| PROFESSION OF HOLINESS TENDS TO 
			PRIDE.Some object that the profession of holiness makes its professor 
			proud and self-righteous. How strange! to be free from sin and to 
			profess to be free causing the most heinous sins of all, pride and 
			self-righteousness! Some say we must sin to keep humble. If a little 
			sin will make us humble great sins should make us very humble. 
				Sin never humbled any soul. Who has more sin than Satan? And 
				who is prouder? Did sin make our first parents humble? If it did 
				not, why do our brethren suppose that its nature is altered for 
				the better? Who was humbler than Christ? But was he indebted to 
				sin for his humility? Do we not see daily that the more sinful 
				men are, the prouder they are also? Did Mr. Hill never observe, 
				that the holier a believer is, the humbler he shows himself? And 
				what is holiness but the reverse of sin? If sin is necessary to 
				make us humble, and to keep us near Christ, does it not follow, 
				that glorified saints, whom all acknowledge to be sinless, are 
				all proud despisers of Christ? If humility is obedience, and if 
				sin is disobedience, is it not as absurd to say, that sin will 
				make us humble, -- that is, obedient -- as it is to affirm, that 
				rebellion will make us loyal, and adultery chaste? See we not 
				sin enough, when we look ten or twenty years back, to humble us 
				to the dust forever, if sin can do it? Need we plead for any 
				more of it in our hearts or lives? If the sins of our youth do 
				not humble us, are the sins of our old age likely to do it? If 
				we contend for the life of the man of sin, that he may subdue 
				our pride, do we not take a large stride after those who say, 
				'Let us sin, that grace may abound; let us continue full of 
				indwelling sin, that humility may increase?' What is, after all, 
				the evangelical method of getting humility? Is it not to look at 
				Christ in the manger, in Gethsemane, or on the cross? To 
				consider Him when He washes His disciples' feet? and obediently 
				to listen to Him when He says, 'Learn of me to be meek and lowly 
				in heart?' Where does the gospel plead the cause of the Barabbas 
				and the thieves within? Where does it say, that they may indeed 
				be nailed to the cross, and have their legs broken, but that 
				their life must be left whole within them, lest we should be 
				proud of their death? Lastly: what is indwelling sin but 
				indwelling pride? At least, is not inbred pride one of the chief 
				ingredients of indwelling sin? And how can pride be productive 
				of humility? Can a serpent beget a dove? And will not men gather 
				grapes from thorns, sooner than humility of heart from 
				haughtiness of spirit? * But there is one point that needs careful consideration and 
			guarding: there are some who profess holiness in a boastful way that 
			gives the lie to their testimony and causes the onlooker to 
			suspicion the presence of a Pharisee. Such persons are fond of 
			saying, "I am sanctified no matter what you think about it;" "I know 
			my heart is clean and you can think as you please." These persons 
			are very conscious of their own worth and can feel power in nearly 
			anything they themselves say or do. They are liable to be a 
			contentious folk. They will stir up trouble on any circuit and are 
			always meddling with other people's affairs. Steer clear of such 
			persons, they are Pharisees in a sanctified man's clothes.
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