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Today's selection from Charles Spurgeon's devotional Faith's
Checkbook (July 24) smote me in my inner man. It is entitled
‘Perfect Purity' and is a quote from Revelation 3:5 ‘He
that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment.'
And then his statement is:
Warrior of the cross,
fight on! Never rest till thy victory is complete; for thine eternal
reward will prove worthy of a life of warfare [struggles]. See, here
is perfect calling, purity for thee! A few in Sardis kept their garments
undefiled, and their recompense is to be spotless. Perfect holiness
is the prize of our calling; let us not miss it.
I have never heard anyone
else equate perfect holiness as being the mark of the high calling
of God. Usually ‘high calling' would be some final and
ultimate expression of ministry in the bringing of the Word, but in
Spurgeon's view, which we need to soberly consider, the issue
of high calling is the issue of holiness. ‘Perfect holiness'
sounds like a redundancy; if it is not perfect it is not holy. If
there is any imperfection, holiness is invalidated. That is just
the nature of it. To be holy implies something perfect, and that
is why it is a struggle to obtain this completion, this perfection.
Spurgeon continues:
See, here is joy!
Thou shalt wear holiday robes, such as men put on at wedding feasts;
thou shalt be clothed with gladness, and be made bright with rejoicing.
Painful struggles shall end in peace of conscience and joy in the
Lord.
Do you notice the adjectives
he uses: joy, gladness, bright with rejoicing, peace of conscience
and joy in the Lord? I wonder if he was even conscious of what he
was composing, but he touched on all the inexorable signs of holiness,
namely, joy, perfect peace of conscience, rejoicing and gladness of
heart. In other words, something accompanies this condition of heart
when it is finally attested and attained in the life of a believer.
Let's take joy.
The attempt charismatically to obtain joy through feigned and manipulative
means is the cheap effort to obtain what can only be obtained through
holiness. When your mind, your heart, your thoughts, your dispositions
and your motives are righteous, you have come to a certain place by
the sanctifying work of God where the joy and the peace of the Lord
set in. It is a remarkable state of being, and this is what I believe
Spurgeon is getting at here. This is not euphoric writing or Spurgeon
taking his literary liberties; he is one of a smaller company of souls
who have known this and who can therefore write out of the reality
of his own life.
Maybe he had the advantage
of being saved at the age of fifteen. He did not have to overcome
years of dissolute living, in sex and drugs and alcohol; he came virtually
as an unblemished young man, and yet, he was still convicted deeply
of sin. His whole Christian life had brought him to a place where
he could make a statement like that. He is making a case for the
issue of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus as being the issue
of perfect holiness. For when it will come, here will be the signs:
He says here is joy.
Something happens when there is the joy of the Lord. You have overcome
and come to a place of union with the Lord Himself where you can be
‘clothed with gladness.' None of those nagging things that
cloud our joy or rob our gladness will be there to function. They
will have been taken care of in the process of the struggle of overcoming.
The mind battles, the questionable motives, the evidences that we
are not in the right place will be gone. We will be able to say,
in some measure, with Jesus, "The prince of this world has come
but he finds nothing in me." There is nothing that he can single
out, a habit, a disposition of heart or mind or spirit that is critical,
or jealous or envious or fretful or anxious. When we attain to that,
there is a joy, a tremendous peace and a gladness, and we shall be
made bright with rejoicing.
He speaks of vessels of
brightness - a continual brightness where there is no sullenness or
moodiness. ‘...and be made bright with rejoicing. Painful
struggles shall end...' because the purpose of the painful
struggle was your sanctification. The struggle is between the flesh
and Spirit, but the contest is now over, the Spirit has prevailed,
the Lord has given you a white garment. ‘The painful struggle
shall end in peace of conscience.' Paul speaks of having a conscience
undefiled before God and before men. When you've covered both
those bases, there is no other base to consider. If your conscience
is clear and free between men and God, there is no issue with God
and no issue with men; you are walking with impeccable righteousness.
Then the struggle has ended. And there WILL be a struggle until you
come to that end, but only if you are serious about this. If you
are not serious about this, and in fact, you find it normative to
be moody and sullen, or live on the periphery of Christian life as
an inactive participant, then there will be no struggle for you.
It is only a struggle for those who want a garment, who want to be
at the wedding. They want to be a privileged guest; they want to
enjoy a conscience free and clear from all blemishes and from inward
conflict of motive and from all self-seeking. They have walked this
out with God; they have fought this out; the Lord has allowed the
enemy to play upon the flesh, but they are fighting that problem through;
they are not making their peace with it; they are not compromising
and learning to live with it; they are fighting the good fight because
they are concerned to attain to that place in the Lord of triumphant
victory; they are willing for the pain of the struggle. But it ends
in peace of conscience and the joy of the Lord. Can you imagine a
church like that? Imagine its witness both to the Jewish community
and to the Greek. Just the presence of such a people will be validated
by the brightness out of which the testimony comes.
See, here is victory!
Thou shalt have thy triumph. Palm, and crown, and white robes shall
be thy recompense; thou shalt be treated as a conqueror, and owned
as such by the Lord Himself. See, here is priestly array! Thou shalt
stand before the Lord in such raiment as the sons of Aaron wore; thou
shalt offer the sacrifices of thanksgiving and draw near unto the
Lord with incense of praise.
I think it came up once
in the class that the Levites are okay for the outer court. They
can toss the sacrifice and hack the animals and deal with the public.
But only the Zadok priesthood can minister unto the Lord in the holy
place. The others are okay for the outer court, but the Zadokite
priests, those who have kept their garments so to speak are the ones
that shall draw near to the Lord.
Who would not fight
for a Lord who gives such large honors to the very least of His faithful
servants?
Now this is an interesting
thing: ‘Least of His faithful servants.' Here is a challenge
that is put before the whole welter of the entire body of Christ.
No man is excluded in the possibility of the Zadokite priestliness
because of lack of right upbringing or unhappy circumstances of life
or lack of character or lack of parentage or heredity or environment.
There is no excuse. Any believer can obtain to this if he is willing
for the struggle. So Spurgeon concludes:
Who would not fight
for a Lord who gives such large honors? Who would not be clothed
in a fool's coat for Christ's sake, seeing He will robe
us with glory?
Spurgeon is saying that
if you are going to take this seriously, you are going to be looked
upon as a fool. You are making yourself a candidate not only of the
opposition of the powers of darkness, but even for the ridicule of
the saints who are content with something much less. Such will always
find ways to flaunt and to taunt. If you are willing presently to
put on the fool's garment, you will be ultimately and eternally
robed with glory.
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