THE TEMPTATIONS OF A SANCTIFIED
MAN
How can a man that is "dead to sin" be "tempted?" asked an
earnest but unsanctified Christian of me some time ago. "If the very
tendencies and inclinations to sin be destroyed, what is there in
the man to respond to a solicitation to evil?
This is a question which every man will ask sooner or later, and
when God showed me the answer, it threw great light on my pathway
and helped me to defeat Satan in many a pitched battle.
The fact is, that the truly sanctified man who is "dead to sin" does
not have any inclinations in him that respond to the ordinary
temptations of men. As Paul declares, "We wrestle not against flesh
and blood" -- against the sensual, fleshly and worldly temptations
which used to have such power over him -- but "against
principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness
of this world, against wicked spirits in heavenly -- as in his
closet, in secret prayer-places" (Eph. vi. 12, marginal reading).
If he were once a drinking man, he is no longer tempted in the least
to get drunk, for he is "dead" and his life" is hid with Christ in
God" (Col. iii. 3).
If he were ever proud and vain, delighting in dress and jewels, he
is no longer allured by the cheap glitter and the vain pomp and
glory of this world, for he has set his affection on things above,
not on things on the earth (Col. iii. 2). Such things now have no
more attraction for him than the brass trinkets, eagle feathers and
war-paint of an Indian.
If be once coveted the honor and praise of men, he now counts such
as dung and dross, that he may win Christ and have the honor that
comes from God only.
If he once desired riches and ease, he now gladly gives up all
earthly possessions and comforts, that he may have treasure in
Heaven and not be "entangled with the affairs of this life"; "that
he may please Him who hath chosen him to be a soldier" (2 Tim. ii.
4). I do not mean to say that Satan will never hold up any of these
worldly and fleshly pleasures and honors to induce the soul to leave
Christ, for he will. But what I do mean to say is, that the soul
being now "dead to sin," having the very roots of sin destroyed,
does not respond to the suggestion of Satan, but instantly rejects
it. Satan may send along a beautiful adulteress, as he did to Joseph
in Egypt; but this sanctified man will flee away and cry out, as
Joseph did, "How ... can I do this great wickedness, and sin against
God?" (Gen. xxxix. 9).
Or, Satan may offer him great power and honor and riches, as he did
to Moses in Egypt; but comparing these with the infinite fullness of
glory and power he has found in Christ, the sanctified man will
instantly reject the Devil's offer: "choosing rather to suffer
affliction with the people of God, than to enjoy the pleasures of
sin for a season; esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches
than the treasures in Egypt" (Heb. xi. 25, 26).
Or again, Satan may tempt his palate with the dainty wines and rich
viands of a king's palace, as he did Daniel in Babylon; but, like
Daniel, this sanctified man will have at once "purposed in his heart
that he would not defile himself with the portion of the king's
meat, nor with the wine which he drank" (Dan. i. 8).
All these worldly baits were held out to Jesus (Matt. iv. 1-11 and
Luke iv. 2-13), but we see in the account of the apostles how
gloriously He triumphed over every suggestion of the Tempter. And
just as He rejected Satan's temptations and gained the victory, so
will the sanctified man, for he has Christ Himself come to dwell in
his heart and to fight his battles, and can now say with the Master,
"The prince of this world cometh, and hath nothing in Me" (John xiv.
30).
In fact, he has found such satisfaction, such peace and joy, such
comfort, such purity and power in Christ, that the power of
temptation along any of the old lines is completely broken, and he
now enjoys the liberty of the sons of God; he is free as any
archangel, for "if the Son ... shall make you free, ye shall be free
indeed "(John vii". 36), even with "the liberty wherewith Christ
hath made us free" (Gal. v. 1).
But while Christ has set this sanctified man at liberty, and he no
longer has to fight against his old worldly passions and fleshly
appetites, yet he has a continual warfare with Satan to keep this
liberty. This warfare is what Paul calls" the good fight of faith"
(I Tim. vi. 12).
He must fight to hold fast his faith in the Father's love. He must
fight to hold fast his faith in the Saviour's cleansing Blood.
He must fight to hold fast his faith in the Holy Spirit's
sanctifying and keeping power.
Although not seen by the world, this fight is as real as that of
Waterloo or Gettysburg, and its far-reaching consequences for good
or evil are infinitely greater.
By faith, the sanctified man is made an heir of God and joint heir
with Jesus Christ (Rom. viii. 17) of all things, and his faith makes
his Heavenly Father and this heavenly inheritance so real to him,
that the influence of these unseen things far surpasses the
influence of the things he sees with his eyes, hears with his ears,
and handles with his hands.
The sanctified man says with Paul, and fully realizes it in his
heart as he says it, that "the things which are seen are temporal,"
and will soon perish; "but the things which are not seen" with our
natural eyes, but are seen by the eye of faith, "are eternal" (2 Cor.
iv. 18) and will remain when" the elements shall melt with fervent
heat" (2 Pet. iii. 10), and "the heavens shall be rolled together as
a scroll" (Isa. xxxiv. 14).
Now in the very nature of the case, these things can only be held by
faith; but so long as the sanctified man thus holds them, Satan's
power over him is utterly broken. This the devil knows quite well,
so he begins systematic warfare against the faith of such a man.
He will accuse him of sin, when the man's conscience is as clear of
willfully breaking God's law as is the conscience of an angel. But
Satan knows if he can get him to listen to this accusation and lose
faith in the cleansing Blood of Jesus, he has him at his mercy.
Satan will in this way accuse a sanctified man, and then turn right
about and declare that it is the Holy Spirit, instead of himself,
condemning the man! He is "the accuser of the brethren" (Rev. xii.
10). Here is the difference we want to notice:
The devil accuses us of sin.
The Holy Spirit condemns us for sin.
If I tell a lie, get proud, or break any of God's commandments, the
Holy Spirit will condemn me at once. Satan will accuse me of having
sinned when I have not, and he cannot prove it.
For instance, a sanctified man talks to a sinner about his soul,
urges him to flee from the wrath to come, and give his heart to God;
but the sinner will not. Then Satan begins to accuse the Christian:
"You did not say the right things to that sinner; if you had, he
would have given in to God."
It is of no use arguing with the devil. The only thing the man can
do is to look away from the accuser to the Saviour and say:
"Dear Lord, Thou knowest that I did the best I could at the time,
and if I did anything wrong or left anything unsaid, I trust Thy
Blood this moment to cleanse me."
If Satan is met this way at the beginning of his accusation, the
man's faith will gain a victory, and he will rejoice in the
Saviour's cleansing Blood and the Spirit's keeping power; but if he
listen to the devil until his conscience and faith are both wounded,
it may take a long time for his faith to regain the strength which
will enable him to shout and triumph over all the power of the
enemy.
When Satan has injured the faith of the sanctified man, he will
begin to blacken the character of God. He will suggest to the man
that the Father no longer loves him with that mighty love He had for
His Son Jesus; yet Jesus declares that He does. Then he will suggest
that, maybe, the Blood does not cleanse him from all sin and that
the Holy Spirit cannot -- or, at least, does not -- keep anybody
spotless and blameless, and that, after all, there is no such thing
as a holy life down here in this world.
As a further result of this wounded faith, the man's secret prayer
loses much of its blessedness; his intense desire to deal with souls
will grow dull; the joy of testifying for Christ will grow less, and
dry talk will take the place of burning testimony, and the Bible
will cease to be a constant source of blessing and strength. Then
the devil will tempt him to actual sin, through the neglect of some
of these duties.
Now if the man listens to Satan and begins to doubt, woe be to his
faith! If he does not cry mightily to God, if he does not search the
Bible to know God's will and find His promises, and plead them day
and night, as Jesus did, "who in the days of His flesh ... offered
up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto Him
that was able to save Him from death" (Heb. v. 7); if he does not
hurl these promises at Satan and resolutely shut his ears to every
suggestion to doubt God, it is only a question of time when he will
be numbered among those who have a name to live and are dead (Rev.
lii. 1); "having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof"
(2 Tim. iii. 5); whose prayer and testimonies are dead; whose Bible
study and exhortations and works are dead, because there is no
living faith in them; or he will become an out-and-out backslider.
What shall the sanctified man do to overcome the devil?
Listen to what Peter says: "Be sober, be vigilant" (that means, keep
your eyes open), "because your adversary the devil, as a roaring
lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour: whom resist
stedfast in the faith" (I Pet. v. 8, 9).
Hear James: "Resist the devil, and he will flee from you" (iv. 7).
Listen to Paul: "Fight the good fight of faith" (I Tim. vs. 12).
"The just shall live by faith (Rom. i. 17). "Above all, taking the
shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery
darts of the wicked" (Eph. vi. 16).
And John: "This is the victory that overcometh the world, even our
faith" (I John v. 4). "And they overcame him" (the devil, the
accuser of the brethren) "by the Blood of the Lamb" (in which Blood
they had childlike faith), "and by the word of their testimony" (for
if a man will not testify his faith will soon die), "and they loved
not their lives unto the death "(Rev. xii. 11); they obeyed God at
all costs, and denied themselves to the uttermost.
Paul attaches the same importance to testimony when he says: "Let us
hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering" (Heb. x.
23).
"Take heed, brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil heart of
unbelief in departing from the living God" (Heb. iii. 12).
" Cast not away therefore your confidence, which hath great
recompense of reward (Heb. x. 35).
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