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CHAPTER IV.
FULL SALVATION IMMEDIATELY ATTAINABLE.
There is
no denial that entire sanctification is necessary to
admission to heaven. There is in many minds a doubt
respecting the attainment of perfect purity before death. It
is thought, so long as the soul and body are united, the
flesh must in some degree taint the spirit. The inherent
evil of matter is an old error of the Gnostics, borrowed
from pagan philosophy, and early introduced into
Christianity as a corrupting element. The Oriental
philosophers taught that matter is uncreated and eternal,
containing in it ineradicable evil; that the Creator, or
Fashioner, did the best that he could with it when he shaped
it into the human form; that he was not able, by any process
of sublimation or refinement, to expel evil entirely from
its nature, and that this inherent evil must continue to
defile the soul immersed in it till death shall dissolve the
loathed union. Then will the soul be in a condition to be
purified, if it is curable, by drifting on rivers of fire
till the stains are purged away. This is Platonism. This is
the origin of the Roman Catholic doctrine of purgatory.
Protestantism has shaken off the fire-purgation, but has too
extensively retained the death-purgatory. After seventeen
hundred years Christianity has not wholly emancipated
herself from this mischievous tenet of a heathen philosophy.
It is our purpose to show that there is no evil in matter or
in spirit which the blood of Christ cannot cleanse, and that
neither death nor penal fire, but the omnipotent Jesus, is
the complete purifier of sin-stained souls, and that the
only instrument he employs is the truth, and the only agent
is the Holy Ghost, the Sanctifier. Our proofs will be wholly
scriptural and experimental. The point to be demonstrated is
this: Can Jesus save from all sin, actual and indwelling,
long before death? The declaration of the angel to Joseph,
"Thou shalt call his name JESUS; for he shall save his
people from their sins," does not explicitly declare when
this salvation will be accomplished. But the implication is
that he is to be a present Saviour, just as a physician
advertising himself as a healer of cancers is understood to
heal patients now, not in future years, nor a few hours
before death. It is fortunate, yea, providential, that we
have an inspired comment on this name by Zacharias when
"filled with the Holy Ghost." With prophetic vision he saw
the immediate advent of Jesus, of whom his son John, then
eight days old, was to be the forerunner.
"Blessed
be the Lord God of Israel; for he hath visited and redeemed
his people, and hath raised up a horn of salvation for us in
the house of David.... That he would grant unto us, that we,
being delivered out of the hand of our (spiritual) enemies,
might serve him without fear, (and hence with perfect love,)
in holiness and righteousness before him, (not
fulfilling any mere human standard,) ALL THE DAYS OF OUR
LIFE." The deliverance was to be spiritual, and not an
emancipation from the Roman power; and the result, a glad
and holy service, was to ensue in this life. No language
could be used to express such an idea more clearly than
this. A still more explicit statement of the same great
privilege of believers is found in St. Paul's brief prayer
in 1 Thess. 5:23. He had just been enjoining duties which
none but those who are fully saved could possibly perform:
"Rejoice ever more. Pray without ceasing. In everything give
thanks." John Wesley says, "I know no higher Christian
perfection than this." To enable them to obey these
injunctions, and another just as difficult - "abstain from
all appearance (every kind) of evil" -- he offers this
prayer: "But may the God of peace himself sanctify you
wholly; and may your spirit, soul and body, be preserved
entire without blame, in the coming of the Lord Jesus."1
So intent
is the great Apostle on giving an adequate and explicit
expression of his meaning, entire sanctification, that he
uses a strong word found nowhere else in the New Testament
-- Dloteleis, wholly, rendered in the Vulgate
per omnia -- "in your collective powers and parts," marking
more emphatically than any ordinary New Testament word the
thoroughness and pervasive nature of the holiness prayed
for. Luther has very happily translated it "durch und durch,"
through and through. Then St. Paul has used another
peculiar term, which is found in only one other place in the
New Testament, in James 1:4, and gives it the position of an
emphatic predicate: "May your spirit be preserved entire,
your soul entire, and your body entire." He
ordinarily employs the word teleios, "perfect,"
when he marks what has reached its proper end and maturity.
But wishing to express a quantitative, and not
qualitative, meaning, he employs a term signifying
"entire in all its parts," "complete," lacking nothing.
Having in these strong and remarkable words indicated the
thoroughness of the sanctification, Paul leaves us in no
doubt as to the time, when he adds, "and preserve you
without blame in the coming of the Lord Jesus." Through what
period of time is the preservation to extend? Till the
second advent of Christ. This period covers the lifetime of
these Thessalonians, and the space between their death and
resurrection. To say that the prayer refers to the latter
period is to involve St. Paul in the papal heresy of praying
for the dead. Therefore the preservation which is to follow
the entire sanctification can refer only to the present
life up to the hour of death. So plainly is this true,
that no polemical writer has ventured to twist this passage
into any other meaning. The entire sanctification here
supplicated is not only in this life, but the peculiar
phraseology of the prayer implies that it is an
instantaneous work. To the objection that the verb
agiasai, sanctify, can here only be understood of
the gradual spread of the principle of holiness implanted in
regeneration; even Olshausen insists that the emphasis laid
on the "very God," or "the God of peace himself," "shows
that something new is to follow," some vigorous
interposition of the omnipotent arm of the Sanctifier.
Besides this, the verb is in the aorist tense, denoting a
single momentary act.
Before
taking our leave of this wonderful Scripture we call
attention to the fact, that it effectually refutes the
Gnostic error respecting the inherent evil of matter. In the
enumeration of the constituent elements of man which are to
be sanctified wholly, and preserved each entire, we find
"body," soma, which is wholly material. St. Paul knew
of nothing in man which was incapable of receiving the
efficacy of the cleansing blood of Christ. And lest there
should be any room for cavil, he specifies the phuxa,
the lower or animal "soul," in which inhere those passions
and desires possessed by man in common with the brutes. This
border land between pure spirit on one side and gross matter
on the other, lies open to the great Purifier as well as the
higher element of spirit, Pneuma, the designed
receptacle or temple for the abode of God in man. In the
Epistle to the Hebrews the Apostle's closet door gets ajar
again, and we hear these words breathed into the ear of God
-- so much like those just quoted as to indicate the same
pleader: "Now the God of peace, that brought again from the
dead our Lord Jesus, through the blood of the everlasting
covenant,2
that great Shepherd of the sheep, make you perfect in
every good work to do his will." This must be before
death, for good works must be in time. To be perfect in them
is to exclude every evil work, that is, all sin.
2. Every
Scripture in which we are exhorted to bring forth those
virtues and graces called the fruit of the Spirit, must
refer to this life. If these are required in perfection, as
they certainly are, they must exclude their opposites.
Perfect love supposes the extirpation of every antagonistic
affection; perfect meekness, all unholy anger; and thus with
all the other graces.
3. We
argue again, that entire holiness is attainable in this
life, because all the commands to be holy must refer to the
present. Grammarians tell us that all imperatives are in the
present tense. If they cover the future they include the
indivisible now. "Be ye holy," plainly requires present
holiness. "Be ye perfect," enjoins perfection today. "Thou
shalt love the Lord with all thy heart," is a command
enforcing perfect love today, if it means anything.
4. The
promises of sanctifying grace are available to believers
now, or they are worthless. For true faith can be exercised
for spiritual grace for ourselves only as it rests on the
promise which includes the present moment. "Knowing this,
that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth
we should not serve sin." This promise of the destruction of
sin begins now, and is followed by a glorious henceforth
of emancipation this side of death. Let the reader study the
following promises, and observe how manifestly they imply
present fulfillment: Isa. 1:18, 25; Titus 2:14; 1 John 1:9;
4:16-18. Let him also remember that every command to be holy
covers the present, and contains an implied promise of the
aid of the Sanctifier.
5. It
remains to examine one Scripture in which it is asserted
that our evangelical perfection is in express terms deferred
to some future time, namely, 1 Peter 5:10: "But the God of
all grace, who hath called us unto his eternal glory by
Christ Jesus, after that ye have suffered a while, make you
perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle you." Some tell us
that the adverbial clause, "after ye have suffered a while,"
modifies the following verb, "perfect." Let us read it this
way, and we will find that the poor souls for whom Peter
prays cannot claim to be "stablished" now, nor strengthened
now, nor settled now; but they must be tossed about in
weakness and instability till after they have "suffered
awhile." This is certainly contrary to the uniform promise
of God to help in time of need. We need the most help when
we suffer. Then again, the soul deserted of God for a while
is anxious to know the length of this indefinite "a while."
How long a time must elapse before I can claim by faith the
strengthening grace here supplicated? It is evident that the
four verbs "perfect," "stablish," "strengthen," and
"settle," are all in the same grammatical construction. If
we must wait a while to be perfected, we must also wait in
suffering to be strengthened. But now suppose that, with the
best biblical scholar of the century, Dean Alford, we attach
the adverbial clause to the verb "hath called," what will be
the rendering then? "But the God of all grace, who called
you unto his eternal glory (heaven, not now, but) when ye
have suffered a little while, himself perfect you (now, )
stablish," etc. This rendering is simple and clear. It
obviates all the difficulties of the other rendering, and
makes God a present help in our extremity. The sufferings
must be passed before the glory can be entered. They are the
condition of the reward. This is all that St. Peter intended
by the clause in dispute. As God is ready to pardon now
every sinner on the earth who comes in penitence and faith
in Jesus, so is this Almighty Saviour able and willing, at
the present moment, to cleanse and endow with the fullness
of the Holy Spirit every believer who honors Christ by a
trust in his promise of the abiding Comforter. So intense is
his abhorrence of sin that he longs to wipe out the last
spot that defiles humanity.
6. The
experimental evidence that the blood of Christ avails to the
complete cleansing of the believer before death would fill
many volumes. We give the first that comes to hand.
A few
years ago the wife of a distinguished minister was lying
hopelessly ill. All was mist and uncertainty before her.
She longed for the purity and peace promised in the holy
word, but her husband had always preached a gradual
growth in grace, and completeness in Christ only at the
last moment of life, and she waited for that hour in
dread uncertainty.
'O
that I could have complete deliverance from sin now,
before that fearful hour!' she exclaimed.
'Why
not now?' the Spirit suggested.
She
sent for her husband, and as he entered her
sick-chamber, she anxiously inquired, 'Can Christ save
me from all sin?'
'Yes;
he's an almighty Saviour, your Saviour able to save to
the uttermost.'
'When
can he save me? You have often said that he saves from
all sin at the dying moment. If he is almighty, don't
you think he could save me a few minutes before death?
It would take the sting of death away to know that I am
saved.'
'Yes,
I think he could.'
'Well, if he could save me a few minutes before death,
don't you believe it possible for him to save a few
hours or a day before death?' The husband bowed his
assent. 'But,' she said with deep earnestness, 'I may
live a week, or a month; do you think it possible for
God to save a soul from sin so long before death ?'
'Yes;
all things are possible with God,' he answered with deep
emotion.
'Then
kneel right down here and pray for me. I want this full
salvation now, and if I live a month, I will live to
praise God.'
He
knelt beside her bed, and poured out his soul to God in
prayer as he had never done before. And while he prayed,
the cleansing blood that makes whiter than snow was
applied to her soul, and she was enabled to rejoice with
a joy unspeakable and full of glory. She lived a month
afterward to magnify the grace of God, and testify of
the perfect love that casteth out all fear. And since
that hour her husband has preached Christ as a present
Saviour, able to save from all sin.3
The following
experience of a Presbyterian preacher's wife who still
lives, and testifies on both continents to the cleansing
blood of Jesus Christ purifying her from all sin years after
conversion, meets the objection urged by some that those
experiencing entire sanctification are only just then
converted or reclaimed from a backslidden state: --
When I
was converted my conversion was so marked, so clear, so
decided, that I never could have a doubt of it. I went
on for three years in the ordinary Christian way,
(sometimes gaining a little, perhaps, but at other times
defeated,) battling against my besetting sins -- against
pride and ambition, against impatience and irritability,
against worrying about the future, and about the petty
things of life.
But
at the end of three years I was taught a very different
way from that of making resolutions, and struggling into
the Divine life, and battling down my ambition, and
pride, and levity, and all those things which tormented
me. I found that Jesus Christ would do all that work for
me. After I learned this, my life was changed. O, how
changed it was! How calm and serene it became! There was
such a resting on Jesus! He seemed to be with me every
day, and all the time; and I looked to him to keep me
from pride and ambition, and from the worriments of
life, and from anxiety about the future, and I found
that he did that work for me. He did it all the time. He
is the Conqueror of sin. If we leave ourselves in his
hands he does for us what we cannot do for ourselves.
A widely
known deaconess, in evangelical labors most abundant,
testifies to a steady growth up to the time when the love of
Christ was made perfect in her heart by the fullness of the
Holy Ghost: --
For
years I worked and worked to get the Christian graces,
and fit myself for salvation by Christ. And 0, how hard
that was! But then it was a great deal easier than to
submit to Jesus. My heart chafed and found no rest until
I was willing to accept the words of Christ when he said
to me, "Your heart is deceitful and desperately wicked,"
and at the same time to accept his words when he said,
"I will save you," and to trust in him. After that,
doubts went from me, and there seemed to be a full
resting in the righteousness of Christ, in his merits,
in his atonement. There was no rest In myself, in my
experiences, or aught else besides simply resting upon
Christ to save me eternally, and accepting his promises
to be with me everywhere and every day, and to guide me
in all things. In this there was peace and Joy to my
soul.
All
that I can think of by which to illustrate my Christian
life is this, that it was like sitting in a rowboat and
rowing up stream, and making progress by severe effort;
until, by and by, there comes a steamer along, and the
weary toiler is asked if he will not have a ride, and he
steps on board, and makes the remainder of the voyage
easily and pleasantly. It seemed at first that the
Christian work was hard and wearying, but after that it
was God doing the work in me, God pushing me on, God
leading me, God guiding. And now it is easy -- easy in
the family, with the little ones, everywhere. For it is
love the love of God that is working. The soul is filled
with love. And 0, how love will go anywhere, and count
no cost, and keep no record of what it does! There is no
burden at all about living for a loved object. It is
perfect freedom."
We have
not space for the clear testimonies of Madam Guyon,
Catharine Adorna, Monsieur De Renty, John and Mary Fletcher,
Hester Ann Rogers, Bramwell, Carvosso, Adam Clarke, J. B.
Taylor, Wilbur Fisk, Olin, Hamline, Alfred Cookman, and a
host of others, whose biographies are a precious legacy to
the Christian world, and a directory to all who are seeking
to find the highway of holiness. |