INFIRMITIES OF THE SPIRIT
III. Infirmities of the spirit. Concerning infirmities of the
spirit, Wesley says:
From wrong judgments, wrong words and actions will necessarily
flow; and, in some cases, wrong affections may also spring from
the same source. I may judge wrong of you; I may think more or
less highly of you than I ought to think; and this mistake in my
judgment may not only cause something wrong in my behavior, it may
have a still deeper effect; it may occasion something wrong in my
affection. From a wrong apprehension, I will love and esteem you
either more or less than I ought. Nor can I be freed from a
liability to such a mistake while I remain in a corruptible body.
A thousand infirmities, in consequence of this, will attend my
spirit, till it returns to God who gave it. And, in numberless
instances, it comes short of doing the will of God, as Adam did in
Paradise.
At first thought one who is accustomed, and properly so, to have
a high ideal of the perfections of holiness will be shocked when it
is stated that there are infirmities which still remain with the
sanctified soul. When we say "infirmities" we do not mean "sins,"
but that which Fletcher calls "involuntary lack of power."
Apply this definition to the specific manifestations of your own
spiritual life and activities and perhaps you will begin to realize
its justice.
So few ever trouble themselves to search into the deep things of the
Spirit, and are so accustomed to accept as law and gospel and to
take into their theological creed every peculiar experimental
speculation of their teachers, that they are apt to be surprised
when they are told that they have placed the standard of holiness
too high or too low, and that one reason for their inability to
stand is their errors in doctrine. Fletcher says:
Some people aim at Christian perfection, but, mistaking it for
angelic perfection, they shoot above the mark, miss it, and then
peevishly give up their hopes. Others place the mark too low:
hence it is that you hear them profess to have attained Christian
perfection when they have not so much as attained the serenity of
a philosopher, or the candor of a good-natured, conscientious
heathen.
Concerning infirmities of the spirit, the first thing we notice
is that there is a limit to the spiritual power or ability (in the
human agent) to accomplish things. Who among us has succeeded in
saving as many souls or doing as much good as he would? The person
who has certainly does not have a very high standard, at least not
as high as some who will not be satisfied unless they see the world
bowing at Jesus' feet Again we quote from Fletcher:
If we consider our lord Jesus Himself as a man, did He do all
the good He would while He was upon earth? Did He preach as
successfully as His perfect love made Him desire to do? If He had
all the success He desired in His ministry, why did He look round
about upon His hearers 'with anger, being grieved for the hardness
of their hearts'? Why did He weep and complain, 'How often would I
have gathered you,' etc., 'and ye would not?' Were even His
private instructions so blessed to His own disciples as He could
have wished? If they were, what meant these strange
expostulations? 'How is it that ye have no faith?' 'Faithless
generation, how long shall I be with you?' 'Hast thou been so long
with me, Philip, and yet hast thou not known me?' 'Will ye also go
away?' "
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