 Be Ye Holy!
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"Holiness" by J. C. Ryle
This volume is considered the best book on the Christian life that has Ever been written.
CONTENTS
Introduction
Sin
Sanctification
Holiness
The Fight
The Cost
Growth
Assurance
Moses, An Example
Lot, A Beacon
A Woman to Be Remembered
Christ’s Greatest Trophy
The Ruler of the Waves
The Church Which Christ Builds
Visible Churches Warned
Do you love Me?
Without Christ
Thirst Relieved
Unsearchable Riches
Needs of the Times
Christ is All
INTRODUCTION
The twenty papers contained in this volume are a humble
contribution to a cause which is exciting much interest in the present day—I
mean the cause of scriptural holiness. It is a cause which everyone who
loves Christ, and desires to advance His kingdom in the world, should
endeavor to help forward. Everyone can do something and I wish to add my
mite.
The reader will find little that is directly
controversial in these papers. I have carefully abstained from naming modern
teachers and modern books. I have been content to give the result of my own
study of the Bible, my own private meditations, my own prayers for light,
and my own reading of old divines. If in anything I am still in error, I
hope I shall be shown it before I leave the world. We all see in part, and
have a treasure in earthen vessels. I trust I am willing to learn.
I have had a deep conviction for many years that
practical holiness and entire self-consecration to God are not sufficiently
attended to by modern Christians in this country. Politics, or controversy,
or party-spirit, or worldliness, have eaten out the heart of lively piety in
too many of us. The subject of personal godliness has fallen sadly into the
background. The standard of living has become painfully low in many
quarters. The immense importance of "adorning the doctrine of God our
Savior" ( Titus 2:10), and making it lovely and beautiful by our daily
habits and tempers, has been far too much overlooked. Worldly people
sometimes complain with reason that "religious" persons, so-called, are not
so amiable and unselfish and good-natured as others who make no profession
of religion. Yet sanctification, in its place and proportion, is quite as
important as justification. Sound Protestant and Evangelical doctrine is
useless if it is not accompanied by a holy life. It is worse then useless;
it does positive harm. It is despised by keen-sighted and shrewd men of the
world, as an unreal and hollow thing, and brings religion into contempt. It
is my firm impression that we want a thorough revival about Scriptural
holiness. and I am deeply thankful that attention is being directed to the
point.
It is, however, of great importance that the whole
subject should be placed on right foundations, and that the movement about
it should not be damaged by crude, disproportion, and one-sided statements.
If such statements abound, we must not be surprised. Satan knows well the
power of true holiness, and the immense injury which increased attention to
it will do to his kingdom. It is his interest, therefore, to promote strife
and controversy about this part of God's truth. Just as in time past he has
succeeded in mystifying and confusing men's minds about justification, so he
is laboring in the present day to make men "darken counsel by words without
knowledge" about sanctification. May the Lord rebuke him! I can not however
give up the hope that good will be brought out of evil, that discussion will
elicit truth, and that variety of opinion will lead us all to search the
Scriptures more, to pray more, and to become more diligent in trying to find
out what is "the mind of the Spirit."
I now feel it a duty, in sending forth this volume, to
offer a few introductory hints to those whose attention is specially
directed to the subject of sanctification in the present day. I know that I
do so at the risk of seeming presumptuous, and possibly of giving offence.
But something must be ventured in the interests of God's truth. I shall
therefore put my hints into the form of questions, and I shall request my
readers to take them as "Cautions for the Times on the subject of holiness."
(1) I ask, in the first place, whether it is wise to
speak of faith as the one thing needful, and the only thing required, as
many seem to do now-a-days in handling the doctrine of sanctification? -Is
it wise to proclaim in so bald, naked, and unqualified a way as many do,
that holiness of converted people is by faith only, and not at all by
personal exertion? Is it according to the proportion of God's Word? I doubt
it.
That faith in Christ is the root of all holiness--that
the first step towards a holy life is to believe on Christ--that until we
believe we have not a jot of holiness--that union with Christ by faith is
the secret of both beginning to be holy and continuing holy--that the life
that we live in the flesh we must live by the faith of the Son of God--that
faith purifies the heart-- that faith is the victory that overcomes the
world--that by faith the elders obtained a good report--all these are truths
which no well-instructed Christian will ever think of denying. But surely
the Scriptures teach us that in following holiness the true Christian needs
personal exertion and work as well as faith. The very same Apostle who says
in one place, "The life that I live in the flesh I live by the faith of the
Son of God," says in another place, "I fight--I run--I keep under my body;"
and in other places, "Let us cleanse ourselves--let us labor, let us lay
aside every weight." ( Galatians 2:20; 1 Corinthians 9:26; 2 Corinthians
7:1; Hebrews 4:11; Hebrews 12:1.) Moreover, the Scriptures nowhere teach us
that faith sanctifies us in the same sense, and in the same manner, that
faith justifies us! Justifying faith is a grace that "works not," but simply
trusts, rests, and leans on Christ. ( Romans 4:5.) Sanctifying faith is a
grace of which the very life is action: it "works by love," and, like a
main-spring, moves the whole inward man. ( Galatians 5:6.) After all, the
precise phrase "sanctified by faith" is only found once in the New
Testament. The Lord Jesus said to Saul, "I send you, that they may receive
forgiveness of sins and inheritance among those who are sanctified by faith
that is in Me." Yet even there I agree with Alford that "by faith" belongs
to the whole sentence, and must not be tied to the word "sanctified." The
true sense is, "that by faith in Me they may receive forgiveness of sins and
inheritance among those who are sanctified." (Compare Acts 26:18 with Acts
20:32.)
As to the phrase "holiness of faith," I find it nowhere
in the New Testament. Without controversy, in the matter of our
justification before God, faith in Christ is the one thing needful. All that
simply believe are justified. Righteousness is imputed "to him that works
not but believes." ( Romans 4:5.) It is thoroughly Scriptural and right to
say "faith alone justifies." But it is not equally Scriptural and right to
say "faith alone sanctifies." The saying requires very large qualification.
Let one fact suffice. We are frequently told that a man is "justified by
faith without the works of the law," by St. Paul. But not once are we told
that we are "sanctified by faith without the deeds of the law." On the
contrary, we are expressly told by St. James that the faith whereby we are
visibly and demonstratively justified before man, is a faith which "if it
has not works is dead, being alone." * ( James 2:17.) I may be told, in
reply, that no one of course means to disparage "works" as an essential part
of a holy life. It would be well, however, to make this more plain then many
seem to make it in these days.
* "There is a double justification by God: the one
authoritative, the other declarative or demonstrative."--The first is St.
Paul's scope, when he speaks of justification by faith without the deeds of
the law. The second is St. James' scope, when he speaks of justification by
works." --T. Goodwin on Gospel Holiness. Works, vol. vii, p. 181.
(2) I ask, in the second place, whether it is wise to
make so little as some appear to do, comparatively, of the many practical
exhortations to holiness in daily life which are to be found in the Sermon
on the Mount, and in the latter part of most of St. Paul's epistles? Is it
according to the proportion of God's Word? I doubt it.
That a life of daily self-consecration and daily
communion with God should be aimed at by everyone who professes to be a
believer --that we should strive to attain the habit of going to the Lord
Jesus Christ with everything we find a burden, whether great or small, and
casting it upon Him--all this, I repeat, no well-taught child of God will
dream of disputing. But surely the New Testament teaches us that we want
something more then generalities about holy living, which often pierce no
conscience and give no offence. The details and particular ingredients of
which holiness is composed in daily life, ought to be fully set forth and
pressed on believers by all who profess to handle the subject. True holiness
does not consist merely of believing and feeling, but of doing and bearing,
and a practical exhibition of active and passive grace. Our tongues, our
tempers, our natural passions and inclinations-- our conduct as parents and
children, masters and servants, husbands and wives, rulers and subjects--our
dress, our employment of time, our behavior in business, our demeanor in
sickness and health, in riches and poverty--all, all these are matters which
are fully treated by inspired writers. They are not content with a general
statement of what we should believe and feel, and how we are to have the
roots of holiness planted in our hearts. They dig down lower. They go into
particulars. They specify minutely what a holy man ought to do an be in his
own family, and by his own fireside, if he abides in Christ. I doubt whether
this sort of teaching is sufficiently attended to in the movement of the
present day. When people talk of having received "such a blessing," and of
having found "the higher life," after hearing some earnest advocate of
"holiness by faith and self-consecration," while their family and friends
see no improvement and no increased sanctity in their daily tempers and
behavior, immense harm is done to the cause of Christ. True holiness, we
surely ought to remember, does not consist merely of inward sensations and
impressions. It is much more then tears, and sighs, and bodily excitement,
and a quickened pulse, and a passionate feeling of attachment to our
favorite preachers and our own religious party, and a readiness to quarrel
with everyone who does not agree with us. It is something of "the image of
Christ." which can be seen and observed by others in our private life, and
habits, and character, and doings. ( Romans 8:29.)
(3) I ask in the third place, whether it is wise to use
vague language about perfection, and to press on Christians a standard of
holiness, as attainable in this world for which there is no warrant to be
shown either in Scripture or experience? I doubt it.
That believers are exhorted to "perfect holiness in the
fear of God"--to "go on to perfection"--to "be perfect," no careful reader
of his Bible will ever think of denying. ( 2 Corinthians 7:1; Hebrews 6:1; 2
Corinthians 13:11.) But I have yet to learn that there is a single passage
in Scripture which teaches that a literal perfection, a complete and entire
freedom from sin, in thought, or word, or deed, is attainable, or has ever
been attained, by any child of Adam in this world. A comparative perfection,
a perfection in knowledge, an all-around consistency in every relation of
life, a through soundness in every point of doctrine--this may be seen
occasionally in some of God's believing people. But as to an absolute
literal perfection, the most eminent saints of God in every age have always
been the very last to lay claim to it! On the contrary they have always had
the deepest sense of their own utter unworthiness and imperfection. The more
spiritual light they have enjoyed the more they have seen their own
countless defects and shortcomings. The more grace they have had the more
they been "clothed with humility." ( 1 Peter 5:5.)
What saint can be named in God's Word, of whose life many
details are recorded, who was literally and absolutely perfect? Which of
them all, when writing about himself, ever talks of feeling free from
imperfection? On the contrary, men like David, and St. Paul, and St. John,
declare in the strongest language that they feel in their own hearts
weakness and sin. The holiest men of modern times have always been
remarkable for deep humility. Have we ever seen holier men then the martyred
John Bradford, or Hooker, or Usher, or Baxter, or Rutherford, or M'Cheyne?
Yet no one can read the writings and letters of these men without seeing
that they felt themselves "debtors to mercy and grace" every day, and the
very last thing they ever laid claim to was perfection!
In face of such facts as these I must protest against the
language used in many quarters, in these last days, about perfection. I must
think that those who use it either know very little of the nature of sin, or
the attributes of God, or of their own hearts, or of the Bible, or of the
meaning of words. When a professing Christian coolly tells me that he has
got beyond such hymns as "Just as I am," and that they are below his present
experience, though they suited him when he first took up religion, I must
think his soul is in a very unhealthy state! When a man can talk coolly of
the possibility of "living without sin" while in the body, and can actually
say that he has "never had an evil thought for three months," I can only say
that in my opinion he is a very ignorant Christian! I protest against such
teaching as this. It not only does no good, but does immense harm. It
disgusts and alienates from religion far-seeing men of the world, who know
it is incorrect and untrue. It depresses some of the best of God's children,
who feel they never can attain to "perfection" of this kind. It puffs up
many weak brethren, who fancy they are something when they are nothing. In
short, it is a dangerous delusion.
(4) In the fourth place, is it wise to assert so
positively and violently, as many do, that the seventh chapter of the
Epistle to the Romans does not describe the experience of the advanced
saint, but the experience of the unregenerate man, or of the weak and
unestablished believer? I doubt it.
I admit fully that the point has been a disputed one for
eighteen centuries, in fact ever since the days of St. Paul. I admit fully
that eminent Christians like John and Charles Wesley, and Fletcher, a
hundred years ago, to say nothing of some able writers of our own time,
maintain firmly that St. Paul was not describing his own present experience
when he wrote this seventh chapter. I admit fully that many cannot see what
I and many others do see: viz, that Paul says nothing in this chapter which
does not precisely tally with the recorded experience of the most eminent
saints in every age, and that he does say several things which no
unregenerate man or weak believer would ever think of saying, and cannot
say. So, at any rate, it appears to me. But I will not enter into any
detailed discussion of the chapter. *
* Those who care to go into the subject will find it
fully discussed in the Commentaries of Willet, Elton, Chalmers, and Haldane,
and in Owen on "Indwelling Sin", and in the work of Stafford on the "Seventh
of Romans".
What I do lay stress upon is the broad fact that the best
commentators in every era of the Church have almost invariably applied the
seventh chapter of Romans to advanced believers. The commentators who do not
take this view have been, with a few bright exceptions, the Romanists, the
Socinians, and the Arminians. Against them is arrayed the judgment of almost
all the Reformers, almost all the Puritans, and the best modern Evangelical
divines. I shall be told, of course, that no man is infallible, that the
Reformers, Puritans, and modern divines I refer to may have been entirely
mistaken, and the Romanists, Socinians, and Arminians may have been quite
right! Our Lord has taught us, no doubt, to "call no man master." But while
I ask no man to call the Reformers and Puritans "masters," I do ask people
to read what they say on this subject, and answer their arguments, if they
can. This has not been done yet! To say, as some do, that they do not want
human "dogmas" and "doctrines," is no reply at all. The whole point at issue
is, "What is the meaning of a passage of Scripture? How is the Seventh
chapter of the Epistle to the Romans to be interpreted? What is the true
sense of its words?" At any rate let us remember that there is a great fact
which cannot be got over. On one side stand the opinions and interpretation
of Reformers and Puritans, and on the other the opinions and interpretations
of Romanists, Socinians, and Arminians. Let that be distinctly understood.
In the face of such a fact as this I must enter my
protest against the sneering, taunting, contemptuous language which has been
frequently used of late by some of the advocates of what I must call the
Arminian view of the Seventh of romans, in speaking of the opinions of their
opponents. To say the least, such language is unseemly, and only defeats its
own end. A cause which is defended by such language is deservedly
suspicious. Truth needs no such weapons. If we cannot agree with men, we
need not speak of their views with discourtesy and contempt. An opinion
which is backed and supported by such men as the best Reformers and Puritans
may not carry conviction to all minds in the nineteenth century, but at any
rate it would be well to speak of it with respect.
(5) In the fifth place, is it wise to use the language
which is often used in the present day about the doctrine of "Christ in us"?
I doubt it. Is not this doctrine often exalted to a position which it does
not occupy in Scripture? I am afraid that it is.
That the true believer is one with Christ and Christ in
him, no careful reader of the New Testament will think of denying for a
moment. There is, no doubt, a mystical union between Christ and the
believer. With Him we died, with Him we were buried, with Him we rose again,
with Him we sit in heavenly places. We have five plain texts where we are
distinctly taught that Christ is "in us." ( Romans 8:10; Galatians 2:20;
4:19; Ephesians 3:17; Colossians 3:11.) But we must be careful that we
understand what we mean by the expression. That "Christ dwells in our hearts
by faith," and carries on His inward work by His Spirit, is clear and plain.
But if we mean to say that beside, and over, and above this there is some
mysterious indwelling of Christ in a believer, we must be careful what we
are about. Unless we take care, we shall find ourselves ignoring the work of
the Holy Spirit. We shall be forgetting that in the Divine economy of man's
salvation election is the special work of God the Father--atonement,
mediation, and intercession, the special work of God the Son--and
sanctification, the special work of God the Holy Spirit. We shall be
forgetting that our Lord said, when He went away, that He would send us
another Comforter, who should "abide with us" forever, and, as it were, take
His Place. ( John 14:16.) In short, under the idea that we are honoring
Christ, we shall find that we are dishonoring His special and peculiar
gift--the Holy Spirit. Christ, no doubt, as God, is everywhere--in our
hearts, in heaven, in the place where two or three are meet together in His
name. But we really must remember that Christ, as our risen Head and High
Priest, is specially at God's right hand interceding for us until He comes
the second time: and that Christ carries on His work in the hearts of His
people by the special work of His Spirit, whom He promised to send when He
left the world. ( John 15:26.) A comparison of the ninth and tenth verses of
the eighth chapter of Romans seems to me to show this plainly. It convinces
me that "Christ in us" means Christ in us "by His Spirit." Above all, the
words of St. John are most distinct and express: "Hereby we know that He
abides in us by the Spirit which He has given us." ( 1 John 3:24.)
In saying all this, I hope no one will misunderstand me.
I do not say that the expression, "Christ in us" is unscriptural. But I do
say that I see great danger of giving extravagant and unscriptural
importance to the idea contained in the expression; and I do fear that many
use it now-a-days without exactly knowing what they mean, and unwittingly,
perhaps, dishonor the mighty work of the Holy Spirit. If any reader think
that I am needlessly scrupulous about the point, I recommend to their notice
a curious book by Samuel Rutherford (author of the well-known letters),
called "The Spiritual Antichrist." They will see there that two centuries
ago the wildest heresies arose out of an extravagant teaching of this very
doctrine of the "indwelling of Christ" in believers. They will find that
Saltmarsh, and Dell, and Towne, and other false teachers, against whom good
Samuel Rutherford contended, began with strange notions of "Christ in us,"
and then proceeded to build on the doctrine antinomianism, and fanaticism of
the worst description and vilest tendency. They maintained that the
separate, personal life of the believer was so completely gone, that it was
Christ living in him who repented, and believed, and acted! The root of this
huge error was a forced and unscriptural interpretation of such texts as "I
live: yet not I, but Christ lives in me." ( Galatians 2:20.) And the natural
result of it was that many of the unhappy followers of this school came to
the comfortable conclusion that believers were not responsible, whatever
they might do! Believers, forsooth, were dead and buried; and only Christ
lived in them, and undertook everything for them! The ultimate consequence
was, that some thought they might sit still in a carnal security, their
personal accountableness being entirely gone, and might commit any kind of
sin without fear! Let us never forget that truth, distorted and exaggerated,
can become the mother of the most dangerous heresies. When we speak of
"Christ being in us," let us take care to explain what we mean. I fear some
neglect this in the present day.
(6) In the sixth place, is it wise to draw such a deep,
wide, and distinct line of separation between conversion and consecration,
or the higher life, so called, as many do draw in the present day? Is this
according to the proportion of God's Word? I doubt it.
There is, unquestionably, nothing new in this teaching.
It is well known that Romish writers often maintain that the Church is
divided into three classes--sinners, penitents, and saints. The modern
teachers of this day who tell us that professing Christians are of three
sorts--the unconverted, the converted, and the partakers of the "higher
life" of complete consecration--appear to me to occupy very much the same
ground! But whether the idea be old or new, Romish or English, I am utterly
unable to see that it has any warrant of Scripture. The Word of God always
speaks of the living and the dead in sin--the believer and the
unbeliever--the converted and the unconverted--the travelers in the narrow
way and the travelers in the broad--the wise and the foolish--the children
of God and the children of the devil. Within each of these two great classes
there are, doubtless, various measures of sin and grace; but it only the
difference between the higher and lower end of an inclined plane. Between
these two great classes there is an enormous gulf; they are as distinct as
life and death, light and darkness, heaven and hell. But of a division into
three classes the Word of God says nothing at all! I question the wisdom of
making new-fangled divisions which the Bible has not made, and I thoroughly
dislike the notion of a second conversion.
That there is a vast difference between one degree of
grace and another--that spiritual life admits of growth, and that believers
should be continually urged on every account to grow in grace--all this I
fully concede. But the theory of a sudden, mysterious transition of a
believer into a state of blessedness and entire consecration, at one mighty
bound, I cannot receive. It appears to me to be a man made invention; and I
do not see a single plain text to prove it in Scripture. Gradual growth in
grace, growth in knowledge, growth in faith, growth in love, growth in
holiness, growth in humility, growth in spiritual-mindedness--all this I see
clearly taught and urged in Scripture, and clearly exemplified in the lives
of many of God's saints. But sudden, instantaneous leaps from conversion to
consecration I fail to see in the Bible. I doubt, indeed, whether we have
any warrant for saying that a man can possibly be converted without being
consecrated to God! More consecrated he doubtless can be, and will be as his
grace increases; but if he was not consecrated to God in the very day that
he was converted and born again, I do not know what conversion means. Are
not men in danger of undervaluing and underrating the immense blessedness of
conversion? Are they not, when they urge on believers the "higher life" as a
second conversion, underrating the length, and breadth, and depth, and
height, of that great first change which Scripture calls the new birth, the
new creation, the spiritual resurrection? I may be mistaken. But I have
sometimes thought, while reading the strong language used by many about
"consecration," in the last few years, that those who use it must have had
previously a singularly low and inadequate view of "conversion," if indeed
they knew anything about conversion at all. In short, I have almost
suspected that when they were consecrated, they were in reality converted
for the first time!
I frankly confess I prefer the old paths. I think it
wiser and safer to press on all converted people the possibility of
continual growth in grace, and the absolute necessity of going forward,
increasing more and more, and in every year dedicating and consecrating
themselves more, in spirit, soul, and body to Christ. By all means let us
teach that there is more holiness to be attained, and more of heaven to be
enjoyed upon earth then most believers now experience. But I decline to tell
any converted man that he needs a second conversion, and that he may some
day or other pass by one enormous step into a state of entire consecration.
I decline to teach it, because I think the tendency of the doctrine is
thoroughly mischievous, depressing the humble-minded and meek, and puffing
up the shallow, the ignorant, and the self-conceited, to a most dangerous
extent.
(7) In the seventh and last place, is it wise to teach
believers that they ought not to think so much of fighting and struggling
against sin, but ought rather to "yield themselves to God," and be passive
in the hands of Christ? Is this according to the proportion of God's Word? I
doubt it.
It is a simple fact that the expression "yield
yourselves" is only to be found in one place in the New Testament, as a duty
urged upon believers. That place is in the sixth chapter of Romans, and
there within six verses the expression occurs five times. (See Romans
6:13-19.) But even there the word will not bear the sense of "placing
ourselves passively in the hands of another." Any Greek student can tell us
that the sense is rather that of actively "presenting" ourselves for use,
employment, and service. (See Romans 12:1.) The expression therefore stands
alone. But, on the other hand, it would not be difficult to point out at
least twenty-five or thirty distinct passages in the Epistles where
believers are plainly taught to use active personal exertion, and are
addressed as responsible for doing energetically what Christ would have them
do, and are not told to "yield themselves" up as passive agents and sit
still, but to arise and work. A holy violence, a conflict, a warfare, a
fight, a soldier's life, a wrestling, are spoken of as characteristic of the
true Christian. The account of "the armor of God" in the sixth chapter of
Ephesians, one might think, settles the question
--Again it would be easy to show that the doctrine of
sanctification without personal exertion, by simply "yielding ourselves to
God," is precisely the doctrine of the antinomian fanatics in the
seventeenth century (to whom I have referred already, described in
Rutherford's Spiritual Antichrist), and that the tendency of it is evil in
the extreme.--Again, it would be easy to show that the doctrine is utterly
subversive of the whole teaching of such tried and approved books as
Pilgrim's Progress, and that if we receive it we cannot do better then put
Bunyan's old book in the fire! If Christian in Pilgrim's Progress simply
yielded himself to God, and never fought, or struggled, or wrestled, I have
read the famous allegory in vain. But the plain truth is, that men will
persist in confounding two things that differ--that is, justification and
sanctification. In justification the word to address to man is believe--only
believe; in sanctification the word must be "watch, pray, and fight." What
God has divided let us not mingle and confuse.
I leave the subject of my introduction here, and hasten
to a conclusion. I confess that I lay down my pen with feelings of sorrow
and anxiety. There is much in the attitude of professing Christians in this
day which fills me with concern, and makes me full fear for the future.
There is an amazing ignorance of Scriptures among many,
and a consequent want of established, solid religion. In no other way can I
account for the ease with which people are, like children, "tossed to and
fro, and carried about by every wind of doctrine." ( Ephesians 4:14.) There
is an Athenian love of novelty abroad, and a morbid distaste for anything
old and regular, and in the beaten path of our forefathers. Thousands will
crowd to hear a new voice and a new doctrine, without considering for a
moment whether what they hear is true.--There is an incessant craving after
any teaching which is sensational, and exciting, and rousing to the
feelings.--There is an unhealthy appetite for a sort of spasmodic and
hysterical Christianity. The religious life of many is little better then
spiritual dram-drinking, and the "meek and quiet spirit" which St. Peter
commends is clean forgotten. ( 1 Peter 3:4.) Crowds, and crying, and hot
rooms, and high-flown singing, and an incessant rousing of the emotions, are
the only things which many care for.--Inability to distinguish differences
in doctrine is spreading far and wide, and so long as the preacher is
"clever" and "earnest," hundreds seem to think it must be all right, and
call you dreadfully "narrow and uncharitable" if you hint that he is
unsound! Moody and Hawies, Dean Stanley and Canon Liddon, Mackonochie and
Pearsill Smith, all seem to be alike in the eyes of such people. All this is
sad, very sad. But if, in addition to this, the true-hearted advocates of
increased holiness are going to fall out by the way and misunderstand one
another, it will be sadder still. We shall indeed be in evil plight.
For myself, I am aware that I am no longer a young
minister. My mind perhaps stiffens, and I cannot easily receive any new
doctrine. "The old is better." I suppose I belong to the old school of
Evangelical theology, and I am therefore content with such teachings about
sanctification as I find in the Life of Faith of Sibbes and Manton, and in
The Life, Walk, and Triumph of Faith of William Romaine. But I must express
a hope that my younger brethren who have taken up new views of holiness will
beware of multiplying causeless divisions. Do they think that a higher
standard of Christian is needed in the present day? So do I.--Do they think
that clearer, stronger, fuller teaching about holiness is needed? So do
I.--Do they think that Christ ought to be more exalted as the root and
author of sanctification as well as justification? So do I.--Do they think
that believers should be urged more and more to live by faith? So do I.--Do
they think that a very close walk with God should be more pressed on
believers as the secret of happiness and usefulness? So do I.--In all these
things we agree. But if they want to go further, then I ask them to take
care where they tread, and to explain very clearly and distinctly what they
mean.
Finally, I must deprecate, and I do it in love, the use
of uncouth and new-fangled terms and phrases in teaching sanctification. I
plead that a movement in favor of holiness cannot be advanced by new-coined
phraseology, or by disproportioned and one-sided statements--or by
overstraining and isolating particular texts--or by exalting one truth at
the expense of another--or by allegorizing and accommodating texts, and
squeezing out of them meanings which the Holy Spirit never put in them--or
by speaking contemptuously and bitterly of those who do not entirely see
things with our eyes, and do not work exactly in our ways. These things do
not make for peace: they rather repel many and keep them at a distance. The
cause of true sanctification is not helped, but hindered, by such weapons as
these. A movement in aid of holiness which produces strife and dispute among
God's children is somewhat suspicious. For Christ's sake, and in the name of
truth and charity, let us endeavor to follow after peace as well as
holiness. "What God has joined together let not man put asunder."
It is my heart's desire, and prayer to God daily, that
personal holiness may increase greatly among professing Christians in
England. But I trust that all who endeavor to promote it will adhere closely
to the proportion of Scripture, will carefully distinguish things that
differ, and will separate "the precious from the vile." ( Jeremiah 15:19.)
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