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CHARLES
GRANDISON FINNEY (17921875)
Father of modern revivalism FINNEY, CHARLES GRANDISON: Congregtionalist, revivalist, theologian and president of Oberlin College; b. at Warren, Litchfield County, Conn., Aug. 29, 1792; d. at Oberlin, 0., Aug. 16, 1875. When he was two years old his parents removed to Oneida County, N. Y., thus placing him beyond the reach of more than a common school education. When about twenty he went to New Jersey, where be attended a bigb school and taught. In later years he acquired some knowledge of Latin, Greek, and Hebrew. In 1816 he entered a law office in Adams, N. Y, At that time, He says, he was "almost as ignorant of religion as a heathen " (Autobiography, p. 7). His curiosity was excited by quotations from the Bible in his law books, and he purchased the first copy he had ever owned, and began to attend prayer-meeting and church. His conversion in 1821 was remarkable for its suddenness, thoroughness, and the definitely marked stages of his experience. After great mental agony, in which he prayed long and fervently, suddenly, he says, "the Holy Spirit descended upon me in a manner that seemed to go through me, body and soul. I could feel the impression like a wave of electricity going through and through me "(Autobiography, p. 20), Feeling an immediate call to preach, he forsook the law, was received under care of presbytery (1822), and licensed to preach (1824), He at once turned his attention to revival labors, which were continued, with few interruptions until 1860 when he was forced to give up the work of an itinerant evangelist on account of age. These labors, beginning in western and central New York, were extended to Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and other cities of the East, and reached to England in 1849 and 1858 In 1832 he accepted a call to the pastorate of the Second Free Church of New York City, and in 1834 another to the recently organized Congregational Church in the same city, known as the Broadway Tabernacle, In 1835 he went to Oberlin as professor of theology, and he continued to labor till the time of his death as instructor, pastor, and college president (1852). During his residence at Oberlin he continued, as before, to hold revival meetings. As preacher Finney had rare gifts. Wherever he went extensive
revivals prevailed. His manner was dramatic, direct, and personal. He used
simple language and illustrations. His presentation was clear and strictly
logical. He directed his appeals to the conscience, rather than to the
emotions, and made it tremble and quake by his searching analysis of the
motives of action. He chose for themes passages which delineate the sinner's
condition as one of conscious alienation from God, and sinning against him. He
dwelt Upon the enmity of the carnal mind, the lack of holiness, and the certain
destruction of the impenitent. He called upon his hearers to come to an
immediate decision and submit to God. "Instead of telling sinners" he says, "to
use the means of grace, and pray for a new heart, I called on them to make
themselves a new heart and spirit, and pressed the duty of immediate surrender
to God " (Autobiography, p. 189). These meetings were often accompanied by
violent bodily manifestations; and Finney was in the habit of calling upon the
audiences to go forward to the anxious-bench, or to rise in attestation of new
resolutions. These methods, his directness and calls to repentance, his
departure from the doctrine of imputation and other features of the Calvinist
theology early evoked criticism and strong opposition from religious
associations and such church leaders as Asabel Nettleton and Lyman Beecher. In
1827 a convention was held at New Lebanon attended by Dr. Hanes of Hartford,
Justin Edwards of Andover, Lyman Beecher of Boston, Dr. Beman of Troy, and
others, to consider the matter. In course of time the opposition decreased
(Autobiography, pp. 210-226). Finney's preaching reached all classes, but
especially lawyers and educated men, notably in Rochester and other towns of
western New York. During the first twelve years of his ministry he wrote no
word of his sermons and often went into the pulpit without knowing the text
from which he would preach; he ascribed his speech to the suggestion of the
Holy Spirit (Autobiography, p. 95). As a teacher at Oberlin, Finney's influence
was also great. He was an original thinker and very positive in his
convictions. His Lectures on Systematic Theology (2 vols., Oberlin, 1846; new
ed., by J. H. Fairchild, 1878) define his theological position. He held to the
plenary ability of the sinner to repent, the voluntary and total moral
depravity of the unregenerate man, the necessity of a radical change of heart
through the truth by the agency of the Holy Spirit, and the sufficiency of the
vicarious atonement for the needs of all mankind. He regarded happiness as the
chief aim, and explained regeneration (which he did not clearly distinguish
from conversion) to consist of an act of the will, rather than an act of the
Holy Spirit. He exerted a shaping influence over the minds of his students; and
his theology, in a modified form, had a wide acceptance in his own
denomination. His works, beside the Lectures on Theology already mentioned,
were Lectures on Revivals (Boston, 1835; many later editions); Lectures to
Professing Christians (Oberlin, 1836); and Sermons on Important Subjects (New
York, 1839). |
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