| INCONSISTENCIES IN PROFESSORS.Some base their objections to holiness on the inconsistencies 
			they see in the lives of professors.
 This method of argument is as reasonable as to take the stand that 
			there is no genuine money because there is a counterfeit. The fact 
			is there can be no counterfeit without a genuine, and, since there 
			is a mock holiness there must be a true holiness. It is natural that 
			the more counterfeit money we discover the more likely we are to 
			distrust all money, but our distrust does not change the character 
			of the real neither does the counterfeit take from the actual value 
			of the genuine, if it makes any difference at all it increases our 
			appreciation if not the value of the genuine. Thus with holiness, if 
			the fact of the existence of counterfeit makes any difference at all 
			it should increase our appreciation of the genuine. And since 
			holiness is a voluntary condition, if this condition remains 
			steadfast and keeps the soul amid shams and frauds the realization 
			of its actual value will increase as the days go by, and in 
			proportion to the oppositions which it endures and amid which it 
			conquers. Again, the fact that holiness is counterfeited does not 
			change the character of real holiness and the more spurious 
			professions there are the more does the beauty and grace of real 
			holiness shine forth, and the more is its actual character revealed.
 
 Then the objector asks to be shown a genuine case of entire 
			sanctification. When Wesley was asked to cite some examples of 
			sanctified persons he answered that if he knew any he would not 
			point them out to the quibbler for no matter how holy they might be 
			the objector would only tear them to nieces. "Cast not your pearls 
			before swine lest they trample them under feet, and turn again and 
			rend you."
 
 While these inconsistencies may be formidable in the mind of the 
			objector and while they may constitute an objection which he thinks 
			cannot be answered yet the whole matter fades into nothingness from 
			any angle it is viewed.
 
 1. The bad life of no single man or body of men is an objection to a 
			good doctrine which they may hold. While the false doctrines of an 
			heretic are the cause of his evil doings (for men are prone to do 
			evil if they can find an excuse for so doing), yet on the other hand 
			the good doctrines of a man who believes in holiness are not the 
			cause of his evil deeds but are the restraint that keeps him from 
			greater evils. If he does wrong he will immediately tell you it was 
			a transgression of his doctrine.
 
 This statement is not negatived even though the bad men that hold 
			the good doctrine may profess to be governing their lives by their 
			doctrine; instead of proving that the doctrine has a pernicious 
			effect it only proves that the professors are either ignorant or 
			hyprocritical.
 
 The fact that bad men make a profession of holiness does not prove 
			that the doctrine of holiness is pernicious; holiness cannot be 
			pernicious for its very nature is opposed to evil, these men may 
			profess holiness for policy or to bring reproach on the cause.
 
 2. Inconsistencies in one or many men's lives do not prove that 
			inconsistencies exist in every man's life. Because one man gets 
			angry when he whips his child he naturally thinks every man does the 
			same, but this is not necessarily the case.
 
 3. Because many men fail in their efforts to be holy, and because 
			you never met any one who according to your opinion was holy, does 
			not prove that all men fail and that there are no holy men. Darius 
			Green's flying machine would not fly, but men are flying now every 
			day whether you ever saw them or not, and whether you believe it or 
			not.
 
 4. What right has an unsanctified man and especially one who is 
			prejudiced against the experience of holiness to set up a standard 
			and then because no person he knows comes up to his ideas brand all 
			holiness professors as hypocrites and self-righteous? Surely such a 
			man falls into his own pit and his feet are taken in his own snares. 
			He is the self-righteous man.
 
 5. Who is the judge of a sanctified man, the quibbler or God?
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