Chapter 10
HOLINESS REJECTED MAKES STRANGE BEDFELLOWS
In my rounds in
many states I have observed a remarkable spirit of union and fraternity
among people who seemingly would have no bond of union whatever. Here
are the conflicting
theories of these separate classes.
1. There are those who
proclaim very openly that there is no such thing as sanctification. It
is a state impossible of attainment. The devil puts his finger to his
nose at this announcement, and
all the giddy and backslidden of earth nod their assent, and the tides
of worldliness and sin roll on
"merry as a marriage bell."
2. Another group rise and
declare that they "got it all at conversion." Satan indulges in a
little broader smile, and every imp of the pit is delighted, and all
their confederates in the dead
churches are serenely happy over the between class No. 1 and class No.
2.
3. Another company testify
that they are of the opinion that somehow they must have missed
it at conversion; but they hope they are growing into it, or would at
least like to do so. Beelzebub,
at this, laughs audibly; his confederates in the pit join in, and class
No. 1 and class No. 2 open
their ranks to welcome class No. 3. They all clasp hands and, without
the slightest sense of
inconsistency, sing, "How pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together
in unity and love!"
4. Another large throng say
that sanctification is a good thing, that would be very
convenient to have around, if we could only get it in this life. It
would truly be just the thing to help
us through the tight places of our earthly pilgrimage. But the inbred
sin of our natures is so
deep-seated that the blood of Christ cannot reach it, nor the fire of
the Spirit-baptism consume it.
Therefore we must wait until the great physician, death, purges our
hearts of the Satan loose a peal
of laughter that makes the wreathing clouds of the ascending smoke of
torment tremble with the
waves of jubilant sound. All the demons of the pit join in to swell the
chorus. All the careless and
the backslidden of earth stop their card playing and dancing long
enough to make a motion that
classes No. 1, No. 2, and No. 3 admit class No. 4 into fraternity. It
carries unanimously, and they
all join in singing, "The fellowship of kindred minds is like to that
above."
5. A still larger throng
rise and say "Yes, sanctification is a good thing. We must doubtless
all have it to be for heaven. But it is beyond the possibility of
either any divine grace or even
death, to effect it; it is to be wrought in us by our purgatorial fire"
This transfers the whole thing
over to Apollyon's territory! And he rises amidst great applause, and
moves that this view be
celebrated by a carnival in hell. It is unanimously carried with a din
of merriment that is
indescribable. Meantime this mirth is catching on earth. Bishops and
presiding elders and church
officials smile and joke about this universal sanctification which,
like the grace of God, leaves
none out. The spirit of union grows wider, and the first four classes
open to take in the fifth. They
lustily sing:
"Brothers, brothers all are we,
A jolly confraternity."
It begins to look as if all
humanity were going to be banded together in unity and love.
6. A little company rise and
humbly say, with a heavenly radiance on their upturned faces:
"After our conversion we sought, by faith, purity of heart as a second
work of grace. The baptism
with the Spirit came upon us with the suddenness of Pentecost. We are
sanctified now; for 'the
blood of Jesus Christ . . . a hallelujah of praise floats down from the
skies. But quicker than a flash
the devil leaps to his feet with a roar of rage that makes every cavern
of hell quiver. Every power
of darkness fairly howls his hate, every hell-bound bays his loudest.
Meantime on earth every
spiritual harlot and covetous moneybags and scheming ecclesiastic and
carnal bigot and
backslidden worldling, and all the other five classes, who were so
lenient towards one another's
divergent views, open up in a torrent of vituperation and rage. With
consent they cry, "Down with
this heresy!" "Put them out!" And all earth and hell pour out their
hottest venom against these
devoted people, reminding one of the enmity that once howled about the
cross of Christ.
How is all
this to be accounted for? How can all those other five classes tolerate
one
another so graciously as common bedfellows, while they rise in such a
storm of hate against the
testimony to sanctification as given in the blessed Word?
Candidly
now, is not this the only explanation: that this doctrine is the truth,
and the devil is
determined that none shall testify that the blood of Jesus . . .
cleanseth us from all sin"? He raises
earth and hell to put this testimony down. John Wesley long ago said,
"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."
Let those
who band together to fight holiness think on these things.
Let them
ask how it is that the irreconcilable divergence of the first five
views troubles
nobody, and the adherents of them are in such sweet peace with one
another; while they all unite in
virulent opposition to the sixth view, by John Wesley and his spiritual
descendants, and belch forth
a common chorus of hate like that which raged about the Cross,
springing from ever class and
condition of men.
Is not
this plainly the old war of carnality against truth and God? Is it not
the same contest,
age-long, between good and evil, light and darkness, righteousness and
sin?
In a Texas
conference some years ago three men preached on the subject of
sanctification.
The first held that it was gotten at the time of conversion. The second
held that Christians grew into
it after conversion. The third held that we obtained it at death. But
all three of those ministers, and
all the rest who did not care when they obtained it, or whether they
received it at all, or whether
there was any such thing, banded together and expelled from the
ministry a fellow minister for
preaching sanctification as a second work of grace, received by faith
after regeneration!!
Truth forever on the scaffold,
Wrong forever on the throne,
Yet that scaffold sways the future,
And, behind the dim unknown,
Standeth God within the shadow,
Keeping watch above His own.
What more
pathetic passage is there in Christian literature than John Wesley's
closing
appeal, "On Christian Perfection?" "Who is he that will open his mouth
against being cleansed
from all pollution, both of flesh and spirit, or against having all the
mind that was in Christ -- has
the hardiness to object to the devoting, not a part, but all our soul,
body and substance to God? Let
this Christian perfection appear in its own shape, and who will fight
against it? It must be
disguised before it can be opposed. It must be covered with a bearskin
first, or even the wild
beasts of the people will scarce be induced to worry it. But whatever
these do, let not the children
of God any longer fit against the image of God. Let not those who are
alive to God oppose
dedicating all our life to Him.
"We allow, we
contend, that we are justified freely through the righteousness and the
blood
of Christ. And why are you so hot against us because we expect likewise
to be sanctified wholly
through His Spirit? How long will you who worship God in spirit . . .
set your battle in array
against those who seek an entire 'circumcision of heart' who thirst to
be cleansed 'from all
filthiness of flesh and spirit,' and to 'perfect holiness in the fear
of God?' Nay, we your enemies
because we look for a full deliverance from the carnal mind, which is
enmity against God? Nay,
we are your brethren, your the vineyard of our Lord, your companions in
the kingdom and patience
of Jesus."
THE END