John Newton's Letters
The history of mankind
July, 1777
Dear sir,
I have recently read "Robertson's History of Charles V", which, like
most other histories, I consider as a comment upon those passages of
Scripture which teach us the depravity of man, the deceitfulness of the
heart, the ruinous effects of sin; and the powerful, though secret, rule of
Divine Providence, moving, directing, controlling the designs and actions of
men, with an unerring hand, to the accomplishment of his own purposes, both
of mercy and judgment. Without the clue and the light which the Word of God
affords—the history of mankind, of any, of every age, only presents
to view—a labyrinth and a chaos; a detail of wickedness and misery to make
us tremble; and a confused jumble of interfering incidents, as destitute of
stability, connection, or order—as the clouds which fly over our heads.
But with the Scripture key—all is plain, all is
instructive. Then I see, truly there is a God, who governs the earth, who
pours contempt upon princes, takes the wise in their own craftiness,
over-rules the wrath and pride of man to bring his own designs to pass, and
restrains all that is not necessary to that end; blasting the best concerted
enterprises at one time, by means apparently slight, and altogether
unexpected, and at other times producing the most important events from
instruments and circumstances which are at first thought too feeble and
trivial to deserve notice.
I would like to see a writer of Dr. Robertson's abilities
give us a history upon this plan; but I think his reflections of this sort
are too general, too cold, and too few. What an empty phantom do the great
men of the world pursue, while they wage war with the peace of mankind, and
butcher (in the course of their lives) perhaps hundreds of thousands, to
maintain the shadow of authority over distant nations, whom they can reach
with no other influence than that of oppression and devastation! But when we
consider those who are sacrificed to their ambition as justly
suffering for their sins, then heroes and conquerors appear in their proper
light, and worthy to be classed with earthquakes and pestilences—as
instruments of Divine vengeance. So many cares, so much pains, so many
mischiefs, merely to support the idea which a human worm has formed
of his own grandeur, is a proof that man, by nature, is not only
depraved—but infatuated. How awful is the case of those who live and die in
such a spirit, and who have multiplied miseries upon their fellow-creatures,
in order to support and feed their pride and arrogance! Perhaps they may,
upon their entrance to the eternal state, be accosted by multitudes, to the
purpose of that sarcastic language in the prophet's sublime ode of triumph
over the king of Babylon, Isa. 14:5-17.
But though the effects of this principle of SELF
are more extensive and calamitous in proportion as those who are governed by
it are more elevated, the principle itself is deep-rooted in every heart,
and is the spring of every action—until grace infuses a new principle, and
self, like Dagon, falls before the Lord Almighty. Great and small are but
relative terms; and the passions of discontent, pride, and envy, which, in
the breast of a potentate are severely felt by one half of Europe, exert
themselves with equal strength in the heart of a peasant, though, for lack
of materials and opportunities, their operations are confined within narrow
bounds. We are fallen into a state of gross idolatry—and SELF is the idol we
worship!