Chapter 9
Innocent Amusements
We hear much said, and
read much, in these days, of indulging in innocent amusements. I heard a
minister, some time since, in addressing a large company of young people, say
that he had spent much time in devising innocent amusements for the young.
Within a few years I have read several sermons and numerous articles pleading
for more amusements than have been customary with religious people. With your
consent, I wish to suggest a few thoughts upon this subject first, what are not,
and, secondly, what are innocent amusements.
1st. This is a question
of morals.
2nd. All intelligent
acts of a moral agent must be either right or wrong. Nothing is innocent in a
moral agent that is not in accordance with the law and gospel of God.
3rd. The moral
character of any and every act of a moral agent resides in the motive or the
ultimate reason for the act. This I take to be self-evident and universally
admitted.
4th. Now, what is the
rule of judgment in this case? How are we to decide whether any given act of
amusement is right or wrong, innocent or sinful? I answer:
1st. By the moral law,
"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart," etc., "and
thy neighbor as thyself." No intelligent act of a moral agent is innocent
or right unless it proceeds from and is an expression of supreme love to God and
equal love to man in other words, unless it is benevolent.
2nd. The Gospel. This
requires the same: "Therefore, whether ye eat or drink, or whatever ye do,
do all to the glory of God." "Do all in the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ."
3rd. Right reason
affirms the same thing.
Now, in the light of
this rule, it is plain that it is not innocent to engage in amusements merely to
gratify the desire for amusement. We may not innocently eat or drink to gratify
the desire for food or drink. To eat or drink merely to gratify appetite is
innocent enough in a mere animal, but in a moral agent it is a sin. A moral
agent is bound to have a higher ultimate motive to eat and drink that he may be
strong and healthy for the service of God. God has made eating and drinking
pleasant to us; but this pleasure ought not to be our ultimate reason for eating
and drinking. So amusements are pleasant, but this does not justify us in
seeking amusements to gratify desire. Mere animals may do this innocently,
because they are incapable of any higher motive. But moral agents are under a
higher law, and are bound to have another and a higher aim than merely to
gratify the desire for amusements. Therefore, no amusement is innocent which is
engaged in for the pleasure of the amusement, any more than it would be innocent
to eat and drink for the pleasure of it.
Again, no amusement is
innocent that is engaged in because we need amusements. We need food and drink;
but this does not justify us in eating and drinking simply because we need it.
The law of God does not say, "Seek whatever ye need because ye need
it"; but, "Do all from love to God and man." A wicked man might
eat and drink selfishly that is, to make his body strong to execute his selfish
plans but this eating and drinking would be sin notwithstanding he needed food
and drink.
Nothing is innocent
unless it proceeds from supreme love to God and equal love to man, unless the
supreme and ultimate motive be to please and honor God. In other words, to be
innocent, any amusement must be engaged in because it is believed to be at the
time most pleasing to God, and is intended to be a service rendered to Him, as
that which, upon the whole, will honor Him more than anything else that we can
engage in for the time being. I take this to be self-evident. What then? It
follows:
1st. That none but
benevolent amusements can be innocent. Fishing and shooting for amusement are
not innocent. We may fish and hunt for the same reason that we are allowed to
eat and drink to supply nature with aliment, that we may be strong in the
service of God. We may hunt to destroy noxious animals, for the glory of God and
the interests of His kingdom. But fishing and hunting to gratify a passion for
these sports is not innocent.
Again, no amusement can
be innocent that involves the squandering of precious time, that might be better
employed to the glory of God and the good of man. Life is short. Time is
precious. We have but one life to live. Much is to be done. The world is in
darkness. A world of sinners are to be enlightened, and, if possible, saved. We
are required to work while the day lasteth. Our commission and work require
dispatch. No time is to be lost. If our hearts are right, our work is pleasant.
If rightly performed it affords the highest enjoyment and is itself the highest
amusement. No turning aside for amusement can be innocent that involves any
unnecessary loss of time. No man that realizes the greatness of the work to be
done, and loves to do it, can turn aside for any amusement involving an
unnecessary waste of time.
Again, no amusement can
be innocent that involves an unnecessary expenditure of the Lord's money. All
our time and all our money are the Lord's. We are the Lord's. We may innocently
use both time and money to promote the Lord's interests and the highest
interests of man, which are the Lord's interests. But we may not innocently use
either for our own pleasure and gratification. Expensive journeys for our own
pleasure and amusement, and not indulged in with a single eye to the glory of
God, are not innocent amusements, but sinful.
Again, in the light of
the above rule of judgment, we see that no form of amusement is lawful for an
unconverted sinner. Nothing in him is innocent. While he remains impenitent and
unbelieving, does not love God and his neighbor according to God's command,
there is for him no innocent employment or amusement; all is sin.
And right here I fear
that many are acting under a great delusion. The loose manner in which this
subject is viewed by many professors of religion, and even ministers, is
surprising and alarming. Some time since, in a sermon, I remarked that there
were no lawful employments or innocent amusements for sinners. An aged clergyman
who was present said, after service, that it was ridiculous to hold that nothing
was lawful or innocent in an impenitent sinner. I replied: "I thought you
were orthodox. Do you not believe in the universal necessity of regeneration by
the Holy Spirit?" He replied: "Yes." I added: "Do you
believe that an unregenerate soul does anything acceptable to God? Before his
heart is changed, does he ever act from a motive that God can accept, in
anything whatever? Is he not totally depraved, in the sense that his heart is
all wrong, and therefore his actions must be all wrong?" He appeared
embarrassed, saw the point, and subsided.
Whatever is lawful in a
moral agent or according to the law of God is right. If anyone, therefore,
engages lawfully in any employment or in any amusement, he must do so from
supreme love to God and equal love to his neighbor; and is, therefore, not an
impenitent sinner, but a Christian. It is simply absurd and a contradiction to
say that an impenitent soul does, or says, or omits anything with a right heart.
If impenitent, his ultimate motive must necessarily be wrong; and, consequently,
nothing in him is innocent, but all must be sinful. What, then, is an innocent
amusement? It must be that and that only which not only might be but actually is
engaged in with a single eye to God's glory and the interests of His kingdom. If
this be not the ultimate and supreme design, it is not an innocent, but a sinful
amusement. Now, right here is the delusion of many persons, I fear. When
speaking of amusements, they say: "What harm is there in them?" In
answering to themselves and others this question, they do not penetrate to the
bottom of it. If on the surface they see nothing contrary to morality, they
judge that the amusement is innocent. They fail to inquire into the supreme and
ultimate motive in which the innocence or sinfulness of the act is found. But
apart from the motive no course of action is either innocent or sinful, any more
than the motions of a machine or the acts of a mere animal are innocent or
sinful. No act or course of action should, therefore, be adjudged as either
innocent or sinful without ascertaining the supreme motive of the person who
acts.
To teach, either
directly or by implication, that any amusement of an impenitent sinner or of a
backslider is innocent is to teach a gross and ruinous heresy. Parents should
remember this in regard to the amusements of their unconverted children. Sabbath
school teachers and superintendents who are planning amusements for their
Sabbath schools, preachers who spend their time in planning amusements for the
young, who lead their flocks to picnics, in pleasure excursions, and justify
various games, should certainly remember that, unless they are in a holy state
of heart, and do all this from supreme love to God and a design in the highest
degree to glorify God thereby, these ways of spending time are by no means
innocent, but highly criminal, and those who teach people to walk in these ways
are simply directing the channels in which their depravity shall run. For be it
ever remembered that, unless these things are indulged in from supreme love to
God and designed to glorify Him, unless they are, in fact, engaged in with a
single eye to the glory of God, they are not innocent, but sinful amusements. I
must say again, and, if possible, still more emphatically, that it is not enough
that they might be engaged in as the best way, for the time being, to honor and
please God; but they must be actually engaged in from supreme love to God, with
the ultimate design to glorify Him.
If such, then, is the
true doctrine of innocent amusements, let no impenitent sinner and no
backslidden Christian suppose for a moment that it is possible for him to engage
in any innocent amusement. If it were true, as the aged minister to whom I have
referred and many others seem to believe, that impenitent sinners or backsliders
can and do engage in innocent amusements, the very engaging in such amusements,
being lawfully right and innocent in them, would involve a change of heart in
the unconverted, and a return to God in the backslider. For no amusement is
lawful unless it be engaged in as a love-service rendered to God and with design
to please and glorify Him. It must not only be a love service, but, in the
judgment of the one who renders it, it must be the best service that, for the
time being, he can render to God a service that will be more pleasing to Him and
more useful to His kingdom than any other that can be engaged in at the time.
Let these facts be borne in mind when the question of engaging in amusements
comes up for decision. And remember, the question in all such cases is not,
"What harm is there in this proposed amusement?" but, "What good
can it do?" "Is it the best way in which I can spend my time?"
"Will it be more pleasing to God and more for the interest of His kingdom
than anything else at present possible to me?" "If not, it is not an
innocent amusement, and I cannot engage in it without sin."
The question often
arises: "Are we never to seek such amusements?" I answer: It is our
privilege and our duty to live above a desire for such things. All that class of
desires should be so subdued by living so much in the light of God, and having
so deep a communion with Him as to have no relish for such amusements whatever.
It certainly is the privilege of every child of God to walk so closely with Him,
and maintain so divine a communion with Him, as not to feel the necessity of
worldly excitements, sports, pastimes, and entertainments to make his enjoyment
satisfactory. If a Christian avails himself of his privilege of communion with
God, he will naturally and by an instinct of his new nature repel solicitations
to go after worldly amusements. To him such pastimes will appear low,
unsatisfactory, and even repulsive. If he is of a heavenly mind, as he ought to
be, he will feel as if he could not afford to come down and seek enjoyment in
worldly amusements.
Surely, a Christian
must be fallen from his first love, he must have turned back into the world,
before he can feel the necessity or have the desire of seeking enjoyment in
worldly sports and pastimes. A spiritual mind cannot seek enjoyment in worldly
society. To such a mind that society is necessarily repulsive. Worldly society
is insincere, hollow, and to a great extent a sham. What relish can a spiritual
mind have for the gossip of a worldly party of pleasure? None whatever. To a
mind in communion with God their worldly spirit and ways, conversation and folly
is repulsive and painful, as it is so strongly suggestive of the downward
tendency of their souls, and of the destiny that awaits them.
I have had so marked an
experience of both sides of this question that I think I cannot be mistaken.
Probably but few persons enjoy worldly pleasure more intensely than I did before
I was converted; but my conversion, and the spiritual baptism which immediately
followed it, completely extinguished all desire for worldly sports and
amusements. I was lifted at once into entirely another plane of life and another
kind of enjoyment. From that hour to the present the mode of life, the pastimes,
sports, amusements, and worldly ways that so much delighted me before have not
only failed to interest me, but I have had a positive aversion to them. I have
never felt them necessary to, or even compatible with, a truly rational
enjoyment. I do not speak boastingly; but for the honor of Christ and His
religion, I must say that my Christian life has been a happy one. I have had as
much enjoyment as is probably best for men to have in this life, and never for
an hour have I had the desire to turn back and seek enjoyment from anything the
world can give.
But some may ask:
"Suppose we do not find sufficient enjoyment in religion, and really desire
to go after worldly amusements. If we have the disposition, is it not as well to
gratify it?" "Is there any more sin in seeking amusements than in
entertaining a longing for them?" I reply that a longing for them should
never be entertained. It is the privilege and therefore the duty of everyone to
rise, through grace, above a hungering and thirsting for the fleshpots of Egypt,
worldly pastimes and time-wasting amusements. The indulgence of such longings is
not innocent. One should not ask whether the longing should be gratified, but
whether it should not be displaced by a longing for the glory of God and His
kingdom.
Professed Christians
are bound to maintain a life consistent with their profession. For the honor of
religion, they ought to deny worldly lusts; and not, by seeking to gratify them,
give occasion to the world to scoff and say that Christians love the world as
well as they do. If professors of religion are backslidden in heart, and
entertain a longing for worldly sports and amusements, they are bound by every
consideration of duty and decency to abstain from all outward manifestation of
such inward lustings. Some have maintained that we should conform to the ways of
the world somewhat at least, enough to show that we can enjoy the world and
religion too; and that we make religion appear repulsive to unconverted souls by
turning our backs upon what they call their innocent amusements. But we should
represent religion as it really is as living above the world, as consisting in a
heavenly mind, as that which affords an enjoyment so spiritual and heavenly as
to render the low pursuits and joys of worldly men disagreeable and repulsive.
It is a sad stumbling-block to the unconverted to see professed Christians
seeking pleasure or happiness from this world. Such seeking is a
misrepresentation of the religion of Jesus. It misleads, bewilders, and
confounds the observing outsider. If he ever reads his Bible, he cannot but
wonder that souls who are born of God and have communion with Him should have
any relish for worldly ways and pleasures. The fact is that thoughtful
unconverted men have little or no confidence in that class of professing
Christians who seek enjoyment from this world. They may profess to have, and may
loosely think of such as being liberal and good Christians. They may flatter
them, and commend their religion as being the opposite of fanaticism and
bigotry, and as being such a religion as they like to see; but there is no real
sincerity in such professions on the part of the impenitent.
In my early Christian
life I heard a Methodist bishop from the South report a case that made a deep
impression on my mind. He said there was in his neighborhood a slave holder, a
gentleman of fortune, who was a gay and agreeable man, and gave himself much to
various field sports and amusements. He used to associate much with his pastor,
often invite him to dinner, and to accompany him in his sports and
pleasure-seeking excursions of various kinds. The minister cheerfully complied
with these requests, and a friendship grew up between the pastor and his
parishioner that continued till the last sickness of this gay and wealthy man.
When the wife of this worldling was apprised that her husband could live but a
short time she was much alarmed for his soul, and tenderly inquired if she
should not call in their minister to converse and pray with him. He feelingly
replied: "No, my dear; he is not the man for me to see now. He was my
companion, as you know, in worldly sports and pleasure-seeking; he loved good
dinners and a jolly time. I then enjoyed his society and found him a pleasant
companion. But I see now that I never had any real confidence in his piety, and
have now no confidence in the efficacy of his prayers. I am now a dying man, and
need the instruction and prayers of somebody that can prevail with God. We have
been much together, but our pastor has never been in serious earnest with me
about the salvation of my soul, and he is not the man to help me now." The
wife was greatly affected, and said: "What shall I do, then?" He
replied: "My coachman, Tom, is a pious man. I have confidence in his
prayers. I have often overheard him pray, when about the barn or stables, and
his prayers have always struck me as being quite sincere and earnest. I never
heard any foolishness from him. He has always been honest and earnest as a
Christian man. Call him." Tom was called, and came within the door,
dropping his hat and looking tenderly and compassionately at his dying master.
The dying man put forth his hand, saying: "Come here, Tom. Take my hand.
Tom, can you pray for your dying master?" Tom poured out his soul in
earnest prayer.
I cannot remember the
name of this bishop, it was so long ago; but the story I well remember as an
illustration of the mistake into which many professors and some ministers fall,
supposing that we recommend religion to the unconverted by mingling with them in
their pleasures and their running after amusements. I have seen many
illustrations of this mistake. Christians should live so far above the world as
not to need or seek its pleasures, and thus recommend religion to the world as a
source of the highest and purest happiness. The peaceful look, the joyful
countenance, the spiritual serenity and cheerfulness of a living Christian
recommend religion to the unconverted. Their satisfaction in God, their holy
joy, their living above and shunning the ways and amusements of worldly minds,
impress the unconverted with a sense of the necessity and desirableness of a
Christian life. But let no man think to gain a really Christian influence over
another by manifesting a sympathy with his worldly aspirations.
Now, is this rule a
yoke of bondage? I do not wonder that it has created in some minds not a little
disturbance. The pleasure loving and pleasure seeking members of the Church
regard the rule as impracticable, as a strait jacket, as a bondage. But to whom
is it a straitjacket and a bondage? To whom is it impracticable? Surely it is
not and cannot be to any who love God with all their heart and their neighbor as
themselves. It certainly cannot be so regarded by a real Christian, for all real
Christians love God supremely. Their own interests and their own pleasure are
regarded as nothing as compared with the interests and good pleasure of God.
They, therefore, cannot seek amusements unless they believe themselves called of
God to do so. By a law of our nature we seek to please those whom we supremely
love. Also, by a law of our nature, we find our highest happiness in pleasing
those whom we supremely love; and we supremely please ourselves when we seek not
at all to please ourselves, but to please the object of our supreme affection.
Therefore, Christians find their highest enjoyment and their truest pleasure in
pleasing God and in seeking the good of their fellow-men; and they enjoy this
service all the more because enjoyment is not what they seek, but what they
inevitably experience by a law of their nature.
This is a fact of
Christian consciousness. The highest and purest of all amusements is found in
doing the will of God. Mere worldly amusements are cold and insipid and not
worthy of naming in comparison with the enjoyment we find in doing the will of
God. To one who loves God supremely it is natural to seek amusements, and
everything else that we do seek, with supreme reference to the glory of God.
Why, then, should this rule be regarded as too strict, as placing the standard
too high, and as being a strait jacket and a bondage? How, then, are we to
understand those who plead so much for worldly amusements?
From what I have heard
and read upon this subject within the last few years, I have gathered that these
pleaders for amusements have thought that there was more enjoyment to be gained
from these amusements than from the service of God. They remind me of a sentence
that I used to have as a copy when a school-boy: "All work and no play
makes Jack a dull boy." They seem to assume that the service of God is work
in the sense of being a task and a burden; that to labor and pray and preach to
win souls to Christ, to commune with God and perform the duties of religion is
so wearisome, not to say irksome, that we need a good many playdays; that the
love of Christ is not satisfactory; that we must have frequent resort to worldly
amusements to make life tolerable. Christ on one occasion said to His disciples:
"Come aside and rest awhile." This is not wonderful when we consider
that they were often so thronged as not to have time even to eat their ordinary
meals. But it was not amusement that they sought; simplify rest from their
labors of love, in which labors they must have had the greatest enjoyment.
I often ask myself:
"What can it mean that so many of our highly fed and most popular preachers
are pleading so much for amusements?" They seem to be leading the Church
off in a direction in which she is the most in danger. It is no wonder that lay
men and women are easily led in that direction, for such teaching exactly
accords with the innumerable temptations to worldliness which are presented to
the Church on every side. The Bible is replete with instruction upon this
subject, which is the direct opposite of these pleas for worldly amusements.
These teachers plead for fun, hilarity, jesting, plays, and games, and such
things as worldly minds love and enjoy; but the Bible exhorts to sobriety,
heavenly-mindedness, unceasing prayer, and a close and perpetual walk with God.
The Bible everywhere assumes that all real enjoyment is found in this course of
life, that all true peace of mind is found in communion with God and in being
given up to seek His glory as the constant and supreme end of life. It exhorts
us to watchfulness, and informs us that for every idle word we must give account
in the Day of Judgment. It nowhere informs us that fun and hilarity are the
source of rational enjoyment; it nowhere encourages us to expect to maintain a
close walk with God, to have peace of mind and joy in the Holy Ghost, if we gad
about to seek amusements. And is not the teaching of the Bible on this subject
in exact accordance with human experience? Do we need to have the pulpit turn
advocate of worldly amusements? Is not human depravity strong enough in that
direction, without being stimulated by the voice of the preacher? Has the Church
worked so hard for God and souls, are Christians so overdone with their
exhausting efforts to pull sinners out of the fire, that they are in danger of
becoming insane with religious fervor and need that the pulpit and the press
should join in urging them to turn aside and seek amusements and have a little
fun? What can it mean? Why, is it not true that nearly all our dangers are on
this side? Is not human nature in its present state so strongly tending in these
directions that we need to be on our guard, and constantly to exhort the Church
not to be led away after amusements and fun, to the destruction of their souls?
But to come back to the question: To whom is it a bondage, to be required to
have a single eye to the good pleasure and glory of God in all that we do? Who
finds it hard to do so? Christ says His yoke is easy and His burden is light.
The requirement to do all for the glory of God is surely none other than the
yoke of Christ. It is His expressed will. Who finds this a hard yoke and a heavy
burden? It is not hard or heavy to a willing, loving mind.
Just the thing here
required is natural and inevitable to everyone that truly loves God and is truly
devoted to the Saviour. What is devotion to Jesus but a heart set upon rendering
Him a loving obedience in all things? What is Christian liberty but the
privilege of doing that which Christians most love to do that is, in all things
to fulfill the good pleasure of their blessed Lord? Turn aside from saving souls
to seek amusements! As if there could be a higher and diviner pleasure than is
found in laboring for the salvation of souls. It cannot be. There can be no
higher enjoyment found in this world than is found in pulling souls out of the
fire and bringing them to Christ. I am filled with amazement when I read and
hear the appeals to the Church to seek more worldly amusements. Do we need, can
we have any fuller and higher satisfaction than is found in a close, serious,
loving walk with God and cooperation with Him in fitting souls for heaven?
All that I hear said to
encourage the people of God in seeking amusements appears to me to proceed from
a worldly, instead of a spiritual state of mind. Can it be possible that a soul
in communion with God and, of course, yearning with compassion over dying men,
struggling from day to day in agonizing prayer for their salvation, should
entertain the thought of turning aside to seek amusement? Can a pastor in whose
congregation are numbers of unsaved souls, and amongst whose membership are many
worldly-minded professors of religion, turn aside and lead or accompany his
Church in a backsliding movement to gain worldly pleasure? There are always
enough in every Church who are easily led astray in that direction. But who are
they that most readily fall in with such a movement? Who are ready to come to
the front when a picnic, a pleasure excursion, a worldly party, or other
pleasure-seeking movements are proposed? Are they, in fact, the class that
always attend prayer meetings, that are always in a revival state of mind? Do
they belong to the class whose faces shine from day to day with the peace of God
pervading their souls? Are they the Aarons and Hurs that stay up the hands of
their pastor with continual and prevailing prayer? Are they spiritual members,
whose conversation is in heaven and who mind not earthly things? Who does not
know that it is the worldly members in the Church who are always ready for any
movement in the direction of worldly pleasure or amusement, and that the truly
spiritual, prayerful, heavenly-minded members are shy of all such movements?
They are not led into them without urging, and weep in secret places when they
see their pastor giving encouragement to that which is likely to be so great a
stumbling-block to both the Church and to the world.
Pres. Finney, in
forwarding his revision of the above tract for publication by the Willard Tract
Repository, accompanied it with a note to Dr. Cullis, in which he said:
"The previous pages contain a condensation of three short articles that I
published in the Independent. I recollect that the editor of the Advance, and
one of the editors of the Independent, both of whom had published what I regard
as very loose views, approving and recommending the worldly amusements of
Christians, criticized those articles with an asperity that seemed to indicate
that they were nettled by them. They so far perverted them as to assert that
they taught asceticism, and the prohibition of rest, recreation, and all
amusements. I regard the doctrine of this tract as strictly Biblical and true.
But, to avoid all such unjust inferences and cavils, add the following lines.
"Let no one say
that the doctrine of this tract prohibits all rest, recreation, and amusement
whatever. It does not. It freely admits all rest, recreation, and amusement that
is regarded, by the person who resorts to it, as a condition and means of
securing health and vigor of body and mind with which to promote the cause of
God. This tract only insists, as the Bible does, that whether we eat or drink,'
rest, recreate, or amuse ourselves, all must be done as a service rendered to
God. God must be our end. To please Him must be our aim in everything, or we
sin."

Chapter
1. Power from on high
Chapter
2. What is it?
Chapter
3. The enduement of the spirit
Chapter
4. Enduement of power from on high
Chapter
5. Is it a hard saying?
Chapter
6. Prevailing prayer
Chapter
7. How to win souls
Chapter
8. Preacher, save thyself
Chapter
9. Innocent amusements
Chapter
10. How to overcome sin
Chapter
11. The decay of conscience
Chapter
12. The psychology of faith
Chapter
13. Psychology of righteousness
Return to Power from on High
