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Charles
Grandison Finney's life began in 1792 in the town of Warren, Connecticut.
When he was two years old, Finney's parents, like many New Englanders
of their day, heeded the call of the frontier and moved to Oneida
County in the wilderness of western New York. Although the community
had a common school which Finney attended, he and his neighbors
had little access to religious services or books. According to
his memoirs, written in 1876 while he was president of Oberlin
College, Finney's domestic life did no more to promote religious
feeling:
"My
parents were neither of them professors of religion, and, I believe,
among our neighbors there were very few religious people. I seldom
heard a sermon, unless it was an occasional one from some travelling
minister, or some miserable holding forth of an ignorant preacher
who would sometimes be found in that country. I recollect very
well that the ignorance of the preachers that I heard was such,
that the people would return from meeting and spend a considerable
time in irrepressible laughter at the strange mistakes which had
been made and the absurdities which had been advanced."
All changed, however, in the autumn of 1821. At age twenty-nine,
a student of the law in Adams, New York, Finney was saved. One
Wednesday morning Charles Finney woke up a questioning and sometimes
scornful observer of the religious life around him. The following
day, when asked by a client if he were ready to try the case scheduled
for that day, Finney was able to reply, "I have a retainer from
the Lord Jesus Christ to plead his cause, I cannot plead yours."
(Memoirs, 24)
The ministry which began that day would change the face of American
evangelism. Before and after his conversion, Finney rejected the
Calvinist doctrine of passive salvation available only to the
elect. He believed that God offered Himself to everyone and, most
importantly, that one could be saved only through an active acceptance
of God's invitation to grace. The sinner chooses to sin just as
the penitent chooses to repent.
To reach as many souls as possible, Finney employed what came
to be called "new measures", although many had been used by earlier
preachers. These new measures triggered alarm among conservative
clergy. Opponents such as Asahel Nettleton were able to list as
many as twenty-nine objectionable practices, but the most controversial
were: public praying of women in mixed-sex audiences, daily services
over a series of days, use of colloquial language by the preacher,
the "anxious bench", praying for people by name, and immediate
church membership for converts.
To a student of American culture, Finney is a crucial figure of
the Jacksonian era. Finney's influence rose in tandem with that
of Andrew Jackson; both addressed the issues of equality of men,
and free will and self governance. In his Lectures on Revivals
of Religion, delivered to his New York congregation in 1834
and published in book form the following year, Charles Finney
takes pains to define a revival. Above all, it is not a miracle
in the sense of a physical change brought on solely by God, but
a change of mind which, though influences by the Holy Spirit,
is ultimately a matter of the individual's free will.
Ordained a Presbyterian minister in 1824, Finney was soon at odds
with conservative clergy. The new measured used by Finney and
his followers caused enough alarm among their more orthodox colleagues
to be the subject of a convention held at New Lebanon, NY in July,
1827. Motions were made to restrict the New School revivalists,
but no definitive anti-new measures resolution was effected. The
victory for Finney and his fellows was in emerging relatively
unscathed from a confrontation with powerful clergymen like Lyman
Beecher.
In the years following New Lebanon, Finney's ministry moved from
small town to big city; he went on to preach in Philadelphia,
Boston, and New York. In 1835 he began work in Oberlin College
and Theological Seminary. He was President of Oberlin College
from 1851 to 1866 and although he retired in 1872, Finney kept
up his involvement with Oberlin's students until his death in
August of 1875.
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