| |
Put them in mind to be subject to principalities and
powers, to obey magistrates, to be ready to every good work.--Titus iii.
1.
The great Creator, having designed the human race for
society, has made us dependent on one another for happiness. He has so
constituted us that it becomes both our duty and interest to seek the public
good; and that we may be the more firmly engaged to promote each other's
welfare, the Deity has endowed us with tender and social affections, with
generous and benevolent principles: hence the pain that we feel in seeing an
object of distress; hence the satisfaction that arises in relieving the
afflictions, and the superior pleasure which we experience in communicating
happiness to the miserable. The Deity has also invested us with moral powers
and faculties, by which we are enabled to discern the difference between right
and wrong, truth and falsehood, good and evil; hence the approbation of mind
that arises upon doing a good action, and the remorse of conscience which we
experience when we counteract the moral sense and do that which is evil. This
proves that, in what is commonly called a state of nature, we are the subjects
of the divine law and government; that the Deity is our supreme magistrate, who
has written his law in our hearts, and will reward or punish us according as we
obey or disobey his commands. Had the human race uniformly persevered in a
state of moral rectitude, there would have been little or no need of any other
law besides that which is written in the heart,--for every one in such a state
would be a law unto himself. There could be no occasion for enacting or
enforcing of penal laws; for such are not made for the righteous man, but
for the lawless and disobedient, for the ungodly, and for sinners, for the
unholy and profane, for murderers of fathers and murderers of mothers, for
manslayers, for whoremongers, for them that defile themselves with mankind, for
men-stealers, for liars, for perjured persons, and if there be any other thing
that is contrary to moral rectitude and the happiness of mankind. The
necessity of forming ourselves into politic bodies, and granting to our rulers
a power to enact laws for the public safety, and to enforce them by proper
penalties, arises from our being in a fallen and degenerate state. The
slightest view of the present state and condition of the human race is
abundantly sufficient to convince any person of common sense and common honesty
that civil government is absolutely necessary for the peace and safety of
mankind; and, consequently, that all good magistrates, while they faithfully
discharge the trust reposed in them, ought to be religiously and
conscientiously obeyed. An enemy to good government is an enemy not only to his
country, but to all mankind; for he plainly shows himself to be divested of
those tender and social sentiments which are characteristic of a human temper,
even of that generous and benevolent disposition which is the peculiar glory of
a rational creature. An enemy to good government has degraded himself below
the rank and dignity of a man, and deserves to be classed with the lower
creation. Hence we find that wise and good men, of all nations and religions,
have ever inculcated subjection to good government, and have borne their
testimony against the licentious disturbers of the public peace.
Nor has Christianity been deficient in this capital point.
We find our blessed Saviour directing the Jews to render to Caesar the things
that were Caesar's; and the apostles and first preachers of the gospel not only
exhibited a good example of subjection to the magistrate, in all things that
were just and lawful, but they have also, in several places in the New
Testament, strongly enjoined upon Christians the duty of submission to that
government under which Providence had placed them. Hence we find that those who
despise government, and are not afraid to speak evil of dignities, are, by the
apostles Peter and Jude, classed among those presumptuous, self-willed sinners
that are reserved to the judgment of the great day. And the apostle Paul judged
submission to civil government to be a matter of such great importance, that he
thought it worth his while to charge Titus to put his hearers in mind to be
submissive to principalities and powers, to obey magistrates, to be ready to
every good work; as much as to say, none can be ready to every good work, or be
properly disposed to perform those actions that tend to promote the public
good, who do not obey magistrates, and who do not become good subjects of civil
government. If, then, obedience to the civil magistrates is so essential to the
character of a Christian, that without it he cannot be disposed to perform
those good works that are necessary for the welfare of mankind,--if the
despisers of governments are those presumptuous, self-willed sinners who are
reserved to the judgment of the great day,--it is certainly a matter of the
utmost importance to us all to be thoroughly acquainted with the nature and
extent of our duty, that we may yield the obedience required; for it is
impossible that we should properly discharge a duty when we are strangers to
the nature and extent of it.
In order, therefore, that we may form a right judgment of
the duty enjoined in our text, I shall consider the nature and design of civil
government, and shall show that the same principles which oblige us to submit
to government do equally oblige us to resist tyranny; or that tyranny and
magistracy are so opposed to each other that where the one begins the other
ends. I shall then apply the present discourse to the grand controversy that at
this day subsists between Great Britain and the American colonies.
That we may understand the nature and design of civil
government, and discover the foundation of the magistrate's authority to
command, and the duty of subjects to obey, it is necessary to derive civil
government from its original, in order to which we must consider what
state all men are naturally in, and that is (as Mr. Locke observes) a
state of perfect freedom to order all their actions, and dispose of their
possessions and persons as they think fit, within the bounds of the law of
nature, without asking leave or depending upon the will of any man. It is
a state wherein all are equal,--no one having a right to control another, or
oppose him in what he does, unless it be in his own defence, or in the defence
of those that, being injured, stand in need of his assistance.
Had men persevered in a state of moral rectitude, every
one would have been disposed to follow the law of nature, and pursue the
general good. In such a state, the wisest and most experienced would
undoubtedly be chosen to guide and direct those of less wisdom and experience
than themselves,--there being nothing else that could afford the least show or
appearance of any one's having the superiority or precedency over another; for
the dictates of conscience and the precepts of natural law being uniformly and
regularly obeyed, men would only need to be informed what things were most fit
and prudent to be done in those cases where their inexperience or want of
acquaintance left their minds in doubt what was the wisest and most regular
method for them to pursue. In such cases it would be necessary for them to
advise with those who were wiser and more experienced than themselves. But
these advisers could claim no authority to compel or to use any forcible
measures to oblige any one to comply with their direction or advice. There
could be no occasion for the exertion of such a power; for every man, being
under the government of right reason, would immediately feel himself
constrained to comply with everything that appeared reasonable or fit to be
done, or that would any way tend to promote the general good. This would have
been the happy state of mankind had they closely adhered to the law of nature,
and persevered in their primitive state.
Thus we see that a state of nature, though it be a state
of perfect freedom, yet is very far from a state of licentiousness. The law of
nature gives men no right to do anything that is immoral, or contrary to the
will of God, and injurious to their fellow-creatures; for a state of nature is
properly a state of law and government, even a government founded upon the
unchangeable nature of the Deity, and a law resulting from the eternal fitness
of things. Sooner shall heaven and earth pass away, and the whole frame of
nature be dissolved, than any part even the smallest iota, of this law shall
ever be abrogated; it is unchangeable as the Deity himself, being a transcript
of his moral perfections. A revelation, pretending to be from God, that
contradicts any part of natural law, ought immediately to be rejected as an
imposture; for the Deity cannot make a law contrary to the law of nature
without acting contrary to himself,--a thing in the strictest sense impossible,
for that which implies contradiction is not an object of the divine power. Had
this subject been properly attended to and understood, the world had remained
free from a multitude of absurd and pernicious principles, which have been
industriously propagated by artful and designing men, both in politics and
divinity. The doctrine of nonresistance and unlimited passive obedience to the
worst of tyrants could never have found credit among mankind had the voice of
reason been hearkened to for a guide, because such a doctrine would immediately
have been discerned to be contrary to natural law.
In a state of nature we have a right to make the persons
that have injured us repair the damages that they have done us; and it is just
in us to inflict such punishment upon them as is necessary to restrain them
from doing the like for the future,--the whole end and design of punishing
being either to reclaim the individual punished, or to deter others from being
guilty of similar crimes. Whenever punishment exceeds these bounds it becomes
cruelty and revenge, and directly contrary to the law of nature. Our wants and
necessities being such as to render it impossible in most cases to enjoy life
in any tolerable degree without entering into society, and there being
innumerable cases wherein we need the assistance of others, which if not
afforded we should very soon perish; hence the law of nature requires that we
should endeavor to help one another to the utmost of our power in all cases
where our assistance is necessary. It is our duty to endeavor always to promote
the general good; to do to all as we would be willing to be done by were we in
their circumstances; to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly before
God. These are some of the laws of nature which every man in the world is bound
to observe, and which whoever violates exposes himself to the resentment of
mankind, the lashes of his own conscience, and the judgment of Heaven. This
plainly shows that the highest state of liberty subjects us to the law of
nature and the government of God. The most perfect freedom consists in obeying
the dictates of right reason, and submitting to natural law. When a man goes
beyond or contrary to the law of nature and reason, he becomes the slave of
base passions and vile lusts; he introduces confusion and disorder into
society, and brings misery and destruction upon himself. This, therefore,
cannot be called a state of freedom, but a state of the vilest slavery and the
most dreadful bondage. The servants of sin and corruption are subjected to the
worst kind of tyranny in the universe. Hence we conclude that where
licentiousness begins, liberty ends.
The law of nature is a perfect standard and measure of
action for beings that persevere in a state of moral rectitude; but the case is
far different with us, who are in a fallen and degenerate estate. We have a law
in our members which is continually warring against the law of the mind, by
which we often become enslaved to the basest lusts, and are brought into
bondage to the vilest passions. The strong propensities of our animal nature
often overcome the sober dictates of reason and conscience, and betray us into
actions injurious to the public and destructive of the safety and happiness of
society. Men of unbridled lusts, were they not restrained by the power of the
civil magistrate, would spread horror and desolation all around them. This
makes it absolutely necessary that societies should form themselves into
politic bodies, that they may enact laws for the public safety, and appoint
particular penalties for the violation of their laws, and invest a suitable
number of persons with authority to put in execution and enforce the laws of
the state, in order that wicked men may be restrained from doing mischief to
their fellow-creatures, that the injured may have their rights restored to
them, that the virtuous may be encouraged in doing good, and that every member
of society may be protected and secured in the peaceable, quiet possession and
enjoyment of all those liberties and privileges which the Deity has bestowed
upon him; i.e., that he may safely enjoy and pursue whatever he chooses, that
is consistent with the public good. This shows that the end and design of
civil government cannot be to deprive men of their liberty or take away their
freedom; but, on the contrary, the true design of civil government is to
protect men in the enjoyment of liberty.
From hence it follows that tyranny and arbitrary power are
utterly inconsistent with and subversive of the very end and design of civil
government, and directly contrary to natural law, which is the true foundation
of civil government and all politic law. Consequently, the authority of a
tyrant is of itself null and void; for as no man can have a right to act
contrary to the law of nature, it is impossible that any individual, or even
the greatest number of men, can confer a right upon another of which they
themselves are not possessed; i.e., no body of men can justly and lawfully
authorize any person to tyrannize over and enslave his fellow-creatures, or do
anything contrary to equity and goodness. As magistrates have no authority but
what they derive from the people, whenever they act contrary to the public
good, and pursue measures destructive of the peace and safety of the community,
they forfeit their right to govern the people. Civil rulers and magistrates are
properly of human creation; they are set up by the people to be the guardians
of their rights, and to secure their persons from being injured or
oppressed,--the safety of the public being the supreme law of the state, by
which the magistrates are to be governed, and which they are to consult upon
all occasions. The modes of administration may be very different, and the forms
of government may vary from each other in different ages and nations; but,
under every form, the end of civil government is the same, and cannot vary: It
is like the laws of the Medes and Persians--it altereth not.
Though magistrates are to consider themselves as the
servants of the people, seeing from them it is that they derive their power and
authority, yet they may also be considered as the ministers of God ordained by
him for the good of mankind; for, under him, as the Supreme Magistrate of the
universe, they are to act: and it is God who has not only declared in his word
what are the necessary qualifications of a ruler, but who also raises up and
qualifies men for such an important station. The magistrate may also, in a more
strict and proper sense, be said to be ordained of God, because reason, which
is the voice of God, plainly requires such an order of men to be appointed for
the public good. Now, whatever right reason requires as necessary to be done is
as much the will and law of God as though it were enjoined us by an immediate
revelation from heaven, or commanded in the sacred Scriptures.
From this account of the origin, nature, and design of
civil government, we may be very easily led into a thorough knowledge of our
duty; we may see the reason why we are bound to obey magistrates, viz.,
because they are the ministers of God for good unto the people. While,
therefore, they rule in the fear of God, and while they promote the welfare of
the state,-- i.e., while they act in the character of magistrates,--it is the
indispensable duty of all to submit to them, and to oppose a turbulent,
factious, and libertine spirit, whenever and wherever it discovers itself. When
a people have by their free consent conferred upon a number of men a power to
rule and govern them, they are bound to obey them. Hence disobedience becomes a
breach of faith; it is violating a constitution of their own appointing, and
breaking a compact for which they ought to have the most sacred regard. Such a
conduct discovers so base and disingenuous a temper of mind, that it must
expose them to contempt in the judgment of all the sober, thinking part of
mankind. Subjects are bound to obey lawful magistrates by every tender tie of
human nature, which disposes us to consult the public good, and to seek the
good of our brethren, our wives, our children, our friends and acquaintance;
for he that opposes lawful authority does really oppose the safety and
happiness of his fellow-creatures. A factious, seditious person, that opposes
good government, is a monster in nature; for he is an enemy to his own species,
and destitute of the sentiments of humanity.
Subjects are also bound to obey magistrates, for
conscience' sake, out of regard to the divine authority, and out of obedience
to the will of God; for if magistrates are the ministers of God, we cannot
disobey them without being disobedient to the law of God; and this extends to
all men in authority, from the highest ruler to the lowest officer in the
state. To oppose them when in the exercise of lawful authority is an act of
disobedience to the Deity, and, as such, will be punished by him. It will,
doubtless, be readily granted by every honest man that we ought cheerfully to
obey the magistrate, and submit to all such regulations of government as tend
to promote the public good; but as this general definition may be liable to be
misconstrued, and every man may think himself at liberty to disregard any laws
that do not suit his interest, humor, or fancy, I would observe that, in a
multitude of cases, many of us, for want of being properly acquainted with
affairs of state, may be very improper judges of particular laws, whether they
are just or not. In such cases it becomes us, as good members of society,
peaceably and conscientiously to submit, though we cannot see the
reasonableness of every law to which we submit, and that for this plain reason:
if any number of men should take it upon themselves to oppose authority for
acts, which may be really necessary for the public safety, only because they do
not see the reasonableness of them, the direct consequence will be introducing
confusion and anarchy into the state.
It is also necessary that the minor part should submit to
the major; e.g., when legislators have enacted a set of laws which are highly
approved by a large majority of the community as tending to promote the public
good, in this case, if a small number of persons are so unhappy as to view the
matter in a very different point of light from the public, though they have an
undoubted right to show the reasons of their dissent from the judgment of the
public, and may lawfully use all proper arguments to convince the public of
what they judge to be an error, yet, if they fail in their attempt, and the
majority still continue to approve of the laws that are enacted, it is the duty
of those few that dissent peaceably and for conscience' sake to submit to the
public judgment, unless something is required of them which they judge would be
sinful for them to comply with; for in that case they ought to obey the
dictates of their own consciences rather than any human authority whatever.
Perhaps, also, some cases of intolerable oppression, where compliance would
bring on inevitable ruin and destruction, may justly warrant the few to refuse
submission to what they judge inconsistent with their peace and safety; for the
law of self-preservation will always justify opposing a cruel and tyrannical
imposition, except where opposition is attended with greater evils than
submission, which is frequently the case where a few are oppressed by a large
and powerful majority.* Except the above-named cases, the minor ought always to
submit to the major; otherwise, there can be no peace nor harmony in society.
And, besides, it is the major part of a community that have the sole right of
establishing a constitution and authorizing magistrates; and consequently it is
only the major part of the community that can claim the right of altering the
constitution, and displacing the magistrates; for certainly common sense will
tell us that it requires as great an authority to set aside a constitution as
there was at first to establish it. The collective body, not a few individuals,
ought to constitute the supreme authority of the state.
* This shows the reason why the primitive Christians did
not oppose the cruel persecutions that were inflicted upon them by the heathen
magistrates. They were few compared with the heathen world, and for them to
have attempted to resist their enemies by force would have been like a small
parcel of sheep endeavoring to oppose a large number of ravening wolves and
savage beasts of prey. It would, without a miracle, have brought upon them
inevitable ruin and destruction. Hence the wise and prudent advice of our
Saviour to them is, When they persecute you in this city, flee ye to
another.
The only difficulty remaining is to determine when a
people may claim a right of forming themselves into a body politic, and assume
the powers of legislation. In order to determine this point, we are to remember
that all men being by nature equal, all the members of a community have a
natural right to assemble themselves together, and act and vote for such
regulations as they judge are necessary for the good of the whole. But when a
community is become very numerous, it is very difficult, and in many cases
impossible, for all to meet together to regulate the affairs of the state;
hence comes the necessity of appointing delegates to represent the people in a
general assembly. And this ought to be looked upon as a sacred and inalienable
right, of which a people cannot justly divest themselves, and which no human
authority can in equity ever take from them, viz., that no one be obliged to
submit to any law except such as are made either by himself or by his
representative.
If representation and legislation are inseparably
connected, it follows, that when great numbers have emigrated into a foreign
land, and are so far removed from the parent state that they neither are or can
be properly represented by the government from which they have emigrated, that
then nature itself points out the necessity of their assuming to themselves the
powers of legislation; and they have a right to consider themselves as a
separate state from the other, and, as such, to form themselves into a body
politic.
In the next place, when a people find themselves cruelly
oppressed by the parent state, they have an undoubted right to throw off the
yoke, and to assert their liberty, if they find good reason to judge that they
have sufficient power and strength to maintain their ground in defending their
just rights against their oppressors; for, in this case, by the law of
self-preservation, which is the first law of nature, they have not only an
undoubted right, but it is their indispensable duty, if they cannot be
redressed any other way, to renounce all submission to the government that has
oppressed them, and set up an independent state of their own, even though they
may be vastly inferior in numbers to the state that has oppressed them. When
either of the aforesaid cases takes place, and more especially when both
concur, no rational man, I imagine, can have any doubt in his own mind whether
such a people have a right to form themselves into a body politic, and assume
to themselves all the powers of a free state. For, can it be rational to
suppose that a people should be subjected to the tyranny of a set of men who
are perfect strangers to them, and cannot be supposed to have that
fellow-feeling for them that we generally have for those with whom we are
connected and acquainted; and, besides, through their unacquaintedness with the
circumstances of the people over whom they claim the right of jurisdiction, are
utterly unable to judge, in a multitude of cases, which is best for them?
It becomes me not to say what particular form of
government is best for a community,--whether a pure democracy, aristocracy,
monarchy, or a mixture of all the three simple forms. They have all their
advantages and disadvantages, and when they are properly administered may, any
of them, answer the design of civil government tolerably. Permit me, however,
to say, that an unlimited, absolute monarchy, and an aristocracy not subject to
the control of the people, are two of the most exceptionable forms of
government: firstly, because in neither of them is there a proper
representation of the people; and, secondly, because each of them being
entirely independent of the people, they are very apt to degenerate into
tyranny. However, in this imperfect state, we cannot expect to have government
formed upon such a basis but that it may be perverted by bad men to evil
purposes. A wise and good man would be very loth to undermine a constitution
that was once fixed and established, although he might discover many
imperfections in it; and nothing short of the most urgent necessity would ever
induce him to consent to it; because the unhinging a people from a form of
government to which they had been long accustomed might throw them into such a
state of anarchy and confusion as might terminate in their destruction, or
perhaps, in the end, subject them to the worst kind of tyranny.
Having thus shown the nature, end, and design of civil
government, and pointed out the reasons why subjects are bound to obey
magistrates,--viz., because in so doing they both consult their own happiness
as individuals, and also promote the public good and the safety of the
state,--I proceed, in the next place, to show that the same principles that
oblige us to submit to civil government do also equally oblige us, where we
have power and ability, to resist and oppose tyranny; and that where tyranny
begins government ends. For, if magistrates have no authority but what they
derive from the people; if they are properly of human creation; if the whole
end and design of their institution is to promote the general good, and to
secure to men their just rights,--it will follow, that when they act contrary
to the end and design of their creation they cease being magistrates, and the
people which gave them their authority have the right to take it from them
again. This is a very plain dictate of common sense, which universally obtains
in all similar cases; for who is there that, having employed a number of men to
do a particular piece of work for him, but what would judge that he had a right
to dismiss them from his service when he found that they went directly contrary
to his orders, and that, instead of accomplishing the business he had set them
about, they would infallibly ruin and destroy it? If, then, men, in the common
affairs of life, always judge that they have a right to dismiss from their
service such persons as counteract their plans and designs, though the damage
will affect only a few individuals, much more must the body politic have a
right to depose any persons, though appointed to the highest place of power and
authority, when they find that they are unfaithful to the trust reposed in
them, and that, instead of consulting the general good, they are disturbing the
peace of society by making laws cruel and oppressive, and by depriving the
subjects of their just rights and privileges. Whoever pretends to deny this
proposition must give up all pretence of being master of that common sense and
reason by which the Deity has distinguished us from the brutal herd.
As our duty of obedience to the magistrate is founded upon
our obligation to promote the general good, our readiness to obey lawful
authority will always arise in proportion to the love and regard that we have
for the welfare of the public; and the same love and regard for the public will
inspire us with as strong a zeal to oppose tyranny as we have to obey
magistracy. Our obligation to promote the public good extends as much to the
opposing every exertion of arbitrary power that is injurious to the state as it
does to the submitting to good and wholesome laws. No man, therefore, can be a
good member of the community that is not as zealous to oppose tyranny as he is
ready to obey magistracy. A slavish submission to tyranny is a proof of a very
sordid and base mind. Such a person cannot be under the influence of any
generous human sentiments, nor have a tender regard for mankind.
Further: if magistrates are no farther ministers of God
than they promote the good of the community, then obedience to them neither is
nor can be unlimited; for it would imply a gross absurdity to assert that, when
magistrates are ordained by the people solely for the purpose of being
beneficial to the state, they must be obeyed when they are seeking to ruin and
destroy it. This would imply that men were bound to act against the great law
of self-preservation, and to contribute their assistance to their own ruin and
destruction, in order that they may please and gratify the greatest monsters in
nature, who are violating the laws of God and destroying the rights of mankind.
Unlimited submission and obedience is due to none but God alone. He has an
absolute right to command; he alone has an uncontrollable sovereignty over us,
because he alone is unchangeably good; he never will nor can require of us,
consistent with his nature and attributes, anything that is not fit and
reasonable; his commands are all just and good; and to suppose that he has
given to any particular set of men a power to require obedience to that which
is unreasonable, cruel, and unjust, is robbing the Deity of his justice and
goodness, in which consists the peculiar glory of the divine character, and it
is representing him under the horrid character of a tyrant.
If magistrates are ministers of God only because the law
of God and reason points out the necessity of such an institution for the good
of mankind, it follows, that whenever they pursue measures directly destructive
of the public good they cease being God's ministers, they forfeit their right
to obedience from the subject, they become the pests of society, and the
community is under the strongest obligation of duty, both to God and to its own
members, to resist and oppose them, which will be so far from resisting the
ordinance of God that it will be strictly obeying his commands. To suppose
otherwise will imply that the Deity requires of us an obedience that is
self-contradictory and absurd, and that one part of his law is directly
contrary to the other; i.e., while he commands us to pursue virtue and the
general good, he does at the same time require us to persecute virtue, and
betray the general good, by enjoining us obedience to the wicked commands of
tyrannical oppressors. Can any one not lost to the principles of humanity
undertake to defend such absurd sentiments as these? As the public safety is
the first and grand law of society, so no community can have a right to invest
the magistrate with any power or authority that will enable him to act against
the welfare of the state and the good of the whole. If men have at any time
wickedly and foolishly given up their just rights into the hands of the
magistrate, such acts are null and void, of course; to suppose otherwise will
imply that we have a right to invest the magistrate with a power to act
contrary to the law of God,--which is as much as to say that we are not the
subjects of divine law and government. What has been said is, I apprehend,
abundantly sufficient to show that tyrants are no magistrates, or that whenever
magistrates abuse their power and authority to the subverting the public
happiness, their authority immediately ceases, and that it not only becomes
lawful, but an indispensable duty to oppose them; that the principle of
self-preservation, the affection and duty that we owe to our country, and the
obedience we owe the Deity, do all require us to oppose tyranny.
If it be asked, Who are the proper judges to determine
when rulers are guilty of tyranny and oppression? I answer, the public. Not a
few disaffected individuals, but the collective body of the state, must decide
this question; for, as it is the collective body that invests rulers with their
power and authority, so it is the collective body that has the sole right of
judging whether rulers act up to the end of their institution or not. Great
regard ought always to be paid to the judgment of the public. It is true the
public may be imposed upon by a misrepresentation of facts; but this may be
said of the public, which cannot always be said of individuals, viz., that the
public is always willing to be rightly informed, and when it has proper matter
of conviction laid before it its judgment is always right.
This account of the nature and design of civil government,
which is so clearly suggested to us by the plain principles of common sense and
reason, is abundantly confirmed by the sacred Scriptures, even by those very
texts which have been brought by men of slavish principles to establish the
absurd doctrine of unlimited passive obedience and nonresistance, as will
abundantly appear by examining the two most noted texts that are commonly
brought to support the strange doctrine of passive obedience. The first that I
shall cite is in 1 Peter ii. 13, 14: submit yourselves to every ordinance
of man,''--or, rather, as the words ought to be rendered from the Greek, submit
yourselves to every human creation, or human constitution,--for the
Lord's sake, whether it be to the king as supreme, or unto governors, as unto
them that are sent by him for the punishment of evil-doers, and for the praise
of them that do well. Here we see that the apostle asserts that
magistracy is of human creation or appointment; that is, that magistrates have
no power or authority but what they derive from the people; that this power
they are to exert for the punishment of evil-doers, and for the praise of them
that do well; i.e., the end and design of the appointment of magistrates is to
restrain wicked men, by proper penalties, from injuring society, and to
encourage and honor the virtuous and obedient. Upon this account Christians are
to submit to them for the Lord's sake; which is as if he had said, Though
magistrates are of mere human appointment, and can claim no power or authority
but what they derive from the people, yet, as they are ordained by men to
promote the general good by punishing evil-doers and by rewarding and
encouraging the virtuous and obedient, you ought to submit to them out of a
sacred regard to the divine authority; for as they, in the faithful discharge
of their office, do fulfill the will of God, so ye, by submitting to them, do
fulfill the divine command. If the only reason assigned by the apostle why
magistrates should be obeyed out of a regard to the divine authority is because
they punish the wicked and encourage the good, it follows, that when they
punish the virtuous and encourage the vicious we have a right to refuse
yielding any submission or obedience to them; i.e., whenever they act contrary
to the end and design of their institution, they forfeit their authority to
govern the people, and the reason for submitting to them, out of regard to the
divine authority, immediately ceases; and they being only of human appointment,
the authority which the people gave them the public have a right to take from
them, and to confer it upon those who are more worthy. So far is this text from
favoring arbitrary principles, that there is nothing in it but what is
consistent with and favorable to the highest liberty that any man can wish to
enjoy; for this text requires us to submit to the magistrate no further than he
is the encourager and protector of virtue and the punisher of vice; and this is
consistent with all that liberty which the Deity has bestowed upon us.
The other text which I shall mention, and which has been
made use of by the favorers of arbitrary government as their great sheet anchor
and main support, is in Rom. xiii., the first six verses: Let every soul
be subject to the higher powers; for there is no power but of God. The powers
that be are ordained of God. Whosoever therefore resisteth the power, resisteth
the ordinance of God; and they that resist shall receive to themselves
damnation; for rulers are not a terror to good works, but to the evil. Wilt
thou then not be afraid of the power? Do that which is good, and thou shalt
have praise of the same: for he is the minister of God to thee for good. But if
thou do that which is evil, be afraid; for he beareth not the sword in vain:
for he is the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doth
evil. Wherefore ye must needs be subject not only for wrath, but also for
conscience' sake. For, for this cause pay you tribute also; for they are God's
ministers, attending continually upon this very thing. A very little
attention, I apprehend, will be sufficient to show that this text is so far
from favoring arbitrary government, that, on the contrary, it strongly holds
forth the principles of true liberty. Subjection to the higher powers is
enjoined by the apostle because there is no power but of God; the powers that
be are ordained of God; consequently, to resist the power is to resist the
ordinance of God: and he repeatedly declares that the ruler is the minister of
God. Now, before we can say whether this text makes for or against the doctrine
of unlimited passive obedience, we must find out in what sense the apostle
affirms that magistracy is the ordinance of God, and what he intends when he
calls the ruler the minister of God.
I can think but of three possible senses in which
magistracy can with any propriety be called God's ordinance, or in which rulers
can be said to be ordained of God as his ministers. The first is a plain
declaration from the word of God that such a one and his descendants are, and
shall be, the only true and lawful magistrates: thus we find in Scripture the
kingdom of Judah to be settled by divine appointment in the family of David.
Or,
Secondly, By an immediate commission from God, ordering
and appointing such a one by name to be the ruler over the people: thus Saul
and David were immediately appointed by God to be kings over Israel. Or,
Thirdly, Magistracy may be called the ordinance of God,
and rulers may be called the ministers of God, because the nature and reason of
things, which is the law of God, requires such an institution for the
preservation and safety of civil society. In the two first senses the apostle
cannot be supposed to affirm that magistracy is God's ordinance, for neither he
nor any of the sacred writers have entailed the magistracy to any one
particular family under the gospel dispensation. Neither does he nor any of the
inspired writers give us the least hint that any person should ever be
immediately commissioned from God to bear rule over the people. The third
sense, then, is the only sense in which the apostle can be supposed to affirm
that the magistrate is the minister of God, and that magistracy is the
ordinance of God; viz., that the nature and reason of things require such an
institution for the preservation and safety of mankind. Now, if this be the
only sense in which the apostle affirms that magistrates are ordained of God as
his ministers, resistance must be criminal only so far forth as they are the
ministers of God, i.e., while they act up to the end of their institution, and
ceases being criminal when they cease being the ministers of God, i.e., when
they act contrary to the general good, and seek to destroy the liberties of the
people.
That we have gotten the apostle's sense of magistracy
being the ordinance of God, will plainly appear from the text itself for, after
having asserted that to resist the power is to resist the ordinance of God, and
they that resist shall receive to themselves damnation, he immediately adds as
the reason of this assertion, For rulers are not a terror to good works,
but to the evil. Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power? Do that which is
good, and thou shalt have praise of the same: for he is the minister of God to
thee for good. But if thou do that which is evil, be afraid; for he beareth not
the sword in vain: for he is the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath
upon him that doth evil. Here is a plain declaration of the sense in
which he asserts that the authority of the magistrate is ordained of God, viz.,
because rulers are not a terror to good works, but to the evil; therefore we
ought to dread offending them, for we cannot offend them but by doing evil; and
if we do evil we have just reason to fear their power; for they bear not the
sword in vain, but in this case the magistrate is a revenger to execute wrath
upon him that doeth evil: but if we are found doers of that which is good, we
have no reason to fear the authority of the magistrate; for in this case,
instead of being punished, we shall be protected and encouraged. The reason why
the magistrate is called the minister of God is because he is to protect,
encourage, and honor them that do well, and to punish them that do evil;
therefore it is our duty to submit to them, not merely for fear of being
punished by them, but out of regard to the divine authority, under which they
are deputed to execute judgment and to do justice. For this reason, according
to the apostle, tribute is to be paid them, because, as the ministers of God,
their whole business is to protect every man in the enjoyment of his just
rights and privileges, and to punish every evil-doer.
If the apostle, then, asserts that rulers are ordained of
God only because they are a terror to evil works and a praise to them that do
well; if they are ministers of God only because they encourage virtue and
punish vice; if for this reason only they are to be obeyed for conscience'
sake; if the sole reason why they have a right to tribute is because they
devote themselves wholly to the business of securing to men their just rights,
and to the punishing of evil-doers,--it follows, by undeniable consequence,
that when they become the pests of human society, when they promote and
encourage evil-doers, and become a terror to good works, they then cease being
the ordinance of God; they are no longer rulers nor ministers of God; they are
so far from being the powers that are ordained of God that they become the
ministers of the powers of darkness, and it is so far from being a crime to
resist them, that in many cases it may be highly criminal in the sight of
Heaven to refuse resisting and opposing them to the utmost of our power; or, in
other words, that the same reasons that require us to obey the ordinance of
God, do equally oblige us, when we have power and opportunity, to oppose and
resist the ordinance of Satan.
Hence we see that the apostle Paul, instead of being a
friend to tyranny and arbitrary government, turns out to be a strong advocate
for the just rights of mankind, and is for our enjoying all that liberty with
which God has invested us; for no power (according to the apostle) is ordained
of God but what is an encourage of every good and virtuous action,-- Do
that which is good, and thou shalt have praise of the same. No man need
to be afraid of this power which is ordained of God who does nothing but what
is agreeable to the law of God; for this power will not restrain us from
exercising any liberty which the Deity has granted us; for the minister of God
is to restrain US from nothing but the doing of that which is evil, and to this
we have no right. To practise evil is not liberty, but licentiousness. Can we
conceive of a more perfect, equitable, and generous plan of government than
this which the apostle has laid down, viz., to have rulers appointed over us to
encourage us to every good and virtuous action, to defend and protect us in our
just rights and privileges, and to grant us everything that can tend to promote
our true interest and happiness; to restrain every licentious action, and to
punish everyone that would injure or harm us; to become a terror of evil-doers;
to make and execute such just and righteous laws as shall effectually deter and
hinder men from the commission of evil, and to attend continually upon this
very thing; to make it their constant care and study, day and night, to promote
the good and welfare of the community, and to oppose all evil practices?
Deservedly may such rulers be called the ministers of God for good. They carry
on the same benevolent design towards the community which the great Governor of
the universe does towards his whole creation. `Tis the indispensable duty of a
people to pay tribute, and to afford an easy and comfortable subsistence to
such rulers, because they are the ministers of God, who are continually
laboring and employing their time for the good of the community. He that
resists such magistrates does, in a very emphatical sense, resist the ordinance
of God; he is an enemy to mankind, odious to God, and justly incurs the
sentence of condemnation from the great Judge of quick and dead. Obedience to
such magistrates is yielding obedience to the will of God, and, therefore,
ought to be performed from a sacred regard to the divine authority.
For any one from hence to infer that the apostle enjoins
in this text unlimited obedience to the worst of tyrants, and that he
pronounces damnation upon those that resist the arbitrary measures of such
pests of society, is just as good sense as if one should affirm, that because
the Scripture enjoins us obedience to the laws of God, therefore we may not
oppose the power of darkness; or because we are commanded to submit to the
ordinance of God, therefore we may not resist the ministers of Satan. Such wild
work must be made with the apostle before he can be brought to speak the
language of oppression! It is as plain, I think, as words can make it, that,
according to this text, no tyrant can be a ruler; for the apostle's definition
of a ruler is, that he is not a terror to good works, but to the evil; and that
he is one who is to praise and encourage those that do well. Whenever, then,
the ruler encourages them that do evil, and is a terror to those that do
well,--i.e., as soon as he becomes a tyrant,--he forfeits his authority to
govern, and becomes the minister of Satan, and, as such, ought to be opposed.
I know it is said that the magistrates were, at the time
when the apostle wrote, heathens, and that Nero, that monster of tyranny, was
then Emperor of Rome; that therefore the apostle, by enjoining submission to
the powers that then were, does require unlimited obedience to be yielded to
the worst of tyrants. Now, not to insist upon what has been often observed,
viz., that this epistle was written most probably about the beginning of Nero's
reign, at which time he was a very humane and merciful prince, did everything
that was generous and benevolent to the public, and showed every act of mercy
and tenderness to particulars, and therefore might at that time justly deserve
the character of the minister of God for good to the people,-- I say, waiving
this, we will suppose that this epistle was written after that Nero was become
a monster of tyranny and wickedness; it will by no means follow from thence
that the apostle meant to enjoin unlimited subjection to such an authority, or
that he intended to affirm that such a cruel, despotic authority was the
ordinance of God. The plain, obvious sense of his words, as we have already
seen, forbids such a construction to be put upon them, for they plainly imply a
strong abhorrence and disapprobation of such a character, and clearly prove
that Nero, so far forth as he was a tyrant, could not be the minister of God,
nor have a right to claim submission from the people; so that this ought,
perhaps, rather to be viewed as a severe satire upon Nero, than as enjoining
any submission to him.
It is also worthy to be observed that the apostle
prudently waived mentioning any particular persons that were then in power, as
it might have been construed in an invidious light, and exposed the primitive
Christians to the severe resentments of the men that were then in power. He
only in general requires submission to the higher powers, because the powers
that be are ordained of God. Now, though the emperor might at that time be such
a tyrant that he could with no propriety be said to be ordained of God, yet it
would be somewhat strange if there were no men in power among the Romans that
acted up to the character of good magistrates, and that deserved to be esteemed
as the ministers of God for good unto the people. If there were any such,
notwithstanding the tyranny of Nero, the apostle might with great propriety
enjoin submission to those powers that were ordained of God, and by so
particularly pointing out the end and design of magistrates, and giving his
definition of a ruler, he might design to show that neither Nero, nor any other
tyrant, ought to be esteemed as the minister of God. Or, rather, --which
appears to me to be the true sense,--the apostle meant to speak of magistracy
in general, without any reference to the emperor, or any other person in
power, that was then at Rome; and the meaning of this passage is as if he had
said, It is the duty of every Christian to be a good subject of civil
government, for the power and authority of the civil magistrate are from God;
for the powers that be are ordained of God; i.e., the authority of the
magistrates that are now either at Rome or elsewhere is ordained of the Deity.
Wherever you find any lawful magistrates, remember, they are of divine
ordination. But that you may understand what I mean when I say that magistrates
are of divine ordination, I will show you how you may discern who are lawful
magistrates, and ordained of God, from those who are not. Those only are to be
esteemed lawful magistrates, and ordained of God, who pursue the public good by
honoring and encouraging those that do well and punishing all that do evil.
Such, and such only, wherever they are to be found, are the ministers of God
for good: to resist such is resisting the ordinance of God, and exposing
yourselves to the divine wrath and condemnation.
In either of these senses the text cannot make anything in
favor of arbitrary government. Nor could he with any propriety tell them that
they need not be afraid of the power so long as they did that which was good,
if he meant to recommend an unlimited submission to a tyrannical Nero; for the
best characters were the likeliest to fall a sacrifice to his malice. And,
besides, such an injunction would be directly contrary to his own practice, and
the practice of the primitive Christians, who refused to comply with the sinful
commands of men in power; their answer in such cases being this, We ought to
obey God rather than men. Hence the apostle Paul himself suffered many cruel
persecutions because he would not renounce Christianity, but persisted in
opposing the idolatrous worship of the pagan world.
This text, being rescued from the absurd interpretations
which the favorers of arbitrary government have put upon it, turns out to be a
noble confirmation of that free and generous plan of government which the law
of nature and reason points out to us. Nor can we desire a more equitable plan
of government than what the apostle has here laid down; for, if we consult our
happiness and real good, we can never wish for an unreasonable liberty, viz., a
freedom to do evil, which, according to the apostle, is the only thing that the
magistrate is to refrain us from. To have a liberty to do whatever is fit,
reasonable, or good, is the highest degree of freedom that rational beings can
possess. And how honorable a station are those men placed in, by the providence
of God, whose business it is to secure to men this rational liberty, and to
promote the happiness and welfare of society, by suppressing vice and
immorality, and by honoring and encouraging everything that is honorable,
virtuous, and praiseworthy! Such magistrates ought to be honored and obeyed as
the ministers of God and the servants of the King of Heaven. Can we conceive of
a larger and more generous plan of government than this of the apostle? Or can
we find words more plainly expressive of a disapprobation of an arbitrary and
tyrannical government? I never read this text without admiring the beauty and
nervousness of it; and I can hardly conceive how he could express more ideas in
so few words than he has done. We see here, in one view, the honor that belongs
to the magistrate, because he is ordained of God for the public good. We have
his duty pointed out, viz., to honor and encourage the virtuous, to promote the
real good of the community, and to punish all wicked and injurious persons. We
are taught the duty of the subject, viz., to obey the magistrate for
conscience' sake, because he is ordained of God; and that rulers, being
continually employed under God for our good, are to be generously maintained by
the paying them tribute; and that disobedience to rulers is highly criminal,
and will expose us to the divine wrath. The liberty of the subject is also
clearly asserted, viz., that subjects are to be allowed to do everything that
is in itself just and right, and are only to be restrained from being guilty of
wrong actions. It is also strongly implied, that when rulers become oppressive
to the subject and injurious to the state, their authority, their respect,
their maintenance, and the duty of submitting to them, must immediately cease;
they are then to be considered as the ministers of Satan, and, as such, it
becomes our indispensable duty to resist and oppose them.
Thus we see that both reason and revelation perfectly
agree in pointing out the nature, end, and design of government, viz., that it
is to promote the welfare and happiness of the community; and that subjects
have a right to do everything that is good, praiseworthy, and consistent with
the good of the community, and are only to be restrained when they do evil and
are injurious either to individuals or the whole community; and that they ought
to submit to every law that is beneficial to the community for conscience'
sake, although it may in some measure interfere with their private interest;
for every good man will be ready to forgo his private interest for the sake of
being beneficial to the public. Reason and revelation, we see, do both teach us
that our obedience to rulers is not unlimited, but that resistance is not only
allowable, but an indispensable duty in the case of intolerable tyranny and
oppression. From both reason and revelation we learn that, as the public safety
is the supreme law of the state,--being the true standard and measure by which
we are to judge whether any law or body of laws are just or not,--so
legislatures have a right to make, and require subjection to, any set of laws
that have a tendency to promote the good of the community.
Our governors have a right to take every proper method to
form the minds of their subjects so that they may become good members of
society. The great difference that we may observe among the several classes of
mankind arises chiefly from their education and their laws: hence men become
virtuous or vicious, good commonwealthsmen or the contrary, generous, noble,
and courageous, or base, mean-spirited, and cowardly, according to the
impression that they have received from the government that they are under,
together with their education and the methods that have been practised by their
leaders to form their minds in early life. Hence the necessity of good laws to
encourage every noble and virtuous sentiment, to suppress vice and immorality,
to promote industry, and to punish idleness, that parent of innumerable evils;
to promote arts and sciences, and to banish ignorance from among mankind.
And as nothing tends like religion and the fear of God to
make men good members of the commonwealth, it is the duty of magistrates to
become the patrons and promoters of religion and piety, and to make suitable
laws for the maintaining public worship, and decently supporting the teachers
of religion. Such laws, I apprehend, are absolutely necessary for the
well-being of civil society. Such laws may be made, consistent with all that
liberty of conscience which every good member of society ought to be possessed
of; for, as there are few, if any, religious societies among us but what
profess to believe and practise all the great duties of religion and morality
that are necessary for the well-being of society and the safety of the state,
let every one be allowed to attend worship in his own society, or in that way
that he judges most agreeable to the will of God, and let him be obliged to
contribute his assistance to the supporting and defraying the necessary charges
of his own meeting. In this case no one can have any right to complain that he
is deprived of liberty of conscience, seeing that he has a right to choose and
freely attend that worship that appears to him to be most agreeable to the will
of God; and it must be very unreasonable for him to object against being
obliged to contribute his part towards the support of that worship which he has
chosen. Whether some such method as this might not tend, in a very eminent
manner, to promote the peace and welfare of society, I must leave to the wisdom
of our legislators to determine; be sure it would take off some of the most
popular objections against being obliged by law to support public worship while
the law restricts that support only to one denomination.
But for the civil authority to pretend to establish
particular modes of faith and forms of worship, and to punish all that deviate
from the standard which our superiors have set up, is attended with the most
pernicious consequences to society. It cramps all free and rational inquiry,
fills the world with hypocrits and superstition bigots--nay, with infidels and
skeptics; it exposes men of religion and conscience to the rage and malice of
fiery, blind zealots, and dissolves every tender tie of human nature; in short,
it introduces confusion and every evil work. And I cannot but look upon it as a
peculiar blessing of Heaven that we live in a land where every one can freely
deliver his sentiments upon religious subjects, and have the privilege of
worshipping God according to the dictates of his own conscience without any
molestation or disturbance,--a privilege which I hope we shall ever keep up and
strenuously maintain. No principles ought ever to be discountenanced by civil
authority but such as tend to the subversion of the state. So long as a man is
a good member of society, he is accountable to God alone for his religious
sentiments; but when men are found disturbers of the public peace, stirring up
sedition, or practicing against the state, no pretence of religion or
conscience ought to screen them from being brought to condign punishment. But
then, as the end and design of punishment is either to make restitution to the
injured or to restrain men from committing the like crimes for the future, so,
when these important ends are answered, the punishment ought to cease; for
whatever is inflicted upon a man under the notion of punishment after these
important ends are answered, is not a just and lawful punishment, but is
properly cruelty and base revenge.
From this account of civil government we learn that the
business of magistrates is weighty and important. It requires both wisdom and
integrity. When either are wanting, government will be poorly administered;
more especially if our governors are men of loose morals and abandoned
principles; for if a man is not faithful to God and his own soul, how can we
expect that he will be faithful to the public? There was a great deal of
propriety in the advice that Jethro gave to Moses to provide able men,--men of
truth, that feared God, and that hated covetousness,--and to appoint them for
rulers over the people. For it certainly implies a very gross absurdity to
suppose that those who are ordained of God for the public good should have no
regard to the laws of God, or that the ministers of God should be despisers of
the divine commands. David, the man after God's own heart, makes piety a
necessary qualification in a ruler: He that ruleth over men (says he)
must be just, ruling in the fear of God. It is necessary it should be so,
for the welfare and happiness of the state; for, to say nothing of the venality
and corruption, of the tyranny and oppression, that will take place under
unjust rulers, barely their vicious and irregular lives will have a most
pernicious effect upon the lives and manners of their subjects: their
authority becomes despicable in the opinion of discerning men. And, besides,
with what face can they make or execute laws against vices which they practise
with greediness? A people that have a right of choosing their magistrates are
criminally guilty in the sight of Heaven when they are governed by caprice and
humor, or are influenced by bribery to choose magistrates that are irreligious
men, who are devoid of sentiment, and of bad morals and base lives. Men cannot
be sufficiently sensible what a curse they may bring upon themselves and their
posterity by foolishly and wickedly choosing men of abandoned characters and
profligate lives for their magistrates and rulers.
We have already seen that magistrates who rule in the fear
of God ought not only to be obeyed as the ministers of God, but that they ought
also to be handsomely supported, that they may cheerfully and freely attend
upon the duties of their station; for it is a great shame and disgrace to
society to see men that serve the public laboring under indigent and needy
circumstances; and, besides, it is a maxim of eternal truth that the laborer is
worthy of his reward.
It is also a great duty incumbent on people to treat those
in authority with all becoming honor and respect,--to be very careful of
casting any aspersion upon their characters. To despise government, and to
speak evil of dignities, is represented in Scripture as one of the worst of
characters; and it was an injunction of Moses, Thou shalt not speak evil
of the ruler of thy people. Great mischief may ensue upon reviling the
character of good rulers; for the unthinking herd of mankind are very apt to
give ear to scandal, and when it falls upon men in power, it brings their
authority into contempt, lessens their influence, and disheartens them from
doing that service to the community of which they are capable; whereas, when
they are properly honored, and treated with that respect which is due to their
station, it inspires them with courage and a noble ardor to serve the public:
their influence among the people is strengthened, and their authority becomes
firmly established. We ought to remember that they are men like to ourselves,
liable to the same imperfections and infirmities with the rest of us, and
therefore, so long as they aim at the public good, their mistakes,
misapprehensions, and infirmities, ought to be treated with the utmost humanity
and tenderness.
But though I would recommend to all Christians, as a part
of the duty that they owe to magistrates, to treat them with proper honor and
respect, none can reasonably suppose that I mean that they ought to be
flattered in their vices, or honored and caressed while they are seeking to
undermine and ruin the state; for this would be wickedly betraying our just
rights, and we should be guilty of our own destruction. We ought ever to
persevere with firmness and fortitude in maintaining and contending for all
that liberty that the Deity has granted us. It is our duty to be ever watchful
over our just rights, and not suffer them to be wrested out of our hands by any
of the artifices of tyrannical oppressors. But there is a wide difference
between being jealous of our rights, when we have the strongest reason to
conclude that they are invaded by our rulers, and being unreasonably suspicious
of men that are zealously endeavoring to support the constitution, only because
we do not thoroughly comprehend all their designs. The first argues a noble and
generous mind; the other, a low and base spirit.
Thus have I considered the nature of the duty enjoined in
the text, and have endeavored to show that the same principles that require
obedience to lawful magistrates do also require us to resist tyrants; this I
have confirmed from reason and Scripture.
It was with a particular view to the present unhappy
controversy that subsists between us and Great Britain that I chose to
discourse upon the nature and design of government, and the rights and duties
both of governors and governed, that so, justly understanding our rights and
privileges, we may stand firm in our opposition to ministerial tyranny, while
at the same time we pay all proper obedience and submission to our lawful
magistrates; and that, while we are contending for liberty, we may avoid
running into licentiousness; and that we may preserve the due medium between
submitting to tyranny and running into anarchy. I acknowledge that I have
undertaken a difficult task; but, as it appeared to me, the present state of
affairs loudly called for such a discourse; and, therefore, I hope the wise,
the generous, and the good, will candidly receive my good intentions to serve
the public. I shall now apply this discourse to the grand controversy that at
this day subsists between Great Britain and the American colonies.
And here, in the first place, I cannot but take notice how
wonderfully Providence has smiled upon us by causing the several colonies to
unite so firmly together against the tyranny of Great Britain, though differing
from each other in their particular interest, forms of government, modes of
worship, and particular customs and manners, besides several animosities that
had subsisted among them. That, under these circumstances, such a union should
take place as we now behold, was a thing that might rather have been wished
than hoped for.
And, in the next place, who could have thought that, when
our charter was vacated, when we became destitute of any legislative authority,
and when our courts of justice in many parts of the country were stopped, so
that we could neither make nor execute laws upon offenders,--who, I say, would
have thought, that in such a situation the people should behave so peaceably,
and maintain such good order and harmony among themselves? This is a plain
proof that they, having not the civil law to regulate themselves by, became a
law unto themselves; and by their conduct they have shown that they were
regulated by the law of God written in their hearts. This is the Lord's doing,
and it ought to be marvelous in our eyes.
From what has been said in this discourse, it will appear
that we are in the way of our duty in opposing the tyranny of Great Britain;
for, if unlimited submission is not due to any human power, if we have an
undoubted right to oppose and resist a set of tyrants that are subverting our
just rights and privileges, there cannot remain a doubt in any man, that will
calmly attend to reason, whether we have a right to resist and oppose the
arbitrary measures of the King and Parliament; for it is plain to
demonstration, nay, it is in a manner self-evident, that they have been and are
endeavoring to deprive us not only of the privileges of Englishmen, and our
charter rights, but they have endeavored to deprive us of what is much more
sacred, viz., the privileges of men and Christians;** i.e., they are robbing us
of the inalienable rights that the God of nature has given us as men and
rational beings, and has confirmed to us in his written word as Christians and
disciples of that Jesus who came to redeem us from the bondage of sin and the
tyranny of Satan, and to grant us the most perfect freedom, even the glorious
liberty of the sons and children of God; that here they have endeavored to
deprive us of the sacred charter of the King of Heaven. But we have this for
our consolation: the Lord reigneth; he governs the world in righteousness, and
will avenge the cause of the oppressed when they cry unto him. We have made our
appeal to Heaven, and we cannot doubt but that the Judge of all the earth will
do right.
** The meaning is not that they have attempted to deprive
us of liberty of conscience, but that they have attempted to take away those
rights which God has invested us with as his creatures and confirmed in his
gospel, by which believers have a covenant right to the good things of this
present life and world.
Need I upon this occasion descend to particulars? Can any
one be ignorant what the things are of which we complain? Does not every one
know that the King and Parliament have assumed the right to tax us without our
consent? And can any one be so lost to the principles of humanity and common
sense as not to view their conduct in this affair as a very grievous
imposition? Reason and equity require that no one be obliged to pay a tax that
he has never consented to, either by himself or by his representative. But, as
Divine Providence has placed us at so great a distance from Great Britain that
we neither are nor can be properly represented in the British Parliament, it is
a plain proof that the Deity designed that we should have the powers of
legislation and taxation among ourselves; for can any suppose it to be
reasonable that a set of men that are perfect strangers to us should have the
uncontrollable right to lay the most heavy and grievous burdens upon us that
they please, purely to gratify their unbounded avarice and luxury? Must we be
obliged to perish with cold and hunger to maintain them in idleness, in all
kinds of debauchery and dissipation? But if they have the right to take our
property from us without our consent, we must be wholly at their mercy for our
food and raiment, and we know by sad experience that their tender mercies are
cruel.
But because we were not willing to submit to such an
unrighteous and cruel decree,--though we modestly complained and humbly
petitioned for a redress of our grievances,--instead of hearing our complaints,
and granting our requests, they have gone on to add iniquity to transgression,
by making several cruel and unrighteous acts. Who can forget the cruel act to
block up the harbor of Boston, whereby thousands of innocent persons must have
been inevitably ruined had they not been supported by the continent? Who can
forget the act for vacating our charter, together with many other cruel acts
which it is needless to mention? But, not being able to accomplish their wicked
purposes by mere acts of Parliament, they have proceeded to commence open
hostilities against us, and have endeavored to destroy us by fire and sword.
Our towns they have burnt, our brethren they have slain, our vessels they have
taken, and our goods they have spoiled. And, after all this wanton exertion of
arbitrary power, is there the man that has any of the feeling of humanity left
who is not fired with a noble indignation against such merciless tyrants, who
have not only brought upon us all the horrors of a civil war, but have also
added a piece of barbarity unknown to Turks and Mohammedan infidels, yea, such
as would be abhorred and detested by the savages of the wilderness,--I mean
their cruelly forcing our brethren whom they have taken prisoners, without any
distinction of whig or tory, to serve on board their ships of war, thereby
obliging them to take up arms against their own countrymen, and to fight
against their brethren, their wives, and their children, and to assist in
plundering their own estates! This, my brethren, is done by men who call
themselves Christians, against their Christian brethren,--against men who till
now gloried in the name of Englishmen, and who were ever ready to spend their
lives and fortunes in the defence of British rights. Tell it not in Gath,
publish it not in the streets of Askelon, lest it cause our enemies to rejoice
and our adversaries to triumph! Such a conduct as this brings a great reproach
upon the profession of Christianity; nay, it is a great scandal even to human
nature itself.
It would be highly criminal not to feel a due resentment
against such tyrannical monsters. It is an indispensable duty, my brethren,
which we owe to God and our country, to rouse up and bestir ourselves, and,
being animated with a noble zeal for the sacred cause of liberty, to defend our
lives and fortunes, even to the shedding the last drop of blood. The love of
our country, the tender affection that we have for our wives and children, the
regard we ought to have for unborn posterity, yea, everything that is dear and
sacred, do now loudly call upon us to use our best endeavors to save our
country. We must beat our ploughshares into swords, and our pruning-hooks into
spears, and learn the art of self-defence against our enemies. To be careless
and remiss, or to neglect the cause of our country through the base motives of
avarice and self-interest, will expose us not only to the resentments of our
fellow-creatures, but to the displeasure of God Almighty; for to such base
wretches, in such a time as this, we may apply with the utmost propriety that
passage in Jeremiah xlviii. 10: Cursed be he that doth the work of the
Lord deceitfully, and cursed be he that keepeth back his sword from
blood. To save our country from the hands of our oppressors ought to be
dearer to us even than our own lives, and, next the eternal salvation of our
own souls, is the thing of the greatest importance,--a duty so sacred that it
cannot justly be dispensed with for the sake of our secular concerns. Doubtless
for this reason God has been pleased to manifest his anger against those who
have refused to assist their country against its cruel oppressors. Hence, in a
case similar to ours, when the Israelites were struggling to deliver themselves
from the tyranny of Jabin, the King of Canaan, we find a most bitter curse
denounced against those who refused to grant their assistance in the common
cause; see Judges v. 23: Curse ye Meroz, said the angel of the Lord,
curse ye bitterly the inhabitants thereof; because they came not to the help of
the Lord, to the help of the Lord against the mighty.
Now, if such a bitter curse is denounced against those who
refused to assist their country against its oppressors, what a dreadful doom
are those exposed to who have not only refused to assist their country in this
time of distress, but have, through motives of interest or ambition, shown
themselves enemies to their country by opposing us in the measures that we have
taken, and by openly favoring the British Parliament! He that is so lost to
humanity as to be willing to sacrifice his country for the sake of avarice or
ambition, has arrived to the highest stage of wickedness that human nature is
capable of, and deserves a much worse name than I at present care to give him.
But I think I may with propriety say that such a person has forfeited his right
to human society, and that he ought to take up his abode, not among the savage
men, but among the savage beasts of the wilderness. Nor can I wholly excuse
from blame those timid persons who, through their own cowardice, have been
induced to favor our enemies, and have refused to act in defence of their
country; for a due sense of the ruin and destruction that our enemies are
bringing upon us is enough to raise such a resentment in the human breast that
would, I should think, be sufficient to banish fear from the most timid male.
And, besides, to indulge cowardice in such a cause argues a want of faith in
God; for can he that firmly believes and relies upon the providence of God
doubt whether he will avenge the cause of the injured when they apply to him
for help? For my own part, when I consider the dispensations of Providence
towards this land ever since our fathers first settled in Plymouth, I find
abundant reason to conclude that the great Sovereign of the universe has
planted a vine in this American wilderness which he has caused to take deep
root, and it has filled the land, and that he will never suffer it to be
plucked up or destroyed.
Our fathers fled from the rage of prelatical tyranny and
persecution, and came into this land in order to enjoy liberty of conscience,
and they have increased to a great people. Many have been the interposition of
Divine Providence on our behalf, both in our fathers' days and ours; and,
though we are now engaged in a war with Great Britain, yet we have been
prospered in a most wonderful manner. And can we think that he who has thus far
helped us will give us up into the hands of our enemies? Certainly he that has
begun to deliver us will continue to show his mercy towards us, in saving us
from the hands of our enemies: he will not forsake us if we do not foresake
him. Our cause is so just and good that nothing can prevent our success but
only our sins. Could I see a spirit of repentance and reformation prevail
through the land, I should not have the least apprehension or fear of being
brought under the iron rod of slavery, even though all the powers of the globe
were combined against us. And though I confess that the irreligion and
profaneness which are so common among us gives something of a damp to my
spirits, yet I cannot help hoping, and even believing, that Providence has
designed this continent for to be the asylum of liberty and true religion; for
can we suppose that the God who created us free agents, and designed that we
should glorify and serve him in this world that we might enjoy him forever
hereafter, will suffer liberty and true religion to be banished from off the
face of the earth? But do we not find that both religion and liberty seem to be
expiring and gasping for life in the other continent?--where, then, can they
find a harbor or place of refuge but in this?
There are some who pretend that it is against their
consciences to take up arms in defence of their country; but can any rational
being suppose that the Deity can require us to contradict the law of nature
which he has written in our hearts, a part of which I am sure is the principle
of self-defence, which strongly prompts us all to oppose any power that would
take away our lives, or the lives of our friends? Now, for men to take pains to
destroy the tender feelings of human nature, and to eradicate the principles of
self-preservation, and then to persuade themselves that in so doing they submit
to and obey the will of God, is a plain proof how easily men may be led to
pervert the very first and plainest principles of reason and common sense, and
argues a gross corruption of the human mind. We find such persons are very
inconsistent with themselves; for no men are more zealous to defend their
property, and to secure their estates from the encroachments of others, while
they refuse to defend their persons, their wives, their children, and their
country, against the assaults of the enemy. We see to what unaccountable
lengths men will run when once they leave the plain mad of common sense, and
violate the law which God has written in the heart. Thus some have thought they
did God service when they unmercifully butchered and destroyed the lives of the
servants of God; while others, upon the contrary extreme, believe that they
please God while they sit still and quietly behold their friends and brethren
killed by their unmerciful enemies, without endeavoring to defend or rescue
them. The one is a sin of omission, and the other is a sin of commission, and
it may perhaps be difficult to say, under certain circumstances, which is the
most criminal in the sight of Heaven. Of this I am sure, that they are, both of
them, great violations of the law of God.
Having thus endeavored to show the lawfulness and
necessity of defending ourselves against the tyranny of Great Britain, I would
observe that Providence seems plainly to point to us the expediency, and even
necessity, of our considering ourselves as an independent state. For, not to
consider the absurdity implied in making war against a power to which we
profess to owe subjection, to pass by the impracticability of our ever coming
under subjection to Great Britain upon fair and equitable terms, we may observe
that the British Parliament has virtually declared us an independent state by
authorizing their ships of war to seize all American property, wherever they
can find it, without making any distinction between the friends of
administration and those that have appeared in opposition to the acts of
Parliament. This is making us a distinct nation from themselves. They can have
no right any longer to style us rebels; for rebellion implies a particular
faction risen up in opposition to lawful authority, and, as such, the factious
party ought to be punished, while those that remain loyal are to be protected.
But when war is declared against a whole community without distinction, and the
property of each party is declared to be seizable, this, if anything can be, is
treating us as an independent state. Now, if they are pleased to consider us as
in a state of independency, who can object against our considering ourselves so
too?
But while we are nobly opposing with our lives and estates
the tyranny of the British Parliament, let us not forget the duty which we owe
to our lawful magistrates; let us never mistake licentiousness for liberty. The
more we understand the principles of liberty, the more readily shall we yield
obedience to lawful authority; for no man can oppose good government but he
that is a stranger to true liberty.
Let us ever check and restrain the factious disturbers of
the peace; whenever we meet with persons that are loth to submit to lawful
authority, let us treat them with the contempt which they deserve, and even
esteem them as the enemies of their country and the pests of society. It is
with peculiar pleasure that I reflect upon the peaceable behavior of my
countrymen at a time when the courts of justice were stopped and the execution
of laws suspended. It will certainly be expected of a people that could behave
so well when they had nothing to restrain them but the laws written in their
hearts, that they will yield all ready and cheerful obedience to lawful
authority. There is at present the utmost need of guarding ourselves against a
seditious and factious temper; for when we are engaged with so powerful an
enemy from without, our political salvation, under God, does, in an eminent
manner, depend upon our being firmly united together in the bonds of love to
one another, and of due submission to lawful authority. I hope we shall never
give any just occasion to our adversaries to reproach us as being men of
turbulent dispositions and licentious principles, that cannot bear to be
restrained by good and wholesome laws, even though they are of our own making,
nor submit to rulers of our own choosing. But I have reason to hope much better
things of my countrymen, though I thus speak. However, in this time of
difficulty and distress, we cannot be too much guarded against the least
approaches to discord and faction. Let us, while we are jealous of our rights,
take heed of unreasonable suspicions and evil surmises which have no proper
foundation; let us take heed lest we hurt the cause of liberty by speaking evil
of the ruler of the people.
Let us treat our rulers with all that honor and respect
which the dignity of their station requires; but let it be such an honor and
respect as is worthy of the sons of freedom to give. Let us ever abhor the base
arts that are used by fawning parasites and cringing courtiers, who by their
low artifices and base flatteries obtain offices and posts which they are
unqualified to sustain, and honors of which they are unworthy, and oftentimes
have a greater number of places assigned them than any one person of the
greatest abilities can ever properly fill, by means of which the community
becomes greatly injured, for this reason, that many an important trust remains
undischarged, and many an honest and worthy member of society is deprived of
those honors and privileges to which he has a just right, whilst the most
despicable, worthless courtier is loaded with honorable and profitable
commissions. In order to avoid this evil, I hope our legislators will always
despise flattery as something below the dignity of a rational mind, and that
they will ever scorn the man that will be corrupted or take a bribe. And let us
all resolve with ourselves that no motives of interest, nor hopes of preferment
shall ever induce us to act the part of fawning courtiers towards men in power.
Let the honor and respect which we show our superiors be true and genuine,
flowing from a sincere and upright heart.
The honors that have been paid to arbitrary princes have
often been very hypocritical and insincere. Tyrants have been flattered in
their vices, and have often had an idolatrous reverence paid them. The worst
princes have been the most flattered and adored; and many such, in the pagan
world, assumed the title of gods, and had divine honors paid them. This
idolatrous reverence has ever been the inseparable concomitant of arbitrary
power and tyrannical government; for even Christian princes, if they have not
been adored under the character of gods, yet the titles given them strongly
savor of blasphemy, and the reverence paid them is really idolatrous. What
right has a poor sinful worm of the dust to claim the title of his most sacred
Majesty? Most sacred certainly belongs only to God alone,--for there is none
holy as the Lord,--yet how common is it to see this title given to kings! And
how often have we been told that the king can do no wrong! Even though he
should be so foolish and wicked as hardly to be capable of ever being in the
right, yet still it must be asserted and maintained that it is impossible for
him to do wrong!
The cruel, savage disposition of tyrants, and the
idolatrous reverence that is paid them, are both most beautifully exhibited to
view by the apostle John in the Revelation, thirteenth chapter, from the first
to the tenth verse, where the apostle gives a description of a horrible wild
beast| which he saw rise out of the sea, having seven heads and ten horns, and
upon his heads the names of blasphemy. By heads are to be understood forms of
government, and by blasphemy, idolatry; so that it seems implied that there
will be a degree of idolatry in every form of tyrannical government. This beast
is represented as having the body of a leopard, the feet of a bear, and the
mouth of a lion; i.e., a horrible monster, possessed of the rage and fury of
the lion, the fierceness of the bear, and the swiftness of the leopard to seize
and devour its prey. Can words more strongly point out, or exhibit in more
lively colors, the exceeding rage, fury, and impetuosity of tyrants, in their
destroying and making havoc of mankind? To this beast we find the dragon gave
his power, seat, and great authority; i.e., the devil constituted him to be his
vicegerent on earth; this is to denote that tyrants are the ministers of Satan,
ordained by him for the destruction of mankind.
Wild beast. By the beast with seven heads and ten horns I
understand the tyranny of arbitrary princes, viz., the emperors and kings of
the Eastern and Western Roman Empire, and not the tyranny of the Pope and
clergy; for the description of every part of this beast will answer better to
be understood of political than of ecclesiastical tyrants. Thus the seven heads
are generally interpreted to denote the several forms of Roman government; the
ten horns are understood of the ten kingdoms that were set up in the Western
Empire; and by the body of the beast it seems most natural to understand the
Eastern, or Greek Empire, for it is said to be like a leopard. This image is
taken from Daniel vii. 6, where the third beast is said to be like a leopard.
Now, by the third beast in Daniel is understood, by the best interpreters, the
Grecian Monarchy. It is well known that John frequently borrows his images from
Daniel, and I believe it will be found, upon a critical examination of the
matter, that whenever he does so he means the same thing with Daniel; if this
be true (as I am fully persuaded it is), then, by the body of this beast being
like a leopard in the Revelation of John, is to be understood the Eastern, or
Greek Empire, which was that part of the old Roman Empire that remained whole
for several ages after the Western Empire was broken into ten kingdoms.
Further: after the beast was risen it is said that the dragon gave him his
seat. Now, by the dragon is meant the devil, who is represented as presiding
over the Roman Empire in its pagan state; but the seat of the Roman Empire in
its pagan state was Rome. Here, then, is a prophecy that the emperor of the
East should become possessed of Rome, which exactly agrees with what we know
from history to be fact; for the Emperor Justinian's generals having expelled
the Goths our of Italy, Rome was brought into subjection to the emperor of the
East, and was for a long time governed by the emperor's lieutenant, who resided
at Ravenna. These considerations convince me that the Greek Empire, and not the
Pope and his clergy, is to be understood by the body of the beast, which was
like a leopard. And what further confirms me in this belief is, that it appears
to me that the Pope and the papal clergy are to be understood by the second
beast which we read of in Revelation xiii. 11-17, for of him it is said that
he had two horns like a lamb. A lamb, we know, is the figure by
which Jesus Christ is signified in the Revelation and many other parts of the
New Testament. The Pope claims both a temporal and spiritual sovereignty,
denoted by the two horns, under the character of the vicar of Jesus Christ, and
yet under this high pretence of being the vicar of Jesus Christ, he speaks like
a dragon; i.e., he promotes idolatry in the Christian Church, in like manner as
the dragon did in the heathen world. To distinguish him from the first beast,
he is called (Revelation xix.) the false prophet that wrought
miracles; i.e., like Mahomet, he pretends to be a lawgiver, and claims
infallibility, and his emissaries endeavor to confirm this doctrine by
pretended miracles. How wonderfully do all these characters agree to the Pope!
Wherefore I conclude that the second, and not the first beast, denotes the
tyranny of the Pope and his clergy.
Such a horrible monster, we should have thought, would
have been abhorred and detested of all mankind, and that all nations would have
joined their powers and forces together to oppose and utterly destroy him from
off the face of the earth; but, so far are they from doing this, that, on the
contrary, they are represented as worshipping him (verse 8): And all that
dwell on the earth shall worship him, viz., all those whose names
are not written in the Lamb's book of life, i.e., the wicked world shall
pay him an idolatrous reverence, and worship him with a godlike adoration. What
can in a more lively manner show the gross stupidity and wickedness of mankind,
in thus tamely giving up their just rights into the hands of tyrannical
monsters, . . . and in so readily paying them such an unlimited obedience as
is due to God alone?
We may observe, further, that these men are said (verse 4)
to worship the dragon;--not that it is to be supposed that they, in
direct terms, paid divine homage to Satan, but that the adoration paid to the
beast, who was Satan's vicegerent, did ultimately centre in him. Hence we learn
that those who pay an undue and sinful veneration to tyrants are properly the
servants of the devil; they are worshipers of the prince of darkness, for in
him all that undue homage and adoration centres that is given to his ministers.
Hence that terrible denunciation of divine wrath against the worshippers of the
beast and his image: If any man worship the beast and his image, and
receive his mark in his forehead, or in his hand, the same shall drink of the
wine of the wrath of God which is poured out without mixture into the cup of
his indignation, and he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the
presence of the holy angels, and in the presence of the Lamb; and the smoke of
their torment ascendeth for ever and ever: and they have no rest day nor night,
who worship the beast and his image, and who receive the mark of his
name.ß We have here set forth in the clearest manner, by the
inspired apostle, God's abhorrence of tyranny and tyrants, together with the
idolatrous reverence that their wretched subjects are wont to pay them, and the
awful denunciation of divine wrath against those who are guilty of this undue
obedience to tyrants.
ß Rev. xiv. 9, 10.
Does it not, then, highly concern us all to stand fast in
the liberty wherewith Heaven hath made us free, and to strive to get the
victory over the beast and his image--over every species of tyranny? Let us
look upon a freedom from the power of tyrants as a blessing that cannot be
purchased too dear, and let us bless God that he has so far delivered us from
that idolatrous reverence which men are so very apt to pay to arbitrary
tyrants; and let us pray that he would be pleased graciously to perfect the
mercy he has begun to show us by confounding the devices of our enemies and
bringing their counsels to nought, and by establishing our just rights and
privileges upon such a firm and lasting basis that the powers of earth and hell
shall not prevail against it.
Under God, every person in the community ought to
contribute his assistance to the bringing about so glorious and important an
event; but in a more eminent manner does this important business belong to the
gentlemen that are chosen to represent the people in this General Assembly,
including those that have been appointed members of the Honorable Council
Board.
Honored fathers, we look up to you, in this day of
calamity and distress, as the guardians of our invaded rights, and the
defenders of our liberties against British tyranny. You are called, in
Providence, to save your country from ruin. A trust is reposed in you of the
highest importance to the community that can be conceived of, its business the
most noble and grand, and a task the most arduous and difficult to accomplish
that ever engaged the human mind--I mean as to things of the present life. But
as you are engaged in the defence of a just and righteous cause, you may with
firmness of mind commit your cause to God, and depend on his kind providence
for direction and assistance. You will have the fervent wishes and prayers of
all good men that God would crown all your labors with success, and direct you
into such measures as shall tend to promote the welfare and happiness of the
community, and afford you all that wisdom and prudence which is necessary to
regulate the affairs of state at this critical period.
Honored fathers of the House of Representatives: We trust
to your wisdom and goodness that you will be led to appoint such men to be in
council whom you know to be men of real principle, and who are of unblemished
lives; that have shown themselves zealous and hearty friends to the liberties
of America; and men that have the fear of God before their eyes; for such only
are men that can be depended upon uniformly to pursue the general good.
My reverend fathers and brethren in the ministry will
remember that, according to our text, it is part of the work and business of a
gospel minister to teach his hearers the duty they owe to magistrates. Let us,
then, endeavor to explain the nature of their duty faithfully, and show them
the difference between liberty and licentiousness; and, while we are animating
them to oppose tyranny and arbitrary power, let us inculcate upon them the duty
of yielding due obedience to lawful authority. In order to the right and
faithful discharge of this part of our ministry, it is necessary that we should
thoroughly study the law of nature, the rights of mankind, and the reciprocal
duties of governors and governed. By this means we shall be able to guard them
against the extremes of slavish submission to tyrants on one hand, and of
sedition and licentiousness on the other. We may, I apprehend, attain a
thorough acquaintance with the law of nature and the rights of mankind, while
we remain ignorant of many technical terms of law, and are utterly unacquainted
with the obscure and barbarous Latin that was so much used in the ages of
popish darkness and Superstition.
To conclude: While we are fighting for liberty, and
striving against tyranny, let us remember to fight the good fight of faith, and
earnestly seek to be delivered from that bondage of corruption which we are
brought into by sin, and that we may be made partakers of the glorious liberty
of the sons and children of God: which may the Father of Mercies grant us all,
through Jesus Christ. AMEN.
|
|