The Upward Way
This article was published in the
Presbyterian Standard, Issue No. 11, July-September 1998.
T
HERE is a question which we should be asking ourselves more often than
we do: Why am I not more holy than I am? Holiness after all is the
great end to which the God of grace has appointed His people in the
eternal counsel of predestination; "he hath chosen us....that we should
be holy" (Eph. 1:4): if we are His then should it not be our decided
aim to "cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit"
(2 Cor. 7:1)? This is our serious duty, a calling which all the saints
share.
Resources
What ample resources are granted to us in that covenant which is
"ordered in all things, and sure" (2 Sam. 23:5) that we may indeed be
made holy! Christ has made a purchase of grace for His people. By the
wonder of an imputed righteousness the penalty of a broken law is
revoked and we appear just before a holy God. Where sin abounded, grace
did much more abound, to reign in the renewed heart (Rom. 5:20, 21).
Our persons and services are now acceptable to God through Christ the
Mediator. The Holy Scriptures are given to us that we may know
infallibly that life which is pleasing to the Lord.
Yet the true
Christian ever feels himself a failure in the face of all this. Rather
than admire his own progress in sanctification he can only lament his
leanness: he cannot find in himself what he wants to find; he is ever
dissatisfied with his present attainments. While others within the
church rest content with their form of godliness, the child of God
falls upon his face when in the secret place — and mourns.
Beginning
What light does Scripture shed on this experience? It is plain that the
new birth, though it be the most profound change a soul may ever
undergo, though it is the renewal of the whole man, a translation from
the realm of spiritual death to that of life, is not the same thing as
perfection. Paul, in writing to a congregation of faithful Christians,
tells them regarding the operation of grace in their lives — it
is but a beginning. Only the return of Christ will see God's special
handiwork finished (Phil. 1:6). Only then shall He polish His jewels to
perfection. Between regeneration and glorification lies the patient
life of sanctification with its many sighs and groans.
Hindrances
The believer's greatest obstacle in the pathway of holiness is himself.
He carries with him wherever he goes the old man, like those poor souls
we have read of who, in a refinement of cruelty, were sentenced to be
chained to a putrefying corpse which they must drag behind them. So the
motion of the spiritual man is hindered, causing him often to be weary
and to be nigh unto falling.
We discover that we
have a traitor in the midst, even within our own bosom; our heart is a
Judas that will quickly betray us to the camp of sin if we do not keep
it with all diligence. Sin is lying always at the door like a voracious
beast, seeking an opportunity to enter in and make of us its prey. Are
we striving manfully against temptation in all its subtle forms and
guises? This ceaseless conflict with the flesh caused the apostle Paul
more grief than stoning and shipwreck, the lash and the prison cell.
Upward
Solomon, who visited both the mountain-tops of blessedness and the
valleys of sinful backsliding in his walk with the Lord, teaches us
that; "The way of life is above to the wise, that he may depart from
hell beneath." (Prov. 15:24). The direction sinners must take to escape
eternal loss and gain the life that shall never end is an upward one.
And to go onward in the Christian life, as we must, is to go ever
upward and Godward — to be holy even as He is holy. Is it not
clear that a power not our own must be at work if we are to rise above
nature? Holiness is as foreign to fallen humanity as is life in another
country and every development in conformity to Christ is made against
our natural inclinations. As a new-born infant must constantly be fed
in order to gain weight so the believer requires a continual supply of
strength from the Spirit of Christ if he is to "grow up into him in all
things" (Eph. 4:15). But do we desire the "sincere milk" of the Holy
Scriptures and cry daily for deliverance from the power of sin? Our
progress in holiness will be in proportion to our longings for the
same. We may be as holy as we truly wish to be.
Our Adversary
We do not think that it is going beyond the bounds of Scripture to say
that the devil is a greater foe today to the godly than he ever was.
The angels are finite creatures: they may increase in knowledge. Those
that did not fall but remained in heaven "desire to look into" the
things which have been revealed to us but not to them (1 Pet. 1:12);
they learn of God's wisdom by the salvation of the church (Eph. 3:10).
So the evil angels, with Satan at their head, who were cast out of
glory and down to the earth (Rev. 12:3, 4, 7-9) now go from place to
place to gain intelligence on the church; not in order to admire the
work of grace but if possible to destroy it (1 Pet. 5:8). The weak
spots of believers are tirelessly sought out. Many testimonies have
been ruined by the devil's devices. We must be vigilant if we would
escape the fowler's snare.
Surroundings
We are probably more influenced by the spiritual environment in which
we live than we realise. Ours is not a godly age. There is still plenty
of religion to be found but grace is less common. The demeaning of the
Most High God and all things holy, the casual attitudes to worship and
the absence of a proper fear of the Lord — these attitudes are
found in the world and increasingly within the church. In popular
preaching, the biblical demand of repentance from sin has been replaced
by an easier method of reconciliation with God in which the divine
love, forgiveness and peace are pronounced indiscriminately — and
quickly.
Grace is meant to
distinguish God's people from others but we are like those creatures
which have the ability to take on the general colour of their
surroundings, blending in and going unnoticed. Is it not easier for us
to "settle upon our lees" again like Moab (Jer. 48:11) than to
"exercise ourselves unto godliness" (1 Tim. 4:7)? We surely need more
of the Spirit of Christ and less of the spirit of the age. Then we
shall make leaps and bounds heavenwards.
Helps
The rule which holds good regarding personal holiness is this: there
are no gains without pains. Yet the struggling saint is not without
encouragement in his pursuit. He has received a heavenly calling (Heb.
3:1): will not the Word of grace lead him home, sanctified in Jesus?
We have a living
and unbreakable union with Christ our Covenant Head (Rom. 8:38, 39). He
is the true and fruitful Vine. In Him there is a fulness of grace
sufficient to overcome all our prevailing sins. We are not to think
that, redemption being accomplished, somehow it is then left to sinners
to apply it to themselves. Our Saviour is still our Priest. He prays
for us on the basis of His cross, sending His Spirit into our hearts to
strengthen us in all those graces which belong to the new man. In this
way we are saved by His life as well as by His death. And because like
the mysterious Melchisedec this Priest has an endless life His
intercession will never fail (Heb. 7:25): our sanctification and final
salvation is secure.
How we need the
Lord to apply the measuring-rod of His Word to our lives to discover
our sins and humble us with a sense of our need! A need which He alone
is able to supply. Are we travelling on this upward way? |