LEADS TO FANATICISM.
It is objected by some that the profession of entire
sanctification leads to fanaticism and makes its professors
impracticable. They assert that holiness people are filled with wild
and uncanny notions, that they are ignorant, superstitious and
hopelessly unreliable.
No matter how learned or wise a person may have been considered
before, as soon as he makes a profession of holiness people wag
their heads, tap their foreheads, and shout fool, fanatic, wildfire,
holy-roller, self-righteous, and a thousand other epithets of
reproach. No matter how innocent, guileless and saintly the
professors may be they are with very few exceptions accused of the
vilest of sins and improprieties.
The Lord foresaw this condition of affairs and prepared His people
for it by saying, "Woe unto you, when all men speak well of you! for
so did their fathers to the false prophets." -- Luke 6:26. "The
world hath hated them, because they are not of the world." –– Jno.
17:14. "Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute
you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely for My
sake. Rejoice, and be exceeding glad, for great is your reward in
heaven: for so persecuted they the prophets which were before you."
-- Matt. 5:11-12. "All that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall
suffer persecution." -- 2 Tim. 3:12.
This method of false accusation has always been one of the devil's
big sticks in his war against holiness and in fact against
Christianity itself. Tertullian, after going to great lengths in
naming and refuting the charges brought against the Christians of
his day, sums the whole thing up by stating that the only crime laid
to their charge was their name. In his Ad Nationes, Book I, Chapter
III, he says,
Since therefore, you who are in other cases most scrupulous
and persevering in investigating charges of far less serious
import, relinquish your care in cases like ours, which are so
horrible, and of such surpassing sin that impiety is too mild a
word for them, by declining to hear confession, which should
always be an important process for those who conduct judicial
proceedings; and failing to make a full inquiry, which should be
gone into by such as sue for a condemnation, it becomes evident
that the crime laid to our charge consists not of any sinful
conduct, but lies wholly in our name.
In reply to the charge that the profession of holiness leads to
fanaticism and wild notions, let us quote the following from Wesley
the acknowledged leader, in modern times, of the holiness movement.
A people that will keep to such a line as this, and sanctified
people do, are neither fanatical nor visionary.
Beware of that daughter of pride, enthusiasm. O, keep at the
utmost distance from it! Give no place to a heated imagination,
Do not hastily ascribe things to God. Do not easily suppose
dreams, voices, impressions, visions, or revelations, to be from
God. They may be from Him. They may be from nature. They may be
from the devil. Therefore, believe not every spirit, but try the
spirits whether they be of God. Try all things by the written
word, and let all bow down before it, You are in danger of
enthusiasm every hour, if you depart ever so little from
Scripture; yea, or from the plain, literal meaning of any text,
taken in connection with the context. And so you are, if you
despise or lightly esteem reason, knowledge, or human learning;
every one of which is an excellent gift of God, and may serve
the noblest purposes.
I advise you never to use the words wisdom, reason, or
knowledge, by way of reproach, On the contrary, pray that you
yourself may abound in them more and more. If you mean worldly
wisdom, useless knowledge, false reasoning, say so; and throw
away the chaff, but not the wheat.
One general inlet to enthusiasm is, expecting the end without
the means; the expecting knowledge, for instance, without
searching the Scriptures and consulting the children of God; the
expecting spiritual strength without constant prayer and steady
watchfulness; the expecting any blessing without hearing the
word of God at every opportunity.
Some have been ignorant of this device of Satan. They have left
off searching the Scriptures. They said, 'God writes all the
Scriptures on my heart. Therefore I have no need to read it.'
Others thought they had not so much need of hearing, and so grew
slack in attending the morning preaching. O, take warning, you
who are concerned herein! You have listened to the voice of a
stranger. Fly back to Christ, and keep in the good old way,
which was once delivered to the saints; the way that even a
heathen bore testimony of: 'That the Christians rose early every
day to sing hymns to Christ as God.'
The very desire of 'growing in grace' may sometimes be an inlet
of enthusiasm, As it continually heads us to seek new grace, it
may lead us unawares to seek something else new, besides new
degrees of love to God and man. So it has led some to seek and
fancy they had received gifts of a new kind, after a new heart,
as (1) The loving God with all our mind; (2) With all our soul:
(3) With all our strength: (4) Oneness with God: (5) Oneness
with Christ: (6) Having our life hid with Christ in God: (7)
Being dead with Christ: (8) Rising with Him: (9) The sitting
with Him in heavenly places: (10) The being taken up into His
throne: (11) The being in the New Jerusalem: (12) The seeing the
tabernacle of God come down among men: (13) The being dead to
all works: (14) The not being liable to death, pain, or grief,
or temptation.
One ground of many of these mistakes is the taking every fresh,
strong application of any of these Scriptures to the heart, to
be a gift of a new kind; not knowing that several of these
Scriptures are not fulfilled yet; that most of the others are
fulfilled when we are justified; the rest the moment we are
sanctified. It remains only to experience them in higher
degrees. This is all we have to expect.
Another ground of these and a thousand mistakes, is, the not
considering deeply that love is the highest gift of God; humble,
gentle, patient love; that all visions, revelations,
manifestations whatever, are little things compared to love; and
that all the gifts above mentioned are either the same with, or
infinitely inferior to it.
It were well you should be thoroughly sensible of this the
heaven of heavens is love. There is nothing higher in religion;
there is, in effect, nothing else; if you look for anything but
more love, you are looking wide of the mark, you are getting out
of the royal way. And when you are asking others, 'Have you
received this or that blessing?' If you mean anything but more
love, you mean wrong; you are heading them out of the way, and
putting them upon a false scent. Settle it then in your heart,
that from the moment God has saved from all sin, you are to aim
at nothing more, but more of that love described in the
thirteenth of the Corinthians. You can go no higher than this,
till you are carried into Abraham's bosom.
I say yet again, beware of enthusiasm. Such is, the imagining
you have the gift of prophesying, or of discerning of spirits,
which I do not believe one of you has; no, nor ever had yet.
Beware of judging people to be either right or wrong by your own
feelings. This no scriptural way of judging. O keep close to
'the law and to the testimony!'
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