Chapter 14
THE WILL OF GOD
"For this is the will of God, even
your sanctification" (1 Thess. 4:3).
It is pleasant to know that
somebody is willing for us to be sanctified. Often the Church is
not. Sanctification is peculiarly a Methodist doctrine, but we have
known presiding elders and
bishops of that church to persecute and drive ministers out of their
connection because they
obtained and professed this blessing. Members of a person's own family
will often look upon him
who obtains this blessing with a touch of pity as mildly insane. Church
leaders will say to young
preachers: "You'll be ruined if you become a holiness preacher."
Yet, unlike these opposers in the
Church and out of it, God tells us it is His will that we
should be sanctified. Read the text again.
I. What Is Sanctification?
The Greek New Testament lexicon
will make it plain. "The adjective hagios primarily
means pure, clean, without blemish, holy, morally pure, upright,
blameless in heart and life." The
verb hagiazo, derived from the adjective, means "To make clean, to
purify, to sanctify." The noun
hagiasmos means "sanctification, purity of heart and life, holiness
produced by the Holy Spirit"
(Rom. 6:19-22; I Thess. 4:3,7, 8; Heb. 12:14; 2 Thess. 2:13).
This is the testimony of the New
Testament lexicon. The Standard English Dictionary
defines "sanctification" as "The gracious work of the Holy Spirit
whereby the believer (not the
sinner) is freed from sin and exalted to holiness of heart and life."
Notice:--
(1) It is the Spirit's work.
Sanctification is not the result of culture, education, growth,
striving, self-discipline, self-development, death or purgatory." The
Greek New Testament teaches
that this blessing is obtained immediately, here and now, by the
baptism with the Holy Spirit (Acts
15:8, 9). Notice --
(2) "Whereby the believer." Then
it is a second work of grace obtained only after
conversion."
(3) "The believer is freed from
sin" (inbred sin or depravity) . The great discussion of St.
Paul in the fifth to the eighth chapters of Romans shows that it means
we are "freed from
depravity" according to the interpretation of the world's best
scholarship.
We have all inherited depravity
through race connection from Adam. This sanctification of
the Holy Spirit is its only cure. It alone cleanses the heart from the
propensity to sin, and makes it
clean and pure.
As Worcester's Dictionary says:
"Sanctification is cleansing from corruption, purifying
from the dominion of sin."
Now
Ii. Consider The Evidences That Christians May Obtain Such A Blessing.
We might draw a most
satisfactory and, as we believe, unanswerable argument:
(1) From the nature and
character of God. Surely an infinitely holy God must hate every
kind of sin with an infinite, eternal hatred: and He must do everything
that is right and reasonable
to help us get rid of it. He will never force us to be holy against our
wills: but if we will consent to
be made holy, and will seek His help, He will make us holy. Jesus said:
"All power is given me in
heaven and on earth," and "He came to destroy the works of the devil."
Now the greatest work of the
devil in us was the implanting of depravity, or the spirit of
alienation from God, in every human breast. But Jesus has ample power
to destroy it: and He will
destroy it if we will permit Him and will co-operate with Him.
A man said to his friend:
"It took two to sanctify me." "Who were they?" "Why, it took me
and God." "Well, what did God do?" "He sanctified me." "And what did
you do?" "I let Him."
This is the truth put in few words. We seek: God sanctifies.
(2) Another evidence of the
possibility of such an experience is that it is God's will. Our
text says: "This is the will of God, even your sanctification." Only
ourselves can frustrate this will
of God.
(3) Jesus prayed for it.
"Sanctify them" (John 17:17). God will never refuse to answer the
prayer of His holy Son. Nothing can prevent this blessing coming to us
but our own opposition to
the will of God.
(4) God commanded it. "Like
as he who called you is holy, be ye yourself also holy in all
manner of living; he cause it is written, Ye shall be holy, for I am
holy" (1 Peter 1:15, 16).
(5) Our Savior commanded it.
"Ye therefore shall be perfect, as your heavenly Father is
perfect" (Matt. 5:48).
(6) Jesus died for it.
"Christ loved the church, and gave himself for it that he might sanctify
it, having cleansed it" (Eph. 5:25,26). "Wherefore Jesus also, that he
might sanctify the people
through His own blood, suffered without the gate" (Heb. 13:12).
Now the adorable God will
never permit His holy Son to die in vain. Be sure some people
are going to be sanctified: and it may as well be you as anyone. It
will be you if you will be a
candidate for the blessing and comply with the conditions.
(7) God calls us to be
sanctified. "For God calls us not for uncleanness, but in
sanctification" (1 Thess. 4:7).
(8) God chose us
to be sanctified. "God chose you, beloved of the Lord, from the
beginning
unto salvation, in sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the
truth." Nothing but obstinate unbelief
will shut us out from this blessing (2 Thess. 2:13).
(9) God promises
this blessing to all that earnestly seek it. "Blessed are they that
hunger
and thirst after righteousness (rightness of heart), for they shall be
filled" (Matt. 5:6). "The God of
peace himself Sanctify you wholly. . . . Faithful is he that calleth
you who also will do it" (1 Thess.
5:23, 24).
(10) We are
taught to pray for it. The Lord's prayer is a prayer for
sanctification, and it
dovetails into our text as if meant to be a part of it. "Our Father who
art in heaven, hallowed by thy
name. Thy kingdom come: Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven."
Are they not all holy in
heaven? Are they not all free from every form of sin there? Have they
not all pure and holy hearts
there? Holiness is the very life and breath and atmosphere of heaven.
Then we are to be like that
on earth.
Does anyone dare
to say that Jesus taught us to pray for that which cannot be realized?
Never! Therefore, we may be sanctified on earth before we reach heaven.
God declares
that nothing shall enter heaven that defileth or worketh abomination or
maketh a lie." The depravity in human hearts does nothing else than
defile and corrupt the
imaginations and the thoughts. He perverts the appetites and desires.
This depravity,
this wicked alienation from God does nothing else but "work abominations
and make deceits in the individual life, in the family, in the church,
in the school, in the community,
in the nation, in all the world. The world war, with all its
indescribable horrors and infamies, was
only the depravity of hell let loose in human hearts to fester, and
corrupt, and blight, and destroy
humanity, and blot out the .image of God from the nature of man.
No wonder the
triune God hates it and wills its destruction. No wonder His infinite
love
has procured a perfect remedy; but it cost the awful price of Calvary
and the atoning death of the
only begotten Son of God.
Beloved, shall
we allow that awful price to be paid in vain, so far as we are
concerned?
Shall you and I reject so great. a salvation procured for us at such a
price? If we do, our damnation
will be deserved and swift and inevitable. .
"Without
sanctification no man shall see the Lord."