CONFLICTS OF THE ENTIRELY
SANCTIFIED.
"To retain perfect purity," says James Caughey, "requires a continual
acting of faith upon the leading promises of the gospel."
Jesus said, "Have faith in God." Isaiah says, "If ye will not believe,
surely ye shall not be established (Isa. 7:9). Paul says, "To the end he
may stablish your hearts unblameable in holiness before God," etc. (1
Thes. 3: 13). "As ye have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord, so
walk ye in him: Rooted and built up in him, and established in the
faith" (Col. 2:6, 7). "Whose house are we, if we hold fast the
confidence and the rejoicing of the hope firm unto the end. * * * For we
are made partakers of Christ, if we hold the beginning of our confidence
steadfast unto the end" (Heb. 3: 0, 14). "Let us hold fast the
profession of our faith without wavering for he is faithful that
promised. * * * Cast not away therefore your confidence, which hath
great recompense of reward" (Heb.10:23,35).
Peter brings out the same general thought when he says, "But the God of
all grace, who hath called us unto his eternal glory by Christ Jesus,
after that ye have suffered a while, make you perfect, stablish,
strengthen, settle you" (1 Pet. 5: 10). After the experience of
Christian perfection is received, according to Peter's instructions, the
next necessary step is to be established. This is necessary in any
religious experience, and is generally brought about through trials and
accusations that, at times, are terrible; but, little by little, the
soul catches the idea that this is the way it must be established, and
becomes more and more firmly fixed on the Rock of Ages.
When your soul is really cleansed, you must not think the battle ended.
It has just commenced in earnest, and you are now in a condition to get
into the thickest of the fight; and, sooner or later, God will put you
there.
You are now in a new country, and the first thing to do is to get your
bearings; that is, find out your surroundings, your new relation to
yourself, the enemy and God; find out your new condition and its import
in your life; find out the new duties and your relation to them. It is a
strange land to you, and you are not as capable of forming judgments
about it from what you have heard as you are of forming judgments of
China or the jungles of Africa from reading books. The only way to know
spiritual things is to "taste and see."
The first thing for you to do is to throw away any and all your
preconceived notions concerning the experience, and determine to learn
all the lessons God has to teach you. It is quite likely that the
unlearning will be a more severe process than the learning, but you can
make it easier and cut the work much shorter if you will, right away,
thoroughly divest yourself of all past ideas and put your ignorant soul
like blank paper in the hands of God to be filled out as he pleases. No
matter how orthodox you may have been, you will be surprised at the
change God will make relative to your past ideas concerning genuine
experience.
One of the most essential characteristics of holiness is teachableness,
and you must keep yourself in a teachable attitude if you expect to grow
in grace, or to even retain the grace you already have. You do not know
all there is to learn even after you are cleansed; and if you are
sanctified you were never as willing to listen as now. You can learn
from the humblest saint, or from a little child.
You will in the first place, need to know something about the conflicts
with which you will meet in order that you may be prepared when they do
come the more easily to overcome them. You cannot go to heaven on
flowery beds of ease any more now than before you were cleansed.
No doubt a great many have been wholly sanctified, but, because of
improper teaching, or from failure to discern the wiles of the devil,
have made shipwreck of faith, who might have been spared much trouble
and saved to the cause of God, had they been properly instructed.
In our anxiety to tell the truth we should not be betrayed into holding
people to a closer line than the Spirit does. Nor, on the other hand,
should we make too much allowance where God would tighten the lines. The
claim we make for sanctification is that it delivers the soul from every
sinful temper, and renews it in the moral image of God. Fletcher says,
Some people aim at Christian perfection; but mistaking it for
angelic perfection they shoot above the mark, and miss it, and then
peevishly give up their hopes. Others place the mark as much too
low; hence it is that you hear them profess to have attained
Christian perfection, when they have not so much as attained the
mental serenity of a philosopher, or the candor of a good-natured,
conscientious heathen.
Wrong doctrine is a fruitful source of vacillation in some people's
experiences, another is just as true when they underestimate that
experience as when they overestimate it. Underestimation will cause
looseness, and overestimation will cause perplexity and uncertainty that
will eventually confuse and overthrow. So, to the best of our ability,
we should place the experience just where God would have us, and, as the
wise man says, not try to "be righteous overmuch," for there is danger
on that line the same as in "overmuch wickedness."
I. Holiness does not save one from infirmities. An infirmity is defined
as "a physical, mental, or moral weakness or flaw" (Standard
Dictionary). It is found in a man's natural involuntary condition. In a
holy person it is not sin, and is perfectly consistent with the highest
degree of Christian perfection. Fletcher clearly draws the line between
sin and infirmities in the following quotation:
An infirmity is a breach of Adam's law of paradisiacal
perfection, which our covenant God does not require of us now: and
(evangelically speaking) a sin is a breach of Christ's evangelical
law of Christian perfection; a perfection this, which God requires
of all Christian believers. An infirmity (considering it with the
error which it occasions) is consistent with pure love to God and
man: but a sin is inconsistent with that love. An infirmity is free
from guile, and has its root in our animal frame: but a sin is
attended with guile, and has its root in our moral frame, springing
either from the habitual corruption of our hearts, or from the
momentary perversion of our tempers. An infirmity unavoidably
results from our unhappy circumstances and from the necessary
infelicities of our present state: but a sin flows from the
avoidable and perverse choice of our own will. An infirmity has its
foundation in an involuntary want of power; and a sin in a willful
abuse of the present light and power we have. The one arises from
involuntary weakness, and is always attended with a good meaning; a
meaning unmixed with any bad design, or wicked prejudice: but the
other has its source in a voluntary perverseness and presumption,
and is always attended with a meaning altogether bad; or at best,
with a good meaning founded on wicked prejudices.
Instead of these infirmities being sin, and as a consequence a
hindrance to grace, they may, if taken rightly, be made a means of
grace. Not that they would be so if voluntarily indulged, for then they
cease to be innocent infirmities and become willful transgressions. The
point at which infirmities become sins is where the person voluntarily
indulges them for some reason that would not pass before God, or where
he refuses correction and instruction. He may excuse himself by saying
it is his way, and that if he did not do that way he would not be
natural; but if down in his heart he finds a secret glorying in such
actions, and also in the fact that he cannot do otherwise, he is guilty
of sin. Yes, Paul gloried in his infirmities, but not to such an extent
that he voluntarily surrendered himself to the weakest points in his
nature; but his glorying was in the fact that he could so take advantage
of his involuntary weaknesses that what would otherwise have been his
ruin should become a means of his furtherance in God. Hence he said,
"All things work together for good to them that love the Lord."
Suppose one because of his lack of judgment or foresight makes a
mistake. If instead of being glad he has made the mistake, he feels
sorry for it, he will gain ground. The mistake costs him no loss of
ground unless he repines over it to an unnecessary degree, but the
humiliation has brought him lower before God, and, in addition to this,
he has learned a new lesson, and so has increased his knowledge. The
glorying comes, not in the action itself, but in the humiliation that of
necessity follows the contemplation of that action; not in the fact that
there are remaining weaknesses, but in the fact that a candid survey of
these weaknesses, and especially when the light of God shines on them,
causes the casting away of any temptations to pride and humbles the soul
more deeply before God. And the clean soul is thankful for anything
that will more effectually humble it, and keep pride at the greatest
distance. Without infirmities we might get to considering ourselves
almost divine, and so be lifted up with pride. Wesley was of the opinion
that those things which we cannot help are for our good. He says,
"Rather let us pray, both with the spirit and with the understanding.
that all these things may work together for our good: that we may suffer
all the infirmities of our nature, all the interruptions of men, all the
assaults and suggestions of evil spirits, and in all be 'more than
conquerors.'"
It may be well to consider what some of the infirmities are from which
we are not delivered in the experience of entire sanctification.
1. Physical infirmities. Under this head comes all those bodily
tendencies variously called passions, appetites, or desires. Not that
these, could they be restored to normal conditions, would be called
infirmities any more than our physical form could be so called; but they
are so depraved by the fall that they seldom, or never, manifest normal
conditions and activities. They are either too weak or too strong, in
some directions scarcely stirring at all, while in others they become
inordinate. This is seen in an aggravated form in that person who
becomes so addicted to the use of tobacco that he will forego the
natural use of his appetite and do without food for the sake of his pet
indulgence; or the person who will almost starve in order to obtain
intoxicants to satisfy his inordinate desire in that direction. While
these are only illustrations, but, carried to such an extent, are
inconsistent with sanctification (and with justification as well, for
that matter), yet they show, not the degree, but the manner in which the
natural appetites of even a holy person are warped, and at times he may
innocently go too far in some direction, and, when he sees his mistake,
be forced to humble himself before God. Yet if he keeps clear, he will
"keep his body under," and "will not be brought under the power of" even
innocent things to such an extent that his transgression will become
willful and chronic. On the other hand he will, by prayer and persistent
self-denial, safeguard and thus strengthen himself at that point. As
this brings in the idea of self-denial, and as self-denial has to do
with the very part of our being with which we are now dealing, it may be
well to outline the way that should be taken by holy people.
Some people, and good people, too, seem to think that since a thing is
lawful, and not positively forbidden in the Bible, there is no such
thing as self-indulgence in connection with that thing. And since this
gratification is their privilege, and is lawful, that they can please
themselves in that thing as much as they desire; and if any one suggests
that this is dwarfing to grace, they are ready, with the "law and the
testimony," to uphold themselves in their practices. They seem to forget
that Paul said, "All things are lawful unto me, but all things are not
expedient [margin, profitable]: all things are lawful for me, but I will
not be brought under the power of any" (1 Cor. 6:12).
But there is a point at which the thing that otherwise would be right
becomes injurious to the soul. There are different things to be taken
into consideration before passing an opinion as to the expediency or
non-expediency of any course of action.
Self-indulgence is defined as the "act or habit of indulging or
gratifying one's own inclinations, tastes, passions, and appetites,
especially when carried to excess or at the expense of the rights of
others" (Standard Dictionary). Then self-indulgence is the act of
gratifying not only the passions, and appetites, which have their rise
in the peculiar demands of the physical man; but any sinful bent of the
heart; such as evil speaking, jealousy, envy, etc. Now it is clear that
if the heart is made clean, all this "sinful bent" is taken away, and
where it does not remain there is no desire for indulgence.
Consequently, if a person has hard work to keep from jealousy, evil
speaking, etc., there is a strong suspicion that the heart is not made
clean. Paul says, "Put off all these; anger, wrath, malice, blasphemy,
filthy communication out of your mouth. Lie not one to another" (Col.
3:8,9). He makes no allowance for any of these things; they are purely
spiritual wickedness and have no manner of excuse for existence in the
peculiar physical, mental or moral makeup of a sanctified man. Their
indulgence is always sinful.
In the unsanctified heart there are sinful tendencies (as covetousness,
lust, etc.), which correspond with these naturals appetites, passions
and desires and use them as channels through which to operate. Now, when
the heart is cleansed, these sinful tendencies are removed, and there
remains only the natural appetites, desires, etc., which all men have in
common.
But there are other things which stand on a different footing; and,
since they use the body and mind as channels through which to operate,
they will never be removed till this corruptible shall have put on
incorruption. Paul seems to recognize this difference, and says:
"Mortify therefore your members which are upon the earth: fornication,
uncleanness, inordinate affection, evil concupiscence and covetousness
which is idolatry" (Col. 3: 5). Here, in pointing out the danger to the
Colossians, instead of using a mild form of speech, which would so
faintly express his antipathy for self-indulgence, he shows what their
natural tendencies (such as sexual desire, desire for money, etc.) would
grow into if not mortified.
Though the soul is purified and restored to its original holiness, as
far as the quality of the renewed nature is concerned, yet the natural
desires remain to some extent warped, just as our minds are still
subject to follies; and these desires must be kept under or they will
make excessive demands and ruin the soul. The tendency of the natural
desires is always toward excess, unless firmly held in check by grace.
Quarles says, "My passions eagle-eyed, my judgment blind." If we listen
to the clamorings of passion, the warning voice of judgment will soon be
lost.
This brings the idea of self-denial and self indulgence down to denial,
or gratification of the natural desires, passions, appetites and
inclinations, such as desire for pleasing food, pleasant surroundings,
congenial companionship, the attractions of the sexes, sleep, rest,
etc., and attraction toward anything is in proportion to its ability to
produce mental or physical pleasure.
A sanctified person may become too self-indulgent -- partaking too
freely of those things which produce physical or mental pleasure; and,
somewhere along this line one may cross the boundary of the lawful and
enter the realm of the inordinate, thus becoming unclean again.
Consequently the only safe plan is to swing as far on the line of
self-denial as is consistent with physical and spiritual well-being.
Keep the body under, even at the expense of physical comfort if
necessary; and, by so doing, the soul will thrive. Godly self-denial
produces great enjoyment at the last.
We do not for a moment think that it is necessary for a sanctified
person to be satisfied with the poorest things of life, as poor
clothing, poor food, poor houses, etc., unless one's circumstances are
such that he cannot afford any better. If in running the way of duty,
the splinters have to be scraped from the bottom of the flour barrel,
and one patch is added to another, or a mansion is changed for a dugout,
or for a log cabin in the wilderness, it is a fine thing to have at
least grace enough to endure it, and that uncomplainingly, for the sake
of Jesus, who had not where to lay his head, and had but five barley
loaves and two small fishes to set before a multitude of about ten
thousand.
Self-denial does not mean to live in rags, dirt, filth, slovenliness and
indifference; such wretchedness is contrary to the spirit of a clean,
wide-awake gospel. But there is such a thing as self-denial. It is
defined as "the act or power of denying one's self gratification, as for
the good of some one else or for self-mortification; forbearance, or
refusal to gratify one's own feelings, inclinations, or desires; passive
self-sacrifice. (Standard Dictionary).
Self-denial is not Greek stoicism nor monastic asceticism, but simply
Christian self-mortification, that places the feelings of others before
one's own, and the glory of God before one's own inclinations and
desires; and, where the good of others or the glory of God run counter
to all we should like to do, to put our own pleasures in the background
and live for others; and also where present pleasure or gratification
excludes to any degree any possibility of future good or spiritual
profit, to deny one's self the present gratification for the sake of the
future benefit. Even self-love properly governed would lead one to do
that.
There are five points to be considered by a holy person before entering
upon the enjoyment of any pleasure of the senses:
(1) Is it lawful? That is, do the laws of God and man uphold me in what
I am about to do? If so, it is well. But we must remember that lawful
things must be "used" and not "abused," and beware lest, in using the
privileges we have under human law, and those which we flatter ourselves
that divine law allows, we should cross the boundary of things
consistent with spiritual health and enter the malarial quagmire of sin.
(2) The second point to be considered is the physical condition of the
person. That which would be beneficial to one person, might be
positively injurious to another. Some require a warm and some a cooler
climate; some a low and some a higher altitude; some regard pork as not
injurious, but beneficial to their health, while a little lard cooked in
the victuals of others will cause nausea. Some aged persons have been
inveterate tobacco users and liquor drinkers all their lives. It would
be of no use to lecture them on the physical injuries of tobacco and
liquor since their very existence would seem to give you the lie;
others, however, would be permanently injured or killed by the use of
either in a few months. We can settle on this one point, that that which
is injurious to the health, be it self-denial or indulgence, is wrong
and should be discontinued. But, on the contrary, we cannot admit that
whatever is not thus injurious is right. We should be careful that while
we are not injuring our bodies we are also not injuring our souls.
(3) For what purpose is the act committed? While man looks on the
outward appearance God looks on the heart, and judges according to the
motive that prompts the action. An act which is all right in one place
may be wrong in another, according to the motive which prompts it. It is
all right to seek congenial companionship when the motive is spiritual
profit, as when we seek the communion of the saints; but when we seek
certain companions because they amuse or flatter us, the motive is
improper and the effect injurious. Again, when we follow any pleasing
occupation for the glory of God, the effect is salutary; but should we
follow it simply because it is pleasing, it is ruinous. Any indulgence,
no matter how pleasing to the flesh, that does not strictly conform to
the rule "whether therefore ye eat or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all
to the glory of God," will, if persistently followed, eventually sap
one's spiritual vitality and leave him spiritually dead.
(4) What effect will the action have on any other party concerned? None
of us live to ourselves. The least act will in some sense have an
influence on some other person. That bunch of ribbon on your hat, that
extra tuck or bit of lace may seem small to you, but some one else in
following your example may go a little farther. That careless remark
seemed small to you, but others standing by were taking you for an
example. Of course, they should not have done this, but they did, and
they were looking for just such a slip from you as an excuse for several
such slips on their part. Now their consciences are eased, and they can
more easily do the wrong thing the next time, and then excuse themselves
by saying, "Brother So-and-So did it, and he is holy."
But some acts of indulgence implicate more than one party. Then a holy
person in maintaining his fancied rights should be very careful that he
is not trampling on the rights of some others. Is it as pleasing to the
other party concerned as it is to you? Godly self-denial, according to
the rule "do all to the glory of God," would wonderfully straighten out
some people and do away with the things that "hinder so many prayers."
See 1 Peter 3: 7. But some one is ready to say, "My rights, my God-given
rights." Nothing has been said against your rights; we have merely
mentioned the rights of the other person whom you ought to love. There
is a line that is pleasing to God; if you would try it, you would be
delighted with the results in soul-health and growth.
(5) The last and greatest rule by which we should govern our pleasure
is, What effect will the act have on my soul? This is equivalent to
asking, "Is it God's will?" for when the will of God is done, the soul
is always benefited. Every spiritual person knows that there are some
things that help and some things that hinder the soul's prosperity. It
takes close living and constant praying to find the path of spiritual
prosperity, but if honest in its pursuit we shall eventually find it. "I
want to" is a poor rule by which to govern the life; "God wants me to,"
is the only safe way. If any course of action causes deadness of soul
and lessens the spirit of prayer, it is unsafe and should be
discontinued.
Do nothing for present pleasure that will cause future suffering. Do
nothing that has the appearance of evil. Do nothing that has a tendency
to weaken the soul. Do always that which is well pleasing in God's
sight. "For if ye do these things, ye shall never fall."
On the line of physical infirmities come the pains and aches, sicknesses
and disabilities arising from disease or heredity. These of necessity
cause inconvenience, and often also hinder the person from doing the
things he otherwise would; or, if he does attempt to do them, the
performance is necessarily imperfect. Those shortcomings which arise
from deficiency of physical power, caused either by lack of strength or
practice, are infirmities that no person should look upon in individuals
as wrongs, unless they have willfully kept themselves in weakness or
Ignorance. In such a case we would rightfully accuse them for not
knowing the things that it was their privilege and duty to know.
2. We are not delivered from mental infirmities only in so far as these
infirmities are sinful. When man fell he fell in the unity of his being
and his mind went down in the general wreck. A certain class of modern
scientists would have us believe that the mental caliber of man was very
small at first, but that by constant development he has risen to a
loftier plane of knowledge than that occupied by our primeval parents in
Eden. We cannot accept such a theory, however, since to our mind it is
destructive and pernicious. There is no doubt that, in respect to
natural research, the scholarship of to-day eclipses that of the
philosophers of two thousand years ago; but this is not because of an
increase of intellect, but because we have the benefits of the
researches, successes and failures, of the men of two thousand and more
years ago, added to all that have lived since that time; and these
products are handed to us in a form that we can easily grasp and retain,
or if we do not wish to do that, we can put endless volumes in our
libraries and turn to them when we choose. This is not to the glory of
the intellect of the twentieth century, but rather, to the glory of that
of former years. What scholar of to-day, without a foundation from which
to start, could successfully study out Aristotle's rules of logic, and
make them so perfect that two thousand years of sharpest criticism would
not impair them?
No, our race is not on the up grade, and that to such an extent that
mental infirmities will soon disappear. Until "time shall be no more"
and this "mortal shall have put on immortality," mental infirmities will
remain with the most intellectual and even the most spiritual. How often
does the man of God bewail his lack of knowledge, his wrong conclusions,
and hence his wrong though not sinful actions -- wrong in such a sense
that, if he had the thing to do over with the increased light and
experience he now possesses, would do differently. How often we hear him
humbly confessing his lack of judgment that has caused him so much
trouble.
We copy the following from Wesley's sermon on "Wandering Thoughts."
But does it only cause this in the time of sickness or
preternatural disorder? Nay, but more or less, at all times, even in
a state of perfect health. Let a man be ever so healthy he will be
more or less delirious every four and twenty hours. For does he not
sleep? And while he sleeps, is he not liable to dream? And who then
is master of his own thoughts, or able to preserve the order and
consistency of them? Who can then keep them fixed on any point, or
prevent their wandering from pole to pole?
But suppose we are awake, are we always so awake that we can
steadily govern our own thoughts? Are we not unavoidably exposed to
contrary extremes, by the very nature of this machine, the body?
Sometimes we are too heavy, too dull and languid to pursue any chain
of thought. Sometimes, on the other hand, we are too lively. The
imagination, without leave, starts to and fro, and carries us away
hither and thither, whether we will or no, and all this from the
merely natural motion of the spirits, or vibration of the nerves.
Farther: How many wandering thoughts may arise, from those various
associations of our ideas, which are made entirely without our
knowledge and independently of our choice! How these connections are
formed we cannot tell; but they are formed in a thousand different
manners. Nor is it in the power of the wisest or holiest of men to
break these associations, or prevent what is the necessary
consequence of them, and matter of daily observation. Let the fire
but touch one end of the train, and it immediately runs to the
other.
Once more: let us fix our attention as studiously as we are able on
any subject, yet let either pleasure or pain arise, especially if it
be intense, and it will demand our immediate attention, and attach
our thought to itself. It will interrupt the steadiest
contemplation, and divert the mind from its favorite subject."
In this wonderful sermon Wesley clearly draws the line between sinful
thoughts and wandering thoughts that are not sinful, for in addition to
what we have quoted, he says,
All those thoughts which wander from God, which leave him no room
in our minds, are undoubtedly sinful. * * * * Such are all
murmuring, discontented thoughts, which say, in effect, We will not
have thee to rule over us; all unbelieving thoughts, whether with
regard to his being, his attributes, his providence. * * * * All
thoughts which spring from sinful tempers, are undoubtedly sinful. *
* * * And so must those be, which either produce or feed any sinful
temper; * * * * for not only whatever flows from evil is evil; but
also whatever leads to it; whatever tends to alienate the soul of
God, and to make or keep it earthly, sensual, or devilish.
3. In the definition of infirmities given in the foregoing, moral
flaws are mentioned in addition to those which are physical or mental.
This is true of the sinner, and also of the imperfect Christian; but as
applied to the fully sanctified, the term flaw must be limited to that
innocent "weakness" which springs from our finite condition. God has not
promised to deliver us from this in the present life. We do not mean
"weakness" in the sense of inability to do all God's will concerning us
(for his will makes allowance for this very weakness), but we mean
rather that we are in ourselves finite, and incapable of doing things
beyond our finite sphere. Taking Fletcher's definition of an infirmity
as being an "involuntary want of power," and applying it to the
condition of the holiest of earth, and it is perfectly consistent with
experience, if not with some people's theories.
While we are sure that the soul is thoroughly delivered from sin,
outward and inward, yet who can accomplish anything, even in spiritual
matters, to his complete satisfaction? Here, as well as elsewhere,
though "perfect in love" we are still imperfect in conduct. Who is there
but at times, finds his soul lagging and stumbling, pressed down by the
corruptible body and by corrupt surroundings, until he cries to God for
a new impetus in divine things, a deeper going down before God, and a
mighty quickening in holiness and love. Not that he has lost ground, but
the time has come that he must get more grace or that which he already
has will steadily decline. Wesley says we must continually pray and
press forward.
It is good to renew ourselves from time to time, by closely
examining the state of our souls, as if we had never done it before:
for nothing tends more to the full assurance of faith, than to keep
ourselves by this means in humility, and the exercise of all good
works.
Bramwell says,
I am giving myself to God, to receive a much deeper baptism,
which I feel is my liberty in this world. I cannot rest in sins
forgiven, or in being cleansed from all unrighteousness. I see the
glory which belongs to me in my blessed Lord is for himself to dwell
fully in my soul.
What holy person, when he compares himself and his attainments with
the attainments of some of his brethren, or with the worthies of other
days, but has felt like saying, with the holy Bramwell,
I long to live as near as any ever did; and yet I feel I have not
all Ann Cutler found. My soul is subject to sloth; and I have hard
work, I assure you, to keep all things going at full speed. But when
I do this for one day, I see the ground I have gone over. Oh, how
swiftly we may run even in this world!
There is no doubt but that a great share of this confession was
caused by humility, but humility sees facts; it sees sins all gone, but
places the soul on the proper level, and puts it in a place where,
acknowledging its needs, it earnestly stretches out after more. Bramwell
again searches his heart, and, in his earnest endeavors after God,
cries:
The love of Christ is my study; but I am frequently at a loss to
understand how it is that my love to him is so little. I am
sometimes ready to stumble at myself on this account. Am I right?
Can I be right in this little love? Could I die for thee? Could I
suffer long, and still love with a passion like thine? I cry to God
daily, hourly, constantly, to receive a thousand times more love. I
must give myself away; for the sacrifice was consumed.
May God breathe on us more of the precious Spirit that inspired this
holy man, and set us to reaching out with greater endeavors after all
his fullness.
A lack of perfect maturity (which the most advanced saint would not
claim to have attained) is an infirmity, in the sense in which we have
spoken of infirmities. Anything that can be improved either in quality
or degree is not yet absolutely perfect. Fletcher says,
Absolute perfection belongs to God alone. * * * God alone is
supremely perfect: all beings are imperfect, when they are compared
to him; and though all his works were perfect in their places, yet,
as he gave them different degrees of perfection, they which have
inferior degrees of goodness, may be said to be imperfect in
comparison to them which are endued with superior degrees of
excellence.
But in this world the spirit is infirm, not only because it is
immature, but also in respect to its understanding and judgments; and
from wrong judgments affections are liable to flow which, if we had
judged rightly, would have been different. This appears whenever we
misunderstand a person's motive, and, as a consequence, indulge
affections toward him which are different than in strict justice he
deserves. If we were angels we would make no such mistakes; but, while
our spirits are perfectly cleansed from sin, yet through our error of
judgment we love the man only as we would a sinner or an enemy, when he
is worthy of being loved as a holy Christian, or a friend. Wesley is
very clear on this point. In his sermon on "Perfection" he says:
The highest perfection which man can attain, while the soul
dwells in the body, does not exclude ignorance, and error, and a
thousand other infirmities. Now from wrong judgments, wrong words
and actions will often 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, but 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.
Let no man excuse his carnality on this score, for if he feels in his
heart the least tendency toward evil surmising, unkindness, uncharitable
criticism, or any lack of perfect love toward all men, he is yet in need
of the sanctifying grace of God.
II. Holy people are subject to trials. This arises from the peculiar
relation they sustain to the world, both to the people and natural
things, and to the various circumstances which arise from their
connection with these things. This is not always the meaning that is
attached to the word either in the Bible or in common parlance, but for
the want of some better word we desire to use it with that meaning.
Peter says, "That the trial of your faith, being much more precious than
of gold that perisheth, though it be tried with fire, might be found
unto praise and honor and glory at the appearing of Jesus Christ" (1 Pet
1: 7). God appeared to Abraham and said, "I am the Almighty God, walk
before me and be thou perfect" (Gen. 17: 1). Some time afterward he "tried"
Abraham's integrity by commanding him to offer Isaac as a sacrifice. Job
was a "perfect and an upright man," yet God allowed him to be tested,
and when he was tried he "came forth as gold." Daniel says, "Many shall
be purified, and made white, and tried" (Dan. 12:10).
All people have trials. Man is ushered into the world amid scenes of
suffering and sorrow. The first sound he produces is a cry, as if he
would bewail his existence and reproach his parents for the sorrows to
which they have begotten him. Here the stormy career begins. Through the
little joys and sorrows of childhood the babe arrives at youth, when the
mystery of existence begins to dawn upon him. Through young manhood he
pursues his way, and at length we see him in succession, at the marriage
altar, in his own home, surrounded by his family, in business life, in
social and religious relations, until as his hair gradually silvers for
the tomb, his eyes grow dim, his steps slacken, his spirit droops and he
realizes, if he is a man of thought, that "Man born of a woman hath but
few days and is full of sorrow" He rejoices in the house of feasting
to-day, and tomorrow mourns at the bier of his friend. Now he exults at
success, but soon weeps at failure. He laughs most happily when his
spirits are light and airy, but soon groans in anguish as his body Is
racked with pain, and at last he goes the way of mankind "earth to
earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust"
"Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?
Like a swift fleeting meteor, a fast flying cloud,
A flash of the lightning, a break of the wave,
Man passes from life to his rest in the grave.
"'Tis the wink of an eye, 'tis the draught of a breath,
From the blossom of health to the paleness of death,
From the gilded saloon to the bier and the shroud --
Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?"
We are social beings -- we desire companionship. Very few -- and they
are abnormally constituted -- prefer to live as hermits, alone. Beasts
and birds might associate together without the rights of one interfering
with those of another, for their capacities are small and their wants
few. But man is a complex being, with rights and desires which reach out
in all directions. Hence it is impossible for him to associate with his
fellows for any length of time without the real or fancied rights of one
interfering with those of the other. Every time your neighbor, in
maintaining what he may call his rights, interferes with your rights or
privileges, or even transgresses your ideas of neighborliness or
philanthropy, though he does nothing that injures you or detracts from
your freedom or rights, if you are not careful to keep your heart steady
before God, you will find a suggestion stealthily taking possession of
you that he is not worthy of your friendship. Your spirit will become
agitated, or at least uneasy, and you will find it necessary to pray in
order to keep wrong feelings from entering your heart. This is a trial
-- a testing of your grace. Sin has not yet entered your heart in the
shape of animosity against your neighbor, but the temptation is in that
direction.
While it is impossible to get a place where you will have no such
trials, yet by the grace of God you may reduce them to a minimum; and
that person who is always finding occasion to suspect his neighbor, and
who is always having his rights crossed, even by well-meaning people,
needs to get saved from touchiness and sensitiveness.
George Müller testified,
Not until I became totally indifferent to what I thought,
desired or preferred; to my opinions, tastes, purposes, and the
blame or praise, the censure or applause, of my fellow men, and
determined that henceforth I would seek no approbation but that of
God; did I ever start on a life of happiness and holiness; but from
that day until now I have been content to live alone with God.
The Rev. W. H. Kennedy, of the Wesleyan Methodist Church, says:
The true condition of the soul is shown by contact with things
opposed to our tastes or habits of life. So when our good is evil
spoken of, when our tastes are offended, our wishes or advices
disregarded, or our opinions ridiculed, to take it all in patient
silence is a fruit of inward purity.
When I am 'contented with mean things' (Rom. 12: 16, margin),
with any food, any raiment, any society, any climate, any seclusion,
any interruption, by the will of God, I have an evidence of inward
purity.
When I can bear with loving patience any irregularity, any disorder,
any lack of punctuality, or any of the annoying things of life with
inward quietness and meekness, then I bear the fruit of holiness.
When I prefer to neglect myself for the benefit of others; when I
avoid referring to myself in commendation, or to desire to be well
spoken of; when I am forgotten, neglected or purposely set aside and
my soul inwardly rejoices; that is an evidence of being dead, and my
life hid with Christ.
When I 'take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities,
in persecutions, in distresses, for Christ's sake,' I agree with St.
Paul (see 2 Cor. 12: 10), and, 'In all these things am more than
conqueror through him that loved me' (Rom. 8:37).
Circumstances sometimes get so complicated that they become a trial.
Poverty, failure of crops, failure of business, etc., all conspire to
try one's patience and faith; but in proportion as we learn to see God
in everything, in that proportion these things cease to be a trial.
Madam Guyon says, "Oh, what fears and uneasiness does a resigned soul
spare itself!"
The following Is from Wesley's sermon on "Heaviness Through
Temptations":
But how many are there in this Christian country that toil, and
labor, and sweat, and have it [food] not at last, but struggle with
weariness and hunger together? Is it not worse, for one after a hard
day's labor to come back to a poor, cold, dirty, uncomfortable
lodging, and to find there not even the food that is needful to
repair his wasted strength? * * * Perhaps to find also the comfort
of five or six children, crying for what he has not to give! Were it
not that he is restrained by an unseen hand, would he not 'curse God
and die'? Oh, want of bread! Want of bread! Who can tell what this
means, unless he hath felt it himself?
Besides these trials that are common to man, there are those that are
peculiar to the Christian. It is a mistake to say that the sinner has
all the trials a Christian does, for if you live for God the devil will
do his best to make your life miserable. Jesus said, "In the world ye
shall have tribulation." Under this head come the persecutions, mockings,
scoffings, and jeerings of the unholy throng. You will be reproached for
being a Christian, "but he that endureth to the end the same shall be
saved."
III. We are surrounded by innumerable hosts of spirits, some good and
some bad, some intent on our salvation and some on our destruction. If
we could meet our enemies in the open field, ourselves armed by the
power of God and aided by our heavenly guardians, we might vanquish
them; but no, they are unseen. Instead of coming out in bold array they
keep up a rambling, guerrilla warfare, darting in when least expected,
and always endeavoring to find the soul off guard. This is the most
tantalizing, aggravating warfare imaginable. The enemy cannot be located
till the crack of his gun is heard, and then he is invisible, and the
victim might about as well save his ammunition as to waste it shooting
at random into the bushes. Take a lesson from this, and when you hear
the crack of the devil's gun do not fire back; save your ammunition for
better game; set to running off some of his flock, and keep him so
occupied keeping up fences and renewing brand-marks that he will have to
give you some rest. True he will try all the harder to catch the
"robber," but you are never safer than when on such an expedition, for
you are surrounded by a wall of fire, and "an innumerable company of
angels" that are especially interested in your success.
The Bible represents the devil in different ways. He is sometimes called
an "adversary," or "the accuser of the brethren." Always when the sons
of God come together Satan (the adversary) comes also, and straightway
begins his old business of accusing. And it is well if the sons of God
detect his wiles and banish him. At times, realizing his inability to
get people willingly to follow him if his identity is manifest, he puts
on a cloak; clothes himself with the livery of heaven, and comes as an
angel of light, thereby trying to deceive people into his clutches. When
he fails as an adversary and as an angel of light, he sometimes throws
off all cloaks, stands forth in his true nature and attempts to frighten
the soul into submission. Then it is that he appears as "a roaring
lion."
Satan has different ways of working. One is by flashing evil
suggestions, or, as the Bible says, "fiery darts." With these he
attempts to pierce your shield. He searches diligently for a weak place
in your harness. Like a good general he tries to find some place where
you are off your guard, or where you have not properly strengthened your
bulwarks. Then through the gap thus caused he hurls his fiery darts, in
the shape of accusations, solicitations to or suggestions of evil; and
it is well if he was mistaken and you had your shield ready, for against
that his fiery darts will glance off like bullets shot against a wall of
adamant. If you have "the shield of faith," he cannot puncture it "Above
all, taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to quench
all the fiery darts of the wicked." Meet him with a Bible promise, or
some other appropriate passage of scripture, as Jesus did or go on your
way without heeding him. Yet do not dare him to the fray, for he will
come soon enough without that. Do not use railing accusations, since
even Michael the archangel dare not do that. It is better to say, like
Michael, "The Lord rebuke thee, 0 Satan."
At times the very air will seem alive with his flying missiles, but do
not be frightened or nervous; he is shorn of his strength, and faith as
a grain of mustard seed on your part will make you "more than
conqueror." Fear not "Have faith in God," and by him you can run through
a troop unscathed, pass through the floods and not be drowned, and march
through fire without its smell left on your garments. In the midst of
all you will be able, with Charles Wesley, to sing:
"Though in affliction's furnace tried,
Unhurt on snares and death I'll tread;
Though sin assail, and hell, thrown wide,
Pour all its flames upon my head;
Like Moses' bush I'll mount the higher,
And flourish, unconsumed, in fire."
Failing with his fiery darts, he will use various kinds of pressure
to overcome you. Throwing his infernal influences around your soul
(thank God, not into it) as an octopus does its many arms around Its
prey, he will thus attempt to force you into yielding to his demands.
The victim will be troubled with strange, unaccountable feelings. At
times the very atmosphere will seem pregnant with spirits that would
goad your impatience, that insist on an entrance to the soul. Then pride
will thrust sore at you, seeking to engender a spirit of
self-exaltation. A spirit of envy will seek to usurp a place in your
heart, or a jealous or covetous spirit to take possession of its throne;
and so on through all the avenues of approach the adversary will seek to
control and overthrow you. Sometimes groans will be wrung from your very
heart, so crushing will be your burden. These suggestions and feelings
may accumulate until your condition will answer the Bible description of
"heaviness through manifold temptations."
James Caughey says, "Temptation is a subject of feeling, as well
as indwelling sin. A temptation is not a temptation in reality unless it
is felt. How can we know we are tempted unless we feel it? How
difficult it is, frequently, to discriminate!" All this is true, with
this explanation: indwelling sin implies an inherent tendency to evil
struggling for gratification, while temptation to the holy soul, in
addition to the feeling caused by the temptation, is met by a
feeling of aversion to and recoil from the forbidden object or the evil
suggested, because of its sinful character. Joseph's response to the
solicitations of Potipher's wife, "How can I do this great evil and sin
against God?" is an illustration.
Here is another point. As you look back at it you will see that the
stirrings of carnality in the past were definite -- that is of pride,
envy, etc.; but in the present temptation there is an indefiniteness and
uncertainty that shows it to be false. Wesley says that the purity of
our hearts at present will appear in a clearer light if we compare the
present with the past feelings. But if the heart is not clean, and we
compare the present with the past, there will be such a striking
similarity that it will increase the feeling that the experience has not
been received.
In Wesley's sermon on "Wandering Thoughts" the following passage occurs:
And as long as evil spirits roam to and fro in a miserable,
disordered world, so long they will assault (whether they can
prevail or no) every inhabitant of flesh and blood. They will
trouble even those whom they cannot destroy: they will attack, if
they cannot conquer. And from these attacks of our restless,
unwearied enemies, we must not look for an entire deliverance, till
we are lodged 'where the wicked cease from troubling, and where the
weary are at rest.'
"It might be asked, "At what point does the clean soul again become
carnal?" Take one form of temptation as an illustration, which is no
doubt the most dangerous and subtle of all, and perhaps the one that the
enemy uses the oftenest: At what point do temptations to doubt so enter
the heart as to render it again carnal?
(1) As soon as a person is really cleansed the devil levels all his
batteries at this experience. He immediately suggests, "You do not have
the experience. Be careful, holiness is a wonderful work and you are
professing a great thing. No one was ever sanctified," etc. But none of
these suggestions, no matter how persistently urged, are inconsistent
with a clean heart. They are outside.
(2) A serious doubt as to whether the heart has been made clean, arising
from a misconception of what real cleansing is, does not necessarily
forfeit the experience. On the contrary it may cause one to examine the
foundation of his hope and the more thoroughly convince himself of the
genuineness of his experience.
(3) A fear that the experience has been forfeited does not of necessity
forfeit it. This fearfulness is likely to occur often before the heart
becomes "established" and learns the wiles of the devil, especially if
the person Is extremely conscientious.
(4) A failure to profess the experience, at least for a short time,
during these temptations to doubt, does not necessarily admit unbelief
to the heart. A great amount of mental misconception is consistent with
a clean heart.
(5) To give up one's profession and attempt to pray through does not
necessarily forfeit the experience. I have known persons who, in their
great anxiety to be right, and honestly attempting to pray through, have
obtained the witness to their cleansing, if possible, more clearly than
before, and upon examination of their past from this advanced ground
were convinced that they had not lost their experience at all.
You say, "If all this is consistent with an experience, where can doubt
come in?" You will notice that all the above-mentioned complications
arise from a misconception of God's requirements, or from a failure to
recognize the devil's temptations. And there is no doubt that God makes
a great deal of allowance for our human short-sightedness. Faith is not
so much the acknowledgment of a fact of experience as confidence in God.
This bases the experience on a different principle than much of the
preaching of to-day wittingly or unwittingly does. But be who builds his
hopes on his ability to profess an experience is not properly founded on
the rock. "Other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is
Jesus Christ" (1 Cor. 8:11).
Here is the point of actual failure. The devil slips up in the midst of
a severe test and says, "There is no use trying, God cannot keep you."
This runs against the will, and if it is quickly repelled the heart is
still clean; but if the will weakens and accepts the statement, the
heart immediately becomes unclean. Or, the devil says, "Are you not
sorry you ever professed holiness?" If the will says, "No,"' all is
well. But if it admits the temptation, it falls. As long as the will
persistently rejects the onslaughts of the devil, and holds its
steadfastness in God, there is no cause for fear; but when it weakens
and accepts distrust of God, carnality re-enters.
Carnality enters at the point of distrust toward God, be that
distrust ever so small. So press on, though all your foundations of
experience seem to totter; for if you steadily hold your confidence in
God, all will come out right in the end. Remember that carnality enters,
If at all, at the point of accepting and yielding to some sinful
principle. Are you guilty in this respect? If so, you are on a lower
plane than you once were. Rest not until the loftier plane is regained,
and, "rooted and grounded in love," you are able to pass through every
conflict, not only unscathed, but more than conqueror."
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