13 -- PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS
"Be holy in all manner of living." -- Peter 1:16
Bishop Foster said: "Christians often need to be admonished; and not always the less so
because of the greatness of their attainments. Admitting, as we do, that no degree of religious
progress precludes mental imperfection and infirmity, even the most mature Christians may need
counsel and advice; and whether they need it or not, they will in proportion to their humility and
self distrust, thankfully receive it when given with good intent and in a proper spirit."
The first temptation of the entirely sanctified is to spiritual pride -- "to think more highly of
himself than he ought" -- to think he knows it all and that none can teach him.
Teachableness
"To imagine none can teach you but those who are themselves' saved from sin, is a very
grave and dangerous mistake. You have need to be taught by the weakest, by all men. "For God
sendeth by whom he will send."
Do therefore say to any who would advise or reprove you, "You are blind; you cannot
teach me. This is your wisdom, 'your carnal reason,' but calmly weigh the thing before God."
Fruits of Perfect Love, or Holiness Applied.
"By their fruits ye shall know them." No fruit, 110 perfect love. No abounding love for God
if none to man.
St. Paul informs us at large. Love is long suffering. It suffers all the weaknesses of the
children of God; all the wickedness of the children of the world, and that not only for a little time
but as long as God pleases. In all it sees the hand of God and willingly submits thereto.
Meantime love is kind. In all, and after all, it suffers, it is soft, mild, tender, benign. Love
envieth not; it excludes every kind and degree of envy out of the heart. Love acteth not rashly, in a
violent headstrong manner, nor passes any rash or severe judgment. It doth not be have itself
indecently; is not rude, does not act out of character. Seeketh not her own ease, pleasure, honor or
profit. Is not provoked, expels all anger from the heart. Thinketh no evil; casts out all suspicions
and readiness to believe evil. Rejoiceth not in iniquity, yea, weeps at the sin or folly of its bitterest
enemies. But rejoiceth in the truth; in the holiness and happiness of every child of man. Love
covers all things, speaks evil of no man. Believeth all things that tend to the advantage of another's
character. It hopeth all things, whatever may extenuate the faults which can not be denied, and it
endureth all things which God can permit or men or devils inflict. This is the law of Christ, the
perfect law, the law of liberty.
Willingness to Admit Faults
Let there be in you that lowly mind which was in Christ Jesus and be ye likewise clothed
with humility. As one instance of this, be always ready to own any fault you have been in. If you
have at any time thought, spoken or acted wrong, be not backward to acknowledge it. Never dream
that this will hurt the cause of God; no it will further it. Be therefore open and frank when you are
taxed with anything; do not seek either to evade or disguise it; but let it appear just as it is, and you
will thereby not hinder but adorn the Gospel." -- Wesley.
"Why should you be any more backward in acknowledging your failings than in professing
that you do not pretend to infallibility? St. Paul was perfect in the love which casts out fear, and
therefore he boldly reproved the high priest; but when he had reproved him too sharply, he directly
confesses his mistake, and set his seal to the importance of the duty in which he had been
inadvertently wanting. "Then Paul said, I knew not, brethren, that he was the high priest; for it is
written, Thou shalt not speak evil of the ruler of thy people." St. John was perfect in the courteous,
humble love, which brings us down at the feet of all. His courtesy, his humility, and the dazzling
glory which beamed forth from a Divine messenger, whom he apprehended to be more than a
creature, betrayed him into a fault contrary to that of St. Paul; but far from concealing it he openly
confessed it and published his confession for the edification of all the churches: "When I had heard
and seen," said he, "I fell down before the feet of the angel who showed me these things. Then said
he unto me, 'See thou do it not, for I am thy fellow-servant.'" Christian Perfection shines as much in
the childlike simplicity with which the Perfect readily acknowledge their faults, as it does in the
manly steadiness with which they resist unto blood, striving against sin." -- John Fletcher
Influence an Inevitable Result of a Holy Life
Holiness and influence are concomitants -- inseparable. They can not be divorced; while
the experience of holiness is actually retained there will be, must be, influence when influence is
gone holiness is gone.
Jesus said, John 7:38, "Out of his heart" -- the depths of his life -- "shall flow rivers of
living water." That is, out of the heart of life of the one full of the Holy Ghost (John 7:39) a holy
influence shall flow corresponding to the onflowing of a mighty river.
"The lives of Christians, practical exponents as they are of our religion, are among the
great influences for the conversion and sanctification of the world. Books and sermons may be
resisted, even tears and entreaties may be despised; but the silent and unostentatious influence of
holy lives will speak a language to the heart it cannot easily gainsay, a language which will sound
on when we sleep in the dust. The dim tracery of words will be washed away and effaced from
memory; but the deep lines of a beautiful example, chiseled into the heart, will remain forever.
It is holiness) not the profession of it that will give us influence both with God and man;
winging our prayers with faith and our counsels with wisdom, deriving power from above and
sending out from us currents of influence through earth. God in us the hope of glory, shining out in
the even and resplendent beauty of a holy life will give us an influence which will draw many after
us to brighten in our crown of rejoicing forever. (Ye may) indeed turn many to righteousness by
wise and earnest words; but infinitely greater will be their efficiency if followed up by the
influence of a life known and read of all. -- Bishop Foster
Confession
"The confession of sin during the whole course of the present life is exceedingly proper for
various reasons; and first, because sin is an unspeakable evil. Those who have obtained the state
of perfect love never can forget their former degradation and guilt; and in their present state of
mind, they never can remember it without being, at each distinct retrospection deeply humbled and
penitent. Indeed, as true confession consists much more in the state of the heart than in the
expression of the lip, those who are earnestly seeking and practicing holiness may be said, in the
highest sense of the terms, to be always acknowledging and lamenting their sin . . whenever and
wherever committed, whether by them selves or others, at the present or in times past.
Second. There is a propriety and a practical importance in the confession of sin, during the
whole course of the present life; because our various infirmities, our defects of judgment, our
frequent ignorance of the motives and characters of our fellowmen, and the relative wrong acts and
feelings which originate in these sources, from which no one, in the present period and history of
the church, can reasonably expect to be free, require an atonement, as well as our willful and
voluntary transgressions. Such is not only our own belief, but we believe it is generally conceded
by those who are likely to take an interest in these inquiries. All such infirmities call for the
atonement of Christ. Anything needing the atonement must be confessed and renounced to receive
the benefits of such atonement.
It is in accordance with what has now been said, that Christians who are established in the
interior life, whenever they have fallen into such errors and infirmities, experience no true peace
of mind until they find a sense of forgiveness. For an error in judgment; for an ill-placed word
when there was no evil designed or intention of saying what was wrong; for an action which was
undesignedly a mistaken one, either through undue remissness or undue haste; for any hasty
uncharitable judgment uttered; for any unavoidable blindness and ignorance whatever, which are
followed by evil or unhappy results; they find no relief but in an immediate and believing
application of the atoning blood. Now as such infirmities are frequent (observe), and as, indeed,
they are unavoidable so long as we come short of the intellectual and physical perfection of Adam,
we shall have abundant occasion to confess our trespasses; and it will ever be true that our sin in
this sense of the term will ever be before us.
It is proper to remark here that Mr. Wesley, while he maintained with great ability and
earnestness, the doctrine of Christian perfection, or of perfect love, did not hold to the doctrine of
sinless perfection. . That is to say, he maintained that it was both our duty and privilege to love
God with all our heart and also that this state of mind had been actually, and in many cases
realized. He maintained, nevertheless, that this state was consistent with those wrong judgments
which are involuntary and unavoidable, and consequently with wrong acts and affections, that we
are continually liable to transgress in the respects which have been mentioned, even while we are
in the state of perfect love, and that the best of men may say from the heart:
"Every moment, Lord, I need
The merit of thy death."
This view seems to be correct. And it is very desirable when we look at it in its practical
results, as well as in its moral relations that it should be continually maintained, because it will
constantly prompt us not only to seek perfection in love, but to seek perfection in manners, habits,
health, words, knowledge, and all good judgment." -- Upham's Interior Life
Molting and Shedding
Beverly Carradine, in an article on "Moulting and Shedding," shows how, in a sense, this
process continues all through life:
"We started the spiritual life by leaving off our actual sins. Later we got rid of the old man.
Since then we cannot number the wrong sayings, unwise methods, foolish notions, hasty
conclusions, and improper ways of approaching and dealing with men we have dropped. No bird
ever molted as we have done. No tree ever outstripped us in the shedding business ... One thing we
shed as a young preacher was a rattan ... After that we molted a beaver hat ... Then came the
shedding of witty speeches.
Time would fail to tell of the different things which are quietly dropped or vigorously flung
off in the course of years from the boughs and branches of a healthy Christian life. They are not
sins, but are unwise sayings and doings; wrong conceptions of duty; false doctrines: mannerisms,
improprieties, eccentricities, extravagances of speech and action; in a word, everything like fungus
growth that needs to be cut off, or like the frosted leaf which ought to be shed quickly and blown
utterly away.
Peter had a time molting what is known as the ceremonial law. There it hung like a bunch
of fluttering dry leaves for months and years after Pentecost, requiring a sharp rebuke from Paul,
and a vision from Heaven to knock the dry things off.
What a relief it would be in many respects, what a help to the cause of God, and what an
increased glory to Christianity, if a lot of silly dressing, and funny headgear, of man imposed
asceticisms and a certain nasal whangdoodle style of praying and preaching could at once and
forever be gotten rid of. In other words shed or molted.
Truly that strong autumnal gale from heaven cannot blow too soon, which shall strip from
us and bear away the needless, the superfluous, the unsightly, the burdensome, and the hurtful, and
leave us open for a foliage and fruitage which shall be honored of God and blessed to the present
and everlasting good of men."
Increased Liberality
As we progress in holiness there will be a commensurate liberality -- we will cease to
content ourselves with giving tithes and offerings -- we will do this, to be sure, but will learn we
are stewards and not owners, and that all we possess is subservient to the Divine order. Stinginess
and sanctification are not compatible ideas they do not hang together -- the stingy man is not a
sanctified man. We should stand before God and say, with Muller, as to the disposition of what
Thou hast entrusted to me, "Command me Lord" all is Thine.
John Wesley's example of liberality shames many of his sons. He preached, "Lay not up
treasures upon earth," and a life of self-denial and economy for Jesus' sake, and practiced what he
preached. When his salary was thirty-two pounds a year he lived on twenty-eight and gave the
balance to the Lord. When his income was sixty pounds he still lived on twenty-eight and gave
away the remaining thirty-two. When it reached ninety pounds he lived on the usual twenty-eight
and gave away the sixty-two pounds. When it reached one hundred and twenty pounds he did not
permit his living expenses to increase but still managed to live on the twenty-eight and gave the
balance to God. Are we progressing in practical holiness according to this example?