Chapter 3
WHAT PAUL SAID ABOUT HOLINESS (Continued)
The Apostle Paul is the wisest
interpreter and expounder of the gospel of Christ that the
ages have produced. It becomes supremely important to learn what he
thought of the Pentecostal
experience. Did he believe in a distinct, epochal spiritual experience,
subsequent to regeneration,
and quite as marked in its influence upon the soul?
A goodly number of wise
theologians believe that he did. Andrew Murray says: "To the
disciples the baptism with the Spirit was very distinctly NOT His first
bestowal for regeneration."
Dr. Watson, a prince among Methodist theologians, says: "We have
already spoken of justification,
adoption, regeneration and the witness of the Spirit, and we proceed to
another as distinctly
marked and as graciously promised in the Holy Scriptures. This is
entire sanctification, or
holiness."
Theologians ought not to write so
unless the Apostle Paul taught it. For we may be sure that
if there was a desired and required second experience Paul would
certainly have found it out, and
would have told the churches about it. Did he do it? And if so, what
estimate did he put upon its
importance?
We will let the apostle himself
decide the matter, as he writes the First Epistle to the
Thessalonians.
In the first chapter he makes it
absolutely certain that he was writing to Christians, as
follows:
1. He wrote his epistle "unto the
church of the Thessalonians which is in God the Father
and in the Lord Jesus Christ." It was not fashionable to be a church
member in those days. Nobody
would join the church who did not have religion enough to forsake the
world and heathenism and
endure persecution for Jesus' sake. We may be sure these persons were
Christians, or they would
never have abandoned the religion of their country and their fathers to
belong to a church "in the
Lord Jesus Christ."
2. Paul says, "We give thanks to
God always for you all." Who can believe that this apostle
was thanking God always for a mob of sinners?
If he was thanking God for
sinners, he certainly had many to be thankful for, as the heathen
world was full of them. But that is unthinkable. He was thanking God
for them because they were
Christians.
3. He remembered "without ceasing"
their "work of faith, and labor of love, and patience
of hope in our Lord Jesus Christ." Here were believers who had the
three cardinal Christian
graces -- faith, hope, and love -- walking with God in an earnest,
laborious, patient spirit. They
were manifestly Christians.
4. He called them "brethren
beloved of God" (1:4, margin). This phrase is never in the
New Testament applied to sinners.
5. He said he knew their election.
People are not elected who are not candidates. Had they
been sinners in the "gall of bitterness, and in the bond of iniquity,"
it would never have occurred to
Paul that they were elected.
6. "And," he says, "ye became
imitators of us, and of the Lord" (1:6, A.S.V.). Who ever
saw a large company of sinners picking out the best man on earth and
the Lord Jesus himself to
imitate?
7. They "received the word . . .
with joy of the Holy Ghost." In all my work as a minister
these thirty years, I have never seen a company of sinners who got any
joy from the Holy Ghost. He
brings joy and comfort to true believers; but He brings only awful
conviction -- the pangs of hell --
to unbelievers or sinners.
8. These Thessalonians became
"ensamples to all that believe." If sinners, they must have
been a choice variety, such as I have never seen! A good example to all
the believers in a whole
province!
9. They "sounded out the word of
the Lord . . . in every place your faith to God-ward is
spread around." They had a real, vital faith, not in themselves, but in
God; and they had preached
Christ so earnestly that everybody knew where they stood and in whom
they believed. This does
not indicate that they were weak Christians, much less unregenerate
sinners.
10. Paul says: "Ye turned to God
from idols to serve the living and true God." No better
description of a genuine conversion could be asked for. They had
actually forsaken the idols of sin,
and quit the sin business, to "serve the living and true God." The God
of mercy and grace requires
no more as a condition of sonship.
11. They waited "for his Son from
heaven." Nobody has ever yet found a large company of
sinners on this earth lovingly on the lookout for Jesus to come from
heaven. It is the last
conceivable thing that sinners would desire. Paul wrote to these same
church members that the
Lord Jesus would be revealed from heaven, "with his mighty angels, in
flaming fire taking
vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of
our Lord Jesus." No, indeed!
Sinners are not waiting for, and joyfully anticipating, Jesus to come
from heaven. They do not want
Him to come. They would prevent His coming and drive Him out of the
universe if they could.
But these excellent Thessalonian
Christians, full of faith and hope and love, earnest in life,
imitating Paul and Jesus, were waiting for their Lord from heaven. If
these people were not
converted, regenerated, justified disciples of Christ, human language
would fail to describe such.
A church filled with such Christians would today be esteemed unusually
spiritual, and its praise
would be on all lips.
But did the apostle urge upon such
Christians a second work of grace, after such a radical
regeneration? He certainly did.
1. In the second chapter he
assured them that he and Timothy had more than the experience
of justification. "Ye are witnesses and God also, how holily and justly
and unblameably we
behaved ourselves among you that believe" (v.10). In other words, they
had the experience of
sanctification.
2. In the third
chapter, tenth and thirteenth verses, he writes them that he is "night
and day
praying exceedingly that we may see your face, and might perfect that
which is lacking in your faith
. . . to the end he may stablish your hearts unblameable in holiness."
In other words, their faith had
laid hold of Christ only for justification; he now wished them to
perfect their faith by receiving the
Pentecostal experience, the baptism of the Holy Ghost for
sanctification, "to the end" they might
live a holy and unblamable life, as he and Timothy were living.
And the apostle
felt that this second experience was so supremely important that it was
the
object of his prayers night and day. He knew that nothing short of the
Pentecostal experience would
give them the stability and steadfastness in the Lord that he coveted
for them. Nothing but the
crucifixion of the carnal mind would render those believers
"unblameable in holiness," and wholly
pleasing to the Lord. And so he prayed for them exceedingly, and urged
them on to the second
work of grace.