Chapter 7
WHAT JAMES AND JOHN SAID ABOUT HOLINESS
We have already
seen in previous chapters what Jesus and Paul and Peter seemed to think
of the importance of the Pentecostal experience. The evidence is ample,
yea, superabundant. They
undeniably regarded the sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit as a second
work of grace subsequent
to regeneration.
This being true,
we might naturally expect so important a Christian doctrine would find
expression in the writing of James and John. We are not disappointed.
Although James's epistle is
not distinctly doctrinal, yet unmistakable traces of this doctrine are
there.
In James 1:4 we
read: "But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect
and
entire, wanting noting." Here is a most manifest reference to that
Christian perfection or life of
perfect love, induced by the Holy Spirit, which John Wesley so mightily
magnified. Godbey says:
Pride is the Satanic mother of all impatience. It is the baptism with
the Holy Spirit that kills this
Satanic pride in Christian hearts, and makes us meek and humble."
In James 3:2 we
read: "If any man offend not in word, the same is a perfect man." Here,
again, is this evangelical perfection, or sanctification, evidenced by
a holy conversation.
In James 4:8, 9
we have the commands: "Cleanse your hands, ye sinners; and PURIFY your
hearts, ye DOUBLE MINDED." In this message the doctrine of the second
work of grace is clearly
implied. (1) Here are two classes named -- sinners and double-minded
people. Sinners have no
double mind. Their mind is single -- set on sin, hostile to Jesus and
loyal to the devil. Sanctified
people have no double mind. Their mind, also, is single -- wholly set
on righteousness, wholly
loyal to Jesus, and hostile to the devil and all his works. It is the
regenerated, justified but
unsanctified Christians, who have the double mind. When they would do
good, evil is present with
them. For the flesh [sarx] 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." It is this
double-minded man that is so unstable in his ways. They love Jesus and
His truth and His service;
but the carnal mind often betrays them into sudden acts sadly at
variance with the general tenor of
their life. They suddenly do things over which they sadly grieve, and
for which they heartily
repent, and seek the forgiveness of God. It makes them appear
inconstant and double. (2) James
commands these sinners to cleanse their hands, that is, forsake their
outward sins; but he
commands the double-minded to get their hearts purified by the
sanctifying work of the Holy
Ghost. It is never sinners, but always regenerated children of God, who
are exhorted in the
Scriptures. to become "purified," and "sanctified," and "perfected."
I John
We now turn to
the First Epistle of John. Here we are on the old battlefield, where
those
who fight holiness think they get their weapons from the arsenal of
God's Word. It is only by a
shocking misinterpretation of scripture that anything can be found here
against the doctrine of
sanctification.
To understand
the epistle, one must know what led the Apostle John to write it. A
class of
heretical teachers had arisen in the Early Church called in history
Docetae. They held these errors:
1. All sin was
connected with the physical body, but not at all with the spiritual
nature.
Matter was essentially impure.
2. Christ did
not have a real body, but only a phantom body. He was born without any
participation of matter.
3. All the acts
and sufferings of His human life, including the crucifixion, were only
apparent. They denied accordingly His resurrection and ascent to heaven.
4. It would
follow logically that the Savior made no real atonement for sin by the
shedding
of His blood.
5. Having led
them so far into error, Satan induced them to plunge into riotous
excesses and
licentiousness. And when Christian teachers urged them to forsake their
sins and accept Jesus, they
replied that they had no need of a Savior, and had no sins, and no sin.
Only their physical body had
done anything out of the way; their souls, their real beings, were
still clean and pure, and had no
need of saving grace.
These awful
errors were seducing believers and corrupting the Early Church.
The
Apostle Peter (II Peter 2:13, 14) wrote of their reveling in their love
feasts, "while
they feast with you; having eyes full of adultery, and that cannot
cease from in; beguiling unstable
souls."
Jude said
of them (verse 4): "There are certain men crept in unawares . . .
ungodly men,
turning the grace of our God into lasciviousness."
John
explains his epistle by saying (I John 2:26): "These things have I
written unto you
concerning them that seduce you." "Little children, let no man deceive
you" (3:7).
Now let us
see how and what the apostle wrote.
In the
first paragraph (I John 1:1-4) he says we know Jesus was no phantom
Christ, a man
only in appearance; for we have "seen [Him] with our eyes," and
"handled" Him with our hands,
and "we have heard" Him, etc.
In the
second paragraph there are six verses -- written in pairs. The first
member of each
pair contains the truth of the gospel of full salvation, justification
and sanctification by the
all-sufficient, cleansing Blood.
These
three alternate verses, put together, read as follows:
Verse 5.
"God is light, and in him is no darkness at all."
Verse 7.
"If we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship one
with another,
and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin."
Verse 9.
"If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to FORGIVE us our
sins, and to
CLEANSE us from all unrighteousness."
Here are
the two blessings stated in unmistakable language, forgiveness which is
received
in justification, and cleansing which is received in sanctification.
This great truth, the possibility of
being cleansed "from all unrighteousness" (unrighteousness), is the
mainspring of the holiness
movement of our day.
Now we
turn to the second members of these three pairs of texts, which
administer a
crushing blow to the awful error that was sweeping over the churches
like a tidal wave of
destruction from the bottomless pit.
Verse 6.
"If we say that we have fellowship with him, and walk in darkness
[indulging in
orgies of lusts, as these vile teachers are doing], we lie, and do not
the truth."
Verse 8.
"If we say we have no sin [as these Christ rejecters are saying while
still
practicing vice], we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.
Verse 10. "If we
say that we have not sinned [as these wretched profligates are saying
while steeped in iniquity and full of lasciviousness], we make him a
liar, and his word is not in
us."
I John 2:4. "He
that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his commandments [as these
seducers are doing while full of disobedience], is a liar, and the
truth is not in him."
2:22. "Who is a
liar but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ?"
We could quote
many more passages to show the meaning and intent of this epistle.
It is passing
strange that the opponents of holiness should quote these verses which
St. John
wrote against the teachings of licentious heretics, to oppose the
blessed truth of full salvation. By
so doing they make the eighth verse flatly contradict the seventh, and
the tenth contradict the ninth.
No sane author, even though uninspired, would thus contradict himself.
We now proceed
to show what further the beloved disciple said about sanctification.
I John 2:5.
"Whoso keepeth his word, in him verily is the love of God PERFECTED."
3:3. "Every man
that hath this hope in him [Christ] PURIFIETH himself, even as he is
pure."
3:5, 6. "And ye
know that he was manifested to take away our sins; and in him is no sin.
Whosoever abideth in him SINNETH NOT."
3:8. "For this
purpose the Son of God was manifested, that HE MIGHT DESTROY the
works of the devil." No work of the devil is so peculiarly malignant
and so awfully harmful as this
implanting of the germ of sin, the poison of depravity, into the moral
nature of every child of
Adam. This gave to each member of the race a spirit of alienation from
God, a satanic relish for
evil. This disaster, if not repaired, would be absolutely fatal to the
kingdom of God. But Jesus
came to destroy the works of the devil, to correct this depravity and
restore the race to its rightful
heritage of holiness. It would be an awful reflection on Jesus to say
that Satan could inflict an evil
on the soul which the infinite Son of God could not repair.
4:12. "If we
love one another, God dwelleth in us, and his LOVE IS PERFECTED in us.
4:17. "Herein is
our love made PERFECT, that we may have boldness in the day of
judgment."
Here we touch
that love that is the "fulfilling of the law," and makes us wholly
acceptable
to God. This is the evangelical perfection of love, for which John
Wesley contended, and which he
so strenuously urged upon the regenerated children of God. It comes
only by the sanctifying
baptism with the Holy Spirit.
Conclusion
We have seen
that James and John, in describing the work of grace in the heart, used
the
word "perfect" four times; "perfected" twice; and such phrases as
"purify your hearts," "cleanseth,"
"cleanse from all unrighteousness" "purifieth himself " "take away
sins," and "destroy the works of
the devil" -- eleven passages in all.
If such Words
and phrases do not teach heart-cleansing and sanctification, human
language
could not do it.
And When we add
to these the words of Jesus and Paul and Peter, we have more than a full
hundred passages of scripture, by every variety of expression, teaching
that it is the privilege of the
regenerated child of God to receive the sanctifying baptism with the
Holy Ghost.
Whoever does or
does not have this experience, this certainly is the teaching of the
Word
of God. There is nothing for the honest soul to do but to bow to the
truth and seek a clean heart. If
we walk in the light, led by the Spirit, the blood of Jesus Christ will
cleanse us from all sin. "For
God hath not called us unto uncleanness, but unto holiness." And,
"Faithful is he that calleth you,
who also will do it."