|
Home About Us Holiness Library History of the Holiness Movement Early English Bibles Bible Studies View Sermons Links
|
|
05—BIBLE TEXTS FOR SIN EXAMINED Much of the controversy about sin results from the want of accuracy in the definition of this term. We do not in this chapter include in sin the involuntary deviations from the law of absolute right, but willful transgressions of the known law of God, written in his word or on the tables of the heart, and also original or inbred sin. Living
without sin are words which shock many persons. It seems to them to be plucking
the crown from the head of Christ, the only sinless man who ever walked the
earth, and putting that crown upon the heads of men. But let us see whether sin
in the human soul really honors or dishonors Christ. What was the great errand
of Jesus into the world? To save his people from their sins. So far, then, as he
does not save from sin, his mission is a dishonorable failure. He came to create
the believer anew, making him a new creature. So much of the old man of sin as
appears to stain and corrupt this new creature reflects discredit upon “Him
that begeteth.” “Ye are his workmanship.” The work testifies of the skill
or of the incompetency of the artist, Will any one insist that sin is a beauty
and not a blemish in the work of the Divine Sculptor? In his prayer, which has
been appropriately styled his high-priestly address to his Father, Jesus says
respecting his disciples, “I am glorified in them.” Does Christ’s glory
consist in sin, reflected from his followers? But
is not sin in the heart necessary to keep the soul humble? Will not spiritual
pride lift itself up as soon as sin is destroyed? As well might you ask whether
a man would not lift up his head haughtily when his neck has been broken. The
Holy Spirit, taking complete possession of the heart, not only breaks the neck
of sin, but casts out this strong man, leaving no seed of pride behind. Perfect
love to Christ is perfect lowliness. When it is demonstrated that men must drink
a little whiskey daily in order to temperance,—steal a trifling amount every
day in order to be honest,—tell a few fibs every twenty-four hours in order to
be truthful,—and occasionally violate the seventh commandment that they may
maintain their purity,—then we will sit down and soberly answer the objection
that a little nest-egg of sin in the heart is a necessary nucleus about which
all the Christian virtues are to be gathered. But does not the Bible flatly
contradict this doctrine, that the freedom which Jesus, the great Emancipator,
bestows, includes grace to live without sinning? Did not Solomon, in prayer at
the dedication of the temple, (2 Chronicles 6:36,) tell Jehovah that “there is
no man which sinneth not?” And does he not repeat this declaration in At
the laying of a corner-stone of a State lunatic asylum the Governor, in his
address, is made by the reporter to say, “If any person in the commonwealth is
insane—for every person is insane—let him come here and be cared for.” We
should all correct the blundering reporter, and say may become insane, instead
of is insane, in order to make the Governor talk sense. Correct the reporter, or
translator, rather, of Solomon, and let him talk sense also, and you will hear
him say, If any man sin, for there is no one who is impeccable, who may not sin.
This criticism applies to the quotation from the Ecclesiastes, also. But does
not St. James say, (3:2,) “For in many things we offend all?” Who are the
we? Is it St. James and the rest of the apostles? Then these excellent men,
after blessing God, fall to cursing men. See ninth verse. But if the we is used
for men generally, the difficulty vanishes. That it is so used read the entire
verse, and note the exception to the general offending, “If any man offend not
in word, the same is a perfect man.” But the plea for continuing in sin has
one more proof-text, (1 After
this removal of misconceptions arising from misinterpreted Scriptures, we
proceed to demonstrate the same doctrine of a complete deliverance from sin, by
referring the reader to those passages which enjoin on the believer the
possession of the fullness of the Divine love, and the fullness of the Spirit.
We would call especial attention to the wonderful prayer of This
subject would not be complete without an examination of that fancied magna
charta for the necessary existence of sin in the Christian heart prompting to
sinful acts, namely, the seventh chapter of the Epistle to the Romans. Does This
being true, it requires great care to ascertain the character speaking—whether
the author is speaking for himself, or personating another. It is a very
significant fact that for the first three centuries the entire Christian Church,
with one accord, applied the picture of the vanquished and despairing slave
described in We are confident in our conclusion that the Holy Scriptures nowhere apologize for sin, or in the least license it or extenuate its existence in the universe. To assert that the Holy God has made sin necessary under the reign of grace is to slander the Father, and pronounce the redemptive plan a stupendous failure.
|