Chapter 16
SOME DANGERS IN NOT GOING ON TO PERFECTION
"Of whom we have many things to say, and hard to be uttered, seeing ye
are dull of hearing. For when for the time ye ought to be teachers, ye have
need that one teach you again which be the first principles of the oracles of
God; and are become such as have need of milk, and not of strong meat. For
every one that useth milk is unskillful in the word of righteousness: for he is a
babe. But strong meat belongeth to them that are of full age, even those who
by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil." –
Heb. 5:11-14.
This letter to the Hebrews is the outstanding epistle of the New
Testament in richness, in illumination, in types and shadows, to prove to the
converted Hebrews Christian perfection from the Old Testament Scripture.
In the fifth chapter, the Apostle shows us the danger of remaining too
long in the milk-baby stage. It is a sad state of affairs to see the majority of
church-members of today still in their babyhood, crying for their bottles, when
they should be giants for God. The doctor's diagnosis in the condition of a
child who fails to grow is "arrested development." Let us notice some dangers
of not going on to perfection:
I. Dull of hearing. That does not mean that they cannot distinguish
sounds, but that they were dull concerning the possibilities of the higher life
and of the deep things of God.
In conversion the spiritual senses are quickened, but because of
remaining carnality and the mixed state of the heart, young Christians often
get the voice of God and of self confused. God's plan is to cleanse and
strengthen the inner senses, that the still small voice and the faintest whisper of
the Holy Ghost can be heard.
The complaint that the apostle brought against the Hebrews was that
they had so long remained in babyhood and failed to grow until they had no
capacity for the deep things of God. There are thousands of Christians
possessing latent capacities and dormant gifts which, if only baptized with the
Holy Ghost, would cause the possessor to shine and glow for God. He would
resurrect and inflame these powers until it would really be amazing what they
could accomplish in love, prayer, faith, endurance, and understanding of the
Scripture. One can never know to what extent the latent powers of the soul
can be developed nor the tied-up capabilities for service until filled with the
Spirit.
II. A lack of progress: "For when for the time ye ought to be teachers, ye
have need that one teach you again."
When Israel refused to go over into Canaan at Kadesh-barnea, and
turned back into the wilderness, they wandered around in circles and
recrossed their track and zig-zagged for nearly forty years; yet were they no
nearer Canaan than two or three decades before. In their marches they often
came upon the remains of old campfires and ashes that they had left years
before.
It is indeed a pitiable condition when one thinks he is growing in grace
and making progress in the life Divine, when really he is only "marking time,"
and he awakes to his true state, as one expresses it, "to find the same low state
of grace, the same weakness and sensitiveness, the same disposition to take
offense, and indisposition to forgive wrongs and injuries, lying about in the
soul." If the truth were known, half the professed Christians would confess that
they had more patience, tenderness of conscience, kindness and sweetness of
spirit the first part of their Christian experience than after perhaps many years
lived in this state. The fact is, there is no decided growth and progress made
until one receives the cleansing baptism of the Holy Ghost, which thus
removes the hindrance to development.
“And are become such as have need of milk, and not strong meat (verse
12).” Milk is adapted to a baby, and has in it all of the needful ingredients until
the teeth appear, when there is need of solid food. A young Christian should
not live in the milk stage any longer than it is necessary to cut his spiritual
teeth. With proper light and teaching, this should not be long.
As long as Israel remained in the wilderness, God fed them on manna, a
soft diet, which has its counterpart in the milk for babes. But we read in
Joshua 5:12: "And manna ceased on the morrow after they had eaten of the
old corn of the land." The "old corn" has for its anti-type the strong meat or
solid food, which stands for firmness of character and for the deeper truths of
the Bible. One could live a long time on milk alone, but it has not in it the
ingredients to produce bone and muscle. This is true in a spiritual sense.
Those who for years remain in the milk stage are lacking in spiritual firmness.
Many who receive light on holiness, instead of going on to Christian perfection
and leaving that miserable dwarf state, consult some carnal-minded person, or
a tobacco-using preacher, and get their views and opinions on the matter
before their final decision is made.
One characteristic of a baby is its easily hurt feelings; it cries for toys and
pouts if it cannot get them. Some baby Christians become offended when they
are not elected to a certain office in church; others will leave the church, or,
perhaps, conference, unless they get their coveted desire. Oh, this wretched
state of having to be petted to be kept in a good humor!
We will never take the world for Christ as long as the greater part of the
church is in the nursery, instead of being like an army with banners.
The crying need of the twentieth-century church is for fathers and
mothers in Israel who will weep between the porch and the altar, and travail in
prayer until a mighty revival of the early Methodism type is brought forth –
one which will sweep the church on to Christian perfection and gird her with
Pentecostal power.
III. The third danger of remaining in babyhood as mentioned by the
Apostle, is that such are "unskillful in the word of righteousness." As the skillful,
kind-hearted surgeon, with sharp instrument in steady hand, seeks only to
remove the diseased spot in order to save the patient, so a well-trained,
illuminated, skillful worker does not go in for the mangling and cutting of
God's people, but only to remove the hindrance to their soul's growth. We
have seen unskilled workers, with a Jehu zeal, start out, and it was cut, lash,
brow-beat, scalp, knock down, drag out, until it reminded one of an Indian
war-chief, with his painted cheek and feathers and the scalps of his victims
dangling from his belt.
Workers of the above type, in their teaching often get truth and error
confused. "There in the human soul a native darkness that no amount of
human learning can dispel, though we walk with Solomon or talk with the
bodily Savior. Conversion cannot fully remove it; it is something that nothing
but the entire sanctification of our souls will ever remove. Hence, the baptism
the Holy Ghost is the only safeguard again heresy."
An able minister, known from ocean to ocean after preaching a great
sermon on the higher life, told the writer that sin is located in the blood, and
no one, therefore, can ever be sanctified on this life. Thousands are tainted
more or less with some form of heresy until sanctified wholly.
Let us remember that the Holy Ghost is the only conservatory of
orthodoxy.
One trait of the "solid-food believer" is a keen sense of spiritual
discernment. "But strong meat belongeth to those that are of full age, even
those who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good
and evil."
When the heart is flooded with Divine love it renders the inner senses
strong, keen and quick to perceive the realities of the spiritual world; and the
more one is filled with the Spirit, the more acute do the spiritual senses
become to grasp things Divine.
We are told that there are three forms of knowledge: instinctive, which
predominates mostly in the lower animals; rational, which prevails principally
in the natural, soulish man who is without the Spirit; and the intuitive, which
obtains among spiritual, illuminated beings. Now, the Apostle tells us that solid
food belongs to those who have their spiritual senses so quickened by use of
exercise that they can discern by the power of intuition, both good and evil.
We are living in an age where everything is tremendously mixed; as, for
instance, the world and the church; politics and so-called religion. Most
believers are living in a mixed state – partly carnal and partly spiritual. Things
are so blended that there is danger of losing our bearings unless we are
endowed with spiritual, intuitive perception, and are thus able to discriminate
between the things of God and the things of the flesh.
There is, in various tempers, such a close resemblance between the
natural and spiritual that, unless we have a mind which is illuminated by the
Spirit, we are liable to become confused. For example, there is a wide
difference between the infirm, human self and the carnal self, yet in some
instances they closely resemble. Holiness is consistent with human infirmities,
weakness, ignorance and mistakes of the head. But it is not consistent with
carnality, such as stubbornness, super-sensitiveness, jealousy and a dictatorial
disposition. Some professors of holiness, who have allowed the tender spirit of
love to leak out of their hearts when under pressure, manifest an ugly spirit,
and excuse it under the pious name of human infirmity. Then, on the other
hand, it is quite as wrong for some over-conscientious person, because of
mistakes and errors of ignorance, to cast away his confidence, and term
infirmities traits of carnality. It is possible to have a heart filled with perfect
love, and at the same time have a body that is loaded down with infirmities.
We should make a distinction between temptations to sin and yielding to
sin. A sanctified soul can be sorely tempted, and still have no condemnation.
But when an unholy object becomes pleasant and fascinating to the fancy or
imagination, it is then that impurity creeps into the heart, the will is weakened
and sin pollutes the soul.
Solid-food believers should be able to discriminate between human and
Divine love. While there are some similarities between the two, there are also
great differences. Human love has its seat in the soul, that part of the being
which opens up through the five senses to the outward world. Divine love has
its seat in the spirit, or spiritual part of the being which unfolds through the
inner senses to the eternal world. While human love is beautiful and can be
developed and refined, yet it can never evolve itself into Divine love which can
only be imparted by the supernatural act of the Holy Ghost. Human love is
earthly, fallen, love is pure and heavenly. Human love is selfish, and seeks its
own gratification. Divine love is unselfish, and seeks to pour itself out in good
works to bless others. Human love is easily offended. Divine love can suffer all
kinds of injuries and ill treatment, and still be patient and kind.
There is no limit to the illumination and strengthening of the spiritual
senses, to the extent that the spirit not only detects the approach of sin, but
even the fine lines of compromise.
The keynote of the Epistle to the Hebrews is, "Leaving the baby-milk
stage and going on to perfection."