Sermon 9
THE SECOND BLESSING IN EXPERIENCE, IN THEOLOGY, AND IN THE BIBLE
1 Thess. V. 23:
"And the God of peace himself sanctify you wholly."
I. Experience.
George Fox was born in 1624.
He was one of the first of the modern apostles of holiness,
and founder of the Society of Friends. Here is his luminous testimony
concerning his own inner
life. "I knew Jesus, and He was very precious to my soul; but I found
something within me that
would not keep sweet and patient and kind. I did what I could to keep
it down, but it was there. I
besought Jesus to do something for me, and when I gave Him my will, He
came to my heart and
took out all that would not be patient, all that would not be kind, and
-- then He shut the door."
Could a second work of grace
be stated more beautifully or definitely?
Dr. A. J. Gordon, of Boston,
wrote: "It seems clear that it is still the duty and privilege of
believers to receive the Holy Spirit by a conscious, definite act of
appropriating faith, just as they
received Jesus Christ ... It is as sinners that we accept Christ for
our justification; but it is as sons
that we accept the Spirit for our sanctification. The Scriptures show
that we are required to
appropriate the Spirit as sons, in the same way that we appropriated
Christ as sinners."
Dr. Gordon did it, and the
blessing made him in many respects the most potent Baptist
pastor in New England. He wrote his beautiful book, "Ministry of the
Spirit," to lead others into
the same experience.
Rev. J. O. Peck, D. D., one
of the greatest pastors Methodism has produced in America,
wrote: "God never left me a single year without a gracious revival, in
which many souls were
given as the seals of my ministry. Never had my pastorate been more
favored with the Divine
blessing that at Springfield; but in the summer of 1872 a deep heart
hunger that I had never known
before began to be realized. I had not lost spirituality; I longed for;
I scarcely knew what. I
examined myself and prayed more earnestly, but the hunger of my soul
grew more imperious. The
result was a consciousness of utter emptiness. Then arose an
unutterable longing to be filled. I was
prejudiced against the National Camp-meeting Association, but a
conviction was borne in on me,
that if I would go to that meeting and confess how I was hungering, I
would be filled with the
Spirit. I went, frankly told my errand, sought the prayers of all,
descended to the altar and knelt
before the Lord. By simple faith I was enabled to take Christ as my
sufficiency, to fill and satisfy
my hungry soul. The instant I received Christ as my wisdom,
righteousness and sanctification, the
stillness and emotionlessness of absolute quiet permeated my whole
being. The tempter suggested,
the Spirit is withdrawn. As quick as thought I replied: with or without
feeling I here and now take
Christ as my all in all. At once came the peace of God that passeth
understanding, till I seemed
filled with all the fullness of God."
Now here is the testimony of
the immortal Quaker, and of a modern Baptist and a
Methodist divine (all saints of God) to a second work of grace and a
second blessing experience.
Similar testimony could be obtained from ten thousand other souls.
There is, then, a second
blessing or a second work of grace in Christian experience.
II. Now, is there such a
blessing taught in theology? Let us see if we can get any witness
from the accredited leaders and teachers of any denomination.
The bishops of the M. E.
Church South in their address to the General Conference in 1894,
said: "The privilege of believers to attain unto a state of entire
sanctification, or perfect love, and
to abide therein, is a well-known teaching of Methodism. Witnesses to
this experience have never
been wanting in the Church, though few in comparison with the whole
membership. Among them
have been men and women of beautiful consistency and seraphic ardor,
jewels of the Church. Let
the doctrine still be proclaimed and the experience still be testified."
In 1884, the Centennial
Conference of American Methodism, which met in Baltimore,
re-affirmed the faith of the entire Church in all its separate
branches: "We remind you, brethren,
that the mission of Methodism is to promote holiness. It is not a
sentiment or emotion, but a
principle inwrought in the heart, the culmination of God's work in us,
followed by a consecrated
life. In all the borders of Methodism this doctrine is preached and the
experience of sanctification
is urged. We beseech you, brethren, stand by your standards on this
subject."
Still earlier Bishop Matthew
Simpson said: "Sanctification is not regeneration. Methodism
differs from Moravianism, in that it does not hold regeneration and
entire sanctification to be
identical. Sanctification is that act of the Holy Ghost whereby a
justified man is made holy." Here,
then, is a distinct announcement of sanctification as a second work or
grace by the most eloquent
bishop the Methodist Church ever produced; made more than thirty years
ago.
In 1874 the bishops of the
M. E. Church South thus concluded their address to the General
Conference: "Extensive revivals of religion have crowned the labor of
our preachers, and the
life-giving energy of the Gospel in the conversion of sinners and the
sanctification of believers has
seldom been more apparent among us. The boon of Wesleyan Methodism, as
we received it from
our fathers, has not been forfeited in our hands!"
This was signed by Bishops
Paine, Price, Kavanaugh, Wightman, Marvin, Doggett,
McTyeire and Keener.
In 1836, in New York City,
Dr. John McClintock, President of Drew Theological
Seminary, in the closing words of his centenary sermon, said: "Knowing
exactly what I say, and
taking the full responsibility of it, I repeat, we are the only Church
in history, from the apostles'
time till now, that has put forth, as the very elemental thought, the
great pervading idea of the
whole book of God, from the beginning to the end, the holiness of the
human soul, heart and will. It
may be called fanaticism, but, dear friends, this is our mission. If we
keep to that, the triumphs of
the next century will throw those of the past into the shade. There is
our mission; there is our glory;
there is our power; and there shall be the ground of our triumph! God
keep us true!"
Bishop Elijah Hedding, who
died in 1852, said in a conference sermon: "It is as important
that you (the ministers of the New Jersey Conference) should experience
this holy work of
sanctification, as it is that the sinners to whom you preach should be
converted."
In 1832 the General
Conference issued a pastoral address to the Church, in which is the
following:
"When we speak of holiness
we mean the state in which God is loved with all the heart and
served with all the power. This, as Methodists, we have said, is the
privilege of the Christian in
this life. And we have further said that this privilege may be
instantaneously received by an act of
faith, as is justification."
In 1824 the bishops, in
their conference address, said: "If Methodists give up the doctrine
of entire sanctification or suffer it to become a dead letter, we are a
fallen people. Holiness is the
main cord that binds us together; relax this and you loosen the whole
system. This will appear
more evident if we recall to mind the original design of Methodism. It
was to raise up and
preserve a holy people. This was the principal object which Mr. Wesley
had in view. To this end
all the doctrines believed and preached by the Methodists tend."
This remarkable deliverance
was signed by Bishop McKendree, Bedding, Soule, George
and Roberts.
Bishop Asbury wrote thus
from a bed of sickness: "I have found by secret search that I
have not preached sanctification as I should have done. If I am
restored this shall be my theme,
more pointedly than ever, God being my helper."
At another time he wrote:
"Bless the Lord, O ye saints! Holiness is the element of my soul.
My earnest prayer is that nothing contrary to holiness may live in me."
He wrote to a minister: "O
purity! O Christian perfection! O sanctification! It is Heaven below to
feel all sin removed. Preach
it, whether they will hear or forbear. Preach it!"
Dr. Adam Clarke was born in
1762; a man of rare scholarship, a delight to John Wesley,
and one of the best preachers of the realm. He afterward became a
prince among commentators of
the Bible. He said: "if the Methodists give up preaching entire
sanctification, they will soon lose
their glory. Let all those who retain the apostolic doctrine -- that
the blood of Christ cleanseth from
all sin in this life -- pray every believer to go on to perfection, and
expect to be saved while here
below, unto fullness of the blessing of the Gospel of Christ."
What could be a plainer
statement of a second work of grace?
John Fletcher, pronounced by
John Wesley to be the most apostolic man he had ever met,
died in 1785. He obtained the blessing of sanctification after
conversion, and lost it several times
by not confessing it. He finally learned to keep it, and confessed: "I
now declare unto you, in the
presence of God, the Holy Trinity, that I am now dead indeed unto sin
and alive unto God, through
Jesus Christ, who is my indwelling holiness, my all in all."
John Wesley, in 1771, wrote:
"Many years since, I saw that without holiness no man shall
see the Lord. I began by following after it. Ten years after God gave
me a clearer view than I had
before how to obtain it; namely, by faith in the Son of God; and
immediately I declared to all: We
are saved from Sin, WE ARE MADE HOLY BY FAITH. This I testified in
private, in public, in
print, and God confirmed it by a thousand witnesses."
Wesley exhorted his
ministers (according to Tyerman, Vol. 2, p. 565) as follows: "As soon
as any penitents find peace, exhort them to go on to perfection."
Preach full salvation now
receivable by faith." "This is the word which the devil peculiarly
hates and stirs up his children
against, but it is the word which God will always bless." "Do not
neglect to strongly and explicitly
urge believers to go on to perfection." "Preach full sanctification,
preach it definitely, preach it
explicitly, preach it strongly, preach it frequently, preach it
constantly, preach it wherever you
have an opportunity. Insist on it everywhere. All our preachers should
make a point of preaching it
constantly, strongly, explicitly. Explicitly assert and prove that it
may be received by simple faith.
If others grow weary and say little about it, do you supply their lack
of service. Speak and spare
not. Let not regard for any man induce you to betray the truth of God."
In the Conference of 1765,
Mr. Wesley was asked the question: "What was the rise of
Methodism?" Ans. "In 1729 my brother Charles and I, reading the Bible,
seeing we could not be
saved without holiness, followed after it and incited others to do so.
In 1737 we saw that this
holiness comes by faith. In 1738 we saw likewise that men are justified
before they are sanctified;
but still holiness was our object, inward and outward holiness: God
then thrust us out to raise up a
holy people."
But some modern
holiness-fighting Methodists tell us that during the latter years of
his life,
Wesley "quietly let drop all insistence upon instantaneous
sanctification." This quotation is from a
book whose author is a great denominational leader. It is absolutely
untrue, as the following
quotations from Wesley will show. Six years before his death (1785) he
wrote to Rev. Freeborn
Garretson: "It will be well, as soon as any of them find peace with
God, to exhort them to go on to
perfection. The more explicitly and strongly you press all believers to
aspire after entire
sanctification as attainable now by simple faith, the more the whole
work of God will prosper."
To Rev. John Ogilvie, 1785:
"God will prosper you in your labors: especially if you
constantly and strongly exhort all believers to expect full
sanctification now by simple faith."
Sept. 15, 1790, 5 months and
17 days before death, he wrote Robert Carr Brackenburg,
Esq.: "I am glad brother D_____ has more light with regard to full
sanctification. This doctrine is
the grand depositum which God has lodged with the people called
Methodists; and for the sake of
propagating this, he chiefly appears to have raised us up."
Nov. 26, 1790, 3 months and
6 days before his death, he wrote to Adam Clark: "To retain
the grace of God is much more than to gain it. Hardly one in three does
this. And this should be
strongly and explicitly urged on all who have tasted of perfect love.
If we can prove that any one
of our local preachers or leaders, either directly or indirectly speaks
against it, let him be a local
preacher or leader no longer. I doubt whether he should continue in the
society; because he that
could speak thus in our congregations cannot be an honest man."
Wesley wrote to Rev. John
Booth, thirty-one days before his death: "Whenever you have
opportunity of speaking to believers, urge them to go on to perfection.
Spare no pains, and God,
even our God, will give you His blessing."
On Feb. 27, 1791, four days
before his death, he said: "We must be justified by faith and
then go on to full sanctification."
Wesley's loyalty to
Sanctification was his ruling passion in old age and in death.
Now look at the Catechisms
and Discipline. The Catechisim of the M. E. Church South:
Question 60. "What is entire sanctification? Ans. Entire sanctification
or Christian perfection, is
that state in which, his heart being cleansed from all sin, perfected
in all righteousness, and
entirely devoted to God, the believer loves God with all his heart,
mind and strength, and his
neighbor as himself."
Question 61. "Can a believer
be entirely sanctified in this life? Ans. The believer can and
should be entirely sanctified in this life."
The M. E. Church's larger
Catechism has this: Question 294: "What is sanctification? Ans.
Sanctification is that act of divine grace whereby we are made holy."
Question 295. "Can and
ought a child of God to be cleansed from all sin in this life? Ans.
Yes; the divine command is, 'Be
ye holy, for I am holy,' with the promise that if we confess our sins
he will cleanse us from all
unrighteousness."
That this second work of
grace is the teaching of the Catechism of the M. E. Church, no
intelligent and honest Methodist can deny.
And Methodist hymns teach
the same.
"Now, O my Joshua, bring me in!
Cast out thy foe, the Inbred sin.
The carnal mind remove:
The purchase of thy death divide,
And Oh, with all the sanctified,
Give me a heart of love."
Here is another hymn:
"Breathe, O breathe Thy loving Spirit
Into every troubled breast;
Let us all in Thee inherit
Let us find that second rest.
Take away our bent to sinning,
Alpha and Omega be.
End of faith, as its beginning,
Set our hearts at liberty."
Here is another that teaches
the doctrine of sanctification as a second work of grace as
plainly as language could do it:
"Speak the second time be clean,
Take away my inbred sin;
Every stumbling-block remove,
Cast it out by Perfect love."
In an
unabridged Methodist hymnal there are over fifty such hymns.
And what
is more, here is the ministerial vow, copied from the M. E. Discipline
of the year
1900, Par. 151:
"1. Have
you faith in Christ?
"2. Are
you going on to perfection?
"3. Do you
expect to be made perfect in this life!
"4. Are
you earnestly striving after it?"
Every
Methodist minister must answer these questions in the affirmative in
order to enter
the ministry. It is a vow that has irrevocably committed every one of
them to advocate
sanctification as a second work of grace subsequent to regeneration. I
once heard the statement
made in a public address that a Methodist minister who fights holiness
as a second work of grace
stands perjured before three worlds.
We have
thus far proved that the second blessing of sanctification is a matter
of experience;
and is taught, at least in Methodist theology. But some of us are not
Methodists. We are anxious to
know whether the second blessing is taught in the Bible. If so, that
settles it. Let us, then, consider:
III. The
second blessing in the Scripture. There are about one hundred passages
in the New
Testament that teach it most distinctly. But we will confine ourselves
to Paul's First Epistle to the
Thessalonians.
1. Notice
what kind of people they were to whom he wrote. That they were noble
Christians is clear from the first chapter, for:
(1) They
were members of "the church of the Thessalonians in God the Father and
in the
Lord Jesus Christ." People did not join the church in those days for
business or social
advancement. It often cost them their lives. The church was not filled
with hypocrites or
worldlings, but with sincere and devout Christians, and to such the
apostle was writing. (Chap. i.,
vs. 1.)
(2) Paul
gave "thanks to God always for them all." He was not thanking God for
heathen,
but for followers of Jesus. (vs. 2.)
(3)
"Remembering without ceasing your work of faith, and labor of love, and
patience of
hope in our Lord Jesus Christ. (vs. 3.) They had the three Christian
graces -- faith, hope and love;
and derived them from their union with Christ.
(4) In the
fourth verse he called them "brethren beloved." Paul never used that
term of any
but Christians.
(5) He declares
that he knew their "election." (vs. 4.) This he could not have known of
sinners.
(6) The next
verse declares that the Gospel came to them in "much assurance." They
did not
have "a guess-so," but a "know-so" salvation. This is more than a good
many church members have
today.
(7) "They became
imitators of the apostle and of Christ." In all my travels over the
world I
have never met any sinners who picked out the best Christians and Jesus
to imitate; so I conclude
they were genuine followers of the Lord.
(8) "They were
examples to all that believe in Macedonia." (vs. 7) This is no
description
of unbelievers.
(9) "For from
you hath sounded forth the word of the Lord," through all Achaia, and
every
place. They must have been, then, a most earnest and aggressive body of
believers.
(10) They had
"joy of the Holy Spirit." (vs. 6.) No sinner ever had that, or ever
will.
(11) They had
"turned unto God from idols to serve a living and true God." (vs. 9) Oh,
what grand churches we should have today, if all the members would
abandon their idols --
tobacco, lodges, cards, theatres, dancing, avarice, selfishness and
unhallowed lusts, and serve the
living God with all their heart. But that is the very kind of
Christians these Thessalonians were.
(12) "They were
waiting for Jesus from heaven." (vs. 10.) No sinners want to see Jesus
come; that is the last thing any of them desire.
Such were these
Thessalonians to whom Paul wrote. Who will dare to say that, measured
by any Gospel standard, they were not Christians of an exalted type of
piety, and a deep
experience of grace?
2. Notice now
what Paul wrote to them.
(1) In the
second chapter and tenth verse he claimed for himself an experience
beyond
justification: "Ye are witnesses and God also how holily and
righteously and unblamably we
behaved ourselves toward you that believe." That is Christian
perfection.
(2) From the
sixth verse to the ninth verse of the third chapter he rejoiceth that
the members
of that Thessalonian church had not backslidden but were still his joy
and comfort. Yet in the tenth
verse he declares that he is "praying night and day exceedingly that he
may see their face and
perfect that which was lacking in their faith." It is not difficult to
see to what he was referring.
They had exercised faith for justification, but not for sanctification:
for, he says in the thirteenth
verse. "To the end he may establish your hearts unblamable in
holiness." In other words, he longed
to see them that he might lead them into the experience of
sanctification, or holiness.
(3) This is still more
apparent from what follows. Only three verses later (chap. iv., vs. 3)
he writes: "For this is the will of God, even your sanctification. That
each one of you may know
how to possess himself of his own vessel in sanctification." (vs. 4.)
"For God called us not for
uncleanness, but in sanctification." (vs. 7.)
Notice how this is all
connected together as a logical and rhetorical whole. "I desire to see
you and perfect your faith, to the end ye may be unblamable in
holiness: FOR this is the will of
God even your sanctification: FOR God hath called us unto
sanctification." This is so interlocked
and dove-tailed and glued together that it cannot be pulled apart, or
wrenched from its meaning.
(4) In the fifth chapter and
nineteenth verse we read, "Quench not the Spirit. What has that
to do with this subject? Everything. It is the Spirit who sanctifies,
as the Word four times declares.
Our hearts are cleansed through the baptism with the Holy Ghost.
Therefore he that quenches the
Spirit defeats the will of God and prevents his work of grace in the
soul.
(5) He says (chap. 5, vs.
22), "Abstain from every form of evil." And what bearing has this
upon the subject? Very, very much. Only those get sanctified who
abstain from evil and are
walking in the light. Start a holiness meeting in any community: it
will be the very best Christians
who will be the first at the altar to seek holiness. Why? Because they
are prayerfully walking with
God, and welcome all the light He sends to their hearts. The command
is, "Quench not the Spirit
and abstain from all evil," and then the prayer. (verse 23.)
(6) "And the God of peace
himself sanctify you wholly, and may your spirit and soul and
body be preserved entire without blame." How much there is in that
wonderful prayer for
believers!
(a) You can not get
sanctification by your own growth or development or by any human
doings or deservings. The "God of peace himself" does the sanctifying,
and brings the "peace of
God that passeth understanding" to the heart.
(b) The verb "sanctify" is
in the aorist tense and signifies an instantaneous, completed
action. God sanctifies by one of His own almighty acts in a moment of
time.
(c) He does it "completely;"
holoteleis, as the Greek word is, meaning the whole, to the
end of all necessity of our being. The German Bible translates it,
"through and through."
(d) The apostle enlarges
upon the completeness of it by saying, "May your spirit and soul
and body be preserved in this sanctification." The Greek word for
"body" means our physical
being. The word translated "soul," means the principle of life, and
such faculties as we share with
lower animals. The word translated "Spirit" means that higher spiritual
faculty by which we
perceive duty and obligation; by which we know God and our
accountability to Him; the faculty
which makes us companions and fellows with angels in the spirit-realm.
These three compose the
whole of our being. From the crown of our head to the sole of our feet
there is nothing more of us
but our clothes.
So completely
may God's grace sanctify and keep us all!
What a wonderful
salvation it is! Carnality slain! The old man crucified! His vile
affections and lusts all gone! The body having only normal appetites
and passions!
The soul having
clean thoughts and holy desires! The spirit seeing God and rejoicing in
His
companionship and presence and love. This is salvation; this is life;
the foretaste and beginning of
life eternal.
Then, following
this wonderful prayer, is a promise; (vs. 24) "Faithful is he that
calleth
you, who also will do it." Calleth to what? In the previous chapter,
(4: vs. 7), he has said that God
calls us to sanctification. Here he says: "Faithful is he that calleth
you, who also will do it." Do
what? Why, SANCTIFY US. That is what he is writing about, and exhorting
to, and praying for.
Nothing can be more evident.
A man said, "It
took two to sanctify me." "Who were they?" was asked. "Why, it took me
and God." "What did God do?" "He sanctified me." "What did you do?" "I
let him." That is the
truth.
It is God's will
that we be sanctified. He calls us to the experience. He will do it for
us if
we will let Him. If we will consent to obey God absolutely, to do and
say and be what God wants
of us; if we will put our all on God's altar, our good things, our
soul, body and spirit, mind, heart,
will, possessions, influence, reputation, time, talents, -- all, all to
be forever the Lord's; if we will
consent to walk with Jesus and bear the reproach of holiness in a
godless, Christ-hating world, and
look up in faith and prayer that will take no denial and claim the
blessing by faith, the Holy Spirit
will be poured out. The blessing will come; it will not tarry. The
willing God will not disappoint
his waiting and expectant child.
We have now
found that this second blessing of sanctification is not a theory, but
a matter
of experience and of theology, and that it is unmistakably taught in
the Scripture.
In conclusion we
now turn back to the fourth chapter and eighth verse, and read it in
connection with the third and seventh. "This is the will of God even
your sanctification: for God
hath not called us unto Uncleanness but unto sanctification."
"Therefore he that rejecteth, rejecteth
not man but God, who giveth his Holy Spirit unto you." Rejecteth what?
Sanctification, the blessing
he is talking about. The man who rejects it does not simply reject a
doctrine of St. Paul, or an
opinion of John Wesley, or of Finney, or of Carradine or Morrison. You
are not rejecting merely a
theory of your poor preacher. You are not dealing with me or any other
man. You are dealing with
God. You reject God who giveth His Holy Spirit unto you to sanctify
you. Do not do it, I pray you.
Do not quench that Spirit whose work alone can cleanse your heart and
fit you for heaven. The
Spirit sanctifies, and without sanctification "no man shall see the
Lord." To grieve Him is always
perilous; to quench Him and fatally resist him is to consign yourself
to the realms of eternal
despair.