CONVERSION
To be converted, to be regenerated,
to receive grace, to experience religion, to gain
an assurance, are so many phrases which denote the
process, gradual or sudden, by which a self hitherto
divided, and consciously wrong inferior and unhappy,
becomes unified and consciously right superior and
happy, in consequence of its firmer hold upon religious
realities. This at least is what conversion
signifies in general terms, whether or not we believe
that a direct divine operation is needed to bring
such a moral change about.
Before entering upon a minuter study
of the process, let me enliven our understanding of
the definition by a concrete example. I choose
the quaint case of an unlettered man, Stephen H. Bradley,
whose experience is related in a scarce American pamphlet.[98]
[98] A sketch of the life of Stephen
H. Bradley, from the age of five to twenty four years,
including his remarkable experience of the power of
the Holy Spirit on the second evening of November,
1829. Madison, Connecticut, 1830.
I select this case because it shows
how in these inner alterations one may find one unsuspected
depth below another, as if the possibilities of character
lay disposed in a series of layers or shells, of whose
existence we have no premonitory knowledge.
Bradley thought that he had been already
fully converted at the age of fourteen.
“I thought I saw the Saviour,
by faith, in human shape, for about one second in
the room, with arms extended, appearing to say to
me, Come. The next day I rejoiced with trembling;
soon after, my happiness was so great that I said
that I wanted to die; this world had no place in my
affections, as I knew of, and every day appeared as
solemn to me as the Sabbath. I had an ardent
desire that all mankind might feel as I did; I wanted
to have them all love God supremely. Previous
to this time I was very selfish and self-righteous;
but now I desired the welfare of all mankind, and
could with a feeling heart forgive my worst enemies,
and I felt as if I should be willing to bear the scoffs
and sneers of any person, and suffer anything for
His sake, if I could be the means in the hands of
God, of the conversion of one soul.”
Nine years later, in 1829, Mr. Bradley
heard of a revival of religion that had begun in his
neighborhood. “Many of the young converts,”
he says, “would come to me when in meeting and
ask me if I had religion, and my reply generally was,
I hope I have. This did not appear to satisfy
them; they said they KNEW THEY had it. I requested
them to pray for me, thinking with myself, that if
I had not got religion now, after so long a time professing
to be a Christian, that it was time I had, and hoped
their prayers would be answered in my behalf.
“One Sabbath, I went to hear
the Methodist at the Academy. He spoke of the
ushering in of the day of general judgment; and he
set it forth in such a solemn and terrible manner as
I never heard before. The scene of that day
appeared to be taking place, and so awakened were
all the powers of my mind that, like Felix, I trembled
involuntarily on the bench where I was sitting, though
I felt nothing at heart. The next day evening
I went to hear him again. He took his text from
Revelation: ’And I saw the dead, small
and great, stand before God.’ And he represented
the terrors of that day in such a manner that it appeared
as if it would melt the heart of stone. When
he finished his discourse, an old gentleman turned
to me and said ’This is what I call preaching.’
I thought the same, but my feelings were still unmoved
by what he said, and I did not enjoy religion, but
I believe he did.
“I will now relate my experience
of the power of the Holy Spirit which took place on
the same night. Had any person told me previous
to this that I could have experienced the power of
the Holy Spirit in the manner which I did, I could
not have believed it, and should have thought the
person deluded that told me so. I went directly
home after the meeting, and when I got home I wondered
what made me feel so stupid. I retired to rest
soon after I got home, and felt indifferent to the
things of religion until I began to be exercised by
the Holy Spirit, which began in about five minutes
after, in the following manner:—
“At first, I began to feel my
heart beat very quick all on a sudden, which made
me at first think that perhaps something is going
to ail me, though I was not alarmed, for I felt no
pain. My heart increased in its beating, which
soon convinced me that it was the Holy Spirit from
the effect it had on me. I began to feel exceedingly
happy and humble, and such a sense of unworthiness
as I never felt before. I could not very well
help speaking out, which I did, and said, Lord, I
do not deserve this happiness, or words to that effect,
while there was a stream (resembling air in feeling)
came into my mouth and heart in a more sensible manner
than that of drinking anything, which continued, as
near as I could judge, five minutes or more, which
appeared to be the cause of such a palpitation of my
heart. It took complete possession of my soul,
and I am certain that I desired the Lord, while in
the midst of it, not to give me any more happiness,
for it seemed as if I could not contain what I had
got. My heart seemed as if it would burst, but
it did not stop until I felt as if I was unutterably
full of the love and grace of God. In the mean
time while thus exercised, a thought arose in my mind,
what can it mean? and all at once, as if to answer
it, my memory became exceedingly clear, and it appeared
to me just as if the New Testament was placed open
before me, eighth chapter of Romans, and as light
as if some candle lighted was held for me to read
the 26th and 27th verses of that chapter, and I read
these words: ’The Spirit helpeth our infirmities
with groanings which cannot be uttered.’
And all the time that my heart was a-beating, it
made me groan like a person in distress, which was
not very easy to stop, though I was in no pain at all,
and my brother being in bed in another room came and
opened the door, and asked me if I had got the toothache.
I told him no, and that he might get to sleep.
I tried to stop. I felt unwilling to go to sleep
myself, I was so happy, fearing I should lose it—
thinking within myself
’My willing soul would
stay
In such a frame as this.’
And while I lay reflecting, after
my heart stopped beating, feeling as if my soul was
full of the Holy Spirit, I thought that perhaps there
might be angels hovering round my bed. I felt
just as if I wanted to converse with them, and finally
I spoke, saying ’O ye affectionate angels! how
is it that ye can take so much interest in our welfare,
and we take so little interest in our own.’
After this, with difficulty I got to sleep; and when
I awoke in the morning my first thoughts were:
What has become of my happiness? and, feeling a
degree of it in my heart, I asked for more, which
was given to me as quick as thought. I then got
up to dress myself, and found to my surprise that I
could but just stand. It appeared to me as if
it was a little heaven upon earth. My soul felt
as completely raised above the fears of death as of
going to sleep; and like a bird in a cage, I had a
desire, if it was the will of God, to get released
from my body and to dwell with Christ, though willing
to live to do good to others, and to warn sinners
to repent. I went downstairs feeling as solemn
as if I had lost all my friends, and thinking with
myself, that I would not let my parents know it until
I had first looked into the Testament. I went
directly to the shelf and looked into it, at the eighth
of Romans, and every verse seemed to almost speak
and to confirm it to be truly the Word of God, and
as if my feelings corresponded with the meaning of
the word. I then told my parents of it, and
told them that I thought that they must see that when
I spoke, that it was not my own voice, for it appeared
so to me. My speech seemed entirely under the
control of the Spirit within me; I do not mean that
the words which I spoke were not my own, for they
were. I thought that I was influenced similar
to the Apostles on the day of Pentecost (with the
exception of having power to give it to others, and
doing what they did). After breakfast I went
round to converse with my neighbors on religion, which
I could not have been hired to have done before this,
and at their request I prayed with them, though I
had never prayed in public before.
“I now feel as if I had discharged
my duty by telling the truth, and hope by the blessing
of God, it may do some good to all who shall read
it. He has fulfilled his promise in sending the
Holy Spirit down into our hearts, or mine at least,
and I now defy all the Deists and Atheists in the
world to shake my faith in Christ.”
So much for Mr. Bradley and his conversion,
of the effect of which upon his later life we gain
no information. Now for a minuter survey of
the constituent elements of the conversion process.
If you open the chapter on Association,
of any treatise on Psychology, you will read that
a man’s ideas, aims, and objects form diverse
internal groups and systems, relatively independent
of one another. Each ‘aim’ which
he follows awakens a certain specific kind of interested
excitement, and gathers a certain group of ideas together
in subordination to it as its associates; and if the
aims and excitements are distinct in kind, their groups
of ideas may have little in common. When one
group is present and engrosses the interest, all the
ideas connected with other groups may be excluded
from the mental field. The President of the
United States when, with paddle, gun, and fishing-rod,
he goes camping in the wilderness for a vacation,
changes his system of ideas from top to bottom.
The presidential anxieties have lapsed into the background
entirely; the official habits are replaced by the
habits of a son of nature, and those who knew the
man only as the strenuous magistrate would not “know
him for the same person” if they saw him as the
camper.
If now he should never go back, and
never again suffer political interests to gain dominion
over him, he would be for practical intents and purposes
a permanently transformed being. Our ordinary
alterations of character, as we pass from one of our
aims to another, are not commonly called transformations,
because each of them is so rapidly succeeded by another
in the reverse direction; but whenever one aim grows
so stable as to expel definitively its previous rivals
from the individual’s life, we tend to speak
of the phenomenon, and perhaps to wonder at it, as
a “transformation.”
These alternations are the completest
of the ways in which a self may be divided.
A less complete way is the simultaneous coexistence
of two or more different groups of aims, of which one
practically holds the right of way and instigates activity,
whilst the others are only pious wishes, and never
practically come to anything. Saint Augustine’s
aspirations to a purer life, in our last lecture,
were for a while an example. Another would be
the President in his full pride of office, wondering
whether it were not all vanity, and whether the life
of a wood-chopper were not the wholesomer destiny.
Such fleeting aspirations are mere velleitates, whimsies.
They exist on the remoter outskirts of the mind,
and the real self of the man, the centre of his energies,
is occupied with an entirely different system.
As life goes on, there is a constant change of our
interests, and a consequent change of place in our
systems of ideas, from more central to more peripheral,
and from more peripheral to more central parts of
consciousness. I remember, for instance, that
one evening when I was a youth, my father read aloud
from a Boston newspaper that part of Lord Gifford’s
will which founded these four lectureships.
At that time I did not think of being a teacher of
philosophy, and what I listened to was as remote from
my own life as if it related to the planet Mars.
Yet here I am, with the Gifford system part and parcel
of my very self, and all my energies, for the time
being, devoted to successfully identifying myself
with it. My soul stands now planted in what
once was for it a practically unreal object, and speaks
from it as from its proper habitat and centre.
When I say “Soul,” you
need not take me in the ontological sense unless you
prefer to; for although ontological language is instinctive
in such matters, yet Buddhists or Humians can perfectly
well describe the facts in the phenomenal terms which
are their favorites. For them the soul is only
a succession of fields of consciousness: yet
there is found in each field a part, or sub-field,
which figures as focal and contains the excitement,
and from which, as from a centre, the aim seems to
be taken. Talking of this part, we involuntarily
apply words of perspective to distinguish it from
the rest, words like “here,” “this,”
“now,” “mine,” or “me”;
and we ascribe to the other parts the positions “there,”
“then,” “that,” “his”
or “thine,” “it,” “not
me.” But a “here” can change
to a “there,” and a “there”
become a “here,” and what was “mine”
and what was “not mine” change their places.
What brings such changes about is
the way in which emotional excitement alters.
Things hot and vital to us to-day are cold to-morrow.
It is as if seen from the hot parts of the field that
the other parts appear to us, and from these hot parts
personal desire and volition make their sallies.
They are in short the centres of our dynamic energy,
whereas the cold parts leave us indifferent and passive
in proportion to their coldness.
Whether such language be rigorously
exact is for the present of no importance. It
is exact enough, if you recognize from your own experience
the facts which I seek to designate by it.
Now there may be great oscillation
in the emotional interest, and the hot places may
shift before one almost as rapidly as the sparks that
run through burnt-up paper. Then we have the
wavering and divided self we heard so much of in the
previous lecture. Or the focus of excitement
and heat, the point of view from which the aim is
taken, may come to lie permanently within a certain
system; and then, if the change be a religious one,
we call it a CONVERSION, especially if it be by crisis,
or sudden.
Let us hereafter, in speaking of the
hot place in a man’s consciousness, the group
of ideas to which he devotes himself, and from which
he works, call it THE HABITUAL CENTRE OF HIS PERSONAL
ENERGY. It makes a great difference to a man
whether one set of his ideas, or another, be the centre
of his energy; and it makes a great difference, as
regards any set of ideas which he may possess, whether
they become central or remain peripheral in him.
To say that a man is “converted” means,
in these terms, that religious ideas, previously peripheral
in his consciousness, now take a central place, and
that religious aims form the habitual centre of his
energy.
Now if you ask of psychology just
HOW the excitement shifts in a man’s mental
system, and WHY aims that were peripheral become at
a certain moment central, psychology has to reply that
although she can give a general description of what
happens, she is unable in a given case to account
accurately for all the single forces at work.
Neither an outside observer nor the Subject who undergoes
the process can explain fully how particular experiences
are able to change one’s centre of energy so
decisively, or why they so often have to bide their
hour to do so. We have a thought, or we perform
an act, repeatedly, but on a certain day the real
meaning of the thought peals through us for the first
time, or the act has suddenly turned into a moral
impossibility. All we know is that there are
dead feelings, dead ideas, and cold beliefs, and there
are hot and live ones; and when one grows hot and
alive within us, everything has to re-crystallize
about it. We may say that the heat and liveliness
mean only the “motor efficacy,” long deferred
but now operative, of the idea; but such talk itself
is only circumlocution, for whence the sudden motor
efficacy? And our explanations then get so vague
and general that one realizes all the more the intense
individuality of the whole phenomenon.
In the end we fall back on the hackneyed
symbolism of a mechanical equilibrium. A mind
is a system of ideas, each with the excitement it
arouses, and with tendencies impulsive and inhibitive,
which mutually check or reinforce one another.
The collection of ideas alters by subtraction or
by addition in the course of experience, and the tendencies
alter as the organism gets more aged. A mental
system may be undermined or weakened by this interstitial
alteration just as a building is, and yet for a time
keep upright by dead habit. But a new perception,
a sudden emotional shock, or an occasion which lays
bare the organic alteration, will make the whole fabric
fall together; and then the centre of gravity sinks
into an attitude more stable, for the new ideas that
reach the centre in the rearrangement seem now to
be locked there, and the new structure remains permanent.
Formed associations of ideas and habits
are usually factors of retardation in such changes
of equilibrium. New information, however acquired,
plays an accelerating part in the changes; and the
slow mutation of our instincts and propensities, under
the “unimaginable touch of time” has an
enormous influence. Moreover, all these influences
may work subconsciously or half unconsciously.[99]
And when you get a Subject in whom the subconscious
life—of which I must speak more fully soon—is
largely developed, and in whom motives habitually ripen
in silence, you get a case of which you can never
give a full account, and in which, both to the Subject
and the onlookers, there may appear an element of
marvel. Emotional occasions, especially violent
ones, are extremely potent in precipitating mental
rearrangements. The sudden and explosive ways
in which love, jealousy, guilt, fear, remorse, or
anger can seize upon one are known to everybody.[100]
Hope, happiness, security, resolve, emotions characteristic
of conversion, can be equally explosive. And
emotions that come in this explosive way seldom leave
things as they found them.
[99] Jouffroy is an example:
“Down this slope it was that my intelligence
had glided, and little by little it had got far from
its first faith. But this melancholy revolution
had not taken place in the broad daylight of my consciousness;
too many scruples, too many guides and sacred affections
had made it dreadful to me, so that I was far from
avowing to myself the progress it had made.
It had gone on in silence, by an involuntary elaboration
of which I was not the accomplice; and although I
had in reality long ceased to be a Christian, yet,
in the innocence of my intention, I should have shuddered
to suspect it, and thought it calumny had I been accused
of such a falling away.” Then follows
Jouffroy’s account of his counter-conversion,
quoted above on p. 173.
[100] One hardly needs examples; but
for love, see p. 176, note, for fear, p. 161 ; for
remorse, see Othello after the murder; for anger see
Lear after Cordelia’s first speech to him; for
resolve, see p. 175 (J. Foster case). Here
is a pathological case in which GUILT was the feeling
that suddenly exploded: “One night I was
seized on entering bed with a rigor, such as Swedenborg
describes as coming over him with a sense of holiness,
but over me with a sense of GUILT. During that
whole night I lay under the influence of the rigor,
and from its inception I felt that I was under the
curse of God. I have never done one act of duty
in my life—sins against God and man beginning
as far as my memory goes back—a wildcat
in human shape.”
In his recent work on the Psychology
of Religion, Professor Starbuck of California has
shown by a statistical inquiry how closely parallel
in its manifestations the ordinary “conversion”
which occurs in young people brought up in evangelical
circles is to that growth into a larger spiritual
life which is a normal phase of adolescence in every
class of human beings. The age is the same,
falling usually between fourteen and seventeen.
The symptoms are the same,—sense of incompleteness
and imperfection; brooding, depression, morbid introspection,
and sense of sin; anxiety about the hereafter; distress
over doubts, and the like. And the result is
the same—a happy relief and objectivity,
as the confidence in self gets greater through the
adjustment of the faculties to the wider outlook.
In spontaneous religious awakening, apart from revivalistic
examples, and in the ordinary storm and stress and
moulting-time of adolescence, we also may meet with
mystical experiences, astonishing the subjects by their
suddenness, just as in revivalistic conversion.
The analogy, in fact, is complete; and Starbuck’s
conclusion as to these ordinary youthful conversions
would seem to be the only sound one: Conversion
is in its essence a normal adolescent phenomenon,
incidental to the passage from the child’s small
universe to the wider intellectual and spiritual life
of maturity.
“Theology,” says Dr. Starbuck,
“takes the adolescent tendencies and builds
upon them; it sees that the essential thing in adolescent
growth is bringing the person out of childhood into
the new life of maturity and personal insight.
It accordingly brings those means to bear which will
intensify the normal tendencies. It shortens
up the period of duration of storm and stress.”
The conversion phenomena of “conviction of sin”
last, by this investigator’s statistics, about
one fifth as long as the periods of adolescent storm
and stress phenomena of which he also got statistics,
but they are very much more intense. Bodily
accompaniments, loss of sleep and appetite, for example,
are much more frequent in them. “The essential
distinction appears to be that conversion intensifies
but shortens the period by bringing the person to
a definite crisis.”[101]
[101] E. D. Starbuck: The Psychology
of Religion, pp. 224, 262.
The conversions which Dr. Starbuck
here has in mind are of course mainly those of very
commonplace persons, kept true to a pre-appointed
type by instruction, appeal, and example. The
particular form which they affect is the result of
suggestion and imitation.[102] If they went through
their growth-crisis in other faiths and other countries,
although the essence of the change would be the same
(since it is one in the main so inevitable), its accidents
would be different. In Catholic lands, for example,
and in our own Episcopalian sects, no such anxiety
and conviction of sin is usual as in sects that encourage
revivals. The sacraments being more relied on
in these more strictly ecclesiastical bodies, the
individual’s personal acceptance of salvation
needs less to be accentuated and led up to.
[102] No one understands this better
than Jonathan Edwards understood it already.
Conversion narratives of the more commonplace sort
must always be taken with the allowances which he
suggests:
“A rule received and established
by common consent has a very great, though to many
persons an insensible influence in forming their notions
of the process of their own experience. I know
very well how they proceed as to this matter, for I
have had frequent opportunities of observing their
conduct. Very often their experience at first
appears like a confused chaos, but then those parts
are selected which bear the nearest resemblance to
such particular steps as are insisted on; and these
are dwelt upon in their thoughts, and spoken of from
time to time, till they grow more and more conspicuous
in their view, and other parts which are neglected
grow more and more obscure. Thus what they have
experienced is insensibly strained, so as to bring
it to an exact conformity to the scheme already established
in their minds. And it becomes natural also
for ministers, who have to deal with those who insist
upon distinctness and clearness of method, to do so
too.” Treatise on Religious Affections.
But every imitative phenomenon must
once have had its original, and I propose that for
the future we keep as close as may be to the more
first-hand and original forms of experience.
These are more likely to be found in sporadic adult
cases.
Professor Leuba, in a valuable article
on the psychology of conversion,[103] subordinates
the theological aspect of the religious life almost
entirely to its moral aspect. The religious
sense he defines as “the feeling of unwholeness,
of moral imperfection, of sin, to use the technical
word, accompanied by the yearning after the peace
of unity.” “The word ‘religion,’”
he says, “is getting more and more to signify
the conglomerate of desires and emotions springing
from the sense of sin and its release”; and
he gives a large number of examples, in which the
sin ranges from drunkenness to spiritual pride, to
show that the sense of it may beset one and crave
relief as urgently as does the anguish of the sickened
flesh or any form of physical misery.
[103] Studies in the Psychology of
Religious Phenomena, American Journal of Psychology,
vii. 309 (1896).
Undoubtedly this conception covers
an immense number of cases. A good one to use
as an example is that of Mr. S. H. Hadley, who after
his conversion became an active and useful rescuer
of drunkards in New York. His experience runs
as follows:—
“One Tuesday evening I sat in
a saloon in Harlem, a homeless, friendless, dying
drunkard. I had pawned or sold everything that
would bring a drink. I could not sleep unless
I was dead drunk. I had not eaten for days,
and for four nights preceding I had suffered with
delirium tremens, or the horrors, from midnight till
morning. I had often said, ’I will never
be a tramp. I will never be cornered, for when
that time comes, if ever it comes, I will find a home
in the bottom of the river.’ But the Lord
so ordered it that when that time did come I was not
able to walk one quarter of the way to the river.
As I sat there thinking, I seemed to feel some great
and mighty presence. I did not know then what
it was. I did learn afterwards that it was Jesus,
the sinner’s friend. I walked up to the
bar and pounded it with my fist till I made the glasses
rattle. Those who stood by drinking looked on
with scornful curiosity. I said I would never
take another drink, if I died on the street, and really
I felt as though that would happen before morning.
Something said, ’If you want to keep this promise,
go and have yourself locked up.’ I went
to the nearest station-house and had myself locked
up.
“I was placed in a narrow cell,
and it seemed as though all the demons that could
find room came in that place with me. This was
not all the company I had, either. No, praise
the Lord: that dear Spirit that came to me in
the saloon was present, and said, Pray. I did
pray, and though I did not feel any great help, I
kept on praying. As soon as I was able to leave
my cell I was taken to the police court and remanded
back to the cell. I was finally released, and
found my way to my brother’s house, where every
care was given me. While lying in bed the admonishing
Spirit never left me, and when I arose the following
Sabbath morning I felt that day would decide my fate,
and toward evening it came into my head to go to Jerry
M’Auley’s Mission. I went.
The house was packed, and with great difficulty I
made my way to the space near the platform.
There I saw the apostle to the drunkard and the outcast—that
man of God, Jerry M’Auley. He rose, and
amid deep silence told his experience. There
was a sincerity about this man that carried conviction
with it, and I found myself saying, ‘I wonder
if God can save me?’ I listened to the testimony
of twenty-five or thirty persons, every one of whom
had been saved from rum, and I made up my mind that
I would be saved or die right there. When the
invitation was given, I knelt down with a crowd of
drunkards. Jerry made the first prayer.
Then Mrs. M’Auley prayed fervently for us.
Oh, what a conflict was going on for my poor soul!
A blessed whisper said, ‘Come’; the devil
said, ‘Be careful.’ I halted but
a moment, and then, with a breaking heart, I said,
’Dear Jesus, can you help me?’ Never
with mortal tongue can I describe that moment.
Although up to that moment my soul had been filled
with indescribable gloom, I felt the glorious brightness
of the noonday sun shine into my heart. I felt
I was a free man. Oh, the precious feeling of
safety, of freedom, of resting on Jesus! I felt
that Christ with all his brightness and power had come
into my life; that, indeed, old things had passed away
and all things had become new.
“From that moment till now I
have never wanted a drink of whiskey, and I have never
seen money enough to make me take one. I promised
God that night that if he would take away the appetite
for strong drink, I would work for him all my life.
He has done his part, and I have been trying to do
mine.”[104]
[104] I have abridged Mr. Hadley’s
account. For other conversions of drunkards,
see his pamphlet, Rescue Mission Work, published at
the Old Jerry M’Auley Water Street Mission, New
York City. A striking collection of cases also
appears in the appendix to Professor Leuba’s
article.
200 Dr. Leuba rightly remarks
that there is little doctrinal theology in such an
experience, which starts with the absolute need of
a higher helper, and ends with the sense that he has
helped us. He gives other cases of drunkards’
conversions which are purely ethical, containing,
as recorded, no theological beliefs whatever.
John B. Gough’s case, for instance, is practically,
says Dr. Leuba, the conversion of an atheist—neither
God nor Jesus being mentioned.[105] But in spite of
the importance of this type of regeneration, with little
or no intellectual readjustment, this writer surely
makes it too exclusive. It corresponds to the
subjectively centered form of morbid melancholy, of
which Bunyan and Alline were examples. But we
saw in our seventh lecture that there are objective
forms of melancholy also, in which the lack of rational
meaning of the universe, and of life anyhow, is the
burden that weighs upon one—you remember
Tolstoy’s case.[106] So there are distinct elements
in conversion, and their relations to individual lives
deserve to be discriminated.[107]
[105] A restaurant waiter served provisionally
as Gough’s ‘Saviour.’ General
Booth, the founder of the Salvation Army, considers
that the first vital step in saving outcasts consists
in making them feel that some decent human being cares
enough for them to take an interest in the question
whether they are to rise or sink.
[106] The crisis of apathetic melancholy—no
use in life—into which J. S. Mill records
that he fell, from which he emerged by the reading
of Marmontel’s Memoirs (Heaven save the mark!)
and Wordsworth’s poetry, is another intellectual
and general metaphysical case. See Mill’s
Autobiography, New York, 1873, pp. 141, 148.
[107] Starbuck, in addition to “escape
from sin,” discriminates “spiritual illumination”
as a distinct type of conversion experience.
Psychology of Religion, p. 85.
Some persons, for instance, never
are, and possibly never under any circumstances could
be, converted. Religious ideas cannot become
the centre of their spiritual energy. They may
be excellent persons, servants of God in practical
ways, but they are not children of his kingdom.
They are either incapable of imagining the invisible;
or else, in the language of devotion, they are life-long
subjects of “barrenness” and “dryness.”
Such inaptitude for religious faith may in some
cases be intellectual in its origin. Their religious
faculties may be checked in their natural tendency
to expand, by beliefs about the world that are inhibitive,
the pessimistic and materialistic beliefs, for example,
within which so many good souls, who in former times
would have freely indulged their religious propensities,
find themselves nowadays, as it were, frozen; or the
agnostic vetoes upon faith as something weak and shameful,
under which so many of us today lie cowering, afraid
to use our instincts. In many persons such inhibitions
are never overcome. To the end of their days
they refuse to believe, their personal energy never
gets to its religious centre, and the latter remains
inactive in perpetuity.
In other persons the trouble is profounder.
There are men anaesthetic on the religious side,
deficient in that category of sensibility. Just
as a bloodless organism can never, in spite of all
its goodwill, attain to the reckless “animal
spirits” enjoyed by those of sanguine temperament;
so the nature which is spiritually barren may admire
and envy faith in others, but can never compass the
enthusiasm and peace which those who are temperamentally
qualified for faith enjoy. All this may, however,
turn out eventually to have been a matter of temporary
inhibition. Even late in life some thaw, some
release may take place, some bolt be shot back in
the barrenest breast, and the man’s hard heart
may soften and break into religious feeling.
Such cases more than any others suggest the idea that
sudden conversion is by miracle. So long as
they exist, we must not imagine ourselves to deal
with irretrievably fixed classes. Now there
are two forms of mental occurrence in human beings,
which lead to a striking difference in the conversion
process, a difference to which Professor Starbuck
has called attention. You know how it is when
you try to recollect a forgotten name. Usually
you help the recall by working for it, by mentally
running over the places, persons, and things with which
the word was connected. But sometimes this effort
fails: you feel then as if the harder you tried
the less hope there would be, as though the name were
JAMMED, and pressure in its direction only kept it
all the more from rising. And then the opposite
expedient often succeeds. Give up the effort
entirely; think of something altogether different,
and in half an hour the lost name comes sauntering
into your mind, as Emerson says, as carelessly as if
it had never been invited. Some hidden process
was started in you by the effort, which went on after
the effort ceased, and made the result come as if
it came spontaneously. A certain music teacher,
says Dr. Starbuck, says to her pupils after the thing
to be done has been clearly pointed out, and unsuccessfully
attempted: “Stop trying and it will do
itself!”[108]
[108] Psychology of Religion, p. 117.
There is thus a conscious and voluntary
way and an involuntary and unconscious way in which
mental results may get accomplished; and we find both
ways exemplified in the history of conversion, giving
us two types, which Starbuck calls the volitional type
and the type by self-surrender respectively.
In the volitional type the regenerative
change is usually gradual, and consists in the building
up, piece by piece, of a new set of moral and spiritual
habits. But there are always critical points
here at which the movement forward seems much more
rapid. This psychological fact is abundantly
illustrated by Dr. Starbuck. Our education in
any practical accomplishment proceeds apparently by
jerks and starts just as the growth of our physical
bodies does.
“An athlete . . . sometimes
awakens suddenly to an understanding of the fine points
of the game and to a real enjoyment of it, just as
the convert awakens to an appreciation of religion.
If he keeps on engaging in the sport, there may come
a day when all at once the game plays itself through
him—when he loses himself in some great
contest. In the same way, a musician may suddenly
reach a point at which pleasure in the technique of
the art entirely falls away, and in some moment of
inspiration he becomes the instrument through which
music flows. The writer has chanced to hear two
different married persons, both of whose wedded lives
had been beautiful from the beginning, relate that
not until a year or more after marriage did they awake
to the full blessedness of married life. So
it is with the religious experience of these persons
we are studying.”[109]
[109] Psychology of Religion, p. 385.
Compare, also, pp. 137-144 and 262.
We shall erelong hear still more remarkable
illustrations of subconsciously maturing processes
eventuating in results of which we suddenly grow conscious.
Sir William Hamilton and Professor Laycock of Edinburgh
were among the first to call attention to this class
of effects; but Dr. Carpenter first, unless I am mistaken,
introduced the term “unconscious cerebration,”
which has since then been a popular phrase of explanation.
The facts are now known to us far more extensively
than he could know them, and the adjective “unconscious,”
being for many of them almost certainly a misnomer,
is better replaced by the vaguer term “subconscious”
or “subliminal.”
Of the volitional type of conversion
it would be easy to give examples,[110] but they are
as a rule less interesting than those of the self-surrender
type, in which the subconscious effects are more abundant
and often startling. I will therefore hurry
to the latter, the more so because the difference between
the two types is after all not radical. Even
in the most voluntarily built-up sort of regeneration
there are passages of partial self-surrender interposed;
and in the great majority of all cases, when the will
had done its uttermost towards bringing one close
to the complete unification aspired after, it seems
that the very last step must be left to other forces
and performed without the help of its activity.
In other words, self-surrender becomes then indispensable.
“The personal will,” says Dr. Starbuck,
“must be given up. In many cases relief
persistently refuses to come until the person ceases
to resist, or to make an effort in the direction he
desires to go.”
[110] For instance, C. G. Finney italicizes
the volitional element: “Just at this
point the whole question of Gospel salvation opened
to my mind in a manner most marvelous to me at the
time. I think I then saw, as clearly as I ever
have in my life, the reality and fullness of the atonement
of Christ. Gospel salvation seemed to me to
be an offer of something to be accepted, and all that
was necessary on my part to get my own consent to
give up my sins and accept Christ. After this
distinct revelation had stood for some little time
before my mind, the question seemed to be put, ’will
you accept it now, to-day?’ I replied, ’Yes;
I will accept it to-day, or I will die in the attempt!’”
He then went into the woods, where he describes his
struggles. He could not pray, his heart was
hardened in its pride. “I then reproached
myself for having promised to give my heart to God
before I left the woods. When I came to try,
I found I could not. . . . My inward soul hung
back, and there was no going out of my heart to God.
The thought was pressing me, of the rashness of my
promise that I would give my heart to God that day,
or die in the attempt. It seemed to me as if
that was binding on my soul; and yet I was going to
break my vow. A great sinking and discouragement
came over me, and I felt almost too weak to stand
upon my knees. Just at this moment I again thought
I heard some one approach me, and I opened my eyes
to see whether it were so. But right there the
revelation of my pride of heart, as the great difficulty
that stood in the way, was distinctly shown to me.
An overwhelming sense of my wickedness in being ashamed
to have a human being see me on my knees before God
took such powerful possession of me, that I cried
at the top of my voice, and exclaimed that I would
not leave that place if all the men on earth and all
the devils in hell surrounded me. ‘What!’
I said, ’such a degraded sinner as I am, on
my knees confessing my sins to the great and holy God;
and ashamed to have any human being, and a sinner
like myself, find me on my knees endeavoring to make
my peace with my offended God!’ The sin appeared
awful, infinite. It broke me down before the
Lord.” Memoirs, pp. 14-16, abridged.
“I had said I would not give
up; but when my will was broken, it was all over,”
writes one of Starbuck’s correspondents.—
Another says: “I simply said: ’Lord,
I have done all I can; I leave the whole matter with
Thee,’ and immediately there came to me a great
peace.”—Another: “All
at once it occurred to me that I might be saved, too,
if I would stop trying to do it all myself, and follow
Jesus: somehow I lost my load.”—Another:
“I finally ceased to resist, and gave myself
up, though it was a hard struggle. Gradually
the feeling came over me that I had done my part,
and God was willing to do his.”[111]—“Lord
Thy will be done; damn or save!” cries John
Nelson,[112] exhausted with the anxious struggle to
escape damnation; and at that moment his soul was
filled with peace.
[111] Starbuck: Op. cit., pp. 91, 114.
[112] Extracts from the Journal of
Mr. John Nelson, London, no date, p. 24.
Dr. Starbuck gives an interesting,
and it seems to me a true, account—so far
as conceptions so schematic can claim truth at all—of
the reasons why self-surrender at the last moment should
be so indispensable. To begin with, there are
two things in the mind of the candidate for conversion:
first, the present incompleteness or wrongness, the
“sin” which he is eager to escape from;
and, second, the positive ideal which he longs to
compass. Now with most of us the sense of our
present wrongness is a far more distinct piece of
our consciousness than is the imagination of any positive
ideal we can aim at. In a majority of cases,
indeed, the “sin” almost exclusively engrosses
the attention, so that conversion is “a process
of struggling away from sin rather than of striving
towards righteousness.”[113] A man’s conscious
wit and will, so far as they strain towards the ideal,
are aiming at something only dimly and inaccurately
imagined. Yet all the while the forces of mere
organic ripening within him are going on towards their
own prefigured result, and his conscious strainings
are letting loose subconscious allies behind the scenes,
which in their way work towards rearrangement; and
the rearrangement towards which all these deeper forces
tend is pretty surely definite, and definitely different
from what he consciously conceives and determines.
It may consequently be actually interfered with (JAMMED,
as it were, like the lost word when we seek too energetically
to recall it), by his voluntary efforts slanting from
the true direction.
[113] Starbuck, p. 64.
Starbuck seems to put his finger on
the root of the matter when he says that to exercise
the personal will is still to live in the region where
the imperfect self is the thing most emphasized.
Where, on the contrary, the subconscious forces take
the lead, it is more probably the better self in posse
which directs the operation. Instead of being
clumsily and vaguely aimed at from without, it is
then itself the organizing centre. What then
must the person do? “He must relax,”
says Dr. Starbuck—“that is, he must
fall back on the larger Power that makes for righteousness,
which has been welling up in his own being, and let
it finish in its own way the work it has begun. .
. . The act of yielding, in this point of view,
is giving one’s self over to the new life, making
it the centre of a new personality, and living, from
within, the truth of it which had before been viewed
objectively.”[114]
[114] Starbuck, p. 115.
“Man’s extremity is God’s
opportunity” is the theological way of putting
this fact of the need of self-surrender; whilst the
physiological way of stating it would be, “Let
one do all in one’s power, and one’s nervous
system will do the rest.” Both statements
acknowledge the same fact.[115]
[115] Starbuck, p. 113.
To state it in terms of our own symbolism:
When the new centre of personal energy has been subconsciously
incubated so long as to be just ready to open into
flower, “hands off” is the only word for
us, it must burst forth unaided!
We have used the vague and abstract
language of psychology. But since, in any terms,
the crisis described is the throwing of our conscious
selves upon the mercy of powers which, whatever they
may be, are more ideal than we are actually, and make
for our redemption, you see why self-surrender has
been and always must be regarded as the vital turning-point
of the religious life, so far as the religious life
is spiritual and no affair of outer works and ritual
and sacraments. One may say that the whole development
of Christianity in inwardness has consisted in little
more than the greater and greater emphasis attached
to this crisis of self-surrender. From Catholicism
to Lutheranism, and then to Calvinism; from that to
Wesleyanism; and from this, outside of technical Christianity
altogether, to pure “liberalism” or transcendental
idealism, whether or not of the mind-cure type, taking
in the mediaeval mystics, the quietists, the pietists,
and quakers by the way, we can trace the stages of
progress towards the idea of an immediate spiritual
help, experienced by the individual in his forlornness
and standing in no essential need of doctrinal apparatus
or propitiatory machinery.
Psychology and religion are thus in
perfect harmony up to this point, since both admit
that there are forces seemingly outside of the conscious
individual that bring redemption to his life.
Nevertheless psychology, defining these forces as
“subconscious,” and speaking of their
effects, as due to “incubation,” or “cerebration,”
implies that they do not transcend the individual’s
personality; and herein she diverges from Christian
theology, which insists that they are direct supernatural
operations of the Deity. I propose to you that
we do not yet consider this divergence final, but
leave the question for a while in abeyance—continued
inquiry may enable us to get rid of some of the apparent
discord.
Revert, then, for a moment more to
the psychology of self-surrender.
When you find a man living on the
ragged edge of his consciousness, pent in to his sin
and want and incompleteness, and consequently inconsolable,
and then simply tell him that all is well with him,
that he must stop his worry, break with his discontent,
and give up his anxiety, you seem to him to come with
pure absurdities. The only positive consciousness
he has tells him that all is NOT well, and the better
way you offer sounds simply as if you proposed to
him to assert cold-blooded falsehoods. “The
will to believe” cannot be stretched as far as
that. We can make ourselves more faithful to
a belief of which we have the rudiments, but we cannot
create a belief out of whole cloth when our perception
actively assures us of its opposite. The better
mind proposed to us comes in that case in the form
of a pure negation of the only mind we have, and we
cannot actively will a pure negation.
There are only two ways in which it
is possible to get rid of anger, worry, fear, despair,
or other undesirable affections. One is that
an opposite affection should overpoweringly break
over us, and the other is by getting so exhausted with
the struggle that we have to stop—so we
drop down, give up, and DON’T CARE any longer.
Our emotional brain-centres strike work, and we lapse
into a temporary apathy. Now there is documentary
proof that this state of temporary exhaustion not infrequently
forms part of the conversion crisis. So long
as the egoistic worry of the sick soul guards the
door, the expansive confidence of the soul of faith
gains no presence. But let the former faint
away, even but for a moment, and the latter can profit
by the opportunity, and, having once acquired possession,
may retain it.
Carlyle’s Teufelsdrockh passes
from the everlasting No to the everlasting Yes through
a “Centre of Indifference.”
Let me give you a good illustration
of this feature in the conversion process. That
genuine saint, David Brainerd, describes his own crisis
in the following words:—
“One morning, while I was walking
in a solitary place as usual, I at once saw that all
my contrivances and projects to effect or procure
deliverance and salvation for myself were utterly in
vain; I was brought quite to a stand, as finding myself
totally lost. I saw that it was forever impossible
for me to do anything towards helping or delivering
myself, that I had made all the pleas I ever could
have made to all eternity; and that all my pleas were
vain, for I saw that self-interest had led me to pray,
and that I had never once prayed from any respect to
the glory of God. I saw that there was no necessary
connection between my prayers and the bestowment of
divine mercy, that they laid not the least obligation
upon God to bestow his grace upon me; and that there
was no more virtue or goodness in them than there
would be in my paddling with my hand in the water.
I saw that I had been heaping up my devotions before
God, fasting, praying, etc., pretending, and
indeed really thinking sometimes that I was aiming
at the glory of God; whereas I never once truly intended
it, but only my own happiness. I saw that as
I had never done anything for God, I had no claim
on anything from him but perdition, on account of
my hypocrisy and mockery. When I saw evidently
that I had regard to nothing but self-interest, then
my duties appeared a vile mockery and a continual
course of lies, for the whole was nothing but self-worship,
and an horrid abuse of God.
“I continued, as I remember,
in this state of mind, from Friday morning till the
Sabbath evening following (July 12, 1739), when I
was walking again in the same solitary place.
Here, in a mournful melancholy state I was attempting
to pray; but found no heart to engage in that or any
other duty; my former concern, exercise, and religious
affections were now gone. I thought that the
Spirit of God had quite left me; but still was NOT
DISTRESSED; yet disconsolate, as if there was nothing
in heaven or earth could make me happy. Having
been thus endeavoring to pray—though, as
I thought, very stupid and senseless—for
near half an hour; then, as I was walking in a thick
grove, unspeakable glory seemed to open to the apprehension
of my soul. I do not mean any external brightness,
nor any imagination of a body of light, but it was
a new inward apprehension or view that I had of God,
such as I never had before, nor anything which had
the least resemblance to it. I had no particular
apprehension of any one person in the Trinity, either
the Father, the Son, or the Holy Ghost; but it appeared
to be Divine glory. My soul rejoiced with joy
unspeakable, to see such a God, such a glorious Divine
Being; and I was inwardly pleased and satisfied that
he should be God over all for ever and ever.
My soul was so captivated and delighted with the
excellency of God that I was even swallowed up in
him, at least to that degree that I had no thought
about my own salvation, and scarce reflected that
there was such a creature as myself. I continued
in this state of inward joy, peace, and astonishing,
till near dark without any sensible abatement; and
then began to think and examine what I had seen; and
felt sweetly composed in my mind all the evening following.
I felt myself in a new world, and everything about
me appeared with a different aspect from what it was
wont to do. At this time, the way of salvation
opened to me with such infinite wisdom, suitableness,
and excellency, that I wondered I should ever think
of any other way of salvation; was amazed that I had
not dropped my own contrivances, and complied with
this lovely, blessed, and excellent way before.
If I could have been saved by my own duties or any
other way that I had formerly contrived, my whole
soul would now have refused it. I wondered that
all the world did not see and comply with this way
of salvation, entirely by the righteousness of Christ.”[116]
[116] Edward’s and Dwight’s
Life of Brainerd, New Haven, 1822, pp. 45-47, abridged.
I have italicized the passage which
records the exhaustion of the anxious emotion hitherto
habitual. In a large proportion, perhaps the
majority, of reports, the writers speak as if the
exhaustion of the lower and the entrance of the higher
emotion were simultaneous,[117] yet often again they
speak as if the higher actively drove the lower out.
This is undoubtedly true in a great many instances,
as we shall presently see. But often there seems
little doubt that both conditions—subconscious
ripening of the one affection and exhaustion of the
other—must simultaneously have conspired,
in order to produce the result.
[117] Describing the whole phenomenon
as a change of equilibrium, we might say that the
movement of new psychic energies towards the personal
centre and the recession of old ones towards the margin
(or the rising of some objects above, and the sinking
of others below the conscious threshold) were only
two ways of describing an indivisible event.
Doubtless this is often absolutely true, and Starbuck
is right when he says that “self-surrender”
and “new determination,” though seeming
at first sight to be such different experiences, are
“really the same thing. Self-surrender
sees the change in terms of the old self, determination
sees it in terms of the new.” Op. cit.,
p. 160.
T. W. B., a convert of Nettleton’s,
being brought to an acute paroxysm of conviction of
sin, ate nothing all day, locked himself in his room
in the evening in complete despair, crying aloud,
“How long, O Lord, how long?” “After
repeating this and similar language,” he says,
“several times, I seemed to sink away into a
state of insensibility. When I came to myself
again I was on my knees, praying not for myself but
for others. I felt submission to the will of
God, willing that he should do with me as should seem
good in his sight. My concern seemed all lost
in concern for others.”[118]
[118] A. A. Bonar: Nettleton
and his Labors, Edinburgh, 1854, p. 261.
Our great American revivalist Finney
writes: “I said to myself: ’What
is this? I must have grieved the Holy Ghost entirely
away.
I have lost all my conviction.
I have not a particle of concern about my soul; and
it must be that the Spirit has left me.’
‘Why!’ thought I, ’I never was so
far from being concerned about my own salvation in
my life.’ . . . I tried to recall my convictions,
to get back again the load of sin under which I had
been laboring. I tried in vain to make myself
anxious. I was so quiet and peaceful that I
tried to feel concerned about that, lest it should
be the result of my having grieved the Spirit away.”[119]
[119] Charles G. Finney: Memoirs
written by Himself, 1876, pp. 17, 18.
But beyond all question there are
persons in whom, quite independently of any exhaustion
in the Subject’s capacity for feeling, or even
in the absence of any acute previous feeling, the
higher condition, having reached the due degree of
energy, bursts through all barriers and sweeps in
like a sudden flood. These are the most striking
and memorable cases, the cases of instantaneous conversion
to which the conception of divine grace has been most
peculiarly attached. I have given one of them
at length—the case of Mr. Bradley.
But I had better reserve the other cases and my comments
on the rest of the subject for the following lecture.