<SPAN name="chapter5"></SPAN>
<h1>V.</h1>
<h2>Purity</h2>
<p align="center">“Ye shall receive power after that the Holy
Ghost is come upon you.”</p>
<p>A minister of the Gospel, after listening to an eminent
servant of God preaching on entire sanctification
through the baptism with the Spirit, wrote to him,
saying: “I like your teaching on the baptism
with the Holy Ghost. I need it, and am seeking it;
but I do not care much for entire sanctification or
heart-cleansing. Pray for me that I may be filled
with the Holy Ghost.”</p>
<p>The brother knew him well, and immediately replied:
“I am so glad you believe in the baptism with
the Holy Ghost, and are so earnestly seeking it. I
join my prayer with yours that you may receive that
gift. But let me say to you, that if you get the gift
of the Holy Ghost, you will have to take entire sanctification
with it, for the first thing the baptism with the Holy
Ghost does is to cleanse the heart from all sin.”</p>
<p>Thank God, he humbled himself, permitted the Lord
to sanctify him, and he was filled with the Holy Spirit,
and mightily empowered to work for God.</p>
<p>Many have looked at the promise of power when the
Holy Ghost is come, the energy of Peter’s preaching
on the day of Pentecost, and the marvellous results
which followed, and they have hastily and erroneously
jumped to the conclusion that the baptism with the
Holy Ghost is for work and service only.</p>
<p>It does bring power—­the power of God, and
it does fit for service, probably the most important
service to which any created beings are commissioned,
the proclamation of salvation and the conditions of
peace to a lost world; but not that alone, nor primarily.
The primary, the basal work of the baptism, is that
of cleansing.</p>
<p>You may turn a flood into your millrace, but until
it sweeps away the logs and brushwood and dirt that
obstruct the course, you cannot get power to turn
the wheels of your mill. The flood first washes out
the obstructions, and then you have power.</p>
<p>The great hindrance in the hearts of God’s children
to the power of the Holy Ghost is inbred sin—­that
dark, defiant, evil something within that struggles
for the mastery of the soul, and will not submit to
be meek and lowly, and patient and forbearing and
holy, as was Jesus; and when the Holy Spirit comes,
His first work is to sweep away that something, that
carnal principle, and make free and clean all the
channels of the soul.</p>
<p>Peter was filled with power on the day of Pentecost;
but evidently the purifying effect of the baptism
made a deeper and more lasting impression upon his
mind than the empowering effect; for years after,
in that first Council in Jerusalem, recorded in the
fifteenth chapter of Acts, he stood up and told about
the spiritual baptism of Cornelius, the Roman centurion,
and his household, and he said: “And God, which
knoweth the hearts, bare them witness, giving them
the Holy Ghost, even as He did unto us; and put no
difference between us and them, purifying their hearts
by faith.” Here he calls attention not to power,
but to purity, as the effect of the baptism. When
the Holy Ghost comes in to abide, “the old man”
goes out. Praise the Lord!</p>
<p>This destruction of inbred sin is made perfectly plain
in that wonderful Old Testament type of the baptism
with the Holy Ghost and fire recorded in the sixth
chapter of Isaiah. The prophet was a most earnest
preacher of righteousness (see Isaiah i. 10-20), yet
he was not sanctified wholly. But he had a vision of
the Lord upon His Throne, and the seraphims crying
one to another: “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord
of Hosts: the whole earth is full of His glory.”
And the very “posts of the door moved at the
voice of him that cried”; and how much more
should the heart of the prophet be moved! And so it
was; and he cried out: “Woe is me! for I am
undone; because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell
in the midst of a people of unclean lips: for mine
eyes have seen the King, the Lord of Hosts.”</p>
<p>When unsanctified men have a vision of God, it is
not their lack of power, but their lack of purity,
their unlikeness to Christ, the Holy One, that troubles
them. And so it was with the prophet. But he adds:
“Then flew one of the seraphims unto me, having
a live coal in his hand, which he had taken with the
tongs from off the altar. And he laid it upon my mouth,
and said, Lo, this hath touched thy lips; and thine
iniquity is taken away, and thy sin purged.”
Here again, it is purity rather than power to which
our attention is directed.</p>
<p>Again, in the thirty-sixth chapter of Ezekiel, we
have another type of this spiritual baptism. In Isaiah
the type was that of fire, but here it is that of
water; for water and oil, and the wind and rain and
dew, are all used as types of the Holy Spirit.</p>
<p>The Lord says, through Ezekiel: “Then will I
sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be clean;
from all your filthiness, and from all your idols,
will I cleanse you. A new heart also will I give you,
and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will
take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I
will give you an heart of flesh. And I will put My
Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in My statutes,
and ye shall keep My judgments, and do them.”</p>
<p>Here again, the incoming of the Holy Spirit means
the outgoing of all sin, of “all your filthiness,
and of all your idols.” How plainly it is taught!
And yet, many of God’s dear children do not
believe it is their privilege to be free from sin and
pure in heart in this life. But, may we not? Let us
consider this.</p>
<p>1. It is certainly <i>desirable</i>. Every sincere
Christian—­and none can be a Christian who
is not sincere—­wants to be free from sin,
to be pure in heart, to be like Christ. Sin is hateful
to every true child of God. The Spirit within him
cries out against the sin, the wrong temper, the pride,
the lust, the selfishness, the evil that lurks within
the heart. Surely, it is desirable to be free from
sin.</p>
<p> “He wills that I should holy be:<br/>
That holiness I long to feel;<br/>
That full Divine conformity<br/>
To all my Saviour’s righteous
will.”</p>
<p>2. It is <i>necessary</i>, for “without holiness
no man shall see the Lord.” Sometime, somehow,
somewhere, sin must go out of our hearts—­all
sin—­or we cannot go into Heaven. Sin would
spoil Heaven just as it spoils earth; just as it spoils
the peace of hearts and homes, of families and neighbourhoods
and nations here. Why God in His wisdom allows sin
in the world, I do not know, I cannot understand.
But this I understand: that He has one world into
which He will not let sin enter. He has notified us
in advance that no sin, nothing that defiles, can
enter Heaven, can mar the blessedness of that holy
place. “Who shall ascend into the hill of the
Lord? or who shall stand in His holy place? He that
hath clean hands, and a pure heart; who hath not lifted
up his soul unto vanity, nor sworn deceitfully”
We must get rid of sin to get into Heaven, to enjoy
the full favour of God. It is necessary.</p>
<p> “Choose I must, and soon must choose<br/>
Holiness, or Heaven lose.<br/>
If what Heaven loves I hate,<br/>
Shut for me is Heaven’s gate!</p>
<p> “Endless sin means endless woe;<br/>
Into endless sin I go<br/>
If my soul, from reason rent,<br/>
Takes from sin its final bent.</p>
<p> “As the stream its channel grooves,<br/>
And within that channel moves;<br/>
So does habit’s deepest tide<br/>
Groove its bed and there abide.</p>
<p> “Light obeyed increaseth light;<br/>
Light resisted bringeth night;<br/>
Who shall give me will to choose<br/>
If the love of light I lose?</p>
<p> “Speed, my soul, this instant yield;<br/>
Let the light its sceptre wield.<br/>
While thy God prolongs His grace,<br/>
Haste thee to His holy face.”</p>
<p>3. This purification from sin is <i>promised</i>.
Nothing can be plainer than the promise of God on
this point. “Then will I sprinkle clean water
upon you, and ye shall be clean; from <i>all</i> your
filthiness and from <i>all</i> your idols will I cleanse
you.” When all is removed, nothing remains. When
all filthiness and all idols are taken away, none
are left.</p>
<p>“But where sin abounded, grace did much more
abound; that as sin hath reigned unto death, even
so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal
life by Jesus Christ our Lord” (Romans v. 20,
21). Grace reigns, not through sin, but “through
righteousness” which has expelled sin. Grace
brings in righteousness and sin goes out.</p>
<p>“If we walk in the light, as He is in the light,
we have fellowship one with another, and the blood
of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all sin”
(1 John i. 7). Hallelujah!</p>
<p>“Being then made free from sin, ye became the
servants of righteousness” (Romans vi. 18).</p>
<p>These are sample promises and assurances any one of
which is sufficient to encourage us to believe that
our Heavenly Father will save us from all sin, if
we meet His conditions.</p>
<p>4. And that deliverance is <i>possible</i>. It was
for this that Jesus Christ, the Father’s Son,
came into the world, and suffered and died, that He
might “save His people from their sins”
(Matthew i. 21). It was for this that He shed His precious
blood: to “cleanse us from all sin.” It
was for this that the word of God, with its wonderful
promises, was given: “That by these ye might
be partakers of the Divine nature, having escaped the
corruption that is in the world through lust”
(2 Peter i. 4); by which is meant, escape from inbred
sin. It was for this that ministers of the Gospel—­Salvation
Army Officers—­are given, “for the
perfecting of the saints” (Eph. iv. 12), for
the saving and sanctifying of men (Acts xxvi. 18).
It is primarily for this that the Holy Ghost comes
as a baptism of fire: that sin might be consumed out
of us, so that we might be “made meet for the
inheritance of the saints in light”; that so
we might be ready without a moment’s warning
to go into the midst of the heavenly hosts in white
garments, “washed in the blood of the Lamb.”
Glory be to God for ever and ever!</p>
<p>And shall all these mighty agents and this heavenly
provision, and these gracious purposes of God, fail
to destroy sin out of any obedient, believing heart?
Is sin omnipotent? No!</p>
<p>If you, my brother, my sister, will look unto Jesus
just now, trusting the merits of His blood, and receive
the Holy Spirit into your heart, you shall be “made
free from sin”; it “shall not have dominion
over you.” Hallelujah! Under the fiery touch
of His holy presence, your iniquity shall be taken
away, and your sin shall be purged. And you yourself
shall burn as did the bush on the mount of God which
Moses saw; yet you, like the bush, shall not be consumed;
and by this holy fire, this flame of love, that consumes
sin, you shall be made proof against that unquenchable
fire that consumes sinners.</p>
<p> “Come, Holy Ghost, Thy mighty aid bestowing;<br/>
Destroy the works of sin, the self, the pride;<br/>
Burn, burn in me, my idols overthrowing:<br/>
Prepare my heart for Him, for my Lord crucified.”</p>
<p class="smallcaps">“Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed?”</p>
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