07 -- Holiness Attainable
51. Will you present some evidences that holiness is attainable?
The Bible plainly teaches, --
1. That God commands us to be holy. "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart,
and with all by soul and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind and thy neighbor as thyself."
(Luke x. 27.) "Be ye holy, for I am holy." (1 Pet. i. 16.) "Be ye therefore perfect, even as your
father which is in heaven is perfect." Matt. v. 48.)
These commands are just as authoritative as any in the Bible; and if holiness is not
attainable, God commands what is impossible. If this requirement is too great to be observed, it is
too great to be commanded. No man ever strives to accomplish what he knows to be impossible.
2. We are expressly exhorted to be holy. "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." (2 Cor. vii. 1.)
"Therefore, leaving the principles of the doctrine of Christ, let us go on unto perfection."
(Heb. vi. 1.) God requires no impossibilities. All his requirements are based on our gracious
ability. He exhorts no man to do an impracticable thing.
3. It is expressly promised in the Scriptures. "Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you,
and ye shall be clean from all your filthiness, and from all your idols will I cleanse you." (Ezek.
xxxvi. 25.) " Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness [Holiness]; for they
shall be filled." (Matt v. 6.) We have just as strong evidence that holiness is promised to
Christians as that it is required of them. We may just as consistently and hopefully insist upon and
urge Christians to lay hold on Christ for sanctifying grace, as to urge sinners to lay hold on Christ
for pardon and regeneration.
4. That entire sanctification is attainable is evident from the fact that the commands and the
promises stand correlated to each other. What God commands, He promises to aid us in doing. If
he commands us to love him with all our heart, he promises, -- "The Lord thy God will circumcise
thy heart, and the heart of thy seed, to love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy
soul." (Deut. xxx. 6.) If he commands us to "be holy," he promises, -- "From all your filthiness, and
from all your idols will I cleanse you." (Ezek. xxxvi. 25.) If he commands, "Be ye therefore
perfect," he promises, "My grace is sufficient for thee;" and, "Faithful is he that calleth you, who
also will do it." This we understand to be a universal law of the Gospel economy. The Bible
enjoins duty, but never without the promise of needful grace to perform it.
5. The possibility of attaining this state is seen in the declarations of Scripture. "Jesus
Christ is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption. (1 Cor. i.
30.) "And that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true
holiness." (Eph. iv. 24.) " To the end that he may establish your hearts unblamable in holiness
before God." (1 Thess. iii. 13.) "For God hath not called us into uncleanness, but unto holiness." (1
Thess. iv. 7.) If these, with kindred declarations, are true, holiness is attainable. If they are not
true, the Bible is not true.
6. Christ and the apostles prayed for it. "Sanctify them through thy truth." (John xvii. 17.)
"Thy kingdom come; thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven; deliver us from evil." (Matt. vi.
10.) "Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me." Ps. li. 10.) "And the
very God of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray God your whole spirit, and soul, and body, be
preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ." (1 Thess. v. 23.) Inspired men
made holiness the subject of definite, fervent, and earnest prayer. If they did not believe holiness
attainable, they would not have prayed for it, or, they were guilty of solemn mockery.
7. The Bible positively affirms that provision is made in the gospel for our sanctification.
"Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree, that we, being dead to sins, might live
unto righteousness." (1 Pet. ii. 24.) "Who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and
sanctification, and redemption." (1 Cor. i. 30.) "Wherefore Jesus, that he might sanctify the people
with his own blood, suffered without the gate." (Heb. xiii. 12.) We have the same Scripture
evidence precisely that provision is made for the entire sanctification of Christians, that we have
that provision is made for the pardon and regeneration of sinners.
8. It is the declared object for which the Holy Ghost dwells in the heart of the Christian.
"To be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man; that Christ may dwell in your hearts
by faith; that ye being rooted and grounded in love, may be able to comprehend with all saints what
is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height; and to know the love of Christ, which passeth
knowledge; that ye might be filled with all the fullness of God." (Eph. iii. 14.)
9. Sanctification is attainable from the fact that God has given us The Word as the
instrumental means of effecting it. "Sanctify them through thy truth; thy word is truth." (John xvii.
17.) "Ye are clean through the word which I have spoken unto you." (John xv. 3.) All scripture is
given by inspiration of God ... that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all
good works." (2 Tim. iii. 16.) The Word declares its necessity, points to the cleansing blood, and
to the Holy Ghost as the efficient agent; "Through the sanctification of the Spirit, and the belief of
the truth." (2 Thess. ii. 13.)
10. It is the grand object of an established ministry. "And he gave some, apostles; and
some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers; for the perfecting of the
saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ, till we all come in the
unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of
the stature of the fullness of Christ." (Eph. iv. 11.)
11. That holiness is attainable is seen in the fact that its attainability lays the only adequate
foundation for vigorous and prayerful efforts to be holy. All admit that we are bound to aim at
holiness. To aim at a state, without the expectation of reaching it, is a hard task, and must render
our efforts powerless. If holiness is not attainable in this life, to seek it is to act in opposition to a
principle that is considered necessary to efficient action on every other subject. No one ever
strives to secure or to accomplish what he knows to be impossible. The full salvation, or holiness
of the child of God, is the grand fact running through the whole book of God. In the Bible figure of
refining gold, it is, "I will purely purge away all thy dross." If water be the figure, it is, "Ye shall
be clean," or "Ye shall be whiter than snow." If it be the working of leaven, it is, "Till the whole is
leavened." If it be death to sin by crucifixion, it is, "He that is dead is freed from sin." If cleansing
the leper be the figure, it is, "Ye shall be clean," or, " I will, be thou clean." If it be a creation, it is,
"Create in me clean heart," If it be a renewal, it is, "In righteousness and true holiness."
If it has respect to the priesthood of Christ, it is "Wherefore he is able also to save them to
the uttermost." Is it a state described? It is, "Blessed are the pure in heart." Is depravity
represented as deep and indelible as scarlet and crimson? It is, "They shall be as white as snow."
Does it present a Divine Prototype? It is, "As He (Christ) is, so are we in this world." Does it
present the instrumental cause? It is,"Sanctify them through thy truth." Does it present the
meritorious cause? It is, "The blood of Jesus Christ his Son," who "gave himself a ransom for all."
Is human agency involved in the work? It is, "He purifieth himself, even as he is pure." Is the
proximate conditional cause stated? It is, "Sanctified by faith that is in me," and, "Purifying their
hearts by faith." Is the grand efficient agent referred to? It is, "Through sanctification of the Spirit."
Is the time stated? It is, "Behold, now is the accepted time," and, "Come, for all things are now
ready." Does it declare who shall enter heaven? It is, "he that hath clean lands and a pure heart."
12. That holiness is attainable is clear from the fact that it is represented in the Bible as
having been experienced.
(1) The comprehensive declaration that "Enoch walked with God three hundred years,"
teaches us that he was believer, and was righteous, was obedient, uniform, and persevering, and
lived holy in his dispensation, and "pleased God." His faith in God and the promised Redeemer
restored to him the righteousness and true holiness from which Adam fell in the Garden of Eden.
(Gen. vi. 23.)
(2) Noah, we read, "walked with God, and was a just man and perfect in his generation."
(Gen. vi: 9.) That was all God required, it was all he could do, and to do it was the fulfilling of the
law.
(3) Whatever Job's friends or his enemies, may have said regarding him, God said, "There
was a man in the Land of Uz, whose name was Job and that man was perfect." The Lord told Satan
three or four times that Job "was a perfect and an upright man." (Job i., ii.)
(4) When Abraham was ninety years old, four hundred years before the giving of the Law,
the Lord appeared to him, and said, "I am Almighty God; walk before me, and be thou perfect." It
is evident, Abraham loved God with all his heart, and obeyed him fully at the time he offered up
Isaac, if not before. (Gen. xx.)
(5) The prophet declares (1 Kings xv.) that king Asa "did that which was right in the eyes
of the Lord, as did David his father;" and, "Asa's heart was perfect with the Lord all his days."
(6) The prophet Isaiah, writing by the inspiration of the Almighty, says, "Though your sins
be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as
wool; " and afterwards fixed the time of his entire sanctification in the year king Uzziah died,
seven hundred and fifty-eight years before the Christian era, and gives his experience somewhat
minutely. He says he saw the Lord high and lifted up, and his train filled the temple. He saw a
burning seraph, covering his face with both wings, in awful amazement at the wonderful holiness
of God; crying, "Holy, holy is the Lord of hosts; the whole earth is full of his glory!" When the
evangelical prophet cried out in bitterness of soul, -- "Woe is me! for I am undone, because I am a
man of unclean lips; then one of the bright, swift-winged seraphs flew to me, having a live coal in
his hand, and he laid it upon my mouth, and said, 'Lo! this hath touched thy lips, and thine iniquity
is taken away and thy sin is purged.' " Isaiah vi. 1-8.)
(7) Zacharias and Elizabeth, it is distinctly stated, "were both righteous before God,
walking in all the commandments of the Lord blameless."
(8) St. John says: "Herein is our love made perfect;" and, "Hereby we know that we dwell
in Him, and he in us." St. Paul says: "Ye are my witnesses and God also, how holily, and justly,
and unblamably we behaved ourselves among you." St. Paul appeals to the Church, and to God
Himself, to witness to the truth of his profession. To be holy, just, and unblamable, is to be entirely
sanctified. See Luke i. 6; 1 Thess. ii. 10; 1 John iv. 17.
52. If entire sanctification is attainable, why do so few experience it?
There are a variety of reasons, the same as there are a variety of reasons why more sinners
are not converted. The main reason in both cases is an unwillingness to come to Christ and comply
with his conditions. This question can be answered by asking, If conversion is attainable, why are
so few converted ? If any are converted, more might be; and if any are entirely sanctified, others
may be. One case of the experience in either, proves the attainableness of regeneration or
sanctification. The Church holds that all sinners have the opportunity of repenting, and being
converted and saved, and yet we see that but a small share of sinners are converted and saved. For
the same reason that millions of sinners are not converted, because they will not come to Christ,
multitudes of believers are not fully sanctified, because they do not believe on the Lord Jesus
Christ for it.
1. It is not that God is unwilling to entirely sanctify all his children. "This is the will of
God, even your sanctification."
2. Nor is it that some are born more depraved than others. "He is able to save them to the
uttermost, that come unto the Father by him."
3. Nor is it because some have fewer helps and privileges than others. God requires
"according to what a man hath, and not according to what a man hath not."
We repeat, the main reason is, they will not come to Christ and comply with the conditions
of entire sanctification. We must not measure the possible by the actual.
No doubt, if the Church and ministry were more faithful to the impenitent, more sinners
would be converted; and if the ministry and the Church were more faithful in respect to this
doctrine and experience, many more believers would be entirely sanctified.
Dr. Lovick Pierce gives his views thus: "The desire of entire sanctification is dying out in
the Church, because the grade of religion our people have been running upon is below the level
where sanctification begins." -- Sermon before Gen. Con.
53. Can a person successfully seek the gradual attainment of entire sanctification?
No; for the following reasons:--
1. He who seeks a gradual sanctification, seeks necessarily something less than entire
sanctification; that is, he does not seek entire sanctification at all.
2. He who does not aim at the extirpation of all sin from his heart now, tolerates some sin
in his heart now. But he who tolerates sin in his heart is not in a condition to offer acceptable
prayer to God. "If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me." Seeking a gradual
purification, renders the attainment of purity impossible, as it excludes its proximate condition.
Faith, the proximate condition of purity, can be exercised only in connection with renunciation of
all sin, entire submission to God, and approval of all his known will. Conscious confidence --
evangelical faith -- and conscious rebellion -- disobedience cannot coexist in the heart. The former
excludes the latter.
3. Inbred sin (the destruction or removal of which constitutes entire sanctification) is a unit,
a simple evil principle, and cannot be divided or subdivided and removed in parts. It is a carnal
life, a simple uncompounded element or quality. In its essential nature it is unchangeably the same.
This "principle," or "flesh," or "nature" or "seed of all sin," or "indwelling sin," or whatever it
may be called, is not removed by any gradual process. See Purity and Maturity, p. 177.
4. The suppression of depravity is not its destruction or removal; and any gradual process
which contemplates the subjugation only of indwelling sin is no definite approach to entire
sanctification.
Rev. Dr. Lowry says: "We can no more evolve it by discipline and culture and good
works, than the Ethiopian can change his skin, or the leopard his spots. We might as well undertake
to grow briers and thorns and Canada thistles out of our fields, by sowing wheat among them, as to
attempt to grow sinful appetites, and lusts, and tastes and tendencies out of the soul, by cultivating
counter graces." -- Divine Life, June, 1878.
54. Does the Scripture imagery employed to illustrate the work of entire sanctification
imply rapidity and dispatch?
It does. The imagery employed is that of death by mortification, death by crucifixion, the
refining of metals, working of leaven, creation, ablution, and the cleansing of the leper.
1. Death by mortification. "Mortify therefore your members which are upon the earth."
(Col. iii. 5.) Let mortification set in, and its victim is soon laid in the dust.
2. Death by crucifixion. "Knowing this, that our old man is crucified with him, that the body
of sin might be destroyed." (Rom. vi. 6.) Mr. Benson says: "Our old man, signifies our entire
depravity and corruption, which by nature spreads itself over the whole man, leaving no part
uninfected." Crucifixion is a short process.
3. The process of creation. "Create in me a clean heart, O God." (Ps. li. 10.) " Which after
(the image of) God is created in righteousness and true holiness." (Eph. iv. 24.) The process of
creation, so far as we know, is instantaneous.
4. The cleansing of the leper. "Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean." (Ps. li.)
Leprosy was incurable by human means, was cured only by a special work of God, and was
effected in a moment. The cleansing of the leper was an emblem of the removal of sin. The whole
process was short. Christ said: "I will, be thou clean, and immediately his leprosy was cleansed."
(Matt. viii. 3.)
5. The refinement of silver and gold. "I will turn my hand upon thee, and purely purge away
thy dross, and take away all thy tin." (Isa. i. 25.) "And he shall sit as a refiner and a purifier of
silver." (Mal. iii. 3.) This is another short process.
6. The working of leaven. "The kingdom of heaven is like unto leaven, which a woman
took and hid in three measures of meal until the whole was leavened." (Matt. xiii. 33.) This
parable is plain, and adapted to the weakest capacity, and indicates a short process.
7. As an ablution. "Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow." (Ps. li.) " Then will I
sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be clean." (Ezek. xxxvi. 25.)
The process in each of these cases is rapid and soon accomplished. Mortification,
crucifixion, creation, refining metals, ablution, and the working of leaven are accomplished in a
few hours, and never extend through series of years. In neither of them is it continued through even
a week. "Behold, now is the day of salvation."
55. Is it not objected that the terms "corruption," "defilement," and the like, are too physical
to be asserted of the soul?
It is; and is a result of efforts to be wise "above what is written." These terms are given in
the Bible; they are very numerous, are in both Testaments, and are more used than any others. The
philosophy of human depravity God has not revealed. The fact he reveals and amply illustrates,
and uses the figures in question to do it.
The Bible clearly teaches, that the soul in its fallen, depraved state is "diseased,"
"defiled," and "polluted," and needs "washing," "purging," "cleansing," and "healing." It is both
scriptural and reasonable to believe that human depravity is a corrupt, diseased condition of soul,
analogous to a diseased, polluted human body. The predisposing evil tendency in the heart is the
exponent of an underlying, radical evil, or corrupt nature. Teaching that "indwelling sin," "inbred
sin," "sin in believers," and "the evil treasure," and the like, mean only "predisposing tendencies,"
conflicts with the whole tenor of the Scriptures. To assert that defilement and pollution are too
physical to be predicated of spirit, when we do not even know what spirit is, is to draw
conclusions from premises which we do not understand, and our conclusions in the nature of the
case must be as uncertain as our knowledge of the premise is uncertain. A false method always
leads to a false conclusion.
We may inter moral condition from moral phenomena just as we do physical condition
from physical phenomena. See Matt. xii. 35; Luke vi. 45. To assert that "the evil man" has no "evil
treasure" in "his heart," because we cannot analyze, explain it and tell what it is, is to contradict
the Bible because of our ignorance. It is reasonable to suppose that the Holy Ghost has selected the
best and most appropriate terms significant of human depravity.
56. Can a state of entire sanctification be secured by ordinary growth in grace?
It cannot; for the following reasons:--
1. Growth in grace is neither a destroying, nor a washing, nor a crucifying, nor a cleansing
process. Entire sanctification is a death, a washing, a purification. "The blood of Jesus Christ his
son cleanseth us from all sin."
2. Growth in grace has respect to addition, to enlargement and development, and belongs
entirely to the positive in Christian life -- the graces of the spirit. Growth is an increase or
development of some living force: not a destroyer or transformer of any living force. The idea of
entire sanctification is that of justification, i. e., the removal of an impurity or defilement. One is a
destruction, the other is an enlargement.
3. Growth in grace is a natural process, involving culture and discipline, and appertains to
spiritual life. Sanctification is a supernatural and divine work wrought in the soul. Growth, the
natural, gradual process of development, should not be mixed with the instantaneous, supernatural
work of purgation and purification.
4. In growth in grace, the soul is active and co-operative. Entire sanctification is something
experienced, and not something done. The soul is passive, is the subject, and not the agent of the
cleansing, the same as it was in regeneration. Before and after both regeneration and entire
sanctification the soul is active and co-operative.
5. Growth never changes the nature of any thing; hence, a believer cannot grow pure, for
the same reason that a sinner cannot grow into a saint -- growth not changing the nature of things. A
pure nature may grow, and an impure one may grow, and mere growth does not change the one or
the other.
6. Growth and development have no fixed relations to purity in any way. They have respect
to size, or enlargement, and not to quality or purity; and hence, all changes by growth, or gradual
processes, are in size or quantity, and not in kind or quality. Purity or holiness has respect to
quality and not to quantity.
7. Growth in grace is the same after entire sanctification as before. If growth in grace is a
cleansing process, and is growth in purity, it must follow, that when the soul is entirely sanctified,
there can be no further growth, since what is wholly pure can never become more pure.
8. Dr. F. G. Hibbard says: "It has long appeared to us that any who are seeking after entire
holiness mistake the duty of gradual growth in grace, and the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ,
for a gradual growing out of sin. They seem to think that the two mutually involve each other, and
that as they must always grow up into Christ in all things, so they must by degrees grow out of the
bondage, guilt, and pollution of sin." Now, to all such we would say one word of admonition.
There is no gradual growing out of sin. All that partakes of the proper nature of sin in you must be
forgiven and washed way through faith in the blood of the Lamb. WHEN THIS IS DONE, IT IS
AN INSTANTANEOUS WORK."
Sin is not a thing to be grown out of, but a thing to be forgiven and to be cleansed away." --
"In this view of perfection [the improvement and maturity of the graces of the Spirit], there are
degrees and progressive stages but in the work of simply cleansing from all sin, both of flesh and
spirit, inbred and overt sin, there are no degrees, no progressive stages, -- the work is complete at
the first, and instantaneous as to time, performed by the Holy Ghost just at the moment when the
burdened soul has faith to be made every whit whole." -- N. C. Advocate.
The idea that deliverance from indwelling sin, and a state of entire sanctification may be
secured by the ordinary process of growth, we regard as a serious mistake and productive of much
evil. The reader will find this question treated with special attention in Purity and Maturity, pp.
128-185.
57. In what sense is entire sanctification instantaneous?
1. If, by entire sanctification be intended the act of cleansing the justified believer from
inbred sin, it is instantaneous in the same sense as regeneration. Not necessarily in the "twinkling
of an eye," at least so far as our perceptions are concerned, but is a short, quick, rapid work, the
same as the new birth. It is instantaneous as a death or a birth, as a washing or refining. Note the
imagery -- (question 54.)
2. The preparatory process is usually more or less gradual hence, Bishop Hamline says: "It
is gradually approached, but instantaneously bestowed." Before regeneration, there was a gradual
process of conviction, repentance, humiliation, consecration, and faith; but they did not regenerate
the soul in part, or in whole, they preceded it. Preceding entire sanctification there is a gradual
process of obtaining light, receiving conviction, hungering after purity, confession, prayer, and
faith. These do not gradually sanctify the soul, but precede that work.
3. The approach to entire sanctification -- the life of righteousness, and the growth of the
Christian virtues received in regeneration, are gradual, and not instantaneous. This is the sense that
some writers mean who maintain that sanctification is only gradual in this life. Others claim that it
is both gradual and instantaneous, gradual as to the growth of the Christian virtues, and
instantaneous in heart purification.
Making this plain distinction between the death of sin and the life of righteousness, relieves
this subject of much confusion, and many writers of contradiction regarding instantaneous and
gradual sanctification.
4. The death of sin is made instantaneous, and the life of righteousness gradual, by Dr.
George Peck, one of the purest and ablest theologians of his day:
"It will be remembered that we have found sanctification to imply both the death of sin, and
the life of righteousness. and when we speak of entire sanctification, as to the former part of it, we
say it may be attained at once -- it is an instantaneous work." ... But in relation to the latter part of
this great work, viz., the life of righteousness embracing all holy affections, and pious efforts, it is
regarded as entirely progressive. The destruction of sin in the soul, and the growth of holiness, are
two distinct things The one is instantaneous, the other gradual and hence it is that we sometimes
say, with propriety that the work of entire sanctification is both gradual and instantaneous." --
Peck's Christian Perfection, p. 212.
5. Dr. Raymond says: In this view it is obvious that the work of complete sanctification is
both progressive and instantaneous progressive as to the acquisition of knowledge and ability to
know, and instantaneous as to the appropriation of he blessing apprehended." -- Vol. ii. p. 393.
58. If growth in grace does not cleanse the heart, what does it accomplish?
1. It secures a progressive Christian life. Growth is an essential condition of life, and all
development of life is by growth. The life of righteousness, embracing all the features of Christian
character, gathers strength, symmetry, and stature by development.
2. Growth in grace is so related to the soul's activities and voluntary powers and the
formation of its habitudes, as to secure increasing spiritual strength and moral vigor; hence, it will
secure easier and more complete victories over inbred sin. It will secure increasing light and
knowledge. It strengthens the habits of virtue. It fortifies the graces of the spirit, and renders them
more and more mature. All this affords increasing power to weaken, and hold in subjection, and
prevent the operations of carnal nature.
3. Growth in grace is an increase in the volume and power of patience, meekness,
gentleness, and love to God. An increase of patience will afford easier victory over impatience.
An increase of love will secure a more easy and perfect victory over all its opposites in the heart.
An increase of faith will give more perfect triumph over unbelief. While this growth and
strengthening these graces may weaken and lessen the power of indwelling sin, it does not cleanse
the heart or remove the cause of these inward antagonisms. Growth may abate its force, but can
neither change its nature nor remove it from the soul.
4. Growth in grace is a gradual approach to the conditions of entire sanctification; and after
entire sanctification, growth is inseparable from the conditions of retaining that state. This growth,
however, is not gradual sanctification, but gradual preparation.
Rev. Dr. Steele says: "Growth in grace, while accompanied by increasing power to abstain
from actual sin, has no power to annihilate the spirit of sin, commonly called original sin. -- Love
Enthroned, p. 331.
59. Is there a distinction between purity and maturity?
There is, and a very important one. Identifying and confounding these lie at the base of
nearly every objection made to an instantaneous sanctification; and has occasioned many strange
notions, and much confusion upon this subject.
1. Purity has respect to moral cleanness or freedom from the defilement of sin. "Wash me,
and I shall be whiter than snow." Health is not manhood. Maturity as respect to moral stature and
strength, to adulthood. "The fullness of the measure of the stature of Christ."
2. Purity, in the light of gospel provisions, is a present privilege and duty. "Be ye holy."
Maturity a question of time, and is subject to the laws of growth and development. "Grow in
grace."
3. Purity being instantaneous, may be received at once. "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ,
and thou shalt be saved." Maturity is a gradual, progressive, and indefinite development. "Take
heed, and add to your faith virtue," &c.
4. No Christian is cleansed into maturity, nor do any grow into purity. The Bible nowhere
promises maturity as a work of God by faith, but purity it does. Even "a babe in Christ " may be
cleansed from all inbred sin and become a pure Christian; but "a babe in Christ" becomes "a young
man," and "a father," by growth and development, and not by cleansing power.
5. It must be seen that there is a difference between purity or entire sanctification, in
infancy -- as just received, and in maturity -- as an advanced and confirmed state of purity --
"rooted and grounded in love." There are "babes," "young men," and "men of full age," a state of
entire sanctification.
6. There are two classes of commands and figures in the Scriptures in regard to Christian
character and duty. One contains commands and figures enjoining and illustrating growth in grace
and maturity the other class enjoins and illustrates Christian holiness or purity.
7. Maturity is nowhere made a condition of entrance to heaven while purity is. Millions of
Christians die in immaturity and are saved: they have been made pure, which is th e moral
qualification for heaven.
Making this plain and easily understood distinction relieves this subject of difficulties
which have perplexed multitudes of good men.
60. What is the voice of the leading writers on sanctification in respect to it
instantaneousness?
They teach that the work of entire sanctification proper -- the cleansing of the heart by the
Holy Spirit is instantaneous. Those who teach otherwise, my invariably confound purity with
maturity, and predicate a gradual sanctification upon the growth and maturity of the Christian
virtues.
The following quotations will be seen to agree with our positions on this subject.
1. I give Mr. Wesley's views. "Indeed, this is so evident a truth that well-nigh all the
children of God, scattered abroad, however they differ in other points, yet generally agree in this:
that although we may 'by the Spirit mortify the deeds of the body,' resist and conquer both outward
and inward sin, -- although we may weaken our enemies day by day, -- yet we can not drive them
out. By all the grace which is given at justification we can not extirpate them. Though we watch
and pray ever so much, we can not wholly cleanse either our hearts or hands. Most sure we can
not, till it please our Lord to speak to our hearts again -- to speak the SECOND time, 'Be clean;'
and then only the leprosy is cleansed. Then only the evil ROOT, the CARNAL MIND, is
destroyed; inbred sin subsists no more. But if there be no such SECOND CHANGE: if there be no
INSTANTANEOUS deliverance AFTER justification if there be NONE but a GRADUAL work of
God (that there is a gradual work none denies), -- then we must be content, as well as we can, TO
REMAIN FULL OF SIN TILL DEATH." --Sermons, vol. i. p. 122.
"Inquiring in 1761, how it was that in all these parts we had so few witnesses of full
salvation, I constantly received one and the same answer: 'We see now we sought it by our works;
we thought it was to come gradually; we never expected it to come in a moment, by simple faith, in
the very same manner as we received justification.' What wonder is it, then, that you have been
fighting all these years as one that beateth the air!" -- Works, vol. vii. p. 377.
"You may obtain a growing victory over sin from the moment you are justified. But this is
not enough. The body of sin the carnal mind, must be destroyed; the old man must be slain, or we
can not put on the new man, which is created after God (or which is the image of God) in
righteousness and true holiness; and this is done in a moment. To talk of this work as being
gradual, would be nonsense, as much as we talked of gradual justification." -- Journal of H. A.
Rogers, p. 174.
"As to manner, I believe this perfection is always wrought in the soul by a simple act of
faith; consequently in an instant." He further says: "Look for it every day, every hour, every
moment. Why not this hour -- this moment? Certainly you may look for it now, if you believe it is
by faith. And by this token you may surely know whether you seek it by faith or by works. If by
works, you want something to be done first before you are sanctified. You think, I must be or do
thus or thus. Then you are seeking it by works unto this day. If you seek it by faith, you expect it as
you are; and if as you are, then expect it now. It is important to observe that there is an inseparable
connection between these three points -- expect it by faith, expect it as you are, and expect it now.
To DENY ONE IS TO DENY THEM ALL." -- Sermons, vol. i. p. 391.
"In London alone I found six hundred and fifty-two members of our society, who were
EXCEEDING CLEAR IN THEIR EXPERIENCE, and of whose testimony I could see no reason to
doubt." And every one of these (after the most careful inquiry, I have not found ONE EXCEPTION
either in Great Britain or Ireland) has declared that his deliverance from sin was instantaneous;
that the change was WROUGHT IN A MOMENT. Had half of these, or one third, or one in twenty,
declared it was gradually wrought in them, I should have believed this in regard to them, and
thought that some were gradually sanctified, and some instantaneously. But as I have not found, in
so long a space of time (more than thirty years), a single person speaking thus AS ALL, who
believe they are sanctified, declare with one voice, that the change was wrought in a moment I can
not but believe, that sanctification is commonly, if not always, an instantaneous work." -- Sermons,
vol. ii. p. 223.
"I have continually testified for these five and twenty years in private and public, that we
are sanctified as well as justified by faith. And, indeed, the one of those great truths does
exceedingly illustrate the other. EXACTLY AS WE ARE JUSTIFIED BY FAITH, So ARE WE
SANCTIFIED BY FAITH." -- Works, vol. i. p 338.
Tyreman says: "The doctrine of Christian Perfection, attainable in an instant by a simple
act of faith, was made prominent in Methodist congregations in 1762, and ever after it was one of
the chief topics of Mr. Wesley's ministry and that of his itinerant preachers." (Tyreman, vol. ii. pp.
346, 416, 444.) According to this, during half of his ministerial life, Mr. Wesley made
instantaneous sanctification a prominent topic of his ministry. He wrote his brother Charles in
1766: "Insist everywhere on full redemption received now by faith alone. Press the instantaneous
blessing."
2. "It is, I think, allowed on all sides," says Rev. John Fletcher, that 'we are saved,' that is,
sanctified, as well a justified 'by faith.' Now, that particular height of sanctification, that full
'circumcision of the heart,' which centrally purifies the soul, springs from a peculiar degree of
saving faith, and from a particular operation of the 'spirit of burning;' a quick operation this, which
is compared to a baptism of fire, and proves sometimes so sharp and searching. that it is as much
as a healthy, strong man can do to bear up under it." -- Last Check, p. 566.
3. Dr. Adam Clarke says: We are to come to God for an instantaneous and complete
purification from all sin, as for instantaneous pardon. In no part of the Scriptures are we directed
to seek the remission of sins seriatim -- one now and another then, and so on. Neither in any part
are we directed to seek holiness by gradation. Neither a gradation pardon nor a gradation
PURIFICATION exists in the Bible." For as the work of cleansing and renewing the heart is the
work of God, his almighty power can perform it in a moment. in the twinkling of au eye. And as it
is this moment our duty to love God with all our heart, and we can not do this till he cleanse our
hearts, consequently he is ready to do it this moment, because he wills that we should in this
moment love him. This moment, therefore, we may be emptied of sin, filled with holiness, and
become truly happy." -- Clarke's Theology, p. 208.
4. Bishop Janes said in his sermon at Morristown: "These two blessings, pardon and
regeneration, justification and sanctification, are here presented [1 John i. 8, 10]in the same
manner, offered upon the same condition ... the conditions of justification and sanctification,
according to the text, are the same."
6. Bishop Foster says: sanctification is "distinct in opposition to the idea that it is a mere
regeneration holding it to be something more and additional instantaneous, in opposition to the idea
of GROWTH GRADUALLY TO MATURITY OR RIPENESS." "And though there is progress
toward it, yet that its attainment is not a mere ripeness ensuing by gradual growth, but is by the
direct agency of the Holy Ghost, and instantaneously wrought, however long the soul may have
been progressing toward Christian Purity, p. 46.
6. Dr. Nathan Bangs says: "Those who teach that we are gradually to grow into a state of
sanctification, without ever experiencing an instantaneous change from inbred sin to holiness, --
are to be repudiated as unsound, anti-scriptural and anti-Wesleyan." -- Article in Guide, 1854.
7. Dr. F. G. Hibbard says: "It is hence Mr. Wesley, and also Mr. Fletcher, distinguish
sanctification into two stages: the lowest degree is to be 'emptied of all sin,' the highest to be
'filled with God.' To be emptied of all sin, to be 'cleansed from all unrighteousness,' is a work to
be done by the Spirit of God immediately acting on the soul, through the truth. It is done at once
according to the faith of the believer, through the meritorious blood and righteousness of the
Redeemer. But to bring forth the Christian graces to the highest measure of maturity or perfection
compatible with this earthly state, or with the moral capabilities of the believer, is a work of time,
to be carried forward and performed, till the day of Jesus Christ." -- N. C. Advocate.
8. Rev. Dr. Fuller, in his address before the Evangelical Alliance: "Nor did you find relief,
peace, strength, victory over your corruptions, until you repaired to the fountain in open for sin and
uncleanness, until looking to Jesus, casting your soul upon him for sanctification, just as you did at
first for pardon."
9. Richard Watson: "To this faith shall the promises of entire sanctification be given,
which in the nature of the case, supposes an instantaneous work immediately following upon entire
and unwavering faith." -- Institutes, vol. ii. p. 455.
10. Rev. J. S. Inskip says: "I apprehend in all cases where any special success has been
given to the teaching of this doctrine, it has been where the instantaneous character of the work has
been made very prominent." -- Method of Promoting Perfect Love.
11. Rev. Dr. Lowry says "Salvation in all its stages is by faith and by faith alone. And this
makes sanctification not only instantaneous, but creates a necessity that we should receive it as a
gracious gift, bestowed in opposition to a product worked out, or resulting from development and
growth." -- Divine Life, June, 1878.
12. The pastoral address of the General Conference of 1832 presents the following upon
the subject of holiness: "When we speak of holiness, we mean that state in which God is loved
with all the heart, and served with all the power. This, as Methodists, we have said, is the
privilege of the Christian in this life and we have further said that this privilege may be secured
instantaneously by an act of faith, as justification was."
61. Will you give some evidence that entire sanctification is instantaneous?
1. The church generally hold that God instantaneously removes all indwelling sin from
dying infants and from all justified believers who die suddenly like the dying thief and it is
reasonable to believe that He instantaneously sanctifies those who trust in the blood of Christ to
have it done.
2. Purity being God's work, and being by faith, is evidence that it is instantaneous, the same
as its kindred blessings -- pardon, adoption, and regeneration.
3. The beautiful analogy in the conditions and experience of regeneration and entire
sanctification teaches a instantaneous work similar to regeneration. The sinner, convicted of his
guilt, believes in Christ for pardon, and is forgiven freely and fully. The Christian, convicted of
impurity, believes in Christ for holiness, and his heart is made pure, entirely and instantaneously.
The promise, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved," covers the latter case
just as much s the former. Gradualism is not according to the analogy of the great work of God in
spiritual regeneration. The instantaneous is.
4. The commands, exhortations, and promises of the Bible teach that purity is
instantaneous. God desires, commands, and expects instant obedience. This cannot be done if
holiness is not instantaneous. God commands -- "Be ye holy," plainly requires present holiness;
"Be ye filled with the Spirit," " Be ye therefore perfect," enjoins perfection today. "This is the will
of God, even your sanctification," means NOW. "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy
heart," is a command enforcing perfect love today, if it means anything. Just as surely as God
desires and commands us now to "be holy;" now "be perfect;" now to " be filled with the Spirit;"
now to "love Him with all our heart;" so surely is sin's destruction and heart sanctification
instantaneous.
5. All the commands, invitations, and promises of God in respect to holiness are in the
present tense. They are as clearly and definitely so as those to the sinner in regard to repentance,
obedience, justification, and regeneration. In point of time, their united language is, "Behold, NOW
is the accepted time; behold, NOW IS THE DAY OF SALVATION."
6. One act of sin by Adam instantly corrupted human nature. Is it not reasonable to believe
that Christ, our second Adam, can as instantly purify the soul when he is fully trusted to do it?
Could Adam do in an instant, in corrupting the soul, what it must take our Lord Jesus Christ a
lifetime to undo, and call in death in the end, as some think, to complete the work?
If, as all believe, in a moment a work of such magnitude as regeneration is wrought,
imparting spiritual life to a soul, dead in trespasses and sins, and removing its weight of guilt,
grief, and doubt; may not the remains of impurity be washed out instantly by "the inspiration of the
Holy Spirit, that we may perfectly love and worthily magnify his holy name"?
7. The fact that inborn sin is a unit, an evil principle or taint infecting our nature, and
cannot be removed by parts, any more than its antagonism, the principle of life in Christ can be
imparted gradually in our regeneration, is evidence that sanctification is instantaneous.
8. The efficacious, meritorious ground of purity is the atoning blood of Christ. The
proximate, conditional source of purity is faith. The instrumental source is the Word of God. The
grand efficient agent is the Holy Ghost -- "sanctified by the Holy Ghost." If the work of purification
is thus wrought according to the Word of God, it must be instantaneous.
9. The uniform experience of all who are clear in the light of personal holiness teaches that
purification is instantaneous and not gradual. Experience has but one voice on this subject, i. e.,
that it was sought by consecration and faith, and received the same as regeneration, by direct
divine power. Gradualism does not accord with the experience of those who profess perfect love.
The instantaneous does.
62. Do not some enjoy Christian purity who did not seek it instantaneously?
Undoubtedly this is the case. A large class of Christians, and some entire denominations,
whose Christian character we do not question, do not believe in sudden conversions, and yet there
was a definite moment when every one of them who is a Christian was pardoned and regenerated,
and his new life began. They were neither pardoned nor regenerated gradually. Many who believe
in sudden conversions cannot tell the precise time of their conversion. They know they are
converted, and can say, "Whereas I was blind, now I see," but cannot tell the time of the change.
The same holds true in regard to entire sanctification. While most who are in the possession of this
grace sought it as an instantaneous work, and received it instantaneously, others cannot tell the
precise time when the full cleansing was wrought; and yet it was wrought in an instant.
63. Is the seventh chapter of Romans a portrayal of Christian experience?
It is not. As this is quoted so often to prove the necessary existence of sin in the Christian
believer, we will give a number of authorities upon it.
"This (the 7th of Romans) was never designed to depict the ideal Christian life, but is
rather the portrayal of the struggles of a convicted sinner seeking justification by the works of the
law. -- Dr. Steele Love Enthroned, p. 79.
"At the present day the church generally, Greek, Roman, Protestant, including some of the
latest commentators, have returned to the just interpretation, as held by the primitive church." --
Dr. Whedon, Com. Rom., vii.
"Surely, there is as clear an opposition between the Christian represented in the sixth
chapter as free from sin, and the seventh chapter, as miserable slaves to the law of sin and death
which was in his members, as between light and darkness." -- Dr. Whitby, Com. vol. vii. p. 37.
The celebrated James Arminius, in 1635, published a dissertation of eighty quarto pages on
this subject. He gives the views of the ancient fathers, and quotes from the writings of the
following, as teaching the views he held: Irenaeus, Tertullian, Origen, Cyprian, Chrysostom, Basil
the Great, Theodoret, Macarius, Ambrose, Jerome; and besides the fathers, he quotes Bede,
Paulinus, Cardinal Hugo, Thomas Aquinas, Haimo, Bruno, Erasmus, and Bucer, as advocating the
same opinion.
"After all that has been urged in favor of this interpretation (that Paul is speaking of himself
and of regenerated Christians), by Doddridge, Teller, and especially by Carpzov, it may justly be
considered as untenable." -- Dr. Bloomfield, on Rom. vii. 14.
Rosenmuller and Dr. Macknight both give the same opinion. See each on Rom. vii.
Professor Stuart, in his learned commentary on this chapter, takes the position that "Paul is
here speaking of himself in a legal state, or under the law, and before he was united to Christ." He
says: "The most ancient fathers of the church, without a dissenting voice, so far as we have any
means of ascertaining their views, were united in the belief, that an unregenerated, unsanctified
person is described in Rom. vii. 5-25. So Origen, Tertullian, Chrysostom, and Theodoret. In this
state the views remained down to the time of Augustine."
He says: "On the other hand, besides all the ancient Greek, and some of the Latin fathers,
there are many distinguished men who have defended the sentiment which has been above
exhibited. Such as Erasmus, Raphel, Episcopus, Limborch, Turretine, Le Clere, Heumann, Bucer,
Schroner, Frank S. Arnold, Bengel, Reinhard, Storr, Flatt, Knapp, Tholuck, and as far as I know,
all the evangelical commentators of the present time on the Continent of Europe. Most of the
English Episcopal Church, also, for many years, and not a few of the Scotch, Dutch, and English
Presbyterian and Congregational divines, have adopted the same interpretation. I cannot but
believe that the time is not far distant when there will be but one opinion among intelligent
Christians about the passages in question." These authorities ought to satisfy any candid mind
respecting the seventh of Romans.
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