| A
great man of the last generation began the preface of a splendid
little book he was writing on this subject, with the words:
"Happy would it be for the church of Christ and for the world,
if Christian ministers and Christian people could be content
to be disciples-learners." He meant to intimate that if only
we were all willing to sit simply at the feet of the inspired
writers and take them at their word, we should have no difficulties
with Predestination. The difficulties we feel with regard to
Predestination are not derived from the Word. The Word is full
of it, because it is full of God, and when we say God and mean
God-God in all that God is-we have said Predestination.
Our difficulties
with Predestination arise from a, no doubt not unnatural,
unwillingness to acknowledge ourselves to be wholly at the
disposal of another. We wish to be at our own disposal. We
wish "to belong to ourselves," and we resent belonging, especially
belonging absolutely, to anybody else, even if that anybody
else be God. We are in the mood of the singer of the hymn
beginning, "I was a wandering sheep," when he declares of
himself, "I would not be controlled." We will not be controlled.
Or, rather, to speak more accurately, we will not admit that
we are controlled.
I say that
it is more accurate to say that we will not admit that we
are controlled. For we are controlled, whether we admit it
or not. To imagine that we are not controlled is to imagine
that there is no God. For when we say God, we say control.
If a single creature which God has made has escaped beyond
his control, at the moment that he has done so he has abolished
God. A God who could or would make a creature whom he could
not or would not control, is no God. The moment he should
make such a creature he would, of course, abdicate his throne.
The universe he had created would have ceased to be his universe;
or rather it would cease to exist-for the universe is held
together only by the control of God.
Even worse
would have happened, indeed, than the destruction of the universe.
God would have ceased to be God in a deeper sense than that
he would have ceased to be the Lord and Ruler of the world.
He would have ceased to be a moral being. It is an immoral
act to make a thing that we cannot or will not control. The
only justification for making anything is that we both can
and will control it. If a man should manufacture a quantity
of an unstable high-explosive in the corridors of an orphan
asylum, and when the stuff went off should seek to excuse
himself by saying that he could not control it, no one would
count his excuse valid. What right had he to manufacture it,
we should say, unless he could control it? He relieves himself
of none of the responsibility for the havoc wrought, by pleading
inability to control his creation.
To suppose
that God has made a universe-or even a single being-the control
of which he renounces, is to accuse him of similar immorality.
What right has he to make it, if he cannot or will not control
it? It is not a moral act to perpetrate chaos. We have not
only dethroned God; we have demoralized him.
Of course,
there is no one that thinks at all who will imagine such a
vanity. We take refuge in a vague antinomy. We fancy that
God controls the universe just enough to control it, and that
he does not control it just enough not to control it. Of course
God controls the universe, we perhaps say-in the large; but
of course he does not control everything in the universe-in
particular.
Probably nobody
deceives himself with such palpable paltering in a double
sense. If this is God's universe, if he made it and made it
for himself, he is responsible for everything that takes place
in it. He must be supposed to have made it just as he wished
it to be-or are we to say that he could not make the universe
he wished to make, and had to put up with the best he could
do?
And he must
be supposed to have made it precisely as he wished it to be,
not only statically but dynamically considered, that is, in
all its potentialities and in all its developments down to
the end. That is to say, he must be supposed to have made
it precisely to suit himself, as extended not only in space
but in time. If anything occurs in it as projected through
time-just as truly as if anything is found in it as extended
in space-which is not just as he intended it to be-why, then
we must admit that he could not make such a universe as he
would like to have, and had to put up with the best he could
get. And, then, he is not God. A being who cannot make a universe
to his own liking is not God. A being who can agree to make
a universe which is not to his liking, most certainly is not
God.
But though
such a being obviously is not God, he does not escape responsibility
for the universe which he actually makes -whether as extended
in space or in time-and that in all its particulars. The moment
this godling (not now God) consented to put up with the actual
universe-whether as extended in space or as projected through
time, including all its particulars without exception-because
it was the best he could get, it became his universe. He adopted
it as his own, and made it his own even in those particulars
which in themselves he would have liked to have otherwise.
These particulars, as well as all the rest, which in themselves
please him better, have been determined on by him as not only
allowable, but as actually to exist in the universe which,
by his act, is actually realized.
That is to
say they are predestinated by him, and because predestinated
by him actually appear in the universe that is made. We have
got rid of God, indeed; but we have not got rid of the Predestination,
to get rid of which we have been willing to degrade our God
into a godling.
We have passed
insensibly from the idea of control to the idea of Predestination.
That is because there is no real difference between the two
ideas at bottom. If God controls anything at all, of course
he has intended to control it before he controls it. Exactly
the control which he exerts, of course he has intended to
exert all long.
No one can
imagine so inadvertent a God, that he always acts "on the
spur of the moment," so to speak, with no manner of intention
determining his action. Providence and Predestination are
ideas which run into one another. Providence is but Predestination
in its execution; Predestination is but Providence in its
intention. When we say the one, we say the other, and the
common idea which gives its content to both is control.
It is purely
this idea of control which people object to when they say
they object to Predestination; not the idea of previousness,
but purely the idea of control. They would object just as
much if the control was supposed to be exercised without any
previous intention at all.
They ought
to object much more. For a control exercised without intention
would be a blind control. It would have no end in view to
justify it; it would have no meaning; it would be sheerly
irrational, immoral, maddening. That is what we call Fate.
Say intention, however, and we say person; and when we say
person we say purpose. A meaning is now given to the control
that is exercised; an end is held before it.
And if the
person who exercises the control be an intelligent being,
the end will be a wise end; if he be a moral being it will
be a good end; if he be infinitely wise and holy, just and
good, it will be an infinitely wise and holy, just and good
end, and it will be wrought out by means as wise and holy,
just and good as itself.
To say Predestination
is to say all this. It is to introduce order into the universe.
It is to assign an end and a worthy end to it. It enables
us to speak of a far off divine event to which the whole creation
is moving. It enables us to see that whatever occurs, great
or small, has a place to fill in this universal teleology;
and thus has significance given it, and a justification supplied
to it. To say Predestination is thus not only to say God;
it is also to say Theodicy.
No matter
what we may say of Predestination in moments of puzzlement,
as we stand in face of the problems of life-the problem of
the petty, the problem of suffering, the problem of sin-it
is safe to say that at the bottom of our minds we all believe
in it. We cannot help believing in it-if we believe in God;
and that, in its utmost extension, as applying to everything
about us which comes to pass.
Take any occurrence
that happens, great or small-the fall of an empire or the
fall of a sparrow, which our Lord himself tells us never once
happens "without our Father." It surely cannot be imagined
that God is ignorant of its happening-nay, even if it be so
small a thing as the fall of a pin.
God assuredly
is aware of everything that happens in his universe. There
are no dark corners in it into which his all-seeing eye cannot
pierce; there is nothing that occurs in it which is hidden
from his universal glance. But certainly neither can it be
imagined that anything which occurs in his universe takes
him by surprise. Assuredly God has been expecting it to happen,
and in happening it has merely justified his anticipations.
Nor yet can
he be imagined to be indifferent to its happening, as if,
though he sees it coming, he does not care whether it happens
or not. That is not the kind of God our God is; he is a God
who infinitely cares, cares even about the smallest things.
Did not our Savior speak of the sparrows and the very hairs
of our heads to teach us this?
Well, then,
can it be imagined that, though infinitely caring, God stands
impotently over against the happenings in his universe, and
cannot prevent them? Is he to be supposed to be watching from
all eternity things which he does not wish to happen, coming,
coming, ever coming, until at last they come-and he is unable
to stop them?
Why, if he
could not prevent their happening any other way he need not
have made the universe; or he might have made it differently.
There was nothing to require him to make this universe-or
any universe at all-except his own good pleasure; and there
is nothing to compel him to allow anything which he does not
wish to happen, to occur in the universe which he has made
for his own good pleasure.
Clearly things
cannot occur in God's universe, the occurrence of which is
displeasing to him. He does not stand helplessly by, while
they occur against his wish. Whatever occurs has been foreseen
by him from all eternity, and it succeeds in occurring only
because its occurrence meets his wish.
It may not
be apparent to us what wish of his it meets, what place it
fills in the general scheme of things to which it is his pleasure
to give actuality, what its function is in his all-inclusive
plan. But we know that it could not occur unless it had such
a function to perform, such a place to fill, a part to play
in God's comprehensive plan.
And knowing
that, we are satisfied.. Unless, indeed, we cannot trust God
with his own plan, and feel that we must insist that he submit
it to us, down to the last detail, and obtain our approval
of it, before he executes it.
Least of all
will the religious man doubt the universal Predestination
of God. Why, what makes him a religious man is, among other
things, that he sees God in everything.
A glass window
stands before us. We raise our eyes and see the glass; we
note its quality, and observe its defects; we speculate on
its composition. Or we look straight through it on the great
prospect of land and sea and sky beyond. So there are two
ways of looking at the world. We may see the world and absorb
ourselves in the wonders of nature. That is the scientific
way. Or we may look right through the world and see God behind
it. That is the religious way.
The scientific
way of looking at the world is not wrong any more than the
glass-manufacturer's way of looking at the window. This way
of looking at things has its very important uses. Nevertheless
the window was placed there not to be looked at but to be
looked through; and the world has failed of its purpose unless
it too is looked through and the eye rests not on it but on
its God. Yes, its God; for it is of the essence of the religious
view of things that God is seen in all that is and in all
that occurs. The universe is his, and in all its movements
speaks of him, because it does only his will.
If you would
understand the religious man's conception of the relation
of God to his world, observe him on his knees. For prayer
is the purest expression of religion and in prayer we see
religion come to its rights.
Did ever a
man pray thus: "O God, Thou knowest that I can do as I choose
and Thou canst not prevent me, Thou knowest that my fellowmen
are, like me, beyond Thy control, Thou knowest that nature
itself goes its own way and Thou canst but stand helplessly
by and watch whither it tends"?
No, the attitude
of the-soul in prayer is that of entire dependence for itself,
and of complete confidence in God's all-embracing government.
We ask him graciously to regulate our own spirit, to control
the acts of our fellowmen, and to direct the course of the
whole world in accordance with his holy and beneficent will.
And we do right. Only, we should see to it that we preserve
this conception of God in his relation to his world, when
we rise from our knees; and make it the operative force of
our whole life.
I know, it
is true, an eminent theologian who will shake his head at
this. God cannot control the acts of free agents, he says,
and it is folly to ask him to do so. If we go gunning with
an unskillful friend, he may awkwardly shoot us; and it is
useless to ask God to protect us; he simply cannot do it.
If we are at work at a dangerous machine by the side of a
careless companion, he may destroy us at any moment, and it
is useless to ask God to avert the mishap; God cannot do it.
If this were
so, we certainly would be in a parlous case. Or rather the
world would long ago have broken down into chaos.
Every religious
man knows full well that it is not so. Every religious man
knows that God can and will and does control everything that
he has made in all their actions, and that therefore-despite
all adverse appearances-it is all well with the world.
All well with
the world, which is moving steadily forward in its established
orbit; and all well with us who put our trust in God. For
has he not himself told us that all things-all things, mind
you-are working together for good to those that love him?
And how, pray, could that be, except that they all do his
bidding in all their actions?
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