The next remark is that the life of the sanctified man is
emphatically and peculiarly a life of faith. "Walk by faith and not
by sight," says the great apostle. All Christians must have faith,
but holy Christians possess it in a very high degree. And this is
precisely the phrase by which some denominations of Christians,
designate the experience of Perfect Love or Entire Sanctification.
All three expressions are sanctioned by the Holy Scripture, and
therefore may be rightly and properly used -- the only point
necessary to be guarded, being that we do not employ the term "full
assurance of faith" -- and at the same time exclude or deny the other
names of the same experience which are equally Scriptural and
equally true. And besides this the term assurance is often employed
in our day to designate the experience of initial salvation, when
the penitent sinner, becomes assured by the witness of the Spirit
that he is a child of God.
Perfect love involves and implies the idea of perfect faith. Perfect
love is love to God without any rivalry, and right and pure love
towards all men. Perfect faith is faith without any admixture of
doubt and unbelief. Faith and love are twin sisters and always keep
pace with each other. Faith takes an advanced step, and, lo, love is
by its side. Little faith, little love -- much faith, much love --
perfect faith, perfect love. Believe Christ with a weak and
trembling faith, and you will love him with a weak and trembling
love. Believe Him with a firm and vigorous faith, and you will love
Him with a firm and vigorous love. Believe Him with a faith that
refuses to doubt, and you will love Him with a love that refuses to
waver.
And both faith and love are irreconcilably opposed to sin. Just in
proportion to the strength of your faith in Christ will be your
desire to please Him, and your unwillingness to grieve or offend
Him. And when your faith becomes perfect, your determination will
become fixed, that by His grace you will not voluntarily sin against
Him. And on the other hand if you possess love for Him even in a
small measure, in that same measure will be your wish to avoid
sinning against Him, and if your love is perfect, nothing can induce
you wilfully to transgress His Holy commands. And thus it is
blessedly true that "faith worketh by love to the purifying of the
heart." I believe there are people in the world today who would
rather die than voluntarily to commit a known sin. Would there were
many more.
The inner life of holiness being thus a life of faith, it does not
much concern itself about special signs or visions or extraordinary
manifestations, or sensational phenomena of any kind or character.
No doubt the Lord may and sometimes does use dreams and trances and
special revelations to the intellect or to the sensibilities, for
the instruction and edification of His children. But we must not
live in them, nor depend upon them, nor think that something is
wrong when they are withheld from us. They are the exception and not
the rule. It is not generally those who know most of the Hidden
Life, who have these sensational experiences, and we are
emphatically forbidden by the blessed Saviour to seek after a sign.
If the Lord in His infinite wisdom, sends to us these extraordinary
manifestations, let us receive them with thankfulness, and pray that
we may learn the lessons they are intended to teach us; but when He
does not send them and we are deprived of them as most Christians
are all through this life, let us gratefully remember that we still
have the Lord Himself, and still have the conscious or unconscious
illumination of the Holy Spirit upon its inspired pages. For these
let us thank God, and with these let us be satisfied.
The love that appertains to the inner life of holiness is like all
other love, self-reactive and self-expanding. It is ever desiring to
love more, and to increase its own capacity of loving. If this
tendency to enlargement and expansion is to go on forever, it must
have an infinite object on which to expend itself, otherwise it
would necessarily terminate when it should have reached everything
in the object which is capable of being loved. But God is an
infinite Being, His excellence can never be exhausted, nor fully
comprehended, and so the soul may go on loving Him with a love that
is perfect all the time, and yet which increases and expands
forever.
The inner life of holiness, I remark in the next place does not make
the mistake of confounding love with joy. Many persons who seem and
claim to be seeking for holiness are seeking for joy. Such not
unfrequently express themselves, as desiring a religion that always
makes them happy or joyful. These individuals no doubt love God
sincerely, but the very fact that they are seeking for joy -- joy in
the abstract, for its own sake -- is proof positive that there is
still much self-love left in their hearts. It is blessedly true
indeed that joy necessarily attends or accompanies holiness, but the
thing to seek and find is not joy for its own sake, but holiness for
its own sake.
Joy is an emotion, and emotions terminate in the individual who is
the subject of them. If we have joy in the Lord it is because we
love the Lord. And if we love Him with a pure love we shall love Him
with an undying love, even if He should see fit for any reason, to
take away our joy. The thing for a Christian to be anxious about
therefore, is not his own measure of joy, but his faith and his
love, and his obedience. The one thing God is pleased with is to
have us everywhere and always, doing and suffering His sweet will.
Love is not simply an emotion but it has in it a strong element of
desire. It does not settle nor terminate in the subject but goes
forth with strong and burning desire to do good to the beloved
object. And when it is directed toward God, the Supreme Object of
Love -- it desires to please Him and to promote His glory. When on
the other hand it is directed towards lost and fallen men it desires
to save them at whatever sacrifice to itself may be required. Listen
to Moses: "O, this people have sinned a great sin, and have made
them gods of gold; yet, now, if Thou wilt forgive their sins; and if
not, blot me, I pray Thee, out of Thy book which Thou hast written."
Listen to Paul: "For I could wish that myself were accursed from
Christ for my brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh."
Listen to Jesus: "And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw
men unto Me." Beloved let us see to it, that our love is kept
perfect, and thus, and thus only, our joy shall be full.
Whoever possesses the true inner life of holiness has his center in
God. Every human being must have a center around which continually
revolves his thoughts, his purposes, his motives, his words, his
actions, his whole character. And this center is either God or self.
Some doubtless make the attempt to revolve around two centers --
both God and themselves -- but this is only the old story of trying
to serve two masters, which Jesus says is utterly impossible. Now it
is a wonderful simplification of the Christian life, to have just
one center of our whole existence, and that center God. Our thoughts
then will be God's thoughts. Our hopes and aspirations will be
directed towards Him. Our life will be hid with Christ in Him. Our
expectations will be from Him. It will be the daily business of our
lives to do always those things that please Him. Our love for all
created persons and things will be subordinate to our love f or Him.
With such love and service as we are capable of we will honor Him on
earth, and with a better love and a better service in the glory
land. |