The inner life of holiness is a life of continuous spiritual
growth. All the spiritual graces which were planted in the heart at
conversion -- and which,. during the justified state were more or
less hindered in their growth and development by the presence of the
carnal mind -- are now permitted to expand themselves, and to
increase indefinitely without restraint or hindrance. And thus the
heart of the sanctified man or woman becomes a spiritual garden --
full of luscious fruits and fragrant flowers, with no noisome weed
or noxious insect to obstruct the growth or the fruitfulness, or the
perfume. "A garden enclosed is my sister my spouse."
We get spiritual life as a gift of God at our conversion. We get
heart-purity also as a gift at the time of our entire
sanctification. Afterwards we are in a position to grow steadily and
constantly unto maturity. In natural things maturity and ripeness is
followed by decay and death; but in spiritual things there is no
maturity attainable beyond which there may not be a farther growth,
and no decay or death can ever occur unless we fall into backsliding
and apostasy. As holiness is synonymous with perfect love, we may
readily believe that there will never be a time on earth or in
heaven when there will never be and will not be an increase of holy
love. Hence spiritual growth as a part of the inner life of holiness
will be continuous and perpetual while we are in the body, and it
will be eternal in glory.
And yet it is true that the sanctified believer, walking year after
year with God, and obeying His voice, -- trusting in Christ and
walking in His foot steps _ does not attain even in this state of
being to a richness of experience, and to a development and fulness
of the Christian graces which may well be designated maturity.
Purity obtained when you are sanctified wholly, is perfection in
nature; maturity, the result of growth, is perfection in degree, but
with the paradoxical condition attached, that "still there's more to
follow."
The apostle Peter, in his first epistle, uses this language, viz:
"Wherefore laying aside all malice and guile, and hypocrisies, and
envies, and all evil speakings, as new-born babes desire the sincere
milk of the word, that ye may grow thereby;" and in his second
epistle at the end he says, "But grow in grace, and in the knowledge
of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ." It is evident that the
apostle -- who has been styled the "Apostle of Growth," -- gives not
the slightest intimation that we can grow into grace, whether the
grace be justification or entire sanctification. In the first
passage quoted, he addresses Christian converts, in a justified
state as "new-born babes," and admonishes them to remove all the
hindrances to growth by which they are beset, and then to seek a
healthy, spiritual appetite and digestion, that they may grow by
feeding upon the pure milk of the word. Here then, we have the
inspired conditions which are necessary to Christian growth. They
are, first, Get rid of inbred sin -- for it is manifest that malice,
guile, hypocricies, envies, evil speakings, are all fruits of the
carnal nature, which abides even in the regenerate -- and Peter is
saying to them, "Be sanctified wholly," "Destroy the body of sin,"
"Remove the obstructions to growth," "Feed yourselves on Bible
truth," and then you will grow. In other words, they are directed to
become healthy Christians, and then to take the right kind of
spiritual nourishment. These two conditions being fulfilled, a rapid
and constant spiritual growth is certain.
From the second quotation given above, we learn that growth in grace
is parallel with and dependent upon a growth "in knowledge of our
Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ." Yes, beloved, we are to be
constantly growing in knowledge -- even the knowledge which is life
eternal.
"That they might know Thee, the only true God and Jesus Christ whom
Thou hast sent." O, to know more of Jesus, let that be our aim; and
for that purpose let us sit at His feet and learn of Him. We can get
additional knowledge of Him by a diligent study of the Word -- by
prayer, and praise, by worship and communion -- by the Spirit taking
of the things of Christ and showing them to us -- and as we grow in
the knowledge of Him we shall always be growing in grace. Praise the
Lord.
A healthy child needs simply to partake bountifully of the food
which is his natural nutriment, and to have proper exercise, and he
will thrive and grow rapidly and symmetrically. But if he be the
subject of some constitutional disease, which affects his digestive
and assimilative functions, then although you may give him his milk
regularly and abundantly, yet his growth will be interfered with --
he will be dwarfish, or distorted, or one-sided, or in some way
unsymmetrical and at the same time a weakling as to strength. Ah,
beloved, are there not far too many dwarfish and one-sided
Christians? Are there not too many weaklings in our churches, and is
not the reason because their growth and development have been
obstructed by the dreadful malady of inbred sin?
Several years ago I read a story like the following, viz., In a
certain family twin sisters were born. One of them was a strong,
healthy, well-developed child, while the other was a poor, weak,
puny infant with no health and little vitality. After twenty-five
years the one was a tall, vigorous and handsome young lady, while
the other had never walked a step nor spoken a word. At the age of
full maturity she was still an infant , and then death ended her
sufferings. It was not that she had been fed and tended and cared
for less than the other. It was because she had no health -she could
not assimilate the food which she swallowed, and so, of course,
could not grow or acquire strength. Let us suppose that in her
infancy a skillful physician had administered a remedy to her which
permeated all her tissues and removed the disease from her
constitution. Then she could have taken her milk and digested it --
and after awhile she would have cut her teeth, and been able to
masticate and assimilate, not simply the meat of infancy, but the
strong meat of womanhood, and like her sister she would have become
full of vigor and able to accomplish all the duties of an active
life.
The lesson is obvious. We are all born with the constitutional
disease of inbred sin. "This infection of nature doth remain, yea,
even in them that have been regenerated." And while it remains
growth and strengthening and development must be greatly retarded.
But there is balm in Gilead -- there is a Physician there -- the
health of the daughter of my people may be and ought to be
recovered. In the blood of Jesus there is a panacea for all
spiritual maladies and for all inbred sin. Take the remedy, beloved,
and be well. Take then the milk and afterwards the meat of the Word
and grow strong in the Lord and "do exploits" by His power.
Listen again to the inspired words of Malachi, "But unto you that
fear my name shall the sun of righteousness arise with healing in
His wings, and ye shall go forth and grow up as calves of the
stall." Notice, beloved, first you fear His name, and are therefore
His children -- next you are to get healing, and that means
holiness, for sanctification is to the soul what health is to the
body. Holiness is wholeness. And then you are to grow up like the
calves in the stall. And how do they grow? First they must be
healthy calves, and secondly, they must be stall-fed. With these
conditions they rapidly grow up into bullocks ready for the market.
0, beloved, let us pray that the Sun of Righteousness may speedily
arise upon Christians and upon Churches with healing in His wings --
and that we all may grow up with full strength and power for
service. Amen.
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