CHAPTER
XII
THE
NEW HAVEN THEOLOGY
As early as 1808, Dr.
Taylor, whilst yet a student of theology, under Dr. Dwight, had given occasion
for anxiety to the friends of sound doctrine, by his views, then developed. Dr.
Nettleton, who was, at the time, a member of the senior class, in Yale College,
says of him: "We then differed in regard to the nature of the doings of the
unregenerate. He also read me a dissertation on the doctrine of the divine
decrees, and the free agency of man, which I then regarded as a virtual denial
of the former, and an avowal of the self-determining power of the
will."
Dr. Taylor was subsequently
settled as a pastor of a church in New Haven, in which he continued, until
called to the professorship of theology. In 1820 and 1821, a discussion was in
progress, on the Socinian controversy, between Professor Woods of Andover and
Dr. Ware, the Unitarian professor of divinity in Harvard. Dr. Taylor, and others
of the New Haven brethren, expressed great dissatisfaction with the positions
taken by Dr. Woods, especially on the subject of native depravity, and were
understood to approve the views of Dr. Ware.
Prior to this date, the
students of Yale, who were destined to the ministry, had, generally, and,
almost, as a matter of course, gone to Andover, to study theology. But, about
this time, dissatisfaction began to prevail in Yale College, on this subject.
Through the Bible-class of Professor Goodrich, sentiments were instilled into
the minds of the pious youth, which purported to be a reproduction of the
doctrines of the elder Edwards and Bellamy; from which the professors at Andover
were charged with departing. Thus, insidiously, was the way prepared for the
full developments which followed.
The apprehensions, which
these indications tended to excite, were aggravated by the report of doctrines
more formally enunciated in a lecture by Professor Goodrich, to his pupils in
Yale, on Saturday evening, December 15, 1821. He commenced by stating that he
was about to present a different view of the subject of his lecture,original
sin, from that which was commonly held. He then proceeded to set forth a
doctrine, which the better informed students recognized as bearing a striking
resemblance to that with which Dr. Ware had opposed Dr. Woods. During the
preceding winter, Dr. Nettleton had been occupied some time preaching in New
Haven, in an extensive revival. With him, Dr. Beecher spent a number of days,
laboring in the work.
"In
all our social intercourse," says Nettleton, “the arguments of Wood and
Ware seemed to form the principal topic of conversation. Dr. Beecher, at that
time, did not fully agree with Dr. Taylor,
and they were often, as I expressed it, `like two cocks, by the gills,' Dr.
Taylor clear over the mark, and Dr. Beecher so far over that I could agree with
neither."
When the report went abroad
of Professor Goodrich's lecture, Nettleton was laboring in Dr. Beecher's church,
at Litchfield, Connecticut. The latter wrote to Dr. Taylor on the subject of the
lecture. He did not fully approve of the views of New Haven; yet made such
concessions as greatly dissatisfied Dr. Nettleton, who wrote to Dr. Taylor,
"With all my love and respect for brothers Taylor, and Goodrich, and
Beecher, I must say that neither my judgment, nor conscience, nor heart, can
acquiesce; and I can go with you no farther. Whatever you may say about infants,
for one, I solemnly believe that God views and treats them, in all respects,
just as he would do if they were sinners. To say that animals die, and therefore
death can be no proof of sin in infants, is, to take infidel ground. The infidel
has just as good a right to say, Because animals die, without being sinners,
therefore adults may…You may speculate better than I can; but I know one
thing, better than you do. I know better what Christians will, and what they
will not, receive; and I forewarn you, that, whenever you come out, our best
Christians will revolt. I felt a deep interest in the controversy, between the
Orthodox and the Unitarians, while it was kept out on the open field of total
depravity, regeneration by the Holy Spirit, divine sovereignty, and election.
For this was taking the enemy by the heart, and I knew who would conquer. But
you are giving the discussion a bad turn, and I have lost all my interest in the
subject, and do not wish my fellow-sinners to hear it.”
This letter of warning was
written in December, 1821. The next spring, it began to be understood that a
seminary was about to be founded, in the interest of the new divinity. At the
meeting of the Hartford North Association, the Rev. Dr. N. Perkins "spoke
of Drs. Taylor, Beecher, and others, as associates in founding a new seminary;
being apprehensive that Andover might not be what they desired it to be."
Dr. Perkins remarked, with some emotion, "Dr. Beecher says, ‘We,’
(meaning Dr. Beecher, Taylor, and others,) ‘We must have another seminary; and
then, if we lose one, we shall have one left.' Dr. Perkins said, 'This is good
logic,' but, like all other men who had seen Stuart's letters to Charming, or
Woods' letters to Unitarians, he did not seem disposed to think, that the cause
of orthodoxy was, at that time, in such peril as to demand another seminary; and
appeared to suspect their meaning to be, 'If Andover will not inculcate our
views, we must have a seminary that will.’”
In the summer of 1822,
mainly through the exertions of Prof. Goodrich, measures were taken to enlarge
the theological department of Yale College, upon the plan of adding one
professor for the theological class, to be assisted by the other professors,
then existing. An endowment was raised for the chair of Didactic Theology, the
founders requiring the Professor to sign a declaration that "I hereby declare my free assent to the Confession
of Faith and Ecclesiastical Discipline, agreed upon by the churches of this
State, in 1708," (that is, the Saybrook Platform.) It was provided that
"If, at any future period, any person, who fills the chair of this
Professorship, holds or teaches doctrines contrary to those referred to, it
shall be the duty of the Corporation of the college to dismiss him forthwith;
and, if they do not dismiss him, then, we reserve to our heirs the right to
demand the several sums which we have paid, or may, hereafter, pay
respectively."
The Corporation made record
of this requirement, and voted that" this Board doth accordingly, found and
establish, in this college, on said fund, a professorship of Didactic Theology,
on the terms, conditions, and limitations expressed in said instrument."
Dr. Taylor was elected to the newly-founded chair, signed the required
declaration, and was inducted into office. This action was afterward vindicated,
by the faculty of the college, in a published statement, upon the ground that
the subscription required at Yale, to articles of faith, is only binding
"for substance of doctrine;" and that Dr. Taylor "had certain
knowledge, from personal intercourse with the founders of that professorship
that, had he embraced every minute doctrine of the Confession, it would have
been considered a decisive disqualification for the office." Was it, then,
the design of the founders to mislead the public?
For some time after the
organization of the theological department, the professors were occupied in the
quiet propagation of their sentiments, through the instruction of their classes,
without any public demonstration, on the subject. But, soon, the students of the
institution began to issue forth, eager to disseminate the new discoveries which
they had received. Says a writer who, in March, 1826, spent two or three weeks
in New Haven—“I had much conversation with several theological students, and
some interviews with tutor Edward Beecher, and also with Professors Gibbs and
Fitch. Such phrases were very common, as, ‘Our views,' ' New divinity,' ‘Dr.
Taylor's views;' and there seemed to be a general opinion that New Haven had
made some advances in theology."
At this time the Rev.
Eleazer T. Fitch occupied the chair of Divinity, in Yale College. It was one of
the duties of his office, to preach, statedly, in the college chapel, to the
students. In the summer of this year, he preached, on one Sabbath, in
fulfillment. of this office, two sermons, on the nature of sin; which, at the
request of the theological students, were published. In these discourses, the
Professor undertook to establish "the unlimited proposition, that sin, in
every form and instance, is reducible to the act of a moral agent, in which he
violates a known rule of duty." Having endeavored to establish this
position, he hence deduced, among others, the following conclusions. "2.
That the truth which we have considered shows us that there is not a sinful
heart in any moral agent, distinct
from his own sinful choices,
determinations, or preferences." "I
have not denied," says the preacher, "and do not deny, that one
purpose, choice, or preference of the agent., may have influence over him, in
regard to another; but what I deny is, that any such disposition, itself moral,
which is supposed to influence the agent to a given resolution, is itself, in
its origin and continuance, at all distinct from a determination of will in the
agent."
"3. We learn, from the
present subject; that, in the connection of Adam with his posterity, no sin of
his is reckoned theirs."
"4. The subject may
assist us in making a right explanation of original sin." The explanation
however is very vague, and amounts to this, that "the Scriptures intend not
to teach, that men are individually the subjects of sin, by imputation of guilt;
or, by vitiosity of constitution, previous
to moral and accountable action, or separate
from such action. We are led, therefore, to the conclusion that, although
man may be so affected, at his origin, in his constitution, as to render certain
his commencing moral agency in sinful action, yet, that nothing can with truth
be called his original sin, but his first moral choice or preference being evil;
which original determination of will, or moral purpose, operates, in addition to
his original susceptibilities, as a ground of his succeeding acts being
sinful."
These discourses excited
comparatively little attention, in New England, where the imputation of Adam's
sin had been almost universally repudiated; from the time when the writings of
Edwards acquired authority and his theory of identity became identified with the
doctrine; and where many of the "orthodox" held the Hopkinsian
position, that all sin and holiness consist in exercise, or action. They were
reviewed by the Rev. Dr. Ashbel Green, in the Christian Advocate; to whom the
Professor replied, in a pamphlet of ninety-five pages, characterized by an
extraordinary display of arrogance and hauteur. He scouts the absurdity "of
carrying our views of guilt beyond the voluntary agency of man, to (we know not
what,) the nature of man, the seat
of the affections.” A self‑determining power of the will, a power in
the sinner to make him anew heart, is also urged with great emphasis, (although
not directly asserted;) by holding up to scorn the opposite doctrine. "Will
he,”—the preacher on that text—“say, ‘You know, and the King knoweth,
that none ever do make them new hearts?' Where is his warrant for this? Who has
told him, that men cannot and do not ‘work out their own salvation,’ when
the Spirit of God is influencing them to will and to do?"
At the commencement of Yale
College, in 1828, Dr. Taylor preached the "Concio ad Clerum," in the
college chapel, to a large assembly of the clergy of Connecticut. The text was
from Eph. ii. 3. "And were, by nature, children of wrath." The
doctrine announced was, "that the entire moral depravity of mankind is by
nature." From this good beginning, the professor proceeded to develop a
doctrine essentially identical with that set forth in Fitch's discourses. He
defined moral depravity as, in general, the entire sinfulness of man's moral
character, that state of the mind and heart to which guilt and the desert of
wrath pertain. This, he says, "does not consist in any essential attribute
or property of the soul, not in anything created in man by his Maker."
"Nor does it consist in a sinful nature, which they have corrupted, by
being one with Adam, and acting
in his act." Nor "in any constitutional
propensities of their nature." "Nor does any degree of excitement of these propensities or desires, not resulting in
choice, constitute moral depravity." "Nor does the moral depravity of
men consist in any disposition or tendency
to sin, which is the cause of all
sin.”
In what then does it
consist? "I answer, it is man's own act., consisting in a free choice of
some object, rather than God, as his chief good; or a free preference of the
world and of worldly good, to the will and glory of God" In support of this
statement, he pretends to appeal to Calvin, Bellamy, Edwards, and the
Westminster Assembly, itself! "The Westminster divines say that ‘every
sin, both original and actual, being a transgression of the righteous law of
God,’ etc. I ask, Is not transgression action ? Is it not something done, and
done knowingly and voluntarily?"
The second head of the
discourse is, "that this depravity is by nature." What does this mean
? "I answer, that such is their nature, that they will sin and only sin, in
all the appropriate circumstances of their being." "then I say that
mankind are entirely depraved by nature, I do not mean that their nature is
itself sinful, nor that their nature is the physical or efficient cause of their
sinning; but I mean that their nature is the occasion, or reason of their
sinning; that such is their nature, that, in all the appropriate circumstances
of their being, they will sin and only sin."
The discourse closes with
two or three "remarks."
"1. It is consistent
with the doctrine of this discourse, that infants should be saved through the
redemption of Christ. They belong to a race who, by nature, and in all the
appropriate circumstances of their being, will sin…Do you ask when he will
begin to sin? I answer, I do not know the
precise instant. The Scriptures do not tell us, and I can see no possible use in
saying that we do know, what it is most palpably evident we do not
know. Is it then said, that we sin before we are born? But there is no such
thing as sinning without acting; and an apostle has told us of two infants, who,
while ‘not yet born,’ had done ‘neither good nor evil"'
Another "remark,"
whilst carefully avoiding any express assertion of the self-determining power of
the will, and the ability of the sinner to make himself a new heart., very
earnestly intimates that doctrine to be true, and urges precisely the same
arguments which had been employed before, by Professor Fitch, of whose
discourses, the Concio ad Clerum was a more elaborate reproduction.
One new point, however, was
now introduced into the controversy. The Professor challenged proof that God
could have adopted a moral system, and prevented all sin. "Do you say, that
God gave man a nature, which he knew would lead him to sin? What if he did? Do
you know that God could have done better—better, on the whole; or, better, if
he gave him existence at all, even for the individual himself? The error lies in
the gratuitous assumption, that God could have adopted
a moral system, and prevented all sin, or at least, the present degree of sin.
For no man knows this; no man can prove it…I say then, that, as
ignorance is incompetent to make an objection, and as no one knows that this
supposition is not a matter of fact, no one has a right to assert the contrary,
or even to think it."
In a long marginal note, he
assails two "common but groundless assumptions:" “First, That sin is
the necessary means of the greatest good, and, as such, so far as it exists, is
preferable, on the whole, to holiness in its stead. Secondly, That God could, in
a moral system, have prevented all sin; or, at least, the present degree of
sin." In opposition to the latter dogma, he says, "If holiness, in a
moral system, be preferable, on the whole, to sin, in its stead, why did not a
benevolent God, were it possible to him, prevent all sin, and secure the
prevalence of universal holiness? Would not a moral universe of perfect
holiness, and of course, of perfect happiness, be happier and better than one
comprising sin and its miseries? And must not infinite benevolence accomplish
all the good it can ? Would not a benevolent God, then, had it been possible to him, in the nature of things, have secured
the existence of universal holiness in his moral kingdom?…Is there, then, the
least particle of evidence that the entire prevention of sin, in moral beings,
is possible to God, in the nature of things ? If not, then, what becomes of the
very common assumption of such possibility?"
The Concio ad Clerum was
ably reviewed by the Rev. Dr. Harvey, to whom a reply was published, in the
Christian Spectator, from the pen of Professor Goodrich; who incorporated
therein the substance of his own lecture of 1821.
In the course of the year
1829, the successive numbers of the Christian Spectator contained a series of
articles, from Dr. Taylor, on regeneration. Taking occasion from a recently
published treatise on the means of regeneration, by Dr. Spring, of New York,
which was briefly noticed, in the first article, the professor proceeded to
develop fully and boldly the views, on that and the connected subjects, which
had only been implied or cautiously suggested, in the previous disclosures, from
New Haven. These articles completed the development of the essential features of
the New Haven system. The writer undertakes to analyze regeneration, and show
what it is, and what the means by which it is accomplished. The definition, and
the process indicated, alike ignore the scriptural doctrine of regeneration, and
exclude it. There is, in the scheme, no room, and no occasion, for the renewing
of the Holy Ghost, the new creation of the elect in Christ Jesus.
“Regeneration, considered
as a moral change, of which man is the subject, giving God the heart, making a
new heart, loving God supremely, etc., are terms and phrases which, in popular
use, denote a complex act. Each, in popular use, denotes what, in a more
analytical mode of speaking, may be viewed and described, as made up of several
particular acts and states of mind; or, as a series of such acts and states;
which are, yet., so related and connected, that, for all ordinary purposes, they are sufficiently defined when
spoken of in combination, and as constituting one act, under one name. Indeed, it is of this combination or series
of mental acts, only, that moral quality can be predicated; since no one act of
the process, viewed abstractly from the other acts, can be a moral
act. The act of the will, or heart, viewed abstractly from the acts of the
intellect, is not moral; nor are the acts of the intellect, viewed abstractly
from the will or heart."
"When we speak of the means of regeneration, we shall use the word,
regeneration, in a more limited import than its ordinary popular import; and
shall confine it, chiefly for the sake of convenient phraseology, to the act of
the will or heart, in distinction from other mental acts, connected with it; or,
to that act of the will or heart, which consists in a preference of God to every
other object; or, to that disposition of the heart, or governing affection or
purpose of the man, which consecrates him to the service and glory of God."
It is “that ultimate act of the will, in which the soul, under the influence
of the Holy Spirit, chooses God, as its supreme good."
"We affirm that there are certain mental acts and states, which, in
the order of nature, at least, precede regeneration; or which precede, as we
propose to use the term, regeneration, that act of the will or heart, in which
God is preferred to every other object. Of these mental acts and states, our
object does not require that we give an accurate analysis. It is sufficient for
our purpose, to, show that there are such
acts and states, and that we so far describe them, that it may be understood,
what class of mental acts we designate, as preliminary to regeneration, and as
constituting using the means of regeneration. We proceed then to say, that
before the act of will, or heart, in which the sinner first prefers God to every
other object, the object of the preference must be viewed or estimated as the
greatest good. Before the object can be viewed as the greatest good, it must be
compared with other objects;. as both are sources or means of good. Before this
act of comparing, there must be an act dictated, not by selfishness, but by self-love;
in which the mind determines to direct its thoughts to the objects, for the sake
of considering their relative value, of forming a judgment respecting it, and of
choosing one or the other as the chief good. These acts, also, imply, under the
presentation of the objects to the mind, an intellectual perception of their
adaptedness to the nature of man, as sources or means of happiness; and, also,
an excitement of constitutional susceptibilities, in view of the objects; i.e.,
involuntary propensities, inclinations, or desires, toward each object
respectively."
“Divine truth does not
become a means to this end, until the selfish principle, so long cherished in
the heart, is suspended, and the mind is left to the control of that
constitutional desire for happiness which is an original principle of our
nature. Then it is, we apprehend, that God and the world are contemplated by the
mind as objects of choice, substantially as they would be by a being who had
just entered on existence, and who was called upon, for the first time, to
select the one or the other, as his supreme good.”
"The sinner is the
subject of that constitutional desire of happiness, called self-love; to which
no moral quality pertains. Let the sinner, then, as a being who loves happiness
and desires the highest degree of its under the influence of such a desire, take
into solemn consideration the question, whether the highest happiness is to be
found in God, or, in the world; let him pursue the inquiry, if need be, till it
result in the conviction that such happiness is to be found in God only; and let
him follow up this conviction, with that intent and engrossing contemplation of
the realities which truth discloses, and with that stirring up of his
sensibilities, in view of them, which shall invest the world, when considered as
his only portion, with an aspect of insignificance, of gloom, and even of
terror, and which shall chill and suspend his present active love of it; and let
the contemplation be persevered in, till it shall discover a reality and an
excellence in the objects of holy affections, which shall put him upon direct
and desperate efforts to fix his heart upon them; and let this process of
thought, of effort, and of action, be entered upon as one which is never to be
abandoned, until the end proposed by it is accomplished; until the only living
and true God is loved and chosen, as his God for ever; and we say, that in this
way, the work of regeneration, through grace, may be
accomplished."
Such is the plan devised at New
Haven to make regeneration so easy that men may not be discouraged from
attempting to do it. It has one defect. We are not told how to get rid of
selfishness; which is the first and essential step in the whole case. Further,
it will be remembered that "all sin is selfishness;" and, according to
this New Haven means of regeneration; self-love, which is to be the motive
power, in the process described, has no moral quality; nor have any of the
series of acts enumerated, abstractly from the final act of the will, by which,
as a result of the whole process, God is chosen. In the mean time, is the man in
a neutral state, neither sinful nor holy?
Surely there is a better way
than this. There are those who "were born, not of blood, nor of the will of
the flesh, nor of the will of man, but
of God."
Dr. Taylor's closing number
was a designed modification of the previous ones; partly, at the suggestion of
Dr. Beecher. The latter told him that he had employed terms badly, in speaking
of the "suspension of selfishness." "All that Dr. Taylor
means," said he, to Dr. Porter of Andover, is, that "the carnal mind
is held in check, or does not act, and
not that it is extinct:" “While this carnal mind is thus checked, has it
moral qualities?" said Dr. Porter. "Doubtless," he replied.
"Is it sinful, or holy, or neither?" (Pause.) "The man is
doubtless a sinner" said he. "Can one who pugnaciously and
ostentatiously maintains that all sin consists in action, maintain that a carnal
mind is sinful, when its action has ceased?" (No reply.)
While the articles on regeneration were publishing, a conference was held, at Andover, at the house of Dr. Porter, with a view to see whether mutual explanations might not result in a restoration of confidence. There were present, the Andover professors, Professors Taylor and Goodrich, Drs. Beecher, Church, Spring, Cogswell, Hewit, Mr. Nettleton and others. The explanations given, by the New Haven professors, however, only served to increase the anxiety. In the course of the. interview, Dr. Woods said to Dr. Taylor, "Does the infant need regenerating grace, in the first month of its existence?" Dr. Taylor replied, "No." "Does he need this grace in the second month?" Again, he answered, “No." “Does he need it in the third month?" He replied as before. Dr. Woods pursued his inquiry, to the fourth, the fifth or sixth month of the child's age; and at one of these points, Dr. Taylor said, "I don't know but that the child may then need renewing grace."
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