Chapter 2
HOLINESS -- HOW TO GET IT
"My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge" (Hosea iv. 6).
"And this is life eternal, that they might know Thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ,
whom Thou hast sent" (John xvii. 3).
Said an old professor of over eighty years, in a certain holiness meeting: "I believe in
holiness; but I don't think it is all got at once, as you people say. I believe we grow into it."
This is a very common mistake, second only to that which makes death the saviour from sin
and the giver of holiness, and it is one which has kept tens of thousands out of the blessed
experience. It does not recognize the exceeding sinfulness of sin (Rom. vii. 13), nor does it know
the simple way of faith by which alone sin can be destroyed.
Entire sanctification is at once a process of subtraction and addition.
First, there are laid aside "all malice, and all guile, and hypocrisies, and envies, and all
evil speakings" (I Pet. ii. 1); in fact, every evil temper and selfish desire that is unlike Christ, and
the soul is cleansed. In the very nature of the case this cannot be by growth, for this cleansing takes
something from the soul, while growth always adds something to it. The Bible says, "Now ye also
put off all these; anger, wrath, malice, blasphemy, filthy communication out of your mouth" (Col.
iii. 8). The Apostle talks as though a man were to put these off in much the same way as he would
his coat. It is not by growth that a man puts off his coat, but by an active, voluntary and immediate
effort of his whole body. This is subtraction.
But the Apostle adds: "Put on therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, bowels of
mercies, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, longsuffering" (Col. iii. 12). No more does a
man put on his coat by growth, but by a similar effort of his whole body.
A man may grow in his coat, but not into his coat; he must first get it on. Just so, a man may
"grow in grace," but not into grace. A man may swim in water, but not into water.
It is not by growth that you get the weeds out of your garden, but by pulling them up and
vigorously using your hoe and rake.
It is not by growth that you expect that dirty little darling, who has been tumbling around
with the dog and cat in the backyard, to get clean. He might grow to manhood and get dirtier every
day. It is by washing and much pure water that you expect to make him at all presentable. So the
Bible speaks of "Him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in His own Blood" (Rev. i. 5).
"The Blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all sin" (I John i. 7). And it is just this we
sing about:
To get this blest washing I all things forgo;
Now wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.
There is a Fountain filled with Blood,
Drawn from Immanuel's veins
And sinners plunged beneath that flood
lose all their guilty stains.
Those facts were told to the old brother mentioned above, and he was asked if, after sixty
years of Christian experience, he felt any nearer the priceless gift of a clean heart than when he
first began to serve Christ. He honestly confessed that he did not.
He was asked if he did not think sixty years were quite long enough to prove the growth
theory, if it were true. He thought they were, and so was asked to come forward and seek the
blessing at once.
He did so, but did not win through that night, and the next night came forward again. He had
scarcely knelt five minutes before he stood up, and, stretching out his arms, while the tears ran
down his cheeks and his face glowed with Heaven's light, he cried out, "As far as the east is from
the west, so far hath He removed my "transgressions from" me (Ps. ciii. 12). For some time after,
he lived to witness to both small and great this wondrous grace of God in Christ, and then went in
triumph to the bosom of that God whom without holiness no man can see.
"But," said a man to me, as I urged him to seek holiness at once, "I got this when I was
converted. God didn't do a half work with me when He saved me. He did a thorough job."
"True, God did a thorough work, brother. When He converted you, He forgave all your
sins, every one of them. He did not leave half of them unforgiven, but blotted them all out as a thick
cloud to be remembered against you no more for ever. He also adopted you into His family and
sent His Holy Spirit into your heart to tell you that blessed bit of heavenly news; and that
information made you feel happier than to have been told that you had fallen heir to a million
dollars, or been elected governor of a state, for this made you an heir of God and a joint heir of all
things with our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Glory to God! It is a great thing to be converted.
But, brother, are you saved from all impatience, anger and like sins of the heart? Do you live a
holy life?"
"Well, you see, I don't look at this matter exactly as you do," said the man. "I do not believe
we can be saved from all impatience and anger in this life." And so, when pressed to the point, he
begged the question, and really contradicted his own assertion that he had got holiness when he
was converted. As a friend writes, he "would rather deny the sickness than take the medicine."
The fact is, that neither the Bible nor experience proves that a man gets a clean heart when
he is converted, but just the contrary. He does have his sins forgiven; he does receive the witness
of adoption into God's own family; he does have his affections changed. But before he has gone
very far he will find his patience mixed up with some degree of impatience, his kindness mixed
with wrath, his meekness mixed with anger (which is of the heart and may not be seen of the
world, but of which he is painfully conscious), his humility mixed with pride, his loyalty to Jesus
mixed with a shame of the Cross, and, in fact, the fruit of the Spirit and the works of the flesh, in
greater or less degree, are all mixed up together.
But this will be done away with when he gets a clean heart, and it will take a second work
of grace, preceded by a whole-hearted consecration and as definite an act of faith as that which
preceded his conversion, to get it.
After conversion, he finds his old sinful nature much like a tree which has been cut down,
but the stump still left. The tree causes no more bother, but the stump will still bring forth little
shoots, if it is not watched. The quickest and most effective way is to put some dynamite under the
stump and blow it up.
Just so, God wants to put the dynamite of the Holy Ghost (the word "dynamite" comes from
the Greek word "power," in Acts i. 8) into every converted soul, and for ever do away with that
old troublesome, sinful nature, so that he can truly say, "Old things are passed away; behold, all
things are become new" (2 Cor. v. 17).
This is just what God did with the apostles on the day of Pentecost. Nobody will deny that
they were converted before Pentecost, for Jesus Himself had told them to "rejoice, because your
names are written in Heaven" (Luke x. 20), and a man must be converted before his name is
written in Heaven.
And again He said, "They are not of the world, even as I am not of the world" (John xvii.
16), and this could not be said of unconverted men. So we must conclude that they were converted,
yet did not have the blessing of a clean heart until the day of Pentecost.
That they did receive it there, Peter declares about as plainly as it is possible to do in Acts
xv. 8, 9, where he says: "God, which knoweth the hearts, bare them witness, giving them the Holy
Ghost, even as He did with us; and put no difference between us and them, purifying their hearts by
faith."
Before Peter got this great blessing he was filled with presumption one day and with fear
the next. One day he declared that, "Though all men shall be offended because of Thee, yet will I
never be offended ... Though I should die with Thee, yet will I not deny Thee" (Matt. xxvi. 33, 35).
And shortly after, when the mob came to take his Master he boldly attacked them with the sword;
but in a few hours, when his blood had cooled a little and the excitement was over, he was so
frightened by a maid that he cursed and swore, and denied his Master three times.
He was like a good many soldiers, who are tremendously brave when there is a "big go"
and everybody is favorable, or who can even stand an attack from persecutors, where muscle and
physical courage can come to the front; but who have no moral courage to wear the uniform alone
in their shop where they have to face the scorn of their mates and the jeers of the street urchin.
These are soldiers who love dress parade, but do not want hard fighting at the front of the battle.
But Peter got over that on the day of Pentecost. He received the power of the Holy Ghost
coming into him. He obtained a clean heart, from which perfect love had cast out all fear; and then,
when shut in prison for preaching on the street and commanded by the supreme court of the land not
to do so any more, he answered, "Whether it be right in the sight of God to hearken unto you more
than unto God, judge ye. For we cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard" (Acts
iv. 19, 20). And then, just as soon as he was released, into the street he went again to preach the
blessed good news of an uttermost salvation.
You could not scare Peter after that nor could he be lifted up with spiritual pride either.
For one day, after he had been used of God to heal a lame man and "the people ran together ...
greatly wondering," Peter saw it and said, "Ye men of Israel, why marvel ye at this? or why look
ye so earnestly on us, as though by our own power or holiness we had made this man to walk? The
God ... of our fathers hath glorified His Son Jesus ... And His name through faith in His name hath
made this man strong ... yea, the faith which is by Him hath given him this perfect soundness" (Acts
iii. 12, 13, 16).
Nor did the dear old apostle have any of that ugly temper he showed when he cut off that
poor fellow's ear the night Jesus was arrested, but armed himself with the mind that was in Christ
(I Pet. iv. 1) and followed Him who left us an example that we should follow His steps.
"But we cannot have what Peter obtained on the day of Pentecost," wrote someone to me
recently. However, Peter himself, in that great sermon which he preached that day, declared that
we can, for he says: "Ye shall receive the Holy Ghost. For the promise is unto you" Jews, to whom
I am talking -- "and to your children," and not to you only, but "to all that are afar off" -- nineteen
hundred years from now -- even as many as the Lord our God shall call," or convert (Acts ii. 38,
39).
Any child of God can have this, if he will give himself wholly to God and ask for it in
faith. "Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find ... If ye then, being evil, know how to
give good gifts unto your children: how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit
to them that ask Him" (Luke xi. 9, 13).
Seek Him with all your heart, and you shall find Him; you shall indeed, for God says so,
and He is waiting to give Himself to you.
A dear young fellow, a candidate for Salvation Army work, felt his need of a clean heart,
went home from the holiness meeting, took his Bible, knelt down by his bed, read the second
chapter of Acts, and then told the Lord that he would not get up from his knees till he got a clean
heart, full of the Holy Ghost. He had not prayed long before the Lord came suddenly to him and
filled him with the glory of God; and his face did shine, and his testimony did burn in people's
hearts after that!
You can have it, if you will go to the Lord in the Spirit and with the faith of that brother;
and the Lord will do for you "exceeding abundantly above all that" you "ask or think, according to
the power that worketh ... in us (Eph. iii. 20).