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CHAPTER
XVII.
STUMBLING-BLOCKS IN THE KING'S HIGHWAY
The
largest of these lies before the very gate of this highway:
-- 1. Full salvation, as an experience, is begirt with
speculative difficulties. Metaphysical quiddities
perplex and bewilder many believers, and they never emerge
from the fog into the clear atmosphere of truth till their
hearts are filled with all the fullness of God. The purified
heart clarifies the head. We can never philosophize
ourselves into that "perfect love" which `'casteth out all
fear that hath torment."
Faith is
the only door through which God enters the soul. Cease
philosophizing and take up the great work of believing.
"This is the work of God, (which God approves,) that ye
believe on Him whom He hath sent." No sinner would ever find
Jesus if he should stubbornly seek him with the lantern of
reason, refusing the lamp of faith. No imperfect believer
can grasp Jesus as the complete Saviour so long as he leans
upon speculative reason as a supplement of his defective
faith. Pride of intellect, the subtilest form of pride, is
keeping thousands of Christians from that higher knowledge
of God which is obtained only by climbing up the ladder of
faith. It is not necessary for the penitent sinner to be
able to define repentance with theological exactness before
he repents of sin, nor to have unquestionable views of the
atonement in its relations to God and to man. All that he is
required to do is, to abandon every other hope and plea, and
to cry, "For me, for me, the Saviour died." It is not
necessary for any soul to discriminate intellectually
between regeneration and entire sanctification, or between
the stream of love shed abroad by the Spirit of adoption and
the ocean of love which the abiding Comforter pours around
the purified soul, in order to enter upon this great
salvation. As it is enough for the penitent to know that he
is guilty, and Jesus can pardon, so it is enough for the
longing Christian to know that he is hungry, and that there
must be perfect satisfaction somewhere in the universe
correlated to that intense and painful appetency. It is
sufficient for him to know that God is a satisfying portion,
and to insist that he should completely satisfy our
spiritual cravings, as he has abundantly promised.
We find
in some honest minds a theoretical difficulty which
constitutes a stone of stumbling in the way of their seeking
full salvation. It is the notion that the grace of perfect
love is of the nature of a charism, or special gift of the
Holy Ghost, dispensed by the Father according to his own
will, and hence not attainable by all believers.
Are there
not instances in which the fullness of the Spirit, or
perfect love, is dispensed in a sovereign manner without
compliance with the usual conditions? We dare not say that
there are not; for (1.) We read in the Scriptures of one who
was to be filled with the Holy Ghost from his mother's womb.
(2.) We believe that the souls of infants, defiled by inborn
depravity, are, without faith on their part, entirely
cleansed before death by the blood of sprinkling because
they are included in the new covenant which is ratified by
that universal atonement which saves all souls which do not
willfully reject it by unbelief. (3.) For the same reason we
believe that all justified souls, all persevering believers
in Jesus Christ, who, through imperfect apprehension of the
"exceeding greatness of his power" to save to the
uttermost," are painfully conscious that they are not
cleansed from all inward unrighteousness, are, before death,
entirely sanctified by the sovereign will of Him who stands
pledged "to finish the good work which he has begun" in
them, and "to present them faultless before the presence of
his glory with exceeding joy "
Nevertheless we must be careful not to fall into the great
error of supposing that a blessing sometimes sovereignly
bestowed is not attainable by all who seek it in the way
prescribed in the Holy Scriptures. We are not to suppose
that because God fed Elijah by the ravens, and the
Israelites with manna from heaven, the ordinary and regular
mode of obtaining supplies by sowing and reaping is no
longer available to the human race. Says Mr. Wesley, "God's
usual method is one thing, but his sovereign pleasure is
another. He has wise reasons for hastening and retarding his
work. Sometimes he comes suddenly and unexpectedly,
sometimes not till we have long looked for him." Yet WesIey
strongly and constantly urges all the justified to press
forward and grasp this greatest prize this side of Glory,
saying, that "it is neither wise nor modest to affirm that a
person must be a believer for any length of time before he
is capable of receiving a high degree of the Spirit of
holiness."
The
arbitrary bestowment, in rare instances, of the Holy Spirit
in the fullness of his power for the accomplishment of some
great work in the spiritual kingdom, has led our
non-Arminian brethren in past days to regard this high
blessing as a charism, a special gift, not attainable
by every earnest seeker. Not a few Arminians who repudiate,
with great zeal for the honor of the impartial God, the
insinuation that the graces of repentance, pardon, and
adoption are dispensed only to a favorite few elected to
life from eternal ages, are, on purely Calvinistic grounds,
excusing themselves from strenuous and persistent endeavors
to obtain entire sanctification by imagining that only those
receive full salvation before death whose constitutions were
peculiarly constructed for its reception. This as
effectually paralyzes effort as the old doctrine of the
continuance of inbred sin till Death, the great sanctifier,
comes to the aid of Jesus. To exhort a thousand to seek the
higher life because it is possible that one of that number
-- the ratio fixed by this theory -- has the inherent
qualities necessary for its attainment, sounds very much
like advice to invest in a lottery ticket which has one
chance in a thousand of drawing the prize. But this
experience of perfect love is not a race, where here and
there one of a thousand lawful racers receives the crown.
The blessed Jesus has for every head, even in the present
life, a diadem resplendent with those precious stones called
by Mr. Fletcher "a spiritual constellation made up of these
gracious stars -- perfect repentance, perfect faith, perfect
humility, perfect meekness, perfect self-denial, perfect
resignation, perfect hope, perfect charity, for our
visible enemies as well as for our earthly relations,
and, above all, perfect love for our invisible God,
through the explicit knowledge of our Mediator, Jesus
Christ." This crown, O ye generation of worldly professors,
ye busy tribe of muck-rakers, intent upon your straws, the
Angel of the New Covenant, the adorable Son of God, is
holding over each of your heads and begging you to wear as
the badge of your present sonship and future kingship unto
the Lord God Almighty. Look up, and see and grasp this crown
designed to adorn your earthly life before that life has
vanished like a vapor, and you have irretrievably lost the
crown of graces on earth fitting for a more resplendent
crown of glory on high.
Some good
Christian people are alarmed at what they deem the incipient
fanaticism of those who testify that, through the abiding of
the Sanctifier in their hearts, they feel no proneness to
sin. This is another stumbling-block which should be
removed. We apprehend that a little attention to the meaning
of the terms "prone" and "proneness" will remove all cause
for alarm. Turning to Webster's Dictionary we find that
prone signifies "bending forward, inclined, not erect,
headlong, running downward; applied to the mind or
affections, usually in an evil sense, as prone to
intemperance." Wesleyanism has always taught that the
believer may be graciously delivered from that sin which is
described in the seventh of Romans as "another law in my
members warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me
into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members."
There is
no difference on this point between the advocates of the
theory of gradual sanctification and those who preach the
possibility of an instantaneous deliverance from this
proneness to sin. There would be just ground for alarm were
any persons in the present state of probation proclaiming
that they had attained a condition of grace in which they
were no longer liable to sin. There is a very great
difference between the possibility of sin and proneness to
it. Adam in Eden came from his Maker's hands with no
proclivity toward disobedience, yet there was that
possibility of sinning which is implied in free agency. The
same is true of the angels in their first or probationary
estate. But the entirely sanctified soul is neither angelic
nor Adamic, but is human, with all the disabilities of
powers crippled and dwarfed by sin. Hence, his liability to
sin is grounded on both his free agency and on these
disabilities. If you ask how a perfectly holy soul may sin,
you strike upon the vexed question with which theologians
and philosophers have wrested for ages -- the origin of sin.
To give a reason for sin is to justify it. Sin is the most
unreasonable thing in the universe. Yet it is possible for
the holiest soul in probation to perform that unreasonable
act. The most that grace can do for us here is to enable us
to abstain from sin -- "posse non peccare," as the
old theologians express it. We may approximate, but in this
world shall never reach, the state of inability to sin --
"non posse peccare." Practical inability to sin is
attained in that fixed state of character in which holy
souls will exist after death, when all the motives are so
manifestly preponderating toward virtue that sin is a
glaring act of suicide, from which the recoil is as
immediate as that of a sane man from precipitating himself
down a precipice. We have used the word practical to
indicate the certainty of the continued obedience of souls
after probation, confirmed in holiness, and yet, as free
agents, theoretically free to fall. There is another Latin
formula by which the fathers used to express the awful state
of character toward which impenitent sinners are all
hastening, lurid foregleams of which we see in the present
life -- "no posse no peccare," inability not to sin.
May not this self-induced and culpable inability to obey the
law of God be the ground of the final sentence to
everlasting punishment?
An
exhaustive discussion of the relation of a completely
sanctified soul to the possibility of sinning, involves the
theory of temptation. Some teach that sin enters the soul
when the sensibilities are stirred by the cognition of the
forbidden object by the intellect. We are not of that class.
The activity of the emotional nature in the presence of its
proper objects is just as inevitable as that of the
perceptive faculties. An apple presented to the gaze of a
hungry child necessarily awakens, not only a perception, but
a desire. This desire is as innocent as the impression on
the retina, or the cognition in the mind. Sin comes in when
the will indulges the desire, or even fosters it against the
remonstrance of conscience. Yet this state of excited
sensibility in the presence of a forbidden object is full of
peril, for here is where sin is conceived. "Lust when it is
conceived bringeth forth sin." Into this region the
Sanctifier enters, and does his work, by exterminating every
incentive to sin which is culpable in itself, such as pride
and malice; by preventing the improper excitement of the
innocent sensibilities, and by reinforcing the will, and
inclining it to obey the mandates of the moral sense, the
eye of which is now purged from the film of sin. The abiding
Comforter is, therefore, the keeping power within the soul.
The vigilance enjoined by our Saviour is obligatory upon the
entirely sanctified, and consists in that habit of faith
which holes the soul in communion with God, and links it to
that spiritual force which gives it constant victory, "being
kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation."
Hence we indirectly, yet most effectually, watch against all
sin, while we maintain that believing attitude of soul which
retains the Holy Spirit in the fullness of his purifying and
keeping power. A rupture in the continuity of this life of
faith is the breach through which the forces of Satan enter
and recapture the city of Mansoul. He has already passed
over the boundary between Christian discretion and
fanaticism who imagines that St. Paul did not write for him
"Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall,"
and that our Saviour did not have in view the highest state
of grace attainable under the Gospel when he said, "What I
say unto you, I say unto all, watch."
"Hang on
His arm alone,
With self-distrusting care,
And deeply in the Spirit groan,
The never-ceasing prayer."
We cannot
commend the scruples of those who say that they have reached
a religious experience in which they cannot join with the
congregation in the use of every hymn in our excellent
collection. I can blend my voice with that of every
worshiping assembly in singing hymns expressive of every
phase of experience. I can sing the language of the
penitent, because, though conscious of forgiveness, I wish
to remember with gratitude the miry pit from which my feet
have been taken. I would not for my closest devotion select,
--
"What
peaceful hours I once enjoyed!
How sweet their memory still!
The world can never fill:"
yet I
sing these words in order to increase thanksgiving to God
for filling this "aching void." For the same reason, while
conscious that all the currents of my soul have been
graciously made to flow heavenward, I may properly sing,
"Prone to wander." In public no one worships for himself
alone, but for the benefit of all the congregation.
2. There
are also practical difficulties. How may I consecrate
all to the Lord, and yet retain the control over all? How,
for instance, can I surrender all my property to God and
still retain some of it for life's uses? The question is
pertinent. No man can live without appropriating something
to his own personality. Property is one of the great natural
rights with which we have been invested by our Creator. We
could not exist without it. What are we to do when we
consecrate possessions to the Lord? Not to shovel our money
into the streets, or to pour it indiscriminately into the
treasuries of the nearest institutions, but to become
Christ's stewards for the faithful custody and expenditure
of this property, making it accomplish the greatest possible
good in the well-being of men and the glory of Christ. So
much as we can spare from our business and the proper
maintenance of our families we must make immediately
productive for good in some department of Christ's service,
for the Lord at all times condescends to use consecrated
substance. But so much as is requisite for the conduct of
our business and decent support of those dependent on us may
be retained and administered solely for the glory of Him who
gave himself for us. Here we must depend each on his own
Judgment under the illumination of the word and the Spirit
of God.
How may I
know that I have laid all on the altar? Self generally
rallies on some one point -- defends itself in some last
ditch. When that is surrendered, the struggle is felt to be
over. We know that we have yielded and hung out the white
flag, the token of our capitulation. Besides, with all
honest souls God is under covenant to reveal to them the
state of their hearts. It is the office of the Holy Spirit
to hold up a mirror and to furnish a lamp with which we may
see our exact visage. |