And he was thus brought into close sympathy with
the realism of the Fathers, who felt that all that
is valuable in theology must radiate from the recognition
of Almighty power in the renovation of society, and
displayed, not according to our human notions of law
and progress and free-will, but supernaturally and
mysteriously, according to his sovereign will, which
is above law, since God is the author of law.
He simply erred in enforcing a certain class of truths
which must follow from the majesty of the one great
First Cause, lofty as these truths are, to the exclusion
of another class of truths of great importance; which
gives to his system incompleteness and one-sidedness.
Thus he was led to undervalue the power of truth
itself in its contest with error. He was led
into a seeming recognition of two wills in God,—that
which wills the salvation of all men, and that which
wills the salvation of the elect alone. He is
accused of a leaning to fatalism, which he heartily
denied, but which seems to follow from his logical
conclusions. He entered into an arena of metaphysical
controversy which can never be settled. The
doctrines of free-will and necessity can never be
reconciled by mortal reason. Consciousness reveals
the freedom of the will as well as the slavery to sin.
Men are conscious of both; they waste their time
in attempting to reconcile two apparently opposing
facts,—like our pious fathers at their
New England fire-sides, who were compelled to shelter
themselves behind mystery.
The tendency of Calvin’s system, it is maintained
by many, is to ascribe to God attributes which according
to natural justice would be injustice and cruelty,
such as no father would exercise on his own children,
however guilty. Even good men will not accept
in their hearts doctrines which tend to make God less
compassionate than man. There are not two kinds
of justice. The intellect is appalled when it
is affirmed that one man justly suffers the penalty
of another man’s sin,—although the
world is full of instances of men suffering from the
carelessness or wickedness of others, as in a wicked
war or an unnecessary railway disaster. The
Scripture law of retribution, as brought out in the
Bible and sustained by consciousness, is the penalty
a man pays for personal and voluntary transgression.
Nor will consciousness accept the doctrine that the
sin of a mortal—especially under strong
temptation and with all the bias of a sinful nature—is
infinite. Nothing which a created mortal can
do is infinite; it is only finite: the infinite
belongs to God alone. Hence an infinite penalty
for a finite sin conflicts with consciousness and is
nowhere asserted in the Bible, which is transcendently
more merciful and comforting than many theological
systems of belief, however powerfully sustained by
dialectical reasoning and by the most excellent men.
Human judgments or reasonings are fallible on moral
questions which have two sides; and reasonings from