Chapter 3
WHAT THIS PENTECOSTAL BLESSING IS, WHICH PEOPLE ARE REJECTING,
AND HOW IT MAY BE RECEIVED OR OBTAINED
If we were to
take a text or two to indicate the Divine endorsement of our teaching
and give
added weight to our words, out of very many that might be taken we
select two:
Rom. 6:6:
"Knowing this that our old man was crucified with Him, that the body of
sin
might be done away, that so we should no longer be in bondage to sin."
I Peter 1:15-16:
"Like as He who called you is holy, be ye yourselves also holy in all
manner of living; because it is written, Ye shall be holy, for I am
holy."
In these days of spiritual
uncertainty and unrest, agnosticism, and soul famine, it is
refreshing to meet a man who knows something. So many people only
"guess" that "may be" they
are saved; they have a "perhaps" or "hope-so" salvation. Paul says,
"Knowing this." Let the reader
pay strict attention to what the old saint knew, for it is the clue to
a joyous, hopeful assurance of
salvation.
1. He knew that the "old man
was crucified."
2. He knew that by this
crucifixion "the body of sin" was done away, "destroyed,"
"annihilated."
3. He knew that this brought
him blessed deliverance from the tormenting bondage of
indwelling sin.
I. Right here some one, to
whom holiness literature is a novelty, says: "Please tell us what
is meant by the 'OLD MAN,' 'the BODY OF SIN?'
The Apostle Paul gives this
"old man" a good many names besides these two in the text
which are very suggestive. These names help us to locate him, and to
understand who and what he
is. In Rom. 7:17, he calls him "Sin that dwelleth in me," as if, at
some time in his career and every
man's [career] there was a strange inmate in the soul-house called
"sin," a spirit of disobedience to
God.
In Rom. 7:23, he calls him
"the LAW of sin." If for this word "law" we substitute the
words "the CONSTANT TENDENCY" to sin, we shall have the "old man's"
photograph. He is the
strange spirit of the devil, put into every child by race inheritance,
a tendency to do wrong, and run
after sin, and run away from God. The nursing babe sometimes shows it
in its mother's lap. The
little children very manifestly exhibit it in the nursery. Older
children show it still more. Adults
feel it so constantly, opposing every good resolution, besieging every
holy purpose, mocking every
Divine aspiration, that in spite of their covenant vows, and earnest
prayers, and holy longings, they
despair of pleasing God. This "old man" of indwelling sin destroys the
religion of millions of
hearts, and destroys the spiritual peace of millions more.
In Rom. 7:24, Paul calls him
"this body of death." This image is probably a reference to
that awful method of capital punishment sometimes used by the cruel
Romans, which consisted in
binding a corpse to a condemned criminal, eyes to eyes, face to face,
mouth to mouth, bosom to
bosom, limbs to limbs; the living man had to carry about the decaying
corpse until its foul stench
stifled him, and ended his life. It is an awful reference to the
corrupting influence of the "old man,"
stifling, if it can, every holy desire of the soul, until faith dies
and every longing for heaven
expires.
In Rom. 8:2, the "old man"
is called "the law if sin and death." Read for "law," the
TENDENCY TO sin and death, and you just have it. It is a proclivity to
evil that is not short-lived;
it works on and on, like Asiatic leprosy, until it brings its victim
down to everlasting death.
In Rom. 8:7, he is called
the "CARNAL MIND" that "is enmity against God, and is not
subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be." In other words, he
is an infernal traitor inside
the citadel of the soul, an enemy to God that would be glad to
surrender us to the devil. Indeed, he
is the devil's own child, and his loyalty to his father can not be
broken. He can not be bribed or
won over to God; first, last, and always, he hates God's law, and hates
God himself.
What an awful thing it is
for a Christian to voluntarily retain in his heart such an enemy of
Christ! Jesus is called our Bridegroom, and we are his bride. How would
a young husband feel to
come home and find that his bride was entertaining in the guest chamber
an old flame of hers who
was an avowed enemy of her husband? Can our Lord be any more pleased
with our retention of the
carnal mind?
In Heb. 12:15, this old man
is called "a root of bitterness;" and this "root," planted by the
devil in every heart, has an ugly vitality. It is sure to grow and
produce a harvest of malignant fruit
-- envy, jealousy, hatred, revenge. This is what makes it so hard for
Christians to forgive injuries,
and so easy to resent wrongs. It makes them sadly conscious of being
unChristlike and strangers to
the real spirit of love.
In Heb. 12:1, he is called
"the sin that doth so easily beset us." The preacher who read it
"the sin that doth so easily upset us," was not far astray. It always
has snares laid for our feet. It is
always making itself felt at the unexpected and unfortunate time. We
are humbled by it when we
least want to be. It finds the weak spot in everybody's character; and
if at any time there is one gate
to the soul unguarded, this sin is sure to find it out. O, this thing
that we are talking about is a
hot-tempered "old man," a touchy "old man," a proud "old man," a vain
"old man," a worldly "old
man," and as deceitful as the "father of lies" himself! What a
detestable inmate to have continually
about in the heart! He heeds no threats; he yields to no entreaties. He
will stay though unwanted,
and be industriously and continuously at his infernal business of
trying to break the connection of
the soul with God, and bring it down to hell.
In Heb. 3:12, this "old man"
is called "an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living
God." This seems to be the hardest and most suggestive name of all.
Think of it! A heart to doubt
Jesus, to question his grace, to cast a suspicion upon his love, to
disbelieve his promises of mercy
and guidance! Such a spirit in a wife would break a loving husband's
heart. Yet Christ, our patient
Beloved, is compelled to bear it through the weary years, while we, His
blood-bought ones, toy
with this evil thing in our inmost souls. O the matchless patience of
our Christ, waiting so long for
us to permit the Holy Spirit to put out this vile proclivity to sin and
Satan and hell!
There are several other
names applied to this "old man" by God; but the list we have given
is quite extended enough to describe him sufficiently for recognition.
In common speech we call
him "DEPRAVITY." He is best known among men by that name. Everybody
means by it a sad
appetency, a devilish propensity to sin, to break God's law, to rebel
against His sovereignty -- a
proclivity to do evil rather than good, a trend of nature away from the
blessed God.
While this thing remains in
the soul the tendencies to backsliding will always be
multiplied; to fall will be comparatively easy. The Christian life will
be robbed of much of its
victory and joy. Its fruitfulness will be greatly lessened, and the
Savior's delight in us will be
greatly abridged, as those in whom His grace has not been permitted to
do its perfect work.
The removal of this curse of
Satan from the moral nature is called the "cleansing" of the
Holy Spirit (Acts 15:8-9); the "circumcision of the heart" (Deut. 30:6,
and Col. 2:9-11); the
"purging away of dross" (Isa. 1:25); the "purging them as gold and
silver" (Mal. 3:3); "the
SANCTIFICATION without which no man shall see the Lord" (Heb. 12:14).
Holiness is the state of
heart of one thus "sanctified," "purged," "cleansed." This is what
God is talking about when he says: "Like as He who called you is holy,
be ye yourselves also holy,
in all manner of living; because it is written, Ye shall be holy: for I
am holy."
A few years ago we had a war
with Spain, and when one of our gunboats was on the way
to the scene of action, a Catholic Spaniard, who had been working for
years on the boat, was
caught depositing a stick of dynamite in the coal to blow up the
vessel. That fanatical Spaniard
may represent the old man in the ship of your soul. Get him out if you
do not want him to deposit a
stick of dynamite within you ready to go off at any moment. Beloved,
sanctification will take the
Spaniard out of the Lord's ship, and put him over into the ranks of the
enemy. We will still have
foes to fight, but they will be on the outside. The ship and all within
will be loyal to God. That is
what all Christians need. God wants that traitor in the ship taken out
forever. That is done by
sanctification, through the power of the Holy Ghost. Then we will not
be obliged to sing:
"Prone to wander, Lord I feel it,
Prone to leave the God I love;
Here's my heart, O take and seal it;
Seal it for thy courts above."
May the day come when God's
children shall all be free from proneness to wander, or to
turn their backs on the blessed Lord!
II. Having seen what
holiness is, let us now consider some manifest reasons why we ought
to be holy and why God wishes us to be holy.
1. GOD IS HOLY. Our sun
shines with surpassing brilliancy in the sky, so brilliant we can
not look at it except with prepared glasses; but as glorious as our sun
is, there are great spots on it
many thousands of miles across. But our holy God is an undimmed Sun,
shining in the sky of the
universe, and there has never yet been, and never will be, one spot on
His ineffable holiness. He is
a holy God, and the angels and cherubim and seraphim look up into His
face, crying," Holy! Holy!
Holy! Lord God of Hosts!" That is the admiration of heaven. That is our
God and Father. He wants
His children to be like Him. You never saw a noble father or mother in
your life that was not
pleased to have their little child show the benevolent traits of its
parents. If father is active and
energetic, he likes to see that trait in his little son. If mother is
sweet and affectionate, she likes to
be told that little Mary has mamma's sweetness. She is pleased to have
Anna show mamma's
musical gift or talent for art. If father is a literary man, or an
orator, he likes to see indications of
these characteristics cropping out in his child.
So our Father in
heaven is holy, and He wants His child to be like Him. There are just
two
great families of ours, and they both have the great, unfailing family
resemblance. One is the family
of sin; and they all have it stamped on their being. The other is the
family of holiness; and they
have the image of God stamped on their being. God is holy. "Be ye holy."
2. God commands us to
be holy. O how men that are trained to obey commands will
execute them! The sailor will obey his captain, and climb the masts and
handle the sheets when the
waves are rolling seemingly mountain high, and the great ship is the
sport of the billows, and those
masts swing back and forth till it would seem they would throw him into
the deep. But he climbs
because he was commanded to do so.
It is a matter of
historical fact, and so said by foreign military critics, that General
Grant
was reckless and unsparing of the lives of his men. One time he lost
twenty thousand soldiers in an
awful battle, trying in vain to take an objective point, and ordering
assault after assault, our men
being driven back and mowed down to death, and there was an awful and
useless loss of life.
Colonel Peter A. Porter was commander of a regiment in that battle that
went from Niagara Falls.
General Grant gave a command to Colonel Porter, and Porter looked him
in the face and said:
"You have ordered me to a needless death." He turned straight around,
led the charge, and was cut
down.
Blessed be God! our
King, the Captain of our salvation, never issues a needless command,
nor orders to a needless death. He only asks us to die to self and the
sin that damns us, that we may
live to God and righteousness for evermore. He never gave a command
that was not sweeter than
honey and the honeycomb, and in the doing of it there is great reward.
3. We ought to become
holy, because sin and every proclivity to sin is so dangerous. I am
amazed as I think of the awful power of Satan, how he has covered the
world with sin and shame
and woe; how nation after nation has gone down to wreck and ruin
because of sin. The
master-stroke of Satan was made when he planted a germ of evil at the
fountain stream of human
life to be communicated through all ages. That was the germ of
carnality. Sin is awful. Sin has
cursed individuals, wrecked families, and made our great cities
ungovernable. Sin has wrapped
the world in a garment of misery and shame. Sin has visited heaven, and
cast angels down from
their high estate. Sin has filled the bosom of God with sorrow, and
will roll a great Gulf Stream of
woe through the universe of God forever. If this proclivity is in me,
ready to act at any time, I pray
God to take it out of my soul.
The cleansing Spirit
can take that all out of you, and you will have the blessed "I know"
salvation. If Jesus cannot do this, then the devil, who injected this
moral poison into the veins of
our race, is mightier than our Christ, He could inflict an evil which
Jesus cannot cure. The very
thought is almost an insult to our adorable God. This leads me to say:
4. We ought to be holy
because holiness brings such blessedness. There is a world of
joyless Christians living. There are multitudes of believers who go
bowed down like bulrushes
and hang their harps on the willows. If their souls sing at all, it is
in some minor key, like
Windham. The poor hungry heart wails out the sad refrain:
"'Tis a thing I long to know,
Oft it causes anxious thought:
Do I love the Lord or no?
Am I His, or am I not?"
Again in some unsatisfied
hour it sobs its deep, pathetic want in the words:
"Look how we grovel here below,
Fond of these earthly toys;
Our souls, how heavily they go
To reach eternal joys!"
What a sorry commendation
this is of the religion of Jesus! No exuberance of hope! no joy
of assurance! Fullness of life in Christ will bring "beauty for ashes,
the oil of joy for mourning, and
the garment of praise for the Spirit of heaviness." The birds of
gladness will sing, and the flowers
of peace will bloom, and the hallelujahs of praise to our sanctifying
and satisfying God will roll
through the arches of the soul, and rise as perpetual incense to our
King.
5. Christ came for this
purpose, and died for this end. Jesus came to destroy the works of
the devil; and the greatest work of the devil was getting that
carnality planted in the bosom of
every child of Adam's race. I see Christ leaving His home in heaven,
leaving the adoration of
cherubim and seraphim, and taking His lonely way down to suffer for
this wicked world, which
had no place for Him. I see Him scourged, and led out to be crucified.
I hear the cruel mob cry,
"Crucify Him!" I see Him dying on Calvary's tree, while God hides His
face from Him, and my
Savior cries out, "My God! why hast Thou forsaken me?" And He is
bearing all this -- what for?
That He might cure us of sin, and make us sanctified and holy.
When I meditate upon all
this in solemn thought, my heart cries out: "O Jesus, if Thou wert
so anxious to have my heart cleansed and purified, it shall be
cleansed. Thy soul shall be satisfied.
I yield, I yield, by dying love compelled. I can hold out no more. I'll
say what you want me to say,
dear Lord; I'll be what you want me to be."
We ought to want this
blessing because God has set His heart upon it. The plan to restore
man to holiness was planned by the Father; and He gave His Son that we
might have it. For this
Jesus poured out His Cleansing blood. For this the sanctifying Spirit
was given that we might be
holy. For this the plan of redemption was instituted to restore man to
holiness. It is the will, the
desire, the longing, the command of the Triune God, that every moral
being in the universe should
be holy. All the work of the atonement for man, and all the promptings
of the Holy Spirit, move to
this end. "Holiness! holiness needed, holiness required, holiness
offered, holiness attainable,
holiness a present duty, a present privilege, a present enjoyment, is
the progress and completeness
of its wondrous theme." This is the glorious truth that is seen in
Bible history, and biography, and
poetry, and prophecy, and precept, and promise, and prayer: "Be ye
holy, for I am holy."
6. Until this blessing is
welcomed we shall never attain our true usefulness and obtain the
enduement of power. God could not safely bestow His great gift of power
upon unclean, carnal
souls. Most of the great popular preachers who receive a touch of power
from God show how the
carnal heart would abuse it and prostitute it to selfish ends. Few of
them keep humble and true.
Few keep their eye single to the glory of God. Few continue to remain
great soul-winners. Few of
them can be safely followed by the people. Few of them lead in the
great but unpopular moral
reforms of their day. Few of them walk close to God in the paths of
righteousness. Power is a
solemn, awful trust; God can not bestow His Spirit's power upon any but
sanctified souls.
III. How may the Pentecostal blessing be obtained?
I want to answer this solemn
question so fully that all who read these lines with burdened
and seeking, or even willing, hearts may surely find the way. There are
so many people that do not
know what ails them, believers in Christ who are still hungry and
disappointed, restless and ill at
ease. They want, they know not what; and their pastors, carrying about
in their own souls the same
craving, can not tell them.
I believe that all honest
and sincere Christians who keep in close touch with God, and are
willing to walk in the light, will, consciously or unconsciously, be
led through certain steps to the
blessing of heart-cleansing and sanctification.
1. The Holy Spirit will
awaken in the teachable believer a sense of obligation to be holy,
and drive home a great, deep conviction of want. It is not optional
with the child of God to be
sanctified or not. It is commanded nearly a score of times in the New
Testament alone. We are
exhorted to it in endlessly varying language, and encouraged by
multiplied promises, and urged on
by every conceivable motive drawn from earth and heaven and hell. We
are taught that our
usefulness and the salvation of souls and the glory of God depend upon
it. Sooner or later the
ever-present Spirit will show these things to the devoted and teachable
heart and make it feel its
need of a deeper and more radical work of grace, an enlargement of
soul, and an enduement of
power. Catharine Booth said, "O, what numbers of ministers, elders,
deacons, leaders, Sabbath
School teachers, and the like, have come to me confessing that they
have been working with little
results!"
Andrew Murray says: "You
know that, before a sinner can be converted, he must be
convicted of sin; just so the believer must be convicted and brought to
the confession of his being
in the carnal state. It might be termed a second conviction, of two
things, -- the utter impotence of
the flesh to do any good, and the mighty power of the flesh to work
evil. This is the first condition
of getting sanctified. Blessed are the poor in Spirit. Blessed are the
Christian hearts to whom the
Holy Spirit reveals their great want of a heart like unto Christ."
2. "Blessed are they that
mourn, for they shall be comforted." Blessed are the believers
who mourn over the fact that God's ideal of a Christian has not been
more speedily realized in
them; that they have not crowned King Jesus as the Lord of their being,
and permitted Him to
baptize them with the Holy Ghost; who mourn because they have had so
little passion for souls,
and won so few victories, and had so little concern for the lost. Such
a mourning is a forerunner of
the comfort of full salvation.
3. The Spirit-led believer
will be brought to feel the importance of the Pentecostal
experience. Like the disciples with their commission to represent Jesus
and disciple the world,
they will cry out, "Who is sufficient for these things? Lord, let me
have more of Thy likeness and
more of Thy power, or let me die right here; I cannot face the world as
I am."
O the stupendous importance
of being "filled with the Spirit," in order to be successful as a
Christian parent, or teacher, or leader, or preacher -- anything that
God wants us to be! There is no
true and large success without it. How the disciples prayed for it in
the upper chamber! How many
others have bowed before God and sought it with all their hearts! Mrs.
Booth says: "God never
gave this gift to any human soul who had not come to the point that he
would sell all he had to get
it."
4. The leading Spirit will
further show the seeking heart that this blessing is for each child
of God. It is the "promise of the Father" to every one of His
blood-bought children. "The promise
is unto you and to your children, and unto them that are afar off, even
to as many as the Lord our
God shall call." Whoever of the sons of men has a call to be a
Christian at all, has a call to be a
sanctified Christian. "This is the will of God, even your
sanctification; for God called us not for
uncleanness, but in sanctification." (Eph. 4:3-7)
Before any one will ever
successfully seek the blessing we are writing about, he will be
led by the Holy Spirit to feel that, as a child of God, it is his
blood-bought right to have it. He may
be very ignorant of the philosophy or theology of the experience; as
ignorant, for instance, as the
poor Texan was. He was genuinely converted from a life of ignorance and
sin, and began to read
and pray over his New Testament. He had no teacher but the Holy Spirit.
He found much in the
book about sanctification, and that it was the will of God that we
should be sanctified. He knelt
above the sacred page and prayed: "O God, You say You want me to be
sanctified. I do not know
what it means, but You know, and I want it. Lord, sanctify me now." And
heaven came down to
greet his soul with a deluge of glory.
O, dear reader, this
blessing is not merely for Saint Paul, and John Fletcher, and John
Wesley, and a few other notable people, but, if you are a true child of
God, it is for YOU.
A still further condition of
receiving this blessing is to HUNGER AND THIRST FOR IT,
until, like a hungry child, you will cry unto God for what you want.
Jesus said, "Blessed are they
that hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled." We
must long for this blessing
with a craving that will take no denial. You can pray for the baptism
with the Holy Ghost till your
tongues are tired, but so long as you fight sanctification as a
possible experience of the children of
God, He will not come to your souls.
Moody said: "Let it be the
cry of your heart day and night. Young men, you will get this
blessing when you seek it above all else. For months I had been
hungering and thirsting for power
in service. I had come to that state that, I think, I would have died
if I had not got it." [After reading
earlier in this book of how Moody later taught that all he received was
power, and not purity, it
rather nullifies the good impression one might receive from reading
this here. -- DVM]
When men are thus filled
with an agony of desire they will not need to be coaxed to come
to the altar. When they get there, they will not be the pink of
propriety, kneeling gracefully on one
knee, and covering their face with a lace handkerchief, silent as a
Sphinx: as if possessed of a
dumb devil. When people are hungry enough for sanctification to get it,
they will rush to the altar
unceremoniously, and tumble down before God, and cry unto Him for the
Spirit with a holy
recklessness, with uplifted face, and loud voice, indifferent to the
opinion of men or devils. That is
the spirit that always gets the blessing.
6. Another condition that
must be named is obedience. We read in Acts 5:32, "The Holy
Ghost whom God hath given to them that OBEY HIM." The Holy Ghost is not
given to disobedient
people. Sanctification does not come to conscious rebels. It is
bestowed only on the obedient. But
obedience is more than obedience in some things. It does not pick and
choose what commands to
obey, and what to disregard. Obedience is a whole-hearted, cheerful
surrender of the will to obey
God in EVERYTHING. How much it means to have a hearty delight in the
law of God, to love the
statutes of the Lord, to feel that they "are sweeter than honey and the
honeycomb, and that in
keeping of them there is great reward!" We have too much obedience
nowadays that obeys in
everything but -- that easily besetting sin, worldliness, or pride, or
avarice, or tobacco. People are
willing to give up everything but; and behind that Satanic "but" there
slips into the life the darling
indulgence, the unhallowed love, the petted sin, which utterly vitiates
the whole life.
This is not obedience at
all. it is only playing at character and virtue. Men shrink from
known duty, through fear of the opinion of others, or through dislike
of some self-denial. They thus
miss the prize of their high calling in Christ Jesus, for the Spirit is
grieved away.
Real obedience consents to
obey God about everything, to listen to the slightest whisper of
the Holy Spirit, to grant anything which God asks, to abstain from
anything which His Word and a
Spirit-illuminated conscience condemns.
People seeking the baptism
with the Holy Ghost have frequent tests of obedience that are
sometimes very striking. With Frances Willard it was the giving up of
gold buttons; with Maggie
Van Cott, the surrender of a gold ring given by a dead husband; with a
man I know it was the
discontinuance of the sale of tobacco; with another it was to give up
his Masonic lodge; with a
girl, the other day, it was to abandon a vain and fashionable dressing
of her hair. In every one of
these cases the heavenly anointing came when the will surrendered in
absolute obedience to God.
7. The next condition is
FULL CONSECRATION. Rom. 12:1, reads, "I beseech you
therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a
living sacrifice, holy,
acceptable to God, which is your reasonable service." The body, being
at present the home of the
soul, stands for the whole being. The verb, "to present" is in the
aorist tense, denoting an act done
and finished. Whoever, then, would receive a baptism with the Holy
Ghost for entire
sanctification, and be made "holy, acceptable to God," must consecrate
himself wholly to the Lord,
body, soul, spirit; eyes to see for God, ears to hear for God, tongue
to speak for God, hands to toil
for God, feet to walk in paths of righteousness; the whole body to be
the temple of the Holy Ghost;
the intellect to think for God; the judgment to decide for God; the
conscience to be an inward
monitor, condemning everything God condemns, approving everything which
He approves; the
memory to record things just, and true, and pure, and holy, and of good
report, and, as readily,
burying in the "*Lethe of forgetfulness" everything corrupting, and
low, and vile, and Satanic;
[*Lethe = 1. in Greek mythology a river in Hades producing
forgetfulness of the past, 2. such
forgetfulness -- Oxford Dict.] the sensibilities to thrill with such
emotions and feelings as would
become the bosom of an angel in heaven; the will to choose Christ, and
place Him upon the throne
of the heart, and crown Him Lord of our entire being, and say "amen" to
His blessed will; the life
to be lived alone for the glory of God; the possessions to be held in
trust and administered upon, as
by a steward, wholly for the kingdom and glory of God; the reputation
to be given over to the Lord
for Him to take care of and defend, everything that you are, or ever
shall be, everything that you
have, or ever shall have, to be the Lord's, WHOLLY His, ONLY His, for
TIME and for
ETERNITY, NOW and FOREVER.
"A consecrated spirit," as
A. B. Simpson says, "is thus wholly given to God, to know Him,
to choose, to resemble His character, to trust His word, to love Him
supremely, to glorify Him
only, to enjoy Him wholly, and to belong to Him utterly, unreservedly,
and forever.
This is genuine
consecration, and nothing short of it will bring the blessing we are
talking
about. Such a consecration as that will put yourself over into God's
hands to be sanctified; will
place you on the altar, which is Christ. What will He do with such a
trust?
8. The soul that has
consciously gone thus far has got on believing ground. There remains
nothing left for it to do but to believe. Many try to believe
prematurely, when their will is not fully
surrendered, or their consecration is not complete, and they know it.
In such a state of heart, the
soul can not believe. Faith will not take hold. It may try, but it is
only playing at believing; it is not
on believing ground, where it can believe. But when the soul feels its
need of sanctification, and
mourns, and. hungers, and thirsts, and is fully surrendered to God for
it, and to live it, and has put
all on the altar, till it has the witness of itself and the Spirit of
God that there is absolutely nothing
held back, nothing unsurrendered, unconsecrated, then what? Why, just
believe that as you have
done your part, God now does His, now IS DOING IT. You may have to wait
a little time as
Abraham did beside the altar, scaring away the birds and jackals of
unbelief, a minute, an hour, a
day, or even a week, while you are holding fast in faith for
sanctification; but, as sure as God lives
and is true, He will honor a genuine obedience and consecration and
faith with the witnessing fire,
the sin-consuming, sanctifying energy of the Holy Ghost. It is the will
of God that you should be
sanctified. (I Thess. 5:3) For this express purpose He shed His blood.
(Heb. 13:12) When your
will comes into harmony with God's will, and you earnestly cry unto God
in faith for the very
blessing He died to give you and has promised you (1 Thess. 5:23-24),
HE "WILL DO IT." He
could not remain a holy God, if He did not "do it."
Ordinarily the witness comes
promptly. Frequently people wait a day or two; but it is an
expectant, prayerful waiting. I have known one man in my meeting to
thus wait seven days, when
an unmistakable witness came. I heard one person say that he thus
waited three weeks; but such
cases are very rare. More frequently, by far, they get the witness at
the same service in which the
work was completed on the human side. GOD SANCTIFlES AS SOON AS, WITH
ALL OUR
HEARTS, WE LET HIM. In my book, "Holiness and Power," I devote
ninety-six pages to careful
instruction on how to receive this blessing. I know of no other book
that gives such ample
instruction, with the recorded experience of so many witnesses. I
purposely made it so, because
my heart was full of sympathy for the souls who were hungering, as I
had done, for this great
blessing which they knew not how to obtain. I refer the reader to that
book for further and
exhaustive discussion of this wondrous theme. To be filled with the
Spirit means to be sanctified.
We close this Chapter with
two quotations from that precious little book, "A Clean Heart,"
already noticed.
"Jesus who knew just what
the heart of man is, said of it: 'Out of the heart proceed evil
thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness,
blasphemies; these are the things
that defile a man." We are accustomed to hear much said today about the
wickedness of our great
cities. The wickedness of our great cities and little cities, and of
the whole world, is in men's
hearts, and all the expressions of it in thought and words are simply
the workings out of what was
inside all the time.
"The effort of all the laws
and nearly all the religions of the world is to get men to behave
better than their hearts want to behave. And the effort is a prodigious
one -- to behave better than
the heart inclines to do. All the crimes and sins of society are born
in men's sinful hearts. If any
religion is to be of benefit to man, it must have its chief sway in the
heart. There never was a more
successful wile of the devil than this -- to keep men's minds on the
externals of religion to such an
extent as to keep their attention from the heart. The result is that
there is a cry that religion is
declining. The decay of genuine, old-time revivals, the decrease of
membership in the Churches,
the decline of family religion as witnessed by the increasing number of
deserted family altars, the
growing Sabbath desecration, the increasing hunger of the professed
Church for the theater and
dance, the small number who attend the means of grace in our Churches,
are all indications that the
heart is wrong. They are certain symptoms of the heart-disease which
Higher Criticism, the
preaching of evolution, the increasing number of organizations in the
Church, do not check, but,
like quack medicines, they only aggravate the disease and kill the
patient. There must soon be a
revival of heart-religion in the present Church organizations or God
will take these candlesticks
out of their places and give them to the keeping of some other whom he
will raise up for the
purpose.
"As long as the world
stands, there is a place for heart religion, and God will always have
it in the world. It is the only hope of the world. Let us each stand
for heart religion, and let us
remember that the greater part of religion is on the inside, and hence
needs great attention.
"It seems as if Satan said
to many Christians: 'Yes, I see that you feel your need of a clean
heart, and it is right that you should have it; but get it in a
reasonable way. Strive hard for it, or
wait until you grow into it, or seek it by evolution.' With him it is
just as well if you seek it in the
wrong way as though you did not seek it at all. The Psalmist sought it
by faith. This is the Bible
method. It is not the popular method. The faith method of salvation has
never been popular with the
world, or the worldly part of the Church. The natural man has much to
say about works and
charities, but he ridicules your idea of being saved by faith. The
religionist of the Church is as
much opposed to the cleansing of the heart by the faith method.
"The late Dr. Curry used to
say that the idea of religion that now obtains in the Church is to
be converted by faith, and then go on and finish the work ourselves by
our own doing instead of
trusting God to complete it. Paul declared that he wished not to be
found in his own righteousness
of the law, but the righteousness which is of God by faith in Christ
Jesus."
The reader will
notice that the subject of this Chapter is HOW TO OBTAIN. Man seeks to
attain a clean heart. This is the human method of doing it for
ourselves by growth, evolution, etc.
To OBTAIN is to receive it as a gift from God.
All salvation
that we ever receive is by gift from God. There is not a passage in the
Word
of God that says it is by works or by growth that we have our hearts
purified. All the passages that
speak on the subject declare that it is by faith. When Paul stood
before Agrippa he declared that
Jesus gave him a commission to preach. In that commission it was
declared that he was to so
declare that gospel that men might receive an inheritance among them
that are SANCTIFIED BY
FAITH. If Jesus told Paul that men are sanctified by faith, it must be
so. Who dares say it is by
growth?
Peter declares
in Acts 15:9," Purifying their hearts by faith." Why do men dare, in
the face
of these unmistakable teachings of Scripture, without a straight,
direct passage to the contrary in all
the Word of God, to set up human methods of saving men from sin
(indwelling sin)?
Dear reader, the
Word tells us four times that we are sanctified by the Holy Spirit. Once
we are told that this heart cleansing comes at the time of the baptism
with the Holy Spirit Will you,
then, by faith receive this baptism for heart cleansing? Will you let
the Holy Spirit crucify the Old
Man and do away with him, that you may be holy? As the refiner's fire
purifies the gold and silver,
will you by faith receive the Spirit, and let the carnal dross of your
being be purged away by the
fire of the Holy Ghost?