Chapter 5
PLEDGE OF FAITH
"Now, as I have
given myself to Thee, I will, from this time forth, regard myself as
Thine. I
believe Thou dost accept the offering that I bring. I put all on the
altar. I believe the altar
sanctifieth the gift. I believe the blood is applied NOW as I comply
with the terms of Thy
salvation. I believe Thou dost now cleanse me from all sin."
Prof. Dougan
Clark, the Friend, says: "The essence of consecration is in the
sentence,
'Yield yourselves unto God.' When you yield yourselves you yield
everything else. Consecration is
not to God's service, or His work, or to the church, or to the
missionary cause, but to God Himself.
'Yield yourselves unto God.' Consecration does not mean the giving up
of your sins, or vices, or
depraved appetites, or forbidden indulgences. We cannot consecrate our
alcohol, or our tobacco,
or our opium, or our card-playing, or dancing, or theater-going. He
wants none of these things.
Actual and known sins must be abandoned at conversion. He wants all the
good things: the son
Isaac, most precious to our heart, laid on the altar. An English
periodical had this:
'I am willing
To receive what Thou givest,
To lack what Thou withholdest,
To relinquish what Thou takest,
To suffer what Thou inflictest,
To be what Thou requirest,
To do what Thou commandest. Amen.'"
Amanda Smith
says: "You must make your consecration complete, and you must make it
eternal."
VIII. -- The
last condition is faith. One might take all the seven steps already
described,
and still remain without the blessing. The children of Israel marched
out of Egypt and entirely
across the desert to the very border of the Promised Land, and halted
on the wrong side of the
border. For lack of faith they did not get into Canaan. With faith they
might have gone in before
sundown. Acts 26:18 teaches that we are "sanctified by faith that is in
Me" (Jesus) . "We receive
the promise of the Spirit through faith" (Gal. 3:14). Our hearts are
"purified by faith" (Acts 15:8,
9). All other conditions lead to this, and without faith all others
would end in failure. As Dr. A. J.
Gordon says: "It is the duty and privilege of believers to receive the
Holy Ghost for sanctification
by a definite act of appropriating faith, just as we received Jesus
Christ by faith for justification. It
is as sinners that we accept Christ by faith for justification; it is
as sons that we accept the Spirit
by faith for sanctification."
Dr. Steele says:
"My faith had three things to master: 'the Spirit, for me, NOW I' Upon
the
promise I ventured with an act of appropriating faith, claiming the
Comforter as my right in the
name of Jesus. For several hours I clung by naked faith. Suddenly I
became conscious of a
mysterious power . . . melting my heart."
Dr. Carradine
says: "Is everything upon the altar? If so, who is the altar? Paul
tells you -- it
is Christ. What does the altar do? God says, "The altar sanctifies the
gift.' Will you believe that?
Will you take God at His word? You must believe that Christ makes you
holy right now. Will you
take that step and receive full salvation? Plant yourself on God's
Word. Dare to believe it, and
hold on till the witness comes."
Andrew Murray
says: "Who are ready to come into this life and claim their heritage as
a
child of God?
(1) Say,
tonight, I must be filled with the Spirit.
(2) I may be
filled with the Spirit; God does not give a must without a may.
(3) Say, I would
be filled with the Spirit; I long for it.
(4) I shall be
filled with the Spirit; O God, I give myself to Thee entirely; I claim
the filling
of the Spirit. Thou givest it."