| THE WITNESS OF OUR OWN SPIRITS.In his sermon on the "Witness of the Spirit," Wesley says,  
			That this testimony of the Spirit of God must needs, in the very 
			nature of things, be antecedent to the testimony of our own spirits, 
			may appear from this single consideration: We must be holy of heart 
			and holy in life before we can be conscious that we are so; before 
			we can have the testimony of our own spirit that we are inwardly and 
			outwardly holy. But we must love God, before we can be holy at all; 
			this being the root of holiness. Now we cannot love God till we know 
			he loves us. 'We love him, because he first loved us.' And we cannot 
			know his pardoning love to us till his Spirit witnesses it to our 
			spirit. Since, therefore, this testimony of his Spirit must precede 
			the love of God and all holiness, of consequence it must precede our 
			inward consciousness thereof, or the testimony of our spirit 
			concerning them. It will, perhaps, be profitable to tell what the witness of our own 
		spirit is and to distinguish between the witness of our spirits in 
		justification from the same witness in entire sanctification.  Justification and sanctification stand on different grounds, and, as 
		a consequence, are different in their manifestations to the soul. That 
		is, the evidence of the one is different from that of the other. Outside 
		of the direct witness of the Holy Spirit, each one carries with it its 
		own witness, and it is this "witness in himself" (1 John 5: 10) of which 
		we wish to speak.
 Justification being accompanied by regeneration, purifies the outward 
		actions and the voluntary tempers of the soul; while sanctification 
		entirely purifies the heart and removes the involuntary evil tempers of 
		the soul.
 
 It can readily he seen that it is easier to judge of actions than of 
		conditions, of voluntary than of involuntary tempers. In this fact lies 
		an explanation of the reason why so many people profess holiness who 
		have never attained to its rich fullness. They know they are doing 
		right, that their wishes are not contrary to God, and, as a consequence, 
		naturally enough conclude that their hearts are cleansed. But holiness 
		goes deeper than this, and purifies the condition of the soul -- the 
		fountain-head from which motives proceed.
 
 Since the evidence of holiness lies so deep it is clearly manifest, as 
		James Caughey says, that "the temptations to doubt concerning one's 
		purity are much more intricate and perplexing than those regarding the 
		forgiveness of sins."
 
 Both a justified and a sanctified soul have temptations and in a sense 
		the same kind of temptations, but there is this difference in the way 
		the soul meets them. Both have a feeling of aversion toward the thing 
		offered; this is grace, -- "the Spirit." But the justified person also 
		realizes a deep-seated something within that favors the idea of wrong; 
		of course he immediately subdues it, but it is there, and almost 
		involuntarily he groans for deliverance; but the sanctified soul has 
		nothing within that favors the wrong suggestion, but experiences a pure 
		feeling of aversion.
 
 Followed down to its deepest facts the difference in the evidence of the 
		two experiences is that the justified soul realizes the presence of a 
		sinful nature from which the sanctified soul realizes that he is 
		delivered.
 
 That the soul is blessed and has certain emotional experiences like 
		those of one whose heart is cleansed is no positive evidence that the 
		former is also cleansed. God pours out his blessings as he pleases, and 
		may give one justified person more joy than he does those in general who 
		are sanctified. This is God's part, and we should consent for him to 
		attend to it. Do not cover up the manifestations of carnality by saying, 
		"I am wonderfully blessed, and therefore must be clean."
 
 Again, the fact that, under certain circumstances which at one time 
		would have overcome you, you keep free and do not even feel impatient 
		within, is not positive proof of cleansing. It may or may not even be 
		proof of growth in grace. Physical and mental conditions are liable to 
		exercise a great influence over the way in which things are "taken;" and 
		the attitude of the soul at the moment may be such as to exclude the 
		probability of yielding just then, or even of being much tried at the 
		circumstances, while at other times it would take all the grace 
		obtainable to keep sweet.
 
 The fact that you do not feel SOME things that are sinful is not a sure 
		sign of purity. Everybody has weaknesses -- points where carnality is 
		the strongest, and would naturally be tried there, while other things 
		are hardly noticeable. Again, there are times when the devil makes 
		special assaults on our patience; then he tries jealousy, evil speaking, 
		etc., all in their turn; then with nearly everybody there come times 
		when he tries all at once. This is terrible, but it is the enemy's 
		business to makes things as terrible as possible. If under the most 
		severe trials there is found to be one sinful tendency remaining, your 
		heart is still unclean, no matter how free you may be in other 
		particulars.
 
 The weakness or strength of the carnal manifestations has nothing to do 
		with their presence. After an especial season of humiliation the movings 
		of sin will of necessity be weaker than when one is loaded with manifold 
		temptations, and the consequence will naturally be fondly to think the 
		soul delivered; but lo! in an evil hour they return with all their old 
		venom and force.
 
 The fact that, after a season of seeking holiness, a great blessing is 
		received and the soul feels free for some time, shouting and testifying 
		to being as free as a bird, is not proof positive of cleansing. Be 
		careful. The devil knows his business well, and sometimes lets a person 
		nearly alone and allows his "infernal offspring," as Adam Clarke says -- 
		the carnal nature -- to rest for the time being. He well knows that when 
		the person gets up high there will be a tendency to be off guard; then, 
		like a flood, he will come sweeping in and attempt to arouse all the 
		latent powers of the internal foe, and take the soul by storm. The 
		Psalmist cautions us to "Rejoice with trembling" (Psalm 2:11).
 
 The whole question centers in this one point again. Are there or are 
		there not carnal tendencies in the soul? Not, do you have greater 
		victory than formerly? And, from a strictly human point of view, the 
		fact of deliverance can only be known by a careful analysis of the 
		"workings of the soul." Here every man is his own judge, and God will 
		most surely hold us accountable for our judgment. The Holy Ghost will be 
		true to us, and if we honestly desire the whole truth of the matter he 
		will reveal it.
 
 Thus the evidence "in ourselves" of deliverance from carnality lies in 
		the deep-seated consciousness that the motives and desires are pure, 
		free from carnal bias. And if the heart is thus purified the most trying 
		circumstances, and the most piercing gazes of divinity flashed through 
		the soul, will only deepen that internal evidence; and each fresh 
		evidence will be like the breaking of an alabaster box of ointment in 
		the soul, spreading its delicious fragrance through the whole being. 
		Hallelujah!
 
 Taking it from another point of view, holiness is manifested in an added 
		quickness to discern the approaches of evil. There are times when the 
		justified soul unconsciously ponders illegitimate things, which are 
		rejected as soon as detected; but the sanctified soul without an act of 
		the will detects and with very little effort instantly rejects the 
		approaches of evil. There is a never-sleeping monitor of the soul that 
		sees danger from afar and wards it off. To some degree this is true in 
		justification, but there are weaknesses in the shield that are manifest 
		and groaned over. Charles Wesley expresses this thought thus in one of 
		his hymns:
 "I want a principle within,Of jealous, godly fear;
 A sensibility of sin,
 A pain to feel it near.
 
 "I want the first approach to feel,
 Of pride, or fond desire;
 To catch the wandering of my will,
 And quench the kindling fire."
 Again, holiness is manifested in a quickness to discern the leadings 
		of the Holy Spirit. True, there is left a certain amount of dullness and 
		sluggishness in this particular, caused by the infirmities of the flesh 
		and mind, but to these is added the blinding, stupefying presence of 
		carnality, in the justified soul, that is liable to confuse him in his 
		leadings. But the heavenly monitor which is enthroned in the holy soul 
		consciously or unconsciously to the person, with comparative ease 
		detects the leadings of the Spirit of God.
 Again, holiness is manifested in a quickness and readiness to obey the 
		slightest movements of the Spirit. It quickly recognizes his reprovings, 
		and heeds his warnings, and gladly does or ceases to do as the Spirit 
		directs. It has no struggle to subdue inward foes before obeying. 
		Obedience is the only rule of life.
 
 Holiness is manifest in a greater devotement to God. Devotion is its 
		atmosphere. In this it lives and moves and has its being. The justified 
		soul is devoted indeed, but struggles to subdue spiritual sloth and 
		rebellion.
 
 Holiness readily acknowledges that all things work together for the good 
		of its possessor. The justified soul tries to do this, and to a great 
		extent, no doubt succeeds; but it is done amid inbred tendencies to 
		break away from perplexing circumstances, and from an environment that 
		binds the Spirit; but holiness is resigned to all the providences of 
		God,
 "And in his hottest fire holds still." Holiness is manifested in greater fervor along all lines of heavenly 
		employment. We do not say greater exertion, for sometimes that 
		would be impossible, but greater fervor. In that spirit that not 
		only works but fully brings God into its work, and accomplishes with one 
		stroke what it would have taken two to have done without this fullness. 
		This fervor manifests itself in soul burden for the lost, in agonizing 
		prayer, in deep yearnings after God, in carefulness and even rigidness 
		of life, and every other kind of holy zeal.
 Its possessor has a deep consciousness that the principle underlying 
		each action is pure; that this principle abides and rules without a 
		rival; that all this quickening of his spiritual powers follows upon the 
		taking away of the vampire that has been sucking the vitality from his 
		most sacred duties, and that grace sits sole monarch, with every enemy 
		cast out of the kingdom within. Thank God for the possibilities of 
		grace!
 
 In Wesley's sermon on the "Witness of the Spirit," we read:
 
			We are all liable to trials, wherein the testimony of our own spirit 
			is not sufficient; wherein nothing but the direct testimony of God's 
			Spirit can assure us that we are his children.
 Two inferences may be drawn from the whole: the first, Let none 
			ever presume to rest in any supposed testimony of the Spirit which 
			is separate from the fruit of it. If the Spirit of God does really 
			testify that we are children of God, the immediate consequence will 
			be the fruit of the Spirit, even 'love, joy, peace, long suffering, 
			gentleness, goodness, fidelity, meekness, temperance.' And however 
			the fruit may be clouded for a while, during the time of strong 
			temptation, so that it does not appear to the tempted person, while 
			Satan is sifting him as wheat; yet the substantial part of it 
			remains, even under the thickest cloud. It is true, joy in the Holy 
			Ghost may be withdrawn during the hour of trial; yea, the soul may 
			be 'exceeding sorrowful,' 'while the hour and power of darkness' 
			continue; but even this is generally restored with increase, till we 
			rejoice 'with joy unspeakable and full of glory.'
 The second inference is, Let none rest in any supposed fruit of the 
			Spirit without the witness. There may be foretastes of joy, of 
			peace, of love, and those not delusive, but really from God, long 
			before we have the witness in ourselves,"
 etc.  Do not trust in any supposed witness of the Spirit of God unless the 
		fruit of a holy life, even the absence of heart sin and the presence of 
		all the beautiful graces of the Spirit immediately follow; and do not 
		trust in any imaginary graces unless the witness of the Holy Spirit is 
		given, for these two agree. If God has accomplished the work in your 
		heart, his witness will agree thereto, and he will inspire your heart 
		with a consciousness of the fact that it is clean every whit. Do not 
		trust ecstasies, no matter how wonderful they may be. Do not trust any 
		state of the emotions, but be determined to have the direct witness of 
		the Spirit, and be determined that this witness shall be accompanied by 
		the fruits of a holy life, the testimony of your own spirit, agreeing 
		thereto.
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