mon works, . . . such as Conviction of sin and misery by the law, and the terrours of the Lord that make men affraid, . . . may put a stop to their lewd courses, yea, and work a reformation in many things, and make a natural Conscience to act more strongly than before." 16 As socially useful as these works were, he added in a phrase that hinted at his reservations about the whole scheme, they did not always produce the beginning of conversion. Grace, he explained elsewhere, might work on men and yet not suffuse their beings. It sometimes operated externally, pushing the faculties of the soul this way or that, instructing the understanding in virtuous behavior, filling the will and the affections with fear when they countenanced sin, and yet leaving their nature unrenewed. Sometimes the natural conscience of the reprobate, without the assistance of common grace, aroused itself. Good preaching could do the job, and a man temporarily affected by his sins could mend his ways. At death, though the soul had achieved an outward reformation and no longer sinned so far as the eyes of the world could observe, the creature was plunged into Hell by a Lord who could see that internally nothing had really changed. 17
|
A society in the national covenant did not have to interest itself in the true inner being of a man. If he behaved it could rest securely. But, of course, a man could not take his condition so lightly; he faced eternal damnation if he settled for anything less than saving faith. It was precisely on this point that the concept of preparation proved of "inconceivable prejudice" to the souls of men, as far as Cotton Mather could see. His analysis of the religious situation in New England always came back to one issue. At the heart of the decline of piety lay the pride of men. Not only did they cherish their own concerns, the flesh and the world, over the Lord's, they wanted to go to Him under their own power. What else was involvedhe askedin the satisfactions felt by the secure and the anxieties experienced by the fearful? The secure, made temporarily "sick" by a sermon or uneasy by their consciences, took up the life of the moral and believed themselves saved. At that point complacency had set in. The anxious, protesting their lack of merit, denied that the Lord would reprieve the likes of them and therefore remained in a natural condition. As different as these two types of men seemed, they were essentially alike: both preferred their own righteousness to Christ. Both indeed were unavowed Arminians. Unfortunately, as
|
|