Chapter 1
True and
False Theories Contrasted
THE sanctification set forth in the Sacred Scriptures has to do with the
entire being--spirit, soul, and body. Here is the true idea of entire
consecration. Paul prays that the church at Thessalonica may enjoy this
great blessing. "The very God of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray
God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the
coming of our Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Thessalonians 5:23).
There is in the religious world a theory of sanctification which is
false in itself and dangerous in its influence. In many cases those who
profess sanctification do not possess the genuine article. Their
sanctification consists in talk and will worship. Those who are really
seeking to perfect Christian character will never indulge the thought
that they are sinless. Their lives may be irreproachable, they may be
living representatives of the truth which they have accepted; but the
more they discipline their minds to dwell upon the character of Christ,
and the nearer they approach to His divine image, the more clearly will
they discern its spotless perfection, and the more deeply will they feel
their own defects.
Page 8
When persons claim that they are sanctified, they give sufficient
evidence that they are far from being holy. They fail to see their own
weakness and destitution. They look upon themselves as reflecting the
image of Christ, because they have no true knowledge of Him. The greater
the distance between them and their Saviour, the more righteous they
appear in their own eyes.
While with penitence and humble trust we meditate upon Jesus, whom our
sins have pierced and our sorrows have burdened, we may learn to walk in
His footsteps. By beholding Him we become changed into His divine
likeness. And when this work is wrought in us, we shall claim no
righteousness of our own, but shall exalt Jesus Christ, while we hang
our helpless souls upon His merits.
Self-righteousness Condemned
Our Saviour ever condemned self-righteousness. He taught His disciples
that the highest type of religion is that which manifests itself in a
quiet, unobtrusive manner. He cautioned them to perform their deeds of
charity quietly; not for display, not to be praised or honored of men,
but for the glory of God, expecting their reward hereafter. If they
should perform good deeds to be lauded by men, no reward would be given
them by their Father in heaven.
The followers of Christ were instructed not to pray for the purpose of
being heard of men. "But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet,
and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret;
and
Page 9
thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly" (Matthew
6:6). Such expressions as this from the lips of Christ show that He did
not regard with approval that kind of piety so prevalent among the
Pharisees. His teachings upon the mount show that deeds of benevolence
assume a noble form and acts of religious worship shed a most precious
fragrance when performed in an unpretending manner, in penitence and
humility. The pure motive sanctifies the act.
True sanctification is an entire conformity to the will of God.
Rebellious thoughts and feelings are overcome, and the voice of Jesus
awakens a new life, which pervades the entire being. Those who are truly
sanctified will not set up their own opinion as a standard of right and
wrong. They are not bigoted or self-righteousness; but they are jealous
of self, ever fearing lest, a promise being left them, they should come
short of complying with the conditions upon which the promises are
based.
Substituting Feeling for Reason
Many who profess sanctification are entirely ignorant of the work of
grace upon the heart. When proved and tested, they are found to be like
the self-righteous Pharisee. They will bear no contradiction. They lay
aside reason and judgment, and depend wholly upon their feelings, basing
their claims to sanctification upon emotions which they have at some
time experienced. They are stubborn and perverse in urging their
tenacious claims of holiness, giving many words, but bearing no
Page 10
precious fruit as proof. These professedly sanctified persons are not
only deluding their own souls by their pretensions, but are exerting an
influence to lead astray many who earnestly desire to conform to the
will of God. They may be heard to reiterate again and again, "God leads
me! God teaches me! I am living without sin!" Many who come in contact
with this spirit encounter a dark, mysterious something which they
cannot comprehend. But it is that which is altogether unlike Christ, the
only true pattern.
Bible sanctification does not consist in strong emotion. Here is where
many are led into error. They make feelings their criterion. When they
feel elated or happy, they claim that they are sanctified. Happy
feelings or the absence of joy is no evidence that a person is or is not
sanctified. There is no such thing as instantaneous sanctification. True
sanctification is a daily work, continuing as long as life shall last.
Those who are battling with daily temptations, overcoming their own
sinful tendencies, and seeking for holiness of heart and life, make no
boastful claims of holiness. They are hungering and thirsting for
righteousness. Sin appears to them exceedingly sinful.
There are those claiming sanctification who make a profession of the
truth, like their brethren, and it may be difficult to make a
distinction between them; but the difference exists, nevertheless. The
testimony of those claiming such an exalted experience will cause the
sweet Spirit of Christ to withdraw from a meeting, and will leave a
chilling influence upon those present, while if
Page 11
they were truly living without sin, their very presence would bring holy
angels into the assembly, and their words would indeed be "like apples
of gold in pictures of silver" (Proverbs 25:11).
The Testing Time
In summer, as we look upon the trees of the distant forest, all clothed
with a beautiful mantle of green, we may not be able to distinguish
between the evergreens and the other trees. But as winter approaches,
and the frost king encloses them in his icy embrace, stripping the other
trees of their beautiful foliage, the evergreens are readily discerned.
Thus it will be with all who are walking in humility, distrustful of
self, but clinging tremblingly to the hand of Christ. While those who
are self-confident, and trust in their own perfection of character, lose
their false robe of righteousness when subjected to the storms of trial,
the truly righteous, who sincerely love and fear God, wear the robe of
Christ's righteousness in prosperity and adversity alike.
Self-denial, self-sacrifice, benevolence, kindness, love, patience,
fortitude, and Christian trust are the daily fruits borne by those who
are truly connected with God. Their acts may not be published to the
world, but they themselves are daily wrestling with evil, and gaining
precious victories over temptation and wrong. Solemn vows are renewed,
and kept through the strength gained by earnest prayer and constant
watching thereunto. The ardent enthusiast does not discern the struggles
of these silent workers; but the eye of Him who seeth
Page 12
the secrets of the heart, notices and regards with approval every effort
put forth in lowliness and meekness. It requires the testing time to
reveal the pure gold of love and faith in the character. When trials and
perplexities come upon the church, then the steadfast zeal and warm
affections of Christ's true followers are developed.
We feel sad to see professed Christians led astray by the false and
bewitching theory that they are perfect, because it is so difficult to
undeceive them and lead them into the right path. They have sought to
make the exterior fair and pleasing, while the inward adorning, the
meekness and lowliness of Christ, is wanting. The testing time will come
to all, when the hopes of many who have for years thought themselves
secure, will be seen to be without foundation. When in new positions,
under varied circumstances, some who have seemed to be pillars in the
house of God reveal only rotten timber beneath the paint and varnish.
But the humble in heart, who have daily felt the importance of riveting
their souls to the eternal Rock, will stand unmoved amid the tempests of
trial, because they trusted not to themselves. "The foundation of God
standeth sure, having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that are his" (2
Timothy 2:19).
Normal Fruit Bearing
Those who take pains to call attention to their good works, constantly
talking of their sinless state and endeavoring to make their religious
attainments prominent, are only deceiving their own souls by so doing. A
healthy man, who is able to attend to the vocations of
Page 13
life and who goes forth day after day to his labor with buoyant spirits
and with a healthy current of blood flowing through his veins, does not
call the attention of every one he meets to his soundness of body.
Health and vigor are the natural conditions of his life, and therefore
he is scarcely conscious that he is in the enjoyment of so rich a boon.
Thus it is with the truly righteous man. He is unconscious of his
goodness and piety. Religious principle has become the spring of his
life and conduct, and it is just as natural for him to bear the fruits
of the Spirit as for the fig tree to bear figs or for the rosebush to
yield roses. His nature is so thoroughly imbued with love for God and
his fellow men that he works the works of Christ with a willing heart.
All who come within the sphere of his influence perceive the beauty and
fragrance of his Christian life, while he himself is unconscious of it,
for it is in harmony with his habits and inclinations. He prays for
divine light, and loves to walk in that light. It is his meat and drink
to do the will of his heavenly Father. His life is hid with Christ in
God; yet he does not boast of this, nor seem conscious of it. God smiles
upon the humble and lowly ones who follow closely in the footsteps of
the Master. Angels are attracted to them, and love to linger about their
path. They may be passed by as unworthy of notice by those who claim
exalted attainments and who delight in making prominent their good
works, but heavenly angels bend lovingly over them and are as a wall of
fire round about them.
Page 14
Why Christ Was Rejected
Our Saviour was the light of the world, but the world knew Him not. He
was constantly employed in works of mercy, shedding light upon the
pathway of all; yet He did not call upon those with whom He mingled to
behold His unexampled virtue, His self-denial, self-sacrifice, and
benevolence. The Jews did not admire such a life. They considered His
religion worthless, because it did not accord with their standard of
piety. They decided that Christ was not religious in spirit or
character; for their religion consisted in display, in praying publicly,
and in doing works of charity for effect. They trumpeted their good
deeds, as do those who claim sanctification. They would have all
understand that they are without sin. But the whole life of Christ was
in direct contrast to this. He sought neither gain nor honor. His
wonderful acts of healing were performed in as quiet a manner as
possible, although He could not restrain the enthusiasm of those who
were the recipients of His great blessings. Humility and meekness
characterized His life. And it was because of His lowly walk and
unassuming manners, which were in such marked contrast to their own,
that the Pharisees would not accept Him.
Meekness a Fruit of the Spirit
The most precious fruit of sanctification is the grace of meekness. When
this grace presides in the soul, the disposition is molded by its
influence. There is a continual waiting upon God and a submission of the
will to
Page 15
His. The understanding grasps every divine truth, and the will bows to
every divine precept, without doubting or murmuring. True meekness
softens and subdues the heart and gives the mind a fitness for the
engrafted word. It brings the thoughts into obedience to Jesus Christ.
It opens the heart to the word of God, as Lydia's was opened. It places
us with Mary, as learners at the feet of Jesus. "The meek will he guide
in judgment: and the meek will he teach his way" (Psalm 25:9).
The language of the meek is never that of boasting. Like the child
Samuel, they pray, "Speak, Lord; for thy servant heareth" (1 Samuel
3:9). When Joshua was placed in the highest position of honor, as
commander of Israel, he bade defiance to all the enemies of God. His
heart was filled with noble thoughts of his great mission. Yet upon the
intimation of a message from Heaven he placed himself in the position of
a little child to be directed. "What saith my lord unto his servant?"
(Joshua 5:14), was his response. The first words of Paul after Christ
was revealed to him were, "Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?" (Acts
9:6).
Meekness in the school of Christ is one of the marked fruits of the
Spirit. It is a grace wrought by the Holy Spirit as a sanctifier, and
enables its possessor at all times to control a rash and impetuous
temper. When the grace of meekness is cherished by those who are
naturally sour or hasty in disposition, they will put forth the most
earnest efforts to subdue their unhappy temper. Every day they will gain
self-control, until that which is unlovely and unlike Jesus is
conquered. They become
Page 16
assimilated to the Divine Pattern, until they can obey the inspired
injunction, "Be swift to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath" (James
1:19).
When a man professes to be sanctified, and yet in words and works may be
represented by the impure fountain sending forth its bitter waters, we
may safely say, That man is deceived. He needs to learn the very
alphabet of what constitutes the life of a Christian. Some who profess
to be servants of Christ have so long cherished the demon of unkindness
that they seem to love the unhallowed element and to take pleasure in
speaking words that displease and irritate. These men must be converted
before Christ will acknowledge them as His children.
Meekness is the inward adorning, which God estimates as of great price.
The apostle speaks of this as more excellent and valuable than gold or
pearls or costly array. While the outward adorning beautifies only the
mortal body, the ornament of meekness adorns the soul and connects
finite man with the infinite God. This is the ornament of God's own
choice. He who garnished the heavens with the orbs of light has by the
same Spirit promised that "he will beautify the meek with salvation"
(Psalm 149:4). Angels of heaven will register as best adorned those who
put on the Lord Jesus Christ and walk with Him in meekness and lowliness
of mind.
There are high attainments for the Christian. He may ever be rising to
higher attainments. John had an elevated idea of the privilege of a
Christian. He says, "Behold, what manner of love the Father hath
bestowed
Page 17
upon us, that we should be called the sons of God" (1 John 3:1). It is
not possible for humanity to rise to a higher dignity than is here
implied. To man is granted the privilege of becoming an heir of God and
a joint heir with Christ. To those who have been thus exalted, are
unfolded the unsearchable riches of Christ, which are of a thousandfold
more value than the wealth of the world. Thus, through the merits of
Jesus Christ, finite man is elevated to fellowship with God and with His
dear Son.
Preparing For Eternity
©1999-2024
All Rights Reserved
Home
Devotional
Our Beliefs
Site Search
Links
Videos
Contact Us