GLOSSARY
ANTINOMIAN:
one who believes that under the gospel dispensation of grace we are no longer
obligated to obey the moral law because faith alone is necessary for
salvation.
ARBITRARY: a choice of the will in the worst sense;
that is, in the sense of having no regard for reason, or for the nature and
relationships of moral agents.
ATONEMENT:
the governmental substitution of the sufferings of Christ for the punishment of
sinners. It is a covering of their
sins by his sufferings.
CAUSE:
the reason behind an effect or event.
CHOICE:
the act of the will in selecting an object, the ground, and reason for all
physical acts.
CONDITION:
an essential element, or that without which something could not exist. Not a cause, yet a necessary
element.
CONDITION
OF OBLIGATION: A condition of obligation in any particular form is an essential
element of obligation in that particular form. It is that, without which, obligation in
that form could not exist, and yet is not the fundamental reason for the
obligation, for example: Moral agency and knowledge.
CONSCIENCE:
the faculty or function that recognizes the conformity or nonconformity of our
heart and life to the moral law as it is revealed in our reason, and also awards
praise for conformity, and blame for nonconformity to the law. It also possesses a propelling or
impulsive power, by which it urges our conformity, and denounces our
nonconformity of will to moral law.
CONSCIOUSNESS
is the faculty or function of self‑knowledge. It is the faculty that recognizes our
own existence, mental actions, and states, together with the attributes of
freedom or necessity, belonging to those actions or states. “Consciousness is the mind in the act of
knowing itself.”
CONVERSION:
see regeneration.
DEATH:
as applied to the mind or heart in the Scriptures is a state of entire
sinfulness, of total depravity and alienation from God.
DESIRE:
a phenomenon of our soul, the longing for or wanting what the mind perceives to
be good or desirable. The existence
of constitutional desires is not sinful by themselves, however their unlawful
indulgence is.
DISINTERESTED
BENEVOLENCE: Love, willing what is good for its own sake; promoting good with no
ulterior motive. Not uninterested,
but without supreme self‑interest.
DIVINE
SOVEREIGNTY: The sovereignty of God consists in the independence of His will, in
consulting His own intelligence and discretion in the selection of His end,
and the means of accomplishing it.
In other words, the sovereignty of God is nothing else than infinite
benevolence directed by infinite knowledge.
ELECTION:
that all of Adam’s race, who are or ever will be saved, were from eternity past
chosen by God to eternal salvation, through the sanctification of their hearts
by faith in Christ. In other words,
they are chosen to salvation by means of sanctification. Their salvation is the end‑‑their
sanctification is a means. Both the
end and the means are elected, appointed, chosen; the means as really as the
end, and for the sake of the end.
ENTIRE
SANCTIFICATION: present, full obedience, or entire consecration to God.
EXECUTIVE
CHOICE, VOLITIONS: efforts put forth to secure the end.
FAITH:
It is an efficient state of mind, and therefore it must consist in embracing the
truth by the heart or will. It is
the will's closing in with the truths of the gospel. It is the soul's act of yielding itself
up, or committing itself to the truths of the evangelical system. It is a trusting in Christ, a committing
of the soul and the whole being to Him, in His various duties, functions, and
relationships to men. It is a
confiding in Him, and in what is revealed of Him, in His word and providence,
and by His Spirit.
FIRST
TRUTH: a truth universally and necessarily assumed by all moral agents, even
those who deny these truths in their doctrines.
FORGIVENESS:
Forgiveness implies previous condemnation, and consists in setting aside the
execution of an incurred penalty.
FREE‑WILL:
the faculty or power of moral agents to choose to decide between objects of
choice without force or necessity.
GOSPEL:
the good news that the mercy of God will withhold the deserved penalty for sin,
and the Grace of God will treat the sinner as if he had never sinned, in
consideration of the death and resurrection of Christ on condition of faith and
repentance in the sinner.
GOSPEL
JUSTIFICATION: it consists in a governmental decree of pardon or amnesty‑‑in
arresting and setting aside the execution of the incurred penalty of law‑‑in
pardoning and restoring to favor those who have sinned, and those whom the law
had pronounced guilty, and on whom it had passed the sentence of eternal death,
and rewarding them as if they had been righteous. It is not to be regarded as a forensic
or judicial proceeding. It is an
act of grace, not law.
GOVERNMENT:
the direction, guidance, control by, or in accordance with rule, or law. All government is, and must be, either
moral or physical.
GRACE:
the attribute of love disposed to give a blessing to a person who deserves the
opposite treatment.
GROUND:
the reason for something, the cause, the consideration.
GROUND
OF OBLIGATION: the consideration, which creates or imposes obligation, the
fundamental reason for the obligation, the importance of the object.
IMMUTABLE
- Not subject or susceptible to change..
INTELLECT:
the faculty that includes, among other functions, reason, conscience, and
self‑consciousness.
INTENTION:
choice.
LAW:
A Rule of Action: it applies to every kind of action, whether of matter or of
mind‑‑whether intelligent or unintelligent‑‑whether free or necessary
action.
LAW
OF LIBERTY: rule of action administered by motive and choice, moral law, not
pre‑determined.
LAW
OF CAUSE AND EFFECT: a rule of action imposed by force, law of cause and effect,
pre‑determined.
LEGAL
JUSTIFICATION: the pronouncement that the justified person is guiltless, or, in
other words, that he has not violated the law, that he has done only what he had
a legal right to do. An act of law,
not grace. A sinner cannot be
pronounced just in the eye of law, or be justified by deeds of law, or by the
law at all.
LOVE:
the commitment to promote the good of another for its own sake; disinterested
benevolence.
MEANS:
immediate objects or proximate ends of pursuit; actions taken to secure or
promote the end chosen.
MORAL
ACTION: strictly an act of the will only.
MORAL
AGENCY consists in possessing the powers, faculties, and feelings of a moral
agent and is universally a condition of moral obligation. The moral agent must have a soul
comprising a mind, emotions, and free‑will.
MORAL
DEPRAVITY: Moral depravity is the depravity of free‑will, not of the faculty
itself, but of its free action. It
consists in a violation of moral law.
Depravity of the will as a faculty, is, or would be physical and not
moral depravity, and would be depravity of substance, and not of free,
responsible choice. Moral depravity
is depravity of choice. It is a
choice in violation of moral law, moral right. It is synonymous with sin or
sinfulness. It is moral depravity,
because it consists in a violation of moral law, and because it has moral
character.
MORAL
GOVERNMENT: the declaration and administration of moral law. It is the government of free will by
motives as distinguished from the government of substance by force.
MORAL
GOVERNMENT, GROUNDS OF: Moral government is indispensable to the highest good of
the universe of moral agents. The
universe depends on this as a means of securing the highest good. This dependence is a good and sufficient
reason for the existence of moral government.
MORAL
GOVERNMENT, END OF: to promote the highest good, or blessedness of the
universe.
MORAL
LAW: that rule to which moral agents ought to conform all their voluntary
actions, and is enforced by sanctions equal to the importance of the
precept.
MORAL
PERFECTION: conformity to moral obligation.
OBEDIENCE:
the consent of the will to serve the dictates of another, either the demands of
our flesh for gratification, or the demands of our reason to conform to moral
law.
OBLIGATION:
idea of obligation is an idea of pure reason. It is a simple, rational concept, and
strictly speaking, cannot be defined since there are no terms more simple by
which it may be defined.
PARDON:
setting aside the penalty due for transgressing the law, an exercise of mercy by
the executive, not the judge.
Synonym: forgiveness.
PENALTY:
that misery or pain due as a sanction for transgressing the law.
PERFECTION:
conformity to what is intended or required.
PERFECTIONISM:
See Sinless Perfection.
PERMANENT
SANCTIFICATION: consists in being established, confirmed, preserved, and
continued in a state of sanctification or of entire consecration to God.
PERSEVERANCE:
that all who are at any time true saints of God are preserved by His grace and
Spirit through faith, in the sense that after regeneration, obedience is their
rule, and disobedience only the exception; and that being thus kept, they will
certainly be saved with an everlasting salvation.
PHYSICAL
DEPRAVITY: is commonly called disease.
It consists in a physical departure from the laws of health; a lapsed, or
fallen state, in which healthy organic action is not perpetuateed. When physical depravity is predicated of
mind, it means that the powers of the mind, either in substance, or because of
their connection with and dependence on the body, are in a diseased, lapsed,
fallen, degenerate state, so that the healthy action of those powers is not
perpetuateed. Physical depravity is
depravity of substance as opposed to depravity of the actions of free‑will and
can have no moral character.
PHYSICAL
GOVERNMENT: control, exercised by a law of cause and effect or force, as
distinguished from the law of free will, or liberty.
PHYSICAL
LAW: the order of sequence, in all the changes that occur under the law of cause
and effect, whether in matter or mind. I mean all changes whether of state or
action, that do not consist in the states or actions of free will.
PROXIMATE
CHOICE: choice of means.
PUBLIC
JUSTICE: consists in the promotion and protection of the public interests, by
such legislation and such an administration of law, as is demanded by the
highest good of the public.
REASON:
the faculty that intuits moral relationships and affirms moral obligation to act
in conformity with perceived moral relationships. It is the faculty that postulates all
the first truths of science whether mathematical, philosophical, theological, or
logical.
REGENERATION:
the same as the new birth. It is
designed to express primarily and principally the thing done, that is, the
making of a sinner holy, and expresses also the fact that God's agency
influences the change. Throw out
the idea of what is done, that is, the change of moral character in the subject,
and he would not be born again, he would not be regenerated, and it could not be
truly said that God had regenerated him.
Same as conversion.
REPENTANCE:
a change of choice, purpose, intention, in conformity with the dictates of the
intelligence. A turning from
sin to holiness, or more strictly, from a state of consecration to self to a
state of consecration to God, is the turning, the change of heart, or the
repentance that is required of all sinners.
REPROBATION:
that certain individuals are, in the fixed purpose of God, cast away, rejected
and eternally lost.
RETRIBUTIVE JUSTICE: Retributive justice consists in treating every subject of government according to his character. It depends on the intrinsic merit or demerit of each individual, and deals with him accordingly.
SANCTIFICATION:
a state of consecration to God. To
sanctify is to set apart to a holy use ‑ to consecrate a thing to the service of
God.
SELFISHNESS:
the obedience of the will to the impulses of the sensibility. It is a spirit of
self‑gratification. The will
seeks to gratify the desires and tendencies for the pleasure of
gratification. Self‑gratification
is sought as an end, and as the supreme end. It is preferred to the claims of God and
the good of others.
SENSIBILITY:
the faculty or susceptibility of feeling.
All sensation, desire, emotion, passion, pain, pleasure, and in short,
every kind and degree of feeling is a phenomenon of this faculty.
SIN:
a voluntary transgression of the moral law; a spirit of self‑seeking, or a
disposition to seek good for self on condition of its relationship to self, and
not impartially and disinterestedly.
SINLESS
PERFECTION: [also called PERFECTIONISM] A theological view that holds that a
believer can “arrive” at a state in which (1.) his walk in obedience and
holiness is not dependant on the Grace of God, and that (2.) he no longer has
the ability to sin. Finney rejected
this view entirely.
TEMPTATION:
the demand of the sensibilities for gratification, contrary to that end to which
the heart is devoted.
TOTAL
DEPRAVITY: moral depravity of the unregenerate is without any mixture of moral
goodness or virtue, that while they remain unregenerate, they never in any
instance, nor in any degree, exercise true love to God and to man.
ULTIMATE
CHOICE: choosing an object for its own sake, or for its importance.
UNBELIEF:
the soul's withholding confidence from truth and the God of truth. The heart’s rejection of evidence, and
refusal to be influenced by it. The
will in the attitude of opposition to truth perceived, or evidence
presented.
WILL:
“by will I mean the heart,” the faculty or power of moral agents to choose. See choice.
WISDOM:
choosing the best ends, and in the use of the most appropriate means to
accomplish the end chosen.
WONDERFUL:
amazing, filled with wonder, astonishment.