Among the various reasons that might be given for the opposition
to the doctrine and experience of entire sanctification we will cite
just a few as samples of the many, or as general reasons under which
particular reasons might be assembled.
1. There is a class of persons who entertain false ideas of the
standard of holiness and because of these false ideas are led to
oppose. This may occur either when they place the standard too high
or too low. Those who place the standard too high are apt to cry
"impossible;" while those who place it too low cannot see any good
that will come from its possession.
2. Another class of opposers are those who fail to comprehend. The
subject may be presented with much patience and care and made never
so clear, but when all is done they still fail to comprehend. "They
are like the deaf adder that stoppeth her ear; which will not
hearken to the voice of charmers, charming never so wisely." -- Ps.
58:4-5. Concerning this class of persons the Lord said to Isaiah:
"Go, and tell this people, Hear ye indeed, but understand not; and
see ye indeed, but perceive not. Make the heart of this people fat,
and make their ears heavy, and shut their eyes; lest they see with
their eyes, and hear with their ears, and understand with their
heart, and convert, and be healed."
3. Another fruitful source of opposition is faulty theology. Error
is often at the foundation of a theological tenet and the person who
accepts the dogma must force everything to bend to fit this ideal.
Certain theological writers have made the statement, and backed it
with plenty of misapplied scripture, that it is impossible to be
made holy in this life. Those who accept this view of things must
either ignore or explain away the plainest declarations of
scripture, and the testimonies of those who have been made holy;
they must even quiet the convictions and desires sent by the Holy
Ghost in their more honest moments and in place of them accept the
things that their better judgment tells them are wrong.
4. Another class of persons is misled by skeptical teachers. They
know nothing of theology and very little of the Bible. They will not
trouble themselves to learn, but blindly follow their leaders. Their
guides say the road they are traveling ends in heaven, and these
persons, although they have the guide book, the Bible, will not
trouble themselves to find out the truth. The guide declares that
the Bible says, "There is none perfect, no not one," and the blind
follower immediately repeats the news and excuses his shortcomings
on the ground of a passage of scripture that does not exist. Surely
"if the blind lead the blind, both shall fall into the ditch." --
Matt. 15:14. "Woe unto you, ye blind guides, for ye compass sea and
land to make one proselyte, and when he is made, ye make him twofold
more the child of hell than yourselves." -- Matt. 23:16, 15.
5. Another reason why some oppose entire sanctification lies in the
fact that they are prone to consider men instead of the word of God.
It is not an exaggeration to say that where one man reads God's word
nine men read the lives of professed Christians, and especially is
it true that they read professors of holiness. If they would read
them in the light of the word of God this would be all right, but
instead they are apt to measure them according to their own
self-conceived ideas.
6. Still others fail to catch the breadth and import of the work of
redemption and hence fall to opposing holiness as an extreme and
erroneous ideal. To many persons redemption is nothing more than
deliverance from hell and the gift of a home in heaven. They fail to
catch the meaning of the angel's message to Joseph, "Thou shalt call
his name Jesus: for he shall save his people from their sins." --
Matt. 1:21. Such persons do not understand what Jesus meant when he
prayed, "Sanctify them (not only His disciples, but all which should
believe on Jesus through their words) through thy truth: thy word is
truth." -- Jno. 16:17. See also Eph. 5:25-27.
7. Some persons consider their own hearts and their utter
helplessness in the cruel hands of sin, and failing to comprehend
the fact that God will help, declare that no man can be holy in this
life. This is as absurd an argument as to reason that because a
lizard is unable to fly nothing can. The happy birds would prove the
fallacy of such a conclusion. When God changes our vile nature and
"all things become new," new possibilities are given and
impossibilities are changed to the possible. When sin is gone and
righteousness reigns the happy saint can "do all things through
Christ who strengtheneth him."
8. Another fruitful reason for opposition arises from the fact that
men are loathe to give up sin, and sin in the heart hates the
holiness of God. Men still "love darkness rather than light, because
their deeds are evil. For every one that doeth evil hateth the
light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be
reproved (margin, discovered)." -- Jno. 3:19, 20.
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