CHAPTER 3
A SANCTIFIED SOUL
We have already seen that in the threefold division of our being the spirit
represents the higher and divine element, that which knows, trusts, loves,
resembles and glorifies God. What then is the soul as distinguished from
the spirit and the body, and what is meant by a soul wholly sanctified?
I. THE NATURE AND ATTRIBUTES OF THE SOUL.
It is not necessary for us to descend into all the depths of psychology and
attempt to analyze the manifold attributes and faculties of that wondrous
consciousness which God has placed within the breast of every human being.
It is enough for the present to observe that every one of us is conscious
of, at least, the following four great classes of mental endowment, viz.,
the understanding, the tastes, the affections and passions, and the appetites.
-
The understanding. This is the seat of intelligence. Many and varied are
the chambers in this house of many mansions. Perhaps the first is that which
the philosophers have called perception, that which fixes its attention upon
objects and becomes directly cognizant of things and thoughts. Next might
be named the faculty of intelligence, of acquiring knowledge, of understanding
truth and relations, and reasoning, thinking and concluding. To this department
also memory belongs, that wondrous attribute which recalls the past and stores
up forever the impressions and sensations of the mind to be the source of
joy or pain. Imagination follows next, the faculty which gives the soul the
power of ignoring space, of bringing the distant near, of peopling the empty
void with the creations of an ideal world, which to the vivid fancy seems
as real as the material forms around it. As the correlative of Memory,
Expectation looks out upon the future with the magnifying glass of Imagination
and springs forward on the wings of Hope, till time and sense are forgotten
in the prospect of the bright vista that opens before. Amid all this, as
the helm of character and the driver of the fiery coursers of the soul, sits
reason or judgment, the faculty of comparing or concluding, of weighing
instructions and deciding courses of action. Sometimes it is called common-sense,
and sometimes the exercise of the judgment. All these are but a few of the
mental qualities of which each of us is conscious, and which constitute the
leading attributes of the soul. When we think how much they have to do with
every interest of human life, it is not necessary to show how important it
is that they should be sanctified so as to be guarded from error and perversion
and used for their highest ends, for our welfare, the good of others and
the glory of God.
-
The tastes follow next in order. Each of us possesses certain special talents
and mental inclinations and adaptations. The result of this is that one man
is a born musician, another has a genius for painting, another is a natural
architect or sculptor, another a great inventor, another a traveler, and
another a poet or writer of fiction.
Each of us then has some special bias of mind, and adaptation is usually
indicated by inclination. But each of these tastes needs to be sanctified.
Just as in the class of faculties previously enumerated the unholy imagination
or the false judgment will lead the literary man to be a prurient Ouida or
a passionate Byron, so here, a false taste will make a lover of art a
disseminator of vice, the unhallowed love of music a channel for Satan’s
most insidious temptations, and even the love of beauty and refinement but
an instigation to self-adornment, fashionable extravagance and the wild carnival
of idolatrous worldliness. Every one of these tastes came to us originally
from God, who is Himself a lover of the beautiful and has made everything
to reflect His own infinite taste and wisdom, but every one of them may be
but a minister to self and sin and a source of degradation and defilement.
Do we not most earnestly desire that all these gifts of heaven, unbalanced
and perverted by the Fall, shall be wholly sanctified?
-
Deeper still, in the soul’s innermost chamber dwell the affections of the
heart. This is the home of love, the mother’s love, the bridegroom’s love,
the love of the child, the brother, the friend, the ties of kindred and the
deep fellowships of congenial affinity and common tastes, dispositions, interests
and aims. We have spoken in the former chapter of love as one of the exercises
of the sanctified spirit. We referred there, of course, to the love which
the Holy Spirit gives to the heart, a divine love for the Supreme Object
and all others related to Him. We speak now of the human affections instinctive
in the soul, which are not wrong in themselves but which need to be sanctified
and lifted above self, sin and excess. Along with these affections are the
various passions and emotions, pride, acquisitiveness, anger, emulation,
mirth, joy, sorrow, and many more, all of which are right or wrong according
to their measure, their motive and their limitations. It is possible to be
angry and sin not, to be proud without vanity, to emulate without envy, to
“covet earnestly the best gifts” without avarice, and to be ambitious for
the highest recompenses without worldliness in spirit or aim.
Yet all these without the grace of God have become like false lights or reefs
of rock and ruin to innumerable human souls, whose very brilliancy of natural
endowments and success have but aggravated more utterly their destruction.
-
Lower still in the scale of beings are the appetites and propensities, which
link the mind with the body and become the hand-maids of the physical organs.
These we shall speak of more in detail in connection with the sanctification
of the body. It is only necessary here to refer to them as qualities of the
mind which touch the physical senses and act through them. All these appetites
are natural and in their normal state, in a properly balanced and sanctified
being, are sinless and blameless, but owing to the disturbing influences
of the Fall and the perversion of human nature they have become disturbed
from their true order and subordinate place, and have become in many cases
degrading and destructive. A man whose reasons and affections are under the
control of his appetites has started downward on the steep incline which
soon must bring him to the level of the brutes, nay, to a still deeper plunge,
measured from the height from which he fell. This, at last, is the wretched
and hideous condition of many a human soul, and, hence, the supreme necessity
that the appetites and propensities which link us so closely with the brute
should be wholly sanctified.
This is a brief survey of the human soul. To realize at once its grandeur
and its peril we have only to think of the records of human history and the
brilliant panorama which has swept over the stage of time, to fall upon the
farther verge over the steep and awful precipices of ruin. How clear and
lofty the intellects that have searched out and sought to teach the ages
the principles of truth! How wonderful the achievements, even without God’s
light, of a Plato, a Socrates, a Confucius, a Seneca! How sublime the genius
and imagination of a Homer, a Virgil, a Dante, a Shakespeare! How splendid
the force of an Alexander and a Napoleon! How superb the taste of a Phidias,
a Wren, a Raphael, a Michael Angelo! How glowing and glorious the eloquence
of a Demosthenes, a Cicero, a Chatham! And yet withal, how sad the highest
issues of human culture and wisdom! How bitter and disappointing the brightest
prospects the best of them could look forward to, and how fearful the wreck
to which many of them plunged even before the eternal depths were revealed
to view! How frequently the brightest intellects have the saddest lives,
and how extreme the perils that encompass the path of genius, success or
beauty! Oh, how the world needs the Sanctifier to guard even her richest
treasures from being their own destroyers!
II. WHAT IS MEANT BY THE SANCTIFICATION OF THE SOUL?
How are all these attributes and faculties to be wholly sanctified? Well,
we cannot better make this plain than by applying our three simple tests
in detail to each of them. They can be separated, dedicated and filled with
the Spirit and life of God and thus, and in no other way, can they be wholly
sanctified. Shall we apply the tests in detail?
1. What about our understanding?
(a) Is it separated? Have we learned to withdraw our attention and perception
from all that is unholy and to refuse to see forbidden things? Is not this
the real source of most of our difficulties about a holy life, that we allow
the unholy world to sweep in through all the avenues of our being and absorb
all our attention until there is inevitable pollution and misery? The very
first thing therefore for us to do is to close the hatches and keep out the
billows, to close the shutters and exclude the objects that intrude themselves
upon our gaze, to drop the eyelash and be kept as the apple of His eye from
the seeing of evil. We can do all this, refuse to perceive and notice the
evil around us. As you walk down the street, have you ever been conscious
of two forces, the one holding your attention to God in a spirit of quiet
recollection and communion, the other tempting you to look at everything
on the street, to take in the glare of the shop windows and the busy crowd
and the whole animated scene and many a picture of evil, which, if it does
not defile, distracts you from the simplicity of your spirit? Have you never
felt, on glancing over your morning paper, a check upon your mind as your
eye fell upon the glaring columns and a voice which seemed to hold you from
absorbing with your eye all the reeking filth that literary scavengers had
shoveled from the alleys and garrets of a wicked metropolis; and have you
not felt, when you had read it, all saturated with uncleanness, even though
you yourself had not any participation in these crimes? Your thoughts had
touched them and therefore were defiled.
The writer was once tempted to read Robert Ingersol’s lectures with a view
of answering them, but after reading a single page he felt so deluged with
the shower of brimstone that poured from every page upon his whole being
that he dared not go farther, and felt that he could only warn his people
from any contact with such things, and tell them that “evil communications
corrupt good manners,” and that God’s ground was to abstain from the very
appearance of evil and have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness,
not even so far as to hear them. He was once called upon by a young convert,
a very earnest Christian woman, who had gone one Sabbath night, under strong
pressure, to hear this daring blasphemer. Her face was fairly shining with
the light of the pit, and she had called to tell her pastor that she was
fascinated and knew not what was the matter, but that she had been so captivated
by his brilliant blasphemy that she seemed to have lost her power of resisting.
Therefore the very first thing in order to the sanctification of the mind
is to separate it from all evil by absolutely ignoring evil and refusing
any contact with it.
So, again, we should separate ourselves from thoughts as well as objects
which are not purifying. There are ten thousand inward activities which spring
up in the soul without any touch from the external world or any observation
of people or things. Many of these are evil thoughts, and still more of them
are unnecessary thoughts. These we must suppress. It is possible so to hold
the reins of the mind that it will refuse to dwell upon thoughts which the
judgment denies. It may be like the waves which beat against the vessel’s
timbers, but this is very different from letting them into the hold through
the hatches. We can keep the hatches down and refuse to open them, and if
we do so, God will take our thoughts and hold them captive and fill our minds
with His higher, holier thoughts. The truth is that a great many people wear
their minds out with useless thinking. Much of the waste of brain and the
dead pain in the cerebellum is not due to overwork for God, but is due to
a thousand cares and questions which did nobody any good and did us infinite
harm. A sanctified soul is one that has learned to be still and cease from
all its own activities This is the meaning of the Psalmist’s passionate cry
when wearied with his own exhausting activity, “I hate thoughts but thy law
do I love.” This is the meaning of the Apostle when he says in the 10th chapter
of Second Corinthians, “The weapons of our warfare are mighty through God
to the pulling down of strongholds, casting down imaginations and bringing
every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ.” Our imaginations,
our thoughts must be suppressed until we learn to wait in stillness for
God’s voice and God’s thoughts. Thus we shall save ourselves needless exhaustion
and ever be within touch of God and out of innumerable sources of temptation.
For every one of Satan’s wandering thoughts is like a thistledown, with wings
at one end and a seed of evil at the other. Softly it floats into the soul,
but ere it goes, it deposits its little germ in the fertile soil which brings
forth its harvest of poisonous thorns.
So, again, we must cease from the unholy activities of the memory as it dwells
on the forbidden past, and the imagination, as it builds its vain castles
in the air or makes temptation vivid and real before the fascinated soul;
and so from our reasoning and judgment, as they proudly sit in council, perhaps
over God’s Word or our brother’s character, or determine in godless independence
our own course of action instead of listening to the voice of the Master.
We must learn to cease from all these activities, to distrust them independently
of the Spirit’s guidance, and the Master’s will, and to hold ourselves unto
God for His complete direction and possession.
(b) And so we apply our second test to the faculties of the understanding.
Are they dedicated? Is our attention dedicated to God? Can we say, “My heart
is fixed, my mind’s stayed on Thee”? Are our thoughts dedicated to God? Is
our intelligence devoted to know His Word and will, and count all things
but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ? Is our memory dedicated
to be stored with His truth? Does our imagination dwell upon His Word until
it makes the things of eternity more real and vivid than the objects of sense?
Is our whole power of thought and reason and judgment and decision wholly
yielded to Him, to know and do His will? He is the Author of our intellect,
He has made it for Himself, it can find its loftiest employment and satisfaction
only in God and His Word. And He needs our mind as well as our spirit to
use as the instrument and organ of His high and holy service.
(c) And, finally, is our understanding and intellect filled with God, for
He must possess us Himself and put in us His thought and mind as well as
His spirit and grace? The Christ who came to give Himself to us had not only
a divine nature but a reasonable soul, and this He imparts to us in our union
with His person. “We have the mind of Christ,” and into this weak and erring
brain can come the very understanding of our blessed. Master, so that, as
the great Kepler, we may say, “I am thinking God’s thoughts after God.”
The Holy Spirit is a quickening force to the consecrated intellect. Minds
that have been dull and obscure before have risen beneath His touch to the
highest intellectual attainments and the mightiest achievements of human
genius. Every intelligent Christian knows the story of Augustine, the worn-out
wreck, who emerged from a wasted youth to become, by the power of grace,
the teacher of twelve centuries and the father of evangelical theology.
Again, such a lost intellect was Thomas Chalmers until kindled from above
by the power of grace and a divine enthusiasm, and from that hour he became
the leader of the religious thought and life of the country and his age.
Such again, in the higher ranks of life, was Wilberforce. As a young,
aristocratic Englishman, his early years were frittered away in the frivolities
of fashionable life and his mind seemed to have but little force and brilliancy.
But from the hour in which he gave himself to God, every power in his intellect
seemed to be awakened and intensified, until he became the champion of the
greatest movement of modern philanthropy, and the honored and successful
leader of his country in one of the greatest social movements of English
history.
And so many a humble name, a Harry Moorhouse from the ranks of English
pickpockets, a Jerry McAuley from the wharf thieves of New York, a Dwight
Moody from the shoemaker apprentices of Boston, and a great multitude of
the most gifted ministers, evangelists and Christian workers of today, all
owe their mental force and that combination of qualities, which constitutes
real genius, to the touch of God upon a mind which, without His grace and
quickening life, would never have risen above obscurity.
But in a degree in which, perhaps, these brethren have not fully understood,
the Lord Jesus is willing to possess the understanding and all the faculties
and so fill them with His Word and the power of presenting it effectually
to others as to constitute a new era in their work for God, as wonderful
as the healing of the body or the consecration of the spirit. There is a
distinct baptism of the Holy Ghost for the mind as well as for the spirit.
The latter gives the qualities of earnestness, faith, love, courage, unction,
and heavenly fire; but the former gives soundness of judgment, clearness
of expression, pungency of thought, power of utterance, attractiveness of
style, and all those qualities which can fit us to be meet vessels for the
Master’s use, prepared unto every good work.
A Christian lady recently illustrated this in a simple conversation by telling
of a vision which had come to her while praying to God to give her power
to understand His Word and teach it to others. She said that there suddenly
appeared before her mind, so vividly that it almost seemed real, a naked
and empty skull. It almost terrified her at first, and it seemed to hint
to her some message of death. But it was immediately followed by the picture
of a flaming fire that seemed to enter the empty skull and fill it in every
part, and then a thought was whispered to her heart, “This is the answer
to your prayer. Your busy brain must become as dead and empty as that skull
and then the Holy Ghost will fill it with His glowing fire and His quickened
life; bringing His thoughts and feelings, and taking possession of it as
His simple instrument and the organ of His working and His will.” This is,
perhaps, the most perfect figure by which we can express the thought of this
message.
Shall we not, beloved, prostrate our proud intellects and lay our wisdom
low at Jesus’ feet, and, into brains emptied of their self-consciousness
and self-sufficiency, receive the baptism of His fire? Shall we not with
a new sense of His meaning breathe out the prayer:
“Refining fire go through my
heart,
Illuminate my soul,
Scatter thy life through every
part,
And sanctify the whole”?
2. Hitherto we have spoken only of the understanding and intellect, the thinking,
reasoning faculties of the mind, but we have seen that there are other
departments. There are the tastes which give direction to our mental faculties,
and bias to our choice, and zest to our employments. Take, for example, the
love of music. It is not necessary to show how it may be perverted, and is,
frequently, for worldliness, selfishness, and sin. It is the very handmaid
of vice and the fascination which allures the heedless world from God and
all thought of eternity and salvation.
And yet it is a divine gift and may be wholly sanctified and gloriously used.
But it must, first, be separated from all earthly alloy and sinful defilement.
The voice that sings for God must not be prostituted to the indulgence of
worldliness and sensuality. How often the lips that lead the worship of Jehovah
in the sanctuary on Sabbath are found ministering to an ungodly or even to
the promiscuous crowd of the music hall or the beer garden before the next
six days are ended!
One of Germany’s greatest painters refused to use his brush, when offered
a fortune by Napoleon, to paint a Venus for the Louvre, because he said he
had just painted the face of Jesus and his art might never be desecrated
again. And so our tastes must be separated. Well I remember the cloud of
condemnation that fell upon my spirit when listening once in my own parlors
to the leader of my choir singing the famous “Ave Maria.” I could not imagine
what had come over my spirit until I began to think of the words and remember
that they were words addressed to a human being which belonged only to Jehovah,
and I could find no peace until I kindly but firmly bore witness to my dear
brother, and promised God that I would never again listen to such blasphemy
without faithful protest.
And yet how often Christians allow their ears to be defiled by listening
to unholy strains by their love of music, and their own voices to be prostituted
by unholy performances in the concert or even the private drawing-room. But
not only must this taste be separated, but it must be dedicated to God and
used for His service and glory, and then He will fill it with His own anointing
and use it to work most gloriously. What ministry today has been more honored
than gospel song? How God has shown in a Bliss, Sankey, or a Phillips the
honor He still will put on this simple taste to draw millions, by the power
of the consecrated melody of the gospel.
So the love of art must be separated. How many Christian homes there are
whose decorations or adornments do not speak for God, but for pagan
licentiousness or godless display. How this quality of taste may be separated
in the matter of personal dress or adorning from that which speaks for the
world and self rather than the meek and lowly Jesus. We may dedicate these
tastes so that they may be witnesses for Christ, so that the walls of our
chamber shall speak for Him, and our very wardrobe be like the phylacteries
of Hebrew garments, written over by the sacred characters which declare the
glory of our Lord.
Then our various talents and the qualities that bring us success in the
occupations of life may be separated so that we shall be strong in every
direction, not for self or earthly glory, but for our Master’s service and
our highest usefulness. There is nothing that may speak more for God than
refinement, good taste and preeminent talents. God wants these things inscribed
with “Holiness unto the Lord.” Blessed be His name for many a lovely woman
and many a gifted man who have laid all the attractions of their person and
their mind on His altar; and may the day be hastened when all that is lovely
in the endowments of nature and the gifts of His infinite taste and wisdom
shall become garlands for His brow and attributes to lay at His feet to whom
belong the beauty and the glory, the riches and the honor, the praise and
the love of the whole creation!
3. But there still remains the most interesting class of our mental qualities,
namely, the emotions and affections of the heart. These, we have seen, belong
to the human soul. Above them all is the attribute of love. It is instinctive
in some form in every human breast. While there is a divine love which is
imparted by the Spirit, yet the soul is endued by the Creator with a strange
and exquisite power of loving, and, like the tendrils of a living vine, its
chords must reach out in some direction.
But how necessary it is that our love should be separated. How natural it
is for the heart, like the vine, to cling to some rotten and ruined wall,
from which it must be detached to save it from destruction. Who is there
that has reached the high and heavenly place in the consecrated life who
does not look back, in the very beginning of his or her progress, to a lonely
grave where the heart’s first idols were buried beneath the cross of Jesus,
and it died to that which was most dear to every natural instinct and affection?
The path of holiness with us all began at Mount Moriah, in the altar of Isaac,
and the sacrifice of our heart. And it was on the same glorious mount that
the majestic temple still rises above the spot where the heart in consecration
first gave its all to God. God loves to build His temples still on the site
of the altar of sacrifice. It is not that He takes delight in wrenching our
affections, but these objects of love most frequently are draining our
heart’s very life and must be severed like the succulent growth of a plant,
if it is ever to bring forth fruit. Happy they who, before they unite their
hearts to any objects, first learn the mind and will of God, and thus save
themselves from a broken heart. It is not necessary that we should be torn
from everything we love if we first learn the mind and will of God. This
is separation. This also is dedication, to give the mind to God and ever
to give Him the supreme place in its affections.
Beloved, are you thus separated? Are you willing thus to separate your heart
and your love from all forbidden love, from every unhallowed friendship,
from every purely selfish affection, and to let Christ be the Master of your
heart and its chief object of affection and delight? Then indeed will He
fill that heart and adjust all its chords to harmony and happiness, and into
every relationship of life so infuse His own Spirit that we shall be enabled
to adjust ourselves to all our mingled and manifold situations and relationships,
and everyone be a link with Him and a channel of holy service and blessing.
So we might trace through the whole realm of our emotional nature the same
great principles, and find that there is not one of our affections and even
passions which might not have a holy and sanctified use. Our anger may be
so pure that it shall be a holy zeal for God. Our emulation may be so free
from envy that it shall impel us to imitate the noble qualities of others.
Our acquisitiveness may be so regulated that it may be lifted above avarice
and covet earnestly only the best gifts. Our ambition may be so heavenly
that it shall be an impulse to others, pressing us forward to the most noble
achievements and most enduring rewards, and every throb of joy and sorrow,
hope or fear, may be a movement of the heart of Christ along the various
chords of our consecrated being, until every voice within us shall join the
heavenly chorus, singing evermore, “Blessing and glory and thanksgiving and
honor and power and might be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto
the Lamb forever.”