The outer life of holiness is manifested by the habit of
believing God. We all know that what is done repeatedly, or very
frequently becomes easy by the mere fact of repetition. This is the
law of habit. All the powers of the mind, as well as those of the
body are influenced by this law. And what is true of memory,
reasoning, walking, riding and all other mental and bodily
operations, is also true of believing. There is such a thing as a
faith-habit in which the individual who is possessed of it,
naturally and easily, and as a matter of course, believes God's
promises, and as a consequence naturally and easily obey His
commands
To form this blessed habit and to sustain it, we must employ our
will-power. We must accept the dictum of the poet, that:
"Our doubts are traitors, And make us lose The good we oft might win, By fearing to attempt."
And so we must determine, and resolve, and act upon the
determination and resolution that whomsoever or whatever else we may
believe or not believe, we will believe God.
In his excellent work, "The Life of Faith" the late Thomas C. Upham,
D.D. quotes, from "a pious person who is said to have died in the
triumphs of faith," these expressions, viz.: "I have given God my
undivided heart; believing that he does accept it, and believing
that the blood of Christ cleanseth us from all sin. Like a stone
which the builder takes, and puts on the foundation, so do I lie on
Christ's blood and God's promises, giving God my soul and body, a
living sacrifice, and covenanting with Him never to doubt more. My
language is, I will believe, I will sooner die than doubt."
But here some one may interpose an objection. He may say belief is
not a matter of will, it is a matter of evidence. Produce sufficient
evidence and we cannot withhold our belief. Withhold the evidence
and we cannot at all believe by mere force of will.
We admit the force of the objection, but it is no longer tenable,
when we reply that the will-power we are recommending is not to be
employed in the absence of evidence, nor contrary to evidence, nor
independently of evidence, but strictly in accordance with evidence
and for the purpose of giving to the evidence its just appreciation
and acceptance.
It is not for want of evidence that any sinner is failing to believe
that God is willing, as He is surely able to save him now. It is not
for want of evidence that any Christian is failing to believe that
God is able and willing to sanctify him now. It is because, on
account of a long habit of doubting, and of the unbelief that is a
part of inbred sin, he is failing to give the evidence its due
weight, and to act upon it by actually believing. And in such a case
the will must be brought to bear in aid of the enfeebled and
paralyzed faith that it may act as it should do, not in the absence,
but in the presence of sufficient evidence.
The outer life of holiness is shown by its possessor being careful
not to judge unfavorably or uncharitably the feelings of others. If
his fellow Christians do not walk uprightly according to his
standard, his first inquiry is "Who makes me to differ?" and his
first care is not to spread the story of their wrongdoings, nor to
rebuke them with intemperate zeal, but to pray for them.
The holy man accounts everything that comes to him in his outward
life as a manifestation of God. It may not come directly from Him,
it may come from Satan, or from wicked men -- but God's hand is
present in it, either to cause it or permit it, for what God sends
or permits he can still be thankful, knowing that He doeth all
things well. Therefore whether joy or sorrow be the portion of his
cup; his first thought is of God, and whether He gives or whether He
takes away, the holy man can say with Job, "Blessed be the name of
the Lord."
As the holy man exhibits in his entire life a constant exercise of
faith, so he exhibits also a continual consecration. It is only by
surrender that we can come on to believing ground. "How can ye
believe" said the blessed Saviour, "who seek the honor that cometh
from man, and not the honor that cometh from God only?" And this
question implies that while the heart is unsurrendered to God, while
it is seeking for earthly honors and endowments, and not making the
will of God its supreme choice, it is not in a condition to believe
God. "If our hearts condemn us, God is greater than our heart," by
which the beloved apostle seems to mean that in such a state of
heart God will condemn us also. But "if our hearts condemn us not,
then have we confidence towards God." In other words, when we become
fully consecrated to the Lord -- and assume just the attitude
towards Him which He desires and demands -- then we believe Him, and
so the continual outward life of the sanctified believer is a life
of continual surrender, and continual trust. His desires are all
merged in the one desire, God's will be done, and his faith
constantly takes it for granted that while he maintains this
position of heart, God's will, so far as he is concerned, is done.
The outer life of holiness is exhibited also by a want or absence of
undue eagerness, or restlessness of spirit. The holy man is seldom
heard exclaiming, I do so want this or that, at least in reference
to worldly things, and the same is true to a large extent, even in
reference to spiritual things. The reason is that he has learned to
accept, and even to love all the arrangements of God, and to so
prefer God's will to his own, that in everything he chooses God's
will, and the expression of his own preference is guarded by the
desire usually uttered, and always implied, if it be His will.
The outer life of the sanctified man or woman is manifested by his
or her willingness to confess with the mouth what God has done
within the heart. That the blood of atonement has been applied by
faith for the forgiveness of past sins, that the same blood applied
by the Holy Spirit now cleanseth from all sin. They are ever ready
to confess their own weakness and unworthiness, and yet ready to
confess also that Jesus by His Holy Spirit keeps them without
condemnation All the glory is to Him. They are nothing Christ is
all.
The sanctified believer is careful to guard against taking undue
satisfaction or complacency in his own deeds. He walks, and works,
and fights always behind the shield of faith. He trusts all to
Christ. He attributes all that is good in his own character and life
not to his unworthy self, not to his own righteousness, which he
knows to be nothing but filthy rags -- but to the grace of God in
the Lord Jesus Christ. Like Paul he acknowledges that it is by the
grace of God that he is what he is. And so while he is far removed
from boasting in or of himself, yet his soul does make her boast in
the Lord. Hallelujah!
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