the other side of the Atlantic, both in a better educated ministry and a purer theology. It is not enough to say of Mr. Watson, that he stands at the head of Methodist writers on theology. He has not only attained a superiority over his brethren in this department; he stands upon an eminence to which even Clarke and Wesley have made but distant approaches. Wesley received a liberal education at the University of Oxford; Clarke, as a biblical critic, was skilled in the languages and in research; but Watson is superior to either of them, as a theologian, as well as in his ability as a writer. His work possesses many excellences for which we search their writings in vain. He indulges less in capricious and extravagant speculations; he treats his subjects with more sobriety and dignity; and above all, he comes to his task with a better defined and more carefully studied theological system. The publication of his Institutes may well be regarded as forming an era in the history of doctrinal Methodism, and is obviously doing much to promote a taste for the study of theology as a science, among those for whom it is especially designed. The work is written with ability, and furnishes a full and clear exhibition of the theological system of our Wesleyan brethren, freed from some of its objectionable peculiarities. We are inclined to believe, that English Methodists have a much more sober theology than those in this country; and our principal reason for this belief, is the fact, that in in England, Watson is held in much higher estimation as a theologian, than Clarke; while in America, though the former is highly esteemed, the latter reigns "sovereign of the ascendant." It is aside from our present purpose, to enter into a full examination of this volume. There is much in it which deserves commendation. From his frequent mention of the old writers, John Howe and others, he is evidently well acquainted with their works, and the system which he has given may be read with profit. The Institutes, however, pure as they are from certain obnoxious peculiarities of Methodism, contain enough that is exceptionable; and in glancing at them, we design to notice some of the most prominent particulars in their theology, and to point out one or two Methodist peculiarities, from which Mr. W. departs. He professes to be an Arminian, and on almost every doctrinal point does in fact occupy precisely the same ground with Arminius, whose language, in the statement and defense of his views, he frequently quotes. We mention this fact thus distinctly, as we intend what follows for the particular edification of those who have suspected us of leaning toward Arminianism. 1. We will glance, in the first place, at the view of human depravity, presented in this work. On this subject, Mr. W. is full and explicit. He describes "the doctrine of scripture to be VOL. VII. 47 that of the natural and universal corruption of man's nature," and makes human depravity consist in "the fault or corruption of every man's nature," in "a moral corruptness of human nature, which has been transmitted to all men;" so that "we are born sinners." The principle upon which he reasons to sustain this position, may be seen in the following paragraph: If it be said, that these natural propensities to various evils in children, are not sinful before they have the consent of the will, all that can be maintained, is, that they are not actual sins, which no one asserts; but as a universal choice of evil, when accountableness takes place, proves a universal pravity of will previous to the actual choice, then it follows, that, though infants do not commit sin, yet theirs is a sinful nature.' p. 360. The great fallacy here lies in the two assumptions, that there must be sin before the first sin, and that there can be sin before accountability. We think it far more scriptural, as well as more philosophical, to account for this "universal choice of evil," not by asserting the previous existence of sin in human nature, but by supposing, that the descendants of fallen Adam come to moral action with an increased and prevailing tendency to evil, which, however, in the nature of things, cannot be considered a state of guilt, and obnoxious to punishment, until it receives the consent of the will; and it is to us passing strange, that any man of common acuteness, who reflects with his bible open, can think differently. But into what absurdity will not blind contention for party opinions plunge men! Sin before accountableness! Sin before there is sin actually! The world may be challenged to tell what kind of existence that is, which is not actual existence,-sin, which is not actual! Mr. W. might as well talk of propensities which are not actual, or of human nature which is not actual. Such a distinction does not exist: it has no support, either from the scriptures or common sense, and is grossly absurd. What is sin? It is not our calamity or misfortune, but our crime. It is a transgression of the divine law, for which men, as moral agents, are punishable, as their own act of choice. In accounting for this "corruption of human nature," Mr. W. assumes, that our first parents, previous to their fall, were not and could not be holy, without the "gift of the Holy Spirit," that holiness is "not an effect which would or could follow from their mere creation, independent of the vouchsafed influence of the Spirit of God;" and then accounts for the "whole case of man's corruption," as follows: The Spirit's influence in him did not prevent the possibility of his sinning, though it afforded sufficient security to him, as long as he looked to that source of strength. He did sin, and the Spirit retired; and, the tide of sin once turned in, the mound of resistance being removed, it overflowed his whole nature. p. 344. Again : But the whole of this sin is not peculiar to our first parents, but is common to the whole race, who, at the time when the first sin was committed, were in their loins, and who afterwards descended from them in the natural mode of propagation. p. 362. This last extract he adopts from Arminius. Notwithstanding such broad and sweeping statements, he undertakes to vindicate his theory from the charge of making God the author of sin; and on the principle, that this sinfulness of human nature is produced, not by "direct and positive infusion," but indirectly, through the withdrawal from human nature of "the only controlling and sanctifying power, the presence of the Spirit." For as in the death of the body, the mere privation of the principle of life, produces inflexibility of the muscles, the extinction of heat, and sense, and motion, and surrenders the body to the operation of an agency, which life, as long as it continued, resisted; namely, that of chimical decomposition; so from the loss of spiritual life,' [or, which in his view is the same thing, the withdrawal of the Divine Spirit,] 'followed estrangement from God, moral inability, the dominion of irregular passions, and the rule of appetite; aversion, in consequence, to restraint; and enmity to God. p. 361. This reasoning, however, by no means relieves the difficulty. It can make no difference, whether God has made our nature sinful directly by his own positive agency, or indirectly done so, provided we have inevitably been made sinners by what he has done. In either case, he is the author of sin; and no reasoning, sophistry or illustration whatever, can redeem Mr. Watson's theory from this dilemma. It makes no difference, as to the fact of murder, whether, in killing a man, we shoot him outright, or confine him to an air-tight room, and extract the air. Nor is the difficulty avoided by saying, as Mr. W. does, that God inflicts spiritual death upon the human race, as a part of the punishment denounced against the sin of our first parents: for, even conceding it to be a principle of God's government, to punish sin with sin, or with that which necessarily and unavoidably produces it, a notion too absurd and monstrous to require even to be "puffed away with sarcasm," what does this theory gain by the concession? If it is true, that for Adam's sin God has punished his race with spiritual death, or moral corruption, still he is the author of this punishment, and of course the difficulty in question remains in all its force. In regard to Mr. W's assumption, that our first parents, before they fell, were entirely dependent on the Holy Spirit for ability to avoid sin and remain holy, we have a few remarks to make. We say assumption, because he has made no attempt to sustain it by proof and argument, and because it cannot be supported, since it is no less without foundation in the scriptures, than it is at variance with the dictates of common sense and sound philosophy. It is a notion to which no man in his senses would resort, unless he is under the influence of affection to some darling theory. This, however, is one of the principal hinges on which the whole Arminian system turns. We have several objections to make to this assumption. (1.) It involves a denial that God created Adam a free moral agent. It does this, by denying him an inherent ability to obey his Maker and avoid sin, when first created, and by resolving his power to obey and continue holy, into the "gift of the Divine Spirit." In order to moral agency, there must be an inherent ability to obey or disobey, to choose or refuse; and where this ability is wholly extraneous, or entirely dependent on ab extra influence, there is no such agency. Even in the opinion of Mr.W. himself, expressed in another part of his work, there is no "moral freedom," where there is " no power to choose either right or wrong." Now if our first parents, previous to their fall, were entirely dependent on God's Spirit for power to obey him; if, as Mr. W. asserts, they could not be holy without the gift of this Spirit; and if their moral liberty was such, that the withdrawal of this "gift" inevitably resulted in their moral corruption; then they never possessed, in themselves, the ability to do right, and of course were not created free moral agents. (2.) Again: this assumption denies, that sinful men are now more dependent on the Spirit of God for holiness, than Adam was immediately after his creation. Nothing is more constantly taught in the scriptures, than the dependence of our fallen race on the Spirit of God for holiness; and that this dependence arises solely from the fact, that sin has entered the world; or, that men remain wilfully opposed to God. But if Mr. W's theory is correct, it is not true, that man's dependence arises from this fact this is not the ground of it; it arises from his not being created a moral agent, and there is no difference, in this respect, between man before and since the fall; for Adam, just after his creation, was as dependent as are his sinful descendants, and as truly in need of a "gracious ability." (3.) Another objection to Mr. W's. view, is, that it depreciates the gospel of Christ, and essentially lessens its glory. The gospel is a glorious dispensation of mercy to sinners, -a harmonious and mighty system of grace; and one of its principal characteristics is the mission of the Holy Ghost. The reason of this mission is declared to be, the existence of sin, or man's continued opposition of will to God. The Divine Spirit comes to convince the world of sin, to carry the claims of obligation into the depths of every impenitent spirit, to curb and destroy that bias toward evil, with which every child of Adam enters on moral action, and to convert men to God. But, if Mr. W's view is correct, the mission of the Holy Spirit is not peculiar to the gospel,is not a mighty effort of heaven to rescue fallen, self-destroying man, but an endowment bestowed upon man at his creation, and though "forfeited" when he fell, yet far more peculiar to him than moral freedom. How greatly, then, is the gospel depreciated by this assumption, which robs it of so principal a characteristic of its glory, as the dispensation of the Holy Spirit! In treating of the mode in which sin is transmitted from parents to children, Mr. Watson takes the ground, that the soul is ex traduce, and that depravity is propagated. To prove this, he several times quotes the words, "Adam begat a son in his own likeness." In another place, he has the following language: "The children of Adam were not born until after the repentance of our first parents, and their restoration to divine favor. They appear to have been devout worshipers, and to have had access to his 'presence,' the visible glory of the shekinah." Now we wish to "put that and that together." If, as he believes, moral character is hereditary; if Adam propagated the moral state of his soul to his children; what, according to his own showing, must have been their moral character? Not unholy, else they could not have been born in their parent's likeness, -for Adam was a regenerated man, a child of God, and, as our Methodist brethren will doubtless contend, in the full enjoyment of sinless perfection. They must have been born, therefore, in a state of perfect holiness. Is it said, "this is impossible, for holiness cannot be propagated?" We ask, why not? Why is not the doctrine of propagated holiness every way as credible as that of propagated sin? It is full as scriptural, as philosophical, as amiable, and far more consistent with the character of our Maker. Why reject it then? If the principle be a correct and sound one, why should it apply in one case, and not in the other? But, a truce to all speculation upon such absurdities: we willingly leave them to the management of those who delight in them. We prefer to follow truth, though she lead us away from our accustomed track, and even scatter our favorite prepossessions or prejudices to the four winds of heaven. 2. We pass on to another topic, the doctrine of imputation. Our readers need not be surprised to find this doctrine occupying a conspicuous place in Methodist theology. With all their fear of making the Judge of the earth do wrong; with all their vehement declamation against Calvin, and the "horrible decrees," Methodists are among the most strenuous asserters of the imputation of Adam's sin to his posterity. Says Mr. Watson: |