Theologi and science have much in common. But it is far
more difficult to separate fact from theory in theology than it is in science. Many a
"scientist" who has fondly clung to evolution has found that the postulates of
that theory are false. One of these, which was once much in vogue, was known as "the
inheritance of acquired characters." That is, the experiences of the race are
incorporated into our physical frames and are passed on as permanent characteristics to
succeeding generations. But it is now known that such a thought is utterly without
foundation.
Theology has the same theory in regard to the entrance of sin. It may
be stated thus: Adam sinned and acquired a sinful nature, which has been passed down to
all his posterity. In theology sin is an "acquired character" which can be
transmitted by generation. If this is so, it is the only case in all creation. It is
contrary to all true science. Nature knows nothing of it. The question arises, is it
really found in revelation? Or is it only another theory supported by authority and
tradition? If it is true, let us have the facts!
To test the theory of acquired characters scientists have performed
thousands of experiments. Plants have been taken and transformed by cultivation, by
changes in soil and elevation, by heat and moisture. But all apparent deviations were
found to be transient and ephemeral, for when the plant is returned to its original
environment it reverts to its old self again. None of its offspring profit by its
experiences. All true scientists have abandoned the theory as untenable and contrary to
every known fact in nature.
Only in theology has this theory kept a unanimous following, for it is
supposed that the Scriptures teach this evolutionary doctrine. We are asked to believe
that a single experience, a single act of Adam, utterly altered his "nature" so
radically that he transmitted the change to all his posterity. Of course, it is not
necessarily false because it is contrary to nature as we know it. Science does not account
for creation. And such a change in Adam can only be explained by a special creation or
miracle on God's part. But theologians will be slow to accept the necessary basis of their
theory, for they dread the very thought of introducing sin by means of divine
interposition.
Is it not time that we followed the example of science and put our
theories to the test? What is the scriptural basis for any change in man's
"nature" as a result of the "fall?" Some will shudder at the very
thought of doubting so sacred and orthodox a doctrine. Let them transfer their reverence
from such empty shells of human supposition to the living, imperishable word of God, and
their feelings will revolt at that which they now revere. We have long enough covered up
the truth with sanctimonious phrases. Let us clear them aside so that we may look upon the
face of God's holy word.
If theologians were at least as accurate in their terms as scientists,
they would make more solid progress. The use of unsound, unscriptural words interposes an
insurmountable barrier to truth. While we may not be able to confine ourselves absolutely
to the minutiae of holy writ, all our key words should be scriptural. It is useless to
even consider this subject further until we have disposed of some of the phrases that
falsify the facts.
We are told that mankind has a "sinful nature." It is true
that the word "sinful" occurs five times in the common version of the "New
Testament," but it has no equivalent in the original. Four times it is used for
"sinner" (Mark 8:38; Luke 5:8; 24:7; Rom.7:13). Once it stands for
"sin" (Rom.8:3). The American Revisers have corrected this mistranslation in
their margin. It should read, "the flesh of sin," or "Sin's flesh,"
not "sinful flesh." So we never read of a "sinful nature." Why
not? Is it an oversight in the word of God or an imposition on it? Away with the
unscriptural words!
Man's "nature" is spoken of in Scripture. But it is
not the incurably corrupt and utterly depraved thing which we have been taught. Man's
corruption and depravity is not connected with his nature, but his condition. In
that most terrible indictment of the human race, found in the first few chapters of
Romans, the apostle never refers disparagingly to human nature. On the contrary, he
tells us that the nations do by instinct (or nature--the same word) what the law demands
(Rom.2:14). How can the "fallen nature" do aught in harmony with the law
of God?
Man's sin is not inherent in his nature or his flesh. Unless we discard
such sanctimonious but unsound catch phrases as "fallen nature," and
"sinful flesh" there will be little likelihood of our eyes being opened to
perceive what God has so clearly revealed, because of the veil of human tradition.
Most of the difficulties connected with this subject arise from the
use, or rather abuse, of the word nature. It has such a wide scope and is so
indefinite that it conveys only a hazy suggestion. We propose to confine it to the Greek
word phusis, which it usually represents in our versions. We must protest against
its use for genesis (James 3:6), and the use of natural for the same word
(James 1:23), as well as for psuchikos, soulish (1 Cor.2:14; 15:44,44,46). Indeed
if "the natural man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God," and
this natural man is the antithesis of the spiritual, as our version plainly
asserts, then the only hope is in an unnatural, artificial man. It is the soulish
man who is in view here. It is not a question of nature.
When we assert that Scripture does not use or suggest such phrases as
"sinful nature," many will suppose that we do not believe that men sin or
are sinners. Let us assure them that we hold to this with all the tenacity of which we are
capable. We are not questioning these facts at all. We are investigating the word of God
to find out what "sin" and "sinner" means. We have found out that a
"sin" is essentially a miss, and now we are discovering, in the word of
God, that a sinner is one who is wanting of the glory of God (Rom.3:23).
The opening argument of the epistle to the Romans gives us the most
detailed indictment of the human race we have in the Scriptures. It brings the whole
world, Jews and gentiles, before the bar of God. Human nature is spoken of three
times in this portion of the epistle. In the midst of such fearful charges against human
conduct, it is most instructive to inquire what attitude the spirit of God takes toward
human nature. Is it "sinful," "depraved," "fallen?"
Or has it retained its integrity in the midst of sin and depravity?
When mankind did not glorify or thank God He gave them over to
dishonorable passions to do that which is beside nature (Rom.1:26). It is evident
that such acts are not beside "sinful nature." The nature here
spoken of protested against the unlawful acts. It remained true even after men had
corrupted themselves. Here, in the midst of the most degrading vices, we find human nature
uncontaminated. If such sinners still possess a nature which is out of line with their
acts, surely they have not a "sinful nature." This is the negative side. On the
positive there is a still stronger witness.
We find a most remarkable attestation to the integrity of human nature
when the apostle discusses the relation of the nations to the law. "For whenever they
of the nations, having no law, may be doing by instinct [or nature] what the law demands,
these, having no law, are a law to themselves, who are displaying the action of the law
written in their hearts, their conscience joining its witness, and their reasonings
between one another accusing or defending them, in the day when God will be judging the
hidden things of humanity, according to my evangel, through Jesus Christ."
It is generally supposed that our "fallen nature" influences
us to commit sin, and urges us to go contrary to our conscience and to the demands of
God's law. Here we are assured that the opposite is true. The nations have no law to tell
them what is right, but they have a nature which, in measure, takes the place of that holy
and just law which God gave to Israel. They do what His law demands by nature. It
is written, not on tablets of stone, but on their hearts. The dictates of nature are
confirmed by conscience. In the judgment men will not be excused because they have a
"sinful nature," but will be condemned because they disregarded the leadings of
their nature and violated their conscience.
Jews will be condemned on the basis of revealed law, which none of them
were able to keep. Gentiles will be judged by the law of their nature, which none have
fully observed. Perhaps it should be called instinct, but a single term is better.
We have one specific example in the first epistle to the Corinthians (11:13-16). Instinct
(or nature) should teach us that, if a man has long hair, it is a dishonor to him, yet if
a woman should have tresses, it is her glory. Human nature does not urge us to do wrong,
but to do right. There is some alien influence which overrides the monitions of nature and
of conscience.
The mere fact that nature is coupled with God's law and with conscience
should be sufficient to show us that it is not the disturbing, offending factor in human
conduct. It is on the side of the right. It is not sinful in its tendencies. If
sufficiently followed it may lead to a high standard of morality.
The next occurrence of the word "nature,"
"instinct," fully confirms our previous discoveries. The apostle is now speaking
to the Jew, who is resting in the rite of circumcision. He insists that the circumcision
of the flesh alone is of no benefit unless it is combined with the fulfilling of the law.
Indeed, if one should fulfill the law, his uncircumcision would be counted for
circumcision. "And the Uncircumcision who, by instinct [or nature], are discharging
the laws demands shall be judging you, who through letter and circumcision, are a
transgressor of law" (Rom.2:27).
The law can be discharged by following instinct, or nature. It is
evident that God's law is not unnatural, or against nature, but in harmony with it. Human
nature has the elements of the law in it. If this nature were fallen, sinful, and
depraved, the very opposite would be true. No one could obey his instincts without going
against God's law. No one could fulfill one iota of it by heeding his instinctive
tendencies.
In these passages the word "nature" is used in its wide
racial sense, which must be preserved in this discussion if we hope to attain to the
truth. Other passages bring this before us. James speaks of the nature of wild beasts and
flying creatures, reptilian and marine, in contrast with human nature (James 3:7). Yet
there are passages in which the word nature is used in a more constricted sense, of that
which comes through natural processes.
In the passage we have been considering the word is applied only to the
nations, the Uncircumcision, for the Jew, in contrast to the gentile, is not left to his
instincts, or nature, but is further enlightened by law. Quite the opposite thought is
presented in Galatians (2:15). There the question is one of Judaizing. If the gentiles are
to be made Jews by putting them under law, they would be artificial Jews, while those born
within the covenant from Jewish parents, would be Jews, by nature. These two usages
of the word "nature" have been confused in our minds because we have related
everything to the idea of fallen, sinful human nature.
While human nature is not sinful, sin is propagated by natural means.
We all inherit a nature that is violated by sin, yet we are sinners "by nature,"
that is, through generation, a natural process. Even thus the nature itself is not sinful.
It is merely the method, the means, the avenue used by sin. What is conveyed through or by
nature must not be confused with nature.
This should enable us to understand the one passage which, more than
all others, has misled us. The expression "by nature children of wrath" has been
freely applied to the race, with small regard to its setting in the Scriptures or the
teaching of the context. It is the Jew by nature who is a child of Indignation,
even as the rest (Eph.2:3). The reference is not to human nature, but to the fact that sin
comes to the Jew by the natural channels just the same as to the gentile.
All sinned, or missed. And why did they sin? The answer is given
forthwith. Because "they are wanting of the glory of God." For this we
have substituted, "because their nature has fallen and become sinful."
But the more we search the Scriptures, the more we shall wonder at the marvelous accuracy
and truthfulness of this indictment of the human race. Their sin arises from a want,
not a nature. It is so necessary that we grasp the full import of the word
"wanting" that we will give a full concordance of all its occurrences.
Aside from its use as subsequent (1 Tim.4:1) and subsequently
(Matt.4:2, etc.), this element occurs in a verb, WANT and two nouns, WANT-effect
and WANTing, both of which signify, a deficiency. The exact force of this
expression can easily be seen if we note the company it keeps. It is the opposite of
superabundance (2 Cor.8:14: Phil.4:12). It makes one an incumbrance (2 Cor.11:9). It is
like an affliction (Heb.11:37). It is corrected by filling (1 Cor.16:17; 2 Cor.9:12;
Phil.2:30), and readjustment (1 Thess.3:10).
hustereesis, WANTing | ||
Mark | 12:44 | she, out of her want, casts in all |
Phil. | 4:11 | not that I am hinting at a want. |
hustereema, WANT-effect, deficiency |
||
Luke | 21: 4 | this woman, out of her want, cast in all |
1 Cor. | 16:17 | they fill up these deficiencies of yours, |
2 Cor. | 8:14 | your superabundance for their want |
:14 | should be coming for your want | |
9:12 | tending to fill up the wants of the saints | |
11: 9 | in want, I am an incumbrance to no one | |
Phil. | 2:30 | he should fill up your want |
Col. | 1:24 | those which are wanting of the afflictions of Christ |
1 Thes. | 3:10 | to readjust the deficiencies of your faith |
hustereoo, WANT |
||
Mark | 19:20 | In what am I wanting [or deficient] still? |
Mark | 10:21 | In one thing you are still wanting |
Luke | 15:14 | and he begins to be in want |
22:35 | do you want anything? | |
John | 2: 3 | at their being in want of wine |
Rom. | 3:23 | and are wanting of the glory of God. |
1 Cor. | 1: 7 | you are not wanting [or deficient] in a single grace |
8: 8 | are we in want | |
12:24 | giving that which is wanting [or deficient] | |
2 Cor. | 11: 5 | I was present with you and in want |
12:11 | I am not wanting [or deficient] in anything | |
Phil. | 4:12 | to be superabounding and to be in want |
Heb. | 4: 1 | some one of you may be seeming to have been wanting [or deficient] |
11:37 | in want, afflicted, maltreated | |
12:15 | that no one be wanting of the grace of God |
In the later Scriptures, especially in Paul's epistles,
we have the principle of sin dealt with as well as the act. "Through one man sin
entered into the world, and through sin death" (Rom. 5:12). That Adam sinned, or
missed the mark, we have already learned. But through this something has come which
effectually makes sinners of all Adam's descendants. If it did not enter his nature or
inhere in his flesh, what did it do, and how does it accomplish its fatal work?
Much may be learned from a close study of sin's effects at the first,
and of the divine judgment pronounced upon it in Eden. The fact that it leads to death,
and the decree that thorns and thistles are to accompany its stay, shed much light on its
character.
Sin, fully consummated, is teeming forth death (James 1:15). Sin,
therefore, attacks the vitality of mankind. The change was not in its constitution,
but in its life. Adam began to die the moment he sinned. This is the force of "dying,
thou shalt die." Since then death has been operating in all his posterity, so that
the only life we know is a process of dying. Sin so lowered the vital functions in Adam's
body that the aura which emanated from its intense vitality and clothed it with a glorious
garment of light, faded so as to become imperceptible to human eyes and disclosed his
frame, no longer effulgent with life, but dull and deathlike, naked and humiliated.
It degraded the vital functions so that they became the source of
distress and disease and dissolution in death. In brief, sin made no essential change in
man's nature, but greatly lowered the power of his life.
Life is the effect of spirit. A lowering of the vital force does not
indicate a change in nature or flesh, but in plenitude of spirit. When God takes His
spirit to Himself, all flesh perishes (Job 34:14). Sin, therefore, is a matter of
spirit. The act of sin is a matter of spiritual relationship. The fact of sin is a matter
of spiritual power. Like fruit plucked from a tree, Adam was severed from vital
spiritual connection with God. Such fruit begins to die the moment it is picked. Such is
mankind since Adam sinned. The fruit is the same. Its nature is not changed. Its flesh is
not transformed. But its vitality is ebbing away.
The judgment of God on Adam is strikingly suggestive of the true
character of sin. Thorns and thistles are concomitants of man's sin and a graphic
illustration of its real essence. What are thorns? They are stunted, undeveloped,
rudimentary growths, undoubtedly due to the lack of sufficient vitality to develop them
into proper form. There were no thorns in Eden. Nor will there be any such thing when once
more the plants exult in the ideal conditions and fruitful fertility of the coming eon.
What will be done to change them? How can the rose lose its thorns and
the cactus its spines? Will the Creator change their nature? Will He remove the
sharp and painful lancelets that disfigure and disgrace them now? He will not alter the
plant but change its environment. He will fill it with the wine of life and thorns will
develop into branches and spines into leaves. The principle that produces thorns and death
in plants is identical with sin, which produces degeneration and death in mankind.
What does the gospel bring? It is God's power for the salvation
of everyone who believes (Rom.1:16). Sin is spiritual deficiency or lack of the divine
glory (Rom.3:23). The evangel supplies the missing energy. Note carefully the contrast in
the fifth of Romans (verses 6-8). While we are still infirm Christ died for the
sake of the irreverent. Man does not sin because that is, his nature, but because he, has
lost the vital force which should sustain him. His nature might be changed ever so much or
ever so often, but that would not doom him to death. Other creatures, who have a different
nature, share his penalty with him, for they also share man's infirmity and humiliation.
Note some of the expressions used of sin. Both Jews and Greeks are under
sin (Rom.3:9). Sin reigns (Rom.5:20; 6:12; 8:2). We were slaves of Sin
(Rom.6:6; 7:16,17,20,23). Sin mastered us (Rom.6:14). With the aid of the law it
makes a man go against his own will (7:17,18). We have died to it (Rom.6:10,11),
are freed from it (Rom.6:18- 22; 8:2). Not one of these things can possibly be true of
our nature.
Sin is essentially outside and alien to human nature. Humanity is not
essentially sinful but subject to sin. Conscience is instinctive, but it is against
sin. Man finds himself at the mercy of an overwhelming tide which he cannot stem, to which
he yields, but which never alters the essential nature given him by God at his creation.
It is the spirit's law of life in Christ Jesus which frees us from the
law of sin and death. The law of Sinai was impotent, because of human infirmity, not
because of human nature. In the coming eon men of like nature as at present will be given
power to fulfill it. We fulfill the righteous requirements of the law (not its literal
enactments) because we have life. The vital force which God's spirit imparts to all who
believe in Christ Jesus counteracts the weakness of sin. The spirit which gave life to the
dead Christ is making its home in us. The spirit that roused Christ from the dead
vitalizes our mortal bodies. The members which would weakly fall into sin are given power
to perform acts of righteousness (Rom. 8:1-14).
The importance of these disclosures will be apparent to everyone who
has been exercised concerning the question of their own tendency to sin, or who has
wandered in one of the many quagmires which this subject recalls. Our "sinful
nature" has been the victim of all sorts of theological nostrums. Efforts have been
made to suppress it or eradicate it entirely, though it never had any existence! But there
is no need to tamper with or eliminate our nature, for no change has taken place in it
since it was given at creation. There is not a word in the divine record to show that it
was radically altered by the entrance of sin. It may be devitalized, but it is not
transformed.
Perhaps many who read these lines will be shocked by their rank
"heresy" and will charge me with denying a variety of theological formulas which
have taken the place of God's word in the minds and hearts of His saints in these
degenerate days. Some may say that this denies the doctrine of "total
depravity." As no one knows precisely what that doctrine is, it would be difficult to
determine our guilt. As it is not mentioned in the Scriptures, it is not worth
considering. It is a sample of that bane of modern theology, a form of unsound words. I
believe that all men are utterly unable to save themselves from the slavery of Sin, but
that Christ is able. But I refuse to make the word "depravity" a key word in
this connection, because it is merely a cloak to cover the lack of clear and Scriptural
thinking.
It may be helpful to tell how we came to clear up this question. Quite
a few years ago I read some articles in a magazine called "Things to Come" on
"the new nature," and "the old nature." They perplexed me, so I
studied the word "nature" in my concordance. As a result I came to the
conclusion that it was being used in an unscriptural way. I took the matter up later with
my, fellow editor, V. Gelesnoff, and we agreed not to allow the word to be used in this
way in the magazine. Since then it has been before me in my studies, and has led me to see
that it has been the cause of much confusion. We commend this course to our readers, if
they desire to enjoy a clear conception of the mind of God. Do away with all unscriptural
expressions. Have a pattern of sound words. God honors it by giving sound thoughts.
Such phrases as "sinful nature," "natural
depravity," etc., have had a distorting effect on the doctrine of human destiny. If
it is human nature to sin, then mankind will need to be changed to something else if it is
to be saved. This has led to the silly superstition that we will become
"angels," in a mythical heaven. But God is going to subject the earth and the
whole universe to human beings, with "human natures," headed by the great Man,
Christ Jesus.
One of the greatest difficulties connected with the incarnation
vanishes once we see that the mother of our Lord did not have a sinful "nature."
If she had, no amount of sophistry could convince the honest heart that she did not impart
this "nature" to her Son. To be sure, a special miracle could have kept Him free
from any taint, but we have no intimation that such a miracle was necessary. We have no
reason to believe that Mary was free from sin. But the power of God is the
effectual corrective of sin, so that her Offspring was holy, harmless and undefiled.
All have sinned and are wanting, or lacking (Rom.3:23). This
simple statement shatters whole systems of theology, especially those held by the most
earnest evangelicals. The figure of the new birth has been used to prop up the idea that
man needs a new nature. Yet generation has never made any such change in fact. Why should
it represent it in figure? Even resurrection does not change our human nature. Our
bodies will be raised in power. They will be vivified. They will be spiritual,
that is, dominated by the spirit rather than the soul, as at present. To be sure, we, who
have a celestial destiny, will be changed. But the change is not in our nature.
To sum up. It is utterly unscriptural and misleading to associate sin
with a change in human nature. Sin came in through a single act, and no series of acts, or
even a lifetime or a number of generations can change the nature of God's creations. Sin
destroys life and ends in death. A change in nature does not lead to dissolution. Hence it
is that the same theology which gives man a sinful nature also endows him with eternal
life in misery and sin. It denies the death-dealing effect of sin and substitutes for it
life and a nature, not only miraculously given at the first, but miraculously sustained in
order to suffer the infinitudes of torment. We do not care to give our opinion of a god
who is so free with his miracles of damnation, when he could, with infinitely less effort,
work one miracle of blessing. We do not care to inquire his object in such a course,
because this is the way that madness lies--and this god is a mere myth of man's perverted
imagination.
How gloriously blessed it is to know our God, Who has given us an
understanding, not only of His ways and His words, but of His heart! His nature is love.
Love may thrust away its object for a time, but only that it may draw it back more
closely. He suffers men to be estranged from Him in order that they may be reconciled. Sin
is not His tyrant, but His slave. It crushes that He may cure, It kills that He may make
alive. Its function is to show God's creatures their utter dependence on His power. It
gives them a wholesome horror of existence without Him. It will change them from His
creatures to His friends. It will drive them into His bosom.
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