Chapter 1
WHAT CHRIST SAID ABOUT HOLINESS
Pentecost filled
the world with its fame. It was an epochal hour in Christian history. It
might almost be said to have revolutionized the spiritual activities of
the kingdom of God among
men. It was the subject of prophecy hundreds of years before the
eventful day came, and it is now
pointed back to as the birth-hour of a dispensation of grace with the
Holy Spirit as the reigning
Executive of the triune God.
How remarkable
it is that a day so prominent and eventful in the history of the Church
of
Christ should be a subject of contention and debate among the leaders
and teachers of the Church!
It would be amazing indeed were it not for the curious fact that upon
every subject of human
thought men have taken sides, and there have been diversities of
opinion. A famous writer has said
that if there were any conceivable motive for doing it somebody would
rise up and deny that two
and two are four.
Sometimes from a
lack of careful thought on the subject, and often nowadays from a desire
to escape the grip of the second blessing theory, men are telling us
that the disciples were never
converted until Pentecost; still others tell us that they were all
backslidden and were only restored.
These theories have apparently been invented in the interest both of
the theory that "you get it all at
conversion" and also the theory that "there is no such thing as
sanctification."
Now the evidence is absolute
and overwhelming that the disciples were Christians long
before Pentecost; for
1. They had "forsaken all"
to follow Jesus.
2. They were the children of
God, for Jesus said to them: "Fear not, little flock; for it is
your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom." They were not
then the children of the devil,
but the children of God.
3. They were branches of
Christ, the Living Vine, abiding in Him.
4. They had long borne a
commission to teach and preach and work miracles in the name of
Jesus. They even cast out devils -- a thing the children of the devil
never do, for his kingdom is not
divided against itself.
5. The world hated them
"because they are not of the world." The world loves its own.
6. They were given to
Christ, and He had kept them, and none of them were lost but one. If
not lost, they must have been saved.
7. The world did not know
the Spirit, but Jesus said to the disciples: "Ye know him; for he
dwelleth with you."
8. Jesus had given them the
sacrament to keep in perpetual remembrance of Him.
9. Jesus said of them in the
intercessory prayer: "For they are thine. And all mine are thine .
. and I am glorified in them."
10. Again Jesus said: "And
the glory which thou gavest me I have given them; that they may
be one, even as we are one."
No language could make it
more evident that Jesus did not class His disciples among
sinners. They were sincere followers of Jesus, and separate from the
world.
After the Resurrection,
every conversation with His followers indicated that He still
looked upon them as His devout and sincere followers.
Now we are confronted by the
striking fact that Jesus' prayed for these converted,
regenerated disciples, that they might be sanctified. Furthermore, in
His last interview He told
them of the promise of the Father, the baptism of the Holy Spirit, and
He strictly charged them to
tarry at Jerusalem and wait for it. He told them that it would endue
them with power, and fit them
to be witnesses in all the world.
He had previously commanded
them, "Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which
is in heaven is perfect." He had said: "Thou shalt love the Lord thy
God with all thy heart, and with
all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength." This
was the fountain of John
Wesley's "Perfect Love," or "Christian Perfection." The crystal stream
of Methodism had its rise in
the hills of heaven. The burden of Jesus' last conversation with His
disciples in the upper chamber,
on the eve of His crucifixion, was the ministry of the Holy Spirit.
John the Baptist had said: "I
indeed baptize you with water.. . but he shall baptize you with the
Holy Ghost, and with fire."
Jesus' parting words to His
disciples before He ascended were: "John truly baptized with
water; but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days
hence." "Ye shall receive
power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you."
Great souls, when leaving
their followers, do not speak on trivial themes in their farewell
addresses. Nothing can be more evident than that Jesus regarded the
Pentecostal baptism as a
matter of the profoundest importance to His followers of all time.
On Pentecost the
long-promised and expected blessing came. What happened? The
advocates of the second blessing are not theorizing here. We walk on
the firm ground of revelation
and historic fact. The Apostle Peter was there, one who experienced the
blessing and was an
eyewitness to all that occurred there, and he bore this testimony
before the council at Jerusalem as
to what happened when the disciples, and also Cornelius and his
household, were baptized with
the Holy Spirit: "And God, which knoweth the hearts, bare them witness,
giving them the Holy
Ghost, even as he did unto us; and put no difference between us and
them, purifying [cleansing]
their hearts by faith."
Manifestly this was the
cleansing or sanctification that Jesus prayed for in the upper
chamber. It too the abnormal, the unnatural, the depraved out of the
hearts or natures of the
disciples. Peter evidently lost his cowardice and became more modest
and humble. James and
John lost the worldly ambitions that urged them to seek first and
second place in the kingdom, and
the passion that wanted fire to fall from heaven and burn up a whole
village. Thomas lost the
morbid tendency to doubt and disbelieve. Martha doubtless lost her fret
about household cares;
and all of them lost self-seeking worldliness and became that loving
band of unselfish believers
wholly devoted to Christ described in Acts, who have been the wonder of
the ages.
Along with that
heart-cleansing came an unusual power, an sense of the presence of God
with them, an assurance of victory over men and devils, that wholly
lifted them above all fear or
anxiety as to results. Opposition did not check them; persecution did
not stay them; threatening
Sanhedrins, scowling priests, and persecuting civil powers could not
stop their progress. All men
suddenly became conscious that those humble, obscure, unlettered
disciples had all at once
become men of power. Something had happened in their spiritual
experience, quite as striking and
marvelous as their regeneration, that riveted upon them the gaze of the
world, and made them in
spiritual life and power wondrously like Jesus, their Lord.
The proof of this epochal
second blessing experience in the Bible is absolute. That it
sanctified or cleansed the cannot be denied. That it endued them with a
superhuman power to
propagate their faith is beyond question. That this blessing is for all
believers, of every age, Peter
distinctly declared at Pentecost.
In the face of
these undeniable facts, how strangely out of place it is for religious
teachers
in the name of Jesus to make light of this Pentecostal experience, and
sneer at this second-blessing
baptism with the Holy Spirit! It is a sad accompanying fact that the
ministers who do it are
scarcely saved from the deserved contempt of the world for their
barrenness.
This is the need
of the hour in all our churches. Our ministers are conspicuously weak
when they might be giants for God. Our churches confront an impudent,
scorning world in
conscious helplessness, when they ought to march against its spiritual
foes, terrible as an army
with banners. I am writing these lines in a parish in Louisiana where
the worldly, tobacco-using
pastor has rejected Pentecost; and as a consequence, he has not won a
soul here in these last two
years. The churches are clothed with barrenness everywhere, and these
sanctification-despising,
Holy-Spirit-rejecting, tobacco-enslaved preachers are letting the
multitudes slip away from them
into hell. A genuine modern Pentecost is the only known remedy for the
disease of spiritual
paralysis that is confessedly ravaging our churches. This is the
Spirit's dispensation; and the
preachers and followers of Christ must stop rejecting the Holy Ghost
and welcome Him to their
hearts in sanctifying power if they would see Christ enthroned in
multitudes of people and the
kingdom of God come with power among men.