who,
on the contrary, here make the same "Free-will" able to will all good; nay, you
thus make them to stand as nothing at all: unless, with you, the same words stand coldly
useless and warmly useful at the same time, while they at once assert all things and deny
all things.
I wonder how any author can delight in repeating the same things so continually, and to
be as continually forgetting his subject design: unless perhaps, distrusting his cause, he
wishes to overcome his adversary by the bulk of his book, or to weary him out with the
tedium and toil of reading it. By what conclusion, I ask, does it follow, that
will
and
power
must immediately take place as often as it is said, 'If thou wilt,' 'If any
one will,' 'If thou shalt?' Do we not most frequently imply in such expressions impotency
rather, and impossibility? For instance. - If thou wilt equal Virgil in singing, my friend
Mevius, thou must sing in another strain. - If thou wilt surpass Cicero, friend Scotus,
instead of thy subtle jargon, thou must have the most exalted eloquence. If thou wilt
stand in competition with David, thou must of necessity produce Psalms like his. Here are
plainly signified things impossible to our own powers, although, by divine power, all
these things may be done. So it is in the Scriptures, that by such expressions, it might
be shewn what we cannot do ourselves, but what can be done in us by the power of God.
Moreover, if such expressions should be used in those things which are utterly
impossible to be done, as being those which God would never do, then, indeed, they might
rightly be called either coldly useless, or ridiculous, because they would be spoken in
vain. Whereas now, they are so used, that by them, not only the impotency of
"Free-will" is shewn, by which no one of those things can be done, but it is
also signified, that a time will come when all those things shall be done, but by a power
not our own, that is, by the divine power; provided that, we fully admit, that in such
expressions, there is a certain signification of things possible and to be done: as if any
one should interpret them thus: - "If thou wilt keep the commandments, (that is, if
thou shalt at any time have the will to keep the commandments, though thou wilt have it,
not of thyself, but of God, who giveth it to whom He will,) they also shall preserve
thee."
But, to take a wider scope. - These expressions, especially those which are
conditional, seem to be so placed also, on account of the Predestination of God, and to
involve that as being unknown to us. As if they should speak thus: - "If thou
desire," "If thou wilt:" that is, if thou be such with God, that he shall
deign to give thee this will to keep the commandments, thou shalt be saved. According to
which manner of speaking, it is given us to understand both truths. - That we can do
nothing ourselves; and that, if we do any thing, God works that in us. This is what I
would say to those, who will not be content to have it said, that by these words our
impotency only is shewn, and who will contend, that there is also proved a certain power
and ability to do those things which are commanded. And in this way, it will also appear
to be truth, that we are not able to do any of the things which are commanded, and yet,
'that we are able to do them all: that is, speaking of the former, with reference to our
own powers, and of the latter, with reference to the grace of God.
Sect. 69. - THE third particular that moves the Diatribe is
this: - "How there can be (it observes) any place for mere necessity there, where
mention is so frequently made of good works and of bad works, and where there is mention
made of reward, I cannot understand; for neither nature nor necessity can have
merit." -
Nor can I understand any thing but this: - that that 'probable opinion,' asserts 'mere
necessity' where it affirms that "Free-will" cannot will any thing good, and
yet, nevertheless, here attributes to it even 'merit.' Hence, "Free-will" gains
ground so fast, as the book and argumentation of the Diatribe increases, that now, it not
only has an endeavour and desire of its own, 'though not by its own powers,' nay, not only
wills good and does good, but also merits eternal life according to that saying of Christ,
(Matt. v. 12,) "Rejoice and be exceeding glad, for great is your reward in
heaven." "Your reward," that is, the reward of "Free-will." For
the Diatribe so understands this passage, that Christ and the Spirit of God are nothing.
For what need is there of them, if we have good works and merit by "Free-will!"
I say these things, that we may see, that it is no rare thing for men of exalted talent,
to be blind in a matter which is plainly manifest even to one of a thick and uninformed
understanding; and that we may also see, how weak, arguments drawn from human authority
are in divine things, where the authority of God alone avails.
But we have here to speak upon two things. First, upon the precepts of the New
Testament. And next, upon merit. We shall touch upon each briefly, having already spoken
upon them more fully elsewhere.
The New Testament, properly, consists of promises and exhortations, even as the Old,
properly, consists of laws and threatenings. For in the New Testament, the Gospel is
preached; which is nothing else than the word, by which, are offered unto us the Spirit,
grace; and the remission of sins obtained for us by Christ crucified; and all entirely
free, through the mere mercy of God the Father, thus favouring us unworthy creatures, who
deserve damnation rather than any thing else.
And then follow exhortations, in order to animate those who are already justified, and
who have obtained mercy, to be diligent in the fruits of the Spirit and of righteousness
received, to exercise themselves in charity and good works, and to bear courageously the
cross and all the other tribulations of this world. This is the whole sum of the New
Testament. But how little Erasmus understands of this matter is manifest from this: - it
knows not how to make any distinction between the Old Testament and the New, for it can
see nothing any where but precepts, by which, men are formed to good manners only. But
what the new-birth is, the new-creature, regeneration, and the whole work of the Spirit,
of all this it sees nothing whatever. So that, I am struck with wonder and astonishment,
that the man, who has spent so much time and study upon these things, should know so
little about them.
This passage therefore, "Rejoice, and be exceeding glad, for great is your reward
in heaven," agrees as well with "Free-will" as light does with darkness.
For Christ is there exhorting, not "Free-will," but His apostles, (who were not
only raised above "Free-will" in grace, and justified, but were stationed in the
ministry of the Word, that is, in the highest degree of grace,) to endure the tribulations
of the world. But we are now disputing about "Free-will," and that particularly,
as it is without Grace; which, by laws and threats, or the Old Testament, is instructe |