We can hardly conceive that grace,
such as that given to the great Apostle who speaks
in the text, would have been given in vain; that is,
we should not expect that it would have been given,
had it been foreseen and designed by the Almighty
Giver that it would have been in vain. By which
I do not mean, of course, to deny that God’s
gifts are oftentimes abused and wasted by man, which
they are; but, when we consider the wonderful mode
of St. Paul’s conversion, and the singular privilege
granted him, the only one of men of whom is clearly
recorded the privilege of seeing Christ with his bodily
eyes after His ascension, as is alluded to shortly
before the text; I say, considering these high and
extraordinary favours vouchsafed to the Apostle, we
should naturally suppose that some great objects in
the history of the Church were contemplated by means
of them, such as in the event were fulfilled.
We cannot tell, indeed, why God works, or by what
rule He chooses, we must always be sober and humble
in our thoughts about His ways, which are infinitely
above our ways; but what would be speculation, perhaps
venturous speculation, before the event, at least
becomes a profitable meditation after it. At
least, now, when we read and dwell on St. Paul’s
history, we may discern and insist upon the suitableness
of his character, before his conversion, for that display
of free grace which was made in him. Not that
he could merit such a great mercy the idea
is absurd as well as wicked; but that such a one as
he was before God’s grace, naturally grew by
the aid of it into what he was afterwards as a Christian.
His, indeed, was a “wonderful
conversion,” as our Church in one place calls
it, because it was so unexpected, and (as far as the
appearance went) so sudden. Who of the suffering
Christians, against whom he was raging so furiously,
could have conceived that their enemy was to be the
great preacher and champion of the despised Cross?
Does God work miracles to reclaim His open malevolent
adversaries, and not rather to encourage and lead
forward those who timidly seek Him?
It may be useful, then, to mention
one or two kinds of what may be called sudden conversions,
to give some opinion on the character of each of them,
and to inquire which of them really took place in St.
Paul’s case.
1. First; some men turn to religion
all at once from some sudden impulse of mind, some
powerful excitement, or some strong persuasion.
It is a sudden resolve that comes upon them.
Now such cases occur very frequently where religion
has nothing to do with the matter, and then we think
little about it, merely calling the persons who thus
change all at once volatile and light-minded.
Thus there are persons who all of a sudden give up
some pursuit which they have been eagerly set upon,
or change from one trade or calling to another, or
change their opinions as regards the world’s
affairs. Every one knows the impression left
upon the mind by such instances. The persons
thus changing may be, and often are, amiable, kind,
and pleasant, as companions; but we cannot depend
on them; and we pity them, as believing they are doing
harm both to their temporal interests and to their
own minds. Others there are who almost profess
to love change for change-sake; they think the pleasure
of life consists in seeing first one thing, then another;
variety is their chief good; and it is a sufficient
objection in their minds to any pursuit or recreation,
that it is old. These, too, pass suddenly and
capriciously from one subject to another. So
far in matters of daily life; but when such
a person exhibits a similar changeableness in his
religious views, then men begin to be astonished,
and look out with curiosity or anxiety to see what
is the meaning of it, and particularly if the individual
who thus suddenly changed, was very decided before
in the particular course of life which he then followed.
For instance, supposing he not merely professed no
deep religious impressions, but actually was unbelieving
or profligate; or, again, supposing he not merely professed
himself of this creed or that, but was very warm,
and even bitter in the enforcement of it; then, I
say, men wonder, though they do not wonder at similar
infirmities in matters of this world.
Nor can I say that they are wrong
in being alive to such changes; we ought to
feel differently with reference to religious subjects,
and not be as unconcerned about them as we are about
the events of time. Did a man suddenly inform
us, with great appearance of earnestness, that he
had seen an accident in the street, or did he say that
he had seen a miracle, I confess it is natural, nay,
in the case of most men, certainly in the case of
the uneducated, far more religious, to feel differently
towards these two accounts; to feel shocked, indeed,
but not awed, at the first to feel a certain
solemn astonishment and pious reverence at the news
of the miracle. For a religious mind is ever
looking towards God, and seeking His traces; referring
all events to Him, and desirous of His explanation
of them; and when to such a one information is brought
that God has in some extraordinary way showed Himself,
he will at first sight be tempted to believe
it, and it is only the experience of the number of
deceits and false prophecies which are in the world,
his confidence in the Catholic Church which he sees
before him, and which is his guide into the truth,
and (if he be educated) his enlightened views concerning
the course and laws of God’s providence, which
keep him steady and make him hard to believe such
stories. On the other hand, men destitute of
religion altogether, of course from the first ridicule
such accounts, and, as the event shows, rightly; and
yet, in spite of this, they are not so worthy our regard
as those who at first were credulous, from having some
religious principle without enough religious knowledge.
Therefore, I am not surprised that such sudden conversions
as I have been describing deceive for a time even
the better sort of people whom I should
blame, if I were called on to do so, not so much for
the mere fact of their believing readily, but for
their not believing the Church; for believing private
individuals who have no authority more than the Church,
and for not recollecting St. Paul’s words, “If
any man . . . though we, or an Angel from heaven,
preach any other Gospel unto you than that ye have
received, let him be accursed.”
2. In the cases of sudden conversion
I have been speaking of, when men change at once either
from open sin, or again from the zealous partizanship
of a certain creed, to some novel form of faith or
worship, their light-mindedness is detected by their
frequent changing their changing again
and again, so that one can never be certain of them.
This is the test of their unsoundness; having
no root in themselves, their convictions and earnestness
quickly wither away. But there is another kind
of sudden conversion, which I proceed to mention,
in which a man perseveres to the end, consistent in
the new form he adopts, and which may be right or
wrong, as it happens, but which he cannot be
said to recommend or confirm to us by his own change.
I mean when a man, for some reason or other, whether
in religion or not, takes a great disgust to his present
course of life, and suddenly abandons it for another.
This is the case of those who rush from one to the
other extreme, and it generally arises from strong
and painful feeling, unsettling and, as it were, revolutionizing
the mind. A story is told of a spendthrift who,
having ruined himself by his extravagances, went
out of doors to meditate on his own folly and misery,
and in the course of a few hours returned home a determined
miser, and was for the rest of his life remarkable
for covetousness and penuriousness. This is
not more extraordinary than the fickleness of mind
just now described. In like manner, men sometimes
will change suddenly from love to hatred, from over-daring
to cowardice. These are no amiable changes,
whether arising or not from bodily malady, as is sometimes
the case; nor do they impart any credit or sanction
to the particular secular course or habit of mind
adopted on the change: neither do they in religion
therefore. A man who suddenly professes religion
after a profligate life, merely because he is sick
of his vices, or tormented by the thought of God’s
anger, which is the consequence of them, and without
the love of God, does no honour to religion, for he
might, if it so chanced, turn a miser or a misanthrope;
and, therefore, though religion is not at all the less
holy and true because he submits himself to it, and
though doubtless it is a much better thing for him
that he turns to religion than that he should become
a miser or a misanthrope, still, when he acts on such
motives as I have described, he cannot be said to do
any honour to the cause of religion by his conversion.
Yet it is such persons who at various times have
been thought great saints, and been reckoned to recommend
and prove the truth of the Gospel to the world!
Now if any one asks what test there
is that this kind of sudden conversion is not from
God, as instability and frequent change are the test,
on the other hand, in disproof of the divinity of the
conversions just now mentioned, I answer, its
moroseness, inhumanity, and unfitness for this world.
Men who change through strong passion and anguish
become as hard and as rigid as stone or iron; they
are not fit for life; they are only fit for the solitudes
in which they sometimes bury themselves; they can
only do one or two of their duties, and that only
in one way; they do not indeed change their principles,
as the fickle convert, but, on the other hand, they
cannot apply, adapt, accommodate, modify, diversify
their principles to the existing state of things,
which is the opposite fault. They do not aim
at a perfect obedience in little things as well as
great; and a most serious fault it is, looking at
it merely as a matter of practice, and without any
reference to the views and motives from which it proceeds;
most opposed is it to the spirit of true religion,
which is intended to fit us for all circumstances
of life as they come, in order that we may be humble,
docile, ready, patient, and cheerful, in
order that we may really show ourselves God’s
servants, who do all things for Him, coming when He
calleth, going when He sendeth, doing this or that
at His bidding. So much for the practice of
such men; and when we go higher, and ask why
they are thus formal and unbending in their mode of
life, what are the principles that make them thus
harsh and unserviceable, I fear we must trace it to
some form of selfishness and pride; the same principles
which, under other circumstances, would change the
profligate into the covetous and parsimonious.
I think it will appear at once that
St. Paul’s conversion, however it was effected,
and whatever was the process of it, resembled neither
the one nor the other of these. That it was
not the change of a fickle mind is shown by his firmness
in keeping to his new faith by his constancy
unto death, a death of martyrdom. That it was
not the change of a proud and disappointed mind, quitting
with disgust what he once loved too well, is evidenced
by the variety of his labours, his active services,
and continued presence in the busy thoroughfares of
the world; by the cheerfulness, alacrity, energy,
dexterity, and perseverance, with which he pleaded
the cause of God among sinners. He reminds us
of his firmness, as well as gentleness, when he declares,
“What mean ye to weep, and break my heart? for
I am ready not to be bound only, but also to die at
Jerusalem for the Name of the Lord Jesus,” and
of his ready accommodation of himself to the will of
God, in all its forms, when he says, “I am made
all things to all men, that I might by all means save
some.”
3. But there is another kind
of sudden conversion, or rather what appears to be
such, not uncommonly found, and which may be that to
which St. Paul’s conversion is to be referred,
and which I proceed to describe.
When men change their religious opinions
really and truly, it is not merely their opinions
that they change, but their hearts; and this evidently
is not done in a moment it is a slow work;
nevertheless, though gradual, the change is often
not uniform, but proceeds, so to say, by fits and
starts, being influenced by external events, and other
circumstances. This we see in the growth of plants,
for instance; it is slow, gradual, continual; yet
one day by chance they grow more than another, they
make a shoot, or at least we are attracted to their
growth on that day by some accidental circumstance,
and it remains on our memory. So with our souls:
we all, by nature, are far from God; nay, and we have
all characters to form, which is a work of time.
All this must have a beginning; and those who are
now leading religious lives have begun at different
times. Baptism, indeed, is God’s time,
when He first gives us grace; but alas! through the
perverseness of our will, we do not follow Him.
There must be a time then for beginning. Many
men do not at all recollect any one marked and definite
time when they began to seek God. Others
recollect a time, not, properly speaking, when they
began, but when they made what may be called a shoot
forward, the fact either being so, in consequence of
external events, or at least for some reason or other
their attention being called to it. Others,
again, continue forming a religious character and
religious opinions as the result of it, though holding
at the same time some outward profession of faith
inconsistent with them; as, for instance, suppose
it has been their unhappy condition to be brought up
as heathens, Jews, infidels, or heretics. They
hold the notions they have been taught for a long
while, not perceiving that the character forming within
them is at variance with these, till at length the
inward growth forces itself forward, forces on the
opinions accompanying it, and the dead outward surface
of error, which has no root in their minds, from some
accidental occurrence, suddenly falls off; suddenly, just
as a building might suddenly fall, which had been
going many years, and which falls at this moment rather
than that, in consequence of some chance cause, as
it is called, which we cannot detect.
Now in all these cases one point of
time is often taken by religious men, as if the very
time of conversion, and as if it were sudden, though
really, as is plain, in none of them is there any suddenness
in the matter. In the last of these instances,
which might be in a measure, if we dare say it, St.
Paul’s case, the time when the formal outward
profession of error fell off, is taken as the time
of conversion. Others recollect the first occasion
when any deep serious thought came into their minds,
and reckon this as the date of their inward change.
Others, again, recollect some intermediate point of
time when they first openly professed their faith,
or dared do some noble deed for Christ’s sake.
I might go on to show more particularly
how what I have said applies to St. Paul; but as this
would take too much time I will only observe generally,
that there was much in St. Paul’s character which
was not changed on his conversion, but merely directed
to other and higher objects, and purified; it was
his creed that was changed, and his soul by regeneration;
and though he was sinning most grievously and awfully
when Christ appeared to him from heaven, he evidenced
then, as afterwards, a most burning energetic zeal
for God, a most scrupulous strictness of life, an
abstinence from all self-indulgence, much more from
all approach to sensuality or sloth, and an implicit
obedience to what he considered God’s will.
It was pride which was his inward enemy pride
which needed an overthrow. He acted rather as
a defender and protector, than a minister of what
he considered the truth; he relied on his own views;
he was positive and obstinate; he did not seek for
light as a little child; he did not look out for a
Saviour who was to come, and he missed Him when He
came.
But how great was the change in these
respects when he became a servant of Him whom he had
persecuted! As he had been conspicuous for a
proud confidence in self, on his privileges, on his
knowledge, on his birth, on his observances, so he
became conspicuous for his humility. What self-abasement,
when he says, “I am the least of the Apostles,
that am not meet to be called an Apostle, because
I persecuted the Church of God; but by the grace of
God I am what I am.” What keen and bitter
remembrance of the past, when he says, “Who was
before a blasphemer, and a persecutor, and injurious;
but I obtained mercy, because I did it ignorantly
in unbelief.” Ah! what utter self-abandonment,
what scorn and hatred of self, when he, who had been
so pleased to be a Hebrew of Hebrews, and a Pharisee,
bore to be called, nay gloried for Christ’s
sake in being called, an apostate, the most odious
and miserable of titles! bore to be spurned
and spit upon as a renegade, a traitor, a false-hearted
and perfidious, a fallen, a lost son of his Church;
a shame to his mother, and a curse to his countrymen.
Such was the light in which those furious zealots
looked on the great Apostle, who bound themselves
together by an oath that they would neither eat nor
drink till they had killed him. It was their
justification in their own eyes, that he was a “pestilent
fellow,” a “stirrer of séditions,”
and an abomination amid sacred institutions which God
had given.
And, lastly, what supported him in
this great trial? that special mercy which converted
him, which he, and he only, saw the Face
of Jesus Christ. That all-pitying, all-holy
eye, which turned in love upon St. Peter when he denied
Him, and thereby roused him to repentance, looked
on St. Paul also, while he persecuted Him, and wrought
in him a sudden conversion. “Last of all,”
he says, “He was seen of me also, as of one
born out of due time.” One sight of that
Divine Countenance, so tender, so loving, so majestic,
so calm, was enough, first to convert him, then to
support him on his way amid the bitter hatred and fury
which he was to excite in those who hitherto had loved
him.
And if such be the effect of a momentary
vision of the glorious Presence of Christ, what think
you, my brethren, will be their bliss, to whom it
shall be given, this life ended, to see that Face eternally?