Sanctification - Part
2 (1)
Rev Roderick MacLeod
Closely allied to this is the fifth principle: The sanctification
of believers is, most emphatically, not a restoration to holiness of their
fallen nature, derived from Adam, but its mortification. Sanctification without
the mortification of our fallen nature is a simple contradiction. It is impossible
to make that nature holy. "You can no more bring it to holiness . . . than
you can bring a dead carcass to life by chaffing and rubbing it" (pp 124,125).
The disposition, or principle, of soul associated with the expressions the natural
state, the flesh, or the old man, is utterly dead in sin;
it can never be revived but must be destroyed. Christ died on the cross, not
that the natural disposition of sinners might be made holy, but so that that
nature would be crucified in all for whom He died. He who tries to reform the
old man is like a fool who tries to rub a black coal clean, supposing it is
white underneath.
The sixth principle is: Faith is necessary to the practice of
holiness. Marshall says, "Faith in Jesus Christ is the grace with which a holy
life is to begin, and by which the foundation of all other holy duties is laid
in the soul. . . . This is the uniting grace whereby the Spirit of God knitteth
the knot of the mystical marriage between Christ and us, and maketh us branches
in that noble Vine". "By faith we have actual enjoyment and possession of Christ
Himself, and not only of remission of sins but of life, and so of holiness." "All
spiritual life and holiness continue, grow or decay in us according as faith
continueth, groweth or decayeth in vigour". "Trusting on Christ, I know no
work of obedience which it is not able to produce."
Saving faith is the inward means of sanctification. Faith identifies and "putteth
away from itself everything that keepeth the soul at a distance from Christ",
as Paul declares: "Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the excellency
of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I have suffered the loss
of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win Christ" (Phil 3:8).
The voice of faith is: "Asshur shall not save us; we will not ride upon horses:
neither will we say any more to the work of our hands, Ye are our gods: for
in Thee the fatherless findeth mercy" (Hos 14:3). Faith gets above other confidences
to Christ as the only happiness and salvation.
Saving faith views the revelation of God in Christ in such a way as inclines
the soul lovingly to serve and obey Him. Believing that Christ has obtained
salvation for us inclines us to serve Him. To be "persuaded of the future enjoyment
of . . . everlasting happiness . . . must precede our holy practice as a cause
disposing and alluring us to it. . . . The sure hope of heaven is made use
of ordinarily by God . . . as an encouragement to the practice of holiness."
We not only lack power, but also the will, to keep the law, "for it is God
which worketh in you both to will and to do of His good pleasure" (Phil 2:13).
The believer knows that all his wellsprings are in Christ and not in himself,
and that he needs quickening daily. Faith lays hold on the promised strength
laid up in Christ, which we need both to will and to perform our duties in
the practice of holiness.
Despite the lucid manner in which this book describes the function of a living
faith in the sanctification of a believer, there are places where Marshall
has cast many readers into troubled confusion, for he sometimes seems to convey
the idea that assurance of sense is essential to faith. While there is undoubtedly
confusion, or at least opacity, in some of his language regarding faith, we
must remember that his purpose was to oppose those Arminians and Neonomians
who denied the biblical doctrines of justification and the preservation of
believers. They slanderously alleged that the doctrine of a perfect and immediate
justification of those who believe savingly leads to licentiousness. They said
the same about the doctrine of the preservation of the justified. Our author,
in that zeal that characterises his writing, seeks to prove that, however the
hypocrite may misuse these doctrines, the believer's assurance of these things
leads to holiness, not to sin. Furthermore, the author is anxious to dismiss
as absurd a kind of faith that is unbelieving in its nature. The Arminian "doubtsome
faith" cannot lead to sanctification but to mistrust, indeed dread, of God.
As the matter is of great importance to believers, let us try to distinguish
between the assurance that is essential to faith and that which is not. There
is an assurance that is essential to faith; there is no saving faith without
it. And there is an assurance that is not essential to faith; there may be
saving faith where it is absent. The first, the assurance essential to faith,
has the Word of God as its object. The second has the work of God in one's
soul as its object. We may explain the difference as follows:
- The function assigned to saving faith in the scheme of salvation is: I
trust, with my whole heart, that God is faithful to His Word, that Christ
is able to save unto the uttermost all those who come unto God by Him, and
that, despite the greatness of my sin, He is able to save me too if I believe
in the manner proposed in His Word. This is assurance with respect to the
Word of God. Some might say that this describes a merely speculative faith.
But a speculative faith involves only the understanding; saving faith involves
the whole heart - that is, the understanding and the will. In the
promises and invitations of the gospel there is what addresses the understanding
as true, and the will as good. When the sinner believes with the whole heart,
his understanding knows that what is presented is true and acquiesces in
it, and the will embraces as good what is there presented.
- The function assigned to the assurance of sense is: I believe upon sure
grounds that the work of God is begun in my soul, and thus I reason that
I am - to the praise of God and His free grace - loved with a divine, electing,
redeeming, regenerating and sanctifying love. This is assurance with respect
to the work of God in my soul. While it is not essential, it is helpful,
comforting and strengthening. Furthermore, it is glorifying to God and ought
to be sought diligently, especially as it may be attained in the diligent
use of the ordinary means of grace. (2)
The seventh principle is: Though sanctification is a mystery, it does
not dispense with the ordinary and outwards means which God has ordained for
strengthening grace in the soul. The means of grace which the author explains
are: hearing and reading the Word, prayer, Psalm-singing, fasting, the sacraments,
self-examination, and fellowship with God's people.
By way of warning, our author refers to the possible misuse of the means of
grace. He cautions us against using these means in such a way as to contradict
the grace of God in Christ. They are intended to guide us to Christ alone,
and if we turn them to any self-righteous use, it is a gross violation of a
divine institution.
By way of commendation, Marshall states: "Though holiness be effectually attained
by the life of faith in Christ, yet the use of any means appointed in the Word
for attaining and promoting holiness is not here made void but rather established".
He speaks of "carnal gospellers" who imagine themselves to be in such a state
of perfection that they are above the ordinances as "lazy solifidians". (3) The
true believer knows how soon faith and all other graces wither without the
use of means. Faith, that gift of God, working by love, makes use of the spiritual
bond between Christ and the believer for sanctifying grace.
This biblical method of sanctification glorifies God's grace and power through
Jesus Christ and His Spirit, and it abases man. It shows that all our good
works are not by the strength of an arm of flesh but by the power of Christ
living in us, and that Christ is the "immediate principal Agent of all their
good works".
Endnotes:
1. This is the second of two articles giving the substance
of a paper presented to the 2001 Theological Conference. It dealt with the
volume, The Gospel Mystery of Sanctification, by the Puritan, Walter
Marshall. After an introduction which outlined the errors Marshall had in
view, the first article went on to begin identifying the principles which
undergird his book. They were: (1) The Word of God is the rule of the sanctified
life. (2) Neither the source, means, manner or matter of sanctification could
ever be known without a revelation from God. (3) There is no sanctification
without the Holy Spirit. (4) Sanctification is perfectly impossible apart
from union to Christ as the source of all spiritual life.#
2. A quotation from William Gurnall's Christian in
Complete Armour on the subject of assurance: "Faith, in time, after much
communion with God, acquaintance with the Word, and experience of His dealings
with the soul, may flourish into assurance. But as the root truly lives before
the flower appears, and continues when that hath shed its beautiful leaves,
and gone again, so doth true justifying faith live before assurance comes
and after it disappears. . . . Assurance is, as it were, the cream of faith.
Now you know there is milk before there is cream; this riseth not but after
some time standing, and there remains milk after it is skimmed off. How many,
alas, of the precious saints of God must we shut out from being believers
if there is no faith but what amounts to assurance? . . . Assurance is like
the sunflower, which opens with the day and shuts with the night. It follows
the motion of God's face. If that looks smilingly on the soul, it lives;
if that frowns or hides itself, it dies. But faith is a plant that can grow
in the shade, a grace that can find the way to heaven in a dark night. It
can 'walk in darkness', and yet 'trust in the name of the Lord' (Is 50:10)."
3. Those who misuse the doctrine of justification by
faith alone, from the Latin solifidius.
This article is part 2 of a series
Other articles in this series: [part 1]
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