MESSAGE
Our Lord's Prayer
for His People's Sanctification
by C. H. Spurgeon
"Sanctify them through thy truth: thy word is
truth." (John 17:17)
OUR LORD JESUS prayed much for his people while he
was here on earth. He made Peter the special subject of his intercession when he
knew that he was in extraordinary danger. The midnight wrestlings of the Son of
man were for his people. In the sacred record, however, much more space is taken
up by our Lord's intercessions as he nears the end of his labors. After the
closing supper, his public preaching work being ended, and nothing remaining to
be done but to die, he gave himself wholly unto prayer. He was not again to
instruct the multitude, nor to heal the sick, and in the interval which
remained, before he should lay down his life, he girded himself for special
intercession. He poured out his soul in life before he poured it out unto death.
In this wonderful prayer, our Lord, as our great
High Priest, appears to enter upon that perpetual office of intercession which
he is now exercising at the right hand of the Father. Our Lord ever seemed, in
the eagerness of his love, to be anticipating his work. Before he was set apart
for his life-work, by the descent of the Holy Ghost upon him, he must needs be
about his Father's business; before he finally suffered at the hands of cruel
men, he had a baptism to be baptized with, and he was straitened till it was
accomplished; before he actually died, he was covered with a bloody sweat, and
was exceeding sorrowful even unto death; and in this case, before he in person
entered within the veil, he made intercession for us. He never tarries when the
good of his people calls for him. His love hath wings as well as feet: it is
true of him evermore, "He rode upon a cherub, and did fly: yea, he did fly upon
the wings of the wind." O beloved, what a friend we have in Jesus! so willing,
so speedy to do for us all that we need. Oh that we could imitate him in this,
and be quick of understanding to perceive our line of service, and eager of
heart to enter upon it.
This chapter, which ought to be universally known
as the Lord's Prayer, may be called the holy of holies of the word of God. Here
we are admitted to that secret place where the Son of God speaks with the Father
in closest fellowship of love. Here we look into the heart of Jesus, as he sets
out in order his desires and requests before his Father on our behalf. Here
inspiration lifts her veil, and we behold truth face to face. Our text lies
somewhere near the middle of the prayer; it is the heart of it. Our Lord's
desire for the sanctification of his people pervades the whole prayer; but it is
gathered up, declared, and intensified in the one sentence that I have read to
you: "Sanctify them through thy truth: thy word is truth." How invaluable must
the blessing of sanctification be when our Lord, in the highest reach of his
intercession, cries: "Sanctify them!" In sight of his passion, on the night
before his death, our Savior lifts his eyes to the great Father, and cries in
his most plaintive tones, "Father, sanctify them." The place whereon we stand is
holy ground, and the subject whereof we speak demands our solemn thought. Come,
Holy Spirit, and teach us the full meaning of this prayer for holiness!
First, I call your attention to what it is the
Savior asks—"sanctify them;" and then, for whom he asks it—it is for
those whom his Father had given him. Thirdly, we shall note of whom he asks
it: he asks this sanctification of God the Father himself, for he alone it
is who can sanctify his people. Lastly, we will enquire how is this blessing
to be wrought?—"Sanctify them through thy truth;" and our Lord adds an
explanatory sentence, which was a confession of his own faith towards the word
of the Lord, and an instruction to our faith in the same matter. "Thy word is
truth."
I. At the beginning, then, consider WHAT HE ASKED.
What is this inestimable blessing which our Savior so earnestly requests at the
Father's hand? He first prays, "Holy Father, keep them;" and again, "Keep them
from the evil;" but this negative blessing of preservation from evil is not
enough: he seeks for them positive holiness, and therefore he cries, "sanctify
them." The word is one of considerable range of meaning: I am not able to follow
it through all its shades, but one or two must suffice.
It means, first, dedicate them to thy service;
for such must be the meaning of the word further down, when we read, "For their
sakes I sanctify myself." In the Lord's case it cannot mean purification from
sin, because our Savior was undefiled; his nature was unblemished by sin, and
his actions were unspotted. No eye of man, nor glance of fiend, could discover
fault in him, and the search of God only resulted in the declaration that in him
God was well pleased. Our Lord's sanctification was his consecration to the
fulfillment of the Divine purpose, his absorption in the will of the Father.
"Lo, I come to do thy will, O God." In this sense our interceding Lord asks that
all his people may by the Father be ordained and consecrated unto holy service.
The prayer means, "Father, consecrate them to thine own self; let them be
temples for thine indwelling, instruments for thy use." Under Jewish law the
tribe of Levi was chosen out of the twelve, and ordained to the service of the
Lord, instead of the firstborn, of whom the Lord had said, "All the firstborn of
the children of Israel are mine: on the day that I smote every firstborn in the
land of Egypt I sanctified them for myself." (Numbers
8:17.) Out of the tribe of Levi one family was taken and dedicated to the
priesthood. Aaron and his sons are said to have been sanctified. (Leviticus
8:30.) A certain tent was sanctified to the service of God, and hence it
became a sanctuary; and the vessels that were therein, whether they were
greater, like the altar, and the holy table, and the ark of the covenant, or
whether they were of less degree, like the bowls and the snuff-dishes of the
candlestick, were all dedicated or sanctified. (Numbers
7:1.) None of these things could be used for any other purpose than the
service of Jehovah. In his courts there was a holy fire, a holy bread, and a
holy oil. The holy anointing oil, for instance, was reserved for sacred uses.
"Upon man's flesh it shall not be poured;" and again, "Whosoever shall make like
unto that, to smell thereto, shall even be cut off from his people." These
sanctified things were reserved for holy purposes, and any other use of them was
strictly forbidden. Bullocks and lambs and sheep and turtle-doves, and so forth,
were given by devout offerers, brought to the holy place, and dedicated unto
God; henceforth they belonged to God, and must be presented at his altar. This
is one part of the meaning of our Lord's prayer. He would have each of us
consecrated unto the Lord, designated and ordained for divine purposes. We are
not the world's, else might we be ambitious; we are not Satan's, else might we
be covetous; we are not our own, else might we be selfish. We are bought with a
price, and hence we are his by whom the price is paid. We belong to Jesus, and
he presents us to his Father, and begs him to accept us and sanctify us to his
own purposes. Do we not most heartily concur in this dedication? Do we not cry,
"Father, sanctify us to thy service?" I am sure we do if we have realized our
redeemed condition.
Beloved brethren, if the sprinkling of the blood,
of which we spake last Sabbath-day, has really taken effect upon us, we belong,
from this time forth, unto him that died for us, and rose again. We regard
ourselves as God's men, the liveried servants of the great King—that livery the
robe of righteousness. We were as sheep going astray, but we have now returned
unto the great Shepherd and Bishop of souls; and henceforth we are his people
and the sheep of his pasture. If any should ask, "To whom belongest thou?" we
answer, "I belong to Christ." If any enquire, "What is thine occupation?" we
reply with Jonah, "I fear God." We are not now at our own disposal, neither can
we hire ourselves out to inferior objects, mercenary aims, or selfish ambitions;
for we are engaged by solemn contract to the service of our God. We have lifted
up our hand unto the Lord, and we cannot draw back. Neither do we wish to
withdraw from the delightful compact and covenant; we desire to keep it even
unto the end. We seek no liberty to sin, nor license for self; rather do we cry,
"Bind the sacrifice with cords, even unto the horns of the altar. Sanctify us, O
Lord. Let us know, and let all the world know, that we are thine, because we
belong to Christ."
In addition to this, those who belonged to God, and
were dedicated to his service, were set apart and separated from others.
There was a special service for the setting-apart of priests; certain rites were
performed at the sanctifying of dedicated places and vessels. You remember with
what solemn service the Tabernacle was set up, and with what pomp of devotion
the Temple itself was set apart for the divine service. The Sabbath-day, which
the Lord hath sanctified, is set apart from the rest of time. To man it is a
dies non, because it is the Lord's-day. The Lord would have those who are
dedicated to him to be separated from the rest of mankind. For this purpose he
brought Abraham from Ur of the Chaldees, and Israel out of Egypt. "The people
shall dwell alone, and shall not be reckoned among the nations." The Lord saith
of his chosen, "This people have I formed for myself; they shall shew forth my
praise." Before long this secret purpose is followed by the open call: "Come out
from among them, and be ye separate; touch not the unclean thing, and I will be
a Father unto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters." The church of Christ
is to be a chaste virgin, wholly set apart for the Lord Christ: his own words
concerning his people are these, "They are not of the world, even as I am not of
the world."
By the election of grace from before the foundation
of the world this distinction commences, and the names are written in heaven.
Thereupon follows a redemption peculiar and special, as it is written; "These
were redeemed from among men, being the firstfruits unto God and to the Lamb."
This redemption is followed by effectual calling wherein men are made to come
forth from the old world into the kingdom of Christ. This is attended with
regeneration, in which they receive a new life, and so become as much
distinguished from their fellow-men as the living are from the dead. This
separating work is further carried on in what is commonly known as
sanctification, whereby the man of God is removed farther and farther from all
fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, and is changed from glory unto
glory, into an ever-growing likeness of his Lord, who was "holy, harmless,
undefiled separate from sinners."
Those who are sanctified in this sense have ceased
to be unequally yoked together with unbelievers; they have ceased to run with
the multitude to do evil; they are not conformed to this present evil world;
they are strangers and pilgrims upon the earth. The more assuredly this is true
of them the better. There are some, in these apostate days, who think that the
church cannot do better than to come down to the world to learn her ways, follow
her maxims, and acquire her "culture." In fact, the notion is that the world is
to be conquered by our conforming to it. This is as contrary to Scripture as the
light is to the darkness. The more distinct the line between him that feareth
God and him that feareth him not, the better all round. It will be a black day
when the sun itself is turned into darkness. When the salt has lost its savor,
and no longer opposes putrefaction, the world will rot with a vengeance. That
text is still true, "Ye are of God, little children, and the whole world lieth
in the wicked one." The seed of the woman knows no terms with the serpent brood
but continual war. Our Lord saith that in this matter he came not to send peace
on the earth, but a sword. "Because ye are not of the world, but I have chosen
you out of the world, therefore the world hateth you." If the church seeks to
cultivate the friendship of the world, she has this message from the Holy Ghost
by the pen of the apostle James: "Ye adulterers and adulteresses, know ye not
that the friendship of the world is enmity with God? whosoever therefore will be
a friend of the world is the enemy of God." He charges all who would please the
world with the black and filthy crime of spiritual adultery. The heart which
ought to be given to Christ and purity must not wander forth wantonly to woo the
defiled and polluted things of this present evil world. Separation from the
world is Christ's prayer for us.
Put these two things together, dedication to God
and separation unto him, and you are nearing the meaning of the prayer. But,
mark you, it is not all separation that is meant; for, as I told you in the
reading there are some who "separate themselves," and yet are sensual, not
having the Spirit. Separation for separation's sake savours rather of Babel than
of Jerusalem. It is one thing to separate from the world, and another thing to
be separate from the church. Where we believe that there is living faith in
Jesus, and the indwelling of the Holy Ghost, we are not called to division, but
to unity. For actual and manifest sin we must separate ourselves from offender—;
but we err if we carry on this separation where it is not authorized by the word
of God. The Corinthians and Galatians were far from being perfect in life, and
they had made many mistakes in doctrine, yea, even upon vital points; but
inasmuch as they were truly in Christ, Paul did not command any to come out of
those churches, and to be separate therefrom; but he exhorted them to prove each
man his own work, and he labored to bring them all back to the one and only
gospel, and to a clearer knowledge of it. We are to be faithful to truth; but we
are not to be of a contentious spirit, separating ourselves from those who are
living members of the one and indivisible body of Christ. To promote the unity
of the church, by creating new divisions, is not wise. Cultivate at once the
love of the truth and the love of the brethren. The body of Christ will not be
perfected by being rent. Truth should be the companion of love. If we heartily
love even those who are in some measure in error, but who possess the life of
God in their souls, we shall be the more likely to set them right. Separation
from the world is a solemn duty, indeed it is the hard point, the crux and
burden of our religion. It is not easy to be filled with love to men and yet for
God's sake, and even for their own sake, to be separated from them. The Lord
teach us this.
At the same time, this word "sanctification" means
what is commonly understood by it, namely, the making of the people of God
holy. "Sanctify them," that is, work in them a pure and holy character.
"Lord, make thy people holy," should be our daily prayer. I want you to notice
that this word here used in the Greek is not that which is rendered "Purify;"
but it has another shade of meaning. Had it meant "purify," it would hardly have
been used in reference to our Lord as it is in the next verse.
It has a higher meaning than that. O brethren, if
you are called Christians, there must be no room for doubt as to the fact that
you are purged from the common sins and ordinary transgressions of mankind, else
are you manifestly liars unto God, and deceivers of your own souls. They that
are not moral, they that are not honest, they that are not kind, they that are
not truthful, are far from the kingdom. How can these be the children of God who
are not even decent children of men? Thus we judge, and rightly judge, that the
life of God cannot be in that man's soul who abides wilfully in any known sin,
and takes pleasure therein. No; purification is not all. We will take it for
granted that you who profess to be Christians have escaped from the foul
pollution of lust and falsehood; if you have not done so, humble yourselves
before God, and be ashamed; for you need the very beginnings of grace. "They
that are Christ's have crucified the flesh." But sanctification is something
more than mere morality and respectability; it is not only deliverance from the
common sins of men, but also from the hardness, deadness, and carnality of
nature: it is deliverance from that which is of the flesh at its very best, and
admittance into that which is spiritual and divine. That which is carnal cometh
not into communion with the spiritual kingdom or Christ: we need that the
spiritual nature should rise above that which is merely natural. This is our
prayer—Lord, spiritualize us; elevate us; make us to dwell in communion with
God; make us to know him whom flesh and blood cannot reveal or discern. May the
Spirit of the living God have full sovereignty over us and perfect in us the
will of the Lord, for this is to be sanctified.
Sanctification is a higher word than purification;
for it includes that word and vastly more: it is not sufficient to be negatively
clean; we need to be adorned with all the virtues. If ye be merely moral, how
does your righteousness exceed that of the scribes and Pharisees? If ye pay your
lawful debts, give alms to the poor, and observe the rites of your religion,
what do ye more than others whom ye yourselves reckon to be in error?
Children of God should exhibit the love of God,
they should be filled with zeal for his glory, they should live generous,
unselfish lives, they should walk with God, and commune with the Most High. Ours
should be a purpose and an aim far higher than the best of the unregenerate can
understand. We ought to reach unto a life and a kingdom of which the mass of
mankind know nothing, and care less. Now, I am afraid that this spiritual sense
of the prayer is one that is often forgotten. Oh that God's Holy Spirit might
make us to know it by experimentally feeling it in ourselves! May "Holiness to
the Lord" be written across the brow of our consecrated humanity!
Beloved, this prayer of our Lord is most necessary,
for without sanctification how can we be saved, since it is written, "Without
holiness no man shall see the Lord?" How can we be saved from sin if sin has
still dominion over us? If we are not living holy, godly, spiritual lives, how
can we say that we are redeemed from the power of evil?
Without sanctification we shall be unfit for
service. Our Lord Jesus contemplated the sending of each one of us into the
world even as the Father sent him into the world; but how can he give a mission
to unsanctified men and women? Must not the vessels of the Lord be clean?
Without sanctification we cannot enjoy the
innermost sweets of our holy faith. The unsanctified are full of doubts and
fears; and what wonder? The unsanctified often say of the outward exercise of
religion, "What a weariness it is!" and no wonder, for they know not the
internal joys of it, having never learned to delight themselves in God. If they
walk not in the light of the Lord's countenance, how can they know the heaven
below which comes of true godliness? Oh, it is a prayer that needs to be prayed
for me, for you, for this church, and for the whole church of God! "Father,
sanctify them through thy truth."
II. Now I want you to notice, in the second place,
FOR WHOM THIS PRAYER WAS OFFERED. It was not offered for the world outside. It
would not be a suitable prayer for those who are dead in sin. Our Lord referred
to the company of men and women who were already saved, of whom he said that
they had kept God's Word: "Thine they were, and thou gavest them me." They were
therefore sanctified already in the sense of being consecrated and set apart for
holy purposes; and they were also sanctified in a measure already in the sense
of being made holy in character; for the immediate disciples of our Lord, with
all their errors and deficiencies, were holy men. It was for the apostles that
Jesus thus prayed; so that we may be sure that the most eminent saints need
still to have this prayer offered for them: "Sanctify them through thy truth."
Though, my sisters, you may be Deborahs, worthy to be called mothers in Israel,
yet you need to be made more holy. Though, my brethren, you may be true fathers
in God, of whom the Scripture saith truly that we have "not many," yet you still
need that Jesus should pray for you: "Sanctify them through thy truth."
These chosen ones were sanctified, but only to a
degree. Justification is perfect the moment it is received, but sanctification
is a matter of growth. He that is justified, is justified once for all by the
perfect work of Jesus, but he that is sanctified by Christ Jesus must grow up in
all things into him who is the Head. To make us holy is a life work, and for it
we should seek the divine operation every hour; for "he that hath wrought us for
the self-same thing is God." We would rise to the utmost pitch of holy living,
and never content ourselves with present attainments. Those who are most pure
and honorable have yet their shortcomings and errors to mourn over. When the
Lord turns the light strong upon us, we soon see the spots upon our raiment; it
is indeed when we walk in the light as God is in the light that we see most our
need of the cleansing blood of Jesus. If we have done well, to God be the glory
of it; but we might have done better. If we have loved much, to God's grace be
the praise; but we ought to have loved more. If we have believed, and believed
steadfastly, we ought to have believed to a far higher degree in our Almighty
Friend. We are still below our capacities; there is a something yet beyond us. O
ye sanctified ones, it is for you that Jesus prays that the Father may still
sanctify you.
I want you to notice more particularly that these
believers for whom our Lord prayed were to be the preachers and teachers of
their own and succeeding generations. These were the handful of seed-corn out of
which would grow the church of the future, whose harvest would gladden all
lands. To prepare them to be sent out as Christ's missionaries they must be
sanctified. How shall a holy God send out unholy messengers? An unsanctified
minister is an unsent minister. An unholy missionary is a pest to the tribe he
visits; an unholy teacher in a school is an injury rather than a blessing to the
class he conducts. Only in proportion as you are sanctified unto God can you
hope for the power of the Holy Spirit to rest on you, and to work with you, so
as to bring others to the Savior's feet. How much may each of us have been
hampered and hindered by want of holiness! God will not use unclean instruments;
nay, he will not even have his holy vessels borne by unclean hands. "To the
wicked, God saith, What hast thou to do to declare my statutes?" A whole host
may be defeated because of one Achan in the camp; and this is our constant fear.
Holiness is an essential qualificatian to a man's fitness for being used of the
Lord God for the extension of his kingdom; hence our Lord's prayer for his
apostles and other workers: "Holy Father, sanctify them."
Furthermore, our Lord Jesus Christ was about to
pray "that they all might be one;" and for this desirable result holiness is
needed. Why are we not one? Sin is the great dividing element. The perfectly
holy would be perfectly united. The more saintly men are, the more they love
their Lord and one another; and thus they come into closer union with each
other. Our errors and our sins are roots of bitterness which spring up and
trouble us, and many are defiled. Our infirmities of judgment are aggravated by
our imperfections of character, and our walking at a distance from our God; and
these breed coldness and lukewarmness, out of which grow disunion and division,
sects and heresies. If we were all abiding in Christ to the full, we should
abide in union with each other and with God, and our Lord's great prayer for the
unity of his church would be fulfilled.
Moreover, our Lord finished his most comprehensive
prayer by a petition that we might all be with him—with him where he is, that we
may behold his glory. Full sanctification is essential to this. Shall the
unsanctified dwell with Christ in heaven? Shall unholy eyes behold his glory? It
cannot be. How can we participate in the splendor and triumphs of the exalted
head if we are not members of his body? and how can a holy head have impure and
dishonest members? No, brethren, we must be holy, for Christ is holy.
Uprightness of walk and cleanness of heart are absolutely requisite for the
purposes of Christian life, whether here or hereafter. Those who live in sin are
the servants of sin; only those who are renewed by the Holy Ghost unto truth,
and holiness, and love, can hope to be partakers of holy joys and heavenly
bliss.
III. I am compelled by shortness of time to be
brief upon each point; but I must dwell for a little upon the third subject of
consideration, which is this—TO WHOM THIS PRAYER IS DIRECTED. "Sanctify them
through thy truth." No one can sanctify a soul but Almighty God, the great
Father of spirits. He who made us must also make us holy, or we shall never
attain that character. Our dear Savior calls the great God "Holy Father"
in this prayer, and it is the part of the holy God to create holiness; while a
holy Father can only be the Father of holy children, for like begets
like. To you that believe in Jesus he gives power to become the sons of God, and
a part of that power lies in becoming holy according to the manner and character
of our Father who is in heaven. As we are holy, so do we bear the image of that
Lord from heaven who, as the second man, is the firstborn to whom the many
brethren are conformed. The holy Father in heaven will own those as his children
upon earth who are holy. The very nature of God should encourage us in our
prayers for holiness; for he will not be slow to work in us to will and to do
according to his perfect will.
Beloved, this sanctification is a work of God from
its earliest stage. We go astray of ourselves, but we never return to the great
Shepherd apart from his divine drawings. Regeneration, in which sanctification
begins, is wholly the work of the Spirit of God. Our first discovery of wrong,
and our first pang of penitence, are the work of divine grace. Every thought of
holiness, and every desire after purity, must come from the Lord alone, for we
are by nature wedded to iniquity. So also the ultimate conquest of sin in us,
and the making us perfectly like to our Lord, must be entirely the work of the
Lord God, who makes all things new, since we have no power to carry on so great
a work of ourselves. This is a creation; can we create? This is a resurrection;
can we raise the dead? Our degenerate nature can rot into a still direr
putrefaction, but it can never return to purity or sweeten itself into
perfection; this is of God and God alone. Sanctification is as much the work of
God as the making of the heavens and the earth. Who is sufficient for these
things? We go not even a step in sanctification in our own strength; whatever we
think we advance of ourselves is but a fictitious progress which will lead to
bitter disappointment. Real sanctification is entirely from first to last the
work of the Spirit of the blessed God, whom the Father hath sent forth that he
might sanctify his chosen ones. See, then, what a great thing sanctification is,
and how necessary it is that our Lord should pray unto his Father, "Sanctify
them through thy truth."
The truth alone will not sanctify a man. We may
maintain an orthodox creed, and it is highly important that we should do so, but
if it does not touch our heart and influence our character, what is the value of
our orthodoxy? It is not the doctrine which of itself sanctifies, but the Father
sanctifies by means of the doctrine. The truth is the element in which we are
made to live in order to holiness. Falsehood leads to sin, truth leads to
holiness; but there is a lying spirit, and there is also the Spirit of truth,
and by these the error and the truth are used as means to an end. Truth must be
applied with spiritual power to the mind, the conscience, and the heart, or else
a man may receive the truth, and yet hold it in unrighteousness. I believe this
to be the crowning work of God in man, that his people should be perfectly
delivered from evil. He elected them that they might be a peculiar people,
zealous for good works; he ransomed them that he might redeem them from all
iniquity, and purify them unto himself; he effectually calls them to a high and
holy vocation, even to virtue and true holiness.
Every work of the Spirit of God upon the new nature
aims at the purification, the consecration, the perfecting of those whom God in
love has taken to be his own. Yea, more; all the events of Providence around us
work towards that one end: for this our joys and our sorrows, for this our pains
of body and griefs of heart, for this our losses and our crosses—all these are
sacred medicines by which we are cured of the disease of nature, and prepared
for the enjoyment of perfect spiritual health. All that befalls us on our road
to heaven is meant to fit us for our journey's end. Our way through the
wilderness is meant to try us, and to prove us, that our evils may be
discovered, repented of, and overcome, and that thus we may be without fault
before the throne at the last. We are being educated for the skies, meetened for
the assembly of the perfect. It doth not yet appear what we shall be; but we are
struggling up towards it; and we know that when Jesus shall appear, we shall be
like him, for we shall see him as he is. We are rising: by hard wrestling, and
long watching, and patient waiting, we are rising into holiness. These
tribulations thresh our wheat and get the chaff away, these afflictions consume
our dross and tin to make the gold more pure. All things work together for good
to them that love God; and the net result of them all will be the presenting of
the chosen unto God, not having spot or wrinkle, or any such thing.
Thus I have reminded you that the prayer for
sanctification is offered to the divine Father, and this leads us to look out of
ourselves and wholly, to our God. Do not set about the work of sanctification
yourselves, as if you could perform it alone. Do not imagine that holiness will
necessarily follow because you listen to an earnest preacher, or unite in sacred
worship. My brethren, God himself must work within you; the Holy Ghost must
inhabit you; and this can only come to you by faith in the Lord Jesus. Believe
in him for your sanctification, even as you have believed for your pardon and
justification. He alone can bestow sanctification upon you; for this is the gift
of God through Jesus Christ our Lord.
IV. This is a great subject, and I have but short
time; so I have, in the last place, to notice with much brevity HOW
SANCTIFICATION IS TO BE WROUGHT IN BELIEVERS, "Sanctify them through thy
truth: thy word is truth. "Beloved, observe how God has joined holiness and
truth together. There has been a tendency of late to divide truth of doctrine
from truth of precept. Men say that Christianity is a life and not a creed: this
is a part truth, and very near akin to a lie. Christianity is a life which grows
out of truth. Jesus Christ is the way and the truth as well as the life, and he
is not properly received except he is accepted in that threefold character.
No holy life will be produced in us by the belief
of falsehood. Sanctification in visible character comes out of edification in
the inner faith of the heart, or otherwise it is a mere shell. Good works are
the fruit of true faith, and true faith is a sincere belief of the truth. Every
truth leads towards holiness; every error of doctrine, directly or indirectly,
leads to sin. A twist of the understanding will inevitably bring a contortion of
the life sooner or later. The straight line of truth drawn on the heart will
produce a direct course of gracious walking in the life. Do not imagine that you
can live on spiritual carrion and yet be in fine moral health, or that you can
drink down poisonous error and yet lift up a face without spot before God. Even
God himself only sanctifies us by the truth. Only that teaching will sanctify
you which is taken from God's word, that teaching which is not true, nor the
truth of God, cannot sanctify you. Error may puff you up, it may even make you
think that you are sanctified; but there is a very serious difference between
boasting of sanctification and being sanctified, and a very grave difference
between setting up to be superior to others and being really accepted before
God. Believe me, God works sanctification in us by the truth, and by nothing
else.
But what is the truth? There is the point. Is the
truth that which I imagine to be revealed to me by some private communication?
Am I to fancy that I enjoy some special revelation, and am I to order my life by
voices, dreams, and impressions? Brethren, fall not into this common delusion.
God's word to us is in Holy Scripture. All the truth that sanctifies men is in
God's Word. Do not listen to those who cry, "Lo here!" and "Lo there!" I am
plucked by the sleeve almost every day by crazy persons and pretenders who have
revelations. One man tells me that God has sent a message to me by him; and I
reply, "No, sir, the Lord knows where I dwell, and he is so near to me that he
would not need to send to me by you." Another man announces in God's name a
dogma which, on the face of it, is a lie against the Holy Ghost. He says the
Spirit of God told him so-and-so; but we know that the Holy Ghost never
contradicts himself. If your imaginary revelation is not according to this Word,
it has no weight with us; and if it is according to this Word, it is no new
thing. Brethren, this Bible is enough if the Lord does but use it, and quicken
it by his Spirit in our hearts. Truth is neither your opinion, nor mine; your
message, nor mine. Jesus says, "Thy word is truth." That which sanctifies men is
not only truth, but it is the particular truth which is revealed in God's
Word—"Thy word is truth." What a blessing it is that all the truth that is
necessary to sanctify us is revealed in the Word of God, so that we have not to
expend our energies upon discovering truth, but may, to our far greater profit,
use revealed truth for its divine ends and purposes! There will be no more
revelations; no more are needed. The canon is fixed and complete, and he that
adds to it shall have added to him the plagues that are written in this Book.
What need of more when here is enough for every practical purpose? "Sanctify
them through thy truth: thy word is truth."
This being so, the truth which it is needful for us
to receive is evidently fixed. You cannot change Holy Scripture. You may arrive
more and more accurately at the original text; but for all practical purposes
the text we have is correct enough, and our old Authorized Version is a sound
one. Scripture itself cannot be broken; we cannot take from it nor add to it.
The Lord has never re-written nor revised his Word, nor will he ever do so.
Our teachings are full of errors, but the Spirit mistaketh not. We have the
"Retractations": of Augustine, but there are no retractations with prophets and
apostles. The faith has been delivered once for all to the saints, and it
standeth fast for ever. "Thy word is truth." The Scripture alone is absolute
truth, essential truth, decisive truth, authoritative truth, undiluted truth,
eternal, everlasting truth. Truth given us in the word of God is that which is
to sanctify all believers to the end of time: God will use it to that end.
Learn, then, my brothers, how earnestly you ought
to search the Scriptures! See, my sisters, how studiously you should read this
Book of God! If this is the truth, and the truth with which God sanctifies us,
let us learn it, hold it, and stand fast in it. To him that gave us the Book let
us pledge ourselves never to depart from his testimonies. To us, at any rate,
God's word is truth. "But they argue differently in the schools!" Let them
argue. "But oratory with its flowery speech speaketh otherwise!" Let it speak:
words are but air and tongues but clay. O God, "thy word is truth." "But
philosophers have contradicted it!" Let them contradict it. Who are they? God's
word is truth: we will go no farther while the world stands. But then let us be
equally firm in our conviction that we do not know the truth aright unless it
makes us holy. We do not hold truth in a true way unless it leads us to a true
life. If you use the back of a knife it will not cut: truth hath its handle and
its blade; see that you use it properly. You can make pure water kill a man; you
must use every good thing aright or it will not be good. The truth, when fully
used, will daily destroy sin, nourish grace, suggest noble desires, and urge to
holy acts. O sirs, I do pray that we may by our lives adorn the doctrine of God
our Savior in all things. Some do not so. I say this to our shame and to my own
hourly sorrow.
The one point of failure to be most deeply
regretted would be a failure in the holiness of our church members. If you
yourselves act as others do, what witness do you bear? If your families are not
graciously ordered; if your business is not conducted upon principles of the
strictest integrity; if your speech is questionable as to purity or
truthfulness; if your lives are open to serious rebuke—how can God accept you or
send a blessing on the Church to which you belong? It is all falsehood and
deceit to talk about your being the people of God when even men of the world
shame you. Your faith in the Lord Jesus must operate upon your lives to make you
faithful and true, it must check you here, and excite you there; it must keep
you back from this, and drive you on to that; it must constantly operate upon
thought and speech and act, or else you know nothing of its saving power. How
can I speak more distinctly and emphatically? Do not come to me with your
experiences, and your convictions, and your professions, unless you sanctify the
name of God in your lives. O brethren, we had better quit our professions if we
do not live up to them. In the name of him who breathed this prayer just before
his face was encrimsoned with the bloody sweat, let us cry mightily unto the
Father, "Sanctify us through thy truth, thy Word is truth." As a people, we have
stuck unto the Word of the Lord, but are we practically obeying it? We have
determined as a congregation to keep the old ways; and I, for one, as the
minister, am solemnly bound to the old faith. Oh that we might commend it by our
holiness! Nothing is truth to me but this one Book, this infallibly inspired
writing of the Spirit of God. It is incumbent upon us to show the hallowed
influence of this Book. The vows of God are on us, that by our godly lives we
should show forth his praises who has brought us out of darkness into his
marvellous light. This Bible is our treasure. We prize each leaf of it. Let us
bind it in the best fashion, in the best morocco of a clear, intelligent faith;
then let us put a golden clasp upon it, and gild its edges by a life of love,
and truth, and purity, and zeal. Thus shall we commend the volume to those who
have never looked within its pages. Brethren, the sacred roll, with its seven
seals, must not be held in hands defiled and polluted; but with clean hands and
pure heart we must hold it forth and publish it among men. God help us so to do
for Jesus' sake! Amen.
Delivered on Lord's-day Morning, March 7th, 1886, by
C. H. SPURGEON,
At
the
Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington
PORTION OF SCRIPTURE READ BEFORE SERMON—John 17.
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