What is Holiness
by Z.T. Johnson, Ph.D.
First Fruits Press Wilmore, Kentucky c2015
What is Holiness? by Z.T. Johnson First Fruits Press, ©2015 Previously published: Louisville, Kentucky: Pentecostal Publishing Co., ©1936 ISBN: 9781621712091 (print), 9781621712107 (digital), 9781621712114 (kindle) Digital version at http://place.asburyseminary.edu/firstfruitsheritagematerial/100/ First Fruits Press is a digital imprint of the Asbury Theological Seminary, B.L. Fisher Library. Asbury Theological Seminary is the legal owner of the material previously published by the Pentecostal Publishing Co. and reserves the right to release new editions of this material as well as new material produced by Asbury Theological Seminary. Its publications are available for noncommercial and educational uses, such as research, teaching and private study. First Fruits Press has licensed the digital version of this work under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/. For all other uses, contact: First Fruits Press B.L. Fisher Library Asbury Theological Seminary 204 N. Lexington Ave. Wilmore, KY 40390 http://place.asburyseminary.edu/firstfruits Johnson, Zachary Taylor, 1897-1981. What is holiness? [electronic resource] / Z.T. Johnson. 1 online resource (239, [5] pages ; 21 cm. ): digital. Wilmore, Ky. : First Fruits Press, ©2015. Includes index. Reprint. Previously published: Louisville, Kentucky: Pentecostal Publishing Co., ©1936. ISBN: 9781621712107 (electronic) 1. Holiness. I. Title. BT767 .J57 2015eb
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Cover design by Wesley Wilcox
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First Fruits Press The Academic Open Press of Asbury Theological Seminary 204 N. Lexington Ave., Wilmore, KY 40390 859-858-2236 first.fruits@asburyseminary.edu asbury.to/firstfruits
WHAT IS HOLINESS
Z. T.
Johnson,
Executive Vice-President of
Ph. D. Asbury College
Copyright, 1936 PENTECOSTAL
PUBLISHING
Louisville, Ky.
CO.
DEDICATION
Dedic ted
to
the
dio Devotion l
Le gue, sponsored by
Asbury College.
PREFACE This book
written with a definite purpose in students in colleges a definite basis
was
view� to
to
of
upon the fundamentals of holiness� textbook which could be taught in
give reasoning provide a
to
holiness schools in a logical and forceful manner� to make available to all holiness preachers that ma: terial in the Scriptures and in the commentaries of
Wesley and Clarke which they can use in the build ing of holiness sermons. The broad general purpose was to make available to a
all persons interested in the doctrine of holiness simple yet practical book which would answer
many of the questions that arise in connection with the title of the book: What Is Holiness? It should be the
enriching the spiritual life of those experience; of strengthening those who believe in it; and of making
means
of
who have obtained the the faith of
it clear to those whose minds may be confused
the
on
subject.
so arranged that it can be used easily teaching purposes in the classroom or can be used by ministers and students as a general reference book. The index has been arranged with this in view. Finally, the writer has attempted to do a number of things in this book: I. To quote practically all the Scriptural ref erences on the subject of holiness and give an expla
The book is
for
nation of each. II.
!
To show the
exact
position
!1
that
John Wesley
and Adam issues
holiness.
possible a ready reference book by complete index, logically arranged, which enable preachers, and especially young preach to find basic material for the building of holi
III. use
will ers, ness
I
Clarke took in reference to the vital the doctrine and experience oďż˝
surrounding
of
To make
a
sermons.
.
Finally,
to
present
to
tion, What is holiness? it and
those who may be in
interpretation of the ques as Asbury College stands for
terested the fundamental
in the institution attempt to train the and missionaries who come to ministers prospective us for their college and seminary work. With the exceptions of the quotations, of course,
the
as
we
opinions printed interprets
the author
herein
are
purely personal
the facts involved. . T.
!
!2
Johnson.
as
!
!3
INTRODUCTION The
positive
"without
statement
holiness
no
in the
holy Scriptures that,
shall
man
see
the
lifts the whole
Lord,"
subject of salvation from sin, purity of heart, and righteousness of life to a place of im portance where it cannot be ignored by any thought ful person
claiming
to
be
a
Christian.
The title of this book ought to awaken interest and suggest investigation on the part of all persons who believe in a future state of conscious existence.
The reader will find that the writer, Dr. Z. T. Johnson, has gone deeply and carefully into the whole subject of holiness as taught in the Old Testa ment
and the New, and has
logical treatise that is ing, and satisfactory. The book is for
scholarly
at once
timely. There dispassionate
and
given us a clear and illuminating, convinc
just now a subject Christianity
is real need
discussion of
that lies at the very foundation of the of Christ, and has in the past few decades been the cause of much discussion in religious circles, some times with
a
spirit
of
antagonism
and bitterness that
harmony with holiness of heart, and that should bind all believers in Christ
quite out fraternity into a holy brotherhood.
was
the
of
quite free from any sort of spirit offensive of controversy, but places before the reader in a forceful and courteous manner one of the This volume is
!
!4
important Scriptural doctrines that can claim the attention of any reader. It can be used as an excellent textbook in seminary, college, or Sabbath
most
School class.
personally grateful to Dr. Johnson for the painstaking and thorough manner with which he has investigated this great Bible truth and the man ner in which he has placed the results before us. I anticipate a large sale, and a wide and profitable study of the book. I
am
H. C. Morrison.
!
!
5
!
6
!
7
!
8
CHAPTE
I
Holiness Phr seology
The the
people
holiness
v rious
ter
s
ccusto
re
for the doctrine
experience they profess. By
e
e
there is
hich nd
n
y hich
The
ter
dhere
ho
they
the holiness
nd
s
hich
to
the
people
forceful f ctor in his theo
y beco e ing nd his
logic l thin those
using
to
te ching th t to regener tion experience subse uent be obt ined by the believer in Christ,
those
n
ed
believe in
pr ctices
of life.
y be divided into t non-Scriptur l nd those
used re
o
groups hich re
Scriptur l. They re f ili r to holiness people every here, nd, even though str nge to the out sider, re e sily understood by those ho believe in the experience. There re t le st eight phr ses in co on use hich e e ns y ter non-Scriptur l. This to s y th t they re not Scriptur l uot tions, but re st te ents b sed upon the Scriptures, nd in so e c ses re l ost ex ct Scriptur l uot tions. It is li e
ise
true
th t
so
preted differently by v er l thing, they re co He rt purity is ter
rience of holiness, sense.
It
fic tion
usu lly brings
of these
e
e
ns
s
rious groups, but, on
th t the
s
inter gen
the expe r ther gener l to
experience ch nge
definite 9
re
phr seology.
hich refers
nd is used in
bout
ter
of s ncti-
of
he rt
1
WHAT
condition.
depr ved
sin,
HOLINESS
result of the This he rt condition is s inbred to referred n ture, so eti es
hich is the
before he
IS
co
spiritu l condition of every person into person l no ledge of re By he rt purity is e nt the exter
es
dee ing
gr ce. in tion of inbred sin, the er dic tion of the de pr ved n ture, nd the infilling of the he rt ith
perfect to
nd for
love for God
every
longer
fro
resulting
disturb nces
Christi n nifest.
or
The second
even
hu
of gr ce,
s id, is properly so-c lled, is ter iness co es to the individu l s or
ith
of gr ce.
reg rd
there is
There
to
re
The inner
hich, John Wesley
i plying result of
three schools of
this
theory. thing s
th t hol
second
thought
One school holds th t
second or of gr ce, but th t, s f r s n ct of God is concerned, one gets his Christi n experience ll t once. This group ould be foolish to s y th t God uses holds th t it no
such
nity.
inbred sin, hich co e fter conversion, re no
h t c n be done in one. or s of gr ce to do The second school holds th t holiness of he rt is obt ined by gr du l process of gro th, hich is consu ted t or ne r the ti e of de th, nd th t it t
is
o
i possible
closing The
to
obt in this
hours of one s life.
experience
until
second-blessing people, ho ever,
the
contend of gr ce is necess ry by virtue n experience itself. of t le st t o f cts. One is hu th t fter conversion, no Actu l conditions sho h ve been, one sooner cle r the c se tter ho y
th t the second
or
or
l ter discovers the f ct th t there is
ithin hi
WHAT c rn l n ture, sinful uprisings
he rt. th t
inbred, sinful bent
n
hich
ust
be s nctified
or
there
indic tive of
not
re
Scriptur l
The other f ct is th t it is
e
11
HOLINESS
IS
fter
e
re
pure s y
to
h ve been
con
verted. The
the first
or
is
not
re
ct
n
of
forgiven. The forgiveness, but
hich God t
es
purifying po er The deeper life is by v rious people to the
ti n gr ces.
of the
life
Holy
co e
second
life
on
ter
Ghost,
gener l experience
nd the re li
Those
th t to
, but it is used
different types of Chris use, ho ever, is to refer to th t
s
one
they
ho
body spe
tion
is the
of the
h ve found the
This
deeper Holy
of the
the p rt of the Chris ple of the Holy Ghost.
on
te deeper life usu lly e n experience of s nctific tion ore spiritu lly s tisfying
be richer, fuller, nd ny st te or condition before
th n
hich the
in
of co union, ith God, hich
nd
ti n th t his
of gr ce
n
pl ce spiritu l rel tionship ver ge Christi n does not en oy. co es by virtue of the b ptis
devotion,
or
Ghost.
Christi n finds th t there is the
lly for directly
process of cle nsing, the c rn l n ture through
out
The
deeper
the
is th t in
of gr ce one s sins re ctu ll the sins of life for hich he is
given responsible by
blessing
ent for the second
rgu
no
n
to
the
.
The rest of f ith is phr se b sed upon the st te in Hebre s th t, There re ineth, therefore, It is not so co rest to the people of God. only entioned, but is used s so e of the other ter s ent
usu lly spo en the second
or
of in this
of gr ce h s
nner
to
brought
indic te th t to
the indi-
1
WHAT
vidu l
rest
in f ith th t he did
One of the
ost
Spirit-filled life. groups of people
co
to
indic te
th t
ter
on
This
r ther loose
to
find in his
not
experience.
verted
In
HOLINESS
IS
used
is e
n
t
s
is th t of the
by
o
t
re
le st
different
by especi lly
y, it is used
they
con
t
o
things.
third group devoted to
dv nce ent of His ingdo . entioned usu lly thin s of groups the Spirit-filled life s hich the presence life in of the Holy Spirit en bles one to eep sin con uered. This group is so eti es referred to s the suppresnd
God
to
One of the t
the
o
people in gener l, ho ever, Spirit-filled life s th t in hich the spe Holy Spirit h s co e in s nctifying po er nd h s t en up His bode in the soul. They e n, fur
sionists.
The holiness
of the
ther, th t their lives nd influence of the
Ghost.
do
re
recogni ed
in ted
by
the po er
presence of the
Holy
ter l ost Scriptu l. perfection is do not e n th t By people they re perfect in ct or thought or ord. They e n th t they h ve entered into rel tionship ith God in hich the their lives re so Holy Spirit through nd their ills do in ted by Hi , re so subser
Christi n
it the holiness
vient to His one
of love
ill th t the bond bet een the t o is nd perfect h r ony.
nd obedience
The victorious
life
is
n
expression
so
eti es used the f ct th t over sin nd self
people, experience gives the victory nd ll c rn l nd orldly conditions nd rel tion ships. The eynote of the phr se is oyful victory by
the
the holiness
nd refers
to
WHAT over
sin
Spirit.
through
The C n n the Old Test
ho left il
hills
nd
13
HOLINESS
ind elling Holy
the po er of the
experience
Egypt
l nd, they
IS
is phr se b sed upon ent story of the children of Isr el to go to the Pro ised L nd. This
ere
honey.
told,
s
cli b, its sp n but, t the s
ount ins
to
gi nts
to
to cross,
ti e, it
e
hich flo ed
one
It h d its
s
ith
con uer, its its v lleys to
such
luxurious
living supposed pure de is of nder conversion light. Le ving Egypt typic l in the ilderness the troubles ing represents brought on by inbred sin crossing the river Jord n is sy l nd th t
in it
bolic l of the second
be
to
s
or
of gr ce
nd the C n
n
experience typifies the oy, delight, nd spiritu l luxury th t one enters into hen he gets the bless ing of holiness. There
co
little
re
bout
only used, rgu
ent.
interch nge bly
distinction ould be s s
ten
So
e of these
ter
hich
y ell for
expressions
nd ith the others, de. At the s us
to
get
discuss e ch
vie
hich
s
there
be
co posite presented by the . to
Scriptur l bout
nd
no
e
one
of the ide
is re
re
very used
technic l
ti e, it
briefly
so
of holiness
gener l ord. It indic tes the experience of perfect rel tionship ith God of the Holy hich is brought bout by the b ptis one usu lly e ns holiness the people Spirit. By those ho h ve oined r n s to expound the doctrine hich they believe. in Holiness is
r ther
WHAT
1
IS
HOLINESS
is Chris understood. In gener l, the ord is t en over fro ti n perfection. This His co nded dis He hen Christ of st te ent ther ciples, Be ye therefore perfect even s your Its n ture h s is in he ven gener l lre dy perfect.
Perfection
is
nother
gener l
it
e
ns
ter
the
,
s
often e
s
been discussed.
in to perfection, phr se closely of holiness signifies experience perfects one in his love for God nd for hu nity. One c nnot love his God or his fello - en perfectly s long s
Perfect love,
th t the
ith one s he rt inbred sin is in the he rt but cle nsed, it is possible to love perfectly.
Pure in he rt is b sed upon the Be titude, Blessed the pure in he rt for they sh ll see God. This ter is used r ther gener lly, but it is co re
only
understood
to
denote the
fic tion.
experience
of s ncti-
used nd under inbred sin is hen stood. It refers to ore inner no t en out of the he rt, there is left y be physic l response to te pt tions. There De d to sin is
ter
fre uently
the f ct th t
llure ents,
ple sures there is
te pt tion bec use of nticip ted depr vity of the he rt is gone, the inner pull or the e se of longer or
but if the no
s be response to sinful present tions th t there fore the second or of gr ce. A phr se hich is so eti es e ployed, but not ith Christ. gener lly, is th t of being crucified This does not refer, of course, to n ctu l crucifix
ion, but st te
ent
to
spiritu l one. It postle P ul,
of the
is dr I
die
n fro
d ily.
the Its
WHAT
IS
1
HOLINESS
usu l e ning is th t one is so de d to orldly nd sinful things, nd so live to the things of God, th t his life is do in ted by the spirit of service nd of s crifice.
The ind of Christ is st te ent b sed upon the exhort tion, Let this ind be in you, hich s lso in Christ Jesus. When holiness believer testifies th t he h s the th t he is do
illingness
nd
served,
nd
thoughts,
of his
ster do
e ns ind of Christ, he of self-s crifice spirit
the
inste d of the desire
is deter
ined
to
thin
nd to let the pure life, in te his every ctivity. ll
filthiness of
expression done by the Holy
nother or
live
fro
by
to serve,
th t he
to
Cle nsed is
in ted
used
the
flesh
nd
to
be
pure
spirit spirit
indic te the type of Spirit in the process of to
ord filthiness does not refer s nctific tion. The ission of sins, but to the condition of to the co this st te denotes inbred sin. To be cle nsed fro or of the the Holy Spirit c rried out in h ving
one s life.
B pti ed ith the Holy Ghost is ter used in s the Scriptures on nu erous occ sions. It pro s urged upon the believers by ised by Christ it nd it h s been t ught s the disciples necessity he rt throughout the centuries. The hu n of the Holy Ghost, the third person of the Trinity, is the Agent ho does the or of the Godhe d, hich n he rt. The b p e c ll s nctific tion, in the hu tis
of the
ti n s life
Holy
Ghost is the
one event
hen he is cle nsed fro
in the Chris
ll inbred sin
16
nd
WHAT set
e ptied The
HOLINESS
IS
side for the of self, nd ord s nctific
ster s de
tion
is
purified vessel,
use,
holy
the Lord.
unto
possibly
the
ost pro inent nd i port nt of ll holiness ter s, bec use ithin it is found not only the gener l phr seology nd theology but the ctu l indic tion of h t holi ords. ness re lly is. The t o Gree ord co es fro
One of these
by cle nsing. purging. In of
rugged,
ords is
the Gree s
used
to
individu listic
indic te the
It h s in it the ele
the
is the
Scriptures
ill of God, ord is used in
even
e
ord
thorough process sifting nd
ent of re
told th t
This
The your s nctific tion. in sense nd l specific
gener Gener lly spe ing, it speci l service. In the specific
sense.
e
ns
to set
sense, it hether it be of cl y,
fies th t the vessel, it be hu n life, is
l or
side for
ys signi
hether
de holy before purged nd side for the definite service to hich it is dedic ted. There re hich re used by ny other ter s the holiness people, but these re the ost co on nd ost essenti l ones. An underst nding of the nd ill en ble gener l Scriptur l b sis for the his o n on the sub ect of one to settle thin ing fir found tion upon holiness nd lso give hi it is
set
hich
to
st nd in
c lly.
defending
E E 1.
.
B
the
ENCE
uel
L.,
theoreti
BOOKS
er, Sherid n, Hidden
Brengle, S Ch pter I.
experience
The
nn ,
Ch pter
I.
W y of Holiness,
WHAT
3.
Broo s,
.
Heironi
. 6.
. .
John Ch pter II.
IS
.,
HOLINESS
Scriptur l
1
S nctific tion,
us, H. T., The The e of the Ages, Ch pters I-IV. Jones, W., The Doctrine of Entire S nctific tion, Ch pter III. Lo ry, Asbury, Possibilities of Gr ce, p. 191.
ullness of the ll lieu, Will rd ., The the Blessing of Gospel of Christ, Ch pter IV. C. Entire nd uth, W., S nctific tion, pp. 1
9.
9. 1 . 11.
1 .
See, Is c ., The est of ith, Ch pter III. Steele, D niel, A Defense of Christi n Perfec tion, Ch pters III, V. T ylor, B. S., Wor s on Holiness, Ch pter I. Wood, J. A., Perfect Love, Section I.
CHAPTE
II.
Wh t Is Sin
possibly one of the theology. If
Sin is
in
ost
difficult
proble s
it could be settled
ll Christi n
once
rgu ny theologic l disputed through the cen ith reg rd to turies. There re v rious theories it nd hich chec ed by it. It theories re ny ill thus be seen th t it is l ost i possible to ns er the uestion, Wh t is sin to the co plete nd for ents
ll, it
ould decide
th t h ve
been
s tisf ction of everyone. The
Gree s
issing
the
pret tion this
h d r .
ord
for sin
This is the
of th t
ord.
So
e
hich
e nt
popul r people thin ost
inter fro
ccident l y therefore be in n ture, th t one f il to do right nd yet y f il through no f ult of his o n. If this ere true, use
of it th t sin
gre t
ount
be done
y
of the ith.
uestion, e find th n responsibility. out
hy
one
pl ced, gener lly,
those ho or environ
iss the
The
e
r
for sin
n ly e
ould
the sin
of it there is
proble , then,
isses the r . in t o groups.
bec use of
l
is
ys to
Sinners
y be re there irst,
physic l, they f
ent l conditions. Second,
ent l, ll short
volunt ry c uiescence nd desire to sin. The popul r ide of sin is th t it is the n tur l n in his te of things. This is not true, bec use
bec use of st
hen
t b c
hu
find
responsibility
But
1
WHAT
IS
19
HOLINESS
n tur l
or s sinner. He s not origin l st te cre ted pure nd holy, fter the i ge of God hence, de to serve God, to ith Hi , to be His l
fro co p nion, to h ve fello ship ith Hi d y to d y. Sin c s n fter th. We do not e in no ho s in the G rden of Eden, long Ad nor ho he h d long fello ship ith God before he fell into sin. The popul r notion is th t l ost sinner. i edi tely fter his cre tion he bec e
y be true, ho ever, th t for ny, ny ye rs l ed nd t l ed ith God before S t n ever
It
he c
into the G rden
e
evil
ith his
insinu tions
nd
suggestions.
Another popul r ide is th t sin ust be co itted, th t it c nnot be esc ped, th t e c nnot ho ny expect to live bove it. There re even believe th t God g ve the Ten Co nd ents hich one or l ide l y not hope to erely s hich one ill ever strive. tt in nd yet to rd ith such n ide l, The thought see s to be th t, ill
one
l
of existence.
Sin
ys
be
ende voring
to
re ch
holy
st te
be properly understood until e re t le st t o There its chief ele ents. n ly e of these. One is th t of disobedience. Wh t is right nd h t is rong c n be deter ined only by the hich is set up. In the or st nd rd or l p ttern c se
c nnot
of
things th t
ti set
n,
God first
could be done, s ve thing, he bec e
one
e, in His up
ll up one restriction n did this one. When
set
de ling
syste
sinner.
ith the hu
of rules.
n
Since
r ce,
th t
God h s
In the Old Test
ent
WHAT
these rules
ere
HOLINESS
ed up in the Ten Co ent they re given
su
In the Ne
ents.
IS
nd
Test
to us
te chings of Christ nd in the pre chings of nd ents nd te chings, postles. All these co en h t God nts ho ever, re si ply to infor in the
the
the
to
do
h t He does not
nd
the
nt
to
do.
The viol tion of these constitutes disobedience. The other sin is
hich should be noted is th t
thing
st te
of rebellion.
So
eti
es
child dis
ore convenient p rent si ply bec use it is to do h t the p rent desires. nts th n h t he st te of such disobedience L ter, he y re ch th t he rebels g inst ll restrictions by the p rents. In th t c se, the situ tion beco es desper te. The
obeys
sinner,
brought
ho is
f ce
responsibility, nd ho to defy the Al ighty, h lion
hich
spiritu l
f ce
to
then
deliber tely
s re ched
ill le d hi
ulti
destruction.
e
ist e us in
ist
y
er lly spe
hich
ing,
to
sin
or l
chooses of rebel his
o
n
is
nd sin be
sin
y lthough si ple, involve extre e i port nce. Gen
uestions,
These tters
e be
st te
tely
Wh t is the difference bet een
t
ith his
re
of
sin
the difference bet een
nd
ined by the ttitude of the tr ns the co ission of n ct no n A sin is gressor. the co ission of is A ist e to be rong. hich is not necess rily thought to be deed rong. ist e sin. Thus, one c n see th t y be itted hich one did So e ct y h ve been co not thin rong t ll, but, in the light of further ist
e is deter
discoveries, it
s
found to be
rong
s
f r
s
his
WHAT
HOLINESS
IS
or l responsibility nd integrity When he first co itted the ct, it but if he should do the s e thing it ould be sin.
As
sin
to
ord.
But
ist
s
e e,
second ti ist co
c nnot
one
concerned.
ere
e, it is
ist
s
of the
sense
1
e in every it sin,
nd then thin of it s ere ist e, bec use the ission of th t sin, in the light of or l re involves ore th n ing the erely sponsibility, co
ist
e.
sins.
ti
so
reg rded reg rd to custo throughout the p ssing ge the f
sin.
s
sins.
s
long
e elry
of the
only
th t
p ssing f ncy for the h ir
or
Is it sinful
to
e
ith
e h ve been of dress
Is it sinful for
short,
or too
sho s
ds of th t ti
When is
short
true
h bits
nd
s
bout
p ssing f ds, so e p rticul rly ith of living. History
re
This is
centuries
ction sinful
or
too
of the notions
e
It is true th t there
es
uestion, e popul r
further into the sin
going
Before
should discuss
dress to
one
y
ind the
ny p nd then decide ith
nected
uestions
These
rticul r s
to
c
or l
n
be too
long
use
be or
the sinfulness
History to
to
e
e
r
sho s th t r
dresses
hich
too
ent,
y be
ges it h s been sin nd it h s been
different
t
too
long,
short.
Li e ise, it reve ls the
thic ness of the
i proper reg rded s sinful.
f ct th t the been
dresses
con
use
involved in it.
sin
ents
ns ered in
responsibility
f d, f ncy,
or
uch
or too
Is it sinful to enter into the
d y
ord
or
to
be too
e elry,
r
every
reg rded
Until
little
clothing over
h s cen-
WHAT
tury
ith
go,
it
HOLINESS
IS
exception
the
custo ry for the iddle ges
s not
During e ring
their
ent l buc les
orn
er tions
they
de
trousers
go
ore
on
en
igs
ere
fe
of
n to
en
too
e
tight
nd s
the other h nd, u rters for not
on
ned in cert in
ned for
for
putting
fe
Just
their shoes.
ns,
trousers.
conde
ere
counted
o
long
r
gen
gre t sinners if
they ere con e ring the .
big uestion to be decided ith reg rd to the popul r sins of the d y ust be considered in the light of or l responsibility. Whenever the f shion of dress re ches the point here it involves or l issues or tends to degr de or ls, then it is The
so-c lled
sinful. As
result in t tor or
of the should ny for the p rt of the spec d tion then it h s beco e sinful. or ents, if
use
to
or l degr p rticip nt,
on
inst nce, it is f shions bout th t
co only ccepted f ct th t so e extre ely suggestive th t they bring turpitude. It is lso cle rly ell no n
re so
or l
so
e
for
s of
public
use
ents
t
v rious
c nnot degener cy fro the orld. eep unspotted Bible is The so pl in upon or l principles th t it is h rd to err if one is diligent in see ing for the truth. If its precepts re follo ed, it is entirely to find the th t is n rro nd str ight, possible p th
ti
es re ch such
ttend
or l
hi
nd
th t
one
self
nd th t is ple sing to God t ll ti es. We should to the Bible to discover for ourselves h t it h s to s y bout sin. turn
Wh t is sin li e this
All
effect th t sin
John 1 unrighteousness is is rel tionship, In 1
e
find
l ngu ge
This s ys in bec use righteoussin.
WHAT
3
HOLINESS
IS
is
ighteousness e ns to be rel tionship. in the proper sense. Wh t, then, is unright eousness It is un-rightness, e ns th t the nd ho is living in sin is not confor ing to the person ness
right
or l l
right o
n
ness.
. He is ith his fello
better self. Th t
e
not
-
ns
in
th t he is not
st te
living
un-right
of
in
not
ith his
right
he is not
living
He is
he is
ith God
right
en
ccord nce
ill of God. If he thin s there is ith the ist or l rectitude in th t rel tionship, he is The postle s ys th t ll unrighteousness is sin.
ny en. et
not so b d. I belong ill s y, Well, I person to the church. I re d the Bible. I friendly ith I do not cl i ll th t so e y neighbors. people not so b d fter ll. Th t is not cl i , but I
the
uestion. uestion
The
right
one
If
is.
is
not
one
is
b d
ho not
one
right
is, but ho
un-
sight of God, rong in the sight
in the
nd if he is rong sinner. If he is of God, he is sinner, he is not so e t future d te or God fro to be sep r ted He is or on the Judg sep r ted fro ent D y. then he is
God
no
.
There
s
n
once
living
in
co
unity
s struc de no pretense of religion. He ho His ities. series of c l ith crops f iled his e sic . nd children bec ife c ttle died his idst of his trouble, he s id, I don t see In the
hy
the Lord tre ts
His p stor s id
to
do
The
to
ith you for ns
er
s,
e
hi
,
this
y.
God h sn t h d
forty ye rs.
Well, I thin
you,
s
nything y p s-
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS
tor, ought to pr y th t God this situ tion. When s ed
he s id,
I c nt
pr y.
He g ve the correct pr y to God, for the
only
ns
er.
si ple
ind of pr yer he c the petition of the Public n one
te ple, God,
erciful
be
to
bring
ill
out
e
hy
The sinner re
n
of
he did not pr y,
son
c nnot
th t there is nd th t is
pr y, ho pr
yed
in
sinner.
e,
the The
sinner
ho is in trouble h s no right to pr y hi self of trouble, nor does he h ve right to s God fro to deliver hi trouble. He c nnot pr y, S ve ife nd children nd crops nd goods, bec use y
out
right to t l to God bout such things. Th t is pl in l ngu ge, but hy not d it the truth itteth The Scripture s ys, He th t co If one belongs to S t n, he h s sin is of the devil. to God or to expect God to help hi no right to t l he h s on God is to be out of trouble. The only cl i erits of the toning sin through the delivered fro he h s
no
ethic l
blood of Christ. In
J
es
1
sho s th t sin is
e
find
not
nother
st te
ent
only
rel tionship
ttitude.
One
hich
but
n
Therefore to hi th t no eth to do ttitude it hi doeth to it is sin. This being not, good, nd it sin not only by true, one c n co positive ct
by neg tive by continuing in
but
recogni ed
c
n even
tr ns
sin of rebellion.
gress nd is If one f lls under conviction for his sins his of need re li e nd to con repent nce brought he to hi self in fession, by refusing yield pl ces it th t beco es sin. rebellion st te of such Chin once s id to fello A ission ry fro
WHAT IS HOLINESS
pre cher th t it
uch e sier
s
to
in
en
to
Christ in the he then l nds th n it eric . s in A When s ed to expl in it, he s id, The lo est gutter snipe in the foulest slu s of Ne or City no s enough of the to be s ved. He
Gospel
th t in Christi n A eric enough Gospel h s been shed cross the p th light y of every in dividu l to give hi no excuse for re ining sinner. e nt
The
no s enough, s f r s ver ge person nd Biblic l te ching re theology concerned, to find God ith very little ssist nce. But one c n re ect the light to such n extent th t he sins by his very re ection. To hi th t no eth to do
good,
nd doeth it not,
no s he
ought
to co
to
dds the sins of rebellion
lre dy
he h s
co
hi
to
e
it is sin.
God,
If
nd disobedience
itted.
one
nd does not, he
Sin is
those
to
ttitude
n
ell
s
rel tionship.
s
o ns 1 3 e re d, And he th t doubteth ned if he e t, bec use he e teth not of f ith for h tsoever is not of f ith is sin. This indic tes th t sin be condition. The st te ent refers y In
is d
to
o the
historic l situ tion. ns to present burnt
te ples, pl ce to e t.
h d been
e t
it
A ong
c rried fro
be sold
The
could
s
be
gre t f ith
o
nd
the
s
ns
the
che per
t
uestion bought
the
It
of the
custo
offerings to the gods. After pl ced before the idols in the h d nd
e ten
it
orship
risen
to
s
buy
lt r
r
te
to
the
th n
r et
ordin ry
hether such
by
the
considered th t
e t
e t
Christi ns.
nd
sign e t
of
it.
6
WHAT
de ling
In
It is
sence,
IS
HOLINESS
uestion,
ith the the
not
ind of
P ul s id in
e t
you
es
The
e t.
uestion is, Wh t is your condition s you e t Are you e ting it, believing th t bec use you e t th t p rticul r e t it ill be speci l blessing to you or re e t His you e ting it si ply s ttitude if s th t Christi n by e ting this e t
offended
nother believer, it
ould be
rong
to e t
tod y is,
Wh t
of life
hinges
it.
uestion
The do
believe
e
hich
e
re
s
c rried
ith
pl ced
over to us
reg rd Every
to
the circu or l
ct
st nces in
round the condition of f ith. of f ith is sin.
There
re
Wh tsoever is cert in cts th t re
sinful, but these very things effect upon the he no s h s
body.
If
y h ve does so
one
h r
ething
not not
ful th t
destructive effect on the body, he is co itting sin, bec use the body is the te ple of the Holy Ghost. In
n ly ing
th t f ith is
the situ tion, P ul too ele ent of Christi n
n
nd th t in
ny hich deter
ind sin
or
not.
If
doubt, if e hich there is connected divine l
uestion
for
sure
hen
he d
ris to
not
re
rel tionships,
hich there is
so ething bout right or rong confor ing to the the
orld to settle y in the le ve it lone until e no
. li e th t is to hether it is right
they
deed, go
bout
do
re
e ith it, The best
re
position
it is the condition of the ines hether n ct y be
c ses
things illing to uncert inty s e
the
in doubt
nd try it.
or s
to
rong. So e people, the Tightness of
When
they
do
so,
they
WHAT
te pting God,
re
HOLINESS
IS
Wh tsoever is
bec use
not
of
f ith is sin.
It is n ct. e find th t sin is John 3 This e ns th t sin of the l . tr nsgression is the volunt ry stepping over the line. It is co itting oneself definitely on one side or the other. In order to viol te out rdly the specific en ct ith the ents of God one ust, no ledge of h t he is doing, volunt rily step over the line of tr nsgression. In
1
the
This does
not
e
n
Of course, in its ulti held responsible for
tr gic
is
f ct th t
th t every sin is te n lysis, one
involunt ry
volunt ry.
be
c nnot
ctions
nd
it
y live in sin to such sl ve to sin nd is not
one
th t he beco es con ster of his o n destiny. When such the ore dition is re ched, one lives in sin n tur lly th n he does in righteousness. But the glorious n extent
f ct is
lso
sin, he h s
th t
hen
his co
nd
true
t
propiti tion
unt ry
for his
one
desires
to
fors
through f ith the sins in Jesus Christ,
S vior of the orld. Thus, f ct th t sinner person is A uestion cl oring for
revert
e
by
to
e
vol the
the fin l
choice.
ns
er
is, Wh t does
Wh t is its effect upon the individu l The nifest is th t it sep r tes one fro first thing
sin do
God. cut
The
off.
Ps l
When
ist
one
is
s ys th t evil-doers sh ll be lien ted fro God, the n t
ur l result is the destruction
There is
no
spiritu l
or
loss of
spiritu l
life.
life except s one is in cont ct of the universe. To live in sin
ith the gre t Spirit e ns to be sep r ted fro
God,
to
h ve
ll
spir-
WHAT
HOLINESS
IS
itu l connections severed in f ct, to h ve spiritu l life destroyed, bec use one is de d in his tresp sses nd sins. A second f ct is th t sin We
c
gression. out
get
next
re
n
e
shoc ed
Ho
ere
e
Then ho
of it
ti e,
blights the volunt ry
ber the first
Ho
e it
it
There is
or s.
e ch
one us
But
isdeeds
po er.
L ter
pre cher, the thought
only
nd of
I
c
his
going
to
tr gic f ct only here but
A young h t ster,
Jesus s id, ed the
.
The young ept fro
n
c
He ven.
e
Keep n
is
But he
th t
sin
y
nd
Jesus
to
s
the co
iled
youth
c
do it
n
sep r tes fro
here fter.
nd
s id,
ents.
Good
And He
nd s id, All these h ve I h ve lived good,
up.
str ight life. Jesus ns ered in effect, the co plete ourney. Go h ve nd give it to the poor, e.
t is the
blighted.
I do to be s ved
ust
y
do
to
bec use his conscience is not
ithout
sin
done until the conscience ill h ve very little chec ing n l ugh t his sins, t the other s pr yers, nd scoff t
third
A
God
n
t
ill
e
st rt
given one
to
the
given to ill obey, l ys nything rong.
be
n
s
tender conscience
e
c
hich God h s
to
s
hich, if
of us, hen
chec
lied
ost incon
l
s
e sy by se uenti l. By uch co punction of conscience. Th it
of tr ns e
uch e sier it
nd the third ti nd
conscience. ct
ill h ve
ou
nd sell
Thou sh lt h ve gre t re
nd
co
ll e
to
th t
go
you nd follo
rd in He ven.
WHAT
The young ro ful, for he
IS
9
HOLINESS
ent nd y sor He lived riches. of s n gre t n the s telling truth, upright, or l life. If he he h d lived ost of us h ve but lot better th n he there s one thing l c ing s not in vit l n
ith God.
cont ct
he rd th t
Sin
ith God.
close touch
When this
eeps
youth s id,
n
ster,
fro
being
in
h t sh ll I do
he s d itting y h ve etern l life th t he did not h ve the sp r of etern l life in his th t I
o
n
soul,
nd
Here is the
sinning, be sep r ted
he is
d itting th t he ne it. tr gic thing. If one does not ce God no nd sep r ted fro
fro
God forever.
se
ill
One h s to live
so e here in eternity, nd God c n no ore live ith one full of sin in eternity th n He c n live ith sin in ti e. This si ply ith one filled e ns e ns to live so e here th t to live nd die in sin forever in sin. y God help us to see th t Sin ill be lost on the ners so eti es thin th t they of the tter is th t they f ct The Judg ent D y.
Sinners thin they re going to die . re th t f cts of the c se the they re etern lly Until co e no . to God, de th in etern l they e br ce etern l of in the spiritu l they re l ys re
lost
no
de th.
to ent in the thirty-fifth Ps l co e hen ill God ill ti e the the effect th t l ugh t the sinner. There re those ho in this life l ugh t the pre cher nd s y th t he is excited. nd s y th t ho get h ppy t those
There is
st te
They l ugh they re f n tic l.
If
e
re
to
believe the
Scrip-
3
WHAT
people
tures, those
de th.
They
re
HOLINESS
IS
their
is necess ry for the to to die. They re going be lost of
etern lly. God co p ssion, ho
his sins
nd
one
re ect
c
n
g inst
Hi
n tion.
plight possible.
etern l th t
Thus
fund
e
c
positive f ct,
nd pronounce eter l ughing t one s
of God
fulness of sin th t
ince
It does not no
on
the nor
ulti
te
cle r,
uestion
to
roo
es
ords
th t the Bible is cle r
It st tes the situ tion in such
Through ll the sin portr yed in
But
nd rebel
Hi
t
turn
y th t there is nd the effect,
the
ercy, of love, lift the sinner out of
l ugh
ill
Thin
see
ill
nd
hell,
ith His children.
one
nd
ent ls of sin.
ist f cts.
t
into hell is for the
God of
It is the
n
to
hell in
to
nts to
until He
n l conde
y
drop
is
e hi
God
br ce of etern l hell, nd ll th t
in the e
re
on
the
of
result
sin.
e find p ges of the Holy Boo its fulness, in its debilit ting
effect upon the hu n soul. We re d of God s h tred for it, nd of His fin l disposition of sin nd sinners.
God,
ho is
His presence.
holy
ust,
nd
c nnot
The Bible is li e ise cle r
of
righteousness. Jesus
hich
s
lost. He
c
e
on
e to
c s
orld. y the sins of the to fulfill the in order sin of pen lty He
of the l to
s
lift the hu
rel tionships
l id do n n
ith
by
r ce out
the
of
God the
the fund nd
see
the L c
endure sin in ent ls
to s ve
b of God e to
to
th t t
e
p y the full
oblig tions Al ighty. He c e its sin nd into holy ther.
or l
He
c
e
to
WHAT
point lost nd rede ption e c
be s ved fro
n
E E 1.
. 3. .
31
ll sin.
ENCE BOOKS
Joseph Ag r, Holiness Sy bolic nd e l, Ch pter I. Brengle, S uel L., He rt T l s on Holiness, Ch pter I.
Beet,
rd, S. L. C, Entire S nctific tion fro , p. 16 . nu l of Holiness, Ch p ., A
Co
1 39 to 19 Dunn, Le is ter
.
HOLINESS
e ry, struggling soul to the pl ce nd of Christi n service. Through
of
Hi
IS
Hills,
I.
A ron
Ch pter Huntington,
erritt,
Holiness
nd
Po er,
II.
6.
nd
D. W. C,
Holiness, Ch p
I, V. The Doctrine of Entire S nctific W., Jones, tion, Ch pter, I, II. ll lieu, Will rd ., The ullness of the Bless ters
. .
9. 1 . 11.
1 . 13.
Gospel of Christ, Ch pter VIII. ntle, J. Gregory, The W y of the Cross, Ch pter V. Pec , Jesse T., The Centr l Ide of Christi nity, Ch pter IV. uth, C. W., Bible e dings on the Second I. Blessing, Ch pter ing of
the
S
p.
ith,
ters
The
Test
ent,
H., P uline Perfection, VII, VIII, I .
Ch p
Schell, Willi
G.,
Better
66.
Joseph
3
WHAT
1 . 1 . 16.
1 . 1 .
.
HOLINESS
Steele, D niel, A Defense of Christi n Perfec tion, Ch pters VI, VIII. rd W., ust We Sin S eeten, Ho Ch pters V. I, T ylor, B. S., Wor s on Holiness, Ch pters II, III, IV. ich rd, A Tre tise on Christi n Treffrey,
Perfection, Ch pter
W tson,
George,
VIII. 19.
IS
VI.
White
obes, Ch pters II,
Wilson, George W., Truths s I H ve Seen The , Ch pters, I, II. Wood, J es A., Christi n Perfection s T ught by John Wesley, Sections IV, V, VI.
III.
CHAPTE Second Wor
Why T
o
things ought
h ppen
to
Gr ce
of
to
ho be
those
people ought to get thoroughly rilled, oyously h ppy, nd gloriously irst, such
lieve in holiness.
Then,
blessed.
experience ought hope th t is ithin ho get s ny people
the
distress is th t
ho h ve
ll those to
n
they
do
tur l b sis for their
ble
be
the
.
to
co
give
One
re
e
into such for
re son son
hy
nctified f ll into doubt
get
not
experience.
good,
solid
so
nd
Scrip
In Hebre s
9 ineth therefore rest to the people of God. Note the t o f cts. It is n ex perience of rest, nd it is for one cl ss of people only those ho no God. The indic tion is th t second or of gr ce. This c lls for so e there is thoughtful consider tion on our p rt. Why is there e
re d,
There re
of
or
second
or
second
There
Why
gr ce gr ce
of
three
ust
there be
uestions th t s tisf ctory
ust be considered conclusion on the sub ect. The first is Do e need second or of gr ce The second is Wh t is the difference bet een the first nd second or s of gr ce The third is re
in order to
Wh t
e to
co
experience
ind of
gr ce isf ctorily, If
e e
c
n
ns
er
is the second
these three
sh ll h ve
hich to st nd.
33
fir
or
uestions
of
s t
found tion upon
3
WHAT As
lre dy
IS
HOLINESS
indic ted in
Ch pter I, there re t o de ling ith the of holiness. is One set uestion Scriptur l, nd one is The non-Scriptur l. uot tions th t re nonre b sed the Scriptur l upon Scriptures, but they re not ex ct Scriptur l uot tions. They re such s second or of gr ce, deeper life, the phr ses rest of f ith, the Spirit-filled life, the victorious life, the C n n experience, nd Christi n perfection. We h ve he rd ll these non-Scriptur l ter s. They re of v lue to us even though they re not ex ct Biblic l uot tions. of ter
sets
These
re
s
co
the
only
used in
Scriptur l
ter
for holiness per love, pure in he rt,
s
fection, s nctific tion, perfect de d to sin, glorified ith Christ, the ind of Christ, cle nsed fro ll filthiness of the flesh, nd b p ti ed ith the Holy Ghost nd fire. These Scrip in
phr ses refer to the second or of gr ce or tter hether the blessing. It does not nd the ter s re used Scriptur l non-Scriptur l re s one interch nge bly. They usu lly reg rded e thing. nd the s Note th t you do not get nd then get the b ptis s nctified of the Holy ou do not get the second blessing nd the Ghost. infilling of the Spirit. ou get the second blessing ith the Spirit. The Christi n hen you re filled the blessing th t is entioned in these l ys gets hen he gets the Blesser on the inside. expressions ou do not get these v rious blessings ithout the tur l
the second
Blesser,
ting you
nd you do
blessing. ste dy. the
not
e
e
get the Blesser ithout get ber th t, nd it ill hold
WHAT
Why c
do
n
need
e
three
re
th t.
er
effect of Ad
s f ll
ll
en.
ity co
e.
ill
It
yielded p ssed do
co
e
upon
ges n
ll hu
Ephesi ns
- 3,
o
ns
1
into his he rt
e
or l
nd
ll hu
beings n
n
depr v beings.
ll ti
for
e
to
ccording spiritu lly de d, ithout hope. According to o n r ce is ithout strength c
nd
6, the hu Corinthi ns cording to ns
the
the
only
r
ce
is,
1 , utterly corrupt,
ithout God
to
c
to
In th t st te of sin the hu to
in
e
s
p ssed upon principle of c rn lity
te pt tion,
n the
Wh t
de th
Inbred sin
to
There
before
er
individu l
us
nd I h ve the
3
gr ce
ns
not
s
P ul tells
fell.
hen he h s
It
of is
one
fell into sin,
ou
bec use Ad
or ust
e
The first
hen Ad
th t
th t
lso r ci l.
s
HOLINESS
second
uestions
ns
it
IS
3- , it is lost
nd blind
of Christ r nd, ccording to n r ce is corrupt in its n ture the hu
Gospel
bec use of inbred sin.
uestion
The second in
Wh t is the
Sin is referred
this inbred sin ent
is
t o ys Sin is th t
one
s
to
in the Ne
principle
of
n ture
nd
Test one
s
hich you do, nd sin is th t hich you find yourself. Sin condition in y be is n ct or st te, but l ys vol tr nsgression When n ct. curses, lies, de unt ry ilfully n
ct.
fr uds, ste ls, ct
for
Depr vity ny
or
viol tes
hich he is
ction.
perverted
ny Divine l
, th t is
n
responsible.
nd it does not denote is inbred sin, It is not volunt ry tr nsgression, but
or l condition for
hich
one
is
not
36
WHAT
responsible.
HOLINESS
IS
It is st te of the he rt. fter he Christi n discovers s ved. He discovers then th t he h s corrupt
It is
dition
th t
ciple
ithin his he rt th t he did
there
until
he rt is
e.
The
th t
e
no
prin
s
ithin
c ll it inbred sin.
his
striving
The Christi n is
n
Th t de
sin, is the thing th t
inbred
n
terrible situ tion in to
up- nd-do n
hich be
to
life.
find oneself.
ll th t God
ould
be, but he discovers th t there is
h ve hi ithin his he
c rn lity
the Christi n to live
It is
not
gets
rd situ tion. We c ll it the old
pr ved he rt, c uses
ti
depr vity
c ll it
e
th t
in
n
con
the
n ture
nts to
do.
th t is
He
ill
pull tugging g inst everything
set out
ith the fir
desire
eeting Wednesd y night, but ill he up so e here else. Wh t c uses th t There re desire to do people ho h ve but before no find th t they it, right, they they r entirely. Wh t is the h ve issed the tter ith the There is n in rd pull there is n to
go
urge hen
to
pr yer ind
ithin the
they
on
th t tends
nt to
the he rt.
The first of
purific tion,
s
Wh
right.
e the
Th t is
do
rong in
depr vity
of gr ce th t God does is the gr ce or th t forgives ll our p st. or of gr ce is or of purging, of It is
of
er dic ting
the
depr ved
n ture.
uestion is Wh t is the purpose of s origin l st te the Holy Spirit his life, his purific tion, his strength to help nd obey God perfectly. love God supre ely He s hen he fell t h ppened deprived of
The third
holiness hi
to
or
forgiveness.
The second
do
In Ad
h
3
Holy Spirit s
the
into his soul of
t is holiness
God.
s presence, nd there in ected inbred tendency to oppose the ill Christ bec e the second Ad .
n
Jesus Jesus
Wherefore
people g te. In Ephesi ns
ith his
c
-
herit nce.
ing spirit n,
nd
find th t
e
the
ithout
Jesus
the
Christ
n s in possible the recovery of Th t ye put off concerning the for er
convers tion the old to
ight s nctify
blood suffered
n
e
to
e
lso th t he o
n,
hich is corrupt
ccord
the deceitful lusts nd be rene ed in the of your nd th t ye put on the ne ind hich fter God is cre ted in righteousness holiness.
The
inherit nce
by putting on the ne nd by being cre ted in the righteousness th t n, is in the Son of God. So it is e sily seen th t if conversion is process of forgiveness, if it t es second c re of volunt ry or cts, there is needed e of gr ce to t e c re of the depr ved st te th t true
putting
off the old
inherited
s
of gr ce is the cle nse the degener next
f ct
to
bet een the first
s f ll.
b ptis te n ture.
of the
The second
Holy Spirit
to
consider is Wh t is the difference or s of gr ce nd the second
i possible to ns vie point bec use the It is
es
nd
the result of Ad
or
The
n
co
er
this
uestion
fro
ctions involved in the
one
t
o
The essenti l difference
or s of gr ce re ny. been expl ined in the f ct th t in the lre dy hile in first or of gr ce one s sins re forgiven, or of gr ce his sinful or c rn l n ture the second h s
is
purged.
It
ould be
ell, therefore,
to
observe
3
WHAT
Scriptur l
v rious
IS
HOLINESS
texts to see
distinctions bet een the
t
if
e c
n
find definite
o.
ustific tion .h th he uic forgiven. ith hi , h ving forgiven you ened together ll out the h nd riting of ordin nces tresp sses blotting s contr ry to us, th t s nd g inst us, hich too it out of the In y, n iling it to his cross. In
our
Colossi ns
sins
13
contr st
to
.
.
th t, in Hebre s 9 1
s nctific tion
our
spe s
of God s
In
ustific tion
he rts
o
ns
e
cle nsed.
re
re d th t in The
bility, through Christ,
your conscience fro God.
of God.
find th t in
e
And you.
re
de d
to serve
bond ge g Spirit of doption, The Spirit itself be
ther. cry, Abb , ith our spirit, th t ness e
e
re
postle purge living f
ily
or ye h ve not in to fe r but
1 , 16 s ys
received the spirit of ye h ve received the
the
into the
dopted
re
e
or s
to
hereby
reth
it
the children of God.
e receive the On the other h nd, in s nctific tion or John truly b pti ed ith the Spirit. b ptis ith ter, Jesus s id, but ye sh ll be b pti ed
ith the Holy Ghost not re d in 1 Peter 1 3 th t in of God. Being born g in,
but of
incorruptible, by
ny
d ys
hence.
We
ustific tion not of corruptible seed,
the
e
re
ord of God, We re d in
born
hich
Acts bideth forever. nd e h ve ith God. th t in s nctific tion po er fter th t the Holy But ye sh ll receive po er, Ghost is co e upon you.
liveth 1
In re
o
ns 11
engr fted
e
ustific tion e process by hich
find th t in
into Christ. This is
WHAT e
life our
HOLINESS
IS
39
pl ced upon the sturdy stoc of spiritu l o ent on dr th t nd po er, nd fro ll fro It nd it. is fruit ge strength figure of re
speech dustry.
by the pec n in pl nts hic ory trees to h rdy strength. When they h ve cert in st ge, pec n buds re engr fted the st l rt hic ory trun , Thus, fro
hich
The
hich gro re ched into the
.
hich is
ble
y be illustr ted
pec n-gro er
ithst nd the
to
nd stress of
stor
ti e, the pec n br nches produce fruit ye r fter ye r. But in s nctific tion it is pruning process. in br nch in s id e th t 1 , Every John Jesus
nd every br nch be reth not fruit he t eth y th t be reth fruit, he purgeth it, th t it y bring ore fruit. This purging is in re lity forth prun
ing.
This is
h t the
ex ctly
in the he rt is.
selfishness, c rn lity in evidences of
sinful
ustific tion Jesus s id in John In
e
or
of s nctific tion
spiritu l process by ll its ph ses, nd ll
It is
n ture re
t
re
en
eli
in ted.
out
of the
hich other orld.
But I h ve chosen you orld h teth you. out of the orld, therefore the orld is t en out of us. Jesus In s nctific tion the
pr yed ord
re not
in
John
nd the of the
1
19
1 1 -1
I h ve
given
I pr y not th t thou shouldest t e the the orld, but th t thou shouldest eep the the evil. They re not of the orld, even not
thy
of the
orld.
ord is truth.
In Lu e
1
thy
the
orld h th h ted the , bec use they not of the orld. orld, even s I
S nctify e
the
out
s
through thy
re d th t in
of
fro I
truth
ustific tion
e
40
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
joy. The disciples, returning from their preaching journey, boasted of the power that was manifest with them. After rebuking them, Jesus explained that they were not to rejoice because of have
are to
manifestation of power, but "rather re because your names are written in heaven." joice In sanctification this joy is made complete. Jesus, outward
speaking
to
His
them,
with
disciples made
near
this
the end of the
startling
jour
in 16.24: "Heretofore have ye asked nothing in my name: ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full." A little later He prayed that they ney
John
be sanctified, and after His resurrection He to tarry in Jerusalem until they should
might urged be
statement
them
baptized
with the
Holy
Ghost.
We read that
on
that memorable occasion when the
Holy Ghost fell joyful ecstasies that
upon them, they were in such the people exclaimed, "These are drunken with new wine." Whereupon Peter rose in joyful triumph, .these are not and replied, "Men and brethren. .
drunken
was
as
.
.but this is that which ye suppose. the prophet Joel; And it shall come .
.
spoken by
pass in the last days, saith God, I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh." This had happened to the disciples, and it was an occasion for joyful cele to
The
bration.
shouts
of
God
resounded
the streets of Jerusalem when the tered the lives of the Christians. In
justification
family
of
God.
we
are
Paul
Ephesians 2:19, "Now strangers and foreigners,
brought
said
to
therefore
Holy
the
into
through
Ghost
en
the
royal Ephesians, in
ye are no more but fellow-citizens with the
WHAT
IS
41
HOLINESS?
saints, and of the household of God." This
was
a
glorious experience. The beloved John gives us the completed picture in evelation 1: , 6, in which he says of Jesus Christ, " nto him that loved us, and
washed
us
from
our
sins in his
own
blood, and hath
ather; kings priests glory and dominion for ever and ever." This is the perfect work of redemption. Through the completed act of sanctification we are to become ultimately kings and priests in the royal family of made
and
us
unto
God and his
him be
to
God.
To
:1
complete the picture, justification we
that in
we
find
in
omans
become the heirs of
"And if children, then heirs; heirs of God, joint-heirs with Christ; if so be that we suffer
Heaven.
and
with him, that we may be also glorified together. ut to be an heir and to be ready to inherit our
possessions 1:12
we
are
two
different
read that the
things.
In Colossians
ather "hath made
us
meet
partakers light." Hence, sanctification completes the work of justification and prepares us for an "abundant entrance" into the ingdom of God. The third uestion is: What kind of experience is the second work of grace? In an all-inclusive sense it is a restful experience. Some think it is a rap It may turous, entrancing, hilarious experience. result in that, but that is not the real thing. If it were, then when we did not feel like shouting, we would not have the blessing. The essential thing, the all-important thing, about it is that it is a restto
be
of the inheritance of the saints in
42
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
experience. "There remaineth therefore a rest people of God." What are the implications of that rest? irst, it is rest from inbred depravity and sinful disturbances. What makes us unduly angry? What makes us jealous of people who do better than we? What makes us envious? Why is there turmoil in our souls even after conversion? When we get the bap tism of the Holy Ghost, inbred sinful disturbances disappear, and we rest in the Holy Ghost. We simply ful
to
the
rest.
The second fact is that it is rest in faith.
have the ness
Holy Spirit,
that all is well.
We
guiding
that if He is
can rest
we
in faith, destiny, we do
we
knowing
can rest
our
If
in the conscious not
have
worry about the future. We can rest in faith when the conference moves us to a hard circuit, and to
going to starve. aith is rest aith without the ful faith in the Holy Ghost. Holy Spirit is a sort of fluctuating trust. It is like ut when a turbulent ocean, ebbing and flowing. the Holy Ghost abides, it is like a lake on top of it looks
as
if
we
were
the mountainside that turns its beautiful face to est the sunlight and rests in the bosom of nature. in faith.
Ghost,
When
we
we can rest
get the
baptism
of the
in the faith of God. We
Holy
can rest
everything around us seems dark. thing is that it is rest in love. "Love envieth not; love vaunteth not itself; is not puffed itself unseemly, seeketh not up; doth not behave not her own, is easily provoked, thinketh no evil; rejoiceth not in ini uity, but rejoiceth in the truth." in faith when
The final
WHAT
IS
4
HOLINESS?
Love will take every vestige of wickedness out of us. we rest in love, it will abolish all envy, pride, and self-seeking. If we have within these character If
istics,
we are
resting
"Wherefore carnal
Ghost. The
If
strivings
experience
of
perfect
love.
ye yet in sin?" When there are within, we are in need of the Holy
He does not abide where
baptism
one
in the
are
does
of the
not
kind, he does
have
Holy perfect
Ghost
carnality exists. brings rest in love.
love for God and
man
have the second work of grace. E E ENCE OO S
not
1.
Carradine,
2.
Coward, S. L. C, Entire Sanctification from 1 9 to 1900, p. 22. owler, Charles, J., ack to Pentecost, Chap ters I , , I. Milton L., The Inheritance estored, Haney, I. , Chapters Jones, W., The octrine of Entire Sanctifica . tion, Chapter
. 4.
. 6.
everly, The Symbol, Chapter II.
Mudge, James,
. 9.
10. 11.
Perfect Life
in
lessing
in
Experience
octrine, Chapter Payne, Thomas, The Pentecostal aptism, Chapters I, II. Peck, Jesse T., The Central Idea of Christian ity, Chapters I, I . ible uth, C. W., eadings on the Second and
.
The
Second
lessing.
I.
uth, C. W., Entire Sanctification, p. 1 4. etter Testament, Schell, William G., The p. 202.
4
WHAT
2.
pham, or
. 4.
. 6.
IS
HOLINESS?
Thomas C, Principles of the Interior Life, Part II, Chapter I.
Hidden
Walker, Edward ., Sanctify Them, Chapter . Wilson, George W., Truths as I Have Seen Them, Chapter . Wood, James A., Christian Perfection as I. Taught by John Wesley, Sections III, Wood, James A., Perfect Love, Section I .
CHAPTE Holiness
There
relating
and
the
I
.
Jewish
Nation
many passages in the Old Testament the holiness of the Jews as a nation and
are
to
special servants among the Jews. There also many Old Testament passages relating to the holiness of individuals. In considering the God s
to
are
teachings
of the Old Testament
holiness, it would be
to
gate these passages in order
they an experience. shed
on
the
subject
In this
those passages which Jews as a nation. The "Then
first
Jacob
reference
as
chapter
is
the
of
investi
discover the
light
doctrine and
a
we
in
as
shall think of
directly
more
found
subject
to
to
Genesis
the
:2.
his household, and to all that were with him, Put away the strange gods that are among you, and be clean, and change your gar ments."
said
to
both
relate
on
advantage
our
unto
It will be noted that the word holiness is
found here, but the expression "be clean" is used. This cleanness is synonymous with holiness. A similar passage may be found in Exodus 19:10, 11: not
"And the Lord said
Moses, Go
unto
unto
the
people,
tomorrow, and let sanctify today them wash their clothes, and be ready against the
them
and
third
day:
and
for the third
day
the Lord will
come
down in the sight of all the people upon Mount Sinai." The cleanliness referred to here means that, 4
46
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
in order to be
prepared for the presence of the Lord in their midst, it was necessary for the Jews to purify their bodies and garments for the spirit relationship
ual
involved in His
personal
Cleanness, righteousness, holiness
indicate the
are
visitation.
that
terms
purity ntil the Jews purified them people. selves for the day of His visitation, He was not ready nor were they prepared for Him to come. Jacob, in this exhortation, was simply getting his house in order for the visitation of the Almighty in all of His holy majesty. of heart and life that God de
mands of His
In Leviticus 11:44, 4 we have a most direct state ment to the Jews in regard to holiness. " or I am
your God: ye shall therefore sanctify yourselves, and ye shall be holy; for I am holy: neither shall ye defile yourselves with any manner
the
Lord
creeping thing
of
or I
am
land of be
Egypt,
holy,
cation,
for I
we
" e
shall
that
the
made.
that
the Lord that to
am
have
a
the
earth.
out
of the
be your God: ye shall therefore holy." Here, instead of an impli
direct statement.
therefore
preparation
The
creepeth upon bringeth you up
sanctify for
His
The command,
yourselves," visitation
meant
must
be
command, " e shall be holy, for I
personal meaning. speaking to the Jews both collectively and individually. As a nation they must live in righteousness and holiness before their holy God. In further emphasis upon this Jehovah said, "Nei ther shall ye defile yourselves," and then concluded am
holy,"
has
a
more
direct and
Here He is
with
a
second exhortation, " e shall therefore be
WHAT
holy,
for I
emulate
am
was
integrity
holy."
4
HOLINESS?
IS
A standard that
they
up by inherent holiness of God
that which
and
The command is
not to
the
was set
holy merely
be
were
to
personal
Himself.
because of
an
the part of God, but it is to be arbitrary because holiness is an inherent characteristic holy
demand
on
God, and therefore
of
expectation
natural
a
on
the part of God for His children in order that they might have association and fellowship with Him. A
more
direct and all-inclusive
this command
to
to
"Sanctify yourselves
emphasis
is
given
holy in Leviticus 20: , : therefore, and be ye holy: for be
I am the Lord your God. And ye shall keep my statutes, and do them: I am the Lord which sanctify you." In this verse God sets up the standard neces
sary for the attainment of holiness when He says, "Sanctify yourselves." That means that they had
themselves apart and observe certain laws of purification and cleansing. Then He says, " e ye holy: for I am the Lord your God." He does not to set
say, " e ye holy, for I am holy," but He merely the standard of holiness by virtue of the fact
sets
that He is the
entire
matter,
Lord God.
He
sanctify you." sanctifying oneself
says,
Here
the
Lord.
In
we
"I
Then,
am
the
Lord
have the relative
and then of
the
clinch the
to
one
which the individual has
being
instance, to
sanctified
there
play.
which
terms
is
a
This part
of
by
part was
necessary process of preparation for the latter part which is what God had to do: that is, to com as
plete
the
The
a
sanctifying
same
is
true
process. with reference
to
individuals
4
IS
WHAT
HOLINESS?
There is a sense in which it is vitally neces sary that every one must sanctify himself. That is, he must get himself ready for the completed process of the work of sanctification. As a result of the attitudes and relationships which he adopts and
today.
places himself in, the Holy Spirit is ready to completelhe office work by His indwelling, sanctifying
power. Thus, the work of holiness in the human heart is like every other work of grace there is a human side and a divine. God always respects human responsibility and initiative. He never coerces
why and
the
or
overrides the human will.
it is
This
possible for Christians who are who are trying to serve God, not to experience of holiness. They do
explains
converted enter not
into
place
themselves in the proper attitude for its reception. ut the same God who demanded that the Jews
sanctify themselves, in order for Him to sanctify them, demands that the individual shall do like must
wise
today. ook of
In the
euteronomy
we
have the laws that
Moses and, through him, to the chil given dren of Israel for their government as a nation, for their conduct as the chosen people of the Lord, to
were
and
serve
up in the
thirty-third as
guidance as individuals who would Jehovah. The spirit of this is summed fifth chapter and the thirty-second and
for their
loye and
verses:
"
c shall observe to do therefore
Lord your God hath commanded you: ye not turn aside to the right hand or to the
the
shall
e shall walk in all the ways which the Lord your God hath commanded you, that ye may live,
left.
WHAT
IS
49
HOLINESS?
and that it may be well with you, and that ye may prolong your days in the land which ye shall pos sess." The kernel of this exhortation is in the clause, " e shall not turn aside to the right hand or to the left." That command was to keep the Israelites from following after the sins of the nations round about them. The command is very much akin to :4: "Prepare ye the that made by John in Luke
paths straight."
way of the Lord, make his proposed that the Israelites
straight ness
and
all the
In ment
days
path
should
to
no
walk
of rectitude and
of their life.
euteronomy 14:2 God makes concerning the Jews, that He
reference art an
narrow
in
the
righteous
specific
state
has made with
He said, " or thou unto the Lord thy God, and the
other
holy people
a
God
people.
Lord hath chosen thee to be
a
peculiar people
himself, above all the nations that
unto
upon the earth." Some would infer from this statement that the Jews were holy merely because they were chosen by Jehovah as a peculiar people, but that is not are
They were no holier, nor were they to be any more holy, than any other group whom God might choose in that day or in this. A holy God true.
could not have chosen to commune with or as sociate with any other than a holy people. We find an example of this in the story of the Garden ntil Adam fell into sin, God walked of Eden. with him; but after his sin,
we
fellowship. Although pented at once, he had to bear to
do
not
Adam
such
work in the fields and
hear of any
obviously
re
the fruits of his sin
earn
his
living by
the
0
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
of his brow. He certainly must have made sacrifices to God on occasion. Whenever he laid his offering upon the altar, it must have been a stinging reminder that he had fallen into sin, and
sweat
was
no
with the Garden.
longer having holy ather
the
intimate
relationships
which he had had
in
the
euteronomy 26:16-19 e find the covenant made by the Lord and His people: "This the Lord thy God hath commanded thee to day do these statutes and judgments: thou shalt there In
that
was
fore
with
keep and do all thy soul.
them with all thine heart, and Thou hast avouched the Lord
thy God, and to walk in his ways, his statutes, and his commandments, keep and his judgments, and to hearken unto his voice. And the Lord hath avouched thee this day to be his peculiar people, as he hath promised thee, and this
and
day
to
be
to
keep all his commandments; and to make thee high above all nations which he hath made, in praise, and in name, and in honour; and that thou mayest be an holy people unto the Lord thy God, as he hath spoken." that thou shouldest
On the
had
one
sworn
determined to
hand,
their to
His voice.
we
find here that the Israelites
allegiance
to
the Lord and had
walk in His ways and to hearken On the other hand, the Lord had
they would be to Him a peculiar peo they should be exalted above all the nations ple, of the earth in praise, in name, and in honor. This exaltation was to come about because they were to be a holy people unto the Ix rd God. sworn
that
that
WHAT
IS
1
HOLINESS?
tragic facts of all history is that Jews changed their emphasis relationship, and took it to mean that
One of the most
time
as
the
went on
upon this
they were to be exalted above the nations round about them in government, economic prestige, war power, and worldly emoluments. Modern critics have missed a point here. They have looked at the small geographic areas of Palestine and have said that a God of wisdom could never have promised to exalt a small people like the Jews above the
other nations of the earth.
The facts of the
case
promised that they should be high above all the nations in praise, honor, and pres tige, in proportion to the holy and sacred relation that God
are
ships
that they would keep with Him. The loss of relationship of holiness, and their subse uent lapses into sin, brought to the Jews shame and
this
dishonor.
God had warned them that their name would become a byword and a curse upon the face
of the earth. So it was that their ultimate rejection of Him brought about a lapse into historical deca dence that ended with the coming of Christ. The
of the
remnant
Jews
left in Palestine under the
omans, because of their lack of spiritual compre hension, were looking for a mighty Christ to re
the government of Israel. Their rejection of Jesus, the holy Savior, the edeemer of mankind, store
brought
about the dark
sied would that the the
Jews
curse
In
come
the
are
to
calamity
which God
still
living
under the shadow of
humanity. twenty-eighth chapter
of
prophe
them; and historical facts show
of
euteronomy
2
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
blessings of God promised to the people long they would observe and do all His com mandments. These blessings were physical and In the first verse they are encouraged to spiritual.
we
find the
so
as
do all His commandments; in the ninth verse the promise is repeated on condition that they shall
"keep
the commandments of the
and walk in his
calamity serve to
Certain
ways."
Lord
In the fifteenth
thy God,
dire is threatened if they should fail "to ob do all. .which I command thee this day." verse
.
.
pronounced upon them. Note the fact that God includes all His commandments. are
ecalogue, given
The was
curses
Commandments,
Ten
brought forcibly less than
keep to
to
Moses upon Mount Sinai, As we read the
the basis of this exhortation.
a
however,
the
to
we
conclusion
are
that
life of holiness would enable
them in such
God.
a
way
as
to
be
at
once
nothing one
to
perfectly pleasing
chapter, after God has prophesied the Israelites might fail to keep His covenant ecause of that failure, He said come to grief
In the thirtieth
that and in
verses
1- : "And it shall
come
to
pass, when all
things upon thee, the blessing and the curse, which I have set before thee, and thou shalt call them to mind among all the nations, whither the Lord thy God hath driven thee, and shalt return unto the Lord thy God, and shalt obey these
are
come
according to all that I command thee this day, thou and thy children, with all thine heart, and with all thy soul; that then the Lord thy God will turn thy captivity, and have compassion upon his voice
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
thee, and will return and gather thee from all the nations, whither the Lord thy God hath scattered
thee."
again
Here
we find the statement that, in order be well with them, it was necessary to do that He had commanded. Incidental to the
for it
all
to
keeping
of the commandments,
heart and soul
utterly yielded
of course, was a God, attracted
to
by no outside sins, and allured by pleasures of the world about them. manding that the Israelites be holy.
Joshua was giving to the people assembled at in verses 6- of chapter 2 : courageous to keep and to When
his
of the
none
God
was
de
dying valedictory
Mt. Shechem, he said " e ye therefore very do all that is written
in the book of the law of Moses, that ye turn not aside therefrom to the right hand or to the left: that ye come not among these nations, these that remain among you; neither make mention of the name of their gods, nor cause to swear by them, neither
serve
them,
nor
bow
yourselves
unto
them:
the Lord your God, as ye have done unto this day." Again the emphasis is to do all that is written in the book of the law, to turn not aside to the right hand nor to the left. They but cleave
unto
exhorted never even to mention the name of gods of the nations round about them. God was zealous and insistent in His demands that the Israelites should be wholly separated from all save were
the
loyal fidelity
to
Him.
This is the
true
essence
of
God that is supreme, an all holiness a obedience to God that is without reservation, and
devotion
to
4
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
love for God that is the central
a
motivating force Joshua, dying bed, was simply of in Jehovah mouthpiece urging the Israelites
of one s life.
the to
cleave
God with
to
them in the ever
a
service.
his
on
a
devotion that would hold
of His will and
center
holy, peculiar people,
keep
them for
aside for divine
set
sings in the seventy-third Psalm, "Truly God is good to Israel, even to such as are of a clean heart." In this hymn sung in the sanctuary, there is brought before the Israelites once again Psalmist
The
to holiness. God was eager for them live pure lives. He was so eager that throughout all the pages of Sacred Writ He emphasized the essential character of all proper relationships with
the command
to
Him purity of heart, loyal devotion, and whole hearted surrender to His perfect will. 19:6
In Exodus
God
which which
light
applied
more
as
we are
directly telling
the nation. After
part of the message by Moses, and
a
Israelites
the nation
of other passages,
applies
it
to
the
to
sent
have
we
to a
a
group; but in the
persuaded
to
believe,
certain element within
Moses to remind the
people
of what He had done for them, and promising that they should be a peculiar treasure unto Him above
people, God said, kingdom of priests, all
refers, to
only as
no
doubt,
the individual
a
In
to
the
priest
to
the
men
priests
in his
"And ye shall be unto and an holy nation."
of the
own
Exodus 22: 1
people
as
a
of the nation.
temple
me
a
This
whole, but also It
but
applied
to
each
not
man
household.
we
find this
application
even
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
more individualized. In speaking of the laws of sacrifices and offerings and of what His people should eat, God said, "And ye shall be holy men unto me." This statement was given to emphasize the peculiar nature of their relationship to God and to show that He did not wish them even to be contaminated with unclean food.
The final reference which nection with the 9: 0.
This has
Jews to
as a
we
shall
holy people
study
in
con
is in Exodus
do with the adornment of the
priest
who was to represent Israel in the Holy of Holies in the temple. pon a crown of pure gold which adorned his head there was written Holiness to the Lord.
Hence, when the
priest
moved in and
among the people, attending to his duties of offerings and sacrifices, and praying for them before out
prominent thing not only meant was office of the a the that holy office, that priest the service which he rendered was a holy service, but it meant that God expected all His people to be holy. It meant that in all that was done in the temple before the mercy seat, and in whatsoever circumstances they might find themselves, they were always to recognize that they were a holy people, serving a holy God. In reading these passages and their contexts, one cannot follow a logical process of thought without coming to the conclusion that holiness was not an afterthought on the part of God, nor the demand for holiness among His people a mere passing fancy. Holiness was the prime motive not only of the the Ark of the Covenant, the one they saw was this inscription. It
6
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
existence of God but of the relationships between Him and His people. He is holy; they were to be holy. It is only logical for us to conclude that if He is the same God yesterday, today, and forever, then the
re uired by re uirements of
Him of His
as
holiness is the
re uirements for the Jews,
His
same; are
people
the
4.
was
the
coming
does He expect it of of Calvary. ENCE
us
spiritual
essential If God
of
Carradine, .
everly,
Lowry, Asbury,
OO S
Sanctification,
Possibilities
eid, Isaiah, Holiness
Jesus,
after the
eet, Joseph Agar, Holiness Symbolic and Chapters II, III. I
.
prior
to
more
E E
2.
If holiness
same.
it is essential for Christians.
tragic spectacle
1.
God is the same;
now.
human needs and their
demanded it of them
how much
principles of holiness people are still the basic
fundamental
same
ible
eal,
Chapter
of Grace, p. 111.
eadings.
CHAPTE Holiness
of
.
Old Testament Individuals
In this discussion
shall confine ourselves
we
to
passages of direct statements, commands, or exhorta tions concerning the holiness of individuals, and
passages which imply the necessity of holiness for individuals. There are many such passages in the Old Testament, and it will be to our interest to
review them
to
am
perfect the
means
essence
about
to
of
make
and
setting
find the
to
to
speaking
to
Almighty God; walk before
perfect." The upright and
be
true a
find the Lord
we
the
and be thou
me,
one
of each.
1 :1
Genesis
In
Abraham, "I
by
one
application
and
command sincere.
holiness of character.
covenant
to
be
This is God
was
with Abraham, but he
could make that agreement only with an individual whose character was unimpeachable and whose
integrity
was
un uestionable.
In Leviticus 10: -12
we
read of the anointment
priests, the tabernacle, the altar and the vessels that were to be set aside for God s special
of
the
service:
"And the Lord
o not drink wine
nor
spake
Aaron, saying, strong drink, thou, nor thy unto
with thee, when ye go into the tabernacle of the congregation, lest ye die: it shall be a statute sons
your generations: and that ye between holy and unholy, and may put difference forever
throughout
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
between unclean and clean; and that ye may teach the children of Israel all the statutes which the
spoken unto them by spake unto Aaron,
Lord hath
And and
the hand of Moses.
Moses
Ithamar, his
unto
meat
offering
that
the Lord made
sons
by fire,
and
beside the altar: for it is In each
case
that
remaineth
and were
of
eat
most
unto
Eleazar
left, Take the
the
offerings
of
it without leaven
holy."
the Lord commanded Moses
to
anoint
the person or article to be set aside for holy service, and He sanctified them. We read further in the
chapter that when the animals were brought the first offerings, when the Levitical priesthood
same
for was
unto
inducted into office, the sacrifice was sanctified the Lord. The word sanctify in these cases
only meant to be set apart, but it meant to be holy for that distinctive service. God could have nothing but a holy priesthood to minister unto His holy children. In euteronomy 1 :1 we find the Lord speaking to the priests of the tribe of Levi. They were to not
made
have
no
the Lord
inheritance among their brethren, because was to be their inheritance, and they were
upon the offering brought to the taber nacle for their sustenance; but, above all things, "Thou shalt be perfect with the Lord thy God."
to
depend
The
perfection
service,
but
it
certainly
character and love
fully acceptable In Job we find to
holiness
or
not
was
perfection
was
re uired
unto an
the
to
the
of
personal perfection of
make their service
Lord.
interesting reference in regard perfection. In Job 1:1 we
Christian
WHAT
read, "There name
was
right,
and
Here is
was
Job;
a
9
HOLINESS?
IS
in the land of
man
z, whose
perfect and up that feared God, and eschewed evil." of the most direct statements in all the and that
man
was
one
one
concerning the attainability and practicality experience of Christian perfection. That Job was perfect and upright meant that he was thoroughly acceptable to and fully approved the Lord. by Word
of
God
of the
In 1 Chronicles 2 :9 there is recorded the caution
of
avid who,
son
Solomon in these words: "And thou, Solomon
on
his
dying bed,
was
exhorting
his
my son, know thou the God of thy father, and serve him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind: for the Lord searcheth all hearts, and understandeth all the imaginations of the thoughts: if
thou seek him, he will be found of thee; but if forsake him, he will cast thee off forever."
thou
The command and with
a
to
willing
serve
God with
mind is the
a
perfect
essence
of
heart
avid s
message. He wanted no restraint in the service which his son would render to the Lord. He wanted
acceptably that there would the perfection of his son s regard uestion in the sight of God. He warned Solomon
Solomon be
no
heart
to serve
God
so
in
to
that God understood all about him and that any thing less than perfection would be uickly detected
and
thoroughly disapproved by
In 1 Chronicles 29:19
for his
son.
we
when he cries out, "And to
find
Almighty.
avid s last prayer
height pathos give Solomon my son a keep thy commandments, thy
It reaches the
perfect heart,
the
of human
60
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
testimonies, and thy
statutes, and to do all these and to build the palace, for the which I have made provision. He knew that Solomon needed
things,
nothing less than a perfect heart to enable him to avid keep all the commandments of the Lord. was here at the of all Christian striking keynote endeavor.
He
was
in accord with
the
later sang: "O for a heart to praise my A heart from sin set free, A heart that always feels So freely spilt for me
poet who
God, Thy
blood
"A heart in every thought renewed, And full of love divine; Perfect and right and pure and good, A copy, Lord, of Thine."
There are at least thirteen passages in the Psalms which deal with the holiness of individuals. We read in the first three the
happy
state
of the
verses man
of the first Psalm of
who is delivered from
The writer says: " lessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth
sin.
in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the ut his delight is in the law of the Lord; scornful. and in his law doth he meditate day and night.
And he shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth his fruit in his season; his leaf also shall not wither; and whatsoever he doeth shall prosper." He is describing here a man
who finds law.
Such
perfect delight in God s holy will and implicit obedience comes from a fully
yielded soul,
selfishness
child.
one
nor
in which there is
desire
to
no element of be other than God s holy
WHAT
an
IS
HOLINESS?
61
In the fourth Psalm, the fourth verse, we find exhortation to "stand in awe and sin not." This
of sinless righteousness is the antithesis of the life which the unsaved man must live. When one is completely delivered from all sin, he stands in state
the presence of God without fear, knowing that through the efficacy of the blood of Christ, and
through
activity of his own faith, he has ap propriated saving grace. He is no longer living a life of sin, but is given over to one of holy accepta bility to the heavenly ather. the
In the fifteenth Psalm
we
have definite
emphasis
upon holy living. asking the uestion, "Lord, who shall abide in thy tabernacle? Who shall dwell in thy holy hill?" the Psalmist answers it by stating After
that those who live in the presence of God must walk upright, must work righteousness, must speak the truth, must not backbite, must do no evil, and must
holy
take up man
no
must
reproach against
condemn
violence
The anyone. and evil in
everyone who is given over to such conduct; and he must honor them that fear the Lord. The holy man cannot make an oath and change it when, in so doing, he would better his own condition at the
expense of the other. He cannot charge unlawful interest, and he cannot take a reward against the innocent. This is in reality a description of a citi zen of ion, a citizen of the ingdom of God on in the earth, who is walking not ways of the man of the world, but in the ways of God. In Psalm 1 : 2
by
we
have
a
avid in memory of the
hymn of praise written day when the Lord de-
62
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
livered him from the hand of Saul. In his paeon praise he sang, "It is God that girdeth me with
of
avid is strength, and maketh my way perfect." not necessarily an of Chris of speaking experience tian perfection, but of a walk that is pleasing to God which, of course, is the result of an experience of perfect relationship with the Lord. The basis for a perfect Christian walk is a perfected Christian heart. In
Psalm
of the Lord
19:1as
the soul.
He
the
is
Lord
meaning
writer
the
being perfect then says,
pure, is that the
mandment of God
and
"The
speaks of the law thereby converting commandment
enlightening perfect law and
are
the
eyes."
of
The
the pure com able to turn the soul from
sin and to give to a man that heavenly wisdom which is necessary for his full deliverance from all evil. He concludes his meditation with a prayer in verse 14, "Let the words of my mouth, and the
meditation of my heart, be acceptable in thy sight, O Lord, my strength, and my redeemer." In Psalm twenty-four we find a situation very closely akin to that mentioned in Psalm fifteen. The writer asks in
verse
three, "Who shall ascend
into the hill of the Lord? his holy place?" Then he
or
"He that hath clean hands and
clean hands
are
who shall stand in it by saying,
answers a
pure heart."
The
forgiveness for the pure heart is symbolical
indicative of
commission of sins, and the of salvation from all inbred sin. The Psalmist here points out that two works of grace are necessary to make the soul thoroughly acceptable to the Lord.
WHAT
6
HOLINESS?
IS
We find a most interesting statement by avid in the thirty-seventh Psalm. It is a description of
the
man who has met all the conditions necessary for perfect acceptance by the Lord. " or the Lord loveth judgment, and forsaketh not his saints; they
preserved
are
shall be
cut
forever: but the seed of the wicked
off.
righteous
The
inherit the
shall
land, and dwell therein forever. The mouth of the righteous speaketh wisdom, and his tongue
talketh of
heart; is
saint.
a
judgment.
of the land.
ance
He is filled with wisdom.
His
speak of the goodness of God, fundamental principles of righteousness
tongue is ready and
The law of his God is in his
of his steps shall slide." Such a man He is preserved; he is promised inherit
none
the
to
inscribed in his heart that none of his steps shall slide. This is not positive proof against back sliding, but it does indicate that the soul who has entered into a state of perfect love is so firmly fixed and established that he may be counted upon are
to
so
stand the
storm
fifty-first
The
and
Psalm
stress
gives
of life.
us
a
picture
of
a
man
who has gone into sin, and upon whom the light of conviction has so fallen that he is in abject
repentance before God. man
might
is
that
be
the
sin
The
which
forgiven, and the might be purged
whole
has
sinful
of
plea
been
the
committed
principle
which
of his heart.
The
strongest indication of this is in verse two. writer prays for the double work of grace:
The
caused it
out
that he may be washed thoroughly from his then, that he may be cleansed from his sin
first,
ini uity; not
the
64
WHAT
act
the
IS
HOLINESS?
of sin, but the principle of sin which produced act. There was longing in the man s heart for
forgiveness, and an urgent desire that he might be so fully delivered that the same temptation would not find him yielding again. ead verses 2, , 10, and 14. "Wash me throughly from mine ini uity, and cleanse me from my sin. .Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean: wash me, .
and I shall be whiter than clean heart, O God; within me. . eliver
a
.
.
snow.
and me
.
.Create in
.
me
right spirit bloodguiltiness,
renew
from
.
a
O God, thou God of my salvation: and my tongue sing aloud of thy righteousness."
shall
In the
ninety-seventh Psalm we expression which has
find in the tenth
been used once before. The Psalmist says, " e that love the Lord, hate evil: he preserveth the souls of his saints; he delivereth them out of the hand of the wicked." The word "saints" is not used here in the sense in which it is commonly understood. As in other cases in the ible, it refers to God s select children verse
who as
to
an
are
in
be well
harmony
pleasing
with His laws, and living so sight. It is such people
in His
whom the Lord has delivered out of the hand of In the next two verses, the writer the wicked.
says, "Light is sown for the righteous, and gladness for the upright in heart. ejoice in the Lord, ye righteous; and give thanks at the remembrance
Saintliness, sanctimonious
holiness."
of his mean
a
mere
therefore, does
setting-up
not
of certain
characters above their fellow-men because they have done some unusual thing in Christian service, but
WHAT
IS
6
HOLINESS?
it is that characteristic which is imbibed from
close
relationship
with
In Psalm 101:2 when he says,
a
holy
God.
avid makes
"I will
a
behave
perfect
godliness myself wisely in a a
of
vow
way. O when wilt thou come unto me? I will walk within my house with a perfect heart." How could he boldly say, "I will behave in a perfect
way. I will walk with a perfect heart," unless there could be such human perfection? The indication is that
his he he
avid knew that there
experience to fulfill possible to and the God, promise implications are that was such an enjoying experience at the time
which
would make
wrote
was
an
for him
this Psalm. 106:
Psalm
it
gives
another evidence
that there
of grace which makes it possible for one It says, to live right under all circumstances. " lessed are they that keep judgment, and he that is
a
state
oing righteous righteousness at all times." ness simply means living right. It is impossible to live right at all times and under all circumstances unless one is fully yielded, wholly consecrated, and consistently devoted to the service of his Master. doeth
In Psalm 119:1-
" lessed
are
we
find
some
significant
words.
the undefiled in the way, who walk lessed are they that keep
in the law of the Lord.
his testimonies, and that seek him with the whole heart. They also do no ini uity: they walk in his
ways."
The
The second
first
significant
expression
word is
"undefiled".
is "whole heart"; and the
66
WHAT
third is "do dicate the be
no
extent
expected by In these
IS
HOLINESS?
These three terms in of salvation from sin which may
ini uity".
God s children.
expressions
in the Psalms
have in
we
part of the hymnal of the chil dren of Israel which was used in connection with the form of
verse
a
their services in the tabernacle.
expression given from
It is the
of their devotional life.
various
the
Psalms
in
The
chapter
this
highest
uotations from
are
from prayers wrung from the distressed heart of the sin-sick individual. Some
are
high
A few
Some
sources.
and
are
are
mighty hymns
which
sung to God. penitence, and several
in the form of
are
praise, but all of them depict heart yearnings of God s children who Him perfectly and to do His will to know sought in all things. in the form of felt
needs
and
In Proverbs 2: -11 we find these words: "Then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord, and or the Lord giveth find the knowledge of God.
wisdom:
out
of his mouth cometh
understanding. the righteous:
uprightly. preserveth
He
He
he is
layeth a
keepeth
up buckler
the
knowledge
and
wisdom for them that walk of judgment, and
sound to
paths
the way of his saints. Then shalt thou understand righteousness, and judgment, and e uity;
yea, every good path. When wisdom entereth into thine heart, and knowledge is pleasant unto thy
soul; discretion shall preserve thee,
shall
keep
"saints". God
thee." Once
again
we
fear
of
understanding
find the
expression,
The statement here is that the saints of
"understand
the
the
Lord."
They
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
6
knowledge of God;" they keep "the paths judgment," and their way is preserved. With this background of religious experience, the high point of the passage is reached in the ninth verse when it is stated that the saints "understand right eousness and judgment and e uity; yea, every good path." "find the
of
11: , 6, 20, and 2 we find four about the righteous person: "The right eousness of the perfect shall direct his way: but the wicked shall fall by his own wickedness. The In Proverbs
statements
righteousness
of
the
upright
shall
deliver
them:
but transgressors shall be taken in their own naughti ness. .They that are of a froward heart are .
.
abomination
to
the Lord: but such
as
are
upright
.The desire of the in their way are his delight. but the is only good: righteous expectation of the .
.
speaks of perfect. The indication is that there is a righteousness attainable which is so acceptable to God that the person in that spir itual condition is "perfect". The full fruition of such a spiritual condition is indicated in this same chapter in the thirtieth and thirty-first verses. In the one the writer says the "righteous shall be recompensed in the earth." In the other we read, "The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life." This thought is also carried over into the twelfth chapter, wicked is wrath."
righteousness
the
One of these
of the
in the second, third, and fifth
these: "A
as .
.
.
.
.
.
.The .The
good
verses
man
verses
in such words
obtaineth favor of the Lord
righteous shall not be moved. thoughts of the righteous are right."
root
of the
6
IS
WHAT
HOLINESS?
We find another statement implying holiness in Proverbs 21: : "The way of man is froward and strange: but as for the pure, his work is right."
The person spoken of as being pure in this case is he who is pure in heart, whose righteousness has been made perfect in the sight of the Lord. This
type of
man
is considered
being
as
who follows
one
the ways of men but the way of the Lord, which is the way of holiness.
not
ook of Isaiah
The
references
to
is found
one
speaks
of the
gives experience
the
Isaiah
in
laying
us
at
least
ten
of holiness.
6:
specific
The first
in which the author
of the live coal
his mouth, ini uity and
on
cleansing purging of his sin. The sin referred to is the principle of inbred sin, the carnal nature, removed by the fiery purging of the coal from God s altar. This experience came to Isaiah in his early min istry as a prophet of God. He was given a divine of his
which resulted in the the
revelation of the holiness of the Lord in order prepare him for his great ministry as a prophet. In Isaiah 26: , 4,
condition
portrayed.
-9
we
find
a
most
to
miraculous
It is in the form of
a
prayer
prophet is not only but inciting the people of Israel to God praising supreme confidence in God. Of the righteous per to
Almighty
the
son
in which the
surrendered to Him, and whose perfect love for Him, the prophet the Almighty: "Thou wilt keep him in peace, whose mind is stayed on thee: be
who is
wholly
heart is filled with
says
to
perfect cause ever:
he trusteth in thee.
for
in
the
Trust ye in the Lord for Lord JEHO AH is everlasting
WHAT
strength. thou,
.
most
IS
HOLINESS?
69
.The way of the just is uprightness: upright, dost weigh the path of the just. .
ea, in the way of thy judgments, O Lord, have we waited for thee; the desire of our soul is to thy name, and to the remembrance of thee. With my soul have I desired thee in the night; yea, with my spirit within
me
judgments world
will
will
I
seek
thee
early;
for when
thy
in the earth, the inhabitants of the learn righteousness." That God will
are
keep that person whose mind is stayed on Him in perfect peace is a marvellous thought. This would not
be
possible without perfect surrender and with loyalty to and dependence upon God.
out utter
Isaiah
gives the picture perfect righteousness and
:1 -1
of
the
man
completely obedient to the will of God. The prophet said: "He that walketh righteously, and speaketh upright ly; he that despiseth the gain of oppressions, he that shaketh his hands from holding of bribes, that stoppeth his ears from hearing of blood, and shutteth his eyes from seeing evil; he shall dwell on high: his place of defence shall be the munitions of rocks: bread shall be given him; his waters shall be sure. Thine eyes shall see the king in his beauty: they shall behold the land that is very far off." The man spoken of is a man of stable character, of who walks in
is
real devotion, of determination to refrain from all evil. He shall find his reward not only in the life hereafter, but in security from the commission of sin in this world and in the spiritual rewards which come to him as a result of that kind of life. The
prophet
rises
to
one
of the
highest points
0
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
writings in the thirty-fifth chapter when, inspiration, he looks forward to the coming of Christ when the Lord shall reign
in all his
under divine second
upon the earth for a thousand years and shall es tablish a highway of holiness upon which the un clean shall not be able to walk. This highway, which is called "The
security, of purity, of of joy and gladness
Way
men
fellowship
in the
redeemed who walk it.
holy
of Holiness," is one of from carnal strivings,
surcease
It is
will be able
to
of all
way upon which tread. a
the
only
and 1: 2:11 we find two passages follows: "Hearken unto me, ye that know righteousness, the people in whose heart is In Isaiah
which read
as
my law; fear ye not the reproach of men, neither be ye afraid of their revilings. . epart ye, de out from touch no unclean thence, part ye, go ye .
.
thing;
go ye out of the midst of her; be ye clean, that bear the vessels of the Lord." The emphasis is upon cleanness or purity. The result of such living is
:12, 1 and also in the again in Isaiah fifty-seventh chapter and the second verse: " or ye shall go out with joy, and be led forth with indicated
peace: the mountains and the hills forth before you into singing, and all the field shall clap their hands. Instead shall come up the fir tree, and instead shall come up the myrtle to the Lord for a name, for shall
not
they
shall
his
be
and
break
of the thorn of the brier it
shall
everlasting sign
be
that
.He shall enter into peace: in their beds, each one walking in
cut
rest
off.
tree: an
shall
the trees of
uprightness."
.
.
WHAT
IS
1
HOLINESS?
The
righteous man who is well pleasing in the of the Lord is described again in the sixtieth sight chapter, the first and twenty-first verses, and in the
sixty-first chapter, read
as
, 9, 10, and 11. They follows: "Arise, shine; for thy light is come, verses
glory of the Thy people also shall and the
Lord is risen upon thee. be all righteous: they shall in .
.
.
herit the land for ever, the branch of my planting, the .To work of my hands, that I may be glorified. .
appoint
them that
unto
mourn
ion,
in
to
.
give
for ashes, the oil of joy for mourn of ing, the garment praise for the spirit of heaviness; that they might be called trees of righteousness, the planting of the Lord, that he might be glorified.
them
unto
.
.
beauty
.And their seed shall be known among the
.
Gentiles, and their offspring among the people: all that see them shall acknowledge them, that they
the seed which the Lord hath blessed. I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful are
in my God; for he hath clothed me with the gar ments of salvation, he hath covered me with the robe of righteousness, as a bridegroom decketh him
self with ornaments, and as a bride adorneth herself or as the earth bringeth forth with her jewels. her bud, and as the garden causeth the things that will
cause
before is
in
people
all the
spring forth; so righteousness and praise
in it
sown
are
the
nations."
The
the Lord God
to
spring
climactic
forth
statement
which says that all of these be called "the holy people, the re
last
shall
to
verse
deemed of the Lord." aniel
gives
one
reference
to
holiness in
chapter
2
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
and 10. He says: "And they that be 12, verses wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament; and they that turn many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever. .Many shall be purified, .
.
and made white, and tried; but the wicked shall do wickedly: and none of the wicked shall under
stand; but the wise shall understand."
and made white
The many are those
who will have been redeemed from sin.
Inasmuch
who shall be as
this is
a
purified
statement
have the direct
children
to
We find to
be
of God Himself
implication purified.
only
one
that God
to
aniel,
wants
reference in Hosea in
the holiness of individuals.
we
all His
regard
This is in Hosea
10:12: "Sow to yourselves in righteousness, reap in mercy; break up your fallow ground: for it is time to seek the Lord, till he come and rain right
upon you." preparation for the
eousness
righteousness.
in mercy
come
This is the
picture
of
perfect
reaping of the pure fruits of Sowing in righteousness and reaping only
after the
ground
of repentance
and consecration has been fallowed. Then comes the rain of righteousness upon the soul of the in dividual who has hungered and thirsted after a
give. interesting uestions
clean heart which God alone
Micah
asks
some
very
can
in
6, , , and 1 1 : "Wherewith chapter, shall I come before the Lord, and bow myself be the sixth
verses
high God? shall I come before him with burnt offerings, with calves of a year old? Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, or with ten thousands of rivers of oil? shall I give my firstfore the
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
born for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord re uire of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk Shall I count humbly with thy God? them pure with the wicked balances, and with the .
bag
.
.
of deceitful
weights?" God wants, according prophet, spiritual relationship, which is not dependent upon mere burnt offerings and for malities of worship. Those people are counted pure in His sight who do justly, who love mercy, and who walk humbly with Him.
-"to
the
a
echariah 14:20, 21 there is another most mar prophecy concerning the second coming of Christ and the result of it. The Old Testament In
vellous
prophet leaps the by events to look
boundaries of centuries and near forward hundreds of years beyond
the birth of Christ
to
the time when He shall
come
again kingdom. "In the shall there be bells of the horses, upon day NTO THE LO HOLINESS ; and the pots in the Lord s house shall be like the bowls before the to
earth
and
establish
His
that
altar.
ea, every pot in Jerusalem and in Judah
shall be holiness
unto
that sacrifice
the Lord of hosts:
shall
and all
take of them, and seethe therein: and in that day there shall be no more the Canaanite in the house of the Lord
they
come
and
of hosts." Malachi
holiness in "
ut who
who shall
gives two references to the experience of He says: chapter , verses 2 and . the of his abide day may coming? and stand when he appeareth? for he is like
4
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
refiner s fire, and like fullers sope: and he shall as a refiner and purifier of silver: and he shall the sons of and purge them as gold Levi, purify
a
sit
and silver, that they may offer unto the Lord an offering in righteousness." Here "purify" and
"purging"
are
the
The
words.
prominent
most
result of that process which is like is indicated in chapter 4, verses 2
a
refiner s fire and
:
"
ut
you that fear my name shall the Sun of right and ye eousness arise with healing in his wings: unto
shall go forth, and grow up as calves of the stall. And ye shall tread down the wicked; for they shall be ashes under the soles of your feet in the that I shall do this, saith the Lord of hosts."
We
that there
see
Testament
and
which
experience
theless,
just
teaches holiness,
have
many passages in the Old to do with the doctrine
of holiness.
direct and urgent. as
are
Others
important.
as
well
day
as
In are
some
cases
they
implied, but,
The
Old
the New.
are
never
Testament
We
must
not
forget the fact, however, that in the Old Testament we find God dealing with individuals collectively more
and
often than He did in the New Testament times thereafter. The reason for this is that the
Jews as a compact nation could be dealt with more easily through their leaders than they could after their dispersion and control by other nations. In later days when God could no longer deal with them men
as a
compact unit, His methods of redeeming
from sin became
more
individualized.
WHAT
IS
E E 1.
Carradine, I
2.
HOLINESS?
ENCE
everly,
OO S
Sanctification,
.
eid, Isaiah, Holiness
ible
eadings.
Chapter
CHAPTE
I.
The Carnal Mind In this
chapter
we
shall discuss the
the carnal mind and endeavor
uestion
of
discover what it
to
have it, why we should be rid of it, and how it can be eliminated. It is referred to by dif
is, why ferent
we
of
terms
the old man; nality, inbred
well
for
being called spoken of as car
sometimes
other times it is
sin, and the carnal mind.
to
us
phraseology,
at
examine the
concerning it and analyze light of the Scriptures and
Scriptural
those
It will be
references
statements
human
in the
experience.
What is meant by the term the carnal mind or the two minds? We read in James 1: , "A doubleminded man is unstable in all his ways." In omans
:6,
we
read, " or
to
be
carnally
minded is death:
life and peace. toward God: for mind is ecause the carnal enmity law of neither indeed God, it is not subject to the In these two passages we have an implica can be." but
to
be
spiritually
minded
is
tion of the fact that there are, spiritually speaking, two minds, and the direct statement that one of
spiritual and the other is carnal. simple meaning is that the spiritual mind is of harmonious relationship with God; whereas,
these
The one
minds is
the other hand, the carnal mind is is out of harmony with the will of God. on
When
the
apostle
says
6
that
"to
be
one
which
spiritually
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
minded is life and
peace," he means that he is spiritual relationships with God who has been purged of carnality, and has been brought by the Holy Spirit into a state of perfect accord secure
in his
with the will of God. These two minds have definite effects upon the human being, which are exactly opposite in their nature. The spiritual mind makes for harmony, peace, love, and perfect fellow
ship with the heavenly ather. The carnal mind brings discord, self-assertion, and rebellion against the authority of the Almighty. There are some uestions to be considered with regard to it, in order to clarify some matters in which all are interested. The first uestion is this: What is the carnal mind?
irst, it is not an act. The condition, a state of being. One finds himself with it, and no act of his produced it. Therefore, in the final analysis, we are not respon carnal mind is
sible
for
after the
a
responsible, ultimately,
it.
ut
light
of God has shown that there is
we
are
a
way to be rid of it. If we find out how to get rid of it, and refuse to take the necessary steps, then ut become responsible for its continuance. we we are not responsible for its being there in the
first
place.
The second uestion is: Who has the carnal mind? nless one has been baptized The answer is this: with the Holy Ghost, he has it, because everybody
inherits the carnal mind as a racial trait. It is not individual inheritance. There is a law of physi cal inheritance that causes a child sometimes to an
revert to traits
of its parents
or
great-grandparents
WHAT an
9
HOLINESS?
IS
individual trait, but
racial inheritance, that
a
explains why the children of sanctified parents are not born holy. That uestion is asked again and again. A parent will say, "If I have the carnal nature purged, and if my wife has, then why aren t our children born holy?" If we could transmit to them through our physical make-ups their spir itual natures, they would have long, lean, lanky spiritual souls, and they would have short-set, stubby, spiritual souls, just as we have such traits physically. In spite of the fact that the parents may be sanctified wholly, this inheritance which is racial and moral is passed on. Children, whether we
admit it
not,
or
desires and ead old
born with the
are
that
nature
we
:
omans 6:6,
inbred, carnal
same
inherited.
" nowing this,
that
our
is crucified with him, that the body of sin be destroyed, that henceforth we should not
man
might serve
sin.
or he that is dead is freed from sin."
In this instance the carnal mind is called in the
Scriptures
"the old man" and "the
Paul contends that in Christ from sin that
we
are
from
dead with Christ which
the
guilt
present sin,
as
of
our
of sin."
delivered old man is
so
Wesley s interpretation
crucified with him." we
know "that
can
body
be
we can
means
is that
be "freed
to
past, and from the power of
dead
men
from the commands of
their former masters." An
interesting
uestion is, Why
omans version eliminate it? In " or that which I do I allow not
giving
my consent
to
does
not
con
:1 -1 ; Paul says: that is, I am not
it, but I do it
just
the
same :
0
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
for what I would, that do I not; but what I hate, that do I. If then I do that which I would not, I the law that it is good." In the eleventh he says, " or sin, taking occasion by the com mandment, deceived me, and by it slew me." One
consent unto verse
may argue that the seventh not describing the Christian.
chapter
omans is
of
We need not go into the theology of it, but this is true it corresponds with the facts of human experience. We do some
things them. in
we
our
do to or
things
do
we
not want to
the
wish
we
one wants to
ing,
we
could
of bitterness
roots
do
not want to
we
do. There
let malice, anger, envy, criticism overpower us.
and
see
ashamed of, and do
are
go along, we find that there are lives certain tendencies that cause
As
are
things to
us
tendencies
backbiting, or strife, why it is, rid of them. They are get within If us. springing up or
We wonder
know whether
or not
he has the bless
he should go underneath his experience and how many such roots he has. Let us test out our
experience
and
dead within.
if the
see
If it is not,
principle
we
of
carnality
is
still have the carnal
mind.
Why reason
does is
not
simple.
and say, "Lord, I
having
any
you to forgive sense." If we are
want
more
capacity, responsible
brain
conversion eliminate them? The Suppose one should come to God
we
me
for
speaking
should be fools, because
we
not
of are
innate mental powers. Or God, "Lord, I want you suppose one should say to forgive me for not being taller than I am." We not
for
our
to
cannot
ask
God
to
forgive
us
for
something
for
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
1
which we are not responsible. Then suppose one should come to God as a Christian, after having found the roots of bitterness and pride, and say,
"Lord,
roots
I want you to forgive me for harboring the of the carnal nature." This would be absurd
because
they
are
by sanctification,
not
which
purged by forgiveness, is a cleansing act.
We cannot control the carnal
self
to
devil in Heaven rebelled
subject
His law.
to
fling
if He could nate
him.
nature, the
standing.
ut God
it out of nate
and
was
not
control him, but from the heavens.
not
lightning pit of
him into the
damnation.
ut
control the devil, He could elimi God does not try to control the carnal not
suppressionists
If God can our
it and
against God,
God could
He could cast him like
He could
God Him
His Word says that it is not the law of God. omans : . The control it.
cannot
subject
nature.
but
completely
souls; He
purify
to
the contrary notwith
suppress it, we cannot. eradicate it. He can fling
cannot
our
can purge it; He can elimi hearts. The Son of God was
might destroy the works of though He cannot control it,
manifested that He
the
devil; and
He
not
even
The destructive process is far more We do not have to worry whether or it will rise up and trouble us. If it is dead, eliminated, we know we are free.
destroy satisfactory. can
it.
purged,
Conversion is a process of forgiveness, and sancti fication is a process of purging. Suppose that we were to come to the altar for conversion, and God were to
to come
try to purge us of sin; or suppose we were for purging, and God should make a mis-
2
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
He convert us He does not do that. in order that He might sanctify us. He is God of decency and order, and He does things
step and saves a
us
step by step.
of the carnal mind? It is a tendency, proclivity to evil. The urge to do right and the urge to do wrong are in every Christian s heart. He wants to be one hundred per What is the
trend,
nature
a
a
for God, but there is a downward pull that keeps him from being at his best. He does things
cent
for which he is sorry, and after he has done them, he asks God to help him. He yearns for deliverance from
carnality. next Scriptural
The
"Now if we on
reference
is
omans
6: :
be dead with Christ, we believe that shall also live with him." Wesley s comment we
this is that
"conformed comment,
to
to
be dead with Christ
his death
connecting believing in
by dying
this with the
to
means
sin."
to
next
be
Clarke s verse,
is:
Christ Jesus, and having a "So we, death unto sin, and a life unto righteousness, should sin no more. If we be risen indeed with Christ, we
should
affections The
man
to an over
seek
the
things above,
and
set
our
things above, and not on the earth. who walks in humble, loving obedience
on
indwelling Christ,
sin has
his soul than death has
glorified body
of his
no
over
edeemer."
more
dominion
the immortal and
omans 6:10 this whole idea of
In being rid of the carnal mind is based upon the moral responsibil ity and efficacy of the saving death of the Son of
God.
" or in that he died, he died unto sin
once:
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
but in that he liveth, he liveth
unto
God."
consummation of this matter is found in
The
omans
6:12. Paul exhorts the omans, "Let not sin there fore reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey
According to Wesley, the always subject to death, but since we may know the redemptive power of the Son of God, it need never be subject to sin again. We must never forget, however, that without the efficacy of the sav ing grace provided through Christ, we should all it in the lusts thereof."
body
is
be bondslaves at
any time.
to
Commenting on represented
"Sin is
hope
sin without any this verse, as
a
king,
Adam
ruler,
or
of release
Clarke says: tyrant, who
has the desires of the mind and the members of the
body under passions he
his control; so that governs the body."
by influencing
the
exhortation is: let sin " o not he of Paul, contends, reign, do him have no place, not let him work; that is, let no being in your souls; because, wherever he is, he governs, less or more; and indeed sin is not sin with out
this."
The
He says further that "Certainly, the very an evil thought to which passion or
existence of
attaches itself, is a proof that there sin has dominion; for without dominion such passions could
appetite
Wherever sin is felt, there sin has dominion; for sin is sin only as it works in action or passion against God." In commenting on the not
be excited.
last clause of the verse, Clarke says: "If it be there, it will reign there; and its reign supposes, neces
subjection of that in which it reigns. A king reigns when his laws are enforced, and the
sarily,
the
4
WHAT
people obey
HOLINESS?
IS
them.
When
there
is
no
executive
government there is no reign. There may be shadow there, but there is no king." The Paul
completes
this argument in
omans 6:1
royal apostle
a
when
he says: "Neither yield ye your members as instru ments of unrighteousness unto sin: but yield your
selves unto God, as those that are alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of right eousness
God."
unto
The climactic point of the argument in the sixth chapter of omans is found in verses 14-16: " or sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are
law, but under grace. What then? sin, because we are not under the law, but
not
under
shall
we
under grace? God forbid. now ye not, that to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his serv ants ye are to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness?" Wesley s comments on
"has neither
for, he says,
sation of
these
right we
terror
verses
nor
are
and
not
to
to
the effect that sin
over a
human
under the law
bondage,
enabling you nder the merciful
without
are
power"
"a
which
being, dispen
only shows sin, but under grace it; con uer
dispensation of the Gospel, which brings complete victory over it; to every one who is under the powerful influences of the Spirit of Christ." Clarke says sin shall not have dominion over us because "God delivers you from it; and if you again become subject to it, it will be the effect of your own
" e
choice
are
or
negligence."
When
under
under the merciful and beneficent
grace,
dispen-
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
sation of the Gospel, that, although it re uires the strictest conformity to the will of God, affords suf ficient power to be thus conformed; and, in the death of Christ, has provided pardon for all that is
past, and grace His
to
help
comment on
suppose
in every time of need."
the sixteenth
that
should
is: "Can you to be the
verse
continue
you of Christ if ye give way to sin? Is he not the master who exacts the service, and to whom the service is performed? Sin is the service of Satan; righteousness the service of Christ. If ye sin ye are servants
servants of Satan, and not the servants of God." The word servant means a slave which, under the Greek and oman masters, was mere property
the
to
be
disposed
of
at
will.
He
was
as to his own comfort; his life of his master, with no protection
state or
treated
"This
of individuals. if he
as
state
is the
were
state
never
was
on
consulted
in the hands
the part of the
And in many cases he was a mere beast. Clarke says: of every poor, miserable sin
ner; he is the slave of Satan, and his own evil lusts and appetites are his most cruel task-masters." The
inference is that Christ has redeemed
or
paid
for
the release of every sinner from the bondage of Satan, and He has a right to demand His property
any time. Just as the unredeemed soul was a slave of Satan, so the saved soul becomes the love slave of Christ. The difference is in the two masters. at
One is bad and
The other is
loving, ence
oppressive, dreadful and malevolent. infinitely good, uplifting, freedom-
and benevolent.
from
a
Christ
never
exacts
soul except for the purpose of
obedi
turning
WHAT
6 it
to
no
HOLINESS?
IS
the soul s eternal
In Him there is
advantage.
self-interest, for He
seek and
to
came
to
save
from all sin. omans 12:2
In
be
conformed
not
formed
by
find the exhortation, "And
we
this world: but be ye trans the renewing of your mind, that ye may to
and acceptable, and per apostle is speaking of the difference between the carnal and the spiritual minds. On every hand we see the prevailing evi dence of sin. We find selfishness, pride, vanity, sinful extravagance, lying, stealing, luxury, riotous living, and sins of like nature all about us. If we
prove what is that fect, will of God."
follow
formed
to
footsteps
carnal
values of life.
Wesley s
we
ut if
about
comment on
our
us,
this is:
us
minds
our
shall find
things
minds,
our
of those about
this world.
transformed,
not on
The
the natural trend of
walk in the or
good,
"
on
shall
and be are
interests
but
we
the
And be
con
renewed
centering spiritual not con
formed Neither in judgment, spirit, nor behaviour; Which neglecting the will of God, to this world its own; that ye may prove follows now entirely sure trial: which is easily done by him who has by thus presented himself to God, What is that good, The will and acceptable, and perfect, will of God of understood all here to be the is of God preceptive part of Christianity, which is in itself so excellently
good,
so
natures."
acceptable
to
God, and
so
Adam Clarke comments: " e ye
transfigured,
appear
as
new
perfective
of
our
metamorphosed,
persons, and with
new
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
habits;
as God has given you a new form of worship, that ye serve in the newness of the Spirit, and not in the oldness of the letter. The word implies
so
a
radical, thorough, and universal change,
both
outward and inward."
When this is done, the will of God is complete in When the mind is renewed,
the individual life.
when the whole life is state
that such
It
can
be
condition
a
the carnal element
nates
when the will of
in which God desires it in the
redemption. as
changed,
perfectly fulfilled, the soul has reached the
God is
perfect
work of
readily discerned, however, be attained as long or principle of sin predomi cannot
in the life of the individual.
Ephesians 4:20-24, we read: " ut ye learned Christ; if so be that ye have heard him, and have been taught by him, as the truth is in Jesus: that ye put off concerning the Turning
have
not
to
so
former conversation the old man, which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts: and be renewed
of your mind; and that ye put on the which after God is created in righteousness man, and true holiness." This discusison gives us a con in the
spirit
new
trast
between the "old man" and the "new man".
The old
man
but the
new
true
holiness;
of God."
is corrupt, according to deceitful lusts, man is created in righteousness and as
This
Wesley
new
man
says, "in the very image is typical of the demand
for universal holiness, because God is an example and pattern both as to code of ethics and as to
character. The
figure
of
speech
used in this passage is sim-
HOLINESS?
IS
WHAT
ilar to that mentioned in Genesis that God created man in his own
interpretation to
which he
1:2 .
It states
image.
Clarke s
the model according is that "God formed in the spirit of his mind. was
was
St. Paul says here that they should put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness
and
true
holiness.
.
.
.in the holiness of truth.
oth
thing, and the one il rom the apostle we learn what lustrates the other. Moses meant by the image of God; it was right
certainly
refer
eousness
and
this
or
soul is
image is
the
to
the
receive
of God.
.
of holiness.
truth
of moral
the other to
same
.
.
.It
.
degree good by Jesus Christ; it is .the likeness of the
is
not
which the the whole
ivine
eing
be traced upon his soul, and he is to bear that fully as his first father Adam bore it in the be
to
as
ginning."
The summation of this whole argument is found
in the purpose of our redemption as stated in Ephe sians 2: : "Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus." Here is the crowning point of
program. The carnal mind, which is at enmity with God, causes the individual to live Its eradica at variance with the purposes of God. the
redemptive
tion from the soul permits the entrance and control of the mind and spirit of Christ who, though being in the form of man, thought it not robbery to be e ual with God. Nevertheless, in spite of that
He took upon Himself the form of a serv ant and humbled Himself and "became obedient
e uality,
even
unto
the
predominant
death
of the
motive of
a
cross."
fully
This
is
the
consecrated Chris-
WHAT
IS
9
HOLINESS?
tian
to seek not his own will but that of his ather in Heaven, for the glory of God and the salvation of his fellow-beings about him.
The final reference to the carnal mind is found in 1 Peter 4:1, 2 in which we are exhorted to arm ourselves with the
mind that Christ had, to longer to live in sin or in the
same
e uip flesh according to the lusts of men, but to live after the holy will of God. " orasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves like ourselves
wise with the
no
mind: for he that hath suffered
same
in the flesh hath ceased from sin; that he no should live the rest of his time in the flesh lusts of men, but on this passage, no
to
longer
the will of God."
Wesley said,
in the flesh
the desires of
others.
to
These
longer to
the
Commenting
"That ye may live Even in this mortal body;
Either your own or those of various: but the will of God is
men
are
one." In
speaking
of the
same
reference, that is, the
mind renewed after that of Christ Jesus, Adam Clarke says it is no longer "governed by the base principle of giving up his faith to save his life; to the lusts of men according to the will of his idola
persecutors; but to the will of God; which will of God is, that he should retain the truth, and live according to its dictates, though he should suffer trous
for it."
Thus, we have studied something of the nature of rom the Scriptural references and the carnal mind. comments a
given,
principle
we
find that the carnal mind is
of inbred sin,
the unfortunate lot of
90
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
every individual. We find that the Christian does We see not rid himself of it fully in conversion. that it is contrary to the will of God, that it has within it the very essence of contrariness which, if left
to
of the
itself, would result in the ultimate demolition
ingdom
of God
as
well
as
the
struction of the individual soul. That God is
Christ died nature
easily
to
spiritual
de
arrayed against carnality, that Jesus us fully from it, that human
redeem
deliverance
craves
from its domination
found in these references
we
is
have studied.
against it, if human nature cries out for deliverance, if Jesus Christ has power, through the efficacy of His blood, to redeem us from it; then it is only reasonable to conclude that our complete freedom from inbred sin is the natural thing to If God is
expect from the hands of God. And it
at
the
moment
ceive it from
an
we may expect faith reaches up to re all-sufficient Hand.
when
E E 1.
2.
4.
OO S
I.
Haney, Milton L., The Inheritance estored, Chapters III, I . Mudge, James, The Perfect Life in Experience
octrine, Chapter . Murray, Andrew, The eeper Christian Life, and
.
ENCE
rengle, Samuel L., Heart Talks on Holiness, Chapter I. avis, Henry Turner, The Shining Way, Chap ter
.
our
Chapter
III.
CHAPTE The Holy Spirit
There the
to
II. and
His Work
many references in the New Testament but in this chapter we shall
are
Holy Spirit,
confine ourselves
those New Testament passages Holy Spirit and His work of sancti to
dealing fying and witnessing with the
in the hearts of individuals.
Since the time of the Ascension of Christ
we
have
living Holy Spirit. dispensation Speaking in theological terms, there have been three such dispensations. The first was that of God the in the
been
of the
ather, which existed from the creation of
the He
coming was
the
of Christ.
While Christ
predominant figure
in
was
man
on
spiritual
to
earth,
contacts
with mankind, and His thirty-three years on earth may be described as the dispensation of the Son. We are now in the third dispensation, which will
coming of Christ when the Spirit will merge their triune glorious reign.
last until the second
ather, Son, and Holy
offices into
one
This does
not
mean
that the
ather, Son, and
three separate and distinct persons Holy Spirit with individual powers, independent of each other. It simply means that the triune nature of God has are
thus far in ecclesiastical history been manifested in personalities of the Godhead. In the first
the three
period the
the
coming
ather was always pointing forward to of the Son. Christ was always connecting
92
WHAT
the
current events
and honor of the
directed attention of the ment
was
At
the great event the coming one time He made the state
disciples that He go Spirit might come and John 16: .
best for the
away in order that the Holy begin His momentous work. We read the first
Holy Spirit
9
of His life to the power and glory ather, and on many occasions to
Holy Spirit.
that it
HOLINESS?
IS
outstanding
reference
and His work in Matthew
to
:11, 12.
the
John
says: "I indeed baptize you with water unto repent ance; but he that cometh after me is mightier than
I, whose shoes I
am not
worthy
to
bear: he shall
bap
tize you with the Holy Ghost, and with fire: whose fan is in his hand, and he will throughly purge his floor, and gather his wheat into the garner; but he will burn up the chaff with un uenchable fire." The forerunner of Christ is minimizing his own
magnifying the power of Jesus. At the time he is indicating the most essential purpose of the coming of Christ to introduce the disciples to a new baptism, not with water but with the Holy Ghost and with fire. work and
same
The
baptism
with the
denotes the work of the
Holy Ghost and with fire Holy Spirit when He comes
into the heart of the Christian.
It is to purge, to burn up the chaff, to gather together all of the worth while elements of personality and character,
purify
the whole with refining fire. Com this passage, Wesley says, "He shall fill you with the Holy Ghost, inflaming your hearts with that fire of love, which many waters cannot
and to
menting
uench.
on
And this
was
done,
even
with
a
visible
94
WHAT
appearance
of fire,
as
Adam Clarke s
IS
HOLINESS?
day
the
on
of Pentecost."
point. He says: "Outward precepts, however well they might de scribe, could not produce inward spirituality. This was
the
province
Spirit of God, represented here
the soul,
similate the whole The
next
and of it
of the
alone; therefore he is similitude of fire, because he
invigorate
the
comments are to
to
was to
under the
illuminate and
penetrate every part, and
the
image
of the God of
reference is found in Matthew
as
glory."
:16, 1 :
went up straight the heavens were and, lo, way and unto he saw the him, opened Spirit of God like and a dove, descending lighting upon him:
"And
Jesus,
out
when he
of the
was
baptized,
water:
a voice from heaven, saying, This is my be loved Son, in whom I am well pleased." In this case the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove came
and lo
upon Christ after His water baptism the pleasure of the Heavenly ather
to
duction of His Son into the work of the which
entering.
symbolize
over
only
the in
ministry
did the the manifest but oice of the ather Himself, Spirit Within two verses was heard. these we have three He
was
now
direct evidences of the triune
Son, the
being
Spirit,
and the
manifest either
Not
nature
ather
visibly
or
of God.
were
The
described
audibly
to
as
John
people who witnessed the ceremony of the baptism of Jesus. It is interesting to note that
and
to
the
disciples on clearly as He did day on this day. His office when He appeared to Christ work on the two occasions, however, was vastly difwhen the
the
Holy Spirit
came
of Pentecost, He
upon the
came as
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
9
ferent. In this instance He was there merely as a witness to the divine pleasure over the act of Jesus. When He came at Pentecost, He came not only as a witness but as a refining fire to baptize the disciples
with His
holy presence concerning their
them
and
to
witness to each of
sanctification.
A similar reference to that in Matthew is found in
Mark
1:
and in Luke
:16:
"I
indeed have
baptized you with water: but he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost. John answered, saying .
.
them all, I indeed baptize you with water; but one mightier than I cometh, the latchet of unto
whose shoes I
am
worthy
not
to
unloose: he shall
baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire." Concerning the first, Clarke says, "This baptism is not to be rested in; it is only an emblem of that
which you must receive from Him who is mightier than I. It is He only who can communicate the Holy Spirit; and water baptism is nothing, but as out, and leads to, the baptism of the Holy reference in Luke is simply a repeti The Ghost." tion of those in Matthew and Mark given in slightly
it
points
phraseology. Luke emphasizes to a greater than the others the attitude of John in mini mizing himself and in magnifying Christ. different extent
In
reading
with the
Spirit
of the
uestion might baptized with water and comparison of this event disciples with the Holy
these references, the
Jesus Spirit. baptism of
arise as to why with the Holy
was
A the
will show that the evidence of the presence Spirit was essentially the same in each case.
It is certain that
Jesus
had
no
sin
to
be
repenetd
96
WHAT
of, and yet He that He had
yet the answer
HOLINESS?
baptized.
was
inbred sin
no
Holy Spirit we
IS
have
to
came
this is
to
It is likewise true
purged from,
be
upon
The
Him.
given
and
best
in the words of
John Wesley when he said, "God owned His ordi nance, so as to make it the season of pouring forth the Holy Spirit upon Him." Luke 24:49 gives one of a series of three passages concerning the coming of the Holy Spirit to the
disciples
which introduces
had in the work of the
us
the interest Christ
to
Holy Spirit
among His im mediate disciples and upon those who should be converted through their preaching. He was on the
giving
hillside
His last
public
utterance
to
them
when He said, "And, behold, I send the promise of my ather upon you; but tarry ye in the city of
Jerusalem, on high."
until
"The
ye be
endued with
promise
doubt, refers to the Holy Acts 1:4, and Acts 2: . horted to tarry until they from
high.
on
power from of my ather," without Ghost. Note John 16:26, The
disciples
were
ex
endued with power In the words of Adam Clarke, "The were
energy of the Holy Ghost was to be communicated 1. to them for three particular purposes. That He might be in them, a sanctifying Comforter, forti
fying
their souls, and bringing to their remembrance Jesus had before spoken to them.
whatever
2.
their
That
preaching might
be
accompanied
His demonstration and power to the hearts of their hearers, so that they might believe and be
by
That
they might
saved.
.
acles
confirm their
to
be able
pretensions
to
to a
work mir
ivine mis-
WHAT
sion, and
to
IS
establish
9
HOLINESS? the
truth
of the doctrines
they preached." The key to
this exhortation and command is found in the passages just prior to the verse uoted. After Jesus had opened their understanding in order
that
had
they might comprehend the Scriptures, finally told them why it was necessary for
die and
to
to
and
Him
rise from the dead, He concluded with
these words: "And ye are witnesses of these things." The power which was to come upon them was not only for personal use but was to e uip them as
witnesses of the will, the purpose, and the power of Christ in the salvation of the individual from all sin. Without this they were helpless. With it the the its
early church was an impregnable defense ingdom of God and a triumphant victor onslaughts against the kingdom of Satan.
of in
The second of this series of references is found
in Acts 1:
in which the writer
uotes Jesus,
on
the occasion of His exhortation and command
to
having said, " or John truly Jerusalem, but with water, ye shall be baptized with baptized the Holy Ghost not many days hence." John Wes tarry in
ley
true
as
says concerning this baptism, "And so are all believers to the end of the world." Clarke s
comment a
sign
of
sin; but
"John baptized with water, which was penitence, in reference to the remission of Christ baptizes with the Holy Ghost, for is:
the destruction of sin, the illumination of the mind,
John s baptism spiritual kingdom; but
and the consolation of the heart. was
in
Christ s
reference
baptism
to
the
established
and
maintained
that
9
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
rom this passage kingdom. that baptism does not always
may
we
mean
also
being plunged
immersed in water; for as this promise evidently refers to the communication of the or
Spirit
on
the
upon each has more
as
following Pentecost, a
learn most
Holy
and then He
sat
cloven tongue of fire, this certainly to sprinkling than to plunging.
affinity
However, the mode of
administering
the
sign
is
of very little conse uence; and which is the best mode is exceedingly dubious; the stress should be laid
on
Ghost,
to
receiving
the
thing signified
the
Holy
illuminate, regenerate, refine, and purify
the heart."
The third and last of the series is found in Acts "And when the day of Pentecost was fully they were all with one accord in one place. And suddenly there came a sound from heaven as of a rushing mighty wind, and it filled all the house where they were sitting. And there appeared unto
2:1-4:
come,
them cloven tongues like as of fire, and it sat upon each of them. And they were all filled with the
Holy Ghost, and began to speak with other tongues, It is of no spe as the Spirit gave them utterance." cial significance that this great event occurred on the day of Pentecost. The important fact is stated by John Wesley. "They were all with one accord in one place So here was a conjunction of company, minds, and place; the whole hundred and twenty being present." The day of Pentecost came fifty days after the passover and was instituted in com memoration of the giving of the Law to Moses on
Mount Sinai.
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
99
Adam Clarke gives us a beautiful picture showing typical relations of these important events in ecclesiastical history. He says: "At the passover, the Israelites were delivered from Egyptian bond the
age: this was human race
type of the thralldom in which the
a
were
to
Satan and sin.
At the pass-
Jesus Christ, who is typified by the paschal lamb, was sacrificed for the sin of the world, and
over,
by
redemption from sin and Satan is proclaimed. On the pentecost, God gave His law on Mount Sinai, accompanied with thunderings and lightnings. On the pentecost, God sent down His Holy Spirit, like a rushing mighty wind; and tongues of fire sat upon each disciple, in order that, by His influence, that new law of light and life might be promulgated and .At the Jewish passover, Christ was established. degraded, humbled, and ignominously put to death: at the following festival, the pentecost, He was highly glorified; and the all-con uering and ever-enduring might of His kingdom Avas commenced." this sacrifice
procured
now
.
and
.
interesting to ponder the place where the Holy Spirit came. The Jewish morning prayer was held in the temple in the third hour, and the evening prayer the ninth hour. When the disciples It is
were
criticized for their manifestations
on
the
oc
baptism of the Holy Spirit, Peter s they could not be drunken since hour of the day. The criti third the only
casion of the defense it
was
was
cism and the the
disciples
that
in reference to it prove that baptized with the Holy Ghost
statement were
100
while
ing
WHAT
they
IS
HOLINESS?
worshipping
were
at
the hour of
morn
prayer. The manifestation of the cloven tongues is an interesting fact to consider. Wesley says: "And
there
appeared
distinct tongues, as of fire�That is, This is all which the phrase,
small flames of fire.
means in the language of the seventy. might intimate God's touching their tongues as it were (together with their hearts) with Divine fire: His giving them such words as were active and penetrating, even as flaming fire." Clarke thinks that the tongues were the emblems of the language they were to speak. The cloven tongues pointed out the diversity of those languages, and the fire seemed to intimate that the whole would be a spiritual gift, and would be the means of bringing life and light to the souls who should hear them preach the ever lasting Gospel in those languages.
tongues of fire,
Yet it
We have other instances where the presence of was attended with similar circumstances.
God
When He showed Himself
to
Elijah,
as
recorded in
Kings 19:11, 12, the strong wind, the earthquake and the fire were evidences of the presence of God 1
which
served
to
prepare
Elijah
to
listen
to
the
still, small voice. When God appointed Moses to deliver Israel, He appeared in the flaming bush which was not consumed. (Ex. 3:2, 3.) When He delivered the law to Moses on Mount Sinai, He appeared in flaming fire. (Ex. 19:16-20.) The fire, therefore, indicated that God was there. The results
which followed
The fact that
proof of that fact. they spoke with other tongues
were
final
as
WHAT
101
HOLINESS?
IS
Spirit gave them utterance has resulted in wide spread confusion at various times in history. ohn Wesley says: "The miracle was not in the ears of the hearers, but in the mouth of the speakers. And this family praising God together, with the tongues the
of all
the world,
was
an
world should in due time
that
earnest
praise
the whole
God in their
va
tongues." Clarke says that the speaking with tongues was emblematic of the restoration of the
rious
unity
of the human
race
at
of
Gospel. language of
under the
abel the
building people was confounded and, this, they became scattered over
says: "At the
in
He
the
consequence of the face of the earth:
this foundation of the Christian Church, the
of various
languages
the scattered nations
under
shepherd.
one
gift given to the apostles, that might be gathered, and united
was
.
.of all souls."
.
In other words the conclusion of the whole matter
may be stated thus: when God's children are ti ed with the Holy Ghost and fire, the Gospel
preach
is
a
salvation from all sin for all
bap they
men.
eter said unto We read in Acts 2:3 , "Then be and them, bapti ed every one of you epent,
in the
name
of
esus
Christ for the remission of
sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost." This
was
the occasion of
eter's sermon, after he
had been filled with the
disciples Holy Ghost. When he preached his great sermon, the people were placed under such conviction that they cried out to the apostles, "Men and brethren, with the other
what shall
we
twofold in its
do?"
nature.
eter gave is answer that It dealt with their conversion
The
102
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
and their sanctification.
They were to repent in order that their sins might be forgiven, and in order that they might be prepared for the coming of the Holy Spirit. Commenting on this, Wesley said: "The gift of the Holy Ghost does not mean in this place the
or the promise power of speaking with tongues. of this was not given to all that were afar off, in ut rather the constant distant ages and nations. fruits of faith, even righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost." Concluding the matter, eter said to them, " or the promise is unto you,
and
to
even as
ley
your children, and to all that are afar off, many as the Lord our God shall call." Wes
thinks that this
meant
whether
they
were
ews
Gentiles the baptism of the Holy Ghost was promised to all who would not be disobedient to or
heavenly calling. He thinks, however, not fully understand the very this instance. in spoke the
eter did
that
even
words he
Clarke thinks that the repentance spoken of meant "Humble yourselves before God, and deeply de plore the sins you have committed pray earnestly to
for mercy, and deprecate the displeasure of incensed justice." The baptism, he thinks, meant, "Take on you the public profession of the religion of Christ,
by being bapti ed in His name and thus acknowl edge yourselves to be His disciples and servants." This baptism, he says, would not be purification itself, but would point out the grace by which puri fication is obtained. Concerning the gift of the Holy Ghost, he says: "If ye faithfully use the sign,
WHAT
IS
103
HOLINESS?
eceive the baptism, in ye shall get the substance. reference to the removal of sins, and ye shall re ceive the Holy Ghost, by whose agency alone the
efficacy of the blood of the covenant is applied, and by whose refining power the heart is purified. It was by being bapti ed in the name of Christ that men took upon themselves the profession of Chris tianity and it was in consequence of this that the disciples of Christ were called Christians." The sum total of the teaching of this Scriptural reference is that it was offered by eter under the leadership of the Spirit to those who heard him and to all who would in the future heed the call of God.
Note that it friends
was
enjoyed
the
who would seek the an
indication of the
of
conversion
of the extent ance
gift
experience eter and his to be given to all those blessing of the Lord. This is universality of the experiences same
which
and
of the
of the call
of
was
sanctification.
Holy Spirit to come to
is limited
The
extent
only by
the
Christ for the deliver
from sin.
In Acts
:1 -1
we
read of another instance of
Holy Ghost. In this case, through the preaching of hilip, certain persons in Samaria When the apostles at had been converted. e eter and ohn rusalem heard about it, they sent to inquire into the matter, and they, "when they were come down, prayed for them, that they might receive the Holy Ghost: (for as yet he was fallen upon none of them: only they were bapti ed in the name of the Lord esus.) Then laid they their hands on them, and they received the Holy Ghost." the need of the
10
WHAT
It is
plainly
HOLINESS?
IS
evident that the
primary
need of the
Christians of the first century after their conversion was the baptism of the Holy Ghost. The record that
states
ohn
and
nothing
else
until after
relation of these
was
they
mentioned
inquired
had
the
new converts to
by
eter
about the
Holy Spirit.
speaking Holy Ghost, reception Wesley asks whether they were to receive Him "in His miraculous gifts? or His sanctifying graces? robably in both." Clarke's inquiry is, " ut for what purpose was the Holy Spirit thus given?" He answers: "Certainly not for the sanctification of the souls of the people: this they had on believing in Christ esus and this the apostles never dispensed. It was the miraculous gifts of the Spirit which were .and those extraordinary thus communicated. of the
In
of the
.
qualifications ful preaching if
which
necessary for the success of the Gospel and doubtless many,
all, of those
not
hands,
were
.
were
on
employed
whom the more
or
apostles
laid their
less in the
work of the Church."
public
Here we have two prominent scholars slightly at variance with each other. The difference may be explained by stating that the emphasis is placed
by
these
evident even
men
from
on
the
though they
two
different
verses
that
angles.
these
It is
new
had the witness of the
quite
converts,
Spirit
to
their conversion, had no knowledge of the sanctify ing power of the Holy Ghost or of the miraculous graces that might be bestowed by Him in His bap tism.
quite certain, from the manifestation reception of the Holy Ghost, that they
It is also
of their
WHAT received
IS
something which they experience.
converted
The hold
sermon
gives
eter to Cornelius and his house
baptism
tion of the it
of
that the
seems
especially
did not get in their
somewhat different slant
a
Holy Ghost. Holy Spirit manifested
were
a
God
to
that his prayers and his alms remembrance in the sight of God." extent
Himself
group of indi the sermon. Cornelius
listening to fasting and praying
had been
the ques In this case
on
of the
for the conversion of
viduals who
10
HOLINESS?
his will, had gone
to
Cornelius
as
to
were
such
an
"had in
eter, against
the result of
a
heavenly vision, and, them, "the Holy Ghost
while he was preaching to fell on all them which heard Those who had believed and were in
the word."
accord with tiles
also
eter
were
poured
was
Ghost." When this and
bapti ed
surprised the
out
event
"that
gift
occurred,
them in the
name
on
of
the Gen
Holy
the
eter took
water
of the Lord.
All
point outpouring of the Holy tiles was not only to answer the personal prayer of a man with a heart hungry for salvation, but evidence
seems
to
to
cial
also was
eter that the grace of God not limited to the ews alone. It would be was
to
easy here to
the fact that this spe Spirit upon these Gen
to
convince
confuse the power of the Holy Ghost to bring about the consum
bring conviction, and
mation of faith for the
Holy Spirit
saving grace. In both instances prime agent and witness to
is the
the work in the soul. In this as
easy
to
particular
case,
however, it would be
just
argue that Cornelius and his household
106
WHAT
were
Acts
already
HOLINESS?
IS
firm believers in God
as
evidenced in
Cornelius may not have been familiar with the modus operandi of conversion and repentance, but it is quite evident that he knew how to prevail with God in prayer. This
10:30, 31, and 33.
being true, it may have been that when eter preached, Cornelius and his household recogni ed the fact that they were firm believers in God, and by faith reached out for the sanctifying grace of the Holy Ghost and received it. This, then, was the
consummation
complete salvation,
of
the
quest of his soul for
and when
he
understood the
of the acceptance of the Christian faith, he proceeded with the ceremony of baptism at once.
full In
extent
fact, he asked for it
at
the hands of
eter, and Later, in relating this
granted. erusalem, eter said: "And as I began to speak, the Holy Ghost fell on them, as on us Then remembered I the word at the beginning. of the Lord, how that he said, ohn indeed bap ti ed with water but ye shall be bapti ed with the Holy Ghost. orasmuch then as God gave them the like gift as he did unto us, who believed on the Lord esus Christ what was I, that I could with stand God?" (Acts 11:1 -1 .) This quotation seems to imply that the latter interpretation given above would be more acceptable and that Cornelius really the
request
incident
was
at
sanctified
Wesley's
Ghost fell were
was
as a
definite second work of grace.
comment on Acts on
all that
they consecrated
the Gentiles.
were
to
is: "The
10:
hearing
God,
as
And thus did God
Holy
the wordďż˝ Thus
the first fruits of
give
a
clear and
WHAT
10
HOLINESS?
IS
satisfactory evidence, that he had accepted them well as the ews." Clarke says: "In what manner this gift was bestowed we cannot tell probably it was in the same way in which it had been given on the day of entecost for as they spake with as
tongues, which
Spirit ciples
as
on
that the aul came
was
the effect of the descent of the
flaming tongues on the the day of entecost, appearance day in passing
same
one
to
Ephesus
now
heads of the dis it
took
through
where he found
is
likely
very
place."
the upper some
coasts
disciples.
them, Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed? And they said unto him, "He said
We have
unto
not
so
much
as
heard whether there be
aul had read his Holy Ghost came on them, and they spoke Holy tongues and prophesied. (Acts 19:2.)
any the
Ghost."
When
text,
with
Clarke says: "It is likely that these were Asiatic ews, who, having been at erusalem about twenty-
six years before this, had heard the preaching of ohn, and received his baptism, believing in the
coming Christ,
whom
ohn
had
proclaimed
it appears that till this time they had got instruction in the Christian religion.
no
but
farther
aul, per
ceiving this, asked them if they had received the or it was the Holy Ghost since they believed. common privilege of the disciples of Christ to re ceive, not only the ordinary graces, but also the extraordinary gifts of the Holy Spirit and thus the disciples of Christ differed from those of ohn, and of all others. ohn bapti ed with water esus the Holy Ghost. And to this day the bapti ed with
10
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
genuine disciples of Christ are distinguished from all false religionists, and from nominal Christians, by being made partakers of this Spirit, which en lightens their minds, and convinces of sin, right eousness, and judgment quickens their souls, wit nesses to their conscience that they are the children of God, and purifies their hearts." Concerning the statement that they spoke with tongues and prophesied, he says, "They received the miraculous gift of different languages and in those languages they taught to the people the great doc trines of the Christian religion for this appears to be the meaning of the word, prophesied, as it is used."
Holy Spirit in the New Testament is in Titus 3: : "Not by works of right have done, but according to we eousness which his mercy he saved us, by the washing of regenera tion, and renewing of the Holy Ghost." Is this aul an explanation of two works of grace or not? to Titus of the "washing of regeneration" speaks and of the "renewing of the Holy Ghost." The aul was speak reference and context indicate that the redemption of ing of the complete process of the human soul, which was not only for conversion but for the especial anointing or bapti ing power of the Holy Spirit. Wesley, in commenting on the The final reference
passage, says: "Herein not
our
works of
and love of God are,
and
our
to
the
we
have, I.
righteousness, Saviour.
II.
The cause of it: but the kindness The effects, which
ustification, being justified, pardoned, accepted through the alone merits of Christ, 1.
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
109
from any desert in us, but according to his own mercy by His grace, His free, unmerited goodness: not
2. Sanctification expressed by the laver of regen eration, (that is baptism, the thing signified, as well the outward
as
and the renewal of the
sign,)
Ghost which purifies the soul
body, III.
come
Clarke Ghost
Holy
cleanses the
and renews it in the whole image of God. The consummation of all, that we might be heirs of eternal life, and live now in the joy
hope
ful
as water
of it."
" y
comments:
the
understand,
we are to
renewing of the Holy only the profession
not
to live a new life, but the grace the heart, and enables us thus to live so the renewing influences are here intended. ap the grace signified by it tism changes nothing
being
of
that
bound
renews
purifies."
cleanses and
E E
ENCE
OOKS
2.
Arthur, William, The Tongue of ire. rengle, Samuel L., When the Holy Ghost Is
3.
Dunn, Lewis
1.
Come. .
ter
.
.
.
Chap
olsom, ohn D., The Holy Spirit Our Helper. II, Hames, . M., Deeper Things, Chapters I
6.
., A Manual of Holiness,
.
Milton L., The Inheritance Chapters L I- LI .
Haney, Hills,
Aaron
Chapters
Merritt, Holiness
III-
.
and
estored,
ower,
110 .
WHAT
IS
Lowry, Asbury,
ossibilities
9.
and p. 330. Mahan, Asa, Out
10.
I. I, Mahan, Asa, The ters
11.
12. 13. 1 .
1 . 16.
1 . 1 . 19.
HOLINESS?
of Grace, p. 2 0
of Darkness into Light, Chap
aptism of the Holy Ghost. Mallalieu, Willard ., The ullness of the less ing of the Gospel of Christ, Chapter I. ayne, Thomas, The entecostal aptism. idout, Samuel, The erson and Work of the Holy Spirit.
uth, C. W.,
ible
lessing, Chapter
eadings
on
the Second
I.
uth, C. W., Entire Sanctification, p. 92. uth, C. W., The entecostal Experience, p. 6 . Steele, Daniel, A Defence of Christian erfec I . tion, Chapter euben A., Torrey, aptism with the Holy
Spirit, Chapter I. Wood, erfection ames A., Christian Taught by ohn Wesley, Section .
as
CHA TE The New In
Testament
this
chapter
Christian
to
erfection
Christian
shall discuss
we
references
Testament
on
III.
eighteen New perfection. It
problem to examine the passages on employ the terms Christian erfec or tion, perfect, perfection. In this connection we run into widely misunderstood phrases in regard to Christian experience. We hear the loose expres sion, "No one can be perfect in this life." We also will be
our
holiness which
hear the statement that
Those who
by
certain
the
term.
tian as
profess
live without sin.
perfection
are
ridiculed
groups because of misunderstanding or an analysis of what is meant by Chris
perfection, possible, but
interested
no one can
Christian
in
we
shall define
our terms
specific meaning.
clearly
chapter we are particularly Scriptural statements and their
in this
the
as
Let
us
examine those
statements
in order.
We find the first such
statement
in Matthew
:
specifically perfect, even as your ather which perfect." Wesley says: "Therefore ye shall be perfect as your ather who is in heaven is perfectďż˝ So the original runs, referring to all that holiness which is described in the foregoing verses, which our Lord in the beginning of the chapter recommends as happiness, and in the close of it as perfection." in which
esus bluntly
and
" e ye therefore is in heaven is
Ill
commands,
112
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
Clarke says that we are to be perfect "as your ather God Himself is the grand law, sole giver, and only pattern of the perfection which He recom mends to His children.
phatic,
Ye shall
Mercy,
and whose
filled with the
The words
very em perfect� ye shall be of that God whose name is are
be therefore
spirit
nature is love. God has many imitators of His power, independence, justice, etc., but few of His love, condescension, and kindness. He calls Himself LO E, to teach us that in this
consists
perfection, the attainment of which both our duty and privilege, for these
that
He has made
words of a
promise."
us
whether world. to
we
our
imply:
...
answer
can
.so
be
to
fully
that
most
vital
gives question� text
saved from all sin in this
esus gave the command to be per ather in heaven is perfect, He meant
When
as
command and
a
Clarke thinks also that this
definite
a
fect
Lord include both
our
"As in His infinite
in your finite
nature
no
sin
there shall dwell
no
nature
there is
sin, for the law of the Spirit of life in Christ
esus
shall make you free from the law of sin and death. God shall live in, fill, and rule your hearts and in what He fills and influences, neither Satan nor If men, slighting their own can have any part. mercies, cry out, This is impossible � whom does this arguing reprove� God, who, on this ground,
sin
given a command, the fulfillment of which is impossible." Clarke thinks that to argue thus would has be
to
claim that God is
a
failure
in
His
effort
through the grace of esus Christ to provide a full remedy or cure for all sin. He thinks, further, that
WHAT
the Christ who laid down His life for would have done
so
113
HOLINESS?
IS
foolishly
if He had
souls
our
not
intended
all power which was given to Him to effect completely that salvation which He died to pro to use
ropounding
cure.
question,
the
"
where
ut
is
the person thus saved?" Clarke says, "Wherever he is found who loves God with all his heart, soul, mind,
strength,
and
neighbor
and his
It would be easy to outstanding authorities
find
due
as
himself."
many quotations from this text, but we would
give on
very little variance with this interpretation, the fact that the passage is so specific. os
to
sibly
the
most
important question
connected with
it is: when may such an experience be obtained? It would be absurd to think that esus would issue
such
a
command
disciples,
His
to
in
so
positive
a
manner, if He had meant for it to be an indefinite problem of speculation. He meant for His Chris
tian workers and followers
rience in this life, The
next
only
not
to
to
of the word
use
Luke 6: 0. "The
disciple
is
enjoy such an expe by but to live by.
die
perfect
not
is found in
above his master:
but everyone that is perfect shall be as his master." This is a quotation from a sermon preached to the
disciples, in which esus was trying to teach the perfect Christian life. They were to love enemies. not
They
deserve it.
required. They were
to
to
were
They
do
were
were not to
reali e that
and therefore should
they not
good to those to give more be
them
their
who did
than
was
super-critical. They
had faults of their own, judge the spiritual acts
of others based upon human frailties.
They
were
11
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
reali e that "a good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is good, and an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart to
bringeth forth that which is evil: for out of the abun dance of the heart the mouth speaketh." The word
meaning
to
back into to
mean
"perfect"
used here is
a
Greek word
adjust, to adapt, or to put this place, however, it was used
restore, to
joint. In complete
instruction
information.
and
(See Hebrews 13:3 and 2 Corinthians 3:1 .) instruction and information, moreover, was
This to
be
completed the disciple more like "Every one who is thoroughly instructed in Divine things, who has his heart united to God, whose dis ordered tempers and passions are purified and re stored to harmony and order every one who has in him the mind that was in Christ, though he cannot be above, yet will be as, his Teacherďż˝ holy, for the
one
only purpose of making his Master. Clarke says:
and
harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners." Whether
esus
was
distinctly teaching
the doc
trine of Christian perfection work of grace or not is not the question at point. What He really was saying was that the disciple has a Master who was to be to him a pattern. As to char as
acter, it
it
was
definite second
pattern of holiness. As pattern of kindness. As to
was
a
a
a
to
attitudes,
relationships
between Master and disciple, it was to be a model of perfect accord with each other. Whatever it takes to bring about this situation is what esus is evi
dently discussing.
reach that
state
He
was
desirous that the
of Christian
perfection
disciples they
in which
WHAT would
only
not
be
pleasing
for Christian service
11
HOLINESS?
IS
to
to
Him but
profitable
lead others into the
same
experience. The
next
place
reference
is in 1 Corinthians 2:6, in
find the words: "Howbeit, we speak wisdom among them that are perfect: yet not the wisdom of this world, nor of the princes of this which
world, that
we
come to
nought."
What does the
apostle
by "wisdom among them that are perfect"? Wesley says that he means "adult experienced Chris mean
tians.
y
wisdom here he
to
seems
whole Christian doctrine, but the
mean,
most
not
the
sublime and
abstruse parts of it. .the mysterious wisdom of God, which was hidden for many ages from all the world and is still hidden even from babes in Christ .
.
from all unbelievers." Wesley is not whether he thinks "adult experienced Christians" are synonymous with the term perfect
much clear or
not
more
as
to
writings we may certainly making that assumption.
but from his other
conclude that he is
not
Clarke argues that the expression, "among them are perfect," refers to those "Christians of the
that
highest knowledge and attainments�those who were fully instructed in the knowledge of God through Christ esus. Nothing, in the judgment of St. aul, deserved the name of wisdom but this. And though he apologi es for his not coming to them with ex cellency of speech or wisdom, yet he means what was reputed wisdom among the Greeks, and which, in the sight of God, was mere folly when compared with that wisdom that However much
we
came
might
from above."
wish
to
try
to
make this
116
WHAT
passage
apply
hardly speaking seems
to a
HOLINESS?
definite second work of grace, it aul to make the attempt.
feasible to
was
members had
surrounding.
IS
the
recently
He
was
Corinthian
trying to trying
the wisdom of men, and among are
based
not
warn
to
a
them
whose
heathen
against
show them that
Christians, that is, among those who instructed in the things of God, faith is upon the wisdom of this world, nor upon
mature
fully
Church
been drawn from
the powers of men about us, nor upon education and philosophy, but on the power of God as it is
in individual lives. This power, in the life, would produce a definite, set tled Christian experience which would not depend made
manifest
operating
upon earthly and ephemeral ideas, but upon a basic faith in God which would grow out of Chris tian experience. There is no denying the fact, how ever,
aid
that the second work of grace would be a vital to the attainment of the state of perfection
mentioned here.
Corinthians 13:1 we have a word called "charity" or "love" which is sometimes referred to Christian perfection, and which in its essence as aul says, "Though When means perfection. In
really I
1
speak
with the tongues of men and of angels, and charity," it is evident that he is thinking
have not
of that Christian grace which goes with the term perfect. In the tenth verse of the same chapter, he which is perfect is come, then says, " ut when that in that which is part shall be done away." The
perfection
referred
to
certainly
nal blessedness which shall
is that state of
come
when the
eter
imper-
WHAT
11
HOLINESS?
IS
probationary state is ended. He concludes chapter, however, with the statement, "And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three but the greatest of these is charity." We cannot escape feet
or
the
the fact that this type of Christian love is attained as a concomitant experience with the baptism of
Holy Ghost. Thus, we see that in this chapter talking about two types of perfection: one dealing with the inner experience of the soul and the other dealing with the ultimate joys in eternity. The whole chapter is vibrant with the message of perfect love. It has been widely contended that in aul was declaring the summum this paragraph bonum of all Christian experience in this life and the result of that experience in the life to come. the
aul is
Our next statement is 2 Corinthians 13:9 in which
aul says, " or we are glad, when we are weak, and ye are strong: and this also we wish, even your per fection." Wesley says, "And this we wish, even your perfectionďż˝ In the faith that worketh by love."
on the same verse, Clarke says, "We be satisfied that persons, with such eminent endowments, who have once received the truth as
Commenting
cannot
esus, should be deficient in any of the that constitute the mind of Christ such as, graces love, brotherly charity, harmony, unity, and order." it is in
perfection directly
The word used here for to
join
back
together,
return
to
a
means
dislocated
joint
its proper place. Clarke thinks that in this pas sage "the perfection or rejointing which the apostle to
wishes is that which refers in its
fellowship, unity,
to
the
order.
state
And
of the Church
perfection
in
11
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
the soul is the same, in reference to it, as perfection in the Church is to its order and unity. The per fection or rejointing of the soul implies its puri
fication, and placing every faculty, passion, and
appetite in its proper place so that the original order, harmony, unity, and purity of the soul may
be restored and the whole builded up to be a hab itation of God through the Spirit." One ancient
authority, e a, in referring to "The apostle's meaning is, that bers of the Church
and
morals."
ever
all,
as
it were, dislocated,
joint, they should be joined together and they should endeavor to make per
of
out
in love fection what or
were
this passage, says, whereas the mem
was
amiss among them, either in faith true this may be, and how
However
interested
aul
might
have been in the
joining
together in love of the members of the Church, it is very clear that the essential meaning is that each member
spiritual bones re-socketed perfect co-ordination. In other individual has beeen made perfect
have his
must
that there will be
so
words, when the in love, then it will be easy for individual lives
to
be co-ordinated and co-operative in their Christian relationships in the churches or wherever their
pathways
may lead.
ter,
aul
perfect,
conclusion of the
chap e " inally, brethren, farewell. of be one mind, live comfort, good
In the eleventh verse,
as a
says,
be of
and the God of love and peace shall be ' e per with you." Wesley's interpretation is: to the highest degree of holiness: 'be of fect'ďż˝ in peace
"
Aspire
uood
com
fort'ďż˝
illed with Divine consolation: 'be
WHAT IS of
HOLINESS?
119
mind'ďż˝ Desire, labour, pray for it, to the that is possible." Clarke says that the word used here for perfect means "to be com one
degree
utmost
get into be restored."
pact
joint again let unity and harmony Concerning the exhortation to be of
mind, he says, "Think the same let there be dissensions among you. e of the same creed, and let disputes about that religion which should be the bond of peace for ever subside." one no
This state of
perfection
will bring about the in of the God of love and peace. dwelling presence Clarke says: "While ye are full of contentions, dis sensions, and discord, peace can have no place among you and as to love, the fulfilling of the law, that worketh
ill to its
no
neighbour,
it has
neces
contentions, and divisions. And sarily where neither peace nor love is to be found, there its
taken
God
cannot
be."
hilippians 3:12 and 1 we have two state ments which seemingly contradict each other: "Not as though I had already attained, either were al ready perfect: but I follow after, if that I may apprehend that for which also I am apprehended of Christ esus. .Let us therefore, as many as be perfect, be thus minded: and if in any thing ye In
.
.
be otherwise minded, God shall reveal even this you." In order to come to a thorough under standing of them, we must reali e that aul is here unto
using
a
race.
set
difference who is
of
metaphors
in connection with
between
perfected.
a
foot
speaking perfect and one ohn Wesley, in commenting on
In the first instance he one
who
is
is
of the
120
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
the statement, says: "There is a difference between one that is perfect, and one that is perfected. The one is fitted for the race the other, ready to receive
pri e.
speaking conditionally, both preceding verse, implies no uncer but tainty, only the difficulty of attaining." The picture is of a man attaining to the resurrec tion of the dead as the ultimate goal of Christian experience. In this sense, of course, aul had neither already attained, nor was he already perfect but in the fifteenth verse he is exhorting those who are perfect to be thus minded, that is, to be prepared "to press toward the mark for the pri e of the high
the
.
.The
.
here, and in the
It is easy to see, therefore, that he means in the second instance that there is such a thing as being perfect in love, and yet not being perfected in the fullest sense of the term, in the highest which comes with the resur Christian
calling."
experience
rection of the dead
esus
Christ.
the power of
through
our
Lord
Clarke, in commenting on this verse, says: " or I have not yet received the pri e I am not glorified, for I have not finished my course and I have the issue will prove a conflict still to maintain, and .Nor am I yet whether I should be crowned. in consequence of perfect I am not yet crowned, .St. aul, therefore, suffered martyrdom. .
having
speaking here of or spiritual state: grace, being yet perfect, that he cleaving dwelling
.
.
is not
to
sin.
him, and .
.
He
.
any deficiency in his own he does not mean, by not
had
was
speaks
a
body
still
of sin and death
polluted with in having termi-
of his not
WHAT nated
his
would
sidered
by martyrdom,
later be the
or
knew
This he
con
perfection of his whole career, and view everything as imperfect or unfin
to
ished till this had taken
commenting perfect," Wesley
In
be
he
which
case.
the
as
led
was
course
sooner
121
HOLINESS?
IS
on
of fitness for the
place."
the statement, "As many as aul was thinking says that
race
or
strength
in faith, which
necessary for the attainment of the goal. Clarke thinks that this verse means, in addition, that aul
was
including in his exhortation only those who thoroughly instructed and deeply experienced the fullness of the grace of God. Compare with
was
were
in
this verse, 1 Corinthians 1 :20. " rethren, be not children in understanding: howbeit in malice be ye
children, but in understanding be men." Another reference all
come
in the
unity
is
Ephesians
:13:
"Till
we
of the faith, and of the knowl
of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ."
edge
Now read Hebrews
eth
to
of
reason
both
use
good
:1 : "
ut strong meat
are
and
evil."
oth
of
may
not
of the
Gospel.
have reached this
experience required everyday living.
ness
of
design of
these
verses
into the
fully urging to seek point
dicate those who have entered and
belong-
of full age, even those who by have their senses exercised to discern
them that
aul is to
meet
in
spirit
any who the full
the demands
ead Colossians 1:2 -29: "To whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles which is Christ in
122
WHAT
you, the
hope
1
HOLINESS?
glory: whom teaching every
of
we
preach, warning
in all wisdom every that we may present every man perfect in Christ esus: whereunto I also labour, striving according to his working, which worketh in me mightily." The best explanation for these passages is found in Clarke's comments. He says: "We find here the sum and substance of the apostle's preaching. 1. He as the Christ, preached only Saviour of sinners. man, and
man
proclaimed this Christ as being in them design of the Gospel is to put men in pos session of the Spirit and power of Christ, to make them partakers of the Divine nature, and thus pre 2.
He
for the
pare them for an eternal union with Himself. 3. He preached this present and indwelling Christ as
the
hope and
hope of glory for no man could rationally glory who had not the pardon of his sins,
for
whose
nature
sanctified
not
was
through glorification sanctifying Spirit of Christ." but
could have
and
the
none
indwelling,
Clarke says further that these passages reveal the used by the apostles in their preaching. "1. They warned every oneďż˝ they showed every
manner
his
man
Gentiles God
was
were
under sin
revealed
righteousness certain
they proved
danger
and
of
against
men
that
that both
and
all
that the wrath
ungodliness
that time and life
now
was
the
day
every man in all considered the world in a state of
2.
They taught
ews
and
of
and
un
were
un
of salvation.
wisdomďż˝ they
ignorance and darkness, every being through sin ignorant and the apostles taught them to know themselves, man
WHAT
IS
123
HOLINESS?
sinners, wretched, helpless, and they taught them to know God, in perishing His purity, justice, and truth, and in His mercy vi ., that they
were
and
through Christ esus. Thus they instructed men in all wisdom for the knowledge of a man's self and his God constitutes all that is essentially nec to
essary ness."
be known for present and eternal
thing
A third fact that Clarke discusses is the
present every in
perfect
or
the
Christďż˝ to
trying preach perfect in Him. "The words through Christ, signify two things:
had in view in
apostles
happi
to
man
thoroughly instructed in Christianity, so that they should know the truth as it is in esus. 2. That they should be made partakers of the grace of the Gospel, so that they might be saved from all their sins, and That
1.
they
should be
the doctrines of
be filled with
as
they please
out
it
.Men may dispute about Christian perfection, but with His fullness.
soul shall
no
ever see
from all sin here cannot,
This
after. and
to
perfection
.
God. He who is
to
his
to
their
whole souls
dwelling Christ
people The
sin
can
for He
was
with be
came
saved
apostle speaks, bring all men, was and through Christ. in the people and
something to be attained in The apostles preached Christ they preached Him as crucified who died for them
joy,
not
God here
see
of which the
he labored
which
.
for mankind.
He
live in them, and fill His own purity. No in to
tolerated
by
an
into the world
indwelling
to
save
His
from their sins." fourth
point, according
to
Clarke, is that
12
WHAT
we
the and
IS
HOLINESS?
verses objects of the ministry of apostles. They were to minister to both ews Gentiles. "Every man had sinned and for
find in these
every sinner Christ had died and He died for them that they might be saved from all their sins. The
apostles never restrained they made them frankly
was
the
to
of
offers
salvation
all, believing that it
the will of God that all should believe and
they
be saved: hence
taught every man they might, at the day of judgment, present every man perfect in Christ esus for, although their own personal ministry could not reach all the inhabitants of the earth, yet it is by the doctrines which they preached, and by the writings which they have left on record, that the earth is to be filled with the knowledge and glory of God, and the souls of men brought to the enjoyment of the fullness of the blessing of the Gospel of peace." that
In
writing
to
warned and
the church
at
Thessalonica,
aul
up the graces and assurances of Christian ex perience. Timothy had previously brought the
sums
good
news
to
him of their faith and
charity,
but
still he says (in 1 Thessalonians 3:10) that he was praying that he might see their faces and might
perfect that which was lacking in their faith. Clarke contends that the perfection spoken of here means fullness of instruction in the doctrines of Christ. aul was interested in filling up He thinks that of truth which these Christians outline the great already received, so that they fectly molded for every good word
had
In
studying
this
verse
in
could
be per and work.
connection
with
the
WHAT
IS
12
HOLINESS?
context, it is very evident that the epitome of all of this is in 1 Thessalonians 3:13: "To the end he
may stablish your hearts unblameable in holiness before God, even our ather, at the coming of our
aul was esus Christ with all his saints." eager to perfect that which was lacking in their faith in order that their hearts might be established Lord
unblameable
before God. It is very that the evident, therefore, perfection he was think was Christian of ing perfection or perfect love,
brings
which
holiness
in
about holiness of heart.
Timothy 3:16, 1 for the re scripture is given by in of and is God, spiration profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in right that the man of God may be perfect, eousness: throughly furnished unto all good works." This perfection, Wesley thinks, means "blameless him self, and thoroughly furnishedďż˝ y the Scripture, We
either
2
turn next to
markable
to
"All
statement:
teach, reprove, correct,
Clarke maintains that the either the
to
here
or
the herald and
be
to
implies as
to
means
servant
in
train up others." of God referred of
righteousness
and that for him
every
good
was
"not
work
in himself
only complete integrity, religious knowledge,
that he
his
preacher
of God
furnished
thoroughly
or
man
but
faith
in
that
he
esus, and love to God and man should have all those qualifications which are essary to complete the character, and insure success
to
of
a
preacher
teach, reprove,
was
to
be
to
of the
Gospel. Timothy
correct, and instruct
them
a
pattern of
good
others
works.
nec
the was
and Is it
126
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
however, that aul was thinking only of the minister of the Gospel? We may be reasonably sure that such was not the case. The primary object of this passage may have been to instruct Timothy true,
minister of the Gospel on the points men tioned, but it is quite certain that the "man of God' may very well be taken to mean every child
as
a
of God who
is attempting to serve his heavenly is also reasonable to assume that the purpose of the giving of the Scriptures to the human race is to assure the sons of God�those who have been redeemed from their sins through the atoning blood of Christ�that they may be perfect in their
ather.
It
acceptance of God, and their
"thoroughly
furnished
"Therefore
leaving
unto
relationship to Him, good works."
all
principles of the doctrine unto perfection not laying
the
of Christ, let us go on the foundation of
again
repentance from dead works, and of faith toward God." (Hebrews 6:1.)
This passage is easy to understand. The injunction given is for the disciples to be steadfast in the faith
securely upon the promise of God. Concerning leaving the principles of the doctrines of Christ, Wesley says: "That is, saying no more of them for the present, let us go on to perfection not laying again the foundation of repentance from dead works� rom open sins, the very first thing and
rest
to
be insisted on, and faith in God, the very next .Turn from those vanities unto the living point. to
.
.
God.
them,
.
.
thing was to lay hands upon they might receive the Holy Ghost they were more fully instructed, touch-
.The
that
after which
next
WHAT
ing
the
the
state
IS
12
HOLINESS?
resurrection, and the general judgment,
called eternal, because the sentence then pronounced is irreversible, and the effects of it remain for ever." Clarke's comment is: "Ceasing to continue in of babes, who must be fed with milkďż˝ Gospel, when ye
with the lowest doctrines of the should
be
'Let
go
us
until
we
capable
on
are
adult
from all sin, and power of Christ." Thus
we
can see
understanding the highest. perfection.' Let us never rest
of
unto
Christiansďż˝ till
are
filled with
that the
Spirit
is to
lay
and aside
principles of salvation we are not to abide them forever. We are to use them as stepping-
the first
by
meaning
saved
are
we
the
to the next experience of grace. Why con tinue in the same state of grace if there is advance
stones
spiritually? Why continue to preach repent or one has already repented baptism, if aul was vitally one already has been bapti ed? concerned that the Hebrew Christians "go on unto perfection " that is, move on into the definite sec ond work of grace where they would find plenty of growing room for their spiritual natures. ment
ance
if
In Hebrews 13:20, 21 we read: "Now the God of peace, that brought again from the dead our Lord esus, that great shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant, make you
in every good work to do his will, working in you that which is wellpleasing in his sight, through esus Christ to whom be glory for ever
perfect
and to
ever.
Amen."
This
statement
the ultimate aim of all the
gives
us
preaching
a
key
of the
12
WHAT
apostles. fection. were
to
We
IS
HOLINESS?
in it what
can see
they
meant
by
per
it, Clarke says: "They do the will of God in every good work,
In
commenting
on
from God
working in them that which is well pleas ing in His sight. This necessarily implies a com plete change in the whole soul, that God may be well pleased with whatsoever He sees in it and this supposes its being cleansed from all sin, for God's sight cannot be pleased with anything that is unholy. This complete inward purity is to pro duce an outward conformity to God's will, so they were to be made perfect in every good work. The within and the perfection without were perfection to be produced by the blood of the everlasting cove for although God is love, yet it is not nant consistent with His justice or holiness to communi cate any good to mankind but through His Son, and through Him as having died for the offences of the human race." The word "perfect" used here, has been referred
as
completely
in
joint.
tion of the will of
the will of God.
to
to
It
before,
means
means
the
to
perfect
be put
restora
harmonious obedience This was the ultimate ideal of
man
to a
Christ and the ultimate goal of the ideal which He brought about through His sufferings and death.
fames exhorts Christians to "let patience have perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing." ( ames 1: .) Wesley's comment her
is that this
grace
you."
and
means
wanting
"adorned with every Christian nothingďż˝ which God requires in
Clarke thinks that the
"perfect
and entire"
means
WHAT be
IS
HOLINESS?
129
"fully
instructed in every part of the doctrine in His whole will concerning you. and God, that ye may have every grace which constitutes the mind that was in Christ, so that your knowledge and holiness may be complete, and bear a proper proportion to each other." He says further that the words used here were borrowed from the Grecian to
of
.
.
.
games and that "the man was perfect, who in any of the athletic exercises had got the victory he was entire, having every thing complete, who had the victory in each of the five exercises. .A vic tim was perfect, that was perfectly sound, .
disease
.
having
it
entire, if it had all its members, e having nothing redundant, nothing deficient. no
was
then to the Lord what He
be
to
spirit,
required His sacrifices let your whole heart, your body, soul, and be sanctified to the Lord of hosts, that He
may fill you with all His fulness." In the third
the word
uses
calling
attention
human
sense.
nature
reached most
the weaknesses and frailties of
to
and is
He says that if
arrogant
or
chapter and the second verse ames perfect again, but in this case he is
the
reproval state
desirable.
tion that
terfere with
a
the word in
man
of
can
his
of human
This
one cannot
that there is
using
perfection
he which
has is
basis for the assump gives live above sin. It simply means no
eter
:10 for
our
It reads:
Christian perfection. of all grace, who hath called
on
human
refrain from rash
fellow-men,
danger in letting physical spiritual development.
We turn to 1
a
us
frailties in
next
"
reference
ut the God
unto
his eternal
130
WHAT
glory by
Christ
IS
HOLINESS?
after that ye have suffered
esus,
a
while, make you perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle
you." to
is
The main
question
this is the time when
only
fair
to state
to
decide with reference
one
that this
is made
verse
perfect.
alone would
be sufficient to settle that question. of other New Testament references
In the on
the
It not
light same
point, however, we can be assured that the per fecting grace is not a gradually acquired experience, but is The
one
result
strengthen, rience.
that of
comes
this
as
an
perfecting
instantaneous work. is
to
establish,
to
and to settle the Christian in his expe
In commenting on this verse, Wesley says: "Now the God of all grace� y which alone the whole work is begun, continued, and finished in your
soul
while
only
after ye
have
compared
to
watch
suffered awhile� A very little eternity Himself� Ye have
with
and resist the devil:
the
rest
God
perform perfect� That no defect may remain stablish� That nothing may overthrow you strength will
en�That ye may conquer all adverse power settle you� As a house upon a rock."
Clarke's
'After that ye have suf that is, while ye are enduring these God will cause all to work together
comment
fered awhile'
and
persecutions, for your good."
is:
"
explains the key words as fol lows: " erfect� ut you in complete joint as the timbers of a building. Stablish� Make you firm in every part adapt you strongly to each other, so He
that you may be mutual supports, the whole build ing being one in the Lord. Strengthen� Cramp and
WHAT bind every part,
so
that there shall be
falling. warping, splitting, evenly and firmly upon the
of
131
HOLINESS?
IS
no
danger
Settleďż˝ Cause all
or
to rest so
best and surest
foundation, that ye may grow together to a holy temple in the Lord: in a word, that ye may be com plete in all the mind that was in Christ supported in all your trials and difficulties strengthened to resist and overcome all your enemies and after all abide, firmly founded, in the truth of grace." We
might
sum
up this entire discussion
on
the
perfection by quoting Ephesians perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ: till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of
work of Christian
:12-16: " or the
fulness of Christ:
the
more
children, tossed
to
that
we
henceforth
be
no
and fro, and carried about
with every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait
deceive, but speaking the truth in love, may grow up into him in all things, which is the head, to
body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth, according to the effectual working in even
the
Christ: from whom the whole
measure
body
unto
of every part, maketh increase of the edifying of itself in love." Here we
the
Gospel preaching and of Chris tian endeavor. It is to bring about the perfecting of the saints until all shall come in the unity of faith to Christian perfection. This is in reality the find the end of all
primal object
of the second work of grace.
It
en-
132
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
compasses all of the graces that may be obtained not only in the works of conversion and sanctifica tion, but in the development of the Christian ex perience all the rest of one's life. It holds up Christ as the ultimate pattern by which we are to measure our completed Christianity. We are not to be tossed about with every wind of doctrine, but, speaking the truth in love, we are to build such a solid spir itual structure that everything about us will be
fitly joined together is
unto
Wesley
thinks that this
to
state
will
be
a
to
come
edifying
the
verse
of love.
implies
that there
of grace in which all true Christians "an exact agreement in the Christian
doctrine, and an experimental knowledge of Christ as the Son of God. .to a state of spiritual man .
hood both
understanding
and
strength.
.
.
.to
of age and spiritual stature wherein shall be filled with Christ, so that He will be all
that we
in
.
maturity
in all." E E 1.
2. 3. .
6.
OOKS
Arthur, William, The Tongue of
ire.
oynton, ., Sanctification
ractical, Chapter I. Heart Talks on Holiness, Samuel L., rengle,
Chapters II, III. Carradine, everly, ter
.
ENCE
II.
The
Sanctified Life, Chap
Coward, S. L. C, Entire Sanctification from 1 39 to 1900, pp. 1 , 1 6. Dunn, Lewis ., A Manual of Holiness, Chap ter
III.
WHAT
.
Haney, ter
.
9. 10. 11.
12. 13.
HOLINESS?
Milton L., Inheritance III.
Huntington, III.
ter
IS
D. W. C,
m and
133
estored, Chap
Holiness, Chap
ones W.,
The Doctrine of Entire Sanctifica I . tion, Chapter McDonald, William, Saved to the ttermost, p. 2 .
Merrill, Stephen M., Sanctification. ayne, Thomas, The Covenant romise of the ather, Chapter III. eck, George, The Scripture Doctrine of Chris tian
erfection.
1 .
eck,
1 .
uth, C. W, The entecostal Experience. ible uth, C. W., eadings on the Second
16.
1 . 1 .
esse T.,
ity, Chapter
The Central Idea .
of Christian
lessing.
uth, C. W., Entire Sanctification. Schell, William G., The etter Testament, p. 2 1.
19.
20. 21.
22. 23. 2 . 2 .
See, Isaac M., The est of aith, Chapter III. Smith, oseph H., auline erfection, Chapters I. I, , Steele, Daniel, A Defense of Christian erfec tion, Chapters III, , I. Steele, Daniel, Love Enthroned, Chapter . Taylor, . S., Works on Holiness, Chapter III. Treffrey, ichard, A Treatise on Christian er
fection, Chapter
pham, or
II.
Thomas C, rinciples of the Interior Life, art I, Chapter II.
Hidden
13
26.
WHAT
Walker, Edward III.
2 . 2 . 29. 30.
IS
Wesley,
fection.
ohn,
HOLINESS?
.,
Sanctify Them, Chapter
lain Account
of Christian
er
Wilson, George W., Truths as I Have Seen I . Them, Chapter Christian Wood, A., ames erfection as Section II. Taught by ohn Wesley, Section I. Wood, ames A., erfect Love,
CHA TE New Testament In
chapter
this
which
use
word itself
we
the word comes
I
Sanctification
on
discuss those
shall
sanctify
from
.
or
two root
passages The
sanctification.
words in the Greek
language, the first one a negative, and the second meaning the earth. In its root meaning, therefore, it signifies not of the earth. This is its negative meaning. In the positive sense it means to cleanse, or purge thoroughly and the word as now inter preted means the act of sanctifying, or the act of making holy. The
esus
first reference
in
truth:
thy
is found in the prayer of 1 :1 : "Sanctify them through thy ohn word is truth." Wesley's interpretation
by the anointing of thy Spirit to their office, and perfect them in holiness, by means of thy word." The emphasis, according One meaning, to this interpretation, is twofold. which Wesley thinks is applicable, is that of pre paring the person sanctified for a special type of of this is: "Consecrate them
Christian service. The other, the inner work of in holiness, is necessary for this special
perfecting
service.
According to Clarke, ings: 1. It signifies to earth and
common use,
God and His service.
"This word has consecrate,
and
2.
It
13
to
to
devote
signifies
two
mean
separate from or
to
dedicate
to
holy
or
make
WHAT
136
IS
HOLINESS?
be understood in pure. The prayer of Christ may both these senses. He prayed- 1. That they might be fully consecrated to the work of the ministry, and separated from all worldly concerns. 2. That they might be holy, and patterns of all holiness to those to whom they announced the salvation of
God."
Although
it is
is for Christians it is
only
people,
alone.
that the work of sanctification it does
not
for Christians who
It is
service.
true
only,
always
are
especially applicable
called to
follow that to
special
that class of
it is true, but it is not confined esus was not praying for the
to
them
disciples
but for all those who would believe in all ages to come through the preaching of the disciples.
only,
consideration we turn to the call of the apostle aul, who was converted while on his in Acts 26:1 . esus way to Damascus. It is quoted or
our next
to preach the Gospel, in gave him his commission these words: "To open their eyes, and to turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan unto God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins, and inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith that is in me." The promise seems
tion.
tion
Gospel of salva "To open their eyes" means to bring convic "to turn them from darkness to light" indi to
cover
all
phases
of the
To turn them "from the power is the converted experience God" of Satan about which brings forgiveness of sins. Wesley is to the effect "that they this indicates that all of faith- (He seems to place the may receive through cates
repentance. unto
WHAT
blessings glory."
in
same
and
Clarke's
ing
opening
the
meant
their
The
the passage is enlightening. of their eyes, he thinks "to be the instrument of inform
comment on
Concerning
that this
next
understanding
clause
means
"from heathenism and
edge
light) pardon, holiness,
fuller
a
13
HOLINESS?
IS
worship
and
in
things
the
they superstition
that
of the
of
were to
to
God."
true
God."
be turned
the knowl
The third
clause, "from the power of Satan unto God," he thinks means deliverance "from the authority and domination of Satan." With
inheritance, he says: " y remis .they become children of God and, if children, then heirs for the children of the
regard
sion of sins.
to
.
.
heavenly family estate.
them
And
that
as
are
shall alone possess the heavenly the inheritance is said to be among
sanctified, this is
a
farther
forgiveness
proof
signifies, purification of the heart." various steps in the obtaining of a the signifies definite Christian experience, and also shows the extent of responsibility of the minister of Christ It to preach the whole Gospel in all its fullness. is also interesting to note that in this case the apostle aul himself had possibly not yet entered into the experience of sanctification. That he was that
only
the
this time
no
not
also the
converted what
at
happened during to
one
can
him after his
blindness and
the
long
of sins, but This passage
doubt.
short
As to
period
of
silence between the
beginning of knowing except by
time of his conversion and the
his
ministry,
the
we
have
no
way of
13
WHAT
epistles
which he
IS
HOLINESS?
abundance of material tion.
on
In 1 Corinthians 1:2
the
we
find
the church of God which is that
are
writings we find question of sanctifica
In these
wrote.
sanctified in Christ
aul
at
esus,
writing
Corinth, called
to
to
"unto
them
be saints,
with all that in every place call upon the name of esus Christ our Lord, both theirs and ours."
Wesley
to
seems
fied in Christ
entire Church,
think that the
esus"
refers in
a
expression
general
"sancti
sense to
the
notwithstanding exceptions in the Church but, on the other hand, they were "called� Of Christ esus, and�As the fruit of that calling, made holy." It is probable that the apostle was not necessarily preaching the doctrine of sanctification, but was using the term in the acceptable sense that is, the Church was not only in a general way set aside for
were
the fact that there
some
Christian service, but the individuals in the Church who were "called to be saints" certainly had to be
sanctified in the fullest to
live up
to
that
sense
of the word in order
designation.
again in 1 Corinthians aul was speaking to the Church, 1:30 in which in a general as well as in a specific sense: probably " ut of him are ye in Christ esus, who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption." This is a universal statement of the plan of the Gospel as it was given aul in his own call already referred to. He is to We find the word used
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
summing up the effect of that Gospel, or at the proposed effect, upon those to whom it preached. Wesley's comment on the verse is unique.
139 least was
He says: "Of Himďż˝ Out of His free grace and mercy, are yeďż˝ Ingrafted into Christ esus, who is made unto us
ly ground
that believe wisdom, who were before utter and ignorant righteousness, the sole
foolish of
our
the wrath and
justification,
who
were
before under
curse of God sanctification, a prin ciple of universal holiness, whereas before we were altogether dead in sin and redemption, that is, complete deliverance from all evil, and eternal bliss both of soul and body."
Clarke thinks that the wisdom mentioned is the
evangelical discernment which excels the sagacity philosopher and the scribes, and even the legal wisdom of the ews. The righteousness, he thinks, is "justification. .procuring for us that remission of sins which the law could not give." The sanctification, he considers, as "procuring for and working in us, not only an eternal and relative of the
.
holiness
as was
that of the
ews, but true and eter by the Holy Spirit." object of the apostle is himself possesses no good,
nal holiness, wrought in He writes further: "The to
show
that
.
man
of
us
comes from God, and from .So then, as all good Christ. God only through is of and from God, let him that has either wisdom,
that whatever he has
.
.
strength, riches, pardon, holiness, or any other blessing, whether temporal or spiritual, acknowl edge that he has nothing but what he has received
1 0 and
WHAT
that,
as
exultation)
he has
in
being
IS
HOLINESS?
cause
of
made
a
glorying (boasting or partaker of these bene
fits and mercies of his Creator and him boast in God alone, whom,
esus, he has received the Writing again to the
by
whole."
edeemer, let
through
Christ
church in 1 Corinthians aul says: "And such were some of you: but ye are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified in the name of the Lord esus, and by the Spirit of our God." Wesley's comment on this is:
6:11,
"
'And such
were
some
ďż˝ rom those gross
of you: but ye
are
washed'
abominations yea, and ye are inwardly sanctified, not before, but in consequence
of your being justified, 'in the name'-That is, by the merits of the Lord esus, through which your sins are forgiven, and by the of our God, whom ye
Spirit
are
by
thus washed and sanctified."
About this passage Clarke writes: "It was not with the prospect of collecting saints that the apostles went about preaching the Gospel of the kingdom.
None but sinners were to be found over the face of the earth they preached that sinners might be converted unto God, made saints, and constituted into
a
Church
and this
was
the effect
as
well
as
object preaching. Several suppose that the order in which the operations of the grace of of their
the
place
in the soul is here inverted but very different mind. Every thing will in its order, when we understand the here appear Ye are washed ye have term used by the apostle.
God take I
am
of
a
bapti ed into the Christian faith, and ye have promised in this baptism to put off all filthiness of been
WHAT
1 1
HOLINESS?
IS
the flesh and spirit and the washing of your bodies is emblematical of the purification of your souls. "Ye are sanctified ye are separated from earthly
things to be connected with spiritual. arated from time to be connected with
Ye
are
sep
eternity. Ye are separated from idols to be joined to the living God. Separation from common, earthly, or sinful uses, to be wholly employed in the service of the true God, is the ideal meaning of this word, both in the
Old and
New
quence of their that they became
ly
of
workers of
iniquity
and
now
are
conse
the world
were
former
and associated with workers
ye
are
together trembling to
justified.
in
was
from
Church of God. Ye
with fear and "Ye
It
being separated a
iniquity,
but
united
Testaments.
separated
work
out
from them, salvation
your before God.
Ye have been
of favour with God blotted out through Christ state
brought
into
a
your sins having been esus, the Spirit of God
witnessing the same to your conscience, and carry ing on by His energy the great work of regeneration The process here is plain and in your hearts. 1. his brother apostles preached aul and simple:ďż˝ the Gospel at Corinth, and besought the people to turn from darkness to lightďż˝ from idol vanities to the living God, and to believe in the Lord esus The people who 2. for the remission of sins. heard
were
convinced
of
the
Divine
truths
de
by the apostle, and flocked to baptism. They were bapti ed in the name of the Lord esus, and thus took upon them the public profession . of the Gospel. eing now bapti ed into the
livered 3.
1 2
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
Christian faith, they were and idolaters, and became
separated from idols incorporated with the Church of God. . As penitents, they were led to the Lord esus for justification, which they re ceived through faith in His blood. 6. eing jus tified freelyďż˝ having their sins forgiven through the redemption that is in esus, they received the Spirit of God to attest this glorious work of grace to their consciences and thus became possessed of that principle of righteousness, that true leaven which was to leaven the whole lump, producing that universal holiness without which
none
can
see
the
Lord." After these comments there is very little room left to question the fact that the apostle was em
phasi ing
not
only
the doctrine of
also of sanctification.
justification
but
It is very clear that the two emphasi ed by aul to
works of grace are equally the church at Corinth. If that church needed such its members from the snares of the world, and to fit it for the special task of evangeli ing the unsaved, how much more
emphasis
in order to
save
does the church today stand in need of the Gospel in all its fullness
Ephesians :13 we the expression occurs In
"Till
we
all
come
in the
find
a
"the
unity
statement
fulness
of
same
in which
Christ".
of the faith, and of
of the Son of God, unto a perfect of the stature of the fulness measure man, unto the of Christ." There is also the expression, "a perfect These two phrases are synonymous with man". sanctification. Wesley's explanation is this: "And the
knowledge
WHAT
IS
1 3
HOLINESS?
every one of us, come to the unity of the faith and knowledge of the Son of God� To both an
agreement in the knowledge of Christ as the Son of God to a perfect man� To a state of spiritual manhood both in understanding and strength, to exact
the
of the
measure
�To
that
wherein
we
stature
of the fulness of Christ
age and spiritual stature shall be filled with Christ, so that He
maturity
of
will be all in all."
Clarke thinks that the apostle is talking about the conversion of both ews and Gentiles, according the Christian system which is the unity of faith mentioned. The knowledge of the Son of
to
here
God is fest
order
understanding flesh, and why
true
a
of
why
this
God
was
mani
necessary in obtain salvation. He comments on "a man" and "the fulness of Christ" as follows: the
in
was
to
perfect thoroughly instructed the whole body of the Church being fully taught, justified, sanctified, and "One
'Measure of the stature'� The full
sealed.
measure
knowledge, love, and holiness, which the Gospel requires. Many preachers, and multitudes of professing people, are studious to find out how many imperfections and infidelities, and how much of
of Christ
inward sinfulness, is consistent with
religion: the fair
as
whether
they
be fit for
army whether their stature be such them for the ranks of the Church mili
heavenly
qualifies
tant
safe state in
but how few, very few, are bringing out Gospel standard to try the height of the
members of the Church the
a
The
measure
of the
stature
of the fulness is
1
WHAT
seldom seen ness,
ited." In
the
IS
HOLINESS?
measure
of the
stature
of little
dwarfishness, and emptiness, is often exhib
Ephesians
:16
quotation: " rom body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth, according to the effectual working in the measure of every part, maketh increase of the body unto the edifying of itself in love." This is an allusion to the human body, and an illustration of the effective ness ol perfect love as it works out in practical holiness. The apostle means to say that as the human body is formed of various members with the head as the central and directing focal point, so the body of Christian believers, with Christ as the Head, grows to maturity by the proper exercise ol the gifts and graces of the individuals within
whom
the
we
find this
whole
the ( lunch.
might symboli e the effectiveness of the ex movements. perience of sanctification by the bodily and action, They are articulation, composition, the of The articulation joints, the iK ulation. We
(
of the muscles, the co-ordinated action of the of the bones and muscles, the circulation a perMood, all working together, make the body machine. So it is with the ex
composition
k(tly integrated which brings perfect perience of sanctification
love
of Christian
into the heart. It causes every phase with every phase of Chris activity to be articulated acts of the sanctified tian responsibility. Christian 1IC
for
co-ordinated efforts dominated by perfect love
God and for
humanity.
The diffusion of per-
WHAT feet love
brings
through
about
would win
an
men
IS
HOLINESS?
1
the life and deeds of the individual energy in Christian service which wholly to Christ. The picture is
that of the edification of the Christian soul in the
unified ness
in
workings of perfect everyday life.
love and
practical
holi
expression in Ephesians :26: "That he might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word." Wesley's com ment is as follows: "That he might sanctify it 1� the word The through ordinary channel of all it'� rom the guilt and cleansed blessings: 'having power of sin, 'by the washing of water'� In baptism, if with the 'outward and visible sign,' we receive the inward and spiritual grace." We
come now
Clarke
sanctify
gives
direct
to a
us
the
following:
"
might represented
'That He
and cleanse it'�The Church is
the spouse of Christ, as the woman is the spouse of the manr and, to prepare this Church for Him self, He washes, cleanses, and sanctifies it. There as
certainly an allusion here to the ancient method purifying women, who were appointed to be twelve months, it appears, were consorts to kings in some instances spent in this purification: Six months with oil of myrrh, and six months with sweet odours and with other things, for the purify ing of women. 'With the washing of water'� ap tism, accompanied by the purifying influences of the Holy Spirit. ' y the word'� The doctrine of Christ crucified, through which baptism is admin is
of
purified from Christ giving ef-
istered, sin cancelled, and the soul
all
unrighteousness
the death of
1 6
WHAT
ficacy
IS
HOLINESS?
The verse means essentially that God that which is cleansed from the unsanctify cleanness of sin. In no case do we find in the Scriptures that sanctification is possible without the to
all."
will
accompanying cleansing ossibly the strongest sanctification
are
process.
passages on the subject of those found in 1 Thessalonians
:3, 1. " or this is the will of God, even your sancti fication, that ye should abstain from fornication:
that every one of you should know how to possess his vessel in sanctification and honour." In this we have the direct statement that sanctifica tion is the will of God, and that His will must be (aniccl out in our lives. Wesley's explanation is:
case
'This is the will of God, even your sanctification.' God has called you to holiness He requires that for without holiness none can you should be holy
"
general calling, but in it Some of these he included. many particulars it is and very likely that these proceeds to mention he had been points on which gave them particular instructions while among them. 'That ye should see
This is the
the Lord.
are
fornication'-The word fornication,
abstain from we
have
seen
in other
places,
includes all
sorts
as
of
.Directions of this kind were pe undeanness. and indeed necessary among the Greeks, .
culiarly
heathens in such vices."
.
general,
who
were
strongly
addicted
to
in which Another exceedingly strong passage 1 in Thessalo is the word "sanctify'' is found of peace sanctify :23: "And the very God nians whole spirit and God I your and pray you wholly
WHAT
body
IS
1
HOLINESS?
preserved blameless unto the com ing esus Christ." Concerning the of this meaning passage there can be no question. Its wording is clear, and the statements are specific. Wesley treats it as follows: " y the peace He
soul and of
our
be
Lord
works in you, which is a great means of sanctifica tion 'wholly'� The word signifies wholly and per fectly every part, and all that concerns you all
that is of, or about you and may the whole of you, the spirit, and the soul, and the body� ust before
he said you, now he denominates them from their spiritual state, that spirit, Gal. 6: wishing that it may be preserved whole and entire then from their
these
natural
state,
the
soul
and
the
(for
body,
make up the whole nature of man, Matt. wishing it may be preserved farther of the
two
10:2 ,)
mentioned, only the two last are the natural, constituent parts of man. The first is ad ventitious, and the supernatural gift of God, to be three here
found in Christians
only.
That
man cannot
possibly
consist of three parts appears hence. The soul is either matter or not matter there is no medium. ut if it is matter, it is part of the matter, it coincides with the spirit."
body
if
not
'And very direct and inclusive. the very God of peace'� That same God who is the author of peace, the giver of peace and who has
Clarke's notes
sent, for the
"
are
redemption
of the world, the
rince
may that very God sanctify you wholly more evil in your hearts than His precepts tolerate evil in your conduct. The word wholly, the same as our phrase, to all intents means
of peace leave no
precisely
1
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
and
purposes. May He sanctify you to the end and the uttermost, that, as sin hath reigned unto
to
death,
reign through righteous esus Christ our Lord. 'Your whole spirit and soul and body'ďż˝ Some think that the apostle alludes to the ythagorean and latonic doctrine, which was acknowledged even
ness unto
so may grace eternal life, by
"
among the Thessalonians. I should rather believe that he refers simply to the fact that the creature
called a
man
body,
is
a
somo,
compound being, consisting, 1. organi ed system, formed by
an
Of
the
creative energy of God out of the dust of the earth composed of bones, muscles, and nerves of arteries,
veins, and blood
and
a
variety
other
of other vessels, in which the circulate. 2. Of a soul,
fluids
psucha, which is the seat of the different affections passions, such as love, hatred, anger, etc., with sensations, appetites, and propensities of different kinds. 3. Of spirit, pneuma, the immortal prin ciple, the source of life to the body and soul, with out which the animal functions cannot be performed, how perfect soever the bodily organs may be and which alone possesses the faculty of intelligence, understanding, thinking, and reasoning, and pro duces the faculty of speech wherever it resides, if accident have not impaired the organs of speech. and
prays that this compound being, in all its parts, powers, and faculties, which he terms their whole, comprehending all parts, every thing that constitutes man and manhood, may be sanctified and preserved blameless till the coming of Christ hence we learn, 1. That body, soul, and spirit are "The
apostle
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
1 9
debased and
polluted by sin. 2. That each is being sanctified, consecrated in all its powers to God, and made holy. 3. That the whole man is to be preserved to the coming of Christ, that body, soul, and spirit may be then glorified
capable
for
of
ever
whole
with
him.
That
.
in
this
the
state
may be so sanctified as to be preserved blameless till the coming of Christ. And thus we man
learn that the sanctification is not to take
place in,
On the pollution and sanctifica at, or after death. tion of flesh and spirit, see the note on 2 Cor. :1."
apostle in the twenty-fourth verse gives a personal testimony to the integrity of God in fulfill ing His promise to His children: " aithful is he that calleth you, who also will do it." Wesley adds in a terse manner, "unless you quench the Spirit." God has promised to sanctify His believing chil dren, and His faithfulness and personal honesty bind Him to keep His word. Therefore, the work The
of grace needful in the believer's heart may be sought. He can rely upon the covenant of God.
Thessalonians 2:13, 1 sanctification used again: " ut In 2
we
we
find the word are
bound
to
God for you, brethren be alway give loved of the Lord, because God hath from the be ginning chosen you to salvation through sanctifica
thanks
tion of the
to
Spirit
and belief of the truth
of
having
whereunto
he called you by our gospel, to the obtaining of the glory of our Lord esus Christ." In this case God is
spoken
as
that is, having taken ways those who have
out
chosen
you to salvation of the world and worldly
come
to
Him
by
faith.
The
1 0
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
sanctification as used here technically means they were saved by faith through the cleansing of the Holy Spirit when they sought redemption from sin. aul is not necessarily speaking of sancti word that
fication
as
referring
a
to
definite second work of grace, but is a broad sense as it applies to the
it in
Holy Spirit. most interesting
work of the
passage in 2 Timothy 2:21: "If a man therefore purge himself from these, he shall be a vessel unto honour, sanctified, and meet for the master's use, and prepared unto every good work." The purging mentioned in this passage is from vessels of dishonor so that the Christian We find
will have
honor, of
a
no
corrupt the these men
fellowship with them vessels of dis being those individuals who would Kingdom of God. Clarke speaks of
course,
as ways and doctrines as well as all wicked from whom the Christian is to be purged.
connection is twofold in setting aside from vessels of implication. for the service of the Master. ut in order dishonor, to be sanctified, and to be properly employed in Sanctification
in
this
It is
its
a
the Master's service for every good word and work, it is necessary that the human vessel be purged from inbred sin.
aside but
a
Sanctification is
cleansing
process we read:
as
not
well.
only
a
setting
" or both he that In Hebrews 2:11 sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one: for which cause he is not ashamed to call them brethren." In this case Clarke says that the word used for sanctify "does not merely signify one who sanctifies or makes holy, but one who makes atone-
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
1 1
.He that sancti reconciliation to God. fies is He that makes atonement and they who are sanctified are they who receive that atonement, and, ment or
.
being reconciled unto God, by adoption, through grace." The word used in this
.
become His children
verse
is the
same
as
in
ohn 1 :19. esus says, " or their sakes I sanctify myself." The literal interpretation is: "On their
I consecrate myself to be a sacrifice." This very act of Christ explains the peculiar statement that the sanctifier and the sanctified are all of one nature. It means that both Christ and His fol lowers are of the same nature, in that Christ partook of the human nature in order that He might qualify to become a sacrifice for man. In other words, as any other child born of human parents esus account
partaker
of the flesh and blood of
humanity. to the marvellous truth that, al brings though esus belonged in the triune Godhead, far above men and angels, yet through the incarnation He brought Himself to the democracy of mankind, and was not ashamed to speak of man as His was a
This
us
brother. was not
He became flesh and dwelt among us, and to be called one of us.
ashamed
In Hebrews 10:10 we
are
sanctified
aul says, " y the which will through the offering of the body
esus Christ once for all." Wesley's interpretation ' y which will'ďż˝ Of God, done and suffered by Christ, 'we are sanctified'ďż˝ Cleansed from guilt, of
is:
"
to God." The will is that of God, ather, who determined that salvation could and
and consecrated
the
should
come
through
the
propitiation
of Christ.
1 2
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
Clarke gives the following interpretation: "Clos in with this so solemnly declared WILL of God
ing
that there is
given under heaven among be saved, but esus the Christ, by we believe in Him, find redemption in His blood, and are sanctified unto God through the sacrificial
men
which
no
name
we can
offering of His body. 1. Hence we see that sovereign WILL of God is, that esus should incarnated the
that He should suffer and die, taste death for every
apostle's words,
that all should believe
on
or,
the be in
man
Him, and be saved from
their sins: for this is the WILL of God, our sancti fication. 2. And as the apostle grounds this on the words of the
psalm,
we see
that it is the WILL
of God that that system shall end for as the essence of it is contained in its sacrifices, and God says He
will
not
have these, and has
prepared
the Messiah
do His will, i.e., to die for men, hence it neces sarily follows, from the psalmist himself, that the to
introduction of the Messiah into the world is the abolition of the law, and that His sacrifice is that which shall last forever."
Continuing
in Hebrews
this 10:1 :
same
apostle says offering he hath
discussion, the
" or
by
one
perfected for ever them that are sanctified." Wes ley thinks that this means that God "has done all that
was
needful in order
to
their full reconcilia
God." Clarke says: "He has procured remission of sins and holiness for it is well ob served here, and in several parts of this epistle, (the tion with
word) to make perfect, is the means) to procure remission
same
as
(that
of sins."
which
erfected
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
1 3
precludes the need of any other pro pitiatory offering, because the gift of Christ was a complete atonement including purification and an abundant entrance into the eternal Kingdom of God. sanctification
The doctrine of sanctification has
proofs
in Hebrews
that he
might sanctify
one
of its
"Wherefore
13:12.
people
the
with
surest
esus also, his
own
blood, suffered without the gate." This passage gives the picture of Christ as a typical sin-offering in
which He takes the place of the scapegoat (Lev. 16:10) of Old Testament times and carries the sin of the people into the wilderness of oblivion.
Wesley comments as follows: "Exactly answering those typical sin-offerings, 'suffered without the gate'� Of erusalem, which answered to the old camp of Israel, 'that he might sanctify'� econcile and consecrate to God, 'the people'� Who believe in Him, 'by his own blood'� Not those shadowy sac rifices, which
are now
gives might sanctify Clarke
crate
them
to
a
of
further use."
no
'That he interpretation: That He might conse people'�
similar
the
"
God, and make
an
atonement
for their
sins, He suffered without the gate at erusalem, as the sin-offering was consumed without the camp
when the tabernacle abode in the wilderness.
haps
all
this
was
typical
the whole
of
er
Levitical
system of worship. He left the city, denounced its final destruction, and abandoned it to its fate and suffered without the gate God." In 1 to
that
eter 1:2 there is
previously
to
an
bring
the Gentiles
expression
used in 2
to
very similar Thessalonians 2:13:
1
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
according to the foreknowledge of God the ather, through sanctification of the Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of esus Christ: Grace unto you, and peace, be multiplied." Clarke's "Elect
reference
to
this is sufficient for
without further
us
'Through Spirit'� through the renewing and purifying influences of His Spirit on their souls, unto obedience� to engage and enable them to yield themselves up to all holy sanctification of the
"
comment:
obedience, the foundation of all which is the 'sprin
kling
of the blood of
blood of
sprinkling
in allusion
kling."
ude
atoning typified by the
Christ'�The
esus
Christ which
esus
was
of the blood of sacrifices under the law, to which it is called the blood of sprin
in the first
sanctified�and
verse
writes
preserved� and
to
those who
" ude,
called.
are
the
and brother of ames, to them that are sanctified by God the ather, and preserved in esus Christ, and called." The word
servant
of
esus Christ,
"sanctify" used thoroughly
been
in Christ
here
signifies
consecrated
but in order
those
God
who
through
have
faith
make it clear that he
believers, ude which, according to
was
the talking only Clarke, "preserved," "signifies those who continued unshaken in Chris tian faith and implies, also, that none can be pre to
word
all
to
to
true
served in the faith that do
not
uses
continue in union
with Christ, by whose grace alone they can be pre served and called. This should be read consecutively with the other epithets, and should be rather, in a
translation, read first than last,
to
the saints in
WHAT God
Saints is the
1
HOLINESS?
ather, called and
the
esus.
IS
same
as
preserved by
Christians
to
Christ become
they were called to believe in Christ by the preaching of the Gospel, and having believed, were preserved by the grace of Christ in the life and practice of piety." Although he does not use the same word in con cluding his epistle, ude has the same meaning in the twenty-fourth verse. He says, "Now unto him that is able to keep you from falling, and to present you faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy." The meaning is simple, that God desires to present us holy and without spot such
before Him in love, and in order to see that desire fulfilled, He has the power to preserve us from the contagion of sin and from any kind of error which would
contaminate
experience
our
of sanctification will
A final reference is in
said
unto
souls.
Nothing bring this
evelation
but
the
about.
:1 : "And I
him, Sir, thou knowest. And he said
unto
of great tribula they washed and have their and made them tion, robes, white in the blood of the Lamb." The key thought me,
These
are
which
is in the last clause.
robes" refers
They
are
to
The
came out
expression "washed their guilt of all sin.
freedom from the
made white
by
the blood of the Lamb,
holiness, which not only brings cleansing, but the atonement of snow-white purity. ardon in
all
and the
gives
both obtained through the blood of Commenting on this passage, Clarke very interesting statement when he says: white robes cannot mean the righteousness
purity
Lamb. a
"Their
are
1 6
WHAT
IS
Christ, for this
of
white in His
own
HOLINESS? be washed and made This white linen is said
cannot
blood.
righteousness of the saints, chap. 19: , righteousness in which they stand before the throne therefore it is not Christ's right eousness, but it is a righteousness wrought in them by the merit of His blood, and the power of His Spirit." be the
to
and this is the
E E 1.
2.
.
.
Hames,
III.
. M., Deeper Things, Chapters
Haney, Milton L., The Inheritance I . Chapters II, III, Hills,
Merritt,
Aaron
. .
9. 10.
ter
11.
and
II.
estored, ower,
.
.
Walker, Edward I
12.
Holiness
-
Chapters Lowry, Asbury, ossibilities of Grace, p. 0 . aul, ohn, The Way of ower, Chapter III. eid, Isaiah, Holiness ible eadings. ible uth, C. W., eadings on the Second I , . lessing, Chapters Hours with St. aul, Chap Daniel, Steele, Half -I
6.
OOKS
Arthur, William, The Tongue of ire. Carradine, everly, Sanctification, Chapters II-
3.
ENCE
.
., Sanctify Them,
Chapter
erfection ames A., Christian Sections III, . ohn Wesley, Taught by
Wood,
as
CHA TE The New Testament In this
chapter
we
. on
Holiness
shall deal with those New
Testament references in which the word holiness or its equivalent is found. We shall attempt to
discover the various implications of the word as used in the Scriptures and to arrive at the mean
ings of those passages in as exact a manner as pos sible. This does not mean that holiness is a separate experience from sanctification both terms refer to
to
same work of grace. The chapter is designed reveal the fact that the term is quite universally
the
used in the New Testament.
:6. reference is found in Matthew which and thirst do after they hunger righteousness: for they shall be filled." This is Our
first
" lessed
one
are
of the
eatitudes, but it is usually quoted in
experience of holiness or full Wesley interprets it as meaning to say: the holiness here describedďż˝ they shall be
connection with the salvation. "After
satisfied with it." In Clarke's comments, he says: "When the soul is awakened to a sense of its wants, and begins to hunger and thirst after righteousness or
holiness, which is its proper food,
we
know that
Holy Spirit, purified by partaker of that living bread, or perish everlast ingly. Now, as God never inspires a prayer but with a design to answer it, he who hungers and thirsts it
must
be
the
a
1
and be made
1
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
after
the full salvation of God, may depend on and effectually blessed or satisfied, well-fed as the word implies. Strong and intense desire after any object has been, both by poets and
being speedily
represented metaphorically by hunger and righteousness spoken of here, as Clarke covers "all the blessings of the new covenant says, �all the graces of the Messiah's kingdom� a full restoration to the image of God "
orators,
thirst."
The
The are
Wesley's �The
reference is in Matthew
next
the
heart:
in
pure
comment on
sanctified.
their hearts."
tions of how
received
The
it is
there is such
this is:
They
a
an
does
verse
mere
"
who
when the
or
they
for
: .
shall
" lessed
see
God."
'The pure in heart' love God with all
not
involve the ques of holiness is
experience
statement
experience.
of the fact that
Christ
certainly
never
would have said, " lessed are the pure in heart" if it were not possible to be pure, and if there were no
who
Christians
purity.
There
heart, which
had
is such
a
experience
we
call holiness.
heart
pure
prayer of one of the disci . "That he would grant ples found in Luke 1: , unto us, that we being delivered out of the hand of our enemies might serve him without fear, in holiness and righteousness before him, all the days The
of
our
next
reference is
experience of thing as having a
the
life."
Wesley
a
thinks that this
means
that
we are to serve God without slavish fear, and that the substance of the prayer is in reality a promise "that we shall be always holy, always happy: that being delivered from Satan and sin, from every
WHAT
1 9
HOLINESS?
IS
uneasy and unholy temper, we shall joyfully love and serve God, in every thought, word, and work."
Clarke
at
length:
meaning of the verse brought by esus Christ, following things:� 1. We are to
his idea of the
gives
"The salvation
consists in the be delivered out of the hand of our enemies, and from all that hate us so that sin shall neither have dominion over us nor existence in us. 2. We are to
worship God,
to
render Him that service and ad
oration which the letter and
quire. conformity 3.
a
spirit
of His
religion
re
live in holiness, a strict inward the mind of Christ� and righteousness,
We to
are to
full outward
conformity
the precepts of the
to
be done before God, under Gospel. the continual influence and support of His grace, and with a constant evidence of His presence and
This is
.
to
. This state is a state of true hap approbation. is fear. Sin is all cast out, holi without piness�it ness is God's in brought power upholds, and His cheers and comforts, the believing approbation heart. Thus misery is precluded, and happiness es
tablished.
long
as
ages, in What a
This
6.
blessedness is to
continue
as
days of our life,' in all situations, and in all circumstances.
exist� 'all the
we
all
pity
to
have lived
so
long
without God in
the world, when so much happiness and be enjoyed in union with Him "
glory
are
to
Holiness is
an
by
an
exhibited
conformity statement must
at
to
that
once
experience which is to be righteousness in experience. In thinking of the
inward
outward life of
that we
can
serve
conclude that
Him without fear, as
long
as
we
sin in any
160
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
form is in the human heart, there will naturally be fear in the presence of God but when there is an inward conformity to the will of God, there will always be found an outward conformity to the commandments of God. He said, "If ye love When this state me, keep my commandments." of grace is reached, an abject fear of God is impos sible. In
references to the ex of holiness than in any other book of the
omans
perience
we
New Testament.
find
more
It is true that these passages do
always use the word holiness, but they do give us an insight into the experience. Our first reference is a long quotation from not
omans 6:1- : "What shall
continue
forbid. any
in
sin,
that
we
grace How shall we, that
longer
us as were
therein?
bapti ed
say then? Shall we God may abound?
are
dead
sin, live
to
Know ye not, that so many of into esus Christ were bapti ed
into his death? Therefore we are buried with him by baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the ather, even so we also should walk in newness of life. or if we
planted together in the likeness of shall be also in the likeness of his knowing this, that our old man is
have been
his death, resurrection:
we
crucified with him, that the body of sin destroyed, that henceforth we should not or he that is dead is freed from sin."
might
serve
chapter aul is trying to prove that salvation comes only Gentile and ew the Messiah and that it can be received In this
to
be
sin.
both
through only by
WHAT
IS
161
HOLINESS?
He also attempts to show that there obligations which all professing Chris
faith in Him. certain
are
tians
must
in order
meet
to
live
a
holy
life.
He
principles of the Christian religion require a holy heart and life, and that there are ample provisions in the Gospel for such an ex perience. Commenting on the first verse, Clarke says: "It is very likely that these were the words of a believing Gentile, whoďż˝ having as yet received but little instruction, for he is but just brought argues that the
of his heathen state to believe in Christ esusmight imagine, from the manner in which God had magnified His mercy, in blotting out his sin on his simply believing on Christ, that, supposing he even gave way to the evil propensities of his own heart, his transgressions could do him no hurt now that he was in the favour of God." Wesley confirms this statement by stating that aul is trying to vindi cate fully the doctrine that the religion of esus out
Christ
all
saves
men
With reference
"TO DIE
to a
do with it and
to
wholly given
connection on
verse
with
our
ture
a
entire
verse
upholds thing or
Clarke
of sin.
them:
to
freedom from the
means
to
from all sin.
live to
up with
6 is
as
being,
guilt
this contention
to
a
them
to
as
"
old
or person is to be have the most intimate
Wesley's interpretation
'Our old man'ďż˝ Coeval as
strong and beautiful
depravity
and
by saying:
thing
them."
follows: and
Wesley says that it and from the power
person, is to have nothing to be totally separated from
him
or
2
the fall,
our
evil
na
expression for that corruption, which by nature
162
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
spreads
itself over the whole man, leaving no part uninfected. This in a believer is crucified with Christ, mortified, gradually killed, by virtue of our union with him: 'that the body of sin'�All evil tempers, words, and actions, which are the mem bers of the old man, might be destroyed."
given to us in these words: " y body of sin, our old man, our wicked, and fleshly self, is to be cruci corrupt, fied that our souls may as truly be raised from a death of sin to a life of righteousness, as the body Clarke's view is
the destruction of the
of Christ
was
ascended
to
raised from the grave, and afterwards ut how does right hand of God.
the
this part of the metaphor apply to esus Christ? lainly and forcibly. esus Christ took on Him a
body
a
body
in the likeness of sinful flesh,
:3 and gave up that body
death alone
an
atonement
chap.
death through which was made for sin, and
to
the way laid open for the vivifying Spirit, to have the fullest access to, and the most powerful opera
tion in, the human heart. Here, the body of Christ dies that He may be a quickening Spirit to man kind. Our body of sin is destroyed by this quick ening Spirit, that henceforth we should live unto Him who died and
rose
again."
used for the old man, he discussing used "The old here, and Eph. :22, and man, says: Col. 3:9, is the same as 'the flesh with its affec and 'the body of the sins tions and lusts,' Gal. :2 In
the
term
of the flesh,' Col. 2:11 and the very same which the ewish writers term, the 'old Adam ' and which they interpret, 'evil concupiscence,' the same which
WHAT we
mean
IS
163
HOLINESS?
by indwelling sin,
the infection of
or
our
rom all which nature, in consequence of the fall. is to counter of God we that the learn may design
and soul of sin, that we shall no longer serve it, no longer be its slaves. Nor shall it any more be capable of perform work and
destroy
the very
spirit
ing its essential functions than perform the functions of natural With
references
contending guilt of the past
to
sin
as
dead
men
- ,
verses
that with Christ
a
man
dead
life." we
body
find
can
Wesley
is freed from the
and from the power of present are from the commands of their
former masters, and that we are conformed to His death by dying to sin. Clarke asks a very vital question in reference to verse 6. "Does not this
simply mean, that the man who has received Christ esus by faith, and has been, through believing, made a partaker of the Holy Spirit, has had his old man, all his evil propensities destroyed so that he is not only justified freely from all sin, but wholly sanctified unto God?" In his argument against the old theory that it was death that freed us
from sin, Clarke says: "It is the blood of Christ that cleanses from all unrighteousness and
alone
the sanctification of on
death than his
a
believer is
justification.
believers do
not
cease
have
say,
they
make
only a
be said
to
proper more
and infidels? to
breathe.
use
no more
from sin
are
dependent
If it be said, 'the
till
they die '
such believers
of their faith
as
do
and what
I
not can
of the whole herd of transgressors They cease to sin, when they cease
If the Christian
religion brings
no
other
16
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
to its upright followers, well wherein doth the wise differ from the ask, may for ut the whole have both one end? fool, they teaches a Gospel contrary doctrine."
privileges
than this
we
A
concluding argument
in connection with the
destruction of inbred sin is found in
omans 6:12.
reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey it in the lusts thereof." Wesley says that the body must be subject to death, "but it need not be subject to sin." Clarke gives an "Let
not
sin therefore
equally pungent analysis of the verse: "Sin is rep as a king, ruler, or tyrant, who has the desires of the mind and the members of the body under his control so that by influencing the he the governs body. Do not let sin reign, passions do not let him work that is, let him have no place, no being in your souls because wherever he is, resented
he governs, less or more: and indeed sin is not sin without this. How is sin known? y evil influences in the mind, and evil
acts
in the life.
ut do not
prove his dominion? an evil existence of Certainly, the very thought to which passion or appetite attaches itself, is a proof these influences and these
acts
that there sin has dominion for without dominion such passions could not be excited. Wherever sin is felt, there sin has dominion for sin is sin only as it works in action or passion against God. Sin cannot be a quiescent thing: if it do not work it
does It
not
is
talking an act
exist."
interesting
about
of sin.
the
to
note
principle
that of
The individual is
the sin
apostle
rather
personally
is
than
respon-
HOLINESS?
WHAT IS
16
sible for any act of sin committed by him, but he cannot be held responsible for a principle of sin which exists within him. ntil he discovers that there is
possibility
a
nature, there
are
passion, appetite,
getting
of
rid of the carnal
within him the elements of lust, and carnal desires of all kinds.
exhortation here is to see that the is eradicated by the power of Christ.
The
carnal
nature
In the fourteenth
sin shall
verse
a
have domion
promise
is
given:
" or
you: for ye are not under the law, but under grace." This grace is described by Wesley as being "the merciful dispen not
Gospel
sation of the
over
which
brings complete victory
everyone who is under the powerful influence Clarke's interpretation of the Spirit of Christ." to
of the
verse
is:
"
'Sin shall
not
have dominion
over
you'� God delivers you from it and if you again become subject to it, it will be the effect of your own
choice
law'� That
or
law
negligence. which
'Ye
are
not
under the
obedience, without
exacts
obey that condemns every trans giving power gression and every unholy thought without provid to
ing '
for the
ut under
beneficent though it
extirpation grace'� Ye
of evil
dispensation requires the
or
of
the
strictest
of God,
the
pardon
of sin.
under the merciful and
are
Gospel, that, conformity to
al the
affords sufficient power to be thus conformed and, in the death of Christ, has pro vided pardon for all that is past, and grace to help will
in every time of need." In
used:
omans 6:19 "I
speak
we
find the word holiness itself
after the
manner
of
men
because
166
WHAT
of the your
IS
HOLINESS?
of your flesh: for as ye have yielded members servants to uncleanness and to
infirmity
iniquity
iniquity
unto
members
servants
to
even
now
so
righteousness
yield
unto
your holiness."
'As ye have Wesley translates the verse to mean: and servants to uncleanness members presented your mem unto so now iniquity present your iniquity bers servants of righteousness, unto holiness'ďż˝ Iniquity (whereof uncleanness is an eminent part) is here opposed to righteousness." He then says: "And unto iniquity is the opposite of unto holiness. ighteousness here, is a conformity to the Divine
will
holiness
they
who
to
the whole Divine
servants
are
holiness, but they who no
farther.
according
live
because of
our
are
ighteousness
nature.
Observe
righteousness go on to servants to iniquity get is
service, because
we
the will of another but liberty, inclination to it and delight in it."
omans 6:22 matter
of
"
to
gives
the conclusion of this whole
in these words: "
ut
now
being
made free
sin, and become servants to God, ye have fruit unto holiness, and the end everlasting your from
life."
Here
we
find the climactic argument of all
omans here the passages of the sixth chapter of tofore given. It is a glorious expression. Summing up a series of statements such as "free from sin," "servants to God," "fruit unto holiness," and
' ut now "everlasting life," Clarke's comment is: being made free from sin'ďż˝ As being free from righteousness is the finished character of a sinner, so being made free from sin is the finished char 'And become servacter of a genuine Christian. "
IS
WHAT ants
to
service of
God'ďż˝ They one
16
HOLINESS?
transferred
were
from
the
they were engaged in the
that of another:
master to
freed from the slavery of sin, and service of God. ' ruit unto holiness'ďż˝ Holiness of heart was the principle and righteousness of life the fruit." of
In the first twenty-two omans we find an
most
entrancing
experience
of the sixth
experience There
manner.
argue that this holiness, because this would
verses
is
not
chapter
chapter
described in are
the does
those
experience not
a
who
of
describe
converted man, but of a sinner. It is very evident, however, that taking the picture as a whole, we see that a man may be delivered from the the
of
a
blight of heathen darkness to a state of grace in which he is free from all sin, is a servant of God, has fruit in his life unto holiness, and in which in the end
expect everlasting life. If this is not verified by the experience of thousands of Christians, then all argument is vain. We see here the various steps he
can
from sin taken
perience
by
a
man
until he attains the
of salvation which
faction in his life.
"holy", experience
The word
used in
brings complete
figures
of
speech
ex
satis
to
repre of holiness, is found in omans 11:16. " or if the first fruit be holy, the lump is also
sent
the
holy and if the root be holy, so are the branches." Wesley thinks that this passage referred to the ews, and gives us the following statement concerning it: "And this will surely come to pass. ' or if the first fruits be holy, so is the lump'ďż˝ The consecration of them
was
esteemed the consecration of all.
And
16
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
the conversion of a few ews is an earnest of the conversion of all the rest. 'And if the root be holy' �The patriarchs from whom they spring, surely God will at length make their descendants also holy." so
Clarke goes into the first fruit be
fruits
to
blessing
God
to
have
now
means
pledges that process of time, admit the whole ewish His favour again, so that they shall
embraced
God will, in nation into
constitute
holy
holy'ďż˝ As
the
upon the rest, so the conversion of Abra the true faith, and the several ews who
ham
'If the
was
' or if explanation: the consecrating the of drawing down His "
fuller
a
a
in this
are
part of the visible Church of Christ.
be
root
Christianity,
holy,
verse
is
so are
to
the branches'ďż˝ The word
be taken in that
sense
which
frequently in the Old and New Testaments, vi ., consecrated, set apart to sacred uses. It must not be forgotten that the first converts to Christ it has
so
from among the ews these formed the root of the Christian Church: these were holy, consecrated to God, and those who among the Gentiles were
were
converted
their
by
means
but the chief reference is
were
to
ewish people, Abraham, Isaac, as
these
were
devoted
His covenant, all their
to
still
have
a
belief, these these
and
acob
and,
root to
the
the branches also, still remain:
blessings
of
they the
though because of their obstinate un blessings are suspended, as they cannot, the ground of the old covenant, enjoy on blessings but through faith: for it was when
covenant
even
certain title
consecrated
God and received into
posterity,
the descendants from that
also
the ancestors of the
WHAT
169
HOLINESS?
IS
Abraham believed God that it was accounted to righteousness and thus he became an heir of the righteousness which is by faith." him for
to
Although this the blessings
the
covenant
meaning sense
it is
applies
reference
more
particularly through
which could be claimed
of the
speaking
of consecration
although
and
ews,
in its direct
of the word holiness in the the
or
service of God, it is easy perience is not only for
to
setting apart see
the
that such
ewish of any day.
for the an
converts
ex
of
We have day but for all converts that where the word holiness noted refers already to being set apart for sacred use in a very specific sense, it always carries with it the meaning of purity and cleansing. This is evident from the fact that God could not use an unholy vessel with which to perform a holy task.
aul's
aul exhorts the a
living, holy,
"I beseech you
and
omans to present their bodies acceptable sacrifice unto God.
therefore, brethren, by the mercies
of God, that ye present your bodies a living sac rifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your
( om. 12:1.)
reasonable service." to
both
tians. as
This
was
written
ews and Gentiles among the oman Chris It is an appeal for them to present themselves
sacrifices, dead
to
sin, in order that they may
be made alive unto holiness and be God for Christian service.
bodies, Clarke says,
bringing offering picked
sacrifices
is
"a
acceptable to The presenting of the metaphor taken from
the altar of God.
The person the choicest of his flock, brought it to the altar, and presented it there as an atoneto
out
1 0
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
merit for his sin. They are exhorted to give them selves up in the spirit of sacrifice to be as wholly the Lord's property as the whole burnt offering no part being devoted to any other use." The word holiness is used in connection with
was,
this sacrificial act.
This is
true
a
conception
the type of sacrifice which God demands. must be an unreserved yielding of self and
of
There
a
com
plete cleansing by the Holy Spirit to bring about acceptability to God in holiness. The result of this type of experience is stated in the following "And be
verse:
not
conformed
to
this world:
but
be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable,
perfect, Wesley says, and nor
will of God."
is
to
non-conformity, judgment, spirit, condition prevails, there The
be "neither in
behaviour." When this
neglecting of the will of God, nor the complete following of one's own will, but there will be a yielding and obedience to the will of God which is in itself good and acceptable to Him. will be
In
1
no
Corinthians 3:1
we
find this
statement:
"If any man defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy: for the temple of God is holy, which
ye are." Clarke gives an insight into this in these words: "If any man injure, corrupt, destroy the Church of God by false doctrine,
temple verse or
God will destroy himďż˝ will take away his part out of the book of life. This refers to him who wilfully mistaken man shall opposes the truth the erring, the obstinate but opposer shall be barely escape
destroyed."
The statement that is of
particular
in-
WHAT terest to us
IS
is that the
1 1
HOLINESS?
temple
of God is
holy.
This
which is the real Christian, is the spiritual habitation of God on earth. In other words God
temple,
exhibits
Himself
through
the
lives
and
spiritual
He indwells the Chris
characters of His followers.
tian heart. The very fact that we are His habita tions indicates that we must be pure and clean. God
dwell
cannot
where
sin rules,
nor
can
He
condone sin in the lives of those who follow His commandments. The
facts
two
are
and inconsistent.
necessity
entirely contrary
Holiness of life is, therefore, a if God is to have intimate fellowship with
us.
In 1 Corinthians 1 :3
of holiness
the
apostle gives
in the heart in these words:
the result "Awake
righteousness, and sin not: for some have not the knowledge of God: I speak this to your shame." Wesley and Clarke give us practically the same thoughts on this passage. Wesley's comment is a to
exclamation full of Shake off 'To your lethargy apostolical majesty. righteousness'� Which flows from the true knowl little
fuller:
'Awake'�An
"
of God, and implies that your whole soul be broad awake 'and sin not'� That is, and ye will not sin. Sin supposes drowsiness of soul. There is need to press this for some among you have not
edge
knowledge knowledge they
of
the
concerns
� or
them
nothing
all
their
boasted
most totally ignorant this to speak your shame' more shameful than sleepy ignorance
to
is
God� With
are
of what it
know. 'I
of God, and of the word and works of God in these especially, considering the advantages they
1 2
WHAT
enjoyed."
had
IS
HOLINESS?
The heart of the
verse, as
it
applies
holiness, is in the expression "sin not". God proposes to save us from all known sin, and if we to
are
righteous, there will be no voluntary act of sin. deeper implication is that there is a right
The
eousness
which also
removes
proclivity
the
to
sin.
fact
knowledge presupposes not permissible for the Christian believer. We find the next promise in 2 Corinthians :1: therefore these "Having promises, dearly beloved,
A
of
true
the
God
that sin is
let
us
cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the
spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of Wesley interprets this to mean that we are to be cleansed from all pollution of the flesh�all outward sin, and all pollution of the spirit� all inward sin. He says that to perfect holiness is to carry it to the highest peak of spiritual living. The loving fear of God is the sure foundation of all flesh and God."
holiness. The
statements
from all
in reference
to
cleansing ourselves spirit, Clarke
filthiness of the flesh and
says, mean to avoid all outward occasions of sin He says that as well as all inward desire to sin. in fear of the the Lord means holiness perfecting
mind of Christ brought into the is This the soul. grand object of a genuine means of The Christian's pursuit. accomplishing 1. this are, esisting and avoiding sin, in all
"getting
the whole
inviting
and
displeasure,
and
its
seducing
forms.
Setting
the
our eyes, that we may dread His abhor whatever might excite it,
fear of God before
and whatever
2.
might provoke
Him to withhold His
WHAT manna
from
there is
our
1 3
HOLINESS?
IS
We see, therefore,
mouth.
that
strong and orthodox sense in which we cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh may and of the spirit, and thus perfect holiness in the a
fear of God." This
is
is very direct and easy to comprehend. preparation for the perfection of holiness
verse
The basic
getting
spirit. living in things, perfect
rid of all filthiness of the flesh and
It stands to
reason
that the
man
who is
sin cannot, in "the very nature of holiness in the fear of the Lord but the
man
who
that is, he who voluntarily himself of sin ceases to commit sin, is placing himself where he
rids can
sin out
Since holiness and yield and be cast
reach the holiness of God.
are
antithetical, the
before the other
one
can
must
the Christian and
enter
become effective in his life. One
ing
of
the
"holy"
word
as
he
strongest
is used is in hath
chosen
statements
Ephesians us
in
in
which
1: .
him
the
"Accord
before
the
foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love." Clarke's comment
on
hath chosen
this is sufficient: us
"
'According
as
he
in him'ďż˝ As He has decreed from
beginning of the world, and has kept in view from the commencement of the religious system
the
ews, (which bring us Gentiles
of the
phrase sometimes means,) to the knowledge of this glo to rious state of salvation by Christ esus. The ews considered themselves an elect or chosen people, and wished to monopoli e the whole of the Divine The apostle here shows love and beneficence, the
1
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
that God had the Gentiles plation of His mercy and
as
much in the contem as He had the
goodness Gospel, now so freely dispensed to them, were the proof that God has thus chosen them, and that His end in giving them the Gospel was the same which He had in view by giving the law to the ews, vi ., that they might be holy and without blame before Him. And as His object was the same in respect to them both, they should consider that, as He loved them, so they should love one another God having provided for each the same blessings, they should therefore be holy�fully separated from earth and sin, and consecrated to God and without blame� having no nor spot imperfection, their inward holiness with their outward consecration. The agreeing words are a metaphor taken from the perfect and immaculate sacrifices which the law required the ut as love is people to bring to the altar of God. the fulfilling of the law, and love the fountain ews
and the
blessings
of the
whence their salvation flowed, therefore love must fill their hearts towards God and each other, and love must be the motive and end of all their words
and works."
indicate the experience is received, but the fact that it is to be received cannot be denied. As the ews could not claim the full bene fits of Christianity for themselves alone, neither can any sect of believers claim a type of religious experience peculiar to themselves. We serve a God who had His plans laid before the foundation of We
see
method
or
that this statement does the time when the
not
WHAT the world
He
be
planned holy, no
IS
HOLINESS?
1
that is, before we ever were created. that the people of His creation should
matter of what race or sect, age or clime. God is the same the religion He demands of us is the same and the consequences of our ac
ceptance We
the
are
new
eousness
rejection
or
exhorted in
man,
to
same.
to
God.
meaning
holiness, and the
imply
in the very Clarke considers the new man here as
nature, which
the mind
:2
the
"put on right Wesley interprets the
universal
mean
words "after God"
image of
Ephesians
are
which after God is created in
and true holiness."
"new man"
as a new
of His demands
through
to
with the
renewing of Holy Spirit. interpreta of man in righteousness and man was re-created in right comes
the
His
tion of the creation true holiness is that eousness and the truth of holiness. The verse is an allusion to the creation of man, and indicates
that, since
created in God's own image, is to be re-created in the image spiritual of God, which is in reality in the image of holiness.
the
man
was
man
The likeness of the Divine
eing
is
to
be traced
upon man's soul so that the grace of God wrought in his heart may be indicated as surely as it was in
Adam.
Holiness in the life of an individual is not more necessary than holiness in the life of the Church. In Ephesians :2 we read the purpose of the plan
Gospel:ďż˝ "That he might present it to himself glorious church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish." Wesley describes this type of
of the a
1 6
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
being "all-glorious within, not having impurity from any sin, or wrinkleďż˝ Of deformity from any decay." Clarke writes that this glorious church is in every way splendid and honor able because it is pure and holy. "Not having spot
church
as
spotďż˝ Of
or
wrinkle" is
indication of
an
no
blemish
on
the
the garment, no mark of decay or spots sickness or decrepitude. So the whole heart and
face, life
no
are
on
to
perfect.
be
He
holy
in every sense pure, clean, and further: "Now it was for this
says purpose that Christ gave Himself for the Church and for this purpose He continued the different ordinances which He has appointed and, partic ularly, the preaching of the Wordďż˝ the doctrine of reconciliation through faith in His blood. And it
purification is to take presented at the day of
is in this life that all this
for
place judgment
shall be
none
Him who has not here been sanctified, cleansed, washed, made, glorious, having no spot, wrinkle, blemish, nor any such thing. How vain is the
the
to
pretension
true
Church
not
while
full
to
of
be members of
spots,
wrinkles,
such things fondly sup that their holiness is in their surety, because
blemishes, and
posing
of multitudes
MANY
in themselves "
2:1 we find the words "'blame "without rebuke." "That ye and less," "harmless," and blameless harmless, the sons of God, may be midst of a crooked and the in without rebuke, In
hilippians
perverse nation, among whom ye shine as lights in the world." The meaning is that there is an experience in which we can be blameless before
WHAT
IS
1
HOLINESS?
God. This will cause us to show by our holy conduct that we are partakers of the Divine nature and that
we can no
live such lives of holiness that there
just charge
of
transgression
made
against
can
be
us.
We find a similar expression in Colossians 1:22. "In the body of his flesh through death, to present
you holy and unblameable and unreproveable in his sight." The idea of holiness is linked up with that of blamelessness.
The thought is that Christ body of his flesh through death, to present you holy and unblameable and unreprove able in his sight." Wesley's comment is: ' y the of his flesh'� So from His body distinguished body, the Church. The body here denotes His entire manhood 'through death'� Whereby He purchased the reconciliation which we receive by faith 'to present you'� The very end of that reconciliation 'holy'� Toward God 'spotless'� In yourselves 'un reproveable'� As to your neighbour." came
"in the
"
'In the body of Clarke goes into more detail. his flesh'� y Christ's assumption of a human body, and dying for man, He has made an atonement for "
sin, through which
men
become reconciled to God
'To present you holy'� Having your sin. ' nblameable'� Having
and to each other.
saved you from filled you with His
Spirit,
and written His law in
your hearts, so that His love, shed abroad in your hearts, becomes the principle and motive to every action. The tree therefore being good, the fruit
unreproveable'� or, being filled love, joy, peace, meekness, gentleness, and goodness, against these there is no law and as they is also
with
good.
'And
1
WHAT called
IS
HOLINESS?
love God with all their selves, the spirit design of the law was fulfilled in them, for love is the fulfilling of the law. 'In his sight'ďż˝ At the day of judgment. None can enjoy heaven who have not been reconciled to God here,
were
whole
to
and
and shown forth the fruits of that reconciliation in being made holy and unblameable, that, when
they
come to be judged, they may be unreproveable." The lesson from these two Scriptures is to the effect that a life of holiness is one that is unblame able and irreproachable before God. This does
not mean
will
that he who has the
experience
of holiness
be blamed, and will escape the reproof of the men of the world but it does mean that there is a life hid with Christ in God in which there is not
condemnation. There is a. life of love and perfect unison between God and His children. no
We find
an
interesting expression
in Colossians
3:9, 10 by which we are exhorted to put off the old man and to put on the new man. "Lie not one to another, seeing that ye have put off the old man with his deeds and have put on the new man,
which is renewed in knowledge after the image of him that created him." The comments on the sixth chapter of omans will apply in this case. (See
page 160.) inbred sin. man
in the
The old
man
is the carnal nature
This exhortation is
image
to
put
of Him that created
noted that God made
on
us.
in His
the
or
new
We have
already image, the image of true holiness. (See Ephesians :23, 2 .) Commenting on the "old man," Clarke says: "Thus, then, man is made by his Creator, not acman
own
WHAT
cording to the image or likeness of any but according to his own the image of And
the Divine
as
fashions, be
must
qualities produced. Hence
alone the
and the
by
knowledge spiritual to
apostle, interpreting image in which
which
are
we
be remade,
must
knowledge, righteousness, knowledge referred to is
wisdom.
which
rightly
might righteousness
with God.
contacts
true
as
experience
The
or
which
which the Christian alone obtains
his
referred the
holiness."
true
in
being,
the Creator. those
are
the words of Moses, says that the man was made, and in which he
consists
other
exist in forms
nature cannot
moral
made anew,
1 9
HOLINESS?
IS
The
comes
with
It
conversion
through
related to God
be is in
the
of repentance. The holiness is the condition of the heart which has been purged from the carnal act
nature
and filled with the
Holy
Ghost.
aul says in 1 Thessalonians 3:13: "To the end he may establish your hearts unblameable in holiness before God, even our ather, at the coming of our Lord esus Christ with all his saints." Here we find
again less
the
before
thought God.
that holiness makes
The
point
that
us
interests
blame us
in
particular is the fact that it is the purpose of the Gospel, through the efficacious sacrifice of Christ, to
establish
Clarke
our
explains
hearts
in
it in the
holiness
before
following
words:
God.
"
'To
may establish your hearts'ďż˝ Without love to God and man, there can be no establishment
the
end
he
religion of Christ. It is love that produces both solidity and continuance. And, as love is the fulfilling of the law, he who is filled with love is in the
1 0
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
unblameable in holiness for he who has the love of God in him is a partaker of the Divine nature, for God is love." This Scripture not only means that
we are
ness
at
the
but it
be established unblameable in holi particular time that Christ shall come, to
means that only those whose hearts are es tablished in holiness now will be able to bear the strict scrutiny of the God of justice. It will take
just
such
a
In
1
experience God hath
not
:
us
there is
the interest of God
called
One
comprehension tively. To do
hath called unto
have
most
a
us
us
unto
man.
uncleanness, but
the
" or
unto
best ways to get a clear of this passage is to state it posi of the
so
would make it read: " or God
unto
holiness,"
cleanness of heart." are
direct
concerning
of holiness in the heart of
holiness."
holiness
to
Thessalonians
statement as to
us
ready for the coming subsequent judgment of the Lord.
condition
of Christ and the
in direct
"God hath called
or
We
opposition
see
that sin and
both in the mind
of God and in the heart of the individual. The two cannot exist together in either case. The pur pose of God is to lift us out of the realm of sin, and to cause us to enter into a life of holiness
utterly pleasing to Him. A reference in 2 Timothy 2:22 gives this state ment: " lee also youthful lusts: but follow right eousness, faith, charity, peace, with them that call The term "pure on the Lord out of a pure heart." heart" refers to the experience of holiness, of course. The exhortation to "follow righteousness, faith, charity, peace, with them that call upon the Lord" which will be
WHAT is
a
IS
HOLINESS?
request for unity with all
apostle
is
urging
that
we
true
flee
not
1 1
believers. The only from all
sinful desires, but those youthful lusts of private ambition and power which men seek especially in their youth. The young man to whom it was ad dressed was Timothy, at that time between thirty and forty years of age. It has been said that ambition
and love of power prevail in one's life at this time aul just as carnal pleasures hold sway in youth. is very anxious that this young preacherďż˝ his son in the
Gospelďż˝ might
pure heart. named is in
have the
gracious experience
The exhortation
a
reality
an
to
of
follow the graces on the part of
injunction
apostle to flee from sin and to pursue what is just, holy, and right. The promptings for this urge, the
of course, cause out
must
come
of the heart
from the inner nature, be the issues of life. nless
are
the heart is made pure, it will be pure desires to spring from it.
impossible
for
nto the pure all things we read: " them that are defiled and un but unto are pure: believing is nothing pure but even their mind and conscience is defiled." The particular reference In Titus 1:1
to the kind of meat that should be used by nder the Mosaic law there was a dis Christians. tinction between clean and unclean meats, but
here is
under the New Testament law this was done away with, at least as far as ceremonial worship and service were concerned. The real point at issue is that to the impure and unbelieving nothing is
pure. In other words, true faith.
nothing
can
be clean without
1 2
WHAT
Clarke's "
'
to
HOLINESS?
IS
comment
is
enlightening
and
point:
the
to
nto the pure all things are pure'ďż˝ This appears have been spoken in reference to the ewish
distinctions of clean and unclean meats. To the genuine Christian every kind of meat proper for human nourishment is pure, is lawful and may be used without scruple. This our Lord had long before decided." The purity mentioned in this verse
refers
purified by
purity
the
to
faith.
of those whose hearts
baptism
When the
of the
are
Holy
carnal desires, then the promptings of the heart come from motives that are pure and
Ghost
removes
undefiled.
True
worship
under
these
conditions,
therefore, will not consist in the ceremonial wash ings and eating, nor in refraining from certain
things,
worshiping God with a religion depends not upon outward altogether, but upon the inner prompt
but will consist in
pure love. True appearances ings of the soul. The
next
reference
remaineth therefore This short
apostle
sentence
tells
of
a
Hebrews
is rest
to
indicates
the
a
the
"There
:9.
people
of God."
beautiful story. The condition of the
unsettled
Israelites in slavery, of their being led from that condition by the great Moses, and of their entrance romised Land. He portrays the Israelites into the resting from their struggles and weary labors after a long period of fluctuation in faith and experience, and entering a country of rest and peace. So it is with
the
Christian who
contentment
These
are
comes
into
the
abiding
of entire sanctification.
Clarke's remarks
on
this
verse:
"
'There
WHAT remaineth therefore �It
IS a
HOLINESS?
1 3
people
of God,'
rest
to
the
The rest of the Sabbath it was not, The rest in the promised land, for the 2. 1.
was
not,
wrote long after the days of oshua there fore there is another rest, a state of blessedness, for the people of God and this is the Gospel, the blessings it procures and communicates, and the
psalmist
glory which it prepares for, and has prom ised to, genuine believers. There are two words in this chapter which we indifferently translate, rest, the first signifying a cessation from labour, so that the weary body is rested and refreshed the second meaning, not only a rest from labour, but a religious rest a rest of a sacred kind, of which both soul and body partake. This is true, whether we understand the rest as referring to Gospel blessings, or to eternal felicity or both." eternal
to "follow 12:1 are exhorted in Hebrews without which and with all men, holiness, peace comment is no man shall see the Lord." Wesley's
We
as
follows:
second
"
' ollow
of
branch
the
peace
with
all
exhortation
men'�This
concerns
our
third, God. 'And holiness'� The neighbours: not following after all holiness, is the direct way to the
fall into sin of every kind." ollowing peace with men means that there should be a good under
all
standing between both ews and Gentiles. Con cerning the holiness mentioned here, Clarke says that it 'no
"state of continual sanctification, purity and detachment and sanctity
means
that life man
of
shall
a
see
the Lord'� shall
never
presence in the world of blessedness.
'To
enjoy see
His
God,'
-
1
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
in the Hebrew phrase, is to enjoy Him and without holiness of heart and life this is impossible. No soul can be fit for heaven that has not suitable dispositions for the place."
The
next verse
preceding
in Hebrews is the climax to the
"Looking diligently, lest any man fail of the grace of God lest any root of bitterness springing up trouble you, and thereby many be defiled." Wesley speaks of the root of bitterness one:
consisting "of envy, anger, suspicion, springing up, destroy the sweet peace lest any, not following after holiness, fall into fornication or profaneness. In general, any corruption, either in doctrine or practice, is a root of bitterness, and may pollute many." as
opinion, "a root of bitterness signifies poisonous plant. The Hebrews call every species of poison a bitter, and with considerable propriety, as most plants are poisonous in proportion to the quantum of the bitter principle they possess. The root of bitterness is here used metaphorically for a bad man, or a man holding unsound doctrines, and endeavouring to spread them in the Church. 'Trouble you'ďż˝ This alludes to the effects of poison taken into the body: the whole animal system is disturbed sometimes violent retchings, great dis turbances through the whole alimentary canal, together with the most fatal changes in the whole sanguineous system, are the consequences of poison The blood itself taken into the stomach. (the of life) becomes putrescent under God, principle, and probably to this the intelligent apostle alludes In Clarke's
a
WHAT
IS
1
HOLINESS?
when he says, 'and thereby many be defiled, rupted or contaminated.'
cor
"
"
ut
he which hath called you is manner of conversation
as
ye holy is written, e ye holy for I of this, Clarke says: "God is in all
holy,
so
be
because it
holy." Speaking holy, and He calls
am
upon all who believe in Him to imitate His holiness and the reason why they should be holy is, that
holy." Some would looked upon only as an ideal, hope to attain unto the high
God who has called them is
say that God and that we standards these
can
be
cannot
up by His moral character but in references we have: first, a command
set
two
second, an exhortation to the same type of perfection in holiness, which is indicated in the character of God. It must be admitted, however, that if one is to
reach this ideal
ability,
his
through
own
attainment
it would be absurd to think that the
but when
or ex
practical experience comes through the baptism with the Holy Ghost, he can be assured that as God has, through the Holy Spirit, such a great and permanent wealth of spiritual resources the attainment of the experience is not only possible but practical, and hortations
are
one
reali es that
the
therefore urgent.
up
gives
the
eter 2: : "Ye also,
up Christ." tian
high point
perfection lively stones, are built a spiritual house, an holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by esus
eter in 1
This is the
experience.
We are,
as
a
We
of Christian
as
bonum of all Chris
summum
ought
Christian
to
be
people,
a
to
holy priesthood.
build up
a
spir-
1 6
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
itual house.
All the sacrifices which
God
purified
to
must
Him.
be
Such
a
Christian graces
from
perience.
Commenting
offer
this passage, Wesley says: 'Ye' stones� Alive to God living through "
on
� elievers, as Him, 'are built up'� In union with each other
spiritual
to
they acceptable possible only when all a holy heart and ex
situation is come
we
will be
before
'a
house'�
eing spiritual yourselves, and a habitation of God through the Spirit 'a holy priest hood'� Consecrated to God, and holy as He is holy 'to offer up'� Your souls and bodies with all your thoughts, words, and actions, as spiritual sacrifices to God." Clarke thinks that this is
a
the Church of Christ with
a
metaphor comparing household.
He says of individual
that a household, family, composed members and they must have a place of residence. is
a
Christian family, daughters of God. "And as all the stones� sons and daughters, that constitute the spiritual building are made partakers of the life of Christ, consequently, they may with great propriety be called living stones, that is, sons and daughters of God, who live by Christ esus, because He lives in them. .Every stone� son and daughter, being a spiritual sacrificer or priest, they all offer up praise and thanksgiving to God through Christ and such sacrifices, being offered up in the name and through the merit of His Son, are all acceptable in His sight." eter 3:11: An interesting reference is found in 2 The
spiritual house composed of
and is
holy
is the
the
.
or
and
sons
.
WHAT
1
HOLINESS?
IS
then that all these things shall be dis manner of persons ought ye to be in what solved, all holy conversation and godliness?" The allusion
"Seeing
to
that
that shall
things
the
concerns
the
dissolved,
be
God who
same
no
doubt,
thought is made these things and in their places has the
the heavens and the earth.
The
whose power holds them authority to bring about their dissolution and
ovation we
restriction
without
worship
such
a
God
as
limitation.
or
this,
we
are
ren
Since
exhorted
to
godliness. Clarke interesting comment when he says: "They will all be separated, all decomposed but none of them destroyed. And as they are the original matter out of which God formed the terraqueous globe, consequently they may enter again into the compo sition of a new system and therefore the apostle
walk before Him in holiness and
gives
an
says, ver. 1 : 'we look for new heavens and a new earth'ďż˝ the others being decomposed, a new system is to be formed out of their materials. There is a
philosophic propriety in the words apostle in describing this most awful event."
wonderful
of the This is
a
God will
definite never
mentioned but the
is
answer to
destroy
the earth.
destruction
not
breaking
those who contend that
down of
one
of
The dissolution
physical
matter,
system in order
to
up another. The implication is that only those who walk in holiness and who live godly and useful
set
lives
can
contemplate
with
hearts this awful power ness
not
only brings
confidence in God.
on
rest
joy and peace in their the part of God. Holi and peace, but a calm
1
WHAT The climax of the
HOLINESS?
IS
apostle's
statement
is found in
2 eter 3:12 and 1 : "Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God, wherein the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and the elements shall
melt
with
loved, seeing
fervent
that
ye
heat.
look
.
.
for
.Wherefore,
such
things,
be
be
diligent that ye may be found of him in peace, without spot, and blameless." Commenting on this,
following statement: 'Seeing that ye look for such things'� As ye profess that such a state of things shall take place, and have the ex pectation of enjoying the blessedness of it, be diligent Clarke makes the
"
in the use of every means and influence of grace, that ye may be found of Him�the Lord esus, the udge of quick and dead, without spot�any con
tagion of sin in your souls, and 'blameless'� being not only holy and innocent, but useful in your lives." We
see
here that the writer refers to the
coming
of the Lord, the dissolution of the earth, and the breaking down of material things, to show us the
necessity
of
walking before God in such a way holy, that our conversation
lives will be
our
that
will
be pure, that there may be peace in our hearts, and that we may be without spot or blame. Note that all of these statements refer to an inner condition. The of
only
man
one
which has
is that
and this does
not
one
to
do with the
referring
refer
to man.
judgment being blameless, In reality, it speaks
to
of the blamelessness with which God views us when He knows that within we are pure and holy. Our final reference is 1 light, as he is in the
in the
ohn 1: . " ut if we walk light, we have fellowship
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
1 9
with another, and the blood of esus Christ his us from all sin." Here is a positive statement that the blood of esus Christ can cleanse a human heart from all sin. Commenting on this one
Son cleanseth
' ut if we walk in the light' passage, Wesley says: �In all holiness, as God is (a deeper word than walk and more worthy of God) 'in the light'� Then "
truly
say, 'we have fellowship one with We who have seen and you who have not seen, do alike enjoy that fellowship with God the invitation of God being the only sure proof
may another.' we
having fellowship with Him. 'And the blood esus Christ his Son'� with the grace purchased thereby 'cleanseth us from all sin'� oth original and actual, taking away all the guilt and all the power."
of
our
of
equally striking: light'� if having received
Clarke's comment is
"
'
ut
if
the prin we walk in the ciple of holiness from Him, we live a holy and righteous life, deriving continual light, power and life from Him, then we have fellowship one with
another, that is,
we
have communion with God, and us. This
God condescends to hold communion with
appears to be the intention of the apostle and so he was understood by some versions and MSS. which instead of with each other have with him.
who
are
deeply experienced
in divine
with God and God with them.
Those
things
con
ohn figure God and a holy heart are in con correspondence. 'The blood of esus Christ' �the meritorious efficacy of His passion and death has purged our conscience from dead works and verse
says is tinual
no
What
190
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
cleanseth us, continues to cleanse us, i. e., keep clean what it has made clean, for it requires the same merit and energy to preserve holiness in the soul of man as to produce it, or, as several MSS. and some
who
versions read, will cleanse already justified, and
speaking of those expecting full being cleansed from
are
redemption
are
in His blood. And all sin is what every believer should look for, what he has a right to expect and what he musfhave in
this life, in order to be prepared Christ is not a partial Saviour, He
his God.
to meet saves to
the utter
most, and He cleanses from ALL SIN."
One of the best ways to understand this reference simplicity is to read verses to 10, beginning with the last and going to the first, rather than in
in its
following
we are
the
usual
sinners
verse
and the fact of
order.
erse
10
shows
that
9 shows the need of confession
forgiveness
convinces
verse
us
of inbred sin verse shows the process by which we may be cleansed from that inbred sin. erse 6
explains why
we
cannot
in the darkness of sin. is
light
or
walk with God and live
erse
declares that God
holiness and that there is
no
sin
or
dark
erse is the climactic point of about Him. experience of full salvation, showing that when we have the experience, and only when we have it, can our joy be made full. These verses inversely read as follows: (10) "If we say we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us. (9) If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. ( ) If we say that we have no sin, ness
the
WHAT we
IS
191
HOLINESS?
deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. ut if we walk in the light, as he is in the
( ) light,
we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of esus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin. (6) If we say that we have fellowship with
him, and walk in darkness,
we
lie, and do
not
the
truth. ( ) This then is the message which we have heard of him, and declare unto you, that God is
light, and in him is no darkness at all. ( ) And these things write we unto you, that your joy may be full." E E 1.
2. 3. .
.
. . 9. 10. 11.
12.
OOKS
Arthur, William, The Tongue of ire. Coward, S. L. C, Entire Sanctification from . 1 39 to 1900, p. olsom, ohn D., The Holy Spirit our Helper,
Chapter I. Huntington, D. ter
6.
ENCE
I
.
W. C, Sin and
Holiness, Chap
Lowry, Asbury, ossibilities of Grace, p. 2 0. Mudge, . A., The erfect Life in Experience
and Doctrine, Chapter III. Murray, Andrew, Holy in Christ. earse, Mark Guy, Thoughts on Holiness, Chapters III, , I. eck, esse T., The Central Idea of Christianity,
Chapter
I
.
eid, Isaiah, Holiness ible eadings. ible uth, C. W., eadings on the Second
lessing,
Steele, Daniel, Half Hours with St ter
III.
aul.
Chap
192 13. 1 .
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
Wilson, George W., Truths as I Have Seen Them, Chapter I . Wood, ames A., Christian erfection as Taught by ohn Wesley, Section I.
CHA TE
I.
New Testament Terms Implying the
Necessity
of
Holiness
position in the selection of the passages of Scripture thus far to group them as near ly as possible around the significant word found It has been
in them.
our
The words used have been
sanctification,
holiness, the baptism with the Holy Ghost, and those
of like
this
In
nature.
chapter
we
shall
not
be
thinking Scripture verse quoted, as of the implication of the passage, reali ing, of course, that the whole idea is to see the fullest meaning of these Scriptures as they relate to the experience and doctrine of holiness. so
much of the
term
used in the
The first one thus used is found in 1 Corinthians 13:1. "Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become
sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal." significant word here is "charity" or "love".
The
as
With
out love, which is born of a pure heart, no matter what the outward manifestation of Christianity may
be, God will It is
not
be
interesting
pleased
to
note
with
us.
that this whole
chapter
is based upon the last verse of the twelfth chapter of 1 Corinthians in which the apostle promises to
show
excellent way than that described in chapter. He then proceeds in the thir
us a more
the twelfth
teenth
chapter
to
show that within themselves 193
gifts
19
WHAT
and graces are shows also that
HOLINESS?
IS
nothing
of God.
sight
in the
matter
no
what the talents
He
or
the
of those talents may be, there can be no real abiding efficacy in them unless they are prompted by this all-important thing of perfect love. use
Clarke
gives the high point of the argument of apostle that even though we could understand all mysteries, that would mean nothing to us with out love. He says: "The meaning of all the types and figures in the Old Testament, and all the un explored secrets of nature 'and all knowledge'� every human art and science and 'though I have the
all faith'� Such miraculous faith me even to remove
discernment the
things
greatest difficulties,
this love
motive
to
God and
of all
my
given nothing'� nothing of God, nothing in which
to
mountains
sacred
in
are
mankind."
The thirteenth
arraignment
of
or
that
'and
man,
as
have
as
would enable
had such
the
I
gives even
or
suffers
charity'� principle and
conduct, the characteristics of
following verses 'I am myself, nothing in the sight the Church, and good for nothing
in
the
in
chapter
human our
or
solve
not
of
1
gifts,
Corinthians graces,
motives, and powers before the bar of
for God and for
powerful
could
fellow-men.
loses
or
is
an
attributes,
perfect
It is not what
love one
sacrifices for Christ, or counts most in the
thinks about Him, that
perfect judgment � it is the motive nless that motive that prompts all of these gifts. a heart that is filled with of out perfect love springs balance of God's
WHAT for God and for
19
HOLINESS?
IS
fellow-men, then all
our
we
do
is in vain. In this
love.
We
chapter must
these attributes
boasts
provoked, her
own,
hopes,
some
ideals and
as
Note them: love is
envy,
find
we
be careful to
willing
in
not
and
happy
in
endures.
greatest of all:
things
the The
perfect
love
distinguish as practical
perfect
between realities.
suffer, is kind, has
to
human
follows the Golden is
attributes of
power,
is
ule in
no
easily seeking not not
truth, bears, believes, final never
characteristic fails.
is
All other
may give way, but perfect love holds on to holds on to faith, stands true, and abides in God, faith and hope. Is it
possible
to
have such
experience? Again
of grace were dependent wholly upon human endeavor or upon frail human will power, it would not be possible but in Christ we must
we
find
ment
state
that if this
strength
gift
an
and power which make the attain entirely possible and prac
of these attributes
tical.
It is
ment
in the
that there may be degrees of attain practice of perfect love, but there are
true
no degrees in the motive of perfect love. Our reaching the goal may depend to a large extent upon our teaching, our environment, our knowledge of the Scriptures, and the help or hindrances we re ut when the Holy ceive from those about us. in to sanctify the heart, He not only comes Spirit expurgates the carnal principle of sin, but estab lishes within, the basic purity of heart motivated by perfect love. This in essence is the love the apostle is speaking of in this chapter.
WHAT
196
HOLINESS?
IS
In 2 Corinthians 1:21 and 22
"Now he which stablisheth
us
and hath anointed us, is God us, and given the earnest of the
we
find these words:
with you in Christ, who hath also sealed
Spirit
in
our
"Stablisheth," "anointed" and "sealed" words
cant
when
applied
to
are
Christian
hearts."
signifi
believers.
eferring to the word "anointed", Wesley says that it is "with the oil of gladness, with joy in the Holy Ghost, thereby giving
strength
us
suffer His will." Clarke says: us'� Stamping His image on
ing
us
and
the
sealing
earnest
between
of his
earnest
an
His
us as
"
our
own
both
do and
hearts, thus mark
property: 'and giving
Spirit'� There is pledge. paid completed.
and
to
'Who also hath sealed
a
be restored when the debt is
A
a
difference
pledge
but
an
is
to
earnest
taken away, but Such an earnest is the Spirit. The first fruits of it we have, om. :23. And we wait for all the fulness." is
not
expression used in Ephesians 3:19 nothing less than the experience of holiness. The apostle says, "And to know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge, that ye might be filled with all the fulness of God." Wesley There is
which
can
comments
an
mean
as
follows:
"This
only
we
know, that
of Christ surpasses all knowledge, 'that filled'�Which is the sum of all, 'with all be ye may the fulness of God'�With all His light, love, wisdom, the
love
holiness, power, and glory. A perfection far beyond a
bare freedom from sin."
Clarke goes into further detail concerning the love of Christ: " ut how can the love of Christ,
which
passeth knowledge,
be known?
Many
have
laboured If
reconcile
to
this
take the verb in
we
19
HOLINESS?
IS
WHAT
seeming
a
contradiction.
in which it is fre
sense
quently
used in the New Testament, acknowledge, or acknowledge with
to
approve,
approbation,
gnosis, to signify comprehension, then the dif ficulty will be partly removed: 'That ye may acknowledge, approve, and publicly acknowledge, that love of God which surpasseth knowledge.' We can acknowledge and approve of that which surpasses our comprehension. We cannot compre and
hend God: yet
know that He is approve Him. In like manner, comprehend the immensity of
we
can
of, love, adore, and
though
we
cannot
serve
the love of Christ, yet we know that He has loved us, and washed us from our sins in His own blood and
said
approve of, and Lord and Saviour.
we
only
to
edge."
acknowledge, In this
Him
as
our
may be know the love of Christ that passeth knowl sense
we
expression of this verse, however, is Commenting on this, Clarke at length: 'That ye might be filled with explains all the fulness of God.' Among all the great sayings The main
in
the
last clause.
"
in this prayer, this is the greatest. To be ILLED with God is a great thing to be filled with the LNESS of God is still greater ALL the fulness of God
with
the
sense
and confounds the
but to be filled
utterly bewilders
understanding.
Most
people, quoting these words, endeavour to correct or explain the apostle, by adding the word com in
municable but this is
impertinent.
The
as
apostle
idle
as
means
it is useless and what he says, and
19
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
would be understood in his
own
meaning.
the
y
fulness of God, we are to understand all those gifts and graces which He has promised to bestow on man, and which He dispenses to the Church. To be 'filled with all the fulness of God' is
whole soul filled with meekness,
to
have the
gentleness, good
love, justice, holiness, mercy, and truth. And what God fills, neither sin or Satan can fill
ness, as
consequently, it implies that the soul shall be emptied of sin, that sin shall neither have dominion over it, nor a being in it. It is impossible for us understand these words in
to
this.
they
ut how much
do
imply)
I
more
cannot
tell.
a
lower
As there is
than
sense
they imply, (for no
more
end
to
the merits of Christ, no bounds to the mercy and love of God, no limits to the improvability of the human soul, so there can be no bounds set saving influence which God will dispense
to
the
to
the
heart of every believer. We may ask, and we shall receive, and our joy shall be full." There can be no
doubt that
refers
to
the
experience In
being filled with all baptism of the Holy
fullness of God Ghost and the
of holiness of heart.
Ephesians
:1
we
read, " ut
speaking
the
truth in love, may grow up into him in all things, which is the head, even Christ." Wesley thinks that
expression "into him" means "into his image and Spirit, and into a full union with him." The exhortation to speak the truth in love in order that we may grow up to Him in all things is but an the
introduction to the next verse which says, " rom the whole body fitly joined together and
whom
WHAT
IS
199
HOLINESS?
compacted by that which every joint supplieth, according to the effectual working in the measure of every part, maketh increase of the body unto the edifying of itself in love." Concerning this reference Clarke writes as follows: "The truth of God should be so preached to all the members of the Church of God, that they may all
receive
increase of grace and life so that each, state he may be, may get forward in
an
in whatever
the way of truth and holiness. In the Church of Christ there are persons in various states: the care less, the penitent, the lukewarm, the tempted, the
diffident, the little child, the young father."
Thus
we
see
man,
and the
that the essential fact is in
struction in love in order that there
might
be
an
acceptance of truth and holiness in the heart. We
turn
saying:
to
or if
live with
2 we
him."
Timothy
2:11.
is
"It
be dead with him,
Wesley interprets
to
rose
again again
to
again
from the dead, so and if we die for Him,
with Him.
surely we
shall also
this
sin, and ready to die for Him." Clarke, the verse means: "As surely
"dead
faithful
a
we
to
According as
shall
shall
mean
Christ
we
rise
surely
live
This, says the apostle, is
a
true
properly import of the word and we need not seek for some saying of Christ which the apostle is supposed to be here quoting, doctrine.
This is
the
and which he learned from tradition." The
phrase,
"dead with him," is the central idea If it means "dead to sin," then it nothing less than the experience of holi
of this passage. can
ness.
mean
The
metaphor
here refers
to
a
death which
200
WHAT
signifies died,
IS
crucifixion.
HOLINESS?
As Christ
crucified and
was
ready to dying out to the allurements of worldly honor, to all thought of self, and a willingness to suffer in order to carry out His objective of making it possible for men to be saved from sin, so must we be willing to die to all criticisms, sinful allurements and personal
die
desires.
must
be crucified and
As His death
meant a
If this is done, we shall have evidenced the which Christ manifested on the cross
spirit
and if we
also
all sin.
to
same
we
so
we
are
crucified
shall be resurrected
Such is the
experience
Hebrews 9:1
asks
a
the
to
to
the
things of the flesh, things of the Spirit.
of holiness of heart.
vital
question:
"How much
shall the blood of Christ, who through the Spirit offered himself without spot to God, conscience from dead works to serve your purge the living God?" This passage does not directly
more
eternal
charge
us to
works,
must
be
holy,
but it indicates that
as
Christ
offered Himself without spot to God, so the Chris tian, whose conscience has been purged from dead
spot
to
perience Wesley
offer himself
God.
This
is
through
none
other
Christ without than
the
ex
of holiness. comments:
"
'How much
redemption being
shall the
more
blood of Christ'�The merit of all His 'who through the eternal Spirit'� The
sufferings
the work of the whole
work
of
Trinity.
Neither is the second person alone concerned even in the ama ing condescension that was needful to ather delivers up the kingdom it. The
complete to
the Son: and the
Holy
Ghost becomes the
gift
WHAT
IS
201
HOLINESS?
of the Messiah, being, as it were, sent according to His good pleasure: 'offered himself� Infinitely more precious than any created victim, and that
without spot to God 'purge our conscience'� Our inmost soul, 'from dead works'� rom all the in ward and outward works of the devil, which spring from spiritual death in the soul, and lead to death
everlasting
'to
of faith, in
the
serve
perfect
living God'� In the spotless holiness "
life
love, and
'Who through the Clarke gives the following: eternal Spirit'� This expression is understood two "
1. Of the Holy Ghost Himself. As Christ's ways: miraculous conception was by the Holy Spirit, and
by the Spirit of God, offering was made through and by that Spirit He was or by the eternal Spirit raised from the dead, 1 eter 3:1 . Indeed, through the whole of His life He was justified by the Spirit He
so
wrought
all His miracles
His death
or
final
find that in this great work of human re demption, the ather, the Son, and the Holy Spirit and
we
continually employed: therefore the words understood of the Holy Spirit properly. be may 2. Of the eternal Logos or Deity which dwelt in the man Christ esus, through the energy of were
which
the
infinitely
offering
of
His
meritorious victim
of Christ is here intended."
humanity
became an therefore the Deity
interprets "purg
He
ing your conscience" to mean "purify your con science. The term purify should be everywhere, both in the translation of the
preaching which,
at
the
Gospel, preferred
present, is scarcely
Scriptures,
to
ever
the word
and in
purge,
used in the
sense
202
WHAT
in which
our
IS
HOLINESS?
employed
translators have
it.
'Dead
penalty general, by the law." The apostle aul, speaking in Acts 2 :16, says: "And herein do I exercise myself, to have always
works'�Sin in
or acts
which the
to
of death is annexed
conscience
a
toward men."
void
of
How
can one
offence
of all offence unless he is
toward
have
positive
a
God,
and
conscience void
of
two
facts: first,
that his sins of the past are under the blood, for given by a beneficent Heavenly ather and, second,
that he has been sanctified
Holy
Ghost?
reaches
a
It
high
when he testifies that his
kind of
by
the
baptism
of the
is very evident that the apostle standard of Christian experience
experience.
objective
is
to
have that
His life showed that he lived
just that way and if one by the gracious power of
upon his heart, then it is dren of God to attain the grace and power.
man
can
live that way,
Holy Spirit moving possible for all the chil same degree of spiritual the
omans :1 we read, "There is therefore now condemnation to them which are in Christ esus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit." This is the same kind of experience that In
no
we
have noted in the
preceding paragraph. positive statement
difference is that this is a there is "no condemnation
to
them which
esus." Wesley says that this means things present or past." Commenting expression, "walking not after the flesh,"
The that
are
in
Christ
"either
for
on
the
Clarke
says: "In this one verse we find the power and virtue of the Gospel scheme it pardons and sancti-
WHAT
IS
203
HOLINESS?
y faith in ewish law could do neither. condemned our Lord esus Christ the penitent, the is law, by pardoned the carnal man, labouring under the overpowering influence of the sin of his he nature, is sanctified he is first freely justified he feels no condemnation he is fully sanctified fies
the
walks
not
after the
LESH, but after the S I IT."
It is very evident that those who do not walk after the flesh, but after the Spirit, have reached the point
perfection
of Christian
where there
demnation in the eyes of God and tion in the minds of men.
just
no
con
condemna
interesting statement in omans expression cannot be reali ed in the heart without the experience of full salva
We have
a
most
This
12:9. human tion.
be
can
no
It reads: "Let love be without dissimulation.
Abhor that which is evil cleave to that which is good." The key word is "dissimulation". It indi cates
emptiness,
this exhortation
In
which has to
the
none
wearing
we
are
a
urged
mask, hypocrisy. to
have
a
love
of the characteristics attributable
this word "dissimulation".
ing
of
The
would be: let love be sincere.
simplest
render
ut to read it
this way, we would have to read into the word sincere more than it actually means in common
today. It has in it the element of purity and perfect innocence with no guile. Clarke gives a clear statement of its meaning. "Have no hypo usage
critical love
let
your love wear a mask make no empty professions. Love God and your neighbor and by obedience to the one and acts of benevolence to
not
the other, show that your love is sincere."
20
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
It will be readily understood that if such a love exists in the heart, the only natural thing is to abhor everything that is evil and to stand for and
aspire
to
everything
full salvation is
that is
one
good.
which lifts
The
us
experience
of
into the realm
mentioned in the
thirty-fifth chapter of Isaiah where description of the highway of holiness. Those who walk this highway are living in an atmosphere of perfect love for God, of strict obedi ence to His commandments and of loving loyalty we
find
a
His will.
to
In
God is
omans 1 :1 not meat
peace, and
joy
we
read, " or the kingdom of
and drink but righteousness, and in the Holy Ghost." Concerning
this, Wesley has the following
to say: "That is, true in external observances does not consist
religion but in righteousness,
the
image
of God
stamped
on
the heart, the love of God and man, accompanied with the peace that passeth all understanding, and
joy
in the
Holy
Ghost."
Clarke goes into fuller details: "That holy re ligion which God has sent from heaven, and which He intends to make the instrument of establishing
a
counterpart of the kingdom of glory among
men.
and drink'� It consists not in these 'Is not It neither par outward and indifferent things. ticularly enjoins nor particularly forbids such. ' ut righteousness'� ardon of sin, and holiness of heart meat
and life. 'And peace'� In the soul, from a sense of God's mercy peace regulating, ruling and har moni ing the heart. 'And joy in the Holy Ghost' �Solid
spiritual happiness
a
joy
which
springs
from
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
20
of God's mercy the love of God being shed abroad in the heart by the Holy Ghost. In a word, it is happiness brought into the soul by the a
clear
sense
Holy Spirit, and maintained there by the same influence. This is a genuine counterpart of heaven righteousness without sin, EACE without inward disturbance, OY without any kind of mental or agony distressing fear." The
of
essence
Scripture is that spiritual and that true a condition of right re
this whole
Kingdom of God is religion brings man into lationships with God and
his
joy.
Scriptures
the
fellow-men
which
result in peace in his own soul. This peace with the presence of the Holy Ghost brings real, abiding Do
we not
love casteth
out
read in the fear"?
that
"perfect
We read in 2 Corinthians 6:16, 1 , "And what agreement hath the temple of God with idols? for ye are the temple of the living God as God hath said, I will dwell in them, and walk in them and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean
thing closely
and
I
related
in which
will
receive you." This passage is that found in 1 Corinthians 3:1 told that we are the temple of God.
to
we are
explanation of that passage will do also for (See page 1 0.) The question asked here by the apostle carries with it a very significant answer. ust as nothing could be more abominable to a ew than to have an idol in the temple of God, so it is wholly incompatable for a Christian to have The
this
one.
206
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
any other object of worship in his heart. If we are the temple of God, it is quite certain that He in tends to make the heart of every believer His own
dwelling place. We could render this passage, "I will inhabit them." This means in the words of Clarke: "I will not be as a wayfaring man, who aside
turns
to
for
tarry
as
eing
can
a
night,
but I will take
up my constant residence with them I will dwell in and among them. 'I will be their God'ďż˝ They shall have no other God, they shall have none besides me and if they take me for their God, I will be to them all that an infinite, eternal, and self-sufficient
be
intelligent
off
and instruct,
en
His
to
spring. 'They shall be my people'ďż˝ If they take me for their GOD, their supreme and eternal GOOD, I take them for my
will
people
lighten, defend, provide for, support,
them,
as
if I had
none
else
to care
and
for in the
bless crea
tion."
This which
thought is carried really concludes the
out
in
answer
the to
next
the
verse
question
"Come out from among them, and be ye separate, and touch not the unclean thing." This
above. is
a
call
to
the Christian from every form and do wants a heart which is not only
minion of sin. God
devoted
wholly is
no
other
to
object
hearts must be "set
purified ther.
Him, but
of on
worship.
Holy Spirit.
a
in which there
In other
Him," filled with
from all sin, and
It is
one
permanent
words, our perfect love,
yielded wholly
to
contract, attested
the
a
by
the
IS
WHAT
1:10, "That ye may excellent that ye may
hilippians
in
read
We
20
HOLINESS?
approve things be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ." Concerning this, Wesley speaks in these that
are
'That ye may try'� y that spiritual sense, 'the things that are excellent'� Not only good, but the very best: the superior excellence of which is
words:
"
hardly discerned, but by the adult Christian: 'that ye may be inwardly sincere'� Having a single eye and a pure heart, and out to the very best things wardly 'without offence'� Holy, unblameable in all things." We can find no better explanation than this interpretation by the founder of Methodism. Timothy,
aul tells
in 1
Timothy charity
end of the commandment is
heart, and of
feigned." meaning as
a
1: : "Now the out
The word
1
"charity"
that word used in the thirteenth
Corinthians.
perfect
As
to
the
meaning
pure un
same
chapter
pure heart" This young of the Cross
that the ultimate aim of the Christian love.
a
here has the
"Charity out of a is another way of saying perfect love. preacher is being told by an old soldier of
of
good conscience, and of faith
religion
of the verse,
is we
quote first from Wesley and then from Clarke.
Wesley
'Whereas the end of the command says: ment'� Of the whole Christian institution 'is love' �And this was particularly the end of the com "
mandment
Ephesus, end
love.
which
ver.
Timotheus was to enforce at The foundation is faith, the 3, ut this can only subsist in a heart 1 .
purified by faith, good conscience."
and
is
always
attended with
a
20
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
Clarke's interpretation is: 'Now the end of the commandment is charity'ďż˝ These genealogical questions lead to strife and debate and the dis "
pensation of God leads to love both to God and These genealogical man, through faith in Christ. questions leave the heart under the influence of all
its vile tempers and evil propensities AITH in this kind of the heart. No esus purifies inquiry
add to any thing by which the guilt of sin can be taken away but the Gospel proclaims pardon, through the blood of the Lamb, to every believing can
penitent. The end, aim, and design of God in giving this dispensation to the world is, that men may have an unfeigned faith, such as lays hold on Christ crucified, and produces a good conscience fr,om a sense of the pardon received, and leads on to purity of heart LO E to God and man the issue of the grace of Christ here being grand and this below, fully preparing the soul for eternal glory. He whose soul is filled with love to God and man has a pure heart, a good conscience, and unfeigned faith. ut these blessings no soul but can ever according to God's dispen acquire,
sation of faith."
"charity" used again in a Timothy :12. "Let no man be thou an example of the but despise thy youth believers, in word, in conversation, in charity, in spirit, in faith, in purity." Wesley interprets this by saying: "Let no one have reason to despise thy youth: to prevent this, be a pattern in wordWe
similar
find
the
manner
ublic and
word
in 1
private
'in
spirit'ďż˝ In
your whole tem-
WHAT
209
HOLINESS?
IS
is placed in the midst per 'in faith'- When this of several other Christian graces, it generally means a particular branch of it fidelity or faithfulness." Clarke gives it in slightly different phraseology: 'Let no man despise thy youth'ďż˝ Act with all the "
and decorum which become thy situation in the Church. As thou art in the place of an elder, act as an elder. oyish playfulness ill becomes a
gravity
minister of the If
six
pattern to the believers in the mentioned, he must have the experience of
is to be
one
points
sanctification.
him. to
as
whatever his age may be."
Gospel,
His
a
Note the
example
conversation,
responsibility placed
is
to
as
to
be followed
love,
anything, purity of character and life. large order for anyone to fill
which he does
as
as
to
as
the
faith, and
to
This
is
exemplary living
of
would
be
given
upon
word,
spirit as
to
in
the
certainly
in his life.
the eradication of all inbred sin such
to
a
a
Without program
impossible.
Timothy 6:11: things and follow after righteousness, godliness, faith, love, patience, meekness." The graces which Timothy is exhorted to obtain are essentially the same as those mentioned in the previous paragraph. The A similar exhortation is
"
ut thou, O
man
man
in 1
of God, flee these
of God mentioned here is
a
Christian.
It is
qualities experience If they are obtained, it will be by no less an experience than the entrance of the Holy Spirit into the heart in cleansing power and the infilling process of perfect love. In 2 Timothy 2:22 the same type of exhortation is given: " lee his
duty
to
seek the
and to obtain them.
of Christian
210
WHAT
also
youthful lusts charity, peace, with of
a
IS
HOLINESS?
but follow
righteousness, faith,
them that call
on
the Lord out
pure heart."
We quote Titus 2:12: "Teaching us that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live sober ly, righteously, and godly, in this present world."
The
essence
and
worldly
Christian is
is in the clause lusts."
to
The
"denying ungodliness
intimation
is
'Instructing us'�All who do not having renounced ungodliness'�Whatever "
the
that
Wesley reject it
be saved from all sin.
says: 'that
is
con
the fear and love of God 'and worldly trary desires'�Which are opposite to sobriety and right to
soberly'� In all purity and holiness. Sobriety, in the Scripture sense, is rather the whole temper of a man, than a single virtue in him. It comprehends all that is opposite to the drowsiness of sin, the folly of ignorance, the unholiness of disorderly passions. Sobriety is no less than all the powers of the soul, being consistently and constantly awake, duly governed by heavenly prudence, and entirely conformable to holy affec tions, 'and righteously'�Doing to all as we would they should do to us 'and godly'� As those who are eousness
'we should live
consecrated
to
God both in heart and life."
following: denying, etc.'� Instructing us Clarke
structed. order
'
to
gives
the
"
'Teaching
children
us
that,
in Christ is the great teacher and men, in learn, must become His disciples� must as
are
put themselves under His tuition, and learn of Him. 'Denying ungodliness'� All things contrary to God whatever would lead us to doubt His being, deny
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
211
any of His essential attributes His providence or government of the world, and His influence on the souls of men. Every thing, also, which is opposed
worship theoretical and practical atheism, deism, and irreligion in general. 'Worldly lusts'�such desires, affections, and appetites as men are governed by who have their portion in this life, and live without God in the world. Gluttony, His
to
true
drunkenness, lasciviousness, anger, malice, and re venge, together with the immoderate love of riches,
power and fame. 'We should live soberly'� Having every temper, appetite, and desire, under the gov ernment of reason, and reason itself under the
government of the
� endering
to
Spirit
every
man
of
God.
due
his
' ighteously' injuring no
person in his body, mind, reputation, or property doing unto all as we would they should do to us and filling up the duties of the particular stations in which it has pleased God to fix us, committing
sin, omitting
duty. 'And godly'� ust implied in ungodliness. 'In world'� Not present supposing that any thing no
reverse
be
no
of what is
purified
in this.
in the world
to come
the
this will
that is not cleansed
The three words above
evidently include neighbor, and to ourselves. 1. We are to live soberly in respect to ourselves. 2. ighteously in respect to our neighbour. And 3. Godly, or piously, in respect to our Maker." "Wherefore, lay apart all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness, and receive with meekness the en grafted word, which is able to save your souls." ( ames 1:21.) This is explained in the words of our
duty
to
God,
to our
212
Wesley:
WHAT "
IS
HOLINESS?
laying aside'� As a dirty gar superfluity of wickedness' or necessary it may appear specious
'Therefore
ment, 'all the filthiness and
� or however
worldly wisdom, all wickedness is both vile, contemptible, and really superfluous. reasonable end may be effectually answered, Every without any kind or degree of it. Lay this, every known sin, aside, or all your hearing is vain 'with meekness'� Constant evenness and serenity of mind to
hateful,
'receive'� Into your ears, your heart, your life 'the Gospel 'engrafted'� In believers, by
word'� Of the
regeneration, which
is
ver.
1 , and by habit,
Heb.
your souls'�The salvation nourishes meekness." Clarke's
able
to
save
comments are as
:1
hope
of
follows: "All filthiness'�
signifies any impurity that cleaves to body applied to the mind, it implies all and impure unholy affections, such as those spoken of in ver. 1 , which pollute the soul in this sense it is used by the best Greek writers. 'Superfluity of er naughtiness'� The overflowing of wickedness. is an allusion here to the there cut off haps part in circumcision, which was the emblem of impure desire and to lessen that propensity, God, in His ut all these evil dispo mercy, enacted this rite. sitions aside, for they blind the soul, and render it incapable of receiving any good, even from that engrafted word of God which otherwise would have 'The engrafted word'� That saved their souls. doctrine which has already been planted among you, which has brought forth fruit in all them that have meekly and humbly received it, and is as This word
the
but
WHAT
powerful
to
save
IS
213
HOLINESS?
your souls believed."
the souls of those
as
already James 1 : 27 we find three very significant words. They are "pure religion", "undefiled", and "unspot ted". "Pure religion and undefiled before God and
who have In
the Father is this, To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world." Although the word holiness is not used here, the indication is that there is a religion so pure in its nature that its effects will be
which is
twofold. First, it will show itself in the attitude that the Christian has toward those who are in need; and,
second, it will reveal itself in its effect upon Chris tian character.
Pure
religion
is
itself, but its possession brings which may not be questioned. On this
only
true
passage
religion
Wesley
in the
a
only spotless spotless character
not
voices his ideas: "The sight of God is this, 'to
visit'� With counsel, comfort, and relief, the 'fatherless and widows'�Those who need it most, 'in their affliction'� In their most helpless and hope less state; 'and to keep himself unspotted from the
world'� From the maxims, tempers, and customs of it. But this cannot be done till we have given our hearts to God, and love our neighbour as ourselves."
Clarke,
as
usual, goes into
religion'� St. James' definition effects of pure religion than
more
detail:
"
rather refers to
life of God in the soul of man,
its
nature.
producing
'Pure the
to
The
love
to
God and man, will show itself in the acts which St. James mentions here. It is pure in the principle, for it is Divine truth and Divine love. It is un-
21
WHAT
denied in all its
unholy,
and it
operations:
because it can
produce
"The words
'pure
have reference
to
can
produce nothing sight of God;
in the
ungentle
no
comes
it
acts
ever
act, because it to
HOLINESS?
IS
word
nor
unkind
from the Father. diamond
a
supposed precious stone, being free from
undefiled'
and
are
or
whose
perfection consists in its cloudy, but of a pure water. True is the ornament of the soul; and its effects, religion flaws; the
"
not
ornament
'To
visit
of the life.
fatherless
the
affliction'ďż˝ Works
and
widows
in
their
the charity mercy fruits of and none are more es proper religion; the of pecially ob ects charity and mercy than the of
and
are
orphans
and widows. False religion may perform of mercy and charity; but its motives not being pure, and its principle being defiled, the flesh,
acts
self, and hypocrisy, spot the
True
religion
does
not
man
and
his
merely give something
acts.
for
relief of the distressed, but it visits them, it takes the oversight of them, it takes them under its care. It goes to their houses, and speaks to their hearts; it relieves their wants, sympathi es with them in
their
distresses, instructs them in Divine things,
and recommends them for the Lord's sake.
to
God.
And all this it does
This is the
religion
of Christ. itself religion prove by works of charity and mercy is not of God. eader, what religion hast thou? Has thine ever led thee to cel lars, garrets, cottages, and houses, to find out the The
distressed? a
destitute
that does
Hast thou
not
ever
representative
fed, clothed, and visited
of Christ?"
WHAT In 1
John
3:
IS
we
have
of the strongest state implying the necessity
one
in the Word of God
ments
21
HOLINESS?
for and the result of the
experience
of holiness.
"Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for his seed remaineth in him; and he cannot sin, is
because he
born
of God."
These words
seem
contradictory to human experience. In fact, there people who misinterpret their meaning, because of the strength of the English interpretation. They seem to imply the impossibility of ever committing
are
sin if
has
one
help 1 John
us
to
ever
been converted.
connect
this
verse
"We know that whosoever is born of
:1 .
God sinneth not; but he that is
keepeth
probably
It will
with that found in
himself, and that wicked
begotten one
of God
toucheth him
not."
Considering
'Who Wesley says: soever is born of God'� By living faith, whereby God is continually breathing spiritual life into his soul, and his soul is continually breathing out love the first verse,
"
and prayer to God, 'doth not commit sin.' For the Divine seed� of loving faith abideth in him; and� so
long
as
it does so, he 'cannot sin because he is
born of God'� Is
Considering " et this gives
inwardly
and
the second, he us
no
universally changed."
comments
encouragement
to
as
sin.
follows:
On the
contrary it is an indisputable truth 'He that is born of God'� That sees and loves God, 'sinneth not'� So
long
neither
as
that
speaks
forbidden.
He
or
loving
faith abides in him.
anything keepeth himself� watching does
which
He
God hath unto
21
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
prayer; and�while he does this, the wicked toucheth him not� so as to hurt him." Clarke's is:
comment
on
the first
'Whosoever is born of God.'
"
'doth used
commit sin': 'that
not
do; he does
to
did.'
not
bringing heavenly birth
the
indubitable
most
philosophers
heathen
cipline
Begotten
habitually
some, as
of God, 'as he
formerly privileges
he
the influences and
This is
of the
sin
mentioned
verse
is,' say
one
very low indeed. We have evidence that many of the had acquired by mental dis
and cultivation, an entire ascendency over all their wonted vicious habits. Perhaps my reader
will recollect the story of the physiognomist, who, coming into the place where Socrates was delivering a
of
lecture, his pupils, wishing the
science
man's
to
proof,
put the
principles
desired
him to examine the face of their master, and say what his moral character was. After a full contemplation of the
most
old
to
philosopher's visage, he pronounced him 'the gluttonous, drunken, brutal, and libidinous
man
that he had
of Socrates
began
to
the
ever
met.'
As the character
of all this, his disciples insult the physiognomist. Socrates inter was
reverse
'The principles of his science may be very correct; for such I was, but I have con quered it by my philosophy.' O ye Christian divines, ye real or pretended Gospel ministers, will ye allow fered and said:
the
even
influence so
heathen who
Concerning soever
of the
extensive never
as
grace of Christ a sway not that of the philosophy of a
heard of the true God?"
the second statement, he says: is born of God sinneth not.' This is
"
'Who
spoken
WHAT of
adult
IS
217
HOLINESS?
Christians;
they are cleansed from all unrighteousness, consequently from all sin. ' eep eth himself�That is in the love of God, by building up himself on his most holy faith and praying in the Holy Ghost, 'and that wicked one,' the devil, 'toucheth him not'� Finds nothing of his own
nature
in him
on
dwelleth in his heart We
thus
can
see
which he
by
can
Christ
work.
faith."
that the
experience
referred
to
a salvation from any wilful sin on the part of a child of God. We say of a fast train running south as we see it go by, "That train
here is that of
go north," which is a self-evident truth. As it is running south with full steam ahead,
cannot
long
as
cannot go any other way; but it is a fact that that train may be placed on a turn table or may switch and turned around. be put through a
it
powers which caused it to go south go north. The will of the Christian, God, determines whether or not he will
Then the
same
can cause
it
yielded
to
to
live above sin.
By
the
Spirit dwelling within, but
become
to
a
gracious
such
a
power of the Holy condition is possible;
Christian does
not
mean
to
lose
individual will power, and it is certainly possible are conditions and eventualities which
that there make it
possible
force and of the
to
for
a
Christian
fall into sin
again.
Scripture, however,
surrendered in this life.
to
God, he
to
lose his
is that if
can
spiritual point is wholly
The essential one
be saved from all sin
21
WHAT EFE
1.
2. 3.
.
IS
HOLINESS?
ENCE BOO S
Arthur, William, The Tongue of Fire. urray, Andrew, Holy in Christ. eid, Isaiah, Holiness Bible eadings. uth, C. W., Bible eadings on the Second
Blessing, Chapter II. Steele, Daniel, Half Hours
.
ter
.
7. .
with St.
II.
Paul, Chap
ust We Sin? Chapter I. Sweeten, Howard, Watson, George D., White obes, Chapter III. Wood, James A., Christian Perfection as
Taught by John Wesley,
Section
.
CHAPTE
II.
What Holiness Is Not
writing the other chapters of this book, thought was suggested that a treatise on the sub ect of holiness would be incomplete without a discussion of the negative side of it. It is in this field that we find some of the greatest misconceptions of the nature of the doctrine and experience. We shall examine some of the points in question and attempt to show the fallacy of certain arguments used against the doctrine of holiness. These are due to a misconception on the part of its opponents as to its meaning, and also to the erratic conclusions After
the
of
some
the
of its devotees.
viewpoint
of four
First, holiness is
perfection.
Edenic
not
We shall discuss it from
trilogies
of
statements.
Edenic, angelic,
perfection
is
that
or
which
inherent in the nature of Adam and Eve. that
wa
man
implied
as
made in the
near
a
state
image
absolute
of God.
of absolute
was
We read
This
perfection
as
could be attained, both morally and physically, in this world. In his original state, Adam, as represent ative
of
the
race,
knew
no
sin.
There
was
no
proneness to sin about him, no tendency toward He had within him all the sin in his nature. elements and characteristics of moral perfection. When Adam fell into sin,
voluntary transgression
came
21
a as
change
came.
the result of
His
being
22
WHAT
deceived
as
the
to
sion of the sin a
depraved
nature not
was
achieve.
It
The commis
act.
an
appeal
to
consequence of the in mankind an innate desire
was
to
was
of the
the result of
nature, but
fact that there to
HOLINESS?
IS
was
a
this that Satan
appealed
when
he said, " e shall not surely die. .ye shall be as When Adam to Satan, he disobeyed; gods." yielded .
and there
was
born within him
.
depravity
a
resulted in other sins. as
to
to
him,
is
manifested in his confession when God
as
hiding place, indicates that primary purity was gone. Where there innocence and purity, there can never perfect
called his
which
His eyes were then opened the nature of sin. The shame which came
him
his
from state
of
be shame.
result of this event, there was entailed into race the depraved nature. Every person since that time has had the inward pull toward sin. He has had the experience mentioned in the sixth As
a
the human
and seventh
chapters struggle
of
of
in which
omans
the
soul
against
scribed
the
desires.
He finds after conversion that this
such
nature
that it
was
that
it
eliminated
As he walks
of his conversion. discovers
not
is
not
a
in
at
is de
carnal is of
the time
the
condition
light, he calling for a cleansing
forgiveness, but one which demands process. Jesus discusses this in John 1 :1-1 , and gives us the two key words connected with it. "Now are ye clean through the word which I have .every branch that beareth spoken unto you. that it may bring forth more he it, fruit, purgeth this fruit." discovery, the earnest Christian pon .
.
WHAT
221
HOLINESS?
IS
seeks the
baptism with the Holy Spirit, or the grace of Christian perfection, usually termed sanctification. He obtains it, and finds that there is a glorious sense of cleanness and purity in his heart. But this
experience
does
give
not
him
the
It is true that the carnal nature is
likewise to
a
that the
true
of sin
state
type of
same
which Adam had in the Garden of Eden.
are
appeals
purged.
of Satan
outward, and do
to
is
It
return
not meet
with
being sub depraved ect to constant temptation from within, he finds an ease and facility in serving God that he had not known before.
of
Instead of
inner response.
a
years
nature.
dition
of
But the accumulation of hundreds
sin
The
this,
to
appreciably
has
scars
left
its
of sin
mark still
are
these
of
sin
upon there.
human
have
altered
years all external environment.
effect of this
on
every side.
We
In see
being
Instead of
ad the in
a
Garden of Eden where the effects of sin were at a minimum, the sanctified person finds himself in a world sub ected to sin in every conceivable manner.
ness,
and
Selfishness,
pride
which he is faced.
by
left his
animosity, bitter ordinary attitudes with
hatred,
the
are
He is bombarded
every side which have
on
the very elements of human nature an indelible impression upon him;
struggle against
could
ever
sin is
have been.
of sin upon human
more
and thus
terrific than Adam's
It is also true that the effect
nature
has left
man
different
today,
even
after
sanctification,
Sin is
physical in nature, but it has a definite upon physical nature. We find warped minds,
effect
not
vastly
from
Adam.
222
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
deformed bodies, fra led nerves, and other phys ical weaknesses in the Christian believer. It can be
said that
tained,
of these
most
results of sin. one
direct
are
The
ex
be human," simply means human imperfections which even the
grace of sanctification does
Holiness is
well avoid.
cannot
always
"He will
that there
are
matter
restrictions which he
pression,
conditions
how great the grace at is still under the influence of human No
not remove.
angelic perfection. We once sang, angel when I die." But such will never be the case. Angels and men are two entirely separate entities. They may have some common "I
be
want to
not
an
characteristics
because
of
the
common
source
of
their Fatherhood, but the two were created under entirely different circumstances and for distinctly
separate purposes. Angels "always behold his glory."
They
in
are
tude which is There
are
no
them to lose But
we
must
a
realm
of
holy
solici
love and
possible disturbing factors which would cause their state of purity and perfect oy. for mortals in the world.
not
remember that,
even
in this condi
sub ect to temptation and liable to loss and separation from God. Satan was spiritual His organi ation of forces once an angel in Heaven. few a revolt against God resulted in his downfall. tion, they
When he
were
was
cast out
of Heaven, there
him all of the revolters, and there
was
went not
with
left in
remaining any tendency It may be true that when man reaches Heaven he will enter into a state similar to that of the the
natures
of those
toward
sin.
angels,
but he will
always
be
a
redeemed soul, and
WHAT his of
IS
place in Heaven the atoning blood
ever,
223
HOLINESS?
will be
given
of Christ.
that sanctification does
not
angelic perfection.
him
It is
as
a
result
evident, how
bring
a
state
of
Holiness is not absolute perfection. This belongs only to the nature of God. It carries with it the meaning of ultimate finality. Just as God is love �inherently� so He is holiness. The one attribute is
as
certain
the other.
as
The
one
does
not
nec
essarily imply the other, but it is certain that with out absolute love there can be no absolute holiness. Absolute
holiness
impossibility
of
ever
be absurd
kings
implies, furthermore, the committing sin. It would
to think that God could do wrong. The of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
contended that
they
such could do
were
absolute Louis
sovereigns I
and
went
so wrong. far as to say, "I am the State." If this had been true, it would naturally follow that he could not do
as
no
wrong, because, no matter what he did, it would be in harmony with his own will, and, therefore,
right. If God is absolute, all-powerful, the supreme Sovereign and uler of the universe, then He can His
purpose. If the virtues of love, holiness, wisdom, and such like, are essential parts of His nature, then those very characteristics would make His every act pure, ennobling, and holy. Such is the nature of God. It is absurd, therefore, to never cross
harbor
the
angels,
could
perfection. For
our
own
notion that human beings, or even ever reach the state of such absolute
second
trilogy
of facts, let
us
consider
WHAT
IS
22
HOLINESS?
impatience. Carnal impatience is the result spirit of fretfulness, anger, malice, or sup pressed desire for one's own personal comfort or security. It is based upon selfish interests. If this
carnal of
a
is
true,
impatience. the
we can argue without fear of that holiness does eliminate carnal The best test to distinguish between
then
contradiction two
is the motive which prompts us to the spirit of impatience. If we grow
exhibition of the
impatient
above,
or
because of either of the facts mentioned from similar conditions, then
evidences of the carnal
If, however, we
that a
are
we
impatience
remaining
is due
to
we
have
within
us.
the fact that
with certain responsibility, and restricted in our attempts to discharge
charged
are
that
our
nature
responsibility, it must be attributed either to or a physical condition purely, dependent
mental
upon the attitude of the person toward his respon sibility. As a matter of fact, there are conditions and circumstances under which one ought to show a
spirit
best.
of
impatience
over
his
inability
to
do his
This would indicate that the person may be
depended upon either to discharge his responsi bilities smoothly and efficiently, or to be vexed over his inability to live up to his own high ideals and expectations. In
may say that holiness those carnal traits and conditions
conclusion, then,
does" eliminate
we
produce an unholy impatience, but it does not change the mental condition or the physical nature so as to eliminate purely human restrictions which would bring impatient actions.
which would
22
WHAT
HOLINESS?
IS
We must not forget, however, that many of the outbursts of human nature, which come from mental and physical conditions, will be restricted as one grows in the Christian graces. This is true for the
simple
reason
and dimmer
Christian
that the
as
one
of sin become dimmer
scars
grows in grace and matures in
experience. not perfection
Holiness is
seeni toHbe
a
in power. This may contradiction of the statement that
gave us when He said, " e shall receive power after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you." The
Jesus
difficulty with many who they do not obtain it is the simple statement of
seek power and find that that they misunderstand the
aster.
seek power as a direct attainment qua rion of the experience of holiness.
to
seek the
bring
baptism purity,
with the
heart
Holy
One is
or
as
a
not
sine
One should
Ghost which will
and then he will discover he has
the power for all of the spiritual attainments nec essary for the work God would have him do. The power Jesus spoke of was the power of the Holy Ghost coming upon the disciples to purge their carnal natures of inbred sin and to enable them to live above the sins of the world. And this applies to
God's children
today.
Sometimes it is taught that if one is bapti ed with the Holy Ghost and receives the grace of perfect love, he will have power for all things:
power to preach, to pray, to testify, and to do efficient Christian service. ""But actual experience disproves such a theory. any of us have known timid people
who
never
could
testify
in
public
with any great
WHAT
abandon.
IS
227
HOLINESS?
have known those who could
We
not
public services with any great degree of effi ciency; and yet those very persons have lived such lead
lives of
purity
forced
experience will
be
and
accept
to
It is
it
The
that
that
we
they
reason
for such
misinterpretation
relative term, and
what it is in all
have been
do have of
the
a
belief
the
word
no one can say its ramifications.
power to preach, then how powerful a will it make? and who is to determine the
is
preacher extent
in
a
definitely ust If
fact
of holiness.
found
power.
consistency
the
of that
power?
and how
are
to measure
we
power of any particular sermon sermons? It is humanly impossible. the
or
series of
If it is power to pray, then to what extent is it prayer power? Is it power to bring one through at the altar? Our own experience shows that this is
impossible. Is it power to heal the sick? We testify that this is possible. any of us that the of has effected a testify power prayer inite healing in our own bodies. We know apostles had such power, but we also know that all
power
limited
was
Jesus
cumstances.
instance
goeth Just
can
def the
that certain conditions and cir called their attention in one to
when He said, "This kind except by fasting and prayer." it is impossible to udge the power of a
to
a
case
not out as
sermon, a
such
can
prayer
so
it is
or
a
impossible to udge testimony or a life.
follows, then, that God did
not mean
the power of It evidently
the
experience
of holiness to be one which grants unlimited power to His followers. The engine must have power to
22
WHAT
pull
IS
HOLINESS?
the train, but the power comes by degrees when As a matter of fact, the nature of the
needed.
engine is such that it cannot contain sufficient power to pull the train long distances. There must be a
fireman and coal and water, and, as the train goes from grade to grade, there must be an intelligent
apportionment water
and
more
of power by the addition of more coal so as to produce the maximum
of power needed So it is with the to save, not
not as
to
cleanse,
to
power sufficient power sufficient
we
tackle life's
demand for
is
the time the load
at
Holy Spirit. purge,
He
comes
sanctify,
to
heavy.
in power but it is
carry one to Heaven. It is to last from year to year; but obs, He is there to know the to
spiritual power that is placed upon manipulate the fire of devotion,
He is there to
us.
the
fuel of Christian love, and the water of desire so as to produce within the engine of the soul power sufficient to make the grade, to pull the load, to do efficiently and effectively the ob that God has
placed upon us. That is the only power seek and which we may expect in the of holiness.
we
should
experience
Holiness is not perfect Christian service; that is sayTit does not guarantee perfect Christian serv ice. This is self-evident in view of the fact that God to
lets
us use our own
we
shall attempt
us
say,
to
preaching.
standing
some
udgment
to
in
most cases as to
do for Him.
form
of
Christian
That, however, does
in the
pulpit
and
what
He calls us, let
not
service,
include
administering
like
merely
the Word.
It involves thousands of other Christian duties and
WHAT
responsibilities. God stands by
IS
22
HOLINESS?
It would be absurd to think that
tell us every little minute detail of Christian service which is expected of us. There to
things which we do on the basis of our udgment, in the light of facts which we know, and in the light of our resources. All sorts of con ditions enter into our Christian activities. any times we are restricted by others with their personal many
are
own
views.
At times
perception
we
fail because of
of ap inertia.
our sense
by physical things as udgment,
which may be dulled
It is likewise true that such
mentaT Testrictions, and attitudes affect the type of
Christian service are
perfect, only
we
to
do. We may think our methods discover that they are very poor.
We may think we know exactly what, when, and how a certain type of Christian service should be
done, only
to
discover that
we were
wrong in every Christian
perform bungle the deed that we do more harm than good. What is the trouble? It is simply this: our motives have been perfect in every in stance; we have thought we were doing the very best thingďż˝ the thing that would please God and produce the most blessed results. But all the other elements were wrong. Holiness does not necessarily imply perfect service. It will bring purity of motive, honesty of endeavor, and a serious attempt to do God's perfect will in a perfect way. instance.
We
service and
may
even
some
so
Third, holiness is
not
perfection
of attributes,
capacities, or characteristics. These things depend ncTt only upon an act of grace, which results in a definite work of salvation or sanctification; but they
23
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
upon two things: graces attained, grace. There is quite a difference between the two facts. The work of grace is for a particular purpose. A grace attained may be an attribute, capacity, or characteristic resulting from
are
and
dependent growth in
trait of the individual. Growth in grace, of course, comes as the years go by, and is dependent upon such things as prayer, study of the
particular
the Word, and Christian service. No
matter
what the
is obvious that it
of holiness may be, it change the attributes of
state
cannot
the individual.
For instance, one may have poise, mental the ability to speak well, to traits, specific dress well, to impress one's self upon others in such
way as to appeal to them. All of these traits may be dependent upon environment, training, or other a
Culture, for instance, may be sadly one's life, but the baptism of the Holy not bring that attribute to one. He may
circumstances.
lacking in Spirit will have
the
unaware
sonal
experience
of holiness
of his crudeness.
There
attributes, also, which
change through
pendent,
more
environment.
do
and are
not
be
entirely
certain per
necessarily
any work of grace. They are de or less, upon one's nature and
experience of holiness necessarily upon one's capacity. That depends
Neither does the have direct effect on
he
the type of mind a yields himself to
man new
has, the extent to which environments, and the
attitude which he takes toward the attainment of certain qualities which he desires. For example, one may have the mental capacity to memori e facts
WHAT
along
lines which
IS
231
HOLINESS?
and yet be very
interest him,
capacity along other lines. One student has the ability to remember history, but is unable to learn languages. His ability in that field is very limited. The same thing applies to an deficient
in
individual
his
the
in
attainment,
accumulation, and
appreciation of certain Christian graces. One may learn to preach in a very acceptable manner, and
yet find it absolutely impossible to master the fine of oratory. One may learn to preach acceptably, and yet never learn to sermoni e effectively. There
art
are
those who
engaged
are
in the field of
teaching
in
religious schools, who are also ordained ministers. They are effective as teachers, but very ineffective as preachers. Why? The answer seems to be found in the
simple
fact that
they
have
capacity, mentally
and otherwise, for the attainment of those graces necessary for one form of Christian service and not for the other.
Holiness does for
description
traits
which
them
are
due
some
to
the
For a
not
imply perfection in individual we find "plenty of room
In this field
characTeristics.
of numbers of individuals who have
are
to
positively detrimental. Some of training, some to environment, and
inherent
nature
the writer knows
example, forcing
habit of
of
the
individual.
person who has his attention upon people in an When speaking to a person, he a
unbearable way. will edge as close to him as possible, thrust his lips close to the face, and almost lean upon his auditor. This is an unwholesome characteristic, and is very offensive.
That
particular
person
happens
to
be
232
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
wholly
devoted to the Lord, and there can be very little doubt as to the manifestation of the grace of holiness in his heart.
any
individual traits are will never be known.
which
psychological
facts
due
There
people's
in
to
lives
conditions certain
are
which
have
adopt certain attitudes which they will never get over. In some cases, different cir cumstances of the past have left an indelible im print upon these persons which will be there, no matter what spiritual grace may be obtained, and no matter how much one may grow in grace. any of
caused them
to
these characteristics
are
merely
habits which have
up, some of which may through criticism of friends, or
grown his
shortcomings himself;
own
have become to
the grave.
so
imbedded that
We
fections; and they
might
term
are not
be as
sloughed
off
discovers
one
but many of them they will follow him
physical imper any particular habits probably de
these
changed by
work of grace. Some of these veloped from simple imitation. One tends
to
imitate
certain habits and characteristics of friends whom he most admires; but in imitation we tend to acquire the bad habits of
We
see
and
note an
are
qualities
our
friends rather than the
good.
outstanding person whom we admire, certain characteristics about him. They
an
essential
part of his nature, but
-rather than
good,
are
bad
and when transferred
other natures, become very noticeable and some times detrimental. One may be sanctified and have to
all
sorts
him
a
of habits which, if eliminated, would make more
effective
Christian.
Note, however,
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
233
that it is not the work of grace which eliminates the characteristic. It is the application of common
and a definite attempt to improve one's methods and effectiveness in Christian service which will eliminate these. sense
All of these facts we
are
brought
to
less self-evident, this conclusion: that there is
being
more
or
difference between the grace of sanctification and thT"graces which may be obtained as a result of sanctification. There are attainments in the life of the sanctified one which we may term the fruits of
a
Spirit. Here again we run crosswise to some popular notions resulting from the fact that some are not able to distinguish between the work of the Spirit and the fruits of the Spirit. The word fruit indicates a ripened product. Of course, there are various stages in the growth and ripening process of the fruit, but we usually think of the word as applying to that which is ready for practical use. any of the graces in the Bible, which we sometimes confuse with the grace of Christian perfection, are really the result of long years of growth and ripening. One who finds himself possessed with an impatient spirit, due, let us say, to physical restrictions, will give such attention to this particular thing that ultimately he may reach the ripened process in his own experience which will result in the transforma tion of the green apple of impatience into the the
"Grimes Golden" of delicious flavor. One may have from an environment where love was practi
come
cally
unknown and where harsh and bitter words
were
common,
until his
own
nature
has taken
on
23
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
those characteristics. He gets sanctified, and finds it very difficult to put into practical application the grace of perfect love. But as he grows in grace, his
develops into the ripened fruit of perfect love; and his uncouth harshness, his tendency to critici e rather than to commend, and other such characteris life
tics
disappear.
Spirit, and perfect love
So it is with the fruits of the
thus it is that
between
distinguish perfection. The first comes into the heart with the baptism of the Holy Ghost; the second is the result of patient striving, constant reproving and checking by the Holy Spirit, and daily attention to our personal spiritual welfare. we
and ultimate Christian
The final
answered in
question which confronts a positive trilogy of facts:
may be holiness is
us
perfection in motive, in desire, and in devotion. p to this poinT we haW tried to analy e some of the difficulties that have arisen through ignorance, misunderstanding, and misrepresentation. Oppo nents of the doctrine of holiness would misrepresent us in some of the things mentioned, and ridicule us by trying to show that it is impossible to achieve what we know can be done by the grace of God. The question that now remains is positive in nature.
We want to know the fundamental facts
as to what sanctification of as a definite second experience work of grace is and what it does in the human heart.
the
Holiness in the heart produces perfection of motive. We have said that it was perfect love. This simply means that our hearts, through the baptism with the heart of
Holy Spirit, are placed in tune with the Heavenly Father; and, being in that
our
WHAT
IS
condition, everything
prompted by face a fallacy,
23
HOLINESS?
we
do in
a
religious
perfect everything that is prompted by perfect
the motive of
love.
that
way is Here again
done by a sanctified person is love. The absurdity of that statement is self-evident. There we
many daily acts which are purely personal, which has any connection with, and in which we
are no
one
responsible to no particular person. They are prompted by love of any kind. They are prompt ed by personal needs and desires. On the other hand, it is likewise true that many things we do are
not
for others
are
done
not out
that person, but for the
en oyment get give a beggar a piece we
out
of
a
motive of love for
purely personal pleasure of the
act
itself.
and
We may
of money. No one may see We may not even think of what God thought about it. It may be done for the self-satisfaction the
act.
we
get
of the
out
daily good
act.
deed which
It may be done we
have
as
charged
do; and it might be only in response
to
conscious moral
or
We the
reflexive action which
significance
whatever.
has
no
a
sort
of
ourselves to
a
sub
spiritual
escape this fact, however: that when Ghost comes in and purges the carnal
cannot
Holy
motives become
basically pure. They utterly selfish. They cannot spring from carnal desires. They prompt us, in all our relation ships with God and our fellow-men, to do right be cause right is right, and because there has been placed within us a principle of love divine, which, as James says, is "a royal law" fulfilled in our hearts, causing us to love God and our fellow-men sincerely. nature,
cannot
our
be
23
WHAT Holiness is
IS
r fectior
HOLINESS?
oL iesire.
With
carnality
gone, impure ancl selfish desires are gone. Possibly one of the best tests of whether we have the ex perience of holiness or not may be found ust here. Are
our
they
are
desires centered around our own selfish purposes? If so, it is evident that we do not have holiness of heart. But if our desires are always for good, if they are for the uplifting of humanity, if way, if
for the
they
are
blessing of others in every spiritual to please God, no matter what the
consequences may be, then have the
we
we
can
be assured that
blessing.
Our desires may be expressed, repressed, or sup We may express them in many kinds of Christian activity. We may give, pray, testify, visit,
pressed.
console, comfort, critici e, which
or do many other things think will result in spiritual blessing to
we
On the other hand, we may repress our We may voluntarily refrain from doing
some one.
desires. what
we
other
have
things
an
inner desire
crowd in and
to
do.
keep
us
We may let from certain
Christian activities which, if we would give expres sion to, would result in blessing to ourselves and to others. And yet again we may have suppressed desires, not those which we have kept down but those which
to
may have been afraid to utter or withďż˝ inner desires to do something
we
experiment
great in the service of the fear in
lack the
ability
to
ingdom, but which we accomplish. The point
however, is that no matter what form desires may take, the basic fact is that whatever desire to do, it is to please God in all things. If
question,
our
we
we
WHAT
IS
237
HOLINESS?
express our desires, it is to that end. If we repress our desires, we must be sure that it is to that end. If we permit our desires to be suppressed, we must be sure that we do not lose the opportunity which may be ours to do good. Our whole desire must be and, if we are wholly His, will be for His we
ultimate
glory
Finally,
does not
things.
in all
perfection of devotion. This periods oF worship will be mean that the worship itself will
holiness is mean
that
our
perfect. It does be perfect. Devotion includes not only the fact of worship, but the attitude and motive in worship. One may worship formally or perfunctorily, but he cannot worship acceptably unless his "offering is without blemish." Just as God demanded of the Jews an unblemished sacrifice on the altar, so it be with
must
ment
If
we
us
when
we
come
to
Him.
Our at
be that of complete personal abandon to His will. It must be a desire to please Him. worship Him, we must do so in spirit and truth.
titude
must
Devotion, however, does
not mean
the
mere
act
definite attitude which worship. is constant in all its purposes. Am I devoted to God? Is He first in my life? Does His will take precedence over mine? Would I rather please Him than myself? Do I preach for His glory and for the edification of souls, or to make an impression upon my audi ence? Do I testify as the result of a oyousness which cannot be repressed, or am I entering into a little period of bragging as to what God has done for me, or what I have done for Him? These are pertinent questions. The answer to them depends upon our of
It involves
a
23
WHAT
IS
HOLINESS?
devotion.
To be utterly devoted to one supreme the will of Godďż˝ means more than we some thingďż˝ times
think.
baptism
devotion. If
The
proposes
Christian
to
Holy Spirit in His cleansing bring about such a spirit of
perfection, then,
means
perfection
of motives, desire, and devotion; and if the baptism with the Holy Spirit purges the dross of carnal na ture,
we
can
relative others. It
term
readily see that holiness is a broad, meaning one thing but implying many
means,
filled with the
first, that
we
are
sanctified and
Spirit.
It means, second, that certain processes result as a definite second
fundamental
work of grace. It implies, third, that after this is done, there are vast reaches and processes of grace
into which God would have in order
to
ripened
fruits of the
claim them for
EFE 1.
2.
Spirit.
us
travel and
explore
very own, the luscious ay we grow in grace
ENCE BOO S
Brengle, Samuel, Heart Talks on Holiness, Chapter II. Carradine, Beverly, Sanctification, Chapters III-
3.
our
I.
Carradine, Beverly, The Sanctified Life, ter
II.
Chap
.
Coward, S. L. C, Entire Sanctification from 173 to 1 , p. 2 .
.
Davis, Henry Turner, The Shining Way, ter
III.
Chap
WHAT .
7.
. 1 .
HOLINESS?
ilton L., The Inheritance Chapters LII- LI -
Haney,
Huntington, ter
.
IS
II.
D. W. C, Sin and
23
estored,
Holiness, Chap
Jones, W., The Doctrine of Entire Sanctifica IIII. tion, Chapters Possibilities of Grace, p. 21 . Lowry, Asbury, Edward F., Sanctify Them, Chapter II. Walker,
INDE
Acceptable to God, 1 Pet. 2: , p. 1 Anointed, 2 Cor. 1:21, p. 1 of the Jews before entering the tabernacle, Lev. 1 : -12, p.
Anointing 7.
Baptism of Christ, p. of John, ark 1: , p. ark Bapti e with the Holy Ghost, 1: ; Luke 3: 1 , p. Bapti ed be, Acts 2:3 , p. 1 1 into Jesus Christ, om. :1-7, p. 1 with the
Holy Ghost,
1: , p. 7 with water, p.
p.
1 ; Acts
7
Believers, example of, 1 Tim. p. 2
:12,
Bitterness, roots of, p. ; Heb. 12:1 , p. 1 and without. Blame, holy Eph. 1 : , p.
173
Blameless, 2 Pet. 3:1 , p. 1 and harmless, Phil. 2:1 , p. 17 preserved, 1 Thess. :23, p. 1 7 Blamelessness, p. 177 Blessing, second, p. 3 Blessings promised to the Jews, Deut. 2 and 3 , p. 2 Blood
of Christ, Heb. :1 , p. 2 of Jesus Christ, 1 John 1:7, p. It of the Lamb, ev. 7:1 , p. 1
Bodies, present 1
your,
om. 12 :1, p.
Body of sin, om. : , 7, pp. 7 , 1 Born of God, 1 John 3: , p. 21 Buried with him, om. :1-7, p. 1 Called, Jude 1, p. 1 Canaan experience, p 13 Capacity, individual, p 23 Carnal mind a condition, p. 77 enmity against God, om. 7 not
not
...
Christian perfection, pp. 12, 11 Christian service, perfection in, 22
glorious, Eph. Church, Clean, now are ye, John 1 :1-1 ,
22 Clean hands, Psalm 2 : , p. 2 Clean heart create in me, Psalm 1, p. such as are of, Psalm 73, p. Cleanness be clean, Gen. 3 :2, p. touch no unclean thing, Isa. p.
7
.
1 -1 ,
p.
p.
1:7,
Cleanse it with the washing of water, Eph. :2 , p. 1 Cleansed from all filthiness of the mind and spirit, p. 1 Cleanseth us from all sin, 1 John 1:7, p. 1 Cleansing of iniquity, Isa. :7, p. Cleave to om. 12: , p. good, 2 3 Commandment, end of the, 1 Tim. 1: , p. 2 7 Commandments, related to holiness, Joshua 23: - , p. 3 ten, Deut. 2 , p. 2 of the 2 Pet. 3:12. n. Coming Lord, 1 om. Condemnation, no, :1, p. 2 2 Conscience, good, 1 Tim. 1: , p. 2 7 : 1 , p. 2 purge your, Heb. void of offence, Acts 2 :1 , p. 2 2 Conversation example in, 1 Tim. :12, p. 2 Covenant with the Jews, Deut. 2 : with
:7,
p.
:27, p. 17
a
.
p.
Crucified with
of, p. 2 eliminated by conversion, p. 7 sub ect to the law of God, om. :7, p. 1 racial trait, p. 7 who has it, p. 77 Carnality, p. 7 om. : , p. 7 Carnally minded, Characteristics, perfection in, p. 23 Charity, 1 Cor. 13:1, pp. 11 , 1 3 example in, 1 Tim. :12, p. 2 2 Tim. 2:22, p. 1 follow nature
Chosen to be a peculiar people, Deut. 1 :2, p. us in him, Eph. 1: . p. 173
him,
.
Christ, p. :1-7,,
om.
David, dying exhortation 1 Chron. 2 : , p.
1 p.
1
to
Solomon,
David's last prayer for Solomon, 1 Chron. 2 :1 , p. Day of Pentecost, Acts 2:1- , p. Dead to sin, p. 1 ; omans :1,' p. 1 with Christ, omans : , p. 2 with him, 2 Tim. 2:11, p. 1 works, Heb. :1 , p. 2 Deeper life, p. 11 Defiled and unbelieving, Titus 1:1 p. 1 1 Delight in the law, Psalm 1:1-3, p.
INDE ďż˝ CONT.
Denying
ungodliness lusts, Titus 2:2,
Depravity, nature
of,
p. p.
from
rest
3
p.
worldly
and
p. 21
22 2
Desire, perfection in, p. 23 Despise thy youth, 1 Tim.
:12,
2
p.
Devotion, perfection in, p. 237 Died unto sin, omans :1 , p. 2
Dissimulation,
Double-minded
om.
12: ,
p.
2 3
1: ,
man, James
p.
Earnest of the Spirit, p. 1 Edifying of itself in love, Eph. p. 1
Eli ah,
1
p.
Establish your p. 17
hearts,
7
:1 ,
3:13,
1 Thess.
Excellent things, approve, Phil. 1 :1 , p. 2 7 Paith
example in, 1 Tim. follow, 2 Tim. 2:22, follow after, 1 Tim. rest in, p. 2 rest of, p. 11
:12,
p.
:11,
p. 2
1
p.
1:7,
Filled
p.
1
att.
: , p. 1 7 with all the fulness of God, Eph.
3:1 , p. 1 Filthiness, lay apart,
James
Fire, bapti ed with,
att.
211
3 p. First fruit,
om.
Flesh, infirmity of,
11:1 ,
p.
1:21,
p.
3:11, 12, 1 7
om. :1 , p. 1 walk not after the, om. :1, p. 2 2 om. Free from sin, :22, p. 1 om. Freed from sin, :1 7, p. 1 om. Fruit unto holiness, :22,, p. 1 Fulness of Christ, Eph. :13, p. 1 2 of God, Eph. 3:1 , p. 1
Gift
of p.
the
1 1
Holy Ghost, Acts 2:3 ,
Godliness, 2 Pet. 3:11,
p.
1 7
follow after. 1 Tim. :11, p 2 Godly, live, Titus 2:12, p. 21
Christ, Eph.
pure, 2 purity, p.
Heaven,
1 ,
p.
1
p.
Luke
righteousness,
p.
:1 ,
Tim. 2 :22, p. ISO
a
Heart Heirs of Holiness
1
:7 -7 ,
1
before God, 1 Thes. 3:13, p. 17 called unto, 1 Thes. :7, p. 1
definition, p. 13 in the book of omans, p. 1
people,
, 13
pp.
phraseology,
purpose
of,
pp.
3
p.
righteousness and 17 righteousness 1 p.
1
, 13, 3 true,
unto,
Eph.
om.
:2 ,
:1 ,
p.
unto
God,
om.
12:1,
p.
; Lev. 2 :7,
, p. 11: be, conversation and godliness, 2 Pet. 3:11, p. 1 7 in
they shall be,
even
of
Holy acceptable
before the presence, Jude 2 , p. 1 Fellowship one with another, 1 John Faultless
Head, Heart
Eph. :2 -2 , p. 7 unblameable in, 1 Thess. 3:13, p. 12 ech. 1 :2 , p. 73 unto the Lord, way of, Isa. 3 , p. 7 without which, Heb. 12:1 , p. 1 3
1
p.
om. under, :1 -1 , pp. , 1 Graces of Christian experience, p. 12 Grow up into him, Eph. :1 , p. 1
true,
2
unfeigned, 1 Tim. 1 : , p. 2 7 Faithful is he, 1 Thess. :2 , p. 1 saying, 2 Tim. 2:11,
God, fail of, Heb. 12:1 ,
of
p. 1
and
2
p.
Grace
out
Everlasting life, om. :22, p. 1 om. 12: , p. 2 3 Evil, abhor, Example of the believers, 1 Tim. :12,,
i
Lev.
all
manner
1 first fruit be,
of
conversation,
p.
om. 11:1 , p. 1 7 priesthood, 1 Pet, 2: , p. 1 to present you, Col. 1:22, p. 177 Holy Ghost baptism of, p. 3
bapti ed with, 3
att: 3:11,
12,
fell on them. Act 11:1 -17, p. have ye received, Acts 1 :2. p. might receive. Acts :1 -17, p. renewing of, Titus 3: , p. 1 and peace, righteousness, om. 1 :17, p. 2
p.
1
1 7 1 3
oy,
Holy Spirit att. 3:1 , 17, p. as a dove, dispensations of, p. 2 Holy men, Ex. 22:31. p. Holy nation, ye shall be, Ex. 1 : , p.
House, spiritual,
1 Pet. 2: , p. 1 S Impatience, what it is, p. 22 Inbred sin, p. 7 ; nature of. p. 3 Individuals, holiness of, p. 7
ďż˝ CONT.
INDE
Ingrafted word, James 1:21, Inheritance, p. 137 Iniquity cleansing of, Isa. :7, p. do no, Psa. 11 :3, p. Joined together, Eph. :1 , 1
p.
have her perfect work, James p. 12 22
211
perfection in, p. Paul's experience, 1
pp.
o ow,
2
Justification, compared with sanctifi cation, pp. 37- 1 Justified, ye are, 1 Cor. :11, p. 1 Justly to do, Ntficah, : , p. 72 om. 1 :17, p. 2 ingdom of God, nowledge, p. 17 ; passeth, Eph. 3:1 , p. 1 om. , Law, not under, :1 , pp. 1
Life, everlasting,
Light, walk
in
om. :22, p. 1 the, 1 John 1:7,
Isa. wilt keep in perfect, 2 :3, p. : , p. 1 2 People of God, Heb. Perfect, See Christian Perfection, pp. Ill, 11 among them that are, 1 Cor. 2: , p. thou
11 and upright, Job 1:1, p. as many as be, Phil. 3:12, p. 11 ; 2 Cor. 13: be, Deut. 1 :13, p. 11, p. 11 Gen. be thou, 17:1, p. 7 att. : , p. Ill be ye, : , p. 113 everyone that is, Luke God maketh my way, Pea. 13:32, 2 p. make you, Heb. 13:2 , 21, p. 127 man of God may be, 2 Tim. 1 :17,
p.
1 Live with him, 2 Tim. 2:11, p. 1 Love, 1 Cor. 13:1, p. 11 and have not, 1 Cor. 13 : 1, p. 1 3 om. without be dissimulation, 12: , p. 2 3 1 of p. edifying itself, Eph. :1 , follow after, 1 Tim. :11, p. 2 2 rest in, p. of Christ, Eph. 3:1 , p. 1 perfect, See Perfect Love. an of
God,
1
Tim.
:11,
p.
p.
p.
in Christ Jesus, Eph. was 2: , p. the two, p. 7 inds, otive, perfection in, p. 23 1 Nature, carnal, p.
which
follow
p.
after, 1 Tim.
:11,
p-
2
1 :27-2 ,
1 Chron. 2 :1 , p. walk with, Psalm 1 1:2, p. 2 Perfect law, Psalm 1 :1- , p. Perfect love, attributes of, p. 1 Perfect man, Eph. :13, pp. 121, 1 2 Perfect peace, thou wilt keep him, Isa. 2 :3, p. Perfect way, behave in, Psa. 1 1:2,
carnal, p. 7 of Christ, p. 1
Passover,
Col.
omans 12:2, p. will of God, Perfect heart and willing mind, 1 Chron. 2 : ,
ind
Pt 'i"nce
man,
stablish, strengthen, settle you, 1 Pet. :1 , p. 13 that ye may be, James 1: , p. 12
2
New man have put on, Col. 3: , 1 , p. 17 :2 -2 , pp. 7, 17 put on, Eph. omans :1-7, p. Newness of life, 1 Phil. 1:1 , p. 2 7 Offence, without, Old man, pp. 2, 7 7 contrasted with new, p. om. : , p, 7 crucified, om. ie crucified, :1-7, p. 1 ye have put off; Col. 3: , 1 , p. 17
12
present every p. 122
1 Tim. :11, p. 2 receive with, James 1:21, p. 211 icah : , p. 73 ercy, to love,
eekness, follow after,
13
Heb. 12:1 , p. 1 3; 2 Tim. 2:22, p. 1 found of him in, 2 Pet. 3:1 , p. 1 om. 1 :17, kingdom of God is, p. 2
,
Joshua, dying exhortation, p. 3 om. 1 :17, Joy in the Holy Ghost, p.
p.
1: ,
p.
Perfected
,
compared with perfect, p. 11 forever, Heb. 1 :1 , p. 1 2 :12Perfecting of the saints, Eph. 1 , p. 131 Perfection, See Christian Perfection absolute, p. 223 angelic, p. 222
Christian, pp. 12, 111 Edenic, p. 21 even your, 2 Cor. 13: , p. 117 in Christian service, p. 22 in desire, p. 23 in devotion, p. 237
INDE
in motive, p. 23 in patience, p. 22 in power, p. 22 James 3:2, p. 12 let us go on unto, Heb. Place, in one, Acts 2:1- ,
Power, perfection in, Present your bodies,
p.
22
:1,
p. 12
p.
om.
12:1,
1 Preserved blameless, 1 Thess. p. 1 7 forever, Psa. 37, p. 3 in Jesus Christ, Jude 1 :1, p. Press toward the mark, Phil. 3:1 11 Priest, adornment of, Ex. 3 :3, Pri e of the p. 11
things
1
,
,
p. p.
high calling, Phil. 3:1 ,
Prophesied, Acts 1 :2,
Pure all his in Pure
p.
.23,
are,
p.
1 7
Titus, 1:1 ,
work is right, Prov. 21 : att. : , heart, p. 1 ; heart charity out of, 1 Tim. 1: , out of, 2 Tim. 2:22, p. 1 Psalm 2 : , p. 2 Pure religion, James 1 :27, p.
Purge
1 1
p.
,
p.
1
p. p.
2 7
e- ointing, epentance,
p. pp.
11
1 1,
213
12
the result of sanctification, p. 1 2 in faith, p. 2 in love, p. there remaineth, Heb. : , p. 1 2 est of faith, p. 11 om. :1esurrection, likeness of, 7, p. 1 :21, p. ighteous, shall be all, Isa. 71 as
ighteously, live, Titus 2:2, p. 21 �alketh, Isa. 33:1 -17, ighteousness,
follow after, 1 Tim. :11, p. 2 instruments of, om. :13, p. of God om. 1 :17, p. kingdom is, 2 of the perfect, Prov. 11: , , 2 , 7 p. son of, ai. :2, p. 7 sow to yourselves, Hosea 1 :12, p. 72 understand, Prov. 2: -11, p. unto holiness, om. :1 , p. 1 works of, Titus 3 : , p. 1 ev. 7:1 , p. obes, washed their, 1 omans, holiness in the book, p. 1 oot of bitterness, p. ; Heb. 12:1 , p. 1
Sacrifice, Saints,
living,
a
om. 12:1,
7.1 ,
p.
preserveth the :11, p.
Sanctification, compared
definition,
way of
with
pp.
ustification,
:
pp.
made unto us, 1 Cor. 1:3 , p. 13 of the Spirit, 1 Pet. 1:2, p. 1 ; 2 Thess. 2:13, p. 1 1 process of purging, p.
self, p. symboli ed,
p. 1 the will of God, 1 Thess. :3, p. 1 Sanctified and meet for the master's use, 2 Tim. 2:21, p. 1 by faith, Acts 2 :1 , p. 13 by God the Father, Jude 1:1, p. 1 by the which will, Heb. 1 :1 , p. 1 1 in Christ Jesus, 1 Cor. 1:2, p. 13 them that are, Heb. 1 .1 , p. 1 2 ye are, 1 Cor. :11, p. 1 Sanctifieth, be that, Heb. 2:11, p. 1 Sanctify and cleanse it, Eph. :2 , p. 1 myself, John 17:1 , p. 1 1 that he might, Heb. 13:12, p. 1 3 them through thy truth, John 17:
17, p. 13 wholly,
you
awake to, 1 Cor. 1 :3 . p. 171 doeth, Psa. 1 :3, p. follow, 2 Tim. 2:22, p. 1
his, Prov. 2
1 , 13
1 Thess.
yourselves, Lev. 11:
p.
1
p.
called to be, 1 Cor. 1:2, p. 13 he preserveth the souls of, Psa.
37- 1
himself from these, 2 Tim. 2:21, p. 1 me, Psa. 1, p. 3 ai. 3:3, p. 7 them as gold, :1 , p. 2 your conscience, Heb. John 1 :1-1 , p. 22 Purgeth it, Purging of sin, Isa. :7, p. Purification of the Jews, p. Purified and made white, Dan. 12 :3, 1 , p. 72 ai. 3:2, 3, p. 7 Purifier of silver, Purity, example in, 1 Tim. :12, p. 2
est
ďż˝ CONT.
,
:23,
,
p. p.
1
;
Lev. 2 :7, , p. Save your souls, James 1:21. p. 211 Sealed us, 2 Cor. 1:21, p. 1 Second work of grace, p. 1 compered with the first, p. 37
INDE ďż˝ CONT.
for, p. 3 for, p. 33 experience,
need
Tarry,
Separate,
Servants omans
1
p.
be ye, 2 Cor.
:1 ,
:17,
p. 2
p.
om. God, .22, p. 1 to righteousness, om. :1 , p. 1 Service, Christian, See Christian to
Sin
service
anaylsis of, p. 1 and a mistake, p. 2 as
an
as
an
as
a
as
a
act,
attitude, condition,
22 1 John
all,
1:7,
p. 1 p. 1 effect on the individual, p. 27 he cannot, 1 John 3: , p. 21 inbred, p. 7 let not, om. :12; p. 1 popular idea of, pp. 1 , 1 purging of, Isa :7, p. shall not have dominion, om 1 , p. 1 should not serve, om. :1-7, 1 universality of, p. 12 voluntary, p. 27
definition of,
Sin
not
1 Cor. Psalm
1 :3 , : , p.
Sincere, that p.
p.
1
: p.
1
be, Phil. 1 :1 , :
of God
p.
3:1 , 17,
att.
: 1 , p. 2 2 Thess.
the,
2:13,
the,
Spot without, 2 Pet. 3:12, without to God, Heb. Stablisheth p. 1
us
p.
1
:1 .
p. 2 with you, 2 Cor. 1:21,
Suffered awhile, 1 Peter
Suppressionists,
p.
12
p.
:1 ,
p.
12
p.
p. p.
their
1 Cor.
ye are,
om. :1, p. 2 2 Spirit-filled life, p. 12 Spiritual house, 1 Pet. 2:1 , p. 1 walk after
: ,
robes,
descending,
p.
1
his, 1 Thess.
possess
light, 1 John 1:7, p. 1 upright, Psa. 1 :7, p. 1 righteously, Isa. 33:1 -17,
Washed 1
sanctification of
3
p.
Walk in the Walketh
the eternal Heb.
P-
:32,
not, Deut.
; Joshua 23: - ,
honour, 2 Tim. 2:21, p. 1 ictorious life, p. 12 isit the fatherless, James 1:27,
of
the, 2 Cor. 1:21, p. 1 example in, 1 Tim. .12, p. 2
earnest
ye shall
213
1
p.
:17,
2 Cor.
unto
Soberly, live, Titus 2:2, p. 21 Speaking the truth in love, Eph. 1 , Spirit
God,
1:22, p. 177 in holiness, 1 Thess. 3.13, p. 17 : nclean thing, touch not, 2 Cor. 17, p. 2 1 us unto, ncleanness, not called Thess. :7, p. 1 ndefiled before God, James 1 :27, p. 213 blessed are, Psa. 11 :3, p. ngodliness, denying, Titus 2:2, p. 21 nity of the faith, Eph. :13, p. 121 nreproveable in his sight, Col. 1:22, p. 177 nspotted from the world, Jos. 1 :27, p. 213 essel,
171
may
ye
2 7
p.
nblameable and unreproveable, Col.
p.
from
us
,
Tongues, pp. 1 , 1 2; of fire, Acts 2:1- , p. Traits, individual, p. 232 Transformed, be ye, om. 12:2, p. Triune nature of God, pp. 2, Truth in love, Eph. :1 , p. 1
aside, 33, p.
p. 2 p. 2
relationship,
cleanseth
p. 17 of the living 2
Turn
27
p.
2 :
Lake
Teaching us, Titus 2:12, p. 21 Temple of God is holy, 1 Cor. 3:17
reason
restful
:11,
ev. p.
7:1 ,
1
baptism, p. Way of holiness, Isa. 3 , p. 7 Whole heart, seek him with, 11 :3, p. Water
Psa.
Will of God, p. 12 by the which we are sanctified, Heb. 1 :1 , p. 1 1 good and perfect and acceptable, omans 12:2, p. this is the, 1 Thess. :3, p. 1 Wind, rushing, mighty, Acts 2:1- , p.
Wisdom,
p.
13 ; 1 Cor. 2: , Phil. 2:1 ,
Wi hout rebuke,
Witnesses,
ye are, Luke 2
:
p. 11 p.
,
17
p.
7