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A Dissertation
Concerning
The Nature Of True Virtue
by Jonathan Edwards
CHAPTER I
Showing wherein the essence of true virtue consists.
WHATEVER controversies and variety of opinions there are about the
nature of virtue, yet all excepting some skeptics, who deny any real
difference between virtue and vice, mean by it, something beautiful,
or rather some kind of beauty, or excellency. It is not all
beauty that is called virtue; for instance, not the beauty of a
building, of a flower, or of the rainbow; but some beauty belonging to
beings that have perception and will. It is not all beauty
of mankind, that is called virtue; for instance, not the external
beauty of the countenance, or shape, gracefulness of motion, or harmony
of voice: but it is a beauty that has its original seat in the mind. But
yet perhaps not every thing that may be called a beauty of
mind, is properly called virtue. There is a beauty of understanding
and speculation; there is something in the ideas and conceptions of
great philosophers and statesmen, that may be called beautiful; which is
a different thing from what is most commonly meant by virtue.
But virtue is the beauty of those qualities and acts of the mind,
that are of a moral nature, i.e., such as are attended with
desert or worthiness of praise, or blame. Things of this
sort, it is generally agreed, so far as I know, do not belong merely to
speculation; but to the disposition and will, or (to use a
general word, I suppose commonly well understood) to the heart.
Therefore, I suppose I shall not depart from the common opinion, when I
say, that virtue is the beauty of the qualities and exercises of the
heart, or those actions which proceed from them. So that when it is
inquired, what is the nature of true virtue? this is the same as
to inquire, what that is, which renders any habit, disposition, or
exercise of the heart truly beautiful.
I use the phrase true virtue, and speak of things truly
beautiful, because I suppose it will generally be allowed, that there is
a distinction to be made between some things which are truly virtuous,
and others which only seem to be so, through a partial and
imperfect view of things: that some actions and dispositions appear
beautiful, if considered partially and superficially, or with regard to
some things belonging to them, and in some of their circumstances and
tendencies, which would appear otherwise in a more extensive and
comprehensive view, wherein they are seen clearly in their whole nature
and the extent of their connections in the universality of things. There
is a general and a particular beauty. By a particular beauty, I
mean that by which a thing appears beautiful when considered only with
regard to its connection with, and tendency to, some particular things
within a limited, and, as it were, a private sphere. And a general
beauty is that by which a thing appears beautiful when viewed most
perfectly, comprehensively and universally, with regard to all its
tendencies, and its connections with every thing to which it stands
related. The former may be without and against the latter. As a few
notes in a tune, taken only by themselves, and in their relation to one
another, may be harmonious; which when considered with respect to all
the notes in the tune, or the entire series of sounds they are connected
with, may be very discordant and disagreeable. That only,
therefore, is what I mean by true virtue, which, belonging to the
heart of an intelligent being, is beautiful by a general
beauty, or beautiful in a comprehensive view, as it is in itself, and as
related to every thing with which it stands in connection. And
therefore, when we are inquiring concerning the nature of true virtue, —
wherein this true and general beauty of the heart does most essentially
consist — this is my answer to the inquiry: —
True virtue most essentially consists in BENEVOLENCE TO BEING IN
GENERAL. Or perhaps to speak more accurately, it is that consent,
propensity and union of heart to being in general, that is immediately
exercised in a general good will.
The things which were before observed respecting the nature of true
virtue, naturally lead us to such a notion of it. If it has its seat in
the heart, and is the general goodness and beauty of the disposition and
its exercise, in the most comprehensive view, considered with regard to
its universal tendency, and as related to every thing with which it
stands in connection; what can it consist in, but a consent and good
will to being in general? Beauty does not consist in discord and
dissent, but in consent and agreement. And if every intelligent being is
some way related to being in general, and is a part of the universal
system of existence; and so stands in connection with the whole; what
can its general and true beauty be, but its union and consent with the
great whole?
If any such thing can be supposed as a union of heart to some
particular being, or number of beings, disposing it to benevolence to a
private circle or system of beings, which are but a small part of the
whole; not implying a tendency to a union with the great system, and not
at all inconsistent with enmity towards being in general; this I suppose
not to be of the nature of true virtue; although it may in some respects
be good, and may appear beautiful in a confined and contracted view of
things. — But of this more afterwards.
It is abundantly plain by the Holy Scriptures, and generally allowed,
not only by Christian divines, but by the more considerable deists, that
virtue most essentially consists in love. And I suppose, it is owned by
the most considerable writers, to consist in general love of
benevolence, or kind affection: though it seems to me, the meaning of
some in this affair is not sufficiently explained, which perhaps
occasions some error or confusion in discourses on this subject.
When I say, true virtue consists in love to being in general.
I shall not be likely to be understood, that no one act of the mind or
exercise of love is of the nature of true virtue, but what has being in
general, or the great system of universal existence, for its direct
and immediate object: so that no exercise of love, or kind
affection, to any one particular being, that is but a small part of this
whole, has any thing of the nature of true virtue. But that the nature
of true virtue consists in a disposition to benevolence towards
being in general; though from such a disposition may arise exercises of
love to particular beings, as objects are presented and occasions
arise. No wonder, that be who is of a generally benevolent
disposition, should be more disposed than another to have his heart
moved with benevolent affection to particular persons, with whom
he is acquainted and conversant, and from whom arise the greatest and
most frequent occasions for exciting his benevolent temper. But
my meaning is, that no affections towards particular persons or beings
are of the nature of true virtue, but such as arise from a generally
benevolent temper, or from that habit or frame of mind, wherein consists
a disposition to love being in general.
And perhaps it is needless for me to give notice to my readers, that
when I speak of an intelligent being having a heart united and
benevolently disposed to being in general, I thereby mean intelligent
being in general. Not inanimate things, or beings that have no
perception or will, which are not properly capable objects of
benevolence.
Love is commonly distinguished into love of benevolence and love of
complacence. Love of benevolence is that affection or propensity
of the heart to any being, which causes it to incline to its well being,
or disposes it to desire and take pleasure in its happiness. And if I
mistake not, it is agreeable to the common opinion, that beauty in the
object is not always the ground of this propensity; but that there may a
disposition to the welfare of those that are not considered as
beautiful; unless mere existence be accounted a beauty. And benevolence
or goodness in the Divine Being is generally supposed, not only to be
prior to the beauty of many of its objects, but to their existence; so
as to be the ground both of their existence and their beauty, rather
than they the foundation of God’s benevolence; as it is supposed that it
is God’s goodness which moved him to give them both being and beauty. So
that if all virtue primarily consists in that affection of heart to
being, which is exercised in benevolence, or an inclination to its good,
then God’s virtue is so extended as to include a propensity, not only to
being actually existing and actually beautiful, but to possible being,
so as to incline him to give being beauty and happiness.
What is commonly called love of complacence, presupposes
beauty. For it is no other than delight in beauty; or complacence in the
person or being beloved for his beauty. If virtue be the beauty of an
intelligent being, and virtue consists in love, then it is a plain
inconsistency to suppose that virtue primarily consists in any love to
its object for its beauty; either in a love of complacence, which
is delight in a being for his beauty, or in a love of benevolence, that
has the beauty of its object for its foundation. For that would be to
suppose, that the beauty of intelligent beings primarily consists in
love to beauty; or that their virtue first of all consists in their love
to virtue. Which is an inconsistency, and going in a circle. Because it
makes virtue, or beauty of mind, the foundation or first motive of that
love wherein virtue originally consists, or wherein the very first
virtue consists; or it supposes the first virtue to be the consequence
and effect of virtue. Which makes the first virtue, both the ground and
the consequence, both cause and effect of itself. Doubtless virtue
primarily consists in something else besides any effect or consequence
of virtue. If virtue consists primarily in love to virtue, then virtue,
the thing loved, is the love of virtue: so that virtue must consist in
the love of the love of virtue. And if it be inquired, what that virtue
is, which virtue consists in the love of the love of, it must be
answered, it is the love of virtue. So that there must be the love of
the love of the love of virtue — and so on ad infinitum. For
there is no end of going back in a circle. We never come to any
beginning or foundation; it is without beginning and hangs on nothing. —
Therefore if the essence of virtue, or beauty of mind,
lies in love, or a disposition to love, it must primarily consist in
something different both from complacence, which is a delight in
beauty, and also from any benevolence that has the beauty of its object
for its foundation. Because it is absurd to say that virtue is primarily
and first of all the consequence of itself. For this makes virtue
primarily prior to itself.
Nor can virtue primarily consist in gratitude; or one being’s
benevolence to another for his benevolence to him. Because this implies
the same inconsistency. For it supposes a benevolence prior to
gratitude, which is the cause of gratitude. The first benevolence
cannot be gratitude. Therefore there is room left for no other
conclusion than that the primary object of virtuous love is being simply
considered; or that true virtue primarily consists, not in love to any
particular beings, because of their virtue or beauty, nor in gratitude,
because they love us; but in a propensity and union of heart to being
simply considered; exciting absolute benevolence, if I may so call it,
to being in general. I say, true virtue primarily consists in this. For
I am far from asserting that there is no true virtue in any other love
than this absolute benevolence. But I would express what appears to me
to be the truth on this subject, in the following particulars.
The first object of a virtuous benevolence is being, simply
considered: and if being, simply considered, be its object, then being
in general is its object; and what it has an ultimate propensity to, is
the highest good of being in general. And it will seek the good of every
individual being unless it be conceived as not consistent with the
highest good of being in general. In which case the good of a particular
being, or some beings, may be given up for the sake of the highest good
of being in general. And particularly, if there be any being statedly
and irreclaimably opposite, and an enemy to being in general, then
consent and adherence to being in general will induce the truly virtuous
heart to forsake that enemy, and to oppose it.
Further, if BEING, simply considered, be the first object of a truly
virtuous benevolence, then that being who has most of being, or has the
greatest share of existence, other things being equal, so far as such a
being is exhibited to our faculties, will have the greatest share of the
propensity and benevolent affection of the heart. I say, "other things
being equal," especially because there is a secondary object of virtuous
benevolence, that I shall take notice of presently, which must be
considered as the ground or motive to a purely virtuous benevolence.
Pure benevolence in its first exercise is nothing else but being’s
uniting consent, or propensity to being; and inclining to the general
highest good, and to each being, whose welfare is consistent with the
highest general good, in proportion to the degree of existence,
understand, "other things being equal."
The second object of a virtuous propensity of heart is benevolent
being. A secondary ground of pure benevolence is virtuous benevolence
itself in its object. When anyone under the influence of general
benevolence, sees another being possessed of the like general
benevolence, this attaches his heart to him, and draws forth greater
love to him, than merely his having existence: because so far as the
being beloved has love to being in general, so far his own being is, as
it were, enlarged, extends to, and in some sort comprehends, being in
general: and therefore, he that is governed by love to being in general,
must of necessity have complacence in him, and the greater degree of
benevolence to him, as it were out of gratitude to him for his love to
general existence, that his own heart is extended and united to, and so
looks on its interest as its own. It is because his heart is thus united
to being in general, that he looks on a benevolent propensity to being
in general, wherever he sees it, as the beauty of the being in whom it
is; an excellency, that renders him worthy of esteem, complacence, and
the greater good will. — But several things may be noted more
particularly concerning this secondary ground of a truly virtuous love.
1. That loving a being on this ground necessarily arises from pure
benevolence to being in general, and comes to the same thing. For he
that has a simple and pure good will to general existence, must love
that temper in others, that agrees and conspires with itself. A spirit
of consent to being must agree with consent to being. That which truly
and sincerely seeks the good of others, must approve of, and love, that
which joins with him in seeking the good of others.
2. This secondary ground of virtuous love, is the thing wherein true
moral or spiritual beauty primarily consists. Yea, spiritual beauty
consists wholly in this, and in the various qualities and exercises of
mind which proceed from it, and the external actions which proceed from
these internal qualities and exercises. And in these things consists all
true virtue, viz. in this love of being, and the qualities and acts
which arise from it.
3. As all spiritual beauty lies in these virtuous principles and
acts, so it is primarily on this account they are beautiful, viz. that
they imply consent and union with being in general. This is the primary
and most essential beauty of every thing that can justly be called by
the name of virtue, or is any moral excellency in the eye of one that
has a perfect view of things. I say, the "primary and most essential
beauty," because there is a secondary and inferior sort of beauty; which
I shall take notice of afterwards.
4. This spiritual beauty, which is but a secondary ground of a
virtuous benevolence, is the ground, not only of benevolence, but
complacence, and is the primary ground of the latter; that is, when the
complacence is truly virtuous. Love to us in particular, and kindness
received, may be a secondary ground: but this is the primary objective
foundation of it.
5. It must be noted, that the degree of the amiableness of true
virtue, primarily consisting in consent and a benevolent propensity of
heart to being in general, is not in the simple proportion of the degree
of benevolent affection seen, but in a proportion compounded of the
greatness of the benevolent being or the degree of being and the degree
of benevolence. One that loves being in general, will necessarily value
good will to being in general, wherever he sees it. But if he sees the
same benevolence in two beings, he will value it more in two, than in
one only. Because it is a greater thing, more favorable to being in
general, to have two beings to favor it, than only one of them. For
there is more being that favors being: both together having more being
than one alone. So, if one being be as great as two, has as much
existence as both together, and has the same degree of general
benevolence, it is more favorable to being in general, than if there
were general benevolence in a being that had but half that share of
existence. As a large quantity of gold, with the same quality, is more
valuable than a small quantity of the same metal.
6. It is impossible that anyone should truly relish this beauty,
consisting in general benevolence, who has not that temper himself. I
have observed, that if any being is possessed of such a temper, he will
unavoidably be pleased with the same temper in another. And it may in
like manner be demonstrated, that it is such a spirit, and nothing else,
which will relish such a spirit. For if a being, destitute of
benevolence, should love benevolence to being in general, it would prize
and seek that for which it had no value. For how should one love and
value a disposition to a thing, or a tendency to promote it, and for
that very reason, when the thing itself is what he is regardless of, and
has no value for, nor desires to have promoted.
CHAPTER II
Showing how that love, wherein true virtue, consists,
respects the Divine Being and created beings.
FROM what has been said, it is evident, that true virtue must chiefly
consist in LOVE TO GOD; the Being of beings, infinitely the greatest and
best. This appears, whether we consider the primary or secondary ground
of virtuous love. It was observed, that the first objective
ground of that love, wherein true virtue consists, is BEING simply
considered: and, as a necessary consequence of this, that being who has
the greatest share of universal existence has proportionably the
greatest share of virtuous benevolence, so far as such a being is
exhibited to the faculties of our minds, other things being equal. But
God has infinitely the greatest share of existence. So that all other
being, even the whole universe, is as nothing in comparison of the
Divine Being.
And if we consider the secondary ground of love, or moral
excellency, the same thing will appear. For as God is infinitely the
greatest Being, so he is allowed to be infinitely the most beautiful and
excellent: and all the beauty to be found throughout the whole creation,
is but the reflection of the diffused beams of that Being who has an
infinite fullness of brightness and glory. God’s beauty is infinitely
more valuable than that of all other beings upon both those accounts
mentioned, viz. the degree of his virtue, and the greatness
of his being, possessed of this virtue. And God has sufficiently
exhibited himself, both in his being, and his infinite greatness and
excellency: and has given us faculties, whereby we are capable of
plainly discovering his immense superiority to all other beings, in
these respects. Therefore, he that has true virtue, consisting in
benevolence to being in general, and in benevolence to
virtuous being, must necessarily have a supreme love to God, both of
benevolence and complacence. And all true virtue must radically and
essentially, and, as it were, summarily, consist in this. Because God is
not only infinitely greater and more excellent than all other being, but
he is the head of the universal system of existence; the foundation and
fountain of all being and all beauty; from whom all is perfectly
derived, and on whom all is most absolutely and perfectly dependent;
of whom, and through whom, and to whom is all being
and all perfection; and whose being and beauty are, as it were, the sum
and comprehension of all existence and excellence: much more than the
sun is the fountain and summary comprehension of all the light and
brightness of the day.
If it should be objected, that virtue consists primarily in
benevolence, but that our fellow creatures, and not God, seem to be the
most proper objects of our benevolence; inasmuch as our goodness does
not extent to God, and we cannot be profitable to him. — To
this I answer,
1. A benevolent propensity of heart is exercised, not only in
seeking to promote the happiness of the being towards whom it is
exercised, but also in rejoicing in his happiness. Even as
gratitude for benefits received will not only excite endeavors to
requite the kindness we receive, by equally benefiting our benefactor,
but also if he be above any need of us, or we have nothing to bestow,
and are unable to repay his kindness, it will dispose us to rejoice in
his prosperity.
2. Though we are not able to give anything to God, which we have of
our own, independently; yet we may be the instruments of promoting
his glory, in which he takes a true and proper delight. (As
was shown at large in the former treatise, on God’s end in creating the
world, Chap. I. sect. 4. whither I must refer the reader for a more full
answer to this objection.) — Whatever influence such an objection may
seem to have on the minds of some, yet is there any that owns the being
of a God, who will deny that any benevolent affection is due to God, and
proper to be exercised towards him? If no benevolence is to be
exercised towards God, because we cannot profit him, then, for the same
reason, neither is gratitude to be exercised towards him for his
benefits to us; because we cannot requite him. But where is the man, who
believes a God and a providence, that will say this?
There seems to be an inconsistency in some writers on morality, in
this respect, that they do not wholly exclude a regard to the Deity
out of their schemes of morality, but yet mention it so slightly, that
they leave me room and reason to suspect they esteem it a less important
and subordinate part of true morality; and insist on benevolence to the
created system, in such a manner as would naturally lead one to
suppose they look upon that as by far the most important and essential
thing in their scheme. But why should this be? If true virtue consists
partly in a respect to God, then doubtless it consists chiefly in
it. If true morality requires that we should have some regard, some
benevolent affection to our Creator, as well as to his creatures, then
doubtless it requires the first regard to be paid to him; and that he be
every way the supreme object of our benevolence. If his being above our
reach, and beyond all capacity of being profited by us, does not hinder,
but that nevertheless he is the proper object of our love, then it does
not hinder that he should be loved according to his dignity, or
according to the degree in which he has those things wherein worthiness
of regard consists, so far as we are capable of it. But this worthiness,
none will deny, consists in these two things, greatness and moral
goodness. And those that own a God, do not deny that he
infinitely exceeds all other beings in these. If the Deity is to be
looked upon as within that system of beings which properly terminates
our benevolence, or belonging to that whole, certainly he is to be
regarded as the head of the system, and the chief part of
it: if it be proper to call him a part, who is infinitely more
than all the rest, and in comparison of whom, and without whom, all the
rest are nothing, either as to beauty or existence. And therefore
certainly, unless we will be atheists, we must allow that true virtue
does primarily and most essentially consist in a supreme love to God;
and that where this is wanting, there can be no true virtue.
But this being a matter of the highest importance, I shall say
something further to make it plain, that love to God is most essential
to true virtue; and that no benevolence whatsoever to other beings can
be of the nature of true virtue without it.
And therefore, let it be supposed, that some beings, by natural
instinct, or by some other means, have a determination of mind to union
and benevolence to a particular person, or private system,
which is but a small part of the universal system of being: and that
this disposition or determination of mind is independent on, or not
subordinate to, benevolence to being in general. Such a determination,
disposition, or affection of mind is not of the nature of true virtue.
This is allowed by all with regard to self-love; in which good will
is confined to one single person only. And there are the same reasons
why any other private affection or good will, though extending to a
society of persons independent of, and insubordinate to, benevolence to
the universality, should not be esteemed truly virtuous. For,
notwithstanding it extends to a number of persons, which taken together
are more than a single person, ye the whole falls infinitely short of
the universality of existence; and if put in the scales with it, has no
greater proportion to it than a single person.
However, it may not be amiss more particularly to consider the
reasons why private affections, or good will limited to a particular
circle of beings, falling infinitely short of the whole existence, and
not dependent upon it, nor subordinate to general benevolence, cannot be
of the nature of true virtue.
1. Such a private affection, detached from general benevolence, and
independent on it, as the case may be, will be against general
benevolence, or of a contrary tendency; and will set a person against
general existence, and make him an enemy to it. As it is with
selfishness, or when a man is governed by a regard to his own private
interest, independent of regard to the public good, such a temper
exposes a man to act the part of an enemy to the public. As, in every
case wherein his private interest seems to clash with the public; or in
all those cases wherein such things are presented to his view, that suit
his personal appetites or private inclinations, but are inconsistent
with the good of the public. On which account, a selfish, contracted,
narrow spirit is generally abhorred, and is esteemed base and sordid.
But if a man’s affection takes in half a dozen more, and his regards
extend so far beyond his own single person as to take in his children
and family; or if it reaches further still to a larger circle, but falls
infinitely short of the universal system, and is exclusive of being in
general; his private affection exposes him to the same thing, viz. to
pursue the interest of its particular object in opposition to general
existence: which is certainly contrary to the tendency of true virtue;
yea, directly contrary to the main and most essential thing in its
nature, the thing on account of which chiefly its nature and tendency is
good. For the chief and most essential good that is in virtue, is its
favoring being in general. Now certainly, if private affection to a
limited system had in itself the essential nature of virtue, it would be
impossible that it should, in any circumstance whatsoever, have a
tendency and inclination directly contrary to that wherein the essence
of virtue chiefly consists.
2. Private affection, if not subordinate to general affection, is not
only liable, as the case may be, to issue in enmity to being in general,
but has a tendency to it as the case certainly is, and must necessarily
be. For he that is influenced by private affection, not subordinate to a
regard to being in general, sets up its particular or limited object
above being in general; and this most naturally tends to enmity against
the latter, which is by right the great supreme, ruling, and absolutely
sovereign object of our regard. Even as the setting up another prince as
supreme in any kingdom, distinct from the lawful sovereign, naturally
tends to enmity against the lawful sovereign. Wherever it is
sufficiently published, that the supreme, infinite, and
all-comprehending Being requires a supreme regard to himself; and
insists upon it, that our respect to him should universally rule in our
hearts, and every other affection be subordinate to it, and this under
the pain of his displeasure (as we must suppose it is in the world of
intelligent creatures, if God maintains a moral kingdom in the world),
then a consciousness of our having chosen and set up another prince to
rule over us, and subjected our hearts to him, and continuing in such an
act, must unavoidably excite enmity, and fix us in a stated opposition
to the Supreme Being. This demonstrates, that affection to a private
society or system, independent on general benevolence, cannot be of the
nature of true virtue. For this would be absurd, that it has the nature
and essence of true virtue, and yet at the same time has a tendency
opposite to true virtue.
3. Not only would affection to a private system, insubordinate to a
regard to being in general, have a tendency to oppose the supreme object
of virtuous affection, as its effect and consequence, but would become
itself an opposition to that object. Considered by itself in its nature,
detached from its effects, it is an instance of great opposition to the
rightful supreme object of our respect. For it exalts its private object
above the other great and infinite object; and sets that up as supreme,
in opposition to this. It puts down being in general, which is
infinitely superior in itself, and infinitely more important, in an
inferior place; yea, subjects the supreme general object to this private
infinitely inferior object: which is to treat it with great contempt,
and truly to act in opposition to it, and to act in opposition to the
true order of things, and in opposition to that which is infinitely the
supreme interest; making this supreme and infinitely important interest,
as far as in us lies, to be subject to, and dependent on, an interest
infinitely inferior. This is to act the part of an enemy to it. He that
takes a subject, and exalts him above his prince, sets him as supreme
instead of the prince, and treats his prince wholly as a subject,
therein acts the part of an enemy to his prince.
From these things, I think, it is manifest, that no affection limited
to any private system, not depending on nor subordinate to being in
general, can be of the nature of true virtue; and this, whatever the
private system be, let it be more or less extensive, consisting of a
greater or smaller number of individuals, so long as it contains an
infinitely little part of universal existence, and so bears no
proportion to the great all-comprehending system. An consequently, that
no affection whatsoever to any creature, or any system of created
beings, which is not dependent on, nor subordinate to, a propensity or
union of the heart to God, the supreme and infinite Being, can be of the
nature of true virtue.
From hence also it is evident, that the divine virtue, or the virtue
of the divine mind, must consist primarily in love to himself, or in the
mutual love and friendship which subsists eternally and necessarily
between the several persons in the Godhead, or that infinitely strong
propensity there is in these divine persons one to another. There is no
need of multiplying words, to prove that it must be thus, on a
supposition that virtue, in its most essential nature, consists in
benevolent affection or propensity of heart towards being in general;
and so flowing out to particular beings, in a greater or lesser degree,
according to the measure of existence and beauty which they are
possessed of. It will also follow, from the foregoing things, that God’s
goodness and love to created beings, is derived from and subordinate to
his love to himself.
With respect to the manner in which a virtuous love in created
beings, one to another, is dependent on, and derived from love to God,
this will appear by a proper consideration of what has been said; that
it is sufficient to render love to any created being, virtuous, if it
arise from the temper of mind wherein consists a disposition to love God
supremely. Because it appears from what has been already observed, all
that love to particular beings, which is the fruit of a benevolent
propensity of heart to being in general is virtuous love. But, as has
been remarked, a benevolent propensity of heart to being in general, and
a temper or disposition to love God supremely, are in effect the same
thing. Therefore, if love to a created being comes from that temper, or
propensity of the heart, it is virtuous. However, every particular
exercise of love to a creature may not sensibly arise from any exercise
of love to God, or an explicit consideration of any similitude,
conformity, union, or relation to God, in the creature beloved.
The most proper evidence of love to a created being, arising from
that temper of mind wherein consists a supreme propensity of heart to
God, seems to be the agreeableness of the kind and degree of our love to
God’s end in our creation, and in the creation of all things, and the
coincidence of the exercise of our love, in their manner, order, and
measure, with the manner in which God himself exercises love to the
creature in the creation and government of the world, and the way in
which God, as the first cause and supreme disposer of all things, has
respect to the creature’s happiness, in subordination to himself as his
own supreme end. For the true virtue of created beings is doubtless
their highest excellency, and their true goodness, and that by which
they are especially agreeable to the mind of their Creator. But the true
goodness of a thing, must be its agreeableness to its end, or its
fitness to answer the design for which it was made. Therefore, they are
good moral agents, whose temper of mind, or propensity of heart, is
agreeable to the end for which God made moral agents. But, as has been
shown, the last end for which God has made moral agents, must be the
last end for which God has made all things: it being evident, that the
moral world is the end of the rest of the world; the inanimate and
unintelligent world being made for the rational and moral world, as much
as a house is prepared for the inhabitants.
By these things, it appears, that a truly virtuous mind, being as it
were under the sovereign dominion of love to God, above all things,
seeks the glory of God, and makes this his supreme, governing, and
ultimate end. This consists in the expression of God’s perfections in
their proper effects, — the manifestation of God’s glory to created
understandings, — the communications of the infinite fullness of God to
the creature, — the creature’s highest esteem of God, love to, and joy
in him, — and in the proper exercises and expressions of these. And so
far as a virtuous mind exercises true virtue in benevolence to created
beings, it chiefly seeks the good of the creature; consisting in its
knowledge or view of God’s glory and beauty, its union with God,
conformity and love to him, and joy in him. And that disposition of
heart, that consent, union, or propensity of mind to being in general,
which appears chiefly in such exercises, is VIRTUE, truly so called; or
in other words, true GRACE and real HOLINESS. And no other disposition
or affection but this is of the nature of true virtue.
Corollary. Hence it appears, that those schemes of religion or moral
philosophy, which — however well in some respects they may treat of
benevolence to mankind, and other virtues depending on it, yet — have
not a supreme regard to God, and love to him, laid as the foundation,
and all other virtues handled in a connection with this, and in
subordination to it, are not true schemes of philosophy, but are
fundamentally and essentially defective. And whatever other benevolence
or generosity towards mankind, and other virtues, or moral
qualifications which go by that name, any are possessed of, that are not
attended with a love to God, which is altogether above them, and to
which they are subordinate, and on which they are dependent, there is
nothing of the nature of true virtue or religion in them. And it may be
asserted in general, that nothing is of the nature of true virtue, in
which God is not the first and the last; or which, with regard to their
exercises in general, have not their first foundation and source in
apprehensions of God’s supreme dignity and glory, and in answerable
esteem and love of him, and have not respect to God as the supreme end.
CHAPTER III
Concerning the secondary and inferior kind of beauty.
THOUGH what has been spoken of is, alone, justly esteemed the true
beauty of moral agents, or spiritual beings; this alone being what would
appear beautiful in them upon a clear and comprehensive view of things;
and therefore alone is the moral amiableness of beings that have
understanding and will, in the eyes of him that perfectly sees all
things as they are; yet there are other qualities, other sensations,
propensities, and affections of mind, and principles of action, that
often obtain the epithet of virtuous, and by many are supposed to
have the nature of true virtue; which are entirely of a distinct nature
from this, and have nothing of that kind; and therefore are erroneously
confounded with real virtue.
That consent, agreement, or union of being to being, which has been
spoken of, viz. the union or propensity of minds to mental
or spiritual existence, may be called the highest and primary beauty;
being the proper and peculiar beauty of spiritual and moral beings,
which are the highest and first part of the universal system, for whose
sake all the rest has existence. Yet there is another, inferior,
secondary beauty, which is some image of this, and which is not peculiar
to spiritual beings, but is found even in inanimate things; which
consists in a mutual consent and agreement of different things, in form,
manner, quantity, and visible end or design; called by the various names
of regularity, order, uniformity, symmetry, proportion, harmony, etc.
Such is the mutual agreement of the various sides of a square, or
equilateral triangle, or of a regular polygon. Such is, as it were, the
mutual consent of the different parts of the periphery of a circle, or
surface of a sphere, and of the corresponding parts of an ellipsis. Such
is the agreement of the colors, figures, dimensions, and distances of
the different spots on a chess board. Such is the beauty of the figures
on a piece of chintz or brocade. Such is the beautiful proportion of the
various parts of a human body, or countenance. And such is the sweet
mutual consent and agreement of the various notes of a melodious tune.
This is the same that Mr. Hutchinson, in his Treatise on Beauty,
expresses by uniformity in the midst of variety. Which is no other than
the consent or agreement of different things, in form, quantity, etc. He
observes, that the greater the variety is in equal uniformity the
greater the beauty. Which is no more than to say, the more there are of
different mutually agreeing things, the greater is the beauty. And the
reason of that is, because it is more considerable to have many things
consent one with another, than a few only.
The beauty which consists in the visible fitness of a thing to its
use, and unity of design, is not a distinct sort of beauty from this.
For it is to be observed, that one thing which contributes to the beauty
of the agreement and proportion of various things, is their relation one
to another; which connects them, and introduces them together into view
and consideration, and whereby one suggests the other to the mind, and
the mind is led to compare them, and so to expect and desire agreement.
Thus the uniformity of two or more pillars, as they may happen to be
found in different places, is not an equal degree of beauty, as
that uniformity in so many pillars in the corresponding parts of the
same building. So means and an intended effect are related one to
another. The answerableness of a thing to its use is only the proportion
and fitness of a cause, or means, to a visibly designed effect, and so
an effect suggested to the mind by the idea of the means. This kind of
beauty is not entirely different from that beauty which there is in
fitting a mortise to its tenon. Only when the beauty consists in unity
of design, or the adaptedness of a variety of things to promote one
intended effect, in which all conspire, as the various parts of an
ingenious complicated machine, there is a double beauty, as there
is a twofold agreement and conformity. First, there is the agreement of
the various parts to the designed end or effect, all the various
particulars agree one with another as the general medium of their union,
whereby they, being united in this third, are all united one to another.
The reason, or at least one reason, why God has made this kind of
mutual agreement of things beautiful and grateful to those intelligent
beings that perceive it, probably is, that there is in it some image of
the true, spiritual, original beauty, which has been spoken of;
consisting in being’s consent to being, or the union of spiritual beings
in a mutual propensity and affection of heart. The other is an image of
this, because by that uniformity diverse things become as it were one,
as it is in this cordial union. And it pleases God to observe analogy in
his works, as is manifest in fact, in innumerable instances; and
especially to establish inferior things with analogy to superior. Thus,
in how many instances has he formed brutes in analogy to the nature of
mankind! and plants, in analogy to animals, with respect to the manner
of their generation, nutrition, etc. And so he has constituted the
external world in analogy to the spiritual world, in numberless
instances; as might be shown, if it were necessary, and here were a
proper place for it. — Why such analogy in God’s works pleases him, it
is not needful now to inquire. It is sufficient that he makes an
agreement of different things, in their form, manner, measure, etc. to
appear beautiful, because here is some image of a higher kind of
agreement and consent of spiritual beings. It has pleased him to
establish a law of nature, by virtue of which the uniformity and mutual
correspondence of a beautiful plant, and the respect which the various
parts of a regular building seem to have one to another, and their
agreement and union, and the consent or concord of the various notes of
a melodious tune, should appear beautiful; because therein is some image
of the consent of mind, of the different members of a society or system
of intelligent beings, sweetly united in a benevolent agreement of
heart.
And here by the way, I would further observe, probably it is with
regard to this image or resemblance, which secondary beauty has of true
spiritual beauty, that God has so constituted nature, that the
presenting of this inferior beauty, especially in those kinds of it
which have the greatest resemblance of the primary beauty, as the
harmony of sounds, and the beauties of nature, have a tendency to assist
those whose hearts are under the influence of a truly virtuous temper,
to dispose them to the exercises of divine love, and enliven in them a
sense of spiritual beauty.
From what has been said we may see, that there are two sorts of
agreement or consent of one thing to another. (1.) There is a cordial
agreement; that consists in concord and union of mind and heart: which,
if not attended (viewing things in general) with more discord than
concord, is true virtue, and the original or primary beauty, which is
the only true moral beauty. (2.) There is a natural union
or agreement; which, though some image of the other, is entirely a
distinct thing; the will, disposition, or affection of the heart having
no concern in it, but consisting only in uniformity and consent of
nature, form, quantity, etc. (As before described), wherein lies an
inferior secondary sort of beauty, which may in distinction from the
other, be called natural beauty. This may be sufficient to let
the reader know how I shall hereafter use the phrases cordial and
natural agreement; and moral, spiritual, divine, and primary
original beauty, and secondary or natural beauty. Concerning this
latter, the inferior kind of beauty, the following things may be
observed:
1. The cause why secondary beauty is grateful to men, is only
a law of nature, which God has fixed, or an instinct he
has given to mankind; and not their perception of the same thing which
God is pleased to regard as the ground or rule by which he has
established such a law of nature. This appears in two things.
(1.) That which God respects, as the ground of this law of
nature, whereby things having a secondary beauty are made grateful to
men, is their mutual agreement and proportion, in measure, form,
etc. But, in many instances, persons that are gratified and affected
with this beauty, do not reflect on that particular agreement and
proportion, which, according to the law of nature, is the ground and
rule of beauty in the case, yea, are ignorant of it. Thus, a man may be
pleased with the harmony of the notes in a tune, and yet know nothing of
that proportion or adjustment of the notes, which, by the law of nature,
is the ground of the melody. He knows not, that the vibrations in one
note regularly coincide with the vibrations in another; that the
vibrations of a note coincide in time with two vibrations of its octave;
and that two vibrations of a note coincide with three of its fifth, etc.
— Yea, he may not know, that there are vibrations of the air in the
case, or any corresponding motions in the organs of hearing, in the
auditory nerve, or animal spirits. — So a man may be affected and
pleased with a beautiful proportion of the features in a face, and yet
not know what that proportion is, or in what measures, quantities, and
distances it consists. In this, therefore, a sensation of secondary
beauty differs from a sensation of primary and spiritual
beauty, consisting in a spiritual union and agreement. What makes the
latter grateful, is perceiving the union itself. It is the
immediate view of that wherein the beauty fundamentally lies, that is
pleasing to the virtuous mind.
(2.) God, in establishing such a law — that mutual natural agreement
of different things, in form, quantity, etc. should appear beautiful or
grateful to men — seems to have had regard to the resemblance
there is in such a natural agreement, to that spiritual, cordial
agreement, wherein original beauty consists. But it is not any
reflection upon, or perception of, such a resemblance, that is the
reason why such a form or state of objects appear beautiful to men: but
their sensation of pleasure, on a view of this secondary beauty, is
immediately owing to the law God has established, or the instinct he has
given.
2. Another thing observable concerning this kind of beauty, is, that
it affects the mind more (other things being equal) when taken notice of
in objects which are of considerable importance, than in little
trivial matters. Thus, the symmetry of the parts of a human body, or
countenance, affects the mind more than the beauty of a flower. So the
beauty of the solar system, more than as great and as manifold an order
and uniformity in a tree. And the proportions of the parts of a church,
or a palace, more than the same proportions in some little slight
compositions, made to please children.
3. Not only uniformity and proportion, etc. of different things, is
requisite, in order to this inferior beauty; but also some relation
or connection of the things thus agreeing one with another. As the
uniformity of likeness of a number of pillars, scattered hither and
thither, does not constitute beauty, or at least by no means in an equal
degree, as uniformity in pillars connected in the same building, in
parts that have relation one to another. So, if we see things
unlike, and very disproportioned, in distant places, which have
no relation to each other, this excites no such idea of deformity, as
disagreement, inequality, or disproportion in things related and
connected; and the nearer the relation, and the stricter the connection,
so much the greater and more disgustful is the deformity, consisting in
their disagreement.
4. This secondary kind of beauty, consisting in uniformity and
proportion, not only takes place in material and external things, but
also in things immaterial; and is, in very many things, plain and
sensible in the latter, as well as the former. And when it is so, there
is no reason why it should not be grateful to them that behold it, in
these as well as the other, by virtue of the same sense, or the same
determination of mind, to be gratified with uniformity and proportion.
If uniformity and proportion be the things that affect and appear
agreeable to this sense of beauty, then why should not uniformity and
proportion affect the same sense in immaterial things as well as
material, if there be equal capacity of discerning it in both? and
indeed more in spiritual things (coeteris paribus) as
these are more important than things merely external and material?
This is not only reasonable to be supposed, but is evident in fact,
in numberless instances. There is a beauty of order in society, besides
what consists in benevolence, or can be referred to it, which is of the
secondary kind. As, when the different members of society have
all their appointed office, place, and station, according to their
several capacities and talents, and everyone keeps his place, and
continues in his proper business. In this there is a beauty, not of a
different kind from the regularity of a beautiful building, or piece of
skillful architecture, where the strong pillars are set in their proper
place, the pilasters in a place fit for them, the square pieces of
marble in the pavement, the panels, partitions, and cornices, etc. in
places proper for them. As the agreement of a variety of things in one
common design, — as of the parts of a building, or complicated machine,
— is one instance of that regularity which belongs to the secondary kind
of beauty, so there is the same kind of beauty in what is called
wisdom, consisting in the united tendency of thoughts, ideas, and
particular volitions, to one general purpose: which is a distinct thing
from the goodness of that general purpose, as being useful and
benevolent.
There is a beauty in the virtue called justice, which consists
in the agreement of different things, that have relation to one another,
in nature, manner, and measure; and therefore is the very same sort of
beauty with that uniformity and proportion, which is observable in those
external and material things that are esteemed beautiful. There is a
natural agreement and adaptedness of things that have relation one to
another, and an harmonious corresponding of one thing with another. He
who from his will does evil to others, should receive evil
from the will of him or them whose business it is to take care of the
injured, and to act in their behalf, in proportion to the evil of
his doings. Things are in natural regularity and mutual agreement, in a
literal sense, when he whose heart opposes the general system, should
have the hearts of that system, or the heart of the rule of the system,
against him; and, in consequence, should receive evil, in proportion to
the evil tendency of the opposition of his heart. So, there is an
agreement in nature and measure, when he that loves has the proper
returns of love; when he that from his heart promotes the good of
another, has his good promoted by the other; for there is a kind of
justice in becoming gratitude.
Indeed most of the duties incumbent on us, if well considered, will
be found to partake of the nature of justice. There is some
natural agreement of one thing to another; some adaptedness of the agent
to the object; some answerableness of the act to the occasion; some
equality and proportion in things of a similar nature, and of a direct
relation one to another. So it is in relative duties; duties of children
to parents, and of parents to children; duties of husbands and wives;
duties of rulers and subjects; duties of friendship and good
neighborhood; and all duties that we owe to God, our creator, preserver,
and benefactor; and all duties whatsoever, considered as required by
God, and as what are to be performed with a regard to Christ.
It is this secondary kind of beauty, which Mr. Wollaston seems to
have had in his eye, when he resolved all virtue into an agreement of
inclinations, volitions, and actions with truth. He evidently has
respect to the justice there is in virtues and duties; which
consists in one being expressing such affections, and using such a
conduct, towards another, as has a natural agreement and proportion to
what is in them, and what we receive from them: which is as much a
natural conformity of affection and action with its ground, object, and
occasion, as that which is between a true proposition and the thing
spoken of in it.
But there is another and higher beauty in true virtue, and in all
truly virtuous dispositions and exercises, than what consists in any
uniformity or similarity of various things; viz. the union of
heart to being in general, or to God, the Being of beings,
which appears in those virtues; and of which those virtues, when true,
are the various expressions or effects. Benevolence to being in general,
or to being simply considered, is entirely a distinct thing from
uniformity in the midst of variety, and is a superior kind of beauty.
It is true, that benevolence to being in general, will naturally
incline to justice, or proportion in the exercises of it. He that loves
being, simply considered, will naturally, other things being equal, love
particular beings, in a proportion compounded of the degree of
being, and the degree of virtue, or benevolence to being, which they
have. And that is to love beings in proportion to their dignity. For the
dignity of any being consists in those two things. Respect to being, in
this proportion, is the first and most general kind of justice; which
will produce all the subordinate kinds. So that, after benevolence to
being in general exists, the proportion which is observed in
objects may be the cause of the proportion of benevolence to
those objects: but no proportion is the cause or ground of
the existence of such a thing as benevolence to being. The tendency of
objects to excite that degree of benevolence, which is proportionable to
the degree of being, etc. is the consequence of the existence of
benevolence, and not the ground of it. Even as a tendency of
bodies one to another, by mutual attraction, in proportion to the
quantity of matter, is the consequence of the being of such a thing as
mutual attraction; and not attraction the effect of proportion.
By this it appears, that just affections and acts have a
beauty in them, distinct from and superior to the uniformity and
equality there is in them: for which, he that has a truly virtuous
temper, relishes and delights in them. And that is the expression and
manifestation there is in them of benevolence to being in general. And
besides this, there is the agreement of justice to the will and
command of God; and also something in the tendency and consequences of
justice, agreeable to general benevolence, as the glory of God, and the
general good. Which tendency also makes it beautiful to a truly virtuous
mind. So that the tendency of general benevolence to produce justice,
also the tendency of justice to produce effects agreeable to general
benevolence, both render justice pleasing to a virtuous mind. And it is
on these accounts chiefly, that justice is grateful to a virtuous
taste, or a truly benevolent heart. But though it be true, that the
uniformity and proportion there is in justice, is grateful to a
benevolent heart, as this uniformity and proportion tends to the general
good; yet that is no argument that there is no other beauty in it
but its agreeing with benevolence. For so the external regularity and
order of the natural world gratifies benevolence, as it is profitable,
and tends to the general good; but that is no argument that there is no
other sort of beauty in external uniformity and proportion, but
only its suiting benevolence, by tending to the general good.
5. From all that has been observed concerning this secondary
kind of beauty, it appears, that the disposition, which consists in a
determination of mind to approve and be pleased with this beauty,
considered simply and by itself, has nothing of the nature of true
virtue, and is entirely a different thing from a truly virtuous taste.
For it has been shown, that this kind of beauty is entirely
diverse from the beauty of true virtue, whether it takes place in
material or immaterial things; and therefore it will follow, that a
taste of this kind of beauty is entirely a different thing from a
taste of true virtue. Who will affirm, that a disposition to approve of
the harmony of good music, or the beauty of a square, or equilateral
triangle, is the same with true holiness, or a truly virtuous
disposition of mind? It is a relish of uniformity and
proportion among spiritual things which are equally discerned. It is
virtuous to love true virtue, as that denotes an agreement of the heart
with virtue. But it agues no virtue for the heart to be pleased with
that which is entirely distinct from it.
Though it be true, that there is some analogy in it to
spiritual and virtuous beauty — as far as material things can have
analogy to things spiritual, of which they can have no more than a
shadow — yet, as has been observed, men do not approve it because
of any such analogy perceived. And not only reason but experience
plainly shows, that men’s approbation of this sort of beauty does not
spring from any virtuous temper, and has no connection with virtue. For
otherwise their delight in the beauty of squares, and cubes, and regular
polygons, in the regularity of buildings, and the beautiful figures in a
piece of embroidery, would increase in proportion to men’s virtue; and
would be raised to a great height in some eminently virtuous or holy
men; but would be almost wholly lost in some others that are very
vicious and lewd. It is evident in fact, that a relish of these things
does not depend on general benevolence, or any benevolence at all
to any being whatsoever, any more than a man’s loving the taste of
honey, or his being pleased with the smell of a rose. A taste of this
inferior beauty in things immaterial, is one thing which has been
mistaken by some moralists, for a true virtuous principle, supposed to
be implanted naturally in the hearts of all mankind.
CHAPTER IV
Of Self-Love, and its various Influence, to
cause Love to others, or the Contrary.
MANY assert that all love arises from self-love. In order to
determine this point, it should be clearly determined what is meant by
self-love. Self-love, I think, is generally defined "a man’s love of his
own happiness;" which is short, and may be thought very plain: but in
reality is an ambiguous definition, as the expression his own, is
equivocal, and liable to be taken in two very different senses. For a
man’s own happiness may either be taken universally, for all the
happiness or pleasure of which the mind is in any regard the subject, or
whatever is grateful and pleasing to men: or it may be taken for the
pleasure a man takes in his own proper, private, and separate good. And
so self-love may be taken two ways:
1. It may be taken for the same as his loving whatsoever is pleasing
to him. Which comes only to this, that self-love is a man’s liking, and
being suited and pleased in that which he likes, and which pleases him;
or, that it is a man’s loving what he loves. For whatever a man loves,
that thing is grateful and pleasing to him, whether that be his own
peculiar happiness, or the happiness of others. And if this be all that
they mean by self-love, no wonder they suppose that all love may be
resolved into self-love. For it is undoubtedly true, that whatever a man
loves, his love may be resolved into his loving what he loves. —
If by self-love is meant nothing else but a man’s loving what is
grateful or pleasing to him, and being averse to what is disagreeable,
this is calling that self-love, which is only a general capacity
of loving or hating; or a capacity of being either pleased or
displeased; which is the same thing as a man’s having a faculty of will.
For if nothing could be either pleasing or displeasing, agreeable to
disagreeable to a man, then he could incline to nothing, and will
nothing. But if he is capable of having inclination, will and choice,
then what he inclines to and chooses, is grateful to him, whatever that
be; whether it be his own private good, the good of his neighbors, or
the glory of God. And so far as it is grateful or pleasing to him, so
far it is a part of his pleasure, good, or happiness.
But if this be what is meant by self-love, there is an impropriety
and absurdity even in the putting of the question, Whether all our love,
or our love to each particular object of our love, does not arise from
self-love? For that would be the same as to inquire, Whether the reason
why our love is fixed on such and such particular objects, is not, that
we have a capacity of loving some things" This may be a general reason
why men love or hate any thing at all; and therein differ from stones
and trees, which love nothing and hate nothing. But it can never be a
reason why men’s love is placed on such and such objects. That a man in
general loves and is pleased with happiness, or has a capacity of
enjoying happiness, cannot be the reason why such and such things become
his happiness: as for instance, why the good of his neighbor, or the
happiness and glory of God, is grateful and pleasing to him, and so
becomes a part of his happiness.
Or if what they mean who say that all love comes from self-love be
not that our loving such and such particular persons and things arises
from our love to happiness in general, but from a love to our own
happiness, which consists in these objects; so, the reason why we
love benevolence to our friends or neighbors is because we love our
happiness, consisting in their happiness, which we take pleasure in: —
still the notion is absurd. For here the effect is made the cause of
that of which it is the effect: our happiness, consisting in the
happiness of the person beloved, is made the cause of our love to that
person. Whereas the truth plainly is, that our love to the person is the
cause of our delighting, or being happy in his happiness. How comes our
happiness to consist in the happiness of such as we love, but by our
hearts being first united to them in affection, so that we as it were
look on them as ourselves, and so on their happiness as our own? Men who
have benevolence to others have pleasure when they see others’
happiness, because seeing their happiness gratifies some inclination
that was in their hearts before. They before inclined to their
happiness; which was by benevolence or good-will; and therefore, when
they see their happiness, their inclination is suited, and they are
pleased. But the being of inclinations and appetites is prior to any
pleasure in gratifying these appetites.
2. Self-love, as the phrase is used in common speech, most commonly
signifies a man’s regard to his confined private self, or love to
himself with respect to his private interest.
By private interest I mean that which most immediately
consists in those pleasures, or pains, that are personal. For
there is a comfort, and a grief, that some have in others’ pleasures or
pains; which are in others originally, but are derived to them,
or in some measure become theirs, by virtue of a benevolent union of
heart with others. And there are other pleasures and pains that are
originally our own, and not what we have by such a participation
with others. Which consist in perceptions agreeable or contrary to
certain personal inclinations implanted in our nature; such as the
sensitive appetites and aversions. Such also is the disposition or the
determination of the mind to be pleased with external beauty, and with
all inferior, secondary beauty, consisting in uniformity, proportion,
etc. whether in things external or internal, and to dislike the contrary
deformity. Such also is the natural disposition in men to be pleased in
a perception of their being the objects of the honor and love of others,
and displeased with others’ hatred and contempt. For pleasures and
uneasiness of this kind are doubtless as much owing to an immediate
determination of the mind by a fixed law of our nature, as any of the
pleasures or pains of external sense. And these pleasures are properly
of the private and personal kind; being not by any participation of the
happiness or sorrow of others, through benevolence. It is evidently mere
self-love that appears in this disposition. It is easy to see that a
man’s love to himself will make him love to himself, and hate
hatred to himself. And as God has constituted our nature self-love
is exercised in no one disposition more than in this. Men probably are
capable of much more pleasure and pain through this determination of the
mind, than by any other personal inclination or aversion whatsoever.
Though perhaps we do not so very often see instances of extreme
suffering by this means as by some others, yet we often see evidences of
men’s dreading the contempt of others more than death; and by such
instances many conceive something what men would suffer if universally
hated and despised; and may reasonably infer something of the greatness
of the misery that would arise under a sense of universal abhorrence, in
a great view of intelligent being in general, or in a clear view of the
Deity, as incomprehensibly and immensely great, so that all other beings
are as nothing and vanity — together with a sense of his immediate
continual presence, and an infinite concern with him and dependence upon
him — and living constantly in the midst of most clear and strong
evidences and manifestations of his hatred and contempt. These things
may be sufficient to explain what I mean by private interest; in
regard to which self-love, most properly so called, is immediately
exercised.
And here I would observe, that if we take self-love in this sense, so
love to some others may truly be the effect of self-love;
i. e. according to the common method and order which is
maintained in the laws of nature. For no created thing has power to
produce an effect any otherwise than by virtue of the laws of nature.
Thus that a man should love those who are of his party, and who are
warmly engaged on his side, and promote his interest, is the natural
consequence of a private self-love. Indeed there is no metaphysical
necessity in the nature of things, that because a man loves himself and
regards his own interest, he therefore should love those that love him
and promote his interest, i. e. to suppose it to be otherwise
implies no contradiction. It will not follow from any absolute
metaphysical necessity, that because bodies have solidity, cohesion, and
gravitation towards the center of the earth, therefore a weight
suspended on the beam of a balance should have greater power to
counterbalance a weight on the other side, when at a distance from the
fulcrum, than when it is near. It implies no contradiction that it
should be otherwise; but only as it contradicts that beautiful
proportion and harmony, which the Author of Nature observes in the laws
of nature he has established. Neither is there any absolute necessity,
that because there is an internal mutual attraction of the parts of the
earth, or any other sphere, whereby the whole becomes one solid coherent
body, therefore other bodies that are around it should also be attracted
by it, and those that are nearest be attracted most. But according to
the order and proportion generally observed in the laws of nature, one
of these effects is connected with the other, so that it is justly
looked upon as the same power of attraction in the globe of the earth,
which draws bodies about the earth towards its center, with that which
attracts the parts of the earth themselves one to another; only exerted
under different circumstances. — By a like order of nature, a man’s love
to those that love him, is no more than a certain expression or effect
of self-love. — No other principle is needful in order to the effect, if
nothing intervenes to countervail the natural tendency of self-love. —
Therefore there is no more true virtue in a man thus loving his friends
merely from self-love, than there is in self-love itself, the principle
from whence it proceeds. So a man being disposed to hate those that hate
him, or to resent injuries done him, arises from self-love, in like
manner as loving those that love us, and being thankful for kindness
shown us.
But it is said by some, that it is apparent there is some other
principle concerned in exciting the passions of gratitude and anger
besides self-love, viz. a moral sense, or sense of moral
beauty and deformity, determining the minds of all mankind to approve
of, and be pleased with virtue, and to disapprove of vice, and behold it
with displicence; and that their seeing or supposing this moral beauty
or deformity in the kindness of a benefactor, or opposition of an
adversary, is the occasion of these affections of gratitude or anger.
Otherwise, why are not these affections excited in us towards inanimate
things that do us good or hurt? Why do not we experience gratitude to a
garden, or fruitful field? And why are we not angry with a tempest, or
blasting mildew, or an overflowing stream? We are very differently
affected towards those that do us good from the virtue of generosity, or
hurt us from the vice of envy and malice than towards things that hurt
or help us, which are destitute of reason and will. Concerning this I
would make several remarks.
1. Those who thus argue, that gratitude and anger cannot proceed from
self-love, might argue in the same way, and with equal reason,
that neither can these affections arise from love to others:
which is contrary to their own scheme. They say that the reason why we
are affected with gratitude and anger towards men, rather than
things without life, is moral sense: which they say is the effect of
that principle of benevolence or love to others, or love to the public,
which is naturally in the hearts of all mankind. But now, I might say,
according to their own way of arguing, gratitude and anger cannot arise
from love to others, or love to the public, or any sense of mind that is
the fruit of public affection. For how differently are we affected
towards those that do good or hurt to the public from understanding and
will, and public motive, from what we are towards such inanimate things
as the sun and the clouds, that do good to the public by enlightening
and enlivening beams and refreshing showers; or mildew, and an
overflowing stream, that does hurt to the public by destroying the
fruits of the earth? Yea, if such a kind of argument be good, it will
prove that gratitude and anger cannot arise from the united influence of
self-love and public love, or moral sense arising from public affection.
For if so, why are we not affected towards inanimate things that are
beneficial or injurious both to us and the public, in the same manner as
to them that are profitable or hurtful to both on choice and design, and
from benevolence or malice?
2. On the supposition, that men love those who love them, and are
angry with those that hate them, from the natural influence of
self-love; it is not at all strange that the Author of Nature, who
observes order, uniformity, and harmony in establishing its laws, should
so order, that it should be natural for self-love to cause the mind to
be affected differently towards exceedingly different objects; and that
it should cause our heart to extend itself in one manner towards
inanimate things, which gratify self-love without sense or will, and in
another manner towards beings which we look upon as having
understanding and will, like ourselves, and exerting these faculties in
our favor, and promoting our interest from love to us. No wonder, seeing
we love ourselves, that it should be natural to us to extend something
of that same kind of love which we have for ourselves, to them who are
the same kind of beings as ourselves, and comply with the inclinations
of our self-love, by expressing the same sort of love towards us.
3. If we should allow that to be universal, that in gratitude and
anger there is the exercise of some kind of moral sense — as it is
granted there is something that may be so called — all the moral sense
that is essential to those affections, is a sense of desert; which is to
be referred to that sense of justice before spoken of, consisting
in an apprehension of that secondary kind of beauty that lies in
uniformity and proportion; which solves all the difficulty in the
objection. Others’ love and kindness to us, or their ill-will and
injuriousness, appear to us to deserve our love or our
resentment. Or in other words, it seems to us no other than just,
that as they love us and do us good, we also should love them and do
them good. And so it seems just, that when others’ hearts oppose
us, and they from their hearts do us hurt, our hearts should oppose
them, and that we should desire themselves may suffer in like manner as
we have suffered, i. e. there appears to us to be a natural
agreement, proportion, and adjustment between these things; which is
indeed a kind of moral sense, or sense of beauty in moral things.
But, as was before shown, it is a moral sense of a secondary
kind, and is entirely different from a sense or relish of the original:
essential beauty of true virtue; and may be without any principle of
true virtue in the heart. Therefore, doubtless, it is a great mistake
in any to suppose, that the moral sense which appears and is exercised
in a sense of desert, is the same thing as a love of virtue, or a
disposition and determination of mind to be pleased with true virtuous
beauty, consisting in public benevolence. Which may be further confirmed
if it be considered, that even with respect to a sense of justice
or desert, consisting in uniformity, and agreement between
others’ actions towards us and our actions towards them, in a way of
well-doing or of ill-doing, it is not absolutely necessary to the being
of these passions of gratitude and anger, that there should be any
notion of justice in them, in any public or general view of things: as
will appear by what shall be next observed.
4. Those authors who hold that the moral sense which is natural to
all mankind, consists in a natural relish of the beauty of virtue, and
so arises from a principle of true virtue implanted by nature in the
hearts of all, hold that true virtue consists in public benevolence.
Therefore, if the affections of gratitude and anger necessarily imply
such a moral sense as they suppose, then these affections imply some
delight in the public good, and an aversion of the mind to public evil.
And if so, then every time a man feels anger for opposition, or
gratitude for any favor, there must be at least a supposition of a
tendency to public injury in that opposition, and a tendency to public
benefit in the favor that excites his gratitude. But how far is this
from being true? For instance; a ship’s crew enter into a conspiracy
against the master, to murder him, and run away with the ship, and turn
pirates: but before they bring their matters to ripeness for execution,
one of them repents, and opens the whole design; whereupon the rest are
apprehended and brought to justice. The crew are enraged with him that
has betrayed them, and earnestly seek opportunity to revenge
themselves upon him. And for an instance of gratitude; a gang of
robbers that have long infested the neighboring country, have a
particular house whither they resort, and where they meet from time to
time to divide their booty, and hold their consultations for carrying on
their pernicious designs. The magistrates and officers of the country,
after many fruitless endeavors to discover their secret place of resort,
at length are well-informed where it is, and are prepared with
sufficient force to surprise them, and seize them all at the place of
rendezvous, at an hour appointed when they understand they will all be
there. A little before the arrival of the appointed hour, while the
officers with their bands are approaching, some person is so kind to
these robbers, as to give them notice of their danger, so as just to
give them opportunity to escape. They are thankful to him, and
give him a handful of money for his kindness. Now in such instances I
think it is plain, that there is no supposition of a public injury
in that which is the occasion of their anger; yea, they know the
contrary. Nor is there any supposition of public good in that
which excites their gratitude; neither has public benevolence, or
moral sense, consisting in a determination to approve of what is for the
public good, any influence at all in the affair. And though there be
some affection, besides a sense of uniformity and proportion, that has
influence in such anger and gratitude, it is not public affection
or benevolence, but private affection; yea, that affection which
is to the highest degree private, consisting in a man’s love of
his own person.
5. The passion of anger, in particular, seems to have been
unluckily chosen as a medium to prove a sense and determination to
delight in virtue, consisting in benevolence natural to all mankind. For
if that moral sense which is exercised in anger, were that which arose
from a benevolent temper of heart, being no other than a sense or relish
of the beauty of benevolence, one would think a disposition to anger
should increase at least in some proportion, as a man had more of
a sweet, benign, and benevolent temper: which seems contrary to
experience, which shows that the less men have of benevolence, and the
more they have of a contrary temper, the more are they disposed to anger
and deep resentment of injuries.
And though gratitude be that which many speak of as a certain
noble principle of virtue, which God has implanted in the hearts of all
mankind; and though it be true there is a gratitude that is truly
virtuous: and the want of gratitude, or an ungrateful temper, is
truly vicious, and argues an abominable depravity of heart; yet I
think, what has been observed may serve to convince such as impartially
consider it, not only that not all anger, or hating those which hate us,
but also that not all gratitude, or loving those which love us, arises
from a truly virtuous benevolence of heart.
Another sort of affections which may be properly referred to
self-love as its source, and which might be expected to be the fruit of
it, according to the general analogy of nature’s laws, is that of
affections to such as are near to us by the ties of nature. Such are
those of whose beings we have been the occasion, in which we have a very
peculiar propriety, and whose circumstances, even from the beginning of
their existence, many ways lead them to a high esteem of us, and to
treat us with great dependence, submission and compliance. These the
constitution of the world makes to be united in interest, and
accordingly to act as one, in innumerable affairs, with a communion in
each other’s affections, desires, cares, friendships, enmities, and
pursuits. As to the opinion of those who ascribe the natural affection
there is between parents and children to a particular instinct of
nature, I shall take notice of it afterwards.
And as men may love persons and things from self-love, so may their
love to qualities and characters arise from the same
source. Some represent this, as though there were need of a great degree
of metaphysical refining to make it out, that men approve of others from
self-love, whom they hear of at a distance, or read of in history, or
see represented on the stage, from whom they expect no profit or
advantage. But perhaps it is not considered, that what we approve of in
the first place is the character; and from the character we
approve the person. And is it a strange thing, that men should
from self-love like a temper or character, which in its nature and
tendency falls in with the nature and tendency of self-love; and which
we know by experience and self-evidence, without metaphysical refining
in the general tends to men’s pleasure and benefit? And on the contrary,
is it strange that any should dislike what they see tends to men’s pain
and misery? Is there need of a great degree of subtlety and abstraction
to make it out, that a child, who has heard and seen much of what is
calculated strongly to fix an idea of the pernicious, deadly nature of
the rattlesnake, should have an aversion to that species from self-love;
so as to have a degree of this aversion and disgust excited by seeing
even the picture of that animal? And that from the same self-love it
should be pleased with a lively representation of some pleasant fruit of
which it has often tasted the sweetness? Or with the image of some bird,
which it has always been told is innocent, and with whose pleasant
singing it has often been entertained? Yet the child neither fears being
bitten by the picture of the snake, nor expects to eat of the painted
fruit, or to hear the figure of the bird sing. I suppose none will think
it difficult to allow, that such an approbation or disgust of a child
may be accounted for from its natural delight in the pleasure, of
taste and hearing, and its aversion to pain and death,
through self-love, together with the habitual connection of these
agreeable or terrible ideas with the form and qualities of these
objects, the ideas of which are impressed on the mind of the child by
their images.
And where is the difficulty of allowing, that a person may hate the
general character of a spiteful and malicious man, for the like reason
as he hates the general nature of a serpent; knowing from reason,
instruction and experience, that malice in men is pernicious to mankind,
as well as spite or poison in a serpent? And if a man may from
self-love disapprove the vices of malice, envy, and others of that
sort, which naturally tend to the hurt of mankind, why may he not
from the same principle approve the contrary virtues of meekness,
peaceableness, benevolence, charity, generosity, justice, and the social
virtues in general; which he as easily and clearly knows, naturally tend
to the good of mankind? — It is undoubtedly true, that some have a love
to these virtues from a higher principle. But yet I think it is
certainly true, that there is generally in mankind a sort of approbation
of them, which arises from self-love.
Besides what has been already said, the same thing further appears
from this; that men commonly are most affected towards, and most highly
approve, those virtues which agree with their interest most,
according to their various conditions in life. We see that persons of
low condition are especially enamored with a condescending, accessible,
affable temper in the great; not only in those whose condescension has
been exercised towards themselves; but they will be peculiarly taken
with such a character when they have accounts of it from others, or when
they meet with it in history, or even in romance. The poor will most
highly approve and commend liberality. The weaker sex, who especially
need assistance and protection, will peculiarly esteem and applaud
fortitude and generosity in those of the other sex, of whom they read or
hear, or which they have represented to them on a stage. I think it
plain from what has been observed, that as men may approve and be
disposed to commend a benevolent temper from self-love; so the
higher the degree of benevolence is, the more may they approve of it.
This will account for some kind of approbation, from this principle,
even of love to enemies, viz. as a man loving his enemies is an
evidence of a high degree of benevolence of temper; the degree of it
appearing from the obstacles it overcomes. And it may be here observed,
that the consideration of the tendency and influence of self-love
may show, how men in general may approve of justice from another
ground, besides that approbation of the secondary beauty there is in
uniformity and proportion, which is natural to all. Men, from their
infancy, see the necessity of it, not only that it is necessary for
others or for human society; but they find the necessity of it for
themselves, in instances that continually occur; which tends to
prejudice them in its favor, and to fix a habitual approbation of it
from self-love.
Again, that aforementioned approbation of justice and desert, arising
from a sense of the beauty of natural agreement and proportion, will
have a kind of reflex, and indirect influence to cause men to approve
benevolence, and disapprove malice; as men see that he who hates and
injures others deserves to be hated and punished, and that he who is
benevolent, and loves others and does them good, deserves himself also
to be loved and rewarded by others, as they see the natural congruity or
agreement, and mutual adeptness of these things. And having always seen
this, malevolence becomes habitually connected in the mind with the idea
of being hated and punished, which is disagreeable to self-love; and the
idea of benevolence is habitually connected and associated with the idea
of being loved and rewarded by others, which is grateful to self-love.
And by virtue of this association of ideas, benevolence itself becomes
grateful, and the contrary displeasing.
Some vices may become in a degree odious by the influence of
self-love, through a habitual connection of ideas of contempt with it;
contempt being what self-love abhors. So it may often be with
drunkenness, gluttony, sottishness, cowardice, sloth, niggardliness. The
idea of contempt becomes associated with the idea of such vices, both
because we are used to observe that these things are commonly objects of
contempt, and also find that they excite contempt in ourselves. Some of
them appear marks of littleness, i. e. of small abilities, and
weakness of mind, and insufficiency for any considerable effects among
mankind. By others, men’s influence is contracted into a narrow sphere,
and by such means persons become of less importance, and more
insignificant. And things of little importance are naturally little
accounted of. And some of these ill qualities are such as mankind find
it their interest to treat with contempt, as they are very hurtful to
human society. — There are no particular moral virtues whatsoever, but
what in some or other of these ways, and most of them in several, come
to have some kind of approbation from self-love, without the
influence of a truly virtuous principle; nor any particular vices, but
what, by the same means, meet with some disapprobation.
This kind of approbation and dislike, through the joint influence of
self-love and association of ideas, is in many vastly
heightened by education. This is the means of a strong, close,
and almost irrefragable association, in innumerable instances of
ideas, which have no connection any other way than by education; and is
the means of greatly strengthening that association or connection which
persons are led into by other means: as anyone would be convinced,
perhaps more effectually than in most other ways, if they had
opportunity of any considerable acquaintance with American savages and
their children.
CHAPTER V
Of natural conscience, and the moral sense
THERE is yet another disposition or principle, of great importance,
natural to mankind; which, if we consider the consistence and harmony of
nature’s laws, may also be looked upon as, in some sort, arising from
self-love, or self-union; and that is, a disposition in man to be uneasy
in a consciousness of being inconsistent with himself, and as it were
against himself in his own actions. This appears particularly in the
inclination of the mind to be uneasy in the consciousness of doing that
to others, which he should be angry with them for doing to him, if they
were in his case, and he in theirs; or of forbearing to do that to them,
which he would be displeased with them for neglecting to do to him.
I have observed, from time to time, that in pure love to others,
i.e. love not arising from self-love, there is an union of the heart
with others; a kind of enlargement of the mind, whereby it so extends
itself as to take others into a man’s self: and therefore it implies a
disposition to feel, to desire, and to act as though others were one
with ourselves. So, self-love implies an inclination to feel and
act as one with ourselves; which naturally renders a sensible
inconsistency with ourselves, and self-opposition in what we ourselves
choose and do, to be uneasy to the mind: which will cause uneasiness of
mind to be the consequence of a malevolent and unjust behavior towards
others, and a kind of disapprobation of acts of this nature, and an
approbation of the contrary. To do that to another, which we should be
angry with him for doing to us, and to hate a person for doing that to
us, which we should incline to and insist on doing to him, if we were
exactly in the same case, is to disagree with ourselves, and contradict
ourselves. It would be for ourselves both to choose and adhere to, and
yet to refuse and utterly reject, the very same thing. No wonder this is
contrary to nature. No wonder, that such a self-opposition, and inward
war with a man’s self, naturally begets unquietness, and raises
disturbance in his mind.
Thus approving of actions, because we therein act as in agreement
with ourselves; and thus disapproving, and being uneasy in the
consciousness of disagreeing with ourselves, in what we do, is
quite a different thing from approving or disapproving actions because
in them we are united with being in general: which is loving or hating
actions from a sense of the primary beauty of true virtue, and of the
odiousness of sin. The former of these principles is private; the latter
is public, and truly benevolent in the highest sense. The former — an
inclination to agree with ourselves — is a natural principle: but the
latter — an agreement or union of heart to the great system, and to God
the head of it, who is all and all in it — is a divine principle.
In that uneasiness now mentioned, consists very much of that inward
trouble men have from reflections of conscience: and when they are free
from this uneasiness, and are conscious to themselves, that in what they
have acted towards others, they have done the same which they should
have expected from them in the same case, then they have what is called
peace of conscience, with respect to these actions. And there is also an
approbation of conscience, respecting the conduct of others towards
ourselves. As when we are blamed, condemned, or punished by them, and
are conscious to ourselves that if we were in their case, and they in
ours, we should in like manner blame, condemn and punish them. And thus
men’s consciences may justify God’s anger and condemnation. When they
have the ideas of God’s greatness, their relation to him, the benefits
they have received from him, the manifestations he has made of his will
to them, etc. strongly impressed on their minds, a consciousness
is excited within them of those resentments, which would be occasioned
in themselves by an injurious treatment in any wise parallel.
There certainly is such a consciousness as this oftentimes within
men, implied in the thoughts and views of the mind, of which, perhaps on
reflection, they could hardly give an account. Unless men’s consciences
are greatly stupified, it is naturally and necessarily suggested; and
habitually, spontaneously, instantaneously, and, as it were, insensibly,
arises in the mind. And the more so for this reason, that we have no
other way to conceive of anything which other persons act or suffer, but
by recalling and exciting the ideas of what we ourselves are conscious
we have found in our own minds; and by putting the ideas which we obtain
by this means in the place of another; or, as it were, substituting
ourselves in their place. Thus we have no conception, what
understanding, perception, love, pleasure, pain, or desire are in
others; but by putting ourselves as it were in their stead, or
transferring the ideas we obtain of such things in our own minds by
consciousness into their place; making such an alteration, as to
degree and circumstances, as what we observe of them requires. It is
thus in all moral things that we conceive of in others; and
indeed in every thing we conceive of, belonging to others, more than
shape, size, complexion, situation, and motion of their bodies. And this
is the only way that we come to be capable of having ideas of any
perception or act even of the Godhead. We never could have any notion
what understanding or volition, love or hatred are, either in created
spirits or in God, if we had never experienced what understanding and
volition, love and hatred, are in our own minds. Knowing what they are
by consciousness, we can deny limits, and remove changeableness
and other imperfections, and ascribe them to God.
But though men in thinking of others do as it were put themselves in
their place, they do it so habitually, instantaneously, and without set
purpose, that they can scarce give any account of it, and many would
think it strange if they were told of it. In all a man’s thoughts of
another person, in whatever he apprehends of his moral conduct to others
or to himself, if it be in loving or hating him, approving or condemning
him, rewarding or punishing him, he necessarily, as it were, puts
himself in his stead; and therefore the more naturally, easily, and
quietly sees whether he, being in his place, should approve or condemn,
be angry or pleased as he is.
Natural conscience consists in these two things.
1. In that disposition to approve or disapprove the moral treatment
which passes between us and others, from a determination of the mind to
be easy or uneasy, in a consciousness of our being consistent or
inconsistent with ourselves. Hereby we have a disposition to approve
our own treatment of another, when we are conscious to ourselves that we
treat him so as we should expect to be treated by him, were he in our
case and we in his; and to disapprove of our own treatment of
another, when we are conscious that we should be displeased with the
like treatment from him, if we were in his case. So we in our
consciences approve of another’s treatment of us, if we are conscious to
ourselves, that if we were in his case, and he in ours, we should think
it just to treat him as he treats us; and disapprove his treatment of
us, when we are conscious that we should think it unjust, if we were in
his case. Thus men’s consciences approve or disapprove the sentence of
their judge, by which they are acquitted or condemned. But this is not
all that is in natural conscience. Besides this approving or
disapproving from uneasiness as being inconsistent with ourselves, there
is another thing that must precede it, and be the foundation of it. As
for instance, when my conscience disapproves my own treatment of
another, being conscious to myself, that were I in his case, I should be
displeased and angry with him for so treating me; the question might be
asked, What would be the ground of that supposed disapprobation,
displeasure, and anger, which I am conscious would be in me in that
case? Therefore,
2. The other thing which belongs to the approbation or disapprobation
of natural conscience, is the sense of desert which was spoken of
before; consisting, as was observed, in a natural agreement, proportion,
and harmony, between malevolence or injury, and resentment and
punishment; or between loving and being loved, between showing kindness
and being rewarded, etc. Both these kinds of approving or disapproving,
concur in the approbation or disapprobation of conscience: the one
founded on the other. Thus, when a man’s conscience disapproves of his
treatment of his neighbor, in the first place, he is conscious, that if
he were in his neighbor’s stead, he should resent such treatment from a
sense of justice, or from a sense of uniformity and equality between
such treatment, and resentment, and punishment; as before explained. And
then, in the next place, he perceives, that therefore he is not
consistent with himself, in doing what he himself should resent in that
case; and hence disapproves it, as being naturally averse to opposition
to himself.
Approbation and disapprobation of conscience, in the sense now
explained, will extend to all virtue and vice; to every thing whatsoever
that is morally good or evil, in a mind which does not confine its view
to a private sphere, but will take things in general into its
consideration, and is free from speculative error. For, as all virtue or
moral good may be resolved into love to others, either God or creatures;
so, men easily see the uniformity and natural agreement there is between
loving others, and being accepted and favored by others. And all vice,
sin, or moral evil summarily consisting in the want of this love
to others, or in malevolence; so, men easily see the natural agreement
there is between hating and doing ill to others, and being hated by
them, and suffering ill from them, or from him that acts for all, and
has the care of the whole system. And as this sense of equality and
natural agreement extends to all moral good and evil; so, this lays a
foundation of an equal extent with the other kind of approbation and
disapprobation which is grounded upon it, arising from an aversion to
self-inconsistency and opposition. For in all cases of benevolence, or
the contrary, towards others, we are capable of putting ourselves in the
place of others, and are naturally led to do it; and so of being
conscious to ourselves, how we should like or dislike such treatment
from others. Thus natural conscience, if the understanding be properly
enlightened, and stupefying prejudices are removed, concurs with the law
of God, is of equal extent with it, and joins its voice with it in every
article.
And thus, in particular,, we may see in what respect this natural
conscience extends to true virtue, consisting in union of heart
to being in general, and supreme love to God. For, although it
sees not, or rather does not taste, its primary and essential
beauty, i.e. it tastes no sweetness in benevolence to being in
general, simply considered, for nothing but general benevolence itself
can do that, yet, this natural conscience, common to mankind, may
approve of it from that uniformity, equality, and justice,
which there is in it; and the demerit which is seen in the
contrary, consisting in the natural agreement between the contrary, and
being hated of being in general. Men, by natural conscience, may see the
justice, or natural agreement, there is in yielding all to God, as we
receive all from him; and the justice there is in being his that made
us, and willingly so, which is the same as being dependent on his will,
and conformed to it in the manner of our being; as we are for our
being itself, and in the conformity of our will to his, on whose will we
are universally and most perfectly dependent. There is also justice
in our supreme love to God; a natural agreement in our having a
supreme respect to him who exercises infinite goodness to us, and from
whom we receive all well-being. Besides, disagreement and discord
appears worse to natural sense in things nearly related, and of great
importance: and therefore it must appear very ill, as it respects the
infinite Being, and that infinitely great relation which there is
between the Creator and his creatures. And it is easy to conceive how
natural conscience should see the desert of punishment, in the contrary
of true virtue, viz. opposition and enmity to being in general.
For, this is only to see the natural agreement there is between
opposing being in general, and being opposed by being in general; with a
consciousness how, if we were infinitely great, we should expect to be
regarded according to our greatness, and should proportionably resent
contempt. This natural conscience, if well-informed, will approve
of true virtue, and will disapprove and condemn the want of it, and
opposition to it; and yet without seeing the true beauty of it. Yea, if
men’s consciences were fully enlightened, if they were delivered from
being confined to a private sphere, and brought to view, and consider
things in general, and delivered from being stupified by sensual objects
and appetites, as they will be at the day of judgment, they would
approve nothing but true virtue, nothing but general benevolence, and
those affections and actions that are consistent with it, and
subordinate to it. For they must see, that consent to being in general,
and supreme respect to the Being of beings, is most just; and that every
thing which is inconsistent with it, and interferes with it, or flows
from the want of it, is unjust, and deserves the opposition of universal
existence.
Thus has God established and ordered that this principle of
natural conscience, which, though it implies no such thing as actual
benevolence to being in general, nor any delight in such a principle,
simply considered, and so implies no truly spiritual sense or virtuous
taste, yet should approve and condemn the same things that are approved
and condemned by a spiritual sense or virtuous taste. And that moral
sense which is natural to mankind, so far as it is disinterested,
and not founded in association of ideas, is the same with this
natural conscience.
The sense of moral good and evil, and that disposition to approve
virtue, and disapprove vice, which men have by natural conscience, is
that moral sense so much insisted on in the writings of many of
late. A misunderstanding of this, seems to have misled those moralists
who have insisted on a disinterested moral sense, universal in
the world of mankind, as an evidence of a disposition to true virtue,
consisting in a benevolent temper, naturally implanted in the minds of
all men. Some of the arguments used by these writers, indeed prove, that
there is a moral sense or taste, universal among men, distinct from what
arises from self-love. Though I humbly conceive, there is some
confusion in their discourses on the subject, and not a proper
distinction observed in the instances of men’s approbation of virtue,
which they produce. Some of which are not to their purpose, being
instances of that approbation of virtue which arises from self-love. But
other instances prove, that there is a moral taste, or sense of moral
good and evil, natural to all, which do not properly arise from
self-love. Yet I conceive there are no instances of this kind which may
not be referred to natural conscience, and particularly to that
which I have observed to be primary in the approbation of natural
conscience, viz. a sense of desert, and approbation of
that natural agreement there is, in manner and measure, in justice.
But I think it is plain from what has been said, that neither this, nor
anything else wherein consists the sense of moral good and evil, which
there is in natural conscience, is of the nature of a truly virtuous
taste, or determination of mind to relish and delight in the essential
beauty of true virtue, arising from a virtuous benevolence of heart.
But if further appears from this; if the approbation of conscience
were the same with the approbation of the inclination of the heart,
or the natural disposition and determination of the mind to love and be
pleased with virtue, then approbation and condemnation of conscience
would always be in proportion to the virtuous temper of the mind;
or rather, the degree would be just the same. In that person who
had a high degree of a virtuous temper, therefore, the testimony of
conscience in favor of virtue would be equally full: But he who had but
little, would have as little a degree of the testimony of conscience for
virtue, and against vice. But I think the case is evidently otherwise.
Some men, through the strength of vice in their hearts, will go on and
sin against clearer light and stronger convictions of conscience than
others. If conscience, approving duty and disapproving sin, were the
same thing as the exercise of a virtuous principle of the heart, in
loving duty and hating sin, then remorse of conscience will be
the same thing as repentance; and just in the same degree as the
sinner feels remorse of conscience for sin, in the same degree is
the heart turned from the love of sin to the hatred of it,
inasmuch as they are the very same thing.
Christians have the greatest reason to believe, from the Scriptures,
that in the future day of the revelation of the righteous judgment of
God, when sinners shall be called to answer before their judge, and all
their wickedness, in all its aggravations, brought forth, and clearly
manifested in the perfect light of that day, and God will reprove them,
and set their sins in order before them, their consciences will be
greatly awakened and convinced, their mouths will be stopped, all
stupidity of conscience will be at an end, and conscience will have its
full exercise; and therefore their consciences will approve the
dreadful sentence of the judge against them; and seeing that they have
deserved so great a punishment, will join with the judge in condemning
them. And this, according to the notion I am opposing, would be the same
thing as their being brought to the fullest repentance; their
hearts being perfectly changed to hate sin and love holiness; and virtue
or holiness of heart in them will be brought to the most full and
perfect exercise. But how much otherwise have we reason to suppose it
will then be! Then the sin and wickedness of their heart will come to
its highest dominion and completest exercise; they shall be wholly left
of God, and given up to their wickedness, even as the devils are! When
God has done waiting on sinners, and his Spirit done striving with them,
he will not restrain their wickedness, as he does now. But sin shall
then rage in their hearts, as a fire no longer restrained or kept under.
It is proper for a judge when he condemns a criminal, to endeavor so to
set his guilt before him as to convince his conscience of the justice of
the sentence. This the Almighty will do effectually, and do to
perfection, so as most thoroughly to awaken and convince the conscience.
But if natural conscience, and the disposition of the heart to be
pleased with virtue, were the same, then at the same time that
the conscience was brought to its perfect exercise, the heart would be
made perfectly holy; or, would have the exercise of true virtue and
holiness in perfect benevolence of temper. But instead of this, their
wickedness will then be brought to perfection, and wicked men will
become very devils, and accordingly will be sent away as cursed into
everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels.
But supposing natural conscience to be what has been described, all
these difficulties and absurdities are wholly avoided. Sinners when they
see the greatness of the Being in contempt of whom they have lived with
rebellion and opposition, and have clearly set before them their
obligations to him, as their Creator, Preserver, Benefactor, etc.
together with the degree in which they have acted as enemies to him, may
have a clear sense of the desert of their sin, consisting in the
natural agreement there is between such contempt and opposition
of such a Being, and his despising and opposing them; between their
being and acting as so great enemies to such a God, and their
suffering the dreadful consequences of his being and acting as their
great enemy; and their being conscious within themselves of the degree
of anger, which would naturally arise in their own hearts in such a
case, if they were in the place and state of their judge. In order to
these things, there is no need of a virtuous benevolent temper,
relishing and delighting in benevolence, and loathing the contrary. The
conscience may see the natural agreement between opposing and
being opposed, between hating and being hated, without abhorring
malevolence from a benevolent temper of mind, or without loving
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