SERMON XVIII.
ON BEING HOLY.
September 2, 1857
by Charles Grandison Finney
President of Oberlin College
Text.--1 Pet. 1:16: "Be ye holy, for I am holy."
This precept enjoins holiness, and our first business
should therefore be to enquire what holiness is. It is plain that the Bible uses
the term as synonymous with moral purity; but the question will still return --
What is moral purity?
I answer -- Moral fitness; that which we see to be morally appropriate; it is in
substance, moral propriety; in other words -- perfect love; such as God
requires. It is sympathy with God and likeness to Him; the state of mind that
God has. Holiness in God is not a part of His nature in such a sense that it is
not voluntary in Him; but it is a voluntary exercise and state of His mind.
The same is true of all beings. Holiness is not a thing of nature as opposed to
free action, but must always be a free and a moral thing. It is not possible to
any beings but such as are made in the image of God in the sense of being moral
agents. They must have free will, and then must voluntarily conform themselves
to rectitude. Nothing less or other than a voluntary conformity of themselves to
the moral law can be holiness. In them all, holiness is that state of mind which
is precisely appropriate to their nature and relations. This state is expressed
in one word -- love, meaning by this, benevolence -- good will to all. When this
term is used in its widest sense, it includes all moral duty. Hence this command
to be holy requires that we bring ourselves into a moral adjustment to God and
our entire moral duty.
Why should we be holy?
God, as in our text, requires it. "It is written -- 'Be ye holy, for I am
holy.'"
The contest also combines with the text to enforce the duty by God's example.
"As He who hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation"
-- according to the ancient precept -- "Be ye holy, for I am holy." Because I am
holy, therefore be ye holy likewise.
Our Lord enforced the same duty by the same reason; (Matt. 5:48) "Be ye
therefore perfect, even as your Father who is in heaven is perfect."
What are the reasons of this requirement?
No moral agent can respect himself unless he is holy. He may be careless and thoughtless; and may thus slide over and past some of the self-reproach he must otherwise feel for unholiness; but he can never have any honest self-respect unless he behaves himself in a comely and decent way which he believes to be in his circumstances right.
Need I urge that self-respect is a thing of very great importance? Few are fully aware how very important self-respect is to themselves and to others. Let a young man lose his self-respect, and what is he? What hope can you have of his stability and manliness? A young woman void of self-respect, is no longer herself. Who does not know how complete she falls from her position as a virtuous woman!
This form of self-respect pertains to our relations to this world and to society; but suppose a moral agent in like manner, to lose his self-respect towards God. How fearful must be the influence of this loss on his heart! How reckless or moral rectitude he becomes in all that pertains to his Maker!
Or suppose God to lose His self-respect. Suppose He should cease to do what is honorable to Himself, and should no longer care to act in a manner worthy of His own esteem. How fearful must be the consequences first to Himself, and next to His whole universe! Suppose Him to be morally impure, no longer adjusting His conduct to His own standard of right. It shocks us unutterably to conceive of God as acting in a way unworthy of Himself. We know how keenly every sensitive and right-minded being feels the disgrace of having consciously acted in a way unworthy of himself. Those who have been conscious of this pain have often thought how God must feel, if, with His infinite sensibilities, He should act unworthy of Himself. You sometimes experience this feeling and therefore know how you loathe yourself and have no peace or rest in your soul.
It is true that these considerations may have but little weight with those who know nothing of holiness, and who have never cultivated their own right feelings and sentiments; but those of you who have been near to God and have had your "heart sprinkled from an evil conscience," must appreciate it.
He requires us to be holy because He cannot make us happy unless we will become holy. Our nature being what it is, it is forever impossible that we should be happy without being holy. God is happy, because He is holy; He knows that we exist under the same law of nature and necessity; hence His benevolence prompts, nay compels Him to use this necessary means of securing our happiness.
REMARKS.
1. Sinners know they are not holy. All know this, yet many often say -- What
have I done so very bad? No matter whether very bad, (judged by the popular
standard,) or not; you know you are not holy. Now do not suppose yourself to be
holy as God is holy. You know there is none of this character in you. How much
so ever confused men's sentiments on this subject may be, it is universally true
that they conceive of God as being holy in a sense in which they are not
themselves. Whatever they may say of it, they know this.
2. The hope that unconverted people often have that they shall be saved, is
utterly without foundation. Many try to think they have not done anything so bad
that they deserve to be sent to hell!
How strange that such men should think themselves fit for heaven! Christ said --
"Marvel not that I said unto you, ye must be born again." No marvel that men
should need a radical change! Hearts so foreign from love, so full of
selfishness -- how can such hearts dwell in heaven! The unholy man's hope of
heaven -- how utterly absurd! What nonsense that men should cherish such hopes
without any holiness to fit them for it! Just as if heaven were a certain place,
of no peculiar character, and to go there would be to ensure one's bliss! You
know better! You know something about the business and the delights of the
Christian -- you know they are such as you delight not in. The Sabbath is no
privilege to you. Rather you exclaim, "behold, what a weariness it is!" Social
worship has no spiritual attractions for you. How then can you suppose that
heaven would be a world of joy to you?
3. Many who know they must become holy, are yet very ignorant of the way in
which they are to become so. Having begun in the Spirit, they try to become
perfect in the flesh. Their reliance is more on resolutions, than on Christ
embraced by faith. A leading minister of the Presbyterian church, not long
since, heard a sermon showing that men are sanctified by receiving Christ into
the heart by faith. He remarked -- "We are just beginning to receive this
doctrine. We have a long time been trying to become holy by resolution."
Of many it is true that all their efforts are by works of law. They seem not to
know that all the efforts they make without Christ avail nothing save only sin.
4. Pardon without holiness is impossible, in this sense: that the heart must
turn from its sins to God before it can be forgiven. Repentance is really
nothing more or less than turning from sin to holiness; and who does not know
that the Scriptures teach that repentance must precede pardon? Reversing this
order would ruin the sinner. The idea that God can reverse it, works only ruin
to those who accept it.
5. The command to be holy implies the practicability of becoming so. I meet with
some professed Christians who on this subject have really no hope. They feel
that need of being holy, but they are in despair of attaining it before they
die. Now these Christians claim to be believers, but they are not. The grand
difficulty in their case is, that they do not believe God's word of promise.
They have no faith that men can become holy in this life, yet they say they
believe in Christ. Yet what is Christ if not a Savior? A Savior from what if not
from sin? Is it not expressly said -- "Thou shalt call His name Jesus, for He
shall save His people from their sins"? Does it not seem strange that so many
profess to be believers in Christ, but yet avow that they do not believe the
plainest things said in the Bible of Christ? They claim to be believers! What!
are they believers, gospel-believers, and yet do not believe what Christ says!
Nay more, they tell you it is dangerous to believe that you can be holy in this
world! Said a Unitarian minister -- "How strange that the Orthodox should object
to sanctification in this life"! He had been reading the views presented here,
and said, "Why can they object? If they profess to believe that Jesus is a
divine Savior, and that in Him all fullness dwells, why should they object? They
should either give up their doctrine of a divine Savior, and deny that He is
able to save to the uttermost, and abandon their ideas of a divine Redeemer, or
admit your views to be true" -- and certainly there seems to be force in his
reasoning.
I have never been more struck with this great idea -- salvation from sinning, by
Jesus Christ -- than I have during the past winter. I found it everywhere as I
read the New Testament, and indeed in the Old Testament also. O how strange that
the church should be fighting the idea of becoming holy through Jesus Christ!
How strange that they should insist that He will not do such thing! Is it not
wonderful?
6. Christ's promise and relations to His people imply a pledge of all the help
we need. The entire gospel scheme is adapted to men -- not in the sense of
conniving at their weakness, but of really helping them out of it. It does not
say -- "Go on in your sins;" does not smooth this path by saying -- "No man can
live sinless in this world;" but it says -- "Take hold of Christ's strength and
He will help you." It does not encourage you to hold on in sinning, but it urges
you to take hold of Christ for all the help you need to overcome the practical
difficulties in your way. Its language is -- "My grace is sufficient for thee,
for My strength is made perfect in weakness."
While you affirm your moral obligation, you are more and more impressed with
your moral weakness. But this weakness is what Christ counterbalances with His
strength. In the extremest weakness, His strength finds largest scope and
fullest development. "As thy day, so shalt thy strength be" -- when thou shalt
thoroughly cast thyself on the arm of the Mighty One.
Hence, the command to be holy is no apology for despondency, but should really
encourage us to take hold of the strength promised to meet human weakness.
7. God sympathizes with every honest effort we make to become holy. Wherever He
sees a moral struggle in any soul, it interests Him exceedingly. He sympathizes
infinitely more deeply than we do. And yet some of us know how deeply we
sympathize where we see a convert getting hold of the idea of sanctification by
Christ. In some such cases I have known the joy of older Christians to be really
inexpressible. When I have seen gospel ministers getting hold of the idea of
sanctification and struggling to reach the experience of that idea, I have said
to myself -- If we can feel so deeply in view of such a struggle, how much more
must God feel! Do you not think God feels? Ah, indeed in every pulse of His
infinite and boundless sensibility!
8. If we become partakes of His holiness, we are made sure of the river of His
pleasures. This comes both of the nature of the case and of the revealed laws of
His kingdom. Holiness becomes God's house forever. And while it is fearfully
true that without holiness, no man shall see the Lord, it is delightfully sure
that the holy shall see and enjoy spiritual blessedness in His presence.
9. All men will sometimes feel the necessity of this holiness. In some cases, it
is felt most deeply. Last winter I became acquainted with a woman, hopefully a
Christian, but who had heard very little on this subject. She had been converted
under circumstances where the great desolation and moral darkness became the
immediate occasion of her awakening. From such surroundings, she had struggled
up into the light. Yet when she came to hear the real gospel, and the way of
holiness was opened to her mind, it was wonderful to see how she did grasp and
devour this blessed bread of life! It met a great void in her spiritual nature,
and her soul exulted in it with exceeding joy.
You often feel these struggles. You know you need something more and higher; you
cannot be satisfied with your present state; you are conscious something is
wrong between your soul and God, and you have a deep conviction that you need
more holiness. Why then do you not lay hold of this hope set before you in the
gospel?
10. There is no rest, short of being holy. Many try to find rest in something
less, but they are sure to fail. They suspend further efforts and would fain
believe they shall have rest where they are; but all such hope is vain. There
can be no rest short of coming into sympathy with God and into spiritual union
with Jesus Christ.
11. Many insanely suppose that when they come to die, they shall be sanctified
and prepared for heaven. Let us sit down by the bedside of such a man -- one who
expects to be sanctified in death. What is he doing? What progress is he making?
Would you speak kindly to him and enquire after his spiritual progress? But you
must not allude to religion -- the doctor would not like to have you. He says it
might retard the man's recovery. He wants his mind to be perfectly quiet and
unthinking. It will not do therefore even to whisper the name of Jesus! And is
it supposable that this dying man is taking hold vigorously of that blessed Name
which you may not even whisper in his ear? Is he gaining the victory over the
world by faith in the Lamb of God? Do you judge from what you see and hear that
his soul is in a mighty struggle with the powers of selfishness and sin, a
struggle in which faith in Jesus ensures the victory? Ah! he sinks -- he goes
down, lower and lower; sometimes all consciousness seems to be lost; and can you
think that in these dying hours, his soul is entering into sympathy with Christ
-- is bursting away from the bands of temptation and taking hold with a mighty
grasp of those exceeding great and precious promises? I do not ask you what you
admit as to the possibility of miracles on a death-bed; but I ask if you think
the circumstances are favorable for the mental effort which the nature of the
case demands in renouncing sin and in receiving Jesus Christ by faith for
sanctification?
12. No man has any right to hope unless he is really committed to holiness and
in all honesty and earnestness intends to live so. If he does not intend to live
a holy life, let him know that he is not in the way to heaven. If he is in his
sins and indulges himself in sinning, by what right or reason can he suppose
himself traveling towards the abodes of infinite glory? If he hopes for heaven
at the end of such a life, he is egregiously self-deceived.
Is not every person in this house most fully convinced that he must become holy
if he would be saved? Notwithstanding all the looseness of your views on this
subject, do you not know that you must be holy if you would find a home in
heaven?
Do you believe that in any practical sense you really can become holy? Doubtless
you do; for where would you be if you knew you must be holy and yet know equally
well that you cannot be? You are not in this dilemma. You cannot bring yourself
to think that the ever blessed God has ever shut up His children in a dilemma so
hopeless.
The case with you probably is, that you know you ought to become holy, but you
are not ready to be just now. If I should call on the younger classes, they
would say -- I have so much to do, how can I? Certainly I am not ready now. The
middle-aged also are equally unprepared yet. The great evil is that men will not
act on their own convictions. They have convictions; they know what they ought
to do and that it is infinitely wicked for them not to do, yet they do it not.
There they stop. They stop, not in the point of gospel rest, but in the point
where impenitent sinners often stop -- convicted of sin, but not acting up to
their convictions of duty. Suppose one should come to you and try to hire you to
make no further effort to become more holy; could you be hired to any such
committal? It would affect you very much as it would have done when you were
first convicted of sin, if some one had tried to hire you to defer all effort to
come to Christ for a score of years longer. You would have cried out -- "Get
thee behind me, Satan," -- "don't tempt me to sell my soul!" Satan took a more
cunning course. He only said -- Waive it just now; let it lie over till you find
a convenient season. So offered, the bait took, and you swallowed it; and so
thousands are putting off their effort to become holy. You would be
horror-stricken with the proposal to put off all effort to become holy for ten
years longer; but the thought of putting it over for an indefinite time --
supposed to be not very long, does not startle you at all.
O my hearers, what shall the end be of such procrastination? May it not be that
in your real heart you have no love of holiness, and have never sought it as the
pearl of great price? Can it be well for you to go on still in a course that
leads you farther every day from God? Will you forget that He is holy, and that
if you would behold His face in peace, you too must become holy?
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