"And the times of this ignorance
God winked at, but now commandeth all men everywhere to
repent." --Acts 17:30
This passage is part of Paul's sermon at Athens. In discussing
it I shall,
I. Show what it means.
II. Apply its principles to some of the great moral movements
of the present age.
III. Show what is implied in repentance.
IV. Show why men should repent and reform now.
I. Paul is speaking of those places and times where the gospel
had not been. It was concerning moral actions performed then and
there that Paul said, "God winked at" them. This affirmed a plain
and well-established truth, viz: that men are held responsible
morally according to their light. Speaking of times when men were
but imperfectly enlightened, he did not say men were then
absolutely guiltless, but only comparatively so. Their sins were a
matter of comparative unimportance. When we use this
language--wink at a thing--we mean Let it pass with slight
notice--let it go. Such must have been Paul's meaning. The
principle assumed is as I have said, a well-established one--that
men are guilty, or not guilty, or as the case may be, are more or
less guilty, according to the knowledge they have or do not have,
of their duty.
II. Applying this well-established principle, which all men
hold and must hold, I remark, that since my recollection, a vast
amount of light has been thrown on many great moral questions, and
consequently the conduct of men in reference to the points they
involve has assumed very different shades of moral character.
For example, the question of Temperance. I can well remember
when ministers used to drink before they went into the pulpit and
drink after they came out of it. The same practices still continue
in other countries. Then they thought it no wrong, unless they
drank to excess, and beyond their own convictions of right. They
measured their ideas of its harm by their own standard. But now so
much light is abroad that the moral character of rum-drinking is
essentially modified. In those very places where men drank without
much guilt, they can no longer drink at all without great guilt.
Then men were often advised to drink by their physicians. They
thought they ought to drink for the sake of health. But this
apology is available no longer. Why not? Because men have learned
that health does not demand rum-drinking. They now know that it is
wrong to use ardent spirits as a beverage, and that very rarely
indeed does it need to be used as a medicine. Of course they
cannot use the article as of old without great guilt--without
losing every particle of their piety.
So on the subject of slavery. For a long time this subject was
scarcely discussed at all. Slavery was abolished so quietly and
gradually in the Northern States, that but little general
discussion was excited. Yet the manner of its abolition in the
North left the impression that Northern men had nothing to do with
its abolition in the South. The work having been achieved by state
legislative action, and without much of any foreign influence of
any sort, it was not unnaturally assumed that other states would
abolish slavery in the same way. Indeed so little attention was
given to this subject by Northern men, that they did not notice
the gradual encroachments of the slave power upon the general
government.
But this state of things has greatly changed. Now men generally
understand the relations of slavery to the national government.
The startling fact is but too apparent that our Union is virtually
a slaveholding state, and that Congress have seriously undertaken
to make the entire domain of our country a slaveholding land. They
enact their Fugitive Slave Bill into so-called law, and then send
their commissioned agents into the free states, upon free soil, to
compel free men, whose souls abhor slavery, to become
slave-catchers, and to deliver up unto their masters or claimants,
the servant that has escaped--in the very face of God's own
command to the contrary, not to say also in the very face of every
dictate of humanity. When the Northern states set their own slaves
free, they had no thought of ever being dragged thus into the
support of slavery. They expected, and were authorized to expect
that the example of emancipation would be followed by the Southern
states. But instead of this, what do we see? Laws enacted by
Congress which people all the free states with commissioners
authorized to seize men as slaves--which deny them a jury trial
and the right of habeas corpus--which leave them only the
miserable mockery of the forms of trial, and which then, under
heavy pains and penalties, compel us to sustain all this iniquity,
and aid in dragging the arrested victim into hopeless bondage.
I do not want to rail--you who hear me preach so often know
full well that I am not; nor do I mean to rail on the worst of men
or the most oppressive of their measures now; but the question
what we, as christian men shall do under this monstrous oppression
is really momentous. The question now has taken this form; shall
we individually and personally aid in making men slaves?
This makes a solemn issue. I feel it to be such. So must all
Northern men and Northern Christians. It is a new issue. We did
not expect when we entered into this Union, that we were to be
dragooned into the business of slave-hunting. We did not calculate
then to become the tools of the slave power, to help make men
found on free soil slaves. We must make up our minds how we will
act under this new issue.
This whole subject presents some curious questions pertaining
to political action, the pulpit, and the duty of christian men.
Before and during the American revolution, there was much more
political discussion in the pulpit than there is now, or perhaps
than there has ever been elsewhere. Indeed the great questions of
the revolution were all discussed in the pulpit and with signal
ability. As some writer has said, "The pulpit thundered and
lightened on the subject of liberty." The consequence was the true
ideas of liberty were understood, and came to have a living
development in the public mind. The tallest statesmen of the land
heard the gospel of liberty proclaimed from the sacred desk. Who
needs be told that ministers then met their responsibilities to
the state and to the public weal, fearlessly and boldly? Who does
not know that all these questions were then blended with prayer,
and civil liberty was hailed as a boon from heaven?
But ministers in our day have become afraid to stand forth and
speak as honest, fearless men on this subject, and political men
have become fearful and sensitive lest the pulpit should utter its
voice for freedom. But why this sensitiveness of politicians? And
why this timidity in the heralds of the gospel? Have not all
Christian men political duties to perform? Ought they not to
search out these duties, and settle in the fear of God all the
great questions they involve, and then meet their political
responsibilities in the fear of God and for the welfare of the
nation?
It is not generally considered that neither of the two great
political parties can manage this question of slavery at their
option. It is a great blessing to have two great parties. They
correct each other's errors, watch each other's movements, and if
either party should swerve essentially from the right path, the
good men of this swerving party would go over to the other, and
quickly turn the scale.
At the South, both parties are united on the subject of
slavery, and will not for a moment diverge from the line of
strictest fidelity to its interests. Each of the two great parties
have, or rather had their other issues; now all other issues have
fallen into comparative insignificance, and the matter of
controversy between them turns no longer upon principles, but upon
men, and the spoils of office. But the thing I would say is, that
neither of them can control the subject of slavery. Hence when the
united South take their stand firmly, and irrespective of party,
say--"So far will we go and no farther," then each party must meet
them on their own ground, or lose their support, and with it all
chances of success as a party.
Both parties therefore concede to the South all they ask. For
example, they both accede to the Compromise acts, Fugitive law
included, and affirm this law to be "a finality." This done, they
cry, Drop the question of slavery--let all be quiet as the grave
on this point, and let us each carry our other questions if we
can. This is just the issue now made. Drop the question of
slavery, and no longer make it in any degree a political issue.
This is the demand first of the whole South; next, of the two
great political parties. Shall the Christian church accede to
this? Shall we let this entire subject alone, and go in for
contention of the other issues as if they had any importance worth
naming in the comparison?
Until matters assumed their present form, a multitude of
Christians acted conscientiously with one or the other of these
great parties. Both of these parties have promised Anti-Slavery
men pretty largely. For example, the Whig party promised to keep
out Texas, and to prevent a war with Mexico; and many did believe,
honestly too, that one party or the other would do something to
withdraw the support of the general government from slavery. So
long as they could reasonably indulge this hope, and honestly did
so, I cannot condemn these Christians for their adherence to their
parties. Many conscientious men thought that they could do most
good in that course, and hence we ought not to complain of them
for it.
But now it is not so much as pretended that any good results
will ensue from acting with either of the great parties. Not even
a bait is now held out to allure conscientious and good men into
their support. Nobody contends that under the control of either of
these great parties, there is, at present, the faintest hope of
repealing or even modifying the Fugitive Slave Bill, or getting
one good thing for truth or righteousness. Therefore I ask, can
any good man hold on to either of those parties--for no good
object whatever--not even the promise of any good to the cause of
the slave being held out as an inducement?
So of the church. Of old it was often said, What have we to do
with slavery? Men did not see that Congress had any particular
responsibility on this subject, and hence they could not see that
as Christian men, or as a church, they could have any special
responsibility in regard to slavery. But now the world are saying,
What are ye Christians doing? Are you with us in the support of
our great party? O yes. Now this may please the men of the world,
but it certainly can never secure their respect. It never can do
honor to the firmness of Christian principle. Do you ask, What
ought Christian men to do? Doubtless they ought to use all their
legitimate influence against the Fugitive Slave Bill, and against
all the political aggressions of slavery upon our free land and
government. Doubtless they ought to vote for freedom as against
slavery, and speak out in no mistakable words and tones, till the
nation shall hear and shall purge itself from all national
patronage of this horrible system.
The same should be said of the responsibilities and duties of
the great benevolent societies. Time was when great ignorance
prevailed in these societies, touching their relations to slavery.
When I entered the ministry, not a word was said about the
relations of the American Board to slavery, or of the Bible
Society, or the Tract Society. But ere long the question came up
in regard to the relations sustained by each of those societies to
slavery. The Christian public ask, What is the true position which
those societies sustain towards slavery? What is their duty? What
are they in fact doing? Does their influence go to sustain the
foul system? They all claim to be disseminating a pure
Christianity, and of course they profess to bear a pure testimony
against every sin, and especially against all great public
iniquities. Are they in fact doing so? They should consider that
increased light begets augmented responsibilities, and that they
cannot pass along now, treating slavery as if it were no
sin--however conveniently they might have done so in those times
of ignorance which God winked at. There is too much light now on
the sin of slavery, and on its multiform relations to the church
and to the nation, to admit of neutrality in regard to it, or to
allow the assumption that it is not to be regarded as a great
sin.
III. What is implied in repentance?
Repentance is turning the heart to God, and abandoning
selfishness. The work of repentance belongs to the heart or will.
Of course it must be the function of the voluntary or moral
department of the mind's powers.
But especially let me remark, that where repentance is genuine,
there will be and must be external reformation. Men may have
emotions of sorrow, with no change of purpose; but this is not
real repentance.
IV. Why should men now repent and reform?
Because as soon as we get light on any former practice which
shows us that it is opposed to God's will, we cannot persist in it
without greatly augmented guilt. For example, the case of
intemperance. As soon as increasing light on this subject showed
the extent of its mischiefs, and the absence of any and all
redeeming good, the practice of using intoxicating drink as a
beverage came to be seen at once as the murder of a man's own body
and soul, and as a fatal temptation to his neighbor. Then, how
could any man persist longer in its use without damning sin?
So of slavery. As soon as light prevails on this subject, men
can no longer go on in the same course of sustaining the system,
without the greatest guilt. It will not answer to substitute
evasions, and dodging and side issues in place of real repentance
and true reform. To evade the claims of truth thus serves not to
acquit the soul before God or man, but only to strengthen
depravity and harden the heart.
For an illustration of this principle take the case of the
Jews. Before Christ came among them, great moral darkness reigned.
When Christ came among them, preaching the kingdom of God and
illustrating its true import in his life and spirit, in his
miracles of goodness and finally in his death on the cross, they
could not but "see a great light." Therefore, when they resisted
this light, and resorted to their lies to evade the evidence
furnished by his resurrection, their consciences became
exceedingly hardened. After all this light, could they go on
rejecting their known Messiah without greatly augmented guilt?
Nay, verily. The same principle applies to the nation as a whole,
and to all its individual members before whom this gospel light
shone.
Refusal to repent when light reveals sin and duty, must hasten
the destruction of any nation or people under heaven. How long did
the Jews continue to prosper after Christ had come and had been
rejected? Terrible was their hardening under so much light, and
equally fearful was their doom! History records no case of more
fearful destruction, or of more black and inexcusable guilt. When
the hour of their retribution at last came, God poured out the cup
of his indignation upon them without mixture, and bitterly did
they drink it to its dregs! So must it be with every nation that
shall refuse to repent when light breaks in and duty stands
revealed, and yet they refuse to do it.
The governments of the earth, if they resist the light that
breaks in upon them, are sure to be destroyed. Who has not looked
with admiration upon the English government, and marked its course
when pressed by public sentiment to adopt demanded reforms? Their
history for centuries is a series of triumphs achieved by the
growing intelligence, firmness and wisdom of the people, calling
for reforms in government or in the social condition of the
masses. We can all of us remember the agitation long and deep
which preceded the glorious act of West India emancipation. If the
government had withstood that appeal and refused to emancipate, I
believe the refusal must have crushed the very throne itself. The
people demanded the reform. The pulpit thundered and
lightened--the whole public mind rocked as with the upheavings of
an earthquake. The only safety lay in yielding to their
demands.
No Christian nation since the world began has been able to
stand against the united prayers and testimony of God's church. No
one has had strength to resist any reform which God's people have
unitedly demanded. If they were seriously to determine on
resistance, they would find God himself arrayed against them. O
how would He drive his judgment-chariot, axle-deep in their blood
and bones! Let his people stand on his side and do his work;--they
may expect his interposing arm for their support, crowning their
toils with glorious victory. This must be so, by a law as
undeviating and unfailing as the veracity of Jehovah!
This principle applies to all organizations, benevolent or
ecclesiastical. If they resist reform when growing light demands
it, God will be against them, and his chariot will grind them to
powder! What does he want of a church or a benevolent society that
resists reform when light and truth demand it, and sets itself in
array against the progress of his cause? He knows how to use them
for beacons of warning if they refuse to be used as instruments of
progress in doing good. Therefore if any people or associate body
will not receive and obey the light, their ruin is sure. The best
of all possible reasons for repentance is, that it is God's good
pleasure. What! if the expression of God's will--if the
manifestation of his wishes to this effect cannot move men to
repent, what can? What would you think of a child who should say,
"No matter what my parents think--who cares for their feelings or
their wishes? It is no reason at all for my conduct that my father
or mother desire me to do as they say." What, I ask, would you
think of such a child? Can anything be more monstrous than such a
trampling underfoot of the most tender and sacred obligations?
Is it then no reason for you who are before me here to-day that
God now commands you all to repent? Nay, more, that with
tenderness he invites and entreats, and cries out, "How can I give
thee up?"
REMARKS.
1. When light breaks in upon men, it is awful, and even
terrifying if they only resist and rebel against it, gathering up
their utmost strength like the ancient Jews, to oppose the claims
of truth and of God. This is true of governments when they resist
the light, oppose reform, and raise for odium's sake the senseless
cry, fanaticism! FANATICISM!
2. But the occasion calls on me to apply these principles to
the course pursued by some of the great benevolent societies of
the day. We wait to know what they have done and are doing in
regard to the great reforms of modern times. The American Tract
Society is a great organization acting under a charter which
allows them to publish only such matter as is approved by a
publishing committee composed of six men, one from each of six
leading evangelical denominations. All these are Northern men now,
and I believe have always been so. If we inquire for the special
circumstances under which they now act, we find that since the
agitation of the slavery question at the North, the people of the
South have become exceedingly sensitive lest some Anti-Slavery
truth should come in among them in Northern books, and thus reach
their slaves. They became jealous of the entire mass of Northern
literature. The Tract Society, dreading to incur their jealousy,
and anxious to make their publications acceptable to Southern
people, have been in the practice of expunging Anti-Slavery
sentiments wherever found in the volumes they thought best to
publish. A great many choice books came before them, too valuable
to be discarded, and yet some few pages or paragraphs of an
Anti-Slavery truth raised a question which they met by expunging
the passages. At first they did this without giving the public any
notice of the fact. But when the fact came to be known, it was
felt by very many to be great injustice to the authors and a fraud
upon the public. They became alarmed and protested against the
course. They exposed the obvious error of the Tract Society in
mutilating books without giving notice of the fact. The result has
been that the Tract Society were compelled to modify their course,
so far as to advertise the public of the omissions they had made,
whether the subject were baptism, slavery, or any other moral or
religious question. But in one important respect they have
continued on as before. They have taken particular pains to strike
out every Anti-Slavery sentiment, whether in psalms and hymns, or
in any other books.
Now some have stigmatized the Tract Society's committee as
Pro-Slavery, but I do not believe they are Pro-Slavery in the
sense of aiming to sustain slavery. They aim I suppose to be
neutral on this question, and especially they mean to print
nothing which would offend the people of the South or their
Northern friends. This I take to be their policy. I believe it to
be a wicked policy, but I do not know that they sin in pursuing
it. They may think they are doing God service.
But I need not pursue this subject farther. The policy is one
which we do not approve, which no good man ought to approve, but
it is one which prevails in a great many of the pulpits in our
country--I cannot say to their honor, or to the augmentation of
their moral power.
3. What shall we do with men who being enlightened upon their
duty, do not repent? By one who spoke in behalf of the Tract
Society, you have been warned to be on your guard against the
force of the sentiment of justice, and perhaps not without some
occasion. Many are ready to cry out for fire to come down from
heaven upon the men who seem not to keep pace with the demands of
truth. But this is never the best way to reform abuses and bring
sinners to repentance. God acts on the principle of the greatest
possible forbearance. He forbears as long as He wisely can. He
beseeches and entreats, and thus labors to secure the desired
repentance and reform.
What then shall we do with offending nations, and with our own
government when they impose upon us fugitive laws? Of course we
are to set about their reformation. Do you ask, how? The way is
open. The Christian church has it in her power to reform this
nation. She has long held the balance of political power, and she
holds it still. Let all christian men say, "We will not sustain
slavery; the men who are in league with it cannot have our
votes."--and the thing would be done. Let all Christian voters be
united in this, and they could just as certainly elect the man of
their choice as there should be another election. Let them try it.
They have the consciences of men on their side, and they would
find strength and help rising up where they did not expect it. If
they did not succeed in the next election, they surely would
succeed soon. Ere another election came round, politicians would
say, "We must honor and please the church," just as they now say,
"We must honor the South."
But the way to do this is not to turn slaveholders ourselves,
and force our opinions down men's throats, and cast them from the
church if they do not vote our ticket. The right way is to
enlightenment on the subject--to treat them kindly and yet with
great fidelity, and to try to bring them over to the truth and the
right by reasoning and persuasion. Substantially we should pursue
the same methods of labor and influence that we adopt when we
would change men's position on any moral question, --the same as
when we would convert sinners from sin to God.
In regard now to the Tract Society, shall I excommunicate them
all at once? Would this avail anything? Shall we not rather
attempt to persuade them as to what we think their duty? Shall we
not try to convince them of the great mistake in their policy?
What right have we to excommunicate them until we have
expostulated?
But some of you say this has been done already. I ask if it has
been done both kindly and earnestly, and with all the perseverance
that the case demands?
But again the question returns, what shall be done by the
church to abolish slavery? I answer, Let all her organizations
speak out with decision and firmness. Let the Congregational
Conference recently organized in Ohio take their stand and bear
their solemn and earnest testimony. Let them send a commission
bearing their fraternal exhortations to other bodies of
Congregationalists--to Iowa--to Wisconsin--to New
England,--wherever they can gain a hearing. But let us not cast
off and condemn the Tract Society without a hearing. Who does not
believe that it is in the power of the great Christian
organizations of our country to reform that society?
4. There is another society formed for the dissemination of
moral truth in its due proportions, not avoiding its bearings on
the great sins of the times. No one can deny that it is always
right to supply any defects in the labors and influence of the
great American societies by constituting another society to do the
whole work, as it should be done. This is one of the proper means
to correct the evils of which we complain. We can support the new
society, and this will be of itself a testimony against the
objectionable course of the old. Hence if I were to give anything
to the old, I would give much more to the new, both because I
would have my donations bear a testimony for righteous principles,
and because the new society will have for some time yet to come,
few friends and patrons, while the old will have many.
5. Another question is often asked, which has an important
bearing upon the subject of church communion. Shall we commune
with an offending brother while we are laboring with him to
reclaim him from his sin?
In my view the answer depends upon his relations as an
arraigned man. I must make no man a sinner by construction. I must
not assume that he is wrong, but wait for the proof of the fact.
The common doctrine of law and justice is that I must assume my
brother to be innocent until he is proved to be guilty. On this
principle, the question of treatment should obviously be
determined, embracing, of course, the question of church
communion.
6. It is always wise to avail ourselves of the admissions of
our opponents. If on the question of Slavery they concede that all
good Northern men abhor it, let us admit and use this concession.
It will be a powerful weapon in our hands.
7. It is always impolitic to represent our opponents to be
farther from us than they really are. For example, it would be the
height of folly for me to say--The whole North American Church is
for Slavery, defending and sustaining the system. If this were
true, how greatly would the fact relieve the conscience of the
South! Slaveholders would surely feel that the Christian sentiment
of all those who were in a situation to judge in the case is in
their favor. And if the fact were not true, it were much better I
should not affirm it to be so. My affirming it will have much the
same influence on Southern mind that the actual truth would have.
Let me take care how I represent the church to be more in favor of
Slavery than she is. Rather let us say, if the facts will sustain
us in it, that we, Christian men of the North, are all agreed that
Slavery is a great sin.
8. But there is yet another reason for the largest charity
towards our Northern brethren. The want of charity serves to
provoke rather than to convince or to convert. Suppose I meet a
Northern brother, and accuse him of being pro-slavery, and try to
make him a slaveholder by construction. If his judgment is not
carried by the obvious justice of the charge, I am doing him to
good. If he thinks himself innocent, he will of course feel
himself wronged, and all my efforts with him are worse than
useless.
Uncharitable measures never succeed. If even the Apostles, with
all their miracles and tongues, had gone out with a bad spirit,
they must have labored in vain. God suffers his own cause to
experience a temporary defeat, rather than give success to men of
a bad spirit. I have no doubt that in many cases the anti-slavery
cause has been thrown aback by the bad spirit of its advocates. If
we have erred in this matter, we must repent. We can never hope
for the blessing of God until we do.
Before I went to the Mediterranean, I had taken the stand in my
congregation in New York city that no slaveholder could come to
our communion. In that vast congregation some slaveholders of
professed piety were almost always present, and the rebuke was
being solemnly felt. The example was exerting a decidedly good
influence. But when I came back, I soon found that a strange state
of things had come about. Everything was hot and fiery. I felt
bound to tell them plainly that they were casting out devils
through Beelzebub, and by getting his spirit were really doing his
work. This would never do. The cause of love and of human
well-being could not be built up by uncharitableness and hate.
If, now, our General Government needs reform, (of which I have
no doubt,) then let us forthwith employ all constitutional means
and measures for its reform. Of the wisdom of doing all this no
one can for a moment doubt.
So of the Tract Society; they have done good; let them have all
due honor for what good they have done. Some of you may have been
converted through the agency of their publications and labors. I
cannot say that any man of you is a hypocrite because I find you
giving your money and your prayers to the Tract Society. If you
choose to give to that Society, do so. The opportunity will be
afforded to every man to give to whichever Society he pleases.
As for voting for either of the two great party candidates, on
a strongly pro-slavery platform, that question is in my mind
easily settled. I can do no such thing. Sooner shall I cut off my
own right hand than suffer it to drop a vote for such men,
standing on such platforms.
It would be interesting and useful too, if there were time, to
show how all great reforms naturally throw men into three great
classes, viz. the Conservatives, the Radicals, and the Moderates.
It were easy to show the philosophy of this classification, and
how it results from the laws of mind and the action of men in
society. It were still more important to inquire what are the
mutual duties of these three classes towards each other. Scarce
any topic more needs to be discussed and well understood at the
present time. Buy my hour is more than spent now, and I must not
enlarge.
In some respects I am sorry, and in some respects I am not
sorry to be called on to say so much on this subject of
slavery--its issues, and the duties of Christians in regard to it.
There is the greatest need that these things should be
investigated and well considered. The public mind will and must
act on these questions, and the action taken is continually
affecting the honor of Christianity and the welfare of the church
and of souls, most fundamentally. It cannot, therefore, be amiss
to bring this subject into the pulpit. Let it engage your serious
attention, and move your hearts to seek divine wisdom in
prayer.
My only regret to occupy your time on this subject lies in the
fact that so many among us are all wrong, and need to be urged
to-day to repent of all sin and yield up their hearts at once and
forever to the service and fear of the Lord their God. For them I
fear it may be an evil to have their attention diverted, even for
one Sabbath, from those great things that pertain to their present
and everlasting peace.