Chapter 15
THE REASON FOR OUR HOPE
"But sanctify in your hearts
Christ as Lord: being ready always to give answer to every
man that asketh you a reason concerning the hope that is in you, yet
with meekness and fear" (1
Peter 3:15).
The commentator Godbey asks:
"How shall we sanctify Christ in our hearts?" He answers:
"The Christian has Christ and depravity in his heart. Christ rules or
He would not stay: But He has
a rival. Cast out all else, and let Christ rule alone."
Is such a state of heart
possible? Can a poor sinner, down in the ditch of sin, abhorred by
others and abhorring himself, climb to such an extraordinary height of
grace in a few days? Can
one who is an alien by birth and a sinner by choice, condemned to God's
wrath, and fit fuel for
eternal burnings, come into such a sublime relationship to God almost
immediately? Can his sins
be blotted out and pardoned for ever, and Christ be enthroned within,
so that he shall be indwelt
and possessed by the Spirit of God, and his heart he pure and his life
holy?
Exactly this and nothing
less than this is our sublime hope. It is beyond philosophy. It
surpasses reason. It beggars description. But it is blessedly true. The
star of hope shines through
all the clouds of past sins, and all the darkness of ungodly years. We
dare to believe that although
we were born with depravity, and have committed sins innumerable, yet,
through the grace of an
atoning Savior, our sins have been forgiven, our hearts have been
cleansed, and by growth in grace
we are now being fitted for glory, in God's own time, to be received
into heaven to dwell with
Him forever.
What reason have we for such
a daring hope?
I. Because God Has Provided For The Pardon And Regeneration Of Sinners
He held out a marvelous
encouragement to those who would turn their back upon sin and
look to Him for mercy. "Let the wicked forsake his way, and the
unrighteous man his thoughts, and
let him return unto the Lord and He will have mercy upon him, and to
our God, for He will
abundantly pardon" (Is. 4:7). Again He looked in compassion upon us, as
we were staggering
along under the crushing load of sin, and said, "Come unto Me, all ye
that labour and are heavy
laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn of me,
for I am meek and lowly in
heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls." We still were dull of
hearing and went on downward,
as if intoxicated with sin and enamored with death. Again in loving
pity for the sure doom that
awaited us, He said: "God so loved the world that He gave His only
begotten Son, that whosoever
believeth in Him should not perish but have everlasting life." "And it
shall come to pass, that
whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved."
There came a day, how well
we remember it, when we grew weary of sin. We longed for
rest from the heavy burden. We took God at His word, and helplessly
threw ourselves upon His
mercy. And, to the praise of His name we witness, we were not
disappointed. He buried our sins
in the depths of the sea of His infinite love, and we saw the burden no
more.
II. We Cherish This Because God Provided Sanctification For All His
Children, And Made It
Possible For Us To Be Cleansed And Holy
Someone exclaims: "Show it.
We want the proof." Very well, here it is; enough to satisfy
the most incredulous:
(1) God PLANNED for our
sanctification back in eternity. "He chose us in him before the
foundation of the world that we should BE HOLY and without blemish
before him in love" (Eph
1:4). And as if this single assurance were not enough, He tells us
again: "God chose you from the
beginning unto salvation in SANCTIFICATION of the Spirit." Now, if,
back in the ages, before the
rock-foundations of the earth were laid a hundred million years ago, or
the sons of God shouted for
joy over a new-born world, God foresaw the sin and fall of our race,
and all its dire consequences
of woe, and provided for our pardon and sanctification, it is not
unreasonable to expect this plan of
God to be realized in time. We are certainly justified in coming to the
throne of grace, and
pleading for the fulfillment of the plan. .
(2) We are informed that it
is GOD'S WILL that we should be sanctified. "For this is the
will of God, even your SANCTIFICATION (1 Thess. 4:3). In other words,
He planned it ages ago;
and this gracious purpose is still the same. What an encouragement to
us to seek the great blessing!
Does it never occur to you
how we mock God if we do not do it? He taught us to pray,
"Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name, thy kingdom come;
THY WILL BE DONE,
in earth as it is in heaven." . Stop there, please. Now ask God what is
His will concerning His
children. He will reply quickly, "This is the will of God, even your
sanctification." What shall we
do about it? Shall we seek the blessing? Or shall we go on mocking God
by repeating a prayer that
we do not even intend shall be answered? God, keep us back from such
hypocrisy.
(3) Sanctification is our
INHERITANCE.
St. Paul said to an
audience, "I commend you to God, and the word of His grace, which is
able to build you . up, and to give you an inheritance among all them
that are sanctified." Most of
us are quite careful to look out for an inheritance. When we are the
rightful heir to an estate we put
in our claim. The children of God are all heirs to this inheritance. We
can each go with all
boldness to the court of heaven and put in our claim.
(4) The inheritance was
bought for us by our Elder Brother. "Christ loved the church and
gave himself for it, that he might sanctify it, having cleansed it"
(Eph. 5:25, 26). "Wherefore Jesus,
also, that he might sanctify the people, suffered without the gate"
(Heb. 13:12, 13). Our precious
Jesus shed His blood and poured out His life that we might each become
sanctified and holy. How
doubly precious and infinitely desirable it ought to make
sanctification seem to us, when we learn
that Jesus suffered with this end in view. We sympathize with the
Christian sister whom we heard
pray years ago: "O Lord, help us to experience in our own hearts and
lives all that Jesus bought for
us with His own blood." We shall never forget how that prayer struck
through our heart with
conviction for sanctification. We never got over it until we went to
the fountain for cleansing. Is it
too much to say that Christians who, knowingly, reject sanctification
are blood despisers and
Christ-rejecters?
(5) God COMMANDS us to have
sanctification.
Surely it is not rash for us
to obey our heavenly Father Who says, "Like as he which called
you is holy, he ye yourselves also holy in all manner of living:
because it is written, Ye shall be
holy, for I am holy" (1 Peter 1:15, 16). He wants us to be like Him in
our inner nature. . He so
created the race "in His own image." But the race fell, and depravity
resulted, and it has been
passed down by race connection to every son and daughter of Adam. Each
of us was born with a
tendency to sin and a trend toward evil, and "an evil heart of unbelief
to depart from the living
God." This is a grief to our heavenly Father. And He has prepared a
remedy: the heart-cleansing
baptism with the Holy Spirit for sanctification.
Oh, the shame of it, if we
refuse this blessing, and prefer to retain within us a spirit of
alienation from God! And, oh, the peril of it! It means downright
disobedience: and that persisted
in means the death of the soul. Obedience is the soul of religion.
Jesus said, "If ye love me, ye will
keep my Commandments; he that hath my commandments and keepeth them, he
it is that loveth me"
(John 14:15 and 21). How is it? Do you love Jesus enough to seek
sanctification and be holy in
order to please Him? If not, if you only have a little fashionable,
gushing, sentimental admiration
for Jesus, your carnal mind will easily persuade you to ignore His
command and live on with a
heart infested with sin.
(6) God calls us to
sanctification.
"God calls us not for
uncleanness but unto sanctification" (1 Thess. 4:7). "God chose you
from the beginning unto salvation in SANCTIFICATION OF THE SPIRIT and
belief of the truth,
whereunto He CALLED YOU through our gospel." God will not force this
blessing upon us: but
oh! how urgently He calls us to have it. By the fitful tempers and
unruly passions and unholy
longings of our poor wayward hearts, He speaks. By the restlessness and
hunger of our souls for a
closer walk with God, He urges. By His blessed Word, and the convicting
and wooing influences
of His Holy Spirit, He calls to the fullness of the blessing of the
gospel of Christ.
(7) Jesus PRAYED that we
might have sanctification.
"Sanctify them" (John
17:17). Is it improper to seek for, and expect to realize in this life,
what Jesus prayed for in that solemn upper chamber on the night before
He suffered for us? When
the shadows of death were upon Him, and He could already feel its pangs
in anticipation, He
thought of our need, and prayed that we might be sanctified. Shall we
let that intercessory prayer
he offered in vain?
(8) Jesus is faithful to
sanctify us when we want it done. "Faithful is He that calleth you"
(to sanctification -- see previous verse and I Thess. 4:7) "Who also
will do it" (1 Thess. 5:24).
Oh, the blessed fidelity of Jesus! How many countless thousands of
times He has heard prayers for
sanctification, and poured out His Spirit in efficacious, cleansing
power!
(9) When it is done the HOLY
GHOST WITNESSES to it. "For by one offering He hath
perfected forever them that are sanctified, whereof, also, the HOLY
SPIRIT BEARETH
WITNESS to us." Others may make light of this whole subject and think
that we are led by a
delusion, but when Jesus baptizes us with the Holy Ghost, thus
cleansing our hearts, and the Spirit
bears witness to the work, and wakes the joys of heaven within us, and
gives "the peace that
passeth understanding," it does not matter much what others say about
it.
(10) Jesus is
NOT ASHAMED of those who have this blessing. "He that sanctifieth and
they who are sanctified are all of one: for which cause He is not
ashamed to call them brethren"
(Heb. 2:11). There are a great many professing Christians who are so
unlike Christ, and weak, and
worldly, and unstable, and unfruitful, that they must be a grief to the
angels, and Jesus must be
ashamed of them. But when He gets a believer sanctified and
Spirit-filled, Jesus is not ashamed of
him.
(11) The end is
heaven.
"Now being free
from the sin, and become servants of God, ye have your fruit unto
SANCTIFICATION, and the end ETERNAL LIFE" (Rom. 6:22). Now, these are
the reasons for
the blessed hope within us. We think they are good reasons. And so, in
spite of the sneers and
derisions of worldly and backslidden professors, we go shouting along
on our way to heaven.