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CHAPTER
XIX.
OBJECTIONS ANSWERED.
My dear
fellow-Believer in Christ: You have honest objections to the
experience of entire sanctification as a distinct blessing.
Let me help you to remove them. You may be stumbling over
the glaring imperfections of some who profess to be walking
in this higher path of Christian life. In the first place,
remember that impenitent men are using the same argument
against all our endeavors to turn them to Christ. You
invariably tell them that Christianity is liable to be
counterfeited by hypocritical professors; that all valuable
things are exposed to base imitations; and that the most
valuable is the most exposed. Please apply your own logic to
yourself when reasoning on the question of the higher
Christian life.
Again,
the Holy Spirit, in his most intense illumination, does not
insure infallible moral judgments. John Newton, while master
of a slave-ship, blinded by the darkness of his times, said
that while enjoying intimate communion with God, "he never
had the least scruple as to the lawfulness of the
slave-trade;" and the seraphic piety of George Whitefield
did not deter him from pleading before the trustees of
Georgia for the introduction of slaves, on the ground of
"the advantage of the Africans." Hence a man whose heart is
full of love, and whose intellect is darkened by ignorance,
may appear unconscientious to one favored with high moral
culture.
You
should constantly bear in mind this fact, that a man can
never appear above the criticism of his fellow-men. Did
Christ, the absolutely sinless man, escape hostile
criticism? Was he not called a winebibber, a
Sabbath-breaker, a Beelzebub, and a subverter of the law?
The difficulty was not in Jesus, but in his green-eyed
critics. Perhaps this is the solution of your perplexity
about the imperfect exemplifications of the love "that
passeth knowledge." God once said to Abraham, "Walk
before me and be thou perfect." He did not command him
to be perfect in the estimation of fallible men. Suppose
that Abraham had interpreted the command to include men as
well as the heart-searching Jehovah? He is commanded to go
to Mount Moriah, and to offer Isaac in sacrifice. He goes
and exhibits to God a heart perfectly obedient, as proved by
the severest test. God is satisfied. But suppose that some
of Abraham's jealous neighbors wonder what the mysterious
three days' journey means, and that they follow on the
patriarch's track afar, and, at last, they see him actually
seize his son and cruelly bind him hand and foot; and then,
O horrible! he draws out from his belt a great sheath knife
and raises it on high and attempts to plunge it into the
throbbing heart of innocence. But something seemed to
prevent the wicked purpose -- the spies are too far away to
see what it was but they saw enough of Abraham's harsh
conduct in his family to satisfy them that his profession to
be an especial "friend of God" is a stupendous piece of
hypocrisy. "Perfection on earth," say they, "is all a myth;
we have proved it." Yet, while this damaging misconstruction
of Abraham's conduct is whispered from one to another of the
neighboring Canaanites, the patriarch is in the enjoyment of
the inward testimony that his ways please Jehovah; he walks
before him and is perfect. It may be thus with many a living
friend of God, maligned of men, while approved of Heaven.
False
professions of this blessed experience should be expected,
and due allowance should be made by all candid minds. But
where there is a secret disrelish for an experience so high,
it is natural to magnify such instances out of all due
proportion to the number of the genuine professors, as
wicked men magnify the hypocrisies in the Christian Church
till they hide the multitude of true Christians.
Are you
stumbled at the fact that many seek the fullness of Divine
love and do not find? Do not many feebly seek regeneration
and fail? There are no instances of persons seeking with
their whole heart, with an unappeasable hunger and a
tireless persistence, who have not received this greatest of
Divine benefactions. In the distribution of his spiritual
blessings God is no respecter of persons. "Every one that
asketh receiveth."
Fanaticisms have attended the profession of this high grace.
True. Extremists and unbalanced minds have abused
justification by faith. Yet this doctrine resounds in all
our churches. In all attempts to promote experimental
godliness there is danger that some one may go astray from
the path of sobriety. Our Protestantism, which accords to
every soul the right of studying the Bible and of access
immediately to God without the intervention of a
Latin-mumbling priest, must run the risk of more or less
abuse of freedom, and eccentricity in doctrinal belief.
There is no cure but the iron railroad track of papal
infallibility prescribing the exact grooves in which all
religious thought and devotion shall run. The remedy is a
thousand-fold worse than the evil. The fanaticisms which
have attended the people who have devoted themselves wholly
to Christ, and who have been filled with the fullness of the
Spirit, have been greatly exaggerated by the imaginations of
unsympathizing enemies. They are not half so disastrous as
the heresies that spring up in a cold and worldly Church,
void of the Spirit of Truth.
Again,
the people who profess holiness are generally unpopular.
They are secretly hated. A very accurate observer of human
nature has suggested the reason. He asks and answers this
question:
"Are
we not apt to have a secret distaste to any who say
they are saved from all sin?" Answer: "It is very
possible we may, and that upon several grounds;
partly from a concern for the good of souls, who may
be hurt, if there are not what they profess; partly
from a kind of implicit envy at those who speak of
higher attainments than our own; and partly from our
natural slowness and unreadiness of heart to believe
the works of God."
-- Wesley's "Plain Account of Christian Perfection."
This
answer could very easily be intended to include other
reasons for this distaste. A holy life is a rebuke to all
unholiness. Jesus was a perpetual rebuke to the Jews. In the
intense light of his pure life, their spots and stains were
made manifest through the whitewash of ceremonialism. Their
hatred of the light was turned against the light-bearer, and
Jesus of Nazareth was the best abused man of his times. In
this respect the servant must not expect to be above his
Lord. A person entirely dead to the world, and thoroughly
alive unto Christ through every fiber of his being, will
make all conformers to this world so uncomfortable that they
will begin to hate him, and to pick all manner of flaws in
his life. They are not willing to give up their idols, and
holiness comes to kindle a destroying fire among them. They
are averse to strenuous effort, to earnest wrestlings with
God at Peniel, and hence they dislike those who point to the
sunlit heights of life above the clouds, and urge them to
mount up thither, as disturbers of their repose. Again,
since all love to God is in antagonism to the spirit of this
world, the higher the degree the more intense that
antagonism.
Another
reason may be found in the activity of Satan, who seeks to
plunder the Gospel of that element which gives it the
highest efficiency in its warfare with his kingdom. He
blinds the eyes of them that believe not, lest the light of
the glorious Gospel of Christ shine unto them. He succeeds
so well with unbelievers that he applies the same method to
believers, blinding their eyes to their highest Gospel
privilege, the fullness of the Spirit, lest the light of
this blessing should gladden their eyes, strengthen their
hearts, and intensify their zeal against his kingdom. Says
John Wesley, in a letter to a Christian woman respecting her
preacher, in 1771:
I hope
he is not ashamed to preach full salvation, receivable
now by faith. This is the word which God will always
bless, and which the devil peculiarly hates; therefore
he is constantly stirring up both his own children and
the weak children of God against it.
Hence the
difficulty which the great Head of the Church has in keeping
this doctrine in the pulpit. It dropped out of the English
pulpit, and Methodism was raised up to bring it back.
Wesley, true to the great light, "the grand depositum
intrusted to the Methodists," found his preachers inclined
to abandon this precious theme. Even now, after the inquiry
on this subject among the laity has become so general, the
majority of preachers pass over the subject like a slurred
note in music, as if it was a demi-semi-quaver in the
jubilant song of our Christianity, and not its very
key-note.
Some
believers may be warped by the influence of those who are
mistaken in their profession of this blessing. Many,
quickened and gladdened by some manifestation of the
Saviour's love, jump to the conclusion that they are
entirely sanctified through the fullness of love, shed
abroad in their hearts, and, under injudicious advice, rush
into a declaration of full salvation before they have the
witness of the Spirit to this great work. (1 Cor. 2:12.)
Such persons soon become what Mr. Fletcher styles
"land-flood" or freshet "professors," left high and dry by
the evanescent emotions of which they are the subjects.
The
injudicious presentation of this blessing by some of its
advocates has contributed to the eclipse of faith in its
reality. Mount Sinai, instead of Mount Calvary, has been
taken for the pulpit, and the terrors of the Lord have been
denounced upon the Lord's children, although heirs of God,
and joint heirs with Jesus Christ. Let not this offend you.
The wise counsel of the founder of Methodism has not always
been heeded in preaching on this subject, "Always by way of
promise; always drawing rather than driving." Thus
injudicious advocates have awakened prejudice. All these
causes combined have almost wrested this doctrine as a great
vital, practical truth from the pulpits of Christendom, and
driven it into select meetings in parlors; from the
candle-stick to the bushel. O Lord! how long, how long, must
this precious light be hidden from the faith of thy people?
Speedily lift it up from under the bushels to the
candle-sticks, there to shine till its splendors blend in
the brightness of thy coming!
Are you
afraid that if you embrace Jesus as a whole Saviour you will
lose your broad sympathy for the whole body of believers and
become clannish? Are those who have found full salvation
inclined to clannishness from choice or from necessity? Is
there not such a chilly temperature in many Churches that
ardent believers can no more dwell safely in them than they
can in a sepulcher? They prefer the light and warmth of a
sympathizing Christian fellowship. Suppose, now, that all
the Church were rejoicing in the increased grace given to
each victorious soul, and, as in the case of St. Paul who
had been caught up to the third heavens, they were
glorifying God in him, we should hear no more of the
segregation of those who are fully saved, than we hear in
the New Testament Church of the withdrawal of the
Spirit-baptized from the neophytes who had not yet received
the Holy Ghost since they believed.
My dear
brother or sister in Jesus, the fault may be more in your
prejudice, your apathy, your love of the world, and lack of
consecration to Christ, than in the souls drawn together by
the mighty magnetism of love to Christ, the ruling passion
of their bosoms. Do you not suppose that the Jews accused
the disciples of clannishness when they persisted in their
ten days' upper-room meeting before pentecost, and afterward
in their breaking bread from house to house? The cure for
the fault-finding Jew would have been to secure the
pentecostal blessing, and feel the mighty attraction of
Christian love. Your remedy is, to attain that perfect love
which will bind you to all believing souls with a threefold
cord.
But this
intense fellowship, which has been stigmatized as
clannishness, may be one of the strong scriptural evidences
of Christian purity. Hear what St. John says will invariably
result when a number of fully-consecrated souls walk arm in
arm with Jesus, robed in the spotless linen of his
righteousness: "But if we walk in the light, as he is in the
light, we have fellowship one with another, and the
blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin."
Those in whom the bond of Christian communion is so weak
that Church sociables must be resorted to for the promotion
of Church feeling in the absence of true spiritual sympathy,
which died with the forgotten prayer-meeting and the
disbanded class-meeting, may well wonder at the mysterious
magnetism which draws together devout persons, and holds
them with hooks of steel, without ice-cream, oysters,
smokes, or other sensuous attractions of the club-room.
Let that
Church which is vexed with a clique devoted to the higher
Christian life take the following course, and the clique
will be killed and buried beyond hope of resurrection. Let
them no longer forsake the assembling of themselves
together, but exhort one another daily, while with one
accord and in one place they seek to be filled with the
Spirit. Then let them give free expression to His voice
within them, not by a hired quartette, but by speaking to
themselves "in psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs,"
making melody in their hearts to the Lord. (Eph. 5:18, 19.)
Let them evince the genuineness of the Spirit-baptism by a
life ever victorious over the world through faith in Jesus
Christ, a beneficence which comes from "first giving
yourselves unto the Lord," and a daily practice in harmony
with the moral code of the Gospel. Under such treatment
clannishness would speedily disappear, and the longest-lived
"holiness meeting" would not survive a month. Again, you are
stumbled by professors of a full trust in Christ, who still
keep their purse-strings closely drawn. The secretaries of
our various benevolent societies do not make this
indiscriminate charge against those who have professed to
find Jesus a complete Saviour. They know that recently, in
consequence of the revival of this doctrine and experience,
living springs of beneficence have been opened which are
pouring constant streams into the Lord's treasury. Here and
there a narrow-minded man has not been brought up to the
standard, either because his intellect has not been
sufficiently enlightened or his heart copiously anointed.
But you
see no reason why you, after a score of years in the average
Christian life, should rein up your soul to this one
definite aim -- full salvation through the blood of Jesus
Christ -- and go through a mighty struggle to attain that
which only a minority of the justified profess to receive
before they are laid on the bed of death. You think that if
such a glorious experience had been designed for you you
would have been led into it long ago, especially since in
your daily prayers you have constantly prayed for the
fullness of the Spirit. It may be that a subtle skepticism
has kept you from vigorous efforts to grasp this great
prize, which you might have seized in any day of your past
Christian life, if you had sincerely believed in Christ's
power to do this work, and distinctly aimed at it with all
the intensity of spirit of which you were capable. The fact
that you have gone so long without this pearl of great price
is a reason why you should now earnestly seek it; that thus
both your own happiness and your usefulness to your
fellow-beings may be increased, and your God honored. The
heaven on earth of heart purity cannot be entered by chance.
There must be a definite aim uniting all the forces of the
soul. "And ye shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall
search for me with all your heart." Jer.29:13. |