Chapter 4
WHAT PAUL SAID ABOUT HOLINESS (Continued)
We have seen in
the previous two chapters that the chief of the apostles wrote to the
Thessalonians his first epistle, urging them in the most explicit terms
to seek entire sanctification
as a second work of grace. It was a church only recently converted from
heathenism, yet entire
sanctification was the standard the apostle set for them. But we hold
that the apostle was inspired;
it was therefore the standard set by the Holy Ghost.
Some may suppose
that this was with Paul an exceptional way of writing to a church. It
will probably surprise such readers to learn that St. Paul wrote or
spoke in at least five books of
scripture in which the Pentecostal blessing of sanctification is
clearly taught.
In Acts 20:32,
we find him addressing the elders of the Ephesian church. He says: "And
now, brethren, I commend you to God, and to the word of his grace,
which is able to build you up,
and to give you an inheritance among them which are sanctified."
In Acts 26:17,
18, he relates his commission from Jesus at the time of his conversion.
It
was this: "Delivering thee from . . . the Gentiles, unto whom now I
send thee, to open their eyes . . .
that they may receive forgiveness of sins, and inheritance among them
which are sanctified by in
me." Here are the two taught pardon and sanctification.
Paul writes to
the Christians at Rome, "called to be saints." In Romans 5:1, 2, he
writes,
"Be justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus
Christ: by whom also we
have access by faith into this grace we stand." Here again we have the
two blessings of
justification and sanctification, the latter being called the standing
grace.
In 6:6 he writes:
"Knowing this, that our old man. is crucified with him, that the body
of sin
might be destroyed." This means the destruction the of the old man of
carnality.
In Romans 6:11 he
says: "Reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive
unto God through Jesus Christ." Here again is the death of the inbred
sin, which brings
sanctification. We reckon by faith, and God makes it a fact.
In Romans 6:13 he
adds: "Yield yourselves unto God, as those that are alive from the dead,
and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God." This is the
consecration that issues in
sanctification, for he says, in 6:19: "So now yield your members
servants to righteousness unto
holiness."
In Romans 6:18 "Being
then made free from sin, ye became the servants of righteousness,"
and in verse 22: "Being made free from sin, ye become servants to God,
ye have your fruit unto
holiness and the end everlasting life."
In Romans 12:1, 2: "I
beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye
present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God,
which is your reasonable
service. And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by
the renewing of your mind,
that ye may prove what is that good, and an acceptable, and perfect
will of God." These people
were already Christians -- "brethren"; but they are exhorted to go
forward to the Pentecostal
blessing of sanctification, which the apostle calls "the perfect will
of God." For in another place
he says: "This is the will of God, even your sanctification."
In Romans 15:16 he
tells us that we are "sanctified by the Holy Ghost." If the apostle did
not teach a second blessing to these Roman Christians subsequent to
regeneration, and urge it upon
them as supremely important, then language could not do it.
The apostle writes to
the Corinthian church in the same strain. In I Corinthians 1:2 he
addresses his epistle, among others, "to them that are sanctified in
Christ us."
In 1:10 (A.S.V.) he
beseeches them to be "perfected together." In 5:7 he tells them "to
purge out . . . the old leaven." In II Timothy 2:21 he assures us that
if a man so purges himself, "he
shall be . . . sanctified."
In I Corinthians 6:11
he says of some of them: "Ye are sanctified . . . by the Spirit of our
God."
In II Corinthians 1:12
(A.S.V.) he glories in the fact that he has behaved "in holiness and
sincerity." In the fifteenth verse he expresses an intention to visit
the church that they "might have a
second grace" (margin). Over and again he lets us know that that second
grace is the Pentecostal
experience.
In II Corinthians 1:22
he tells us that God seals us and gives us "the earnest of the Spirit in
our hearts."
In II
Corinthians 7:1 he exhorts: "Having therefore these promises, dearly
beloved, let us
cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit,
perfecting holiness in the fear of God."
How could there be given a plainer exhortation to sanctification? Lest
any Christian should think
this a severe and perhaps impossible requirement, he writes in 9:8:
"God is able to make all grace
abound toward you, that ye, always having all sufficiency in all
things, may abound to every good
work."
We turn to his
epistle to the Galatians, and we find this great theme still present in
the
apostle's mind. He tells us in 3:2 that we receive the Spirit (who
sanctifies) by faith, and in the
next verse he asks the pointed question: "Having begun in the Spirit,
are ye now made perfect by
the flesh?" Manifestly Christian perfection is here held up as the goal
of endeavor. And he taught
that it came through the Spirit received by faith.
In the same
chapter (3:14) he shows that Christ died that upon the Gentiles might
come (1)
the blessing of Abraham in Christ Jesus (justification), (2) that we
might receive the promise of the
Spirit through faith (sanctification).
In the fifth
chapter (5:17) he points out the inevitable conflict between the
carnality of the
heart and every attempt to serve God, in the striking words: "For the
flesh lusteth against the Spirit,
and the Spirit against the flesh: and these are contrary the one to the
other: so that ye cannot do the
things that ye would." The next verse gives the remedy: "But if ye be
led by the Spirit, ye are not
under the law." The uniformity tendency to sin is destroyed by the Holy
Spirit in our hearts. And so
Paul urges this Pentecostal blessing upon us in the words: "Walk in the
Spirit, and ye shall not
fulfill the lust of the flesh."
We turn to
Ephesians, and we find the Pentecostal theme is predominant. The apostle
scarcely gets his letter started before he tells us (1:4) that God
chose us "before the foundation of
the world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love."
In the
thirteenth verse he tells the Ephesians: "In whom also after that ye
believed, ye were
sealed with that holy Spirit of promise." Jesus called the Pentecost al
outpouring of the Spirit "the
promise of the Father."
In the same
chapter (1:18, 19) he breaks out into a prayer, "That ye may know what
is the
hope of his calling, and what the riches of the glory of his
inheritance in the saints, and what is the
exceeding greatness of his power to us-ward who believe." We know what
the hope of the calling
is, for he tells us we are chosen to "be holy," and called unto
sanctification.
In the third
chapter (3:14-20) he breaks out into another prayer, that believers may
be
strengthened with the Spirit, and know the length and breath and height
and depth of the love of
Christ, and "be filled with all the fullness of God."
In the next
chapter (4:12) he tells us that evangelists, pastors, and teachers were
given "for
the perfecting of the saints" -- till we all attain unto a full-grown
man, "unto the measure of the
stature of the fullness of Christ." In I Corinthians 3:1 he calls some
Christians "babes," because
they are "carnal." But here he tells us that means are provided for the
perfecting of them until they
are full-grown, that is, freed from carnality by sanctification.
In 4:24 he tells
believers to "put on the new man, which after God is created in
righteousness and true holiness." In 4:30 he tells them not to grieve
the Spirit, whereby they are
"sealed."
In 5:18 he tells
them to "be filled with the Spirit," which rules out every form of sin.
In 5:25-27 he
says: "Christ loved the church, and gave himself for it; that he might
sanctify
and cleanse it . . . that he might present it to himself a glorious
church, not having spot or wrinkle .
. . but that it should be holy and without blemish."
Yet with these
two prayers and nine passages of scripture in this single epistle
urging upon
believers the Pentecostal experience of sanctification, multitudes have
their eyes blinded to this
great truth. Even many religious teachers cannot see that the apostle
taught sanctification as a
second work of grace.