Obedience and Sanctification
ARTICLE IN SIGNS OF THE TIMES, MAY 19, 1890 .
"And walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us, and hath given Himself for us an
offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling savour" (Ephesians 5:2). In all
the fullness of His divinity, in all the glory of His spotless humanity, Christ gave
Himself for us as a full and free sacrifice, and each one who comes to Him should accept
Him as if he were the only one for whom the price had been paid. As in Adam all die, so in
Christ shall all be made alive; for the obedient will be raised to immortality, and the
transgressor will rise from the dead to suffer death, the penalty of the law which he has
broken.
Obedience to the law of God is sanctification. There are many who have erroneous ideas
in regard to this work in the soul, but Jesus prayed that His disciples might be
sanctified through the truth, and added, "Thy word is truth" (John 17:17).
Sanctification is not an instantaneous but a progressive work, as obedience is continuous.
Just as long as Satan urges his temptations upon us, the battle for self-conquest will
have to be fought over and over again; but by obedience, the truth will sanctify the soul.
Those who are loyal to the truth will, through the merits of Christ, overcome all weakness
of character that has led them to be moulded by every varying circumstance of life.
Satan's Delusion and Snare
Many have taken the position that they cannot sin because they are sanctified, but this
is a delusive snare of the evil one. There is constant danger of falling into sin, for
Christ has
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warned us to watch and pray lest we enter into temptation. If we are conscious of the
weakness of self, we shall not be self-confident and reckless of danger, but we shall feel
the necessity of seeking to the Source of our strength, Jesus our Righteousness. We shall
come in repentance and contrition, with a despairing sense of our own finite weakness, and
learn that we must daily apply to the merits of the blood of Christ, that we may become
vessels fit for the Master's use.
While thus depending upon God we shall not be found warring against the truth, but we
shall always be enabled to take our stand for the right. We should cling to the teaching
of the Bible and not follow the customs and traditions of the world, the sayings and
doings of men.
When errors arise and are taught as Bible truth, those who have a connection with
Christ will not trust to what the minister says, but like the noble Bereans, they will
search the Scriptures daily to see if these things are so. When they discover what is the
word of the Lord, they will take their stand on the side of the truth. They will hear the
voice of the True Shepherd saying, "This is the way, walk ye in it." Thus you
will be educated to make the Bible the man of your counsel, and the voice of a stranger
you will neither hear nor follow.
Two Lessons
If the soul is to be purified and ennobled, and made fit for the heavenly courts, there
are two lessons to be learned-- self-sacrifice and self-control. Some learn these
important lessons more easily than do others, for they are exercised by the simple
discipline the Lord gives them in gentleness and love. Others require the slow discipline
of suffering, that the cleansing fire may purify their hearts of pride and self-reliance,
of earthly passion and self-love, that the true gold of character may appear and that they
may become victors through the grace of Christ.
The love of God will strengthen the soul, and through the
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virtue of the merits of the blood of Christ we may stand unscathed amid the fire of
temptation and trial; but no other help can avail to save but Christ, our righteousness,
who is made unto us wisdom and sanctification and redemption.
True sanctification is nothing more or less than to love God with all the heart, to
walk in His commandments and ordinances blameless. Sanctification is not an emotion but a
heaven-born principle that brings all the passions and desires under the control of the
Spirit of God; and this work is done through our Lord and Saviour.
Spurious sanctification does not glorify God but leads those who claim it to exalt and
glorify themselves. Whatever comes in our experience, whether of joy or sorrow, that does
not reflect Christ and point to Him as its author, bringing glory to Him and sinking self
out of sight, is not true Christian experience.
When the grace of Christ is implanted in the soul by the Holy Spirit, its possessor
will become humble in spirit and will seek for the society of those whose conversation is
upon heavenly things. Then the Spirit will take the things of Christ and show them unto us
and will glorify, not the receiver, but the Giver. If, therefore, you have the sacred
peace of Christ in your heart, your lips will be filled with praise and thanksgiving to
God. Your prayers, the discharge of your duty, your benevolence, your self-denial, will
not be the theme of your thought or conversation, but you will magnify Him who gave
Himself for you when you were yet a sinner. You will say: "I give myself to Jesus. I
have found Him of whom Moses in the law, and the prophets, did write." As you praise
Him you will have a precious blessing, and all the praise and glory for that which is done
through your instrumentality will be given back to God.
Not Boisterous or Untameable
The peace of Christ is not a boisterous, untameable element
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made manifest in loud voices and bodily exercises. The peace of Christ is an
intelligent peace, and it does not make those who possess it bear the marks of fanaticism
and extravagance. It is not a rambling impulse but an emanation from God.
When the Saviour imparts His peace to the soul, the heart will be in perfect harmony
with the Word of God, for the Spirit and the Word agree. The Lord honours His Word in all
His dealings with men. It is His own will, His own voice, that is revealed to men, and He
has no new will, no new truth, aside from His Word, to unfold to His children. If you have
a wonderful experience that is not in harmony with expressed directions of God's Word, you
may well doubt it, for its origin is not from above. The peace of Christ comes through the
knowledge of Jesus whom the Bible reveals.
If happiness is drawn from outside sources and not from the Divine Fount, it will be as
changeable as varying circumstances can make it; but the peace of Christ is a constant and
abiding peace. It does not depend on any circumstance in life, on the amount of worldly
goods, or the number of earthly friends. Christ is the fountain of living waters, and
happiness and peace drawn from Him will never fail, for He is a well-spring of life. Those
who trust in Him can say: "God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in
trouble. Therefore will not we fear, though the earth be removed, and though the mountains
be carried into the midst of the sea; though the waters thereof roar and be troubled,
though the mountains shake with the swelling thereof. . . . There is a river, the streams
whereof shall make glad the city of God, the holy place of the tabernacles of the Most
High" (Psalm 46:1-4).
We have reason for ceaseless gratitude to God that Christ, by His perfect obedience,
has won back the heaven that Adam lost through disobedience. Adam sinned, and the children
of Adam share his guilt and its consequences; but Jesus bore the guilt of Adam, and all
the children of Adam that will flee to Christ, the second Adam, may escape the penalty of
transgression.
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Jesus regained heaven for man by bearing the test that Adam failed to endure; for He
obeyed the law perfectly, and all who have a right conception of the plan of redemption
will see that they cannot be saved while in transgression of God's holy precepts. They
must cease to transgress the law and lay hold on the promises of God that are available
for us through the merits of Christ.
Trust Not in Men
Our faith is not to stand in the ability of men but in the power of God. There is
danger of trusting in men, even though they may have been used as instruments of God to do
a great and good work. Christ must be our strength and our refuge. The best of men may
fall from their steadfastness, and the best of religion, when corrupted, is ever the most
dangerous in its influence upon minds. Pure, living religion is found in obedience to
every word that proceeds out of the mouth of God.
Righteousness exalts a nation, and the absence of it degrades and ruins man.
"Believe, Only Believe"
From the pulpits of today the words are uttered: "Believe, only believe. Have
faith in Christ; you have nothing to do with the old law, only trust in Christ." How
different is this from the words of the apostle who declares that faith without works is
dead. He says, "But be ye doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving your own
selves" (James 1:22). We must have that faith that works by love and purifies the
soul. Many seek to substitute a superficial faith for uprightness of life and think
through this to obtain salvation.
The Lord requires at this time just what He required of Adam in Eden--perfect obedience
to the law of God. We must have righteousness without a flaw, without a blemish. God gave
His Son to die for the world, but He did not die to repeal the law which was holy and just
and good. The sacrifice of
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Christ on Calvary is an unanswerable argument showing the immutability of the law. Its
penalty was felt by the Son of God in behalf of guilty man, that through His merits the
sinner might obtain the virtue of His spotless character by faith in His name.
The sinner was provided with a second opportunity to keep the law of God in the
strength of his divine Redeemer. The cross of Calvary forever condemns the idea that Satan
has placed before the Christian world, that the death of Christ abolished not only the
typical system of sacrifices and ceremonies but the unchangeable law of God, the
foundation of His throne, the transcript of His character.
Through every device possible Satan has sought to make of none effect the sacrifice of
the Son of God, to render His expiation useless and His mission a failure. He has claimed
that the death of Christ made obedience to the law unnecessary and permitted the sinner to
come into favour with a holy God without forsaking his sin. He has declared that the Old
Testament standard was lowered in the gospel and that men can come to Christ, not to be
saved from their sins but in their sins.
But when John beheld Jesus he told His mission. He said, "Behold the Lamb of God,
which taketh away the sin of the world" (John 1:29). To every repentant soul the
message is, "Come now, and let us reason together, saith the Lord: though your sins
be as scarlet, they shall be white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be
as wool" (Isaiah 1:18).