To minister peace and comfort to those who, though truly converted,
have not laid hold of a full Christ, and who, as a consequence, are
not enjoying the liberty of the Gospel, is the object we have in view
in considering the important and deeply-interesting subject of sanctification.
We believe that very many of those whose spiritual welfare we desire
to promote suffer materially from defective or erroneous ideas on
this vital question. Indeed, in some cases, the doctrine of sanctification
is so entirely misapprehended as to interfere with the faith of the
believer's perfect justification and acceptance before God.
For example, we have frequently heard persons speak of sanctification
as a progressive work, in virtue of which our old nature is to be
made gradually better; and, moreover, that until this process has
reached its climax, until fallen and corrupt humanity has become completely
sanctified, we are not fit for heaven.
Now, so far as this view of the question is concerned, we have only
to say that both Scripture and the truthful experience of all believers
are entirely against it. The Word of God never once teaches us that
the Holy Spirit has for His object the improvement, either gradual
or otherwise, of our old nature -- that nature which we inherit, by
natural birth, from fallen Adam. The inspired apostle expressly declares
that, "The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit
of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them,
because they are spiritually discerned" (1 Cor 2:14). This one
passage is clear and conclusive on the point. If "the natural
man" can neither "receive" nor "know" "the
things of the Spirit of God," then how can that "natural
man" be sanctified by the Holy Ghost? Is it not plain that to
speak of "sanctification of our nature" is opposed to the
direct teaching of 1 Cor 2:14?
Other passages might be adduced to prove that the design of the Spirit's
operations is not to improve or sanctify the flesh, but there is no
need to multiply quotations. An utterly ruined thing can never be
sanctified. Do what you will with it, it is ruined; and, most assuredly,
the Holy Ghost did not come down to sanctify a ruin, but to lead the
ruined one to Jesus. So far from any attempt to sanctify the flesh,
we read that "The flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit
against the flesh: and these are contrary the one to the other"
(Gal 5:17). Could the Holy Ghost be represented as carrying on a warfare
with that which He is gradually improving and sanctifying? Would not
the conflict cease so soon as the process of improvement had reached
its climax? But does the believer's conflict ever cease so long as
he is in the body?
This leads us to the second objection, to the erroneous theory of
the progressive sanctification of our nature, namely, the objection
drawn from the truthful experience of all believers. Is the reader
a true believer? If so, has he found any improvement in his old nature?
Is it a single whit better now than it was when he first started on
his Christian course? He may, and should through grace, be able to
subdue it more thoroughly; but it is nothing better. If it be not
mortified, it is just as ready to spring up and show itself in all
its vileness as ever. "The flesh" in a believer is in no
wise better than "the flesh" in an unbeliever. And if the
Christian does not bear in mind that self must be judged, he will
soon learn by bitter experience that his old nature is as bad as ever;
and, moreover, that it will be the very same to the end.
It is difficult to conceive how anyone who is led to expect a gradual
improvement of his nature, can enjoy an hour's peace, inasmuch as
he cannot but see, if he only looks at himself in the light of God's
Holy Word, his old self -- the flesh -- is the very same as when he
walked in the moral darkness of his unconverted state. His own condition
and character are, indeed, greatly changed by the possession of a
new, yea, a "divine nature" (2 Pet 1:4), and by the indwelling
of the Holy Ghost, to give effect to its desires; but the moment the
old nature is at work, he finds it as opposed to God as ever. We doubt
not but that very much of the gloom and despondency, of which so many
complain, may be justly traced to their misapprehension of this important
point of sanctification. They are looking for what they can never
find. They are seeking for a ground of peace in a sanctified nature
instead of in a perfect sacrifice -- in a progressive work of holiness
instead of in a finished work of atonement. They deem it presumptuous
to believe that their sins are forgiven until their evil nature is
completely sanctified; and, seeing that this end is not reached, they
have no settled assurance of pardon, and are therefore miserable.
In a word, they are seeking for a "foundation" totally different
from that which Jehovah says He has laid, and, therefore, they have
no certainty whatever. The only thing that ever seems to give them
a ray of comfort is some apparently successful effort in the
struggle for personal sanctity. If they have had a good day -- if
they are favored with a season of comfortable communion -- if they
happen to enjoy a peaceful, devotional frame, they are ready to cry
out, "Thou hast made my mountain to stand strong; I shall never
be moved" (Psalm 30).
But, ah! These things furnish a sorry foundation for the soul's peace.
They are not Christ; and until we see that our standing before God
is in Christ, there cannot be settled peace. The soul that
has really got hold of Christ is desirous indeed of holiness; but
if intelligent of what Christ is to him, he has done with all thoughts
about sanctified nature. He has found his all in Christ, and the paramount
desire of his heart is to grow into His likeness. This is true, practical
sanctification.
It frequently happens that persons, in speaking of sanctification,
mean a right thing, although they do not express themselves according
to the teaching of Holy Scripture. There are many also, who see one
side of the truth as to sanctification, but not the other; and, although
we should be sorry to make any one an offender for a word, yet it
is always most desirable, in speaking of any point of truth, and especially
of so vital a point as that of sanctification, to speak according
to the divine integrity of the Word. We shall, therefore, proceed
to quote for our readers a few of the leading passages from the New
Testament in which this doctrine is unfolded. These passages will
teach us two things, namely, what sanctification is, and how it
is effected.
The first passage to which we would call attention is 1 Cor 1:30:
"But of Him are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us
wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption."
Here we learn that Christ "is made unto us" all these things.
God has given us, in Christ, a precious casket, and when we open that
casket with the key of faith, the first gem that glitters in our view,
in this wisdom of God, is "righteousness"; then, "sanctification";
and lastly, "redemption." We have them all in Christ.
As we get one so we get all. And how do we get one and all? By
faith. But why does the apostle name redemption last? Because it
takes in the final deliverance of the body of the believer from
under the power of mortality, when the voice of the archangel and
the trump of God shall either raise it from the tomb, or change it,
in the twinkling of an eye. Will this act be progressive? Clearly
not; it will be done "in the twinkling of an eye."
The body is in one state now, and "in a moment" it will
be in another. In the brief point of time expressed by the rapid movement
of the eyelash, will the body pass from corruption to incorruption;
from dishonor to glory; from weakness to power. What a change! It
will be immediate, complete, eternal.
But what are we to learn from the fact that "sanctification"
is placed in the group with "redemption"? We learn that
what redemption will be to the body, that sanctification is
now to the soul. In a word, sanctification, in the sense in which
it is here used, is immediate, and complete, a divine work.
The one is no more progressive than the other. The one is as immediate
as the other. The one is as complete and as independent of man as
the other. No doubt, when the body shall have undergone the glorious
change, there will be heights of glory to be trodden, depths of glory
to be penetrated, wide fields of glory to be explored. All these things
shall occupy us throughout eternity. But, then, the work which is
to fit us for such scenes will be done in a moment. So also is it,
in reference to sanctification. The practical results of it
will be continually developing themselves; but the thing itself,
as spoken of in this passage, is done in a moment.
What an immense relief it would be to thousands of earnest,
anxious, struggling souls to get a proper hold of Christ as their
sanctification! How many are vainly endeavoring to work out a sanctification
for themselves! They have come to Christ for righteousness after many
fruitless efforts to get a righteousness of their own; but they are
seeking after sanctification in a different way altogether. They have
gotten "righteousness without works," but they imagine they
must get sanctification with works. They have gotten righteousness
by faith, but they imagine they must get sanctification by effort.
They do not see that we get sanctification in precisely the same way
as we get righteousness, inasmuch as Christ "is made unto us"
the one as well as the other. Do we get Christ by effort? No; by faith.
It is "to him that worketh not" (Rom 4:5). This applies
to all that we get in Christ. We have no warrant whatever to single
out from 1 Cor 1:30 the matter of "sanctification" and place
it upon a different footing from all the other blessings which it
enfolds. We have neither wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, nor
redemption in ourselves; nor can we procure them by aught that we
can do; but God has made Christ to be unto us all these things. In
giving us Christ, He gave us all that is in Christ. The fullness of
Christ is ours, and Christ is the fullness of God.
Again, in Acts 26:18, the converted Gentiles are spoken of as "receiving
forgiveness of sins and an inheritance among them which are sanctified
by faith." Here, faith is the instrument by which we are said
to be sanctified, because it connects us with Christ. The very moment
the sinner believes on the Lord Jesus Christ he becomes linked to
Him. He is made one with Him, complete in Him, accepted in Him. This
is true sanctification and justification. It is not a process. It
is not a gradual work. It is not progressive. The Word is very explicit.
It says, "them which are sanctified by faith which
is in me." It does not say, "which shall be sanctified,"
or, "which are being sanctified." If such were the doctrine
it would have been so stated.
No doubt, the believer grows in the knowledge of this sanctification,
in his sense of its power and value, its practical influence and results,
the experience and enjoyment of it. As "the truth" pours
its divine light upon his soul, he enters into a more profound apprehension
of what is involved in being "set apart" for Christ, in
the midst of this evil world. All this is blessedly true; but the
more its truth is seen, the more clearly we shall understand that
sanctification is not merely a progressive work, wrought in us by
the Holy Spirit, but that it is one result of our being linked to
Christ, by faith whereby we become partakers of all that He is. This
is an immediate, a complete, and an eternal work. "Whatsoever
God doeth, it shall be for ever: nothing can be put to it, nor any
thing taken from it" (Eccles 3:14). Whether He justifies or sanctifies,
"it shall be forever." The stamp of eternity is fixed upon
every work of God's hand: "nothing can be put to it," and,
blessed be His name, "nothing can be taken from it."
There are passages which present the subject in another aspect, --
the practical result in the believer of his sanctification
in Christ, and which may require fuller consideration hereafter. In
1 Thess 5:23, the apostle prays for the saints whom he addresses:
"And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray God
your whole spiril and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the
coming of our Lord Jesus Christ." Here, the Word is applied to
a sanctification admitting of degrees. The Thessalonians had, along
with all believers, a perfect sanctification in Christ; but as to
the practical enjoyment and display of this, it was only accomplished
in part, and the apostle prays that they may be wholly sanctified.
In this passage, it is worthy of notice, that nothing is said of
"the flesh." Our fallen, corrupt nature is always treated
as a hopelessly ruined thing. It has been weighed in the balance and
found wanting. It has been measured by a divine rule and found short.
It has been tried by a perfect plummet and proved crooked. God has
set it aside. Its "end has come before him." He has condemned
it and put it to death (Rom 8:3). Our old man is crucified, dead,
and buried (Rom 6:8). Are we, then, to imagine for a moment, that
God the Holy Ghost came down from heaven for the purpose of exhuming
a condemned, crucified, and buried thing, so that He might sanctify
it? The idea has only to be named, to be abandoned forever by every
one who bows to the authority of Scripture. The more closely we study
the Law, the Prophets, the Psalms, and the entire New Testament, the
more closely we shall see that the flesh is wholly unmendable. It
is absolutely good for nothing. The Spirit does not sanctify it,
but He enables the believer to mortify it. We are told to "put
off the old man." This precept would never have been delivered
to us if the object of the Holy Ghost were the sanctification of that
"old man."
We trust that no one will accuse us of entertaining a desire to lower
the standard of personal holiness, or to weaken the soul's earnest
aspirations after a growth in that purity for which every true believer
must ardently long. God forbid! If there is one thing above another
which we desire to promote in ourselves and others, it is a full personal
purity -- a godly practical sanctity -- a wholehearted separation
to God --from all evil, -- in every shape and form. For this we long,
for this we pray, in this we desire to grow daily.
But then we are fully convinced that a superstructure of true, practical
holiness can never be erected on a legal basis; and hence it is that
we press I Cor 1:30, upon the attention of our readers. It is to be
feared that many who have, in some measure, abandoned the legal ground,
in the matter of "righteousness," are yet lingering thereon
for "sanctification." We believe this to be the mistake
of thousands, and we are most anxious to see it corrected. The passage
before us would, if simply received into the heart by faith, entirely
correct this serious mistake.
All intelligent Christians are agreed as to the fundamental truth
of "Righteousness without works." All freely and fully admit
that we cannot, by any efforts of our own, work out a righteousness
for ourselves before God. But it is not just so clearly seen that
righteousness and sanctification are put upon precisely the same ground
in the Word of God. We can no more work out a sanctification than
we can work out a righteousness. We may try it, but we shall, sooner
or later, find out that it is utterly vain. We may vow and resolve;
we may labor and struggle; we may cherish the fond hope of doing better
tomorrow than we have done today; but, in the end, we must be constrained
to see, and feel, and own, that as regards the matter of sanctification,
we are as completely "without strength" as we have already
proved ourselves to be in the matter of righteousness.
And, oh! What sweet relief to the suffering one who has been seeking
for satisfaction or rest in his own holiness to find, after years
of unsuccessful struggle, that the very thing he longs for is treasured
up in Christ for him -- his own this moment, even a complete sanctification
to be enjoyed by faith! Such a one may have been battling with
his habits, his lusts, his tempers, his passions; he has been making
the most laborious efforts to subdue his flesh and grow in inward
holiness. But alas, he has failed! He finds, to his deep sorrow, that
he is not holy, and he reads that "without holiness no
man shall see the Lord" (Heb 12:14). Not, observe, without a
certain measure, or attainment in holiness, but without the thing
itself; which every Christian has, from the moment he believes, whether
he knows it or not. Perfect sanctification is as fully included in
the word "salvation" as is "righteousness," or
"redemption." He did not get Christ by effort, but by faith;
and when he laid hold on Christ he received all that is in Christ.
Hence, it is by abiding in Christ he finds power for the subjugation
of his lusts, passions, tempers, habits, circumstances, and influences.
He must look to Jesus for all.
All this is simple to faith. The believer's standing is in Christ,
and if in Christ for one thing, he is in Christ for all. I am not
in Christ for righteousness, and out of Christ for sanctification.
If I am a debtor to Christ for righteousness, I am equally a debtor
to Him for sanctification. I am not a debtor to legalism for either
the one or the other. I get both by grace, through faith, and all
in Christ. Yes, all -- all in Christ. The moment the sinner comes
to Christ, and believes on Him, he is taken completely off the old
ground of nature; he loses his old legal standing and all its belongings,
and is looked at as in Christ. He is no longer "in the flesh"
but "in the Spirit" (Rom 8:9). God only sees him in Christ,
and as Christ. He becomes one with Christ forever. "As he is,
so are we in this world" (1 John 4). Such is the absolute standing,
the settled and eternal position, of the very feeblest babe in the
family of God. There is but one standing for every child of God, every
member of Christ. Their knowledge, experience, power, gift, and intelligence,
may vary; but their standing is one. Whatever of righteousness or
sanctification they possess, they owe it all to their being in Christ;
consequently, if they have not gotten a perfect sanctification, neither
have they gotten a perfect righteousness. But 1 Cor 1:30 distinctly
teaches that Christ "is made" both the one and the
other to all believers. It does not say that we have righteousness
and "a measure of sanctification." We have just as
much scriptural authority for putting the word "measure"
before righteousness as before sanctification. The Spirit of God does
not put it before either. Both are perfect, and we have both in Christ.
God never does anything by halves. There is no such thing as a half
justification. Neither is there such a thing as a half sanctification.
The idea of a member of the family of God, or of the body of Christ,
wholly justified, but only half sanctified, is at once opposed to
Scripture, and revolting to all sensibilities of the divine nature.
It is not improbable that very much of the misapprehension which
prevails in reference to sanctification is traceable to the habit
of confounding two things which differ very materially, namely our
standing and our walk, or position and condition. The
believer's standing is perfect because it is the gift of God in Christ.
His walk, alas, may be very imperfect, fluctuating, and marked with
personal infirmity. Whilst his position is absolute and unalterable,
his practical condition may exhibit manifold imperfections, inasmuch
as he is still in the body and surrounded by various hostile influences
which affect his moral condition from day to day. If, then, his standing
be measured by his walk, his position by his condition, what he is
in God's view by what he is in man's, the result must be false. If
I reason from what I am in myself, instead of from what I am in Christ,
I must, of necessity, arrive at a wrong conclusion.
We should look carefully to this. We are very much disposed to reason
upward from ourselves to God, instead of downward from God to us.
We should bear in mind that
"Far as heaven's resplendent orbs
Beyond earth's spot extend,
As far My thoughts, as far My ways,
Your ways and thoughts transcend."
God looks on His people, and acts toward them, too, according to
their standing in Christ. He has given them this standing. He has
made them what they are. They are His workmanship. Hence, therefore,
to speak of them as half justified would be a dishonor cast upon God;
and to speak of them as half sanctified would be just the same.
This train of thought conducts us to another weighty proof drawn
from the authoritative and conclusive page of inspiration, namely,
1 Cor 6:11. In the verses preceding, the apostle draws a fearful picture
of fallen humanity, and he plainly tells the Corinthian saints that
they had been just like that. "Such were some of you." This
is plain dealing. There are no flattering words -- no daubing with
untempered mortar -- no keeping back the full truth as to nature's
total and irretrievable ruin. "Such were some of you: but ye
are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified,
in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God."
What a striking contrast between the two sides of the apostle's "but"!
On the one side, we have all the moral degradation of man's condition;
and, on the other side, we have all the absolute perfectness of the
believer's standing before God. This, truly, is a marvelous contrast;
and be it remembered that the soul passes in a moment, from one side
to the other of this "but." "Such were some of you:
but ye are" now something quite different. The moment
they received Paul's Gospel, they were "washed, sanctified, and
justified." They were fit for heaven; and, had they not been
so, it would have been a slur upon the divine workmanship.
"'Clean every whit,' thou saidst it, Lord;
Shall one suspicion lurk?
Thine, surely, is a faithful word,
And Thine a finished work."
This is divinely true. The most inexperienced believer is "clean
every whit," not as a matter of attainment, but as the necessary
result of being in Christ. He will, no doubt, grow in the knowledge
and experience of what sanctification really is. He will enter into
its practical power; its moral effects upon his habits, thoughts,
feelings, affections, and associations: in a word, he will understand
and exhibit the mighty influence of divine sanctification upon his
entire course, conduct, and character. But, then, he was as completely
sanctified, in God's view, the moment he became linked to Christ by
faith, as he will be when he comes to bask in the sunlight of the
divine presence, and reflect back the concentrated beams of glory
emanating from the throne of God and of the Lamb. He is in Christ
now; and he will be in Christ then. His sphere and his circumstances
will differ. His feet shall stand upon the golden pavement of the
upper sanctuary, instead of standing upon the arid sand of the desert.
He will be in a body of glory, instead of a body of humiliation; but
as to his standing, his acceptance, his completeness, his justification,
and sanctification, all was settled the moment he believed on the
name of the only begotten Son of God -- as settled as ever it will
be, because as settled as God could make it. All this seems to flow
as a necessary and unanswerable inference from I Cor 6:11.
It is of the utmost importance to apprehend, with clearness, the
distinction between a truth and the practical application and result
of a truth. This distinction is ever maintained in the Word of God.
"Ye are sanctified." Here is the absolute truth as
to the believer, as viewed in Christ. The practical application of
it, and its results in the believer, we find in such passages as these.
"Christ loved the church, and gave Himself for it; that He might
sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word"
(Eph 5:25-26). And "the very God of peace sanctify you wholly"
(1 Thess 5:23).
But how is this application made, and this result reached? By the
Holy Ghost, through the written Word. Hence we read, "Sanctify
them through thy truth" (John 17). And again, "God hath
from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification
of the Spirit and belief of the truth" (2 Thess 2:13). So also,
in Peter, "Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father,
through sanctification of the Spirit" (1 Pet 1:2). The Holy Ghost
carries on the believer's practical sanctification on the ground of
Christ's accomplished work; and the mode in which He does so is by
applying to the heart and conscience the truth as it is in Jesus.
He unfolds the truth as to our perfect standing before God in Christ,
and, by energizing the new man in us, He enables us to put away everything
incompatible with that perfect standing. A man who is "washed,
sanctified, and justified," ought not to indulge in any unhallowed
temper, lust, or passion. He is separated to God and should "cleanse
himself from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit." It is his
holy and happy privilege to breathe after the very loftiest heights
of personal sanctity. His heart and his habits should be brought and
held under the power of that grand truth that he is perfectly "washed,
sanctified, and justified."
This is true practical sanctification. It is not any attempt at the
improvement of our old nature. It is not a vain effort to reconstruct
an irretrievable ruin. No; it is simply the Holy Ghost, by the powerful
application of "the truth," enabling the new man to live,
and move, and have his being in that sphere to which he belongs. Here
there will undoubtedly be progress. There will be growth in the moral
power of this precious truth -- growth in spiritual ability to subdue
and keep under all that pertains to nature -- a growing power of separation
from the evil around us -- a growing meetness for that heaven to which
we belong, and toward which we are journeying -- a growing capacity
for the enjoyment of its holy exercises. All this there will be, through
the gracious ministry of the Holy Ghost, who uses the Word of God
to unfold to our souls the truth as to our standing in Christ, and
as to the walk which comports with such standing. But let it
be clearly understood that the work of the Holy Ghost in practical
sanctification, day by day, is founded upon the fact that believers
"are sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus
Christ once" (Heb 10:10). The object of the Holy Ghost is to
lead us into the knowledge, the experience, and the practical exhibition
of that which was true of us in Christ the very moment we believed.
As regards this, there is progress; but our standing in Christ is
eternally complete.
"Sanctify them through Thy truth; Thy Word is truth" (John
17:17). And again, "The very God of peace sanctify you wholly"
(1 Thess 5:23). In these passages, we have the grand practical side
of this question. Here we see sanctification presented, not merely
as something absolutely and eternally true of us in Christ, but also
as wrought out in us, daily and hourly, by the Holy Ghost through
the Word. Looked at from this point of view, sanctification is obviously
a progressive thing. I should be more advanced in personal holiness
next year than I was in this. I should, through grace, be advancing,
day by day, in practical holiness. But what, let me ask, is this?
What, but the working out in me of that which was true of me in Christ,
the very moment I believed? The basis on which the Holy Ghost carries
on the subjective work in the believer is the objective
truth of his eternal completeness in Christ.
Again, "Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which
no man shall see the Lord" (Heb 12:14). Here is holiness presented
as a thing to be "followed after" -- to be attained by earnest
pursuit -- a thing which every true believer will long to cultivate.
May the Lord lead us into the power of these things. May they not
dwell as doctrines and dogmas in the region of our intellect, but
enter into and abide in the heart, as sacred and powerfully influential
realities! May we know the sanctifying power of the truth (John 17:17);
the sanctifying power of faith (Acts 26:18); the sanctifying power
of the name of Jesus (1 Cor 1:30; 6:11); the sanctifying of the Holy
Ghost (1 Pet 1:2); the sanctifying grace of the Father (Jude 1).
And, now, unto the Father and unto the Son and unto the Holy Ghost,
be honor and glory, might, majesty, and dominion, world without end.
Amen.
Originally published in 1898 in Miscellaneous Writings
by C.H. Mackintosh, vol. 1. |