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"And
the God of peace himself sanctify you wholly; and may your
spirit and soul and body be preserved entire without blame
at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. Faithful is he that
calleth you, who will also do it." (1 Thess. 5:23-24)
THERE is no feature of Christianity more strongly emphasized
by those to whom its establishment in the world was committed,
than the breadth and depth of its ethical demands. The "salvation"
which was promised in the "Gospel" or "Glad Tidings" which
constituted its proclamation, was just salvation from sin
and unto holiness. In other words, it was a moral revolution
of the most thoroughgoing and radical kind. "Sanctification"
is the Biblical word for this moral revolution, and in "sanctification"
the very essence of salvation is made to consist. "This is
the will of God" for you, says the Apostle to his readers
in this very epistle, "even your sanctification." A great
part of the epistle is given, accordingly, to commending the
new converts for the progress they had already made in this
sanctification, and to urging them onward in the same pathway.
No
moral attainment is too great to be pressed on them as their
duty, no moral duty is too minute to be demanded of them as
essential to their Christian walk. The standard the Apostle
has before him, and consistently applies to his readers, falls
in nothing short of absolute perfection, a perfection which
embraces in its all-inclusive sweep the infinitely little
and the infinitely great alike. In the verses immediately
preceding our text the Apostle had been engaged, as is his
wont in all his epistles, in enumerating a number of details
of conduct which he wished, especially, to emphasize to his
readers. They are not chosen at haphazard, but are just the
items of conduct which the particular readers with whom he
is at the moment engaged required most to have urged upon
their attention.
But
the Apostle would not have his readers suppose that their
whole duty was summed up in the items he enumerates. As he
draws to the close of his exhortations he therefore breaks
off in the enumeration and adjoins one great comprehensive
prayer for their entire perfection: "But may the God of peace
Himself sanctify you wholly: and may your spirit and soul
and body be preserved perfect without failure, at the coming
of our Lord Jesus Christ. Faithful is He that calleth you
who also will do it."
Here
we have obviously a classical passage-possibly the classical
passage-for "entire sanctification"; and it may repay us in
the perennial interest which attends the discussion of the
theme of "entire sanctification" to look at it somewhat closely,
as such.
First
of all, let us settle it clearly in mind that it is of entire
sanctification" that the passage treats. There can certainly
be no doubt of it, if we will only give the language of the
passage a fair hearing. It is so emphasized, indeed, and with
such an accumulation of phraseology that it becomes almost
embarrassing. The entirety, the completeness, the perfection
of the sanctification, of which it speaks is, in fact, the
great burden of the passage. In contrast with the details
with which the Apostle had just been dealing, and which-just
because they were details-could touch the periphery only of
a perfect life, and that only at this or that point of the
circumference, he here averts to the complete sanctification
that not merely touches but fills not the periphery only but
the entire circle of the Christian-nay, of the human-life.
It is a sanctification that is absolutely complete and that
embraces the perfection of every member of the human constitution,
that the Apostle here deals with.
Observe
the emphatic repetition of the idea of completeness. May the
"God of Peace"-and this very designation of God, doubtless,
has its reference to the completeness of the sanctification,
peace being the opposite of all division, distraction, hesitation
and dubitation,-may the "God of Peace," the Apostle prays,
"sanctify you completely"-so as that ye may be perfect and
wanting nothing that enters into the perfection of your correspondence
to the ends for which you were created. And not content with
this, he adds explanatorily, "And may your spirit and your
soul and your body be preserved entire, perfect," and not
that merely, but "blamelessly entire, perfect"; "blamelessly"-that
is, in a manner which is incapable of being accused of not
coming up to its idea.
Observe
further the distribution of the personality which is to be
perfected into its component parts, of each of which, in turn,
perfection is desiderated. Not only are we to be sanctified
wholly, but every part of us-our spirit, our soul, our body
itself-is to be kept blamelessly perfect. The Apostle is not
content, in other words, with the general, but descends into
the specific elements of our being. And for each of these
elements in turn he seeks a "blameless perfection," that the
sum of them all-the "we" at large-may be, indeed., complete
and entire, wanting nothing.
Now,
no doubt, this enumeration of parts is in a sense rhetorical
and not scientific. The Apostle is accumulating terms to convey
the great idea of completeness more pungently to us-something
as our Lord did when He told us we must love the Lord our
God with all our heart and soul and mind and strength. But
even so he makes a certain distinction between the three elements
he enumerates, by the accumulation of which he expresses completeness
most emphatically. His meaning is that there is no department
of our being into which he would not have this perfection
penetrate, where he would not have it reign, and through which
he would not have it operate to the perfecting of the whole.
By
this double mode of accumulation, we perceive, the Apostle
throws an astonishing emphasis on the perfection which he
desires for his readers. Here we may say is "Perfectionism"
raised to its highest power, a blameless perfection, a perfection
admitting of no failure to attain its end, in every department
of our being alike, uniting to form a perfection of the whole,
a complete attainment of our idea in the whole man. There
is certainly no doctrine of "entire sanctification" that has
been invented in these later days which can compare with Paul's
doctrine in height or depth or length or breadth. His "Perfectionism"
is assuredly the very apotheosis of perfectionism. The perfection
proposed is a real perfection (which is not always true of
recent teachings on this subject) and the man who attains
it is a perfect man-every part of his being receiving its
appropriate perfection (and this is seldom or never true of
recent teachings). A perfect perfection for a perfect man-an
entire sanctification for the entire man-surely here is a
perfection worth longing for.
Let
us observe next that Paul does not speak of this perfecting
of the entire man as if it were a mere ideal, unattainable,
and to be looked up to only as the forever beckoning standard
hanging hopelessly above us. He treats it as distinctly attainable.
He seriously prays God to grant it to his readers; and that
as the end of his exhortation to them to study moral perfection
as the aim of their endeavors.
He
does not, indeed, represent it as attainable by and through
human effort alone, as if man in his own strength could reach
and touch this his true ultimate goal of endeavor. Rather
he emphatically represents it as the gift of God alone. After
exhorting men to their best endeavors., he turns suddenly
from man to God and besieges Him with prayer. Strive, he says,
strive always, do this thing and do that-and so work out this,
your ethical salvation. "But may God Himself-the God of peace
Himself "-the stress is on the "Himself." It is in God, in
God alone, the God of peace alone, that hope can be placed
for such high attainments.
But
cannot hope be placed in God for this attainment? The whole
gist of Paul's prayer-nay, the whole drift of his discourse-would
be stultified, were it not so. Paul's prayer, and the way
in which he introduces his prayer, all combine to make it
certain that he is not mocking us here with an illusory hope
but is placing soberly before us an attainable goal. This
perfect perfection is then, necessarily, according to Paul,
attainable for man. God can and will give it to His children.
Even
more must be said. Paul not only prays seriously for it for
his readers, and this implies that it may, nay, will be given
them; he definitely promises it to them, and bases this, his
definite promise, on no less firm a foundation than the faithfulness
of God. May God sanctify you wholly, he says, and the rest
of it. But he does not stop there. He follows the prayer with
the promise: "Faithful is He that calleth you," and he adds,
"who also will do it." Thus Paul pledges the faithfulness
of God to the completion of his readers' perfection. And we
must not lose the force and pointedness with which he does
this by failing to pay attention to the sharp, proverbial
character of this pledging clause. It has all the quality
of a maxim; and the gist of the maxim is that God, this God
of whom Paul was praying our perfection, is not a caller only,
but also a performer. He has called us into the Christian
life. This Christian life into which He has called us is in
principle a life of moral perfection. And this God that calls
is not a God that calls merely-He is a God that also accomplishes.
His very calling of us into this life of new morality is a
pledge, then, that He will perfect the good work in us which
He has begun. "Faithful is He that calleth you: who also is
one that shall do."
The
accomplishment of this our perfection then does not hang on
our weak endeavors. It does not hang even on Paul's strong
prayer. It hangs only on God's almighty and unfailing faithfulness.
If God is faithful, He who not only calls but does-then, we
cannot fail of perfection. Here you see is not only perfection
carried to its highest power, but the certainty of attaining
this perfection carried also to its highest power. Not only
may a Christian man be perfect-absolutely perfect in all departments
of his being-but he certainly and unfailingly shall be perfect.
So certain as it is that God has called him "not for uncleanness
but in sanctification" as the very sphere in which his life
as a Christian must be passed, so certain is it that the God
who is not merely a caller but a doer will perfect him in
this sanctification. Such is the teaching of the text. And
assuredly it goes in this, far, far beyond all modern teaching
as to entire sanctification that ever has been heard of among
men.
And
now, let us observe, thirdly, the period to which the Apostle
assigns the accomplishment of this great hope. It is at once
evident that he is not dealing with this perfection as a thing
already in the possession of his readers. It is not a matter
of congratulation to them-as some Christian graces were, for
the presence of which in their hearts he thanks God,-but a
matter of prayer to God for them. It is a thing not yet in
possession but in petition. It is yet to come to them. He
does not permit us to suppose, then, that the Thessalonians
had already attained-or should already have attained-it. He
thanks God, indeed, for their rescue from the state in which
they were by nature. He thanks God for their great attainments
in Christian living. But he does not suggest they had already
reached the goal. On the contrary, a great part of the letter
is taken up with exhortation to Christian duties not yet overtaken,
graces of Christian living still to be cultivated. His readers
are treated distinctly and emphatically as viatores,
not yet as comprehensores. Not in and of them, but
in and of God, is the perfection which he prays for. What
we see is not hoped for, what we pray for is not already attained.
Moreover the very pledge he gives of the attainment of this
perfection bears in it an implication that it is yet a matter
of hope, not of possession. He pledges the faithfulness of
God, the Caller. Accordingly, the perfection longed for and
promised is not given in the call itself; it is not the invariable
possession of the Christian soul. He that is called looks
yet for it; it is sought still; and at the hands of the Caller
whose faithfulness assures the performance. The performance,
therefore, still lags.
It
is clear, therefore, that Paul, though promising this perfection
as the certain heritage of every Christian man, presents it
as a matter of hope, not yet seen; not as a matter of experience,
already enjoyed. That it belongs to us as Christians we can
be assured only by the faithfulness of God, the Performer
as well as the Caller. Can we learn from Paul when we can
hope for it? Assuredly, he has not left us in ignorance here.
He openly declares, indeed, the term of our imperfection-the
point of entrance into our perfection. "May the God of peace,"
he prays, "sanctify you wholly and may there be preserved
blamelessly perfect your spirit and soul and body, at the
coming of our Lord Jesus Christ." You see it is on the second
advent of Christ-and that is the end of the world, and the
judgment day-that the Apostle has his eyes set. There is the
point of time to which he refers the completeness of our perfecting.
And
if you will stop and consider a moment, you will perceive
that it must be so, for the entire perfecting, at least, of
which the Apostle speaks. For you will bear in mind that the
perfecting includes the perfecting of the body also. It is
the perfecting of the whole man that he prays for, and this
expressly includes the body as well as the soul and spirit.
Now the perfected body is given to man only at the resurrection,
at the last day, which is the day of the second coming of
Christ. Until then the body is moldering in the grave. Whether
spiritual perfection may be attained before then, he does
not in this passage say. But the analogy of the body will
apparently go so far as this, at all events-it raises a suspicion
that the perfecting of the soul and spirit also will be gradual,
the result of a process, and will be completed only in a crisis,
a cataclysmic moment, when the Spirit of God produces in them
the fitness to live with God. This suspicion is entirely borne
out by Paul's dealing with the whole matter of sanctification
in this context, and in this whole epistle: as a matter of
effort, long-continued and strenuous, building up slowly the
structure to the end. There is no promise of its completion
in this life; there is no hint that it may be completed in
this life. There is only everywhere strong exhortations to
ceaseless effort; and strong encouragements by promises of
its completion in the end against "that day." "That day" of
judgment, that is, when God shall take account of all men
and of all that is in man.
What
is thus fairly implied here is openly taught elsewhere. Men
here are not comprehensores but viatores; we
are fighting the good fight; we are running the race. The
prize is yonder. And not until the body of this death is laid
aside shall the soul be fitted to enter naked into the presence
of its Lord, there expecting until the body shall be restored
to it-no longer a body of death but of glory. Meanwhile the
gradual process of sanctification goes on in soul and body-until
the crisis comes when the "Spiritus Creator" shall powerfully
intervene with the final acts of renewal.
Certainly
the gradualness of this process ought not to disturb us. It
may be inexplicable to us that the Almighty God acts by way
of process. But that is revealed to us as His chosen mode
of operation in every sphere of His work, and should not surprise
us here. He could, no doubt, make the soul perfect in a moment,
in the twinkling of an eye; just as He could give us each
a perfect body at the very instant of our believing. He does
not. The removal of the stains and effects of sin-in an evil
heart and in a sick and dying body-is accomplished in a slow
process. We all grow sick and die-though Jesus has taken on
His broad shoulders (among the other penalties of sin) all
our sicknesses and death itself. And we still struggle with
the remainders of indwelling sin; though Jesus has bought
for us the sanctifying operations of the Spirit. To us it
is a weary process. But it is God's way. And He does all things
well. And the weariness of the struggle is illuminated by
hope. After a while!-we may say; after a while! Or as Paul
puts it: Faithful is He that calls us-who also will do it.
He will do it! And so, after a while, our spirit, and soul
and body shall be made blamelessly perfect, all to be so presented
before our Lord, at that Day. Let us praise the Lord for the
glorious prospect!
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