Chapter 1
OUR HERITAGE AND OUR HOPE
PREFACE
If it is true, as a famous writer has said, that "life becomes a futile
thing when it lacks a faith in the high meaning of its origin and the
high meaning of its goal," then it is time for Nazarenes everywhere
to rediscover the glory and grandeur of their heritage and to rededicate
themselves to the promise and purpose of their destiny.
In this soft and sassy age, there is the ever-present danger of so diluting
the demands and blurring the lines and distorting the distinctive doctrine
of holiness that it becomes nothing more than an anemic idea, a flabby
ideal, an arid cliché, and an emasculated shibboleth.
In this loud and brassy time there is the urgent need to take a grateful
glance at the past -- at its spiritual heroes and their heroic achievements
-- and then, with quiet poise, look confidently toward the future, with
the inner assurance that the beliefs we hold are really true, and that
those truths are still significant and relevant to the world's needs and
to humanity's hungers.
In this time of transition and change, then, a time fraught with danger
and filled with promise, may this brief message be a God-blest reminder
that it was the spiritual dynamic of holiness that necessitated and
enriched our yesterdays, and that it alone justifies and makes meaningful
our existence today, and that holiness -- as a message, as a dynamic, and
as a way of life -- is the only real hope we have of realizing the rich
promise of our tomorrows.
C. William Fisher
* * * * * * * * * *
And it came to pass after these things, that Naboth the Jezreelite had
a vineyard, which was in Jezreel, hard by the palace of Ahab king of
Samaria.
And Ahab spake unto Naboth, saying, Give me thy vineyard, that I may
have it for a garden of herbs, because it is near unto my house: and
I will give thee for it a better vineyard than it; or, if it seem good
to thee, I will give thee the worth of it in money.
And Naboth said to Ahab, The Lord forbid it me, that I should give the
inheritance of my fathers unto thee.
I Kings 21:1-3
* * * * * * * * * *
OUR HERITAGE AND OUR HOPE
"I am overwhelmed at times," said Albert Einstein, "with the sense of
my great debt to those who have gone before me." If such a creative intelligence
as Albert Einstein felt compelled to make that admission, then certainly
the rest of us need to recognize anew our vast debt to the Pauls and
the Luthers and the Wesleys and the thousands of unnamed Christians who
have filled to overflowing the reservoir of our spiritual heritage with
their own rich, red blood and who, with gnarled and bloody hands, have
lifted the chalice of suffering and sacrifice to our soft and trembling
lips.
One of the greatest dangers of our day is that we who draw from that
reservoir of holy heritage will not replace our withdrawals with the
full, whole blood of sacrifice and service, but will dilute it with the
water of our easygoing lives and our partial surrenders and our shifting
convictions until that heritage, once so great and so magnificent, will
become so diluted that it cannot sustain our own loyalties nor be effectively
passed on to a new generation.
May God help us to value our heritage of holiness so deeply that, regardless
of the pressures of a secular civilization and the subtle suggestions
of the enemy and the threats of a godless society, we will hold to our
heritage and, with God's help, hand it on to those who follow -- untainted,
untarnished, and undiminished in power and vigor and richness and meaning.
The story of Naboth and his vineyard is an inspiring and invigorating
example of a man who refused to surrender his heritage -- even when
pressured by a king. Ahab, the king, had a beautiful palace in Samaria
but he wanted to improve his country house in Jezreel and thought he
needed Naboth's vineyard to use as a vegetable garden. Ahab's offer to Naboth
was very generous -- Naboth might choose a better vineyard or he might
have cash. No hardship was involved -- except in regard to Naboth's
principles!
Naboth refused to exchange or sell his inheritance and died because
of his refusal. But Ahab, the king, found out there was a man in Samaria
who could not be bribed or bought but who valued his inheritance more
than he valued life itself, and could not be pressured into surrendering
his heritage even by the royal pressures of a greedy king. Naboth lost
his vineyard -- and his life. But he didn't lose his reverence for his
heritage! No Ahab can take that away from a man.
I. OUR HOLINESS HERITAGE
Men who are associated with old and honored institutions are accustomed
to boast of the age of their institution. How familiar are the signs
in advertising: "Serving the public for over fifty years," "In business
for over a century," "Continuous publication since 1837"! All such slogans
try to impress the public with the stability and enduring quality of their
product or firm.
Length of continuity in itself, of course, does not prove the institution
or cause to be genuine or valid or God-directed. But the length of continuity
of a God-originated, God-directed, and God-empowered cause does have
importance and significance for everyone who is looking for something
genuine and enduring. And the only cause that God has really backed, from
the beginning, is the cause of holiness. He has given everything He has
for that cause.
If anyone wants to get into something that has had God's redeeming attention
and support from the beginning, line up in the cause of holiness. God
has always had a central interest in that!
Who Started It?
It was God himself who conceived the idea of the holiness corporation,
with himself as Chairman of the board and Christ, His Son, as President
of the entire scheme of salvation, and the Holy Spirit as Executive
Secretary in charge of operations, and with every true believer a vice-president
in charge of promotion. And as is so often true when a son is made president,
this Son started at the bottom -- no one can start lower than a manger.
But with divine energy He worked His way up through the ranks until
He reached the pinnacle of the Cross. But the arms of His executive chair
were not curved -- for comfort, but straight out -- for suffering; and
His feet did not rest on a desk, but on a nail.
Of course this Son had the job of president from the beginning (most
sons do), but He had to come down to earth to get the "feel" of the business;
and, my soul! how He got the feel of it! He got it by touching diseased
bodies and blinded eyes and hurt hearts and soiled souls and lame lives
-- and, finally, He got the "feel" of it by the cruelty and the crunch
of cold, hard nails! All of this, just so He could be a President who
would be sympathetic and friendly and understanding and forgiving!
The world has never seen another president like Him. He doesn't hand
out orders with an iron hand; He hands out love -- with a hand that drips
with mercy. He doesn't bark; He whispers. He doesn't strut; He suffers.
He doesn't fire; He forgives.
God, then, has been in business from the beginning and His purpose has
never been to make men rich, but to make men holy. His business is not
to make men slaves, but to make men free. Of course there have been many
workers and clients who have been lost to the firm, but the corporation
still stands. And its slogan is, "Holiness unto the Lord." And its advertising
doesn't read, "Since 1907," or, "Since 1517," or, "Since A.D. 33," or,
"Since 4000 B.C." But it reads, "Since the Beginning!"
Let no one ever feel inferior because holiness didn't start until 1907.
It didn't start then. Bresee didn't start it. Wesley didn't start it.
Paul didn't start it. Peter didn't start it. Isaiah didn't start it.
Moses didn't start it. God started it!
Don't ever be ashamed of holiness. Don't ever hang your head because
you belong to a holiness church. Lift up your head and remember that
holiness has the longest and most illustrious history and the brightest
and surest future of anything that's ever been in this universe!
The Price Paid
The call to holiness has always been a call to heroism. Its challenge
has never received the response of weaklings or worldlings. It has always
been a cause that called for volunteers -- draftees are too weak of
motive and mission to be accepted. Those who have fought in the cause of
holiness have been the "Christian Commandos" --those who volunteered for
the place of greatest danger in the mission that required the greatest
courage. If holiness has never been a popular cause, it is not because
it lacks appeal; it is simply because there have always been more cowards
in the world than heroes.
But, thank God, there have been some heroes. The great reservoir of
our holiness heritage has been filled by the blood of holy prophets
and Christian martyrs. All the apostles poured their blood into the reservoir.
So many early Christians were killed in the arena of the Colosseum that
the sands of the arena were turned blood-red. But that blood was not
lost. It trickled through the sand and into the great reservoir of
a great heritage.
John the Baptist, moved upon by the Holy Ghost even before his birth,
lived a life of rugged holiness and preached with the fire of God blazing
from his heart and lips. But when he refused to soften or blur his message
even for the lecherous Herodias, his life was doomed; and finally his
head was served on a platter to the passion-lashed Herodias by the beautiful
and supple Salome. The platter held his head, but it couldn't hold his
blood! That had already flowed into the reservoir of a great heritage.
When Polycarp was condemned to death by burning, he was commanded to
curse Christ; but he answered, "Six and eighty years have I served Him,
and He hath done nothing but good; and how could I curse Him, my Lord
and my Saviour?" Refusing to renounce his faith, he was burned
to death. But as the flames leaped around his body and licked into his
flesh, his blood was dripping down through the faggots into the reservoir
of a noble heritage.
Wesley, after pouring out his life in traveling over two hundred thousand
miles on foot and on horseback, after preaching over forty thousand
sermons, after decades of being vilified and slandered and ridiculed,
died at eighty-eight, leaving less than fifty dollars in this world's goods.
And yet, in the words of David Lloyd George, "He bequeathed to the world
a heritage incomparably sublime." The blood that had flowed through
that frail body for so long finally flowed into the great reservoir of
a magnificent heritage.
Heroes of the Faith
But there have been thousands of men and women and young people whose
names will never be known to anyone but God who paid the price for holy
living in spite of the fires of persecution and torture. Although their
deaths were not so dramatic or spectacular, they lived so unselfishly
and sacrificially that their entire lives were a continual drip of their
lifeblood into the rich reservoir of a great heritage.
Heroes of the faith, we salute you! You who through the ages, in spite
of fire and dungeon and sword, fought a good fight, finished your course,
and kept the faith! You who in the blazing light of public execution
dared to stay true to a great Christ! You who in the dark corners of
obscurity paid the great price of faithfulness to a great cause! You who
marched through the colosseums and catacombs of history, undaunted
by the ridicule of the mobs and unafraid of the persecutions of the
mighty, but through it all gave glorious witness to the reality of God's
grace in the soul, we salute you!
You battle-scarred heroes of the cause of holiness in America; you who
slept on planks, lived in tents, prayed and fasted for days on end, suffered
ridicule and jeers; you who were thrown into jails and were run out of
towns; you who suffered poverty and sickness and heart-crushing defeats
and yet fought on -- fought on in the great cause of holiness and added
your lifeblood to the reservoir of a great heritage, we salute you!
And now, with heads bowed in honor to your sacrifice and suffering,
and with hearts warmed by the example of your devotion and faith, and
with wills steeled by your heroism and courage, we gratefully say with
Austin Dobson:
Heroes of old! I humbly lay The laurel on your graves again; Whatever
men have done, men may-- The deeds you wrought are not in vain!
II. WHAT "AHAB" OFFERS FOR OUR HERITAGE
Ahab's first offer to Naboth was a better vineyard than the one he already
had. This is always Ahab's first approach: something of the same nature,
only better. That is his first approach today. A religion, yea, but a
"better" religion than the one we have. Not a reversal of values, only
a
"better" and broader concept of those values! Not a renunciation of our
heritage -- Ahab offers what he says is the same thing, but in a "different
frame of reference." That is always the spearhead of Ahab's invasion.
Oh, how subtle these "Ahabs" can be!
Who is it that has not heard Ahab's offer of a less demanding religion
for the rugged implications of genuine holiness? Who is it that has
not heard him say, "You don't have to give up everything just because
you claim to be sanctified"; "You don't really have to work that hard in
trying to win others just because you claim to be filled with the Spirit"!
And on and on Ahab goes in trying to bevel the edges and blur the
lines and soften the distinctions of real heart holiness. Not something
different; just diluted! That is always Ahab's first offer for our heritage:
The tragedy is that Ahab has been so successful with so many. Many who
have accepted his offer still give lip service to the idea of holiness,
but they are untrue to the demands of holiness. Some of them still belong
to holiness churches and give to holiness causes -- it's so much easier
to give the pocketbook than to give the heart; but in their hearts they
are untrue to their holiness heritage. They still know the holiness vocabulary,
but they have long since lost the experience content of that vocabulary.
Surrendering the Sacred
One can always tell whether or not people have accepted Ahab's offer
by the way they talk and act and look. They say things like: "Well, no
one can live up to what everyone thinks is right, and we all see things
differently anyhow, so I'm going to live my own life." Or perhaps they
say: "Oh, a lot of those rules are silly anyhow; and besides, I live a
lot better life than some of the people who keep all the rules"; or,
"Well, I don't care what they say; I'm not going to look like I'm about
ready to topple into my grave."
When one loses the inner beauty of holiness character, one always tries
to make up for it by an increased attention to the outside. When church
movements lose the inner realities of their faith, they try to bolster
it on the outside with showy buildings and facilities. It is the same with
people. When the spiritual is descendant, the physical is ascendant.
I think now of a young couple, in their early thirties, who were both
reared in holiness homes and who grew up under the sound of holiness
preaching, and yet are today living lives that are a denial of the clear
implications of true holiness. They both claim to be sanctified; that is,
they say they are sanctified "if anyone is." But they are very vague as
to what it means or why they profess it. They attend the Church of
the Nazarene rather faithfully. They particularly are faithful to all
the social activities of the church. (It is surprising how many "use"
the church for social reasons when they can't make the grade socially
anywhere else.) They both are very frank to admit that they "see things
a lot differently" from what they once did. And they are equally frank
to admit that they attend a show once in a while, and allow their little
girl to attend fairly regularly. And while it is impossible for them
to attend revivals except on Sunday morning, or do any calling or personal
work at all, they can sit up far into the night playing Rook or canasta,
or watching some comic program on their television. They have actually
sold out to Ahab. And what a sellout! To surrender a heritage so rich
and precious for that!
If that is holiness, then Paul and Wesley and other heroes of the faith
lived and died for a lost cause. But the tragedy is that a holiness
so watered down and so diluted is too weak to be passed on to their daughter
-- or to anyone else!
Tolerant Today of Yesterday's Evils
But certain of the young people are not the only ones who have sold
out to Ahab. There are older holiness people who also "see things a
lot differently" from what they once did. They can remember when the
lines of demarcation were more sharply drawn, when their own convictions
were more distinct, their own habits of spiritual life were more vital
and meaningful, and their own lives were more of a power of God.
But now they can smile indulgently at practices and attitudes that once
would have brought condemnation to their own souls. There are those, even
of the first generation, who are today smiling at the heavy nets they
once used in deep-sea fishing. But they have never caught such big
fish, nor so many of them, since they quit using those nets. Ahab's offer
has been accepted -- nets are still used; but lighter, less cumbersome,
less demanding ones are preferred. And then some wonder why their children
are not interested in, or loyal to, holiness and the church, when in the
span of their own lifetime the heritage has been so diluted that it
cannot sustain their own loyalties, much less reproduce itself in
their offspring.
A More Sophisticated Religion
Ahab's appeal is not only directed toward those who are looking for
an "easy" religion; his appeal is also to those who look for a more
"sophisticated" religion. He does not ask us to abandon religion -- yet;
he simply offers us a more dignified, more beautiful, more ritualistic,
more sophisticated kind. Is there anyone so deaf that he has never heard
Ahab's clever suggestions? "You don't have to emphasize the fact that
entire sanctification is a second work of grace -- just call it a deeper
walk, a higher life, a fuller concept, a nobler insight; you will appeal
to more and better people with that terminology, and even the holiness
people will be fooled:" "You don't really have to insist on the destruction
of the carnal nature, or cleansing -- those are very controversial terms,
you know." "And the altar -- no need to place so much stress on that, for
it really is not too dignified for intelligent people to crowd around an
altar and cry and shout." "And speaking of shouting, don't you know that
it drives 'respectable' people away from your church?"
And on and on Ahab goes, tempting us to surrender the rugged beauty
of genuine holiness for the cheap facade of dignity and sophistication.
And yet how many there are who have sold out to Ahab for that! A person,
or a church, can become too "respectable" even for God! A person, or
a church, can become so nice and so dignified and so dead that God can
no longer use them in carrying out His redemptive will.
Spindly Specimens
A young lady in her twenties, born and reared in a holiness parsonage,
educated in a holiness school -- the very food she ate and the clothes
she wore and the education she received, paid for by sacrificing holiness
people -- finally started attending and later joined a more formal,
dignified, and sophisticated church. It didn't mean too much to the church
she left, or the church she entered. It doesn't do any harm, or good,
to change labels on empty bottles. But she felt "emancipated," freed
from the restraints and the requirements and the rebuffs that she had endured
by belonging to a holiness church. And, as she explained to a friend,
"It just got so that I was ashamed to invite my friends to church. But
it is so much quieter and more dignified where I go now. And the pastor
-- you'd love him; he never raises his voice, and no one ever shouts or
says, 'Amen.' Everything is so much more beautiful, and I enjoy it so
much more and -- the nicest people attend there."
Some of those who have sold out to Ahab so cheaply would almost convince
one that Richard Niebuhr's statement is actually true -- "By its very
nature the sectarian type of organization is valid for one generation
only."
So many who have received so much have sold out so cheaply! They have
diluted their blood-red heritage with the tasteless and flat water of
sophistication until they are nothing now but pale, anemic, spindly
specimens of a "holiness" which once was robust and rugged and rich and
virile.
Something Different
When Naboth refused to accept a "better" vineyard than the one he had,
Ahab offered him cash: If you won't take a better religion, then take
money. That is always Ahab's next approach. If you will not surrender
for another vineyard, perhaps you will sell for something that glitters.
Glitter of Possessions
How many have given up their heritage completely for the glitter of
possessions! They have heard Ahab say, "You can't make a lot of money
and keep your religious convictions." So they have given up their convictions.
They have heard Ahab say, "You can't have the really fine things in
life and stay true to your religious scruples." So they have surrendered
their scruples. Some have gathered great possessions, some haven't. That
is not the important thing. The important thing is that they have surrendered
to Ahab; they have given up their religion; they have repudiated their
heritage.
A young doctor of fine background and great potential was confronted
with the choice of a career -- with or without Christ. After long deliberation
he said: "I'm sorry, but I can't pay the price. I just can't be as successful
and prosperous as I want to be, and expect to be, in this business and
be a Christian." Unfortunately, he apparently did not know of the great
physicians, and some of them in the holiness ranks, who had not sold
out to Ahab.
Whatever the wealth accumulated or the possessions gained, they are
not worth the terrific price of surrendering a great heritage to a greedy
Ahab. It was a young Jew -- And aren't Jews supposed to know about
such things as profit and loss? -- who said, "What shall it profit a man,
if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?"
Glitter of Pleasure
How many young people have surrendered their heritage for the glitter
of pleasure! Ahab has said to them, "You can't have a good time and
be a Christian"; "You can't really enjoy life until you forget restraints
and taboos and rules and regulations"; "Don't be a fool! Have a good time!
You're only young once! Enjoy yourself; it may be later than you think!"
And so, under the constant insistence of Ahab's oily voice and the
continuous pressure of a godless, sensual, sex-crazed, pleasure-mad,
convention-defying generation, they have surrendered their priceless heritage
for the glitter of cheap pleasure.
Some have had a good time, some haven't. That is not the important thing.
The important thing is that they surrendered something that was priceless
for something that was cheap. They surrendered something beautiful for
something ugly, something big for something little, something eternal
for something transient, something fruitful for something "funny," something
heavenly for something earthly. And now they are no longer tip-top Christians,
but topsy-turvy worldlings. They have slipped into a rut on the road
of life. Their lives have changed from ideal ones to idle ones, and
they are discovering that a life lived in the whirl of the world is a life
of diminishing returns.
Whatever the pleasures of the world might be, they endure only "for
a season." The glitter soon tarnishes, the glamour soon fades, the sparkle
soon dims, the fizz soon evaporates, and the soul that surrenders the
inner glow of a great heritage for the glitter of a cheap pleasure soon
becomes nothing but a tarnished, tainted, tawdry thing -- a harp without
strings, a cloud without water, a soul without God.
Glitter of Popularity
It is impossible to estimate the number of men and women and young people
who have surrendered a great heritage for the glitter of popularity. That
offer of Ahab's strikes at the core of personality. "You want to be
popular, don't you? Well, you can't be with the stand you take." "You
want to have friends, don't you? Well, you'll never have any if you belong
to that holiness church." "You want other young people to like you,
don't you? Well, they won't so long as you believe the way you do." "Don't
be so narrow and so definite in your stand -- you'll never be popular that
way!" And so thousands, hearing Ahab's whispered lies, have surrendered
a magnificent heritage for the pottage of popularity.
It is always so easy and so tempting for one to move from persecution
to popularity. But it is tragic for a person, or a church, when it makes
that move. As Vance Havner says, "The church languishes when her members
wear medals in the grandstand -- she prospers when they wear scars
in the arena." But it is so much "nicer" and so much more "popular" to
sit in the stands and cheer than to get down in the arena and bleed. The
"nicest" people just don't do that! And no one can do it and be popular.
But what a puny, pampered, pusillanimous bunch of babies we are if we,
as inheritors of a great tradition of suffering and persecution, whimper
and whine and complain because a few people laugh at us and the majority
don't like us! The early Christians took the jeers of their day; we
can't take the smiles of ours. The early Christians died for an unpopular
cause; we can't even live for that cause today. The early Christians
felt the slash of swords; we can't even stand the sting
of words. O God! deliver us from all the weak-kneed, namby-pamby, wishy-washy,
watery-spined men and women and young people of today who won't even
take a stand for a great cause -- simply because it is "unpopular"!
Conquer with Christ
Significantly, these three things the Ahabs of our day offer us for
our heritage -- possessions, pleasure, and popularity -- are exactly
the same three things that Satan offered Christ if He would bow down
and surrender. Did Christ whimper because He couldn't have the world
and all its pleasures? Did He whine because He couldn't be popular? No!
Jesus, with a divine imperative in His voice, said, "Get thee behind me,
Satan."
Let us then take our stand with Christ and say, "Get thee behind me,
Ahab! Get thee behind me, Satan! Though you made me master of the whole
world, with all its possessions, I would not surrender my sacred heritage.
Though you emptied the wine cup of pleasure upon me, I would not sell
you my inheritance. Though you made me the most popular and most famous
person in the whole wide world, with honors piled high and prestige to
peddle, I would not surrender my priceless heritage. Ahab, you might
as well quit talking. My mind is set; my heart is fixed; my will is resolute
-- I will never be untrue to this glorious heritage of holiness; and though
you slay me, I will never surrender!"
III. HOLINESS, OUR HOPE
Does holiness really have a chance in a world that has grown cold and
hard and secular and materialistic and godless? There is just one answer
to that question:
Holiness is the only thing that does have a chance!
Everything else will ultimately falter and fail. Only holiness has the
mark of eternity upon it. No cause can endure without God's backing, and
the only cause that God really backs is the cause of holiness.
Lecomte du Nouy, in his book Human Destiny, talks about man as the "trunk
line" and all other life as being in some blind alley, some dead end.
Holiness is like that; it is God's principal redemptive thrust in human
life. Holiness, poured out in redemptive love, is God's trunk line, and
all other ideas and causes will wind up in some blind alley, some dead
end. There is no future in anything in this world except holiness! Holiness
is the only way that leads clear through. It is the only train with
tracks through eternity.
The Only Hope
Our hope is not in our organization nor our machinery nor our administrative
abilities. Our hope is not in our big churches nor fine choirs nor educational
institutions. Our hope is not in the money we raise nor the people
we attract nor the statistics we compile.
Holiness is our hope -- and it is our only hope!
Holiness is perennially a "movement," and when it becomes so tied up
with organizational procedures and promotions that it is no longer the
free-flowing "movement" of God's redeeming love -- when it becomes so
completely identified with organization and policy and administration
that its freedom is stifled and its throb is softened and its mission is
contained, the organization that does the "containing" ceases to be
the primary channel through which God moves humanity to holy living.
Our task is to build a Kingdom, not merely an institution. The institution
is just the scaffolding; the Kingdom is what we're building. Failure
follows for any church that gives more attention to its scaffolding than
to its building.
No, bigger and finer churches are not our hope. Bigger and better trained
choirs are not our hope. Bigger and better organs are not our hope.
Bigger and better recreational programs are not our hope. Bigger and
better promotions are not our hope. Bigger and more complex organizations
are not our hope.
Our only hope is holiness -- holy people with holy hearts living holy
lives. That is our hope!
Holiness Calls for Heroism
A positive, vigorous holiness is the only thing that is able to call
forth great heroisms and sustained loyalties from our people -- young
or old. The real reason we have lost as many young people as we have
is not that we have asked too much of our young people, but that we have
asked too little. Really, about all we have asked of them is that they
quit going to shows and dances and be sure to come to Sunday school
and young people's meeting. What possible challenge is there in that?
A person without any religion at all can do those things.
We have asked our people to be true to some prohibitions, when we have
not given them the challenge of having inner resources that make those
prohibitions intelligent or necessary or worthwhile. There is no romance
in a negation. There is no sense of loyalty to a minus sign. There is
no "pull" in a "no."
Our people, everywhere, desperately need to know that holiness is not
a narrowing, pinching, limiting, containing experience, but a thrilling,
expanding, enlarging, challenging, dynamic relationship that puts all
of life atingle with adventure and alive with new interests and new
projects and new goals -- all made possible if only they will leave the
arid plains of mere morality and through the gate of God's grace enter
the mountain areas of spirituality where there are matchless treasures
so vast and so precious that it will take an eternity to explore them and
to appreciate them.
Yes, holiness is a positive challenge. It is a thrilling affirmative.
It is a vigorous exclamation point. It is a glorious "yes" to the will
of God. It is a divine plus sign.
And men can rally around that sign! God's plus sign always has the vertical
line a little longer than the horizontal -- making room for the feet
-- which means, surely, that truth must ever march. That plus sign has
claimed the allegiance of millions and sustained the loyalties of multitudes
and called forth the highest heroisms from thousands.
A History of Heroism
The cause of holiness and inner righteousness has always called forth
humanity's highest heroisms. When King Nebuchadnezzar commanded his
people to bow their knees to his golden image, everyone in the whole
realm obeyed except the Hebrew children -- "in whom was no blemish."
And when in livid rage Nebuchadnezzar threatened them with the fiery furnace,
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego answered in words of heroism that have
rung through the corridors of the centuries: "O Nebuchadnezzar, .
. . our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery
furnace, and he will deliver us out of thine hand, O king. But if not,
be it known unto thee, O king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship
the golden image which thou hast set up" (Dan. 3:16-18).
There is a future for a cause that can generate that kind of allegiance
and faith.
When King Darius signed the decree forbidding anyone to pray to any
god or man for thirty days, at the risk of being thrown into the den
of lions, Daniel -- in whom there was neither "error or fault" -- when
he "knew that the writing was signed, . . . went into his house; and his
windows being open in his chamber toward Jerusalem, he kneeled upon his
knees three times a day, and prayed, and gave thanks before his God,
as he did aforetime" (Dan. 6:10).
There is hope for a cause that can inspire that kind of courage and
fortitude.
When the high priest and Temple council had ordered the apostles beaten
and had commanded them not to speak in the name of Jesus, the apostles
flung back their answer, "We ought to obey God rather than men." "And
they departed from the presence of the council, rejoicing that they were
counted worthy to suffer shame for his name. And daily in the temple; and
in every house, they ceased not to teach and preach Jesus Christ" (Acts
5:41-42).
There is a future for a cause that is able to infuse men with that kind
of devotion and dedication.
When Luther stood before the entrenched might of church and state and
was commanded to recant, he flung out those heroic words from his heart
that have tolled freedom's bell for over four hundred years, and words
that still make men stand up and salute: "Here I stand. God helping me,
I can do no other!"
There is hope for a cause that can produce that kind of heroic commitment.
When the early pioneers of holiness in America were being ridiculed
by their "superiors" and jeered at by their "inferiors" and were gradually
being squeezed out of their pulpits by ecclesiastical pressures, they
cried, "We will preach holiness -- and we will be heard!" And with
action to match the heroism of their words, they went out under the stars
and under tents and under arbors and under ceilings of mission halls
and scrubbed-out saloons, and preached the glorious truth of holiness
until there arose over this broad land a renewed and revived holiness movement
that is still spreading scriptural holiness across these lands -- and
around this world.
There is a future for a cause that can produce such men with such sense
of mission. There is hope for a cause that can move men to such devotion
and such courage and such sacrifice and such heroism!
Needed: A Heroism for This Hour
The story is told of a young Chinese Communist who was tried for treason
and sentenced to hang. As he was walking from the courtroom, he turned
and looked at his judges and the people packing the room, and with a
voice trembling and vibrant with emotion and commitment said: "All
right, you've sentenced me to hang! And so I am going to die! But remember
this: I am dying for a cause. What are you people living for?"
Dare we answer that burning question by saying, "We are living for pleasure"?
"For popularity"? "For prestige"? "For money"? "For a finer house or
a bigger car"?
What an answer! To squander a heritage so rich on trifles so tawdry!
To let an inheritance and a cause that cost so much blood and sweat
and tears, slip so easily through our soft and flabby hands and our
cold and careless hearts!
Dr. Louis Evans says that "religion to our grandparents was an experience;
religion to our parents was a tradition; but religion to many of us
today is nothing more than a convenience." What a tragic dilution! And
that pattern of dilution can happen not only in successive generations;
it can also take place in individual hearts and lives.
Is holiness, to us today, an experience, a tradition, or a mere convenience?
The time to stand up and be counted is now!
And with the help of God, we will stand up and be counted -- on the
side of holiness!
And with God's help we will say to the Nebuchadnezzars of our day: "We
will not bow down to your little gold gods. Heat your fiery furnace seven
times over, but we will not bow down! Our God, whom we serve, is able
to deliver us. . . and He will deliver us. . . . But if not -- praise
God, even if He does not deliver us, be it known unto thee that we value
our priceless heritage so deeply, we treasure our inheritance so highly,
that we will never bow down and worship any god you may set up. For
the Lord -- He is God!"
With God's help we stand today with tens of thousands of Naboths and
say to the Ahabs of our generation: "We will not bow the knee to Baal.
We will not sell out. We will not surrender our inheritance for anything
you might have to offer. We will not sell our heritage for any possession
or pleasure or popularity you might bestow. Do what you will, but we
will never surrender! You may hold us up to ridicule; you may take away
our lives; but you can never take away our reverence for that heritage
which we believe to be sacred!"
We stand today in the line of a great tradition and humbly say to the
Wesleys and the Asburys and the Bresees and the tens of thousands of
other heroes of the faith who suffered criticisms and persecution and
ostracism and ridicule for the glorious cause of holiness: "You did
not live and die in vain. We accept your challenge to heroism. And with
God's Spirit to empower us, and with your example to inspire us, and with
the cry of the world's lost millions to challenge us, we will march on!
With the flag of holiness unfurled against the sky, we will sing as we
march on our way: "Faith of our fathers, living still In
spite of dungeon, fire, and sword! Oh, how our hearts beat high with joy
Whene'er we hear that glorious word! "Faith of our fathers! Holy faith!
We will be true to thee till death!"
THE END
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