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  <description>“To be filled with God is a great thing, to be filled with the fullness of God is still greater;
  to be filled with all the fullness of God is greatest of all,” Clarke writes in this brief essay.
  In it, he defends John Wesley’s teaching of “Christian perfection,” the belief that living
  free of voluntary sin is possible through a second work of God’s grace. In other words,
  Christians can and ought to live completely holy, sinless lives following conversion. This
  idea became hugely influential in the development of Methodism especially, and worked
  to begin what became known as the “holiness movement.” While some Christians
  criticize Clarke and Wesley’s view for reinforcing a “saved by works” mentality, others
  embrace it as a call to faithfulness.

  <br /><br />Kathleen O’Bannon<br />CCEL Staff
  </description>
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  <bkgID>entire_sanctification_(clarke)</bkgID>
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  <editorialComments>From “Holiness Miscellany and Experiences” by John S. Inskip</editorialComments>
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  <DC>
    <DC.Title>Entire Sanctification</DC.Title>
    <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="short-form">Adam Clarke</DC.Creator>
    <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="file-as">Clarke, Adam</DC.Creator>
    <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="ccel">clarke</DC.Creator>
    <DC.Subject scheme="LCCN">BT766</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="lcsh1">Doctrinal theology</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="lcsh1">Salvation</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="ccel">All Christian Life</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Publisher>Grand Rapids, MI: Christian Classics Ethereal Library</DC.Publisher>
    <DC.Contributor sub="Digitizer" />
    <DC.Date sub="Created">2004-09-03</DC.Date>
    <DC.Type>Text.Monograph</DC.Type>
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    <DC.Language scheme="ISO639-3">eng</DC.Language>
    <DC.Rights>Public Domain</DC.Rights>
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    <div1 title="Title Page" progress="0.55%" id="i" prev="toc" next="ii">	
<h1 id="i-p0.1">ENTIRE SANCTIFICATION</h1>

<h4 id="i-p0.2">BY</h4>

<h2 id="i-p0.3">ADAM CLARKE</h2>

<h4 id="i-p0.4">From ‘Holiness Miscellany and Experiences” <br />
by John S. Inskip</h4>
</div1>

    <div1 title="About Adam Clarke" progress="0.68%" id="ii" prev="i" next="iii">

<h3 id="ii-p0.1">ABOUT ADAM CLARKE</h3>
<p id="ii-p1">Adam Clarke’s treatise on entire sanctification follows “Adam Clarke: Holiness Saint And Scholar.” If you know little about Adam 
Clarke beyond the fact that he authored “Clarke’s Commentary,” you 
might enjoy reading the following sketch about him before reading 
his treatise on entire sanctification.</p>

<h3 id="ii-p1.1">ADAM CLARKE: HOLINESS SAINT AND SCHOLAR</h3>
<p id="ii-p2">The name of Adam Clarke is synonymous with biblical scholarship and 
rightly so. His Commentary and Critical Notes on the entire Bible was 
completed in 1826 and it represented more than 30 years of intense 
research and writing. Other scholars have written commentaries on the 
whole Bible, but Clarke’s is a thesaurus of biblical, oriental, 
philosophical, and classical learning unequaled by any other. When it 
is recalled that all this work was done while Clarke was a busy, 
itinerant Wesleyan preacher who never had an hour’s secretarial help 
in his life, it, together with all his other publications, indicates 
a prodigious literary achievement.</p>

<p id="ii-p3">Clarke was a Wesleyan scholar and an ardent, convinced expositor 
of scriptural holiness. No appreciation of the holiness heritage can 
ignore Adam Clarke. Following the Wesley brothers and John Fletcher, 
Clarke’s is the next name in that illustrious line of holiness preachers 
and scholars from John Wesley to the present. It is altogether fitting 
that we should highlight Adam Clarke’s contribution to the theology 
of scriptural holiness. Before looking at his teaching in some detail, 
a brief sketch of his life and work is necessary.</p>

<p id="ii-p4">Adam Clarke was born in the county of Londonderry, North Ireland, 
in 1760 and was converted in 1779 through hearing a Methodist preacher. 
Three years later he left home to attend Wesley’s school in Kingswood, 
Bristol, England. Five weeks later he was appointed to his first 
preaching circuit and for the next 50 years he was a self-taught 
Wesleyan preacher who, among other academic accomplishments, made 
himself master of at least 10 languages, ancient and modern.</p>

<p id="ii-p5">He served on 24 Methodist circuits in England and Ireland, worked 
for 3 years in the Channel Islands, was three times president of the 
English Methodist Conference and four times president of the Irish 
Methodist Conference. He devoted hundreds of working hours to the newly 
founded British and Foreign Bible Society and 10 years of painstaking 
editing and collating of state papers. This latter work was a colossal 
undertaking. It required the most exact examination, deciphering, and 
classification of British State Papers from 1131 to 1666. The research 
was carried on in 14 different locations, including the Tower of London, 
London’s Westminster Archives, and Cambridge University Library. In 
1808 the University of Aberdeen conferred on Adam Clarke the honorary 
degree of LL.D., the university’s highest academic honor.</p>

<p id="ii-p6">As well as his Commentary, Clarke’s publications ran to 22 volumes, 
including his Memorials of the Wesley Family, Reflections on the Being 
and Attributes of God, The Manners of the Ancient Israelites, 4 volumes 
of sermons, 3 volumes of miscellanea titled Detached Pieces, a volume 
on Christian Missions, A Concise View of the Succession of Sacred 
Literature, and A Bibliographical Dictionary. Clarke’s literary output 
was phenomenal when it is recalled that he was a full-time itinerant 
preacher.</p>

<p id="ii-p7">A glance at the record of the 24 Methodist circuits he served 
between 1782 and 1832 shows that his longest domicile in one place was 
four years, yet his moving from place to place approximately every two 
years does not seem to have interfered with his reading, writing, and 
publication. He was elected a member of six of the most learned 
societies of his day, including the Antiquarian Society, the Royal 
Asiatic Society, and the Royal Irish Academy. In spite of all the 
distinctions given to him, Clarke remained a loyal Wesleyan preacher 
and a devout, humble believer. Learning I love,” he once wrote, “learned 
men I prize; with the company of the great and the good I am often 
delighted. But infinitely above all these and all other possible 
enjoyments, I glory in Christ—in me living and reigning and fitting 
me for His heaven.”</p>

<p id="ii-p8">Clarke was a preacher of rare power and gifts and, particularly in 
his latter years, he preached to crowded churches. To his pulpit 
ministry he brought all the warmth of his Celtic upbringing and all 
the vast resources of his encyclopaedic learning. Essentially a textual 
preacher, he made little formal preparation before he entered the 
pulpit—a method that we lesser mortals should not emulate! “I cannot 
make a sermon before I go into the pulpit,” he confessed to his friend, 
Robert Carr Brackenbury, “therefore, I am obliged to hang upon the 
arm and the wisdom of the Lord. I read a great deal, write very little, 
but strive to study.” “I . . . strive to study”—that was the secret of 
Clarke’s success both as a preacher and a writer.</p>

<p id="ii-p9">A veritable Briareus in his many accomplishments, he explored every 
available avenue of knowledge, especially the linguistic, the scientific, 
and the historical. Advising a young Methodist preacher about his 
studies, Clarke averred: “A Methodist preacher should know everything. 
Partial knowledge on any branch of science or business is better than 
total ignorance. . . . The old adage of ‘ Too many irons in the fire’ 
contains an abominable lie. You cannot have too many—poker, tongs, 
and all, keep them all going.” It was advice he followed himself before 
giving it to others. Visiting Liverpool in the north of England in 
1832, he contracted the deadly Asiatic cholera and died from it at his 
London home on August 26.</p>

<p id="ii-p10">Adam Clarke was a holiness preacher and scholar. He was enthusiastically 
committed to Methodist doctrine and experience and particularly to Wesley’s 
understanding of Christian perfection. In a sermon preached from <scripRef passage="Phil. 1:27-28" id="ii-p10.1" parsed="|Phil|1|27|1|28" osisRef="Bible:Phil.1.27-Phil.1.28">Phil. 1:27-28</scripRef> 
titled “Apostolic Preacher,” he explained Christian holiness:</p>

<p id="ii-p11">“The whole design of God was to restore man to his image, and raise 
him from the ruins of his fall; in a word, to make him perfect; to blot 
out all his sins, purify his soul, and fill him with all holiness, so 
that no unholy temper, evil desire, or impure affection or passion 
shall either lodge or have any being within him. This and this only 
is true religion, or Christian perfection; and a less salvation than 
this would be dishonourable to the sacrifice of Christ and the operation 
of the Holy Ghost. . . . Call it by what name we please, it must imply 
the pardon of all transgression and the removal of the whole body of 
sin and death. . . . This, then, is what I plead for, pray for, and heartily 
recommend to all true believers, under the name of Christian perfection.”</p>

<p id="ii-p12">Preaching on <scripRef passage="Ephesians 3:14-21" id="ii-p12.1" parsed="|Eph|3|14|3|21" osisRef="Bible:Eph.3.14-Eph.3.21">Eph. 3:14–21</scripRef> Clarke interpreted the phrase “filled with 
all the fulness of God” as descriptive of the experience of full 
salvation. “To be filled with God is a great thing, to be filled with 
the fulness of God is still greater; to be filled with all the fulness 
of God is greatest of all. It is . . . to have the heart emptied of, 
and cleansed from, all sin and defilement, and filled with humility 
meekness, gentleness, goodness . . . and love to Go and man.”</p>

<p id="ii-p13">Clarke knew that some Christians were opposed to the Wesleyan 
doctrine of entire sanctification because they think no man can be 
fully saved from sin in this life. . . . They hold out death as the 
complete deliver from all corruption and the final destroyer of sin 
as if were revealed in every page of the Bible! Whereas there is not 
one passage in the sacred volume that says any such thing! Were this 
true, then death, far from being the last enemy, would be the last and 
best friend, and the greatest of all deliverers. . . . It is the blood 
of Jesus alone that cleanseth from all unrighteousness.”</p>

<p id="ii-p14">Another familiar argument against Christian perfection was the 
assertion that indwelling sin humbles believers and keeps them penitent. 
Clarke replied: “Pride is of the essence of sin . . . and the root 
whence all moral obliquity flows. How then can pride humble us? . . . 
The heart from which it [pride] is cast out has the humility, meekness 
and gentleness of Christ implanted in its stead.”</p>

<p id="ii-p15">To the further argument that a Christian is surely humbled by the 
sense of indwelling sin, Clarke replied: “I grant that they who see 
and feel and deplore their indwelling sin, are humbled. But is it the 
sin that humbles? No. It is the grace of God that shows and condemns 
the sin that humbles us. . . . We are never humbled under a sense of 
indwelling sin till the Spirit of God drags it to the light and shows 
us not only its horrid deformity, but its hostility to God; and He 
manifests it that He may take it away.”</p>

<p id="ii-p16">Preaching some 30 years after Wesley died, Clarke saw this glorious 
doctrine exemplified by a host of professing Methodists. Replying to 
the objection that this teaching produced self-righteousness in its 
professors, Clarke testified: “No person that acts so has ever received 
this grace. He is either a hypocrite or a self-deceiver. Those who 
have received it . . . love God with all their heart, they love even 
their enemies. . . . In the splendor of God’s holiness they feel themselves 
absorbed. . . . It has been no small mercy to me that in the course of 
my religious life, I have met with many persons who professed that the 
blood of Christ had saved them from all sin, and whose profession was 
maintained by an immaculate life; but I never knew one of them that 
was not of the spirit above described. They were men of the strongest 
faith, the purest love, the holiest affections, the most obedient lives 
and the most useful in society.”</p>

<p id="ii-p17">Adam Clarke wrote and preached and exegeted the doctrine of entire 
sanctification with all his command of scripture, linguistic expertise, 
and wide theological reading, but there is one characteristic of his 
presentation that deserves more attention. He not only believed it was 
a scriptural doctrine and that it was theologically sound—he enforced 
it and explained it and defended it with all the passion of an evangelist. 
Whenever he touched the subject, he had as his dominant concern not 
only that Christians would believe it and be persuaded of its veracity, 
but that they might personally claim the experience, enter into it, 
live it, enjoy it, and testify to it.</p>

<p id="ii-p18">“If men would but spend as much time in fervently calling upon God 
(i.e. to fully sanctify them) as they spend in decrying this doctrine, 
what a glorious state of the church should we soon witness! . . . This 
moment we may be emptied of sin, filled with holiness and become truly 
happy. . . . The perfection of the gospel system is not that it makes 
allowance for sin, but that it makes an atonement for it, not that it 
tolerates sin, but that it destroys it. . . . Let all those who retain 
the apostolic doctrine . . . press every believer to go on to perfection, 
and expect to be saved, while here below, into the fulness of the 
blessing of the Gospel of Jesus. . . . Art thou weary of that carnal mind 
which is enmity to God? Canst thou be happy whilst thou art unholy? 
Arise, then, and be baptized with a greater effusion of the Holy Ghost. . . . 
Reader, it is the birthright of every child of God to be cleansed from 
all sin, to keep himself unspotted from the world, and so to live as 
never more to offend his Maker. All things are possible to him that 
believeth, because all things are possible to the infinitely meritorious 
blood and energetic Spirit of the Lord Jesus.”</p>

<p id="ii-p19">It is surely not out of place to note that the doctrine that Adam 
Clarke advocated so fervently found rich expression in his own life. 
Henry Moore, close confidant of both John Wesley and Adam Clarke, said 
of the latter: “Our Connection, I believe, never knew a more blameless 
life than that of Dr. Clarke.”</p>

<p id="ii-p20">In view of Clarke’s clear and enthusiastic exposition of Christian 
perfection, it is not a little surprising that the most serious criticism 
of his teaching has come from the “holiness movement.” 
Clarke emphasized almost exclusively the instantaneous phase of 
sanctification and quite neglected the growth phase. “In no part of 
the scriptures are we directed to seek holiness gradatim. We are to 
come to God as well for an instantaneous and complete purification 
from all sin as for an instantaneous pardon. Neither the gradatim 
pardon or the seriatim purification exists in the Bible.”</p>

<p id="ii-p21">Clarke’s teaching is further described as throwing “off center” 
John Wesley’s “theological balance.” But this criticism is quite 
misleading. It quotes only one brief passage from the chapter titled 
“Entire Sanctification” in Samuel Dunn’s anthology of Clarke’s teaching, 
titled Christian Theology. That chapter is a compilation from a number 
of Clarke’s writings on Christian holiness, and the full text of the 
originals needs to be studied before such a sweeping judgment is made 
on three sentences. In the given extract Clarke is speaking exclusively 
of entering into the blessing, a grace as instantaneous as justification. 
Wesley taught this identical truth and to say that Clarke’s reiteration 
of it jeopardized the Wesleyan “theological balance” is quite wide of 
the mark. And why not quote the very next sentence from Clarke? “It 
is when the soul is purified from all sin that it can properly grow 
in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.” And why 
ignore an earlier passage? “He who continues to believe, love and obey 
will grow in grace and continually increase in the knowledge of Jesus 
Christ. The life of a Christian is a growth.”</p>

<p id="ii-p22">Clarke’s teaching on entire sanctification is thoroughly Wesleyan; 
in fact Clarke more nearly follows John Wesley here than any of his 
contemporary, and later, Methodist theologians—John Fletcher, Richard 
Watson, W. B. Pope, etc.. Clarke argues, as Wesley did, that in a 
moment the believer’s heart may be cleansed from all sin and filled 
with God’s fullness. Following this crisis of grace there is continuous 
growth in the entirely sanctified life. This is what authentic Wesleyanism 
has always taught. Those who want to criticize Clarke here really must 
go back to the original full text of his writings rather than passing 
premature judgment on isolated extracts. Far from throwing Wesley’s 
teaching “off center,” Clarke reinforced, reemphasized, and revitalized 
Wesley’s “grand depositum”—and for that reason, and others, Adam 
Clarke inspires holiness preachers today.</p>

<p id="ii-p23">Source: “The Preacher’s Magazine,” by Herbert McGonigle Professor of 
Church History, British Isles Nazarene College, Manchester, England</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Entire Sanctification" progress="19.46%" id="iii" prev="ii" next="iv">
<h1 id="iii-p0.1">ENTIRE SANCTIFICATION</h1>
<h3 id="iii-p0.2">By Dr. Adam Clarke</h3>

<p id="iii-p1">The word “sanctify” has two meanings. 1. It signifies to consecrate, 
to separate from earth and common use, and to devote or dedicate to 
God and his service. 2. It signifies to make holy or pure.</p>

<p id="iii-p2">Many talk much, and indeed well, of what Christ has done for us: 
but how little is spoken of what he is to do in us! and yet all that 
he has done for us is in reference to what he is to do in us. He was 
incarnated, suffered, died, and rose again from the dead; ascended to 
heaven, and there appears in the presence of God for us. These were 
all saving, atoning, and mediating acts for us; that he might reconcile 
us to God; that he might blot out our sin; that he might purge our 
consciences from dead works; that he might bind the strong man armed 
—take away the armor in which he trusted, wash the polluted heart, 
destroy every foul and abominable desire, all tormenting and unholy 
tempers; that he might make the heart his throne, fill the soul with 
his light, power, and life; and, in a word, “destroy the works of the 
devil.” These are done in us; without which we cannot be saved unto 
eternal lie. But these acts done in us are consequent on the acts done 
for us: for had he not been incarnated, suffered, and died in our stead, 
we could not receive either pardon or holiness; and did he not cleanse 
and purify our hearts, we could not enter into the place where all is 
purity: for the beatific vision is given to them only who are purified 
from all unrighteousness: for it is written, “Blessed are the pure in 
heart, for they shall see God.” Nothing is purified by death;—nothing 
in the grave; nothing in heaven. The living stones of the temple, like 
those of that at Jerusalem, are hewn, squared, and cut here, in the 
church militant, to prepare them to enter into the composition of the 
church triumphant.</p>

<p id="iii-p3">This perfection is the restoration of man to the state of holiness 
from which he fell, by creating him anew in Christ Jesus, and restoring 
to him that image and likeness of God which he has lost. A higher 
meaning than this it cannot have; a lower meaning it must not have. 
God made man in that degree of perfection which was pleasing to his 
own infinite wisdom and goodness. Sin defaced this divine image; Jesus 
came to restore it. Sin must have no triumph; and the Redeemer of 
mankind must have his glory. But if man be not perfectly saved from 
all sin, sin does triumph, and Satan exult, because they have done a 
mischief that Christ either cannot or will not remove. To say he cannot, 
would be shocking blasphemy against the infinite power and dignity of 
the great Creator; to say he will not, would be equally such against 
the infinite benevolence and holiness of his nature. All sin, whether 
in power, guilt, or defilement is the work of the devil; and he, Jesus, 
came to destroy the work of the devil; and as all unrighteousness is 
sin, so his blood cleanseth from all sin, because it cleanseth from 
all unrighteousness.</p>

<p id="iii-p4">Many stagger at the term perfection in Christianity; because they 
think that what is implied in it is inconsistent with a state of 
probation, and savors of pride and presumption: but we must take good 
heed how we stagger at any word of God; and much more how we deny or 
fritter away the meaning of any of His sayings, lest he reprove us, and 
we be found liars before him. But it may be that the term is rejected 
because it is not understood. Let us examine its import.</p>

<p id="iii-p5">The word “perfection,” in reference to any person or thing signifies 
that such person or thing is complete or finished; that it has nothing 
redundant, and is in nothing defective. And hence that observation of 
a learned civilian is at once both correct and illustrative, namely, 
“We count those things perfect which want nothing requisite for the 
end whereto they were instituted.” And to be perfect often signifies 
“to be blameless, clear, irreproachable;” and according to the above 
definition of Hooker, a man may be said to be perfect who answers the 
end for which God made him; and as God requires every man to love him 
with all his heart, soul, mind, and strength, and his neighbor as 
himself; then he is a perfect man that does so; he answers the end for 
which God made him; and this is more evident from the nature of that 
love which fills his heart: for as love is the principle of obedience, 
so he that loves his God with all his powers, will obey him with all 
his powers; and he who loves his neighbor as himself will not only do 
no injury to him, but, on the contrary, labor to promote his best 
interests. Why the doctrine which enjoins such a state of perfection 
as this, should be dreaded, ridiculed, or despised, is a most strange 
thing; and the opposition to it can only be from that carnal mind that 
is enmity to God; “That is not subject to the law of God, neither 
indeed can be.” And had I no other proof that man is fallen from God, 
his opposition to Christian holiness would be to me sufficient.</p>

<p id="iii-p6">The whole design of God was to restore man to his image, and raise 
him from the ruins of his fall; in a word, to make him perfect; to 
blot out all his sins, purify his soul, and fill him with holiness; 
so that no unholy temper, evil desire, or impure affection or passion 
shall either lodge or have any being within him; this and this only 
is true religion or Christian perfection; and a less salvation than 
this would be dishonorable to the sacrifice of Christ, and the operation 
of the Holy Ghost; and would be as unworthy of the appellation of 
Christianity,” as it would be of that of “holiness or perfection.” 
They who ridicule this are scoffers at the word of God; many of them 
totally irreligious men, sitting in the seat of the scornful. They who 
deny it, deny the whole scope and design of divine revelation and the 
mission of Jesus Christ. And they who preach the opposite doctrine are 
either speculative Antinomians, or pleaders for Baal.</p>

<p id="iii-p7">When St. Paul says he “warns every man, and teaches every man in 
all wisdom, that he may present every man PERFECT in Christ Jesus,” 
he must mean something. What then is this something? It must mean “that 
holiness without which none shall see the Lord.” Call it by what name 
we please, it must imply the pardon of all transgression, and the 
removal of the whole body of sin and death; for this must take place 
before we can be like him, and see him as he is, in the effulgence of 
his own glory. This fitness, then, to appear before God, and thorough 
preparation for eternal glory, is what I plead for, pray for, and 
heartily recommend to all true believer, under the name of Christian 
perfection. Had I a better name, one more energetic, one with a greater 
plenitude of meaning, one more worthy of the efficacy of the blood 
that bought our peace, and cleanseth from all unrighteousness, I would 
gladly adopt and use it. Even the word “perfection” has, in some 
relations, so many qualifications and abatements that cannot comport 
with that full and glorious salvation recommended in the gospel, and 
bought and sealed by the blood of the cross, that I would gladly lay 
it by, and employ a word more positive and unequivocal in its meaning, 
and more worthy of the merit of the infinite atonement of Christ, and 
of the energy of his almighty Spirit; but there is none in our language; 
which I deplore as an inconvenience and a loss.</p>

<p id="iii-p8">Why then are there so many, even among sincere and godly ministers 
and people, who are so much opposed to the term, and so much alarmed 
at the profession? I answer, Because they think no man can be fully 
saved from sin in this life. I ask, where is this in unequivocal words, 
written in the New Testament? Where, in that book is it intimated that 
sin is not wholly destroyed till death takes place, and the soul and 
the body are separated? Nowhere. In the popish baseless doctrine of 
purgatory, this doctrine, not with more rational consequences, is 
held: this doctrine allows that, so inveterate is sin, it cannot be 
wholly destroyed even in death; and that a penal fire, in a middle 
state between heaven and hell, is necessary to atone for that which 
the blood of Christ had not cancelled; and to purge from that which 
the energy of the almighty Spirit had not cleansed before death.</p>

<p id="iii-p9">Even papists could not see that a moral evil was detained in the 
soul through its physical connection with the body; and that it required 
the dissolution of this physical connection before the moral contagion 
could be removed. Protestants, who profess, and most certainly possess, 
a better faith, are they alone that maintain the deathbed purgatory; 
and how positively do they hold out death as the complete deliverer 
from all corruption, and the final destroyer of sin, as if it were 
revealed in every page of the Bible! Whereas, there is not one passage 
in the sacred volume that says any such thing. Were this true, then 
death, far from being the last enemy, would be the last and best friend, 
and the greatest of all deliverers: for if the last remains of all the 
indwelling sin of all believers is to be destroyed by death, (and a 
fearful mass this will make,) then death, that removes it, must be the 
highest benefactor of mankind. The truth is, he is neither the cause 
nor the means of its destruction. It is the blood of Jesus alone that 
cleanseth from all unrighteousness.</p>

<p id="iii-p10">It is supposed that indwelling sin is useful even to true believers, 
because it humbles them and keeps them low in their own estimation. A 
little examination will show that this is contrary to the fact. It is 
generally, if not universally allowed that pride is of the essence of 
sin, if not its very essence; and the root whence all moral obliquity 
flows. How then can pride humble us? Is not this absurd? Where is there 
a sincere Christian, be his creed what it may, that does not deplore 
his proud, rebellious, and unsubdued heart and will, as the cause of 
all his wretchedness; the thing that mars his best sacrifices, and 
prevents his communion with God? How often do such people say or sing, 
both in their public and private devotions,—</p>

<verse id="iii-p10.1">
<l class="t1" id="iii-p10.2">“But pride, that busy sin, </l>
<l class="t1" id="iii-p10.3">Spoils all that I perform!” </l>
</verse>

<p style="text-indent:0in; margin-top:9pt" id="iii-p11">Were there no pride, there would be no sin; and the heart from which 
it is cast out has the humility, meekness, and gentleness of Christ 
implanted in its stead.</p>

<p id="iii-p12">But still it is alleged, as an indubitable fact, that “a man is 
humbled under a sense of indwelling sin.” I grant that they who see 
and feel, and deplore their indwelling sin, are humbled: but is it the 
sin that humbles? No. It is the grace of God, that shows and condemns 
the sin that humbles us. Neither the devil nor his work will ever show 
themselves. Pride works frequently under a dense mask, and will often 
assume the garb of humility. How true is that saying, and of how many 
is it the language!</p>

<verse id="iii-p12.1">
<l class="t1" id="iii-p12.2">“Proud I am my wants to see, </l>
<l class="t1" id="iii-p12.3">Proud of my humility.” </l>
</verse>

<p style="text-indent:0in; margin-top:9pt" id="iii-p13">And to conceal his working, even Satan himself is transformed into an 
angel of light! It appears then that we attribute this boasted humiliation 
to a wrong cause. We never are humbled under a sense of indwelling sin 
till the Spirit of God drags it to the light, and shows us, not only 
its horrid deformity, but its hostility to God; and he manifests it, 
that he may take it away: but a false opinion causes men to hug the 
monster, and to contemplate their chains with complacency!</p>

<p id="iii-p14">It has been objected to this perfection, this perfect work of God 
in the soul, that “the greater sense we have of our own sinfulness, 
the more will Christ be exalted in the eye of the soul: for, if the 
thing were possible that a man might be cleansed from all sin in this 
life, he would feel no need of a Saviour; Christ would be undervalued 
by him as no longer needing his saving power.” This objection mistakes 
the whole state of the case. How is Christ exalted in the view of the 
soul? How is it that he becomes precious to us? Is it not from a sense 
of what he has done for us, and what he has done in us? Did any man 
ever love God till he had felt that God loved him? Do we not “love him 
because he first loved us?” Is it the name JESUS that is precious to 
us? or JESUS the Saviour saving us from our sins? Is all our confidence 
placed in him because of some one saving act? or, because of his 
continual operation as the Saviour? Can any effect subsist without its 
cause? Must not the cause continue to operate in order to maintain the 
effect? Do we value a good cause more for the instantaneous production 
of a good and important effect, than we do for its continual energy, 
exerted to maintain that good and important effect? All these questions 
can be answered by a child. What is it that cleanseth the soul and 
destroys sin? Is it not the mighty power of the grace of God? What is 
it that keeps the soul clean? Is it not the same power dwelling in us? 
No more can an effect subsist without its cause, than a sanctified 
soul abide in holiness without the indwelling Sanctifier. When Christ 
casts out the strong-armed man, he takes away that armor in which he 
trusted, he spoils his goods, he cleanses and enters into the house, 
so that the heart becomes the habitation of God through the Spirit. 
Can then a man undervalue that Christ who not only blotted out his 
iniquity, but cleansed his soul from all sin; and whose presence and 
inward mighty working constitute all his holiness and all his happiness? 
Impossible! Jesus was never so highly valued, so intensely loved, so 
affectionately obeyed, as now. The great Saviour has not his highest 
glory from his atoning and redeeming acts, but from the manifestation 
of his saving power.</p>

<p id="iii-p15">“But the persons who profess to have been made thus perfect are 
proud and supercilious, and their whole conduct says to their neighbor, 
‘Stand by, I am holier than thou.’“ No person that acts so has ever 
received this grace. He is either a hypocrite or a self-deceiver. Those 
who have received it are full of meekness, gentleness, and long-suffering: 
they love God with all their hearts—they love even their enemies; love 
the whole human family, and are servants of all. They know they have 
nothing but what they have received. In the splendor of God’s holiness 
they feel themselves absorbed. They have neither light, power, love, 
nor happiness, but from their indwelling Saviour. Their holiness, 
though it fills the soul, yet is only a drop from the infinite ocean. 
The flame of their love, though it penetrate their whole being, is 
only a spark from the incomprehensible Sun of righteousness. In a 
spirit and in a way which none but themselves can fully comprehend and feel, 
they can say or sing,—</p>

<verse id="iii-p15.1">
<l class="t1" id="iii-p15.2">“I loathe myself when God I see, </l>
<l class="t1" id="iii-p15.3">And into nothing fall:</l>
<l class="t1" id="iii-p15.4">Content that Christ exalted be;</l>
<l class="t1" id="iii-p15.5">And God is all in all.” </l>
</verse>

<p id="iii-p16">It has been no small mercy to me, that, in the course of my religious 
life, I have met with many persons who professed that the blood of 
Christ had saved them from all sin, and whose profession was maintained 
by an immaculate life; but I never knew one of them that was not of 
the spirit above described. They were men of the strongest faith, the 
purest love, the holiest affections, the most obedient lives, and the 
most useful in society. I have seen such walking with God for many 
years: and as I had the privilege of observing their walk in life, so 
have I been privileged with their testimony at death, when their sun 
appeared to grow broader and brighter at its setting; and, though they 
came through great tribulation, they found that their robes were washed 
and made white through the blood of the Lamb. They fully witnessed the 
grand effects which in this life flow from justification, adoption, and 
sanctification; namely, assurance of God’s love, peace of conscience, 
joy in the Holy Ghost, increase of grace, and perseverance in the same 
to the end of their lives. O God! let my death be like that of these 
righteous I and let my end be like theirs! Amen.</p>

<p id="iii-p17">It is scarcely worth mentioning another objection that has been 
started by the ignorant, the worthless, and the wicked. “The people 
that profess this, leave Christ out of the question; they either think 
that they have purified their own hearts, or that they have gained 
their pretended perfection by their own merits.” Nothing can be more 
false than this calumny. I know that people well in whose creed the 
doctrine of “salvation from all sin in this life “ is a prominent 
article. But that people hold most conscientiously that all our 
salvation, from the first dawn of light in the soul to its entry into 
the kingdom of glory, is all by and through Christ. He alone convinces 
the soul of sin, justifies the ungodly, sanctifies the unholy, preserves 
in this state of salvation, and brings to everlasting blessedness. No 
soul ever was or can be saved but through his agony and bloody sweat, 
his cross and passion, his death and burial, his glorious resurrection 
and ascension, and continued intercession at the right hand of God.</p>

<p id="iii-p18">If men would but spend as much time in fervently calling upon God 
to cleanse by the blood that which He has not cleansed, as they spend 
in decrying this doctrine, what a glorious state of the church should 
we soon witness! Instead of compounding with iniquity, and tormenting 
their minds to find out with how little grace they may be saved, they 
would renounce the devil and all his works, and be determined never 
to rest till they had found that He had bruised him under their feet, 
and that the blood of Christ had cleansed them from all unrighteousness. 
Why is it that men will not try how far God will save them? nor leave 
off praying and believing for more and more, till they find that God 
has held his hand? When they find that their agonizing faith and prayer 
receive no farther answer, then, and not till then, they may conclude 
that God will be no farther gracious, and that He will not save to the 
uttermost them who come to him through Christ Jesus.</p>

<p id="iii-p19">But it is farther objected, that even St. Paul himself denies this 
doctrine of perfection, disclaiming it in reference to himself: “Not 
as though I had already attained, either were already perfect; but I 
follow after,” <scripRef passage="Phil. iii. 12." id="iii-p19.1" parsed="|Phil|3|12|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Phil.3.12">Phil. iii. 12.</scripRef> This place is mistaken: the apostle is 
not speaking of his restoration to the image of God; but to completing 
his ministerial course, and receiving the crown of martyrdom; as I have 
fully shown on my notes on this place, and to which I must beg to refer 
the reader. There is another point that has been produced, at least 
indirectly, in the form of an objection to this doctrine: “Where are 
those adult, those perfect Christians? We know none such; but we have 
heard that some persons professing those extraordinary degrees of 
holiness have become scandalous in their lives.”</p>

<p id="iii-p20">When a question of this kind is asked by one who fears God, and 
earnestly desires his salvation, and only wishes to have full evidence 
that the thing is attainable, that he may shake himself from the dust 
and arise and go out, and possess the good land—it deserves to be 
seriously answered. To such I would say, There may be several, even 
in the circle of your own religious acquaintance, whose evil tempers 
and unholy affections God has destroyed; and having filled them with 
is own holiness, they are enabled to love Him with all their heart, 
soul, mind, and strength, and their neighbor as themselves. But such 
make no public professions: their conduct, their spirit, the whole 
tenor of their life, is their testimony. Again: there may be none such 
among your religious acquaintance, because they do not know their 
privilege, or they unfortunately sit under a ministry where the doctrine 
is decried; and in such congregations and churches holiness never 
abounds; men are too apt to be slothful, and unfaithful to the grace 
they have received; they need not their minister’s exhortations to 
beware of looking for or expecting a heart purified from all 
unrighteousness; striving or agonizing to “enter in at the strait 
gate” is not pleasant work to flesh and blood; and they are glad to 
have anything to countenance their spiritual indolence; and such 
ministers have always a powerful coadjutor; the father of lies, and 
the spirit of error will work in the unrenewed heart, filling it with 
darkness, and prejudice, and unbelief. No wonder, then, that in such 
places, and under such a ministry there is no man that can be “presented 
perfect in Christ Jesus.” But wherever the trumpet gives a certain 
sound, and the people go forth to battle, headed by the Captain of 
their salvation, there the foe is routed, and the genuine believers 
brought into the liberty of the children of God.</p>

<p id="iii-p21">As to some having professed to have received this salvation, and 
afterward become scandalous in their lives (though in all my long 
ministerial labors, and extensive religious acquaintance, I never 
found but one example), I would just observe that they might possibly 
have been deceived; thought they had what they had not; or they might 
have become unfaithful to that grace and lost it; and this is possible 
through the whole range of a state of probation. There have been angels 
who kept not their first estate; and we all know, to our cost, that 
he who was the head and fountain of the whole human family, who was 
made in the image and likeness of God, sinned against God, and fell 
from that state. And so may any of his descendants fall from any degree 
of the grace of God while in their state of probation; and any man and 
every man must fall, whenever he or they cease to watch unto prayer, 
and cease to be “workers together with God.” Faith must ever be kept 
in lively exercise, working by love; and that love is only safe when 
found exerting its energies in the path of obedience. An objection of 
this kind against the doctrine of Christian perfection will apply as 
forcibly against the whole revelation of God as it can do against one 
of the doctrines; because that revelation brings the account of the 
defection of angels and of the fall of man. The truth is, no doctrine 
of God stands upon the knowledge experience, faithfulness, or 
unfaithfulness of man; it stands on the veracity of God who gave it. 
If there were not a man to be found who was justified freely through 
the redemption that is by Jesus; yet the doctrine of “justification 
by faith” is true; for it is a doctrine that stands on the truth of 
God. And suppose not one could be found in all the churches of Christ 
whose heart was purified from all unrighteousness, and who loved God 
and man with all his regenerated powers, yet the doctrine of Christian 
perfection would still be true; for Christ was manifested that he might 
destroy the works of the devil; and his blood cleanseth from all 
unrighteousness. And suppose every man be a liar, God is true.</p>

<p id="iii-p22">It is not the profession of a doctrine that establishes its truth; 
it is the truth of God, from which it has proceeded. Man’s experience 
may illustrate it; but it is God’s truth that confirms it.</p>

<p id="iii-p23">In all cases of this nature, we must forever cease from man, 
implicitly credit God’s testimony, and look to him in and through 
whom all the promises of God are yea and amen.</p>

<p id="iii-p24">To be filled with God is a great thing; to be filled with the 
fulness of God is still greater; to be filled with all the fulness of 
God is greatest of all. This utterly bewilders the sense and confounds 
the understanding, by leading at once to consider the immensity of 
God, the infinitude of His attributes, and the absolute perfection of 
each! But there must be a sense in which even this wonderful petition 
was understood by the apostle, and may be comprehended by us. Most 
people, in quoting these words, endeavor to correct or explain the 
apostle by adding the word communicable. But this is as idle as it is 
useless and impertinent. Reason surely tells us that St. Paul would 
not pray that they should be filled with what could not be communicated. 
The apostle certainly meant what he said, and would be understood in 
his own meaning; and we may soon see what this meaning is.</p>

<p id="iii-p25">By the “fulness of God,” we are to understand all the gifts and 
graces which he has promised to bestow on man in order to his full 
salvation here, and his being fully prepared for the enjoyment of 
glory hereafter. To be filled with all the fulness of God is to have 
the heart emptied of and cleansed from all sin and defilement, and 
filled with humility, meekness, gentleness, goodness, justice, holiness, 
mercy, and truth, and love to God and man. And that this implies a 
thorough emptying of the soul of every thing that is not of God, and 
leads not to him, is evident from this, that what God fills, neither 
sin nor Satan can fill, nor in any wise occupy; for, if a vessel be 
filled with one fluid or substance, not a drop or particle of any 
other kind can enter it, without displacing the same quantum of the 
original matter as that which is afterward introduced. God cannot be 
said to fill the whole soul while any place, part, passion, or faculty 
is filled, or less or more occupied, by sin or Satan: and as neither 
sin nor Satan can be where God fills and occupies the whole, so the 
terms of the prayer state that Satan shall neither have any dominion 
over that soul nor being in it. A fulness of humility precludes all 
pride; of meekness, precludes anger; of gentleness, all ferocity; of 
goodness, all evil; of justice, all injustice; of holiness, all sin; 
of mercy, all unkindness and revenge; of truth, all falsity and 
dissimulation; and where God is loved with all the heart, soul, mind, 
and strength, there is no room for enmity or hatred to him, or to any 
thing connected with him; so, where a man loves his neighbor as himself, 
no ill shall be worked to that neighbor; but, on the contrary, every 
kind affection will exist toward him; and every kind action, so far 
as power and circumstances can permit, will be done to him.</p>

<p id="iii-p26">Thus the being filled with God’s fulness will produce constant, 
pious, and affectionate obedience to him, and unvarying benevolence 
towards one’s neighbor; that is, any man, any and every human being. 
Such a man is saved from all sin; the law is fulfilled in him; and he 
ever possesses and acts under the influence of that love to God and 
man which is the fulfilling of the law. It is impossible, with any 
Scriptural or rational consistency, to understand these word in any 
lower sense; but how much more they imply, (and more they do imply,) 
who can tell?</p>

<p id="iii-p27">Many preachers, and multitudes of professing people, are studious 
to find out how many imperfections and infidelities, and how much 
inward sinfulness, are consistent with a safe state in religion; but 
how few, very few, are bringing out the fair gospel standard to try 
the height of the members of the church; whether they be fit for the 
heavenly army; whether their stature be such as qualifies them for the 
rank of the church militant! “the measure of the stature of the fulness” 
is seldom seen; the measure of the stature of littleness, dwarfishness, 
and emptiness, is often exhibited.</p>

<p id="iii-p28">Some say “The body of sin in believers is, indeed, an enfeebled, 
conquered, and deposed tyrant, and the stroke of death finishes its 
destruction.” So, then, the death of Christ and the influences of the 
Holy Spirit were only sufficient to depose and enfeeble the tyrant 
sin; but our death must come in to effect his total destruction! Thus 
our death is, at least partially, our Saviour, and thus that which was 
an effect of sin, (“for sin entered into the world, and death by sin,” ) 
becomes the means of finally destroying it: that is, the effect of a 
cause can become so powerful as to react upon that cause and produce 
its annihilation! The divinity and philosophy of this sentiment are 
equally absurd. It is the blood of Christ alone that cleanses from 
all unrighteousness; and the sanctification of a believer is no more 
dependent on death than his justification. If it be said that “believers 
do not cease from sin till they die,” I have only to say they are such 
believers as do not make a proper use of their faith: and what can be 
said more of the whole herd of transgressors and infidels? They cease 
to sin when they cease to breathe. If the Christian religion bring no 
other privileges than this to its upright followers, well may we ask, 
“Wherein doth the wise man differ from the fool, for they have both 
one end!” But the whole gospel teaches a contrary doctrine.</p>

<p id="iii-p29">It is strange there should be found a person believing the whole 
gospel system and yet living in sin! “Salvation from sin” is the long 
continued sound, as it is the spirit and design, of the gospel. Our 
Christian name, our baptismal covenant, our profession of faith in 
Christ, and avowed belief in his word, all call us to this: can it be 
said that we have any louder calls than they? Our self-interest, as 
it respects the happiness of a godly life, and the glories of eternal 
blessedness; the pains and wretchedness of a life of sin, leading to 
the worm that never dies, and the fire that is not quenched; second, 
most powerfully, the above calls. Reader, lay these things to heart, 
and answer this question to God: “How shall I escape if I neglect so 
great salvation?” And then, as thy conscience shall answer, let thy 
mind and thy hand begin to act.</p>

<p id="iii-p30">As there is no end to the merits of Christ incarnated and crucified; 
no bounds to the mercy and love of God; no let or hindrance to the 
almighty energy and sanctifying influence of the Holy Spirit; no limits 
to the improvability of the human soul; so there can be no bounds to 
the saving influence which God will dispense to the heart of every 
genuine believer. We may ask and receive, and our joy shall be full! 
Well may we bless and praise God, “who has called us into such a state 
of salvation;” a state in which we may be thus saved; and, by the grace 
of that state, continue in the same to the end of our lives!</p>

<p id="iii-p31">As sin is the cause of the ruin of mankind, the gospel system, 
which exhibits it cure, is fitly called “good news, or glad tidings;” 
and it is good news, because it proclaims Him who saves his people 
from their sins; and it would indeed be dishonorable to that grace, 
and the infinite merit of Him who procured it, to suppose, much more 
to assert, that sin had made wounds which grace would not heal. Of 
such a triumph Satan shall ever be deprived.</p>

<p id="iii-p32">“He that committeth sin is of the devil.” Hear this, ye who plead 
for Baal, and cannot bear the thought of that doctrine that states 
believers are to be saved from all sin in this life! He who committeth 
sin is a child of the devil, and shows that he has still the nature 
of the devil in him; “for the devil sinneth from the beginning:” he 
was the father of sin,—brought sin into the world, and maintains 
sin in the world by living in the hearts of his own children, and thus 
leading them to transgression; and persuading others that they cannot 
be saved from their sins in this life, that he may secure a continual 
residence in their heart. He also knows that if he has a place throughout 
life, he will probably have it at death; and, if so, throughout eternity.</p>

<p id="iii-p33">“That is,” say some, “he does not sin habitually as he formerly did.” 
This is bringing the influence and privileges of the heavenly birth 
very low indeed. We have the most indubitable evidence that many of 
the heathen philosophers had acquired, by mental discipline and 
cultivation, an entire ascendancy over all their wonted vicious habits. 
Perhaps my reader will recollect the story of the physiognomist, who, 
coming into the place where Socrates was delivering a lecture, his 
pupils, wishing to put the principles of the man’s science to proof, 
desired him to examine the face of their master, and say what his moral 
character was. After a full contemplation of the philosopher’s visage, 
he pronounced him the “most gluttonous, drunken, brutal, and libidinous 
old man that he ever met.” As the character of Socrates was the reverse 
of all this, his disciples began to insult the physiognomist. Socrates 
interfered, and said, “The principles of his science may be very 
correct; for such I was, but I have conquered it by my philosophy.” O 
ye Christian divines! ye real or pretended gospel ministers! will ye 
allow the influence of the grace of Christ a sway not even so extensive 
as that of the philosophy of a heathen who never heard of the true God?</p>

<p id="iii-p34">Many tell us that “no man can be saved from sin in this life.” Will 
these persons permit us to ask, How much sin may we be saved from in 
this life? Something must be ascertained on this subject: 1. That the 
soul may have some determinate object in view. 2. That it may not lose 
its time, or employ its faith and energy, in praying for what is 
impossible to be attained. Now, as Christ was manifested to take away 
our sins, to destroy the works of the devil; and as his blood cleanseth 
from all sin and unrighteousness, is it not evident that God means 
that believers in Christ shall be saved from all sin? For if his blood 
cleanses from all sin, if he destroys the works of the devil, (and sin 
is the work of the devil,) and if he who is born of God does not commit 
sin, then he must be cleansed from all sin; and while he continues in 
that state, he lives without sinning against God, for the seed of God 
remaineth in him, and he cannot sin, because he is born, or begotten 
of God.</p>

<p id="iii-p35">How strangely warped and blinded by prejudice and system must men 
be who, in the face of such evidence as this, will still dare to maintain 
that no man can be saved from his sin in this life; but must daily 
commit sin in thought, word, and deed, as the Westminster divines have 
asserted! that is, every man is laid under the fatal necessity of 
sinning as many ways against God as the devil does through his natural 
wickedness and malice; for even the devil himself can have no other 
way of sinning against God, except by thought, word, and deed. And 
yet, according to these and others of the same creed, “even the most 
regenerate sin against God as long as they live.” It is a miserable 
salvo to say “they do not sin so much as they used to do; and they do 
not sin habitually, only occasionally.” Alas for this system! Could 
not the grace that saved them partially save them perfectly? Could not 
that power of God that saved them from habitual sin save them from 
occasional or accidental sin? Shall we suppose that sin, how potent 
soever it may be, is as potent as the Spirit and grace of Christ? And 
may we not ask, If it was for God’s glory and their good that they 
were partially saved, would it not have been more for God’s glory and 
their good if they had been perfectly saved? But the letter and spirit 
of God’s word, and the design and end of Christ’s coming, is to save 
his people from their sins.</p>

<p id="iii-p36">The perfection of the gospel system is not that it makes allowances 
for sin, but that it makes an atonement for it; not that it tolerates 
sin, but that it destroys it.</p>

<p id="iii-p37">However inveterate the disease of sin may be, the grace of the Lord 
Jesus can fully cure it.</p>

<p id="iii-p38">God sets no bounds to the communications of his grace and Spirit 
to them that are faithful. And as there are no bounds to the graces, 
so there should be none to the exercise of those graces. No man can 
ever feel that he loves God too much, or that he loves man too much 
for God’s sake.</p>

<p id="iii-p39">Be so purified and refined in your souls, by the indwelling Spirit, 
that even the light of God shining into your hearts shall not be able 
to discover a fault that the love of God has not purged away.</p>

<p id="iii-p40">“Be thou perfect, and thou shalt be perfection,” that is, altogether 
perfect: be just such as the holy God would have thee to be, as the 
Almighty God can make thee, and live as the sufficient God shall 
support thee; for He alone who makes the soul holy can preserve it in 
holiness. Our blessed Lord appears to have these word pointedly in 
view, “Ye shall be perfect, as your Father who is in heaven is perfect,” 
<scripRef passage="Matt. v. 48." id="iii-p40.1" parsed="|Matt|5|48|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.5.48">Matt. v. 48.</scripRef> But what does this imply? Why, to be saved from all the 
power, the guilt, and the contamination of sin. This is only the negative 
part of salvation, but it has also a positive part; to be made perfect 
—to be perfect as our Father who is in heaven is perfect, to be filled 
with the fulness of God, to have Christ dwelling continually in the 
heart by faith, and to be rooted and grounded in love. This is the 
state in which man was created; for he was made in the image and 
likeness of God. This is the state from which man fell; for he broke 
the command of God. And this is the state into which every human soul 
must be raised who would dwell with God in glory; for Christ was 
incarnated and died to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself. What 
a glorious privilege! And who can doubt the possibility of its attainment 
who believes in the omnipotent love of God, the infinite merit of the 
blood of the atonement, and the all-pervading and all-purifying energy 
of the Holy Ghost? How many miserable souls employ that time to dispute 
and cavil against the possibility of being saved from their sins, which 
they should devote to praying and believing that they might be saved 
out of the hands of their enemies! But some may say, “You overstrain 
the meaning of the term; it signifies only, Be sincere; for, a perfect 
obedience is impossible, God accepts of sincere obedience.” If by 
sincerity the objection means “good desires, and generally good purposes, 
with an impure heart and spotted life,” then I assert that no such thing 
is implied in the text, nor in the original word. But if the word 
sincerity be taken in its proper and literal sense, I have no objection 
to it. Sincere is compounded of sine cera, “without wax;” and, applied 
to moral subjects, is a metaphor taken from clarified honey, from which 
every atom of the comb or wax is separated. Then let it be proclaimed 
from heaven, “Walk before me, and be sincere! Purge out the old leaven, 
that ye may be a new lump unto God; and thus ye shall be perfect, as 
your Father who is in heaven is perfect.” This is sincerity. Reader, 
remember that the blood of Christ cleanseth from all sin. Ten thousand 
quibbles on insulated texts can never lessen, much less destroy, the 
merit and efficacy of the great atonement.</p>

<p id="iii-p41">God never gives a precept but he offers sufficient grace to enable 
thee to perform it. Believe as he would have thee, and act as he shall 
strengthen thee, and thou wilt believe all things savingly, and do all 
things well.</p>

<p id="iii-p42">God is holy; and this is the eternal reason why all his people 
should be holy—should be purified from all filthiness of the flesh 
and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God. No faith in any 
particular creed, no religious observance, no acts of benevolence and 
charity, no mortification, attrition, or contrition can be a substitute 
for this. We must be made partakers of the divine nature. We must be 
saved from our sins—from the corruption that is in the world, and be 
holy within and righteous without, or never see God. For this very 
purpose Jesus Christ lived, died, and revived, that he might purify 
us unto himself; that through faith in his blood our sins might be 
blotted out, and our souls restored to the image of God. Reader, art 
thou hungering and thirsting after righteousness? Then, blessed art 
thou, for thou shalt be filled.</p>

<p id="iii-p43">God is ever ready, by the power of his Spirit, to carry us forward 
to every degree of life, light, and love, necessary to prepare us for 
an eternal weight of glory. There can be little difficulty in attaining 
the end of our faith, the salvation of our souls from all sin, if God 
carry us forward to it; and this he will do, if we submit to be saved 
in his own way, and on his own terms. Many make a violent outcry 
against the doctrine of perfection; that is, against the heart being 
cleansed from all sin in this life, and filled with love to God and 
man; because they judge it to be impossible! Is it too much to say of 
these, that they know neither the Scripture nor the power of God? 
Surely, the Scripture promises the thing, and the power of God can 
carry us on to the possession of it.</p>

<p id="iii-p44">The object of all God’s promises and dispensations was to bring 
fallen man back to the image of God, which he had lost. This, indeed, 
is the sum and substance of the religion of Christ. We have partaken 
of an earthly, sensual, and devilish nature; the design of God, by 
Christ, is to remove this, and to make us partakers of the divine 
nature, and save us from all the corruption, in principle and fact, 
which is in the world.</p>

<p id="iii-p45">It is said that Enoch not only “walked with God,” setting him always 
before his eyes—beginning, continuing, and ending every work to His 
glory—but also that “he pleased God,” and had “the testimony that he 
did please God.” Hence we learn that it was then possible to live so 
as not to offend God: consequently so as not to commit sin against 
him, and to have the continual evidence or testimony that all that a 
man did and purposed was pleasing in the sight of Him who searches 
the heart, and by whom devices are weighed: and if it was possible 
then, it is surely, through the same source, possible now; for God, 
and Christ, and faith are still the same.</p>

<p id="iii-p46">The petition “Thy will be done in earth, as is in heaven,” certainly 
points out a deliverance from all sin; for nothing that is unholy can 
consist with the divine will; and, if this be fulfilled in man, surely 
sin shall be banished from his soul. Again: the holy angels never 
mingle iniquity with their loving obedience; and, as our Lord teaches 
us to pray that we do his will here as they do in heaven, can it be 
thought he would put a petition into our mouths the fulfilment of 
which was impossible?</p>

<p id="iii-p47">The reader is probably amazed at the paucity of large stars in the 
whole firmament of heaven. Will he permit me to carry his mind a little 
farther, and either stand astonished at, or deplore with me the fact 
that, out of the millions of Christians in the vicinity and splendor 
of the eternal Sun of Righteousness, how very few are found of the 
first order! How very few can stand examination by the test laid down 
in 1 Cor. xiii! How very few love God with all their heart, soul mind, 
and strength, and their neighbors as themselves! How few mature 
Christians are found in the church! How few are, in all things, living 
for eternity! How little light, how little heat, and how little influence 
and activity, are to be found among them that bear the name of Christ! 
How few stars of the first magnitude will the Son of God have to deck 
the crown of His glory! Few are striving to excel in righteousness; 
and it seems to be a principal concern with many, to find out how 
little grace they may have, and yet escape hell; how little conformity 
to the will of God they may have, and yet get to heaven. In the fear 
of God I register this testimony, that I have perceived it to be the 
labor of many to lower the standard of Christianity, and to soften 
down, or explain away, those promises of God that Himself has linked 
with duties; and because they know they cannot be saved by their good 
works, they are contented to have no good works at all; and thus the 
necessity of Christian obedience, and Christian holiness, makes no 
prominent part of some modern creeds. Let all those who retain the 
apostolic doctrine, that the blood of Christ cleanseth from all sin 
in this life, press every believer to go on to perfection, and expect 
to be saved, while here below, into the fulness of the blessing of the 
gospel of Jesus. To all such my soul says, Labor to show yourselves 
approved unto God; workmen that need not be ashamed, rightly dividing 
the word of truth; and may the pleasure of the Lord prosper in your 
hands! Amen.</p>

<p id="iii-p48">Many employ that time in brooding and mourning over their impure 
hearts, which should be spent in prayer and faith before God, that 
their impurities might be washed away. In what a state of nonage are 
many members of the Christian church!</p>

<p id="iii-p49">I am afraid that what some persons call their infirmities may rather 
be called their strengths; the prevailing and frequently ruling power 
of pride, anger, ill will, &amp;c.; for how few think evil tempers to be 
sins! The gentle term “infirmity” softens down the iniquity; and as 
St. Paul, so great and so holy a man, say they, had his infirmities, 
how can they expect to be without theirs? These should know that they 
are in a dangerous error; that St. Paul means nothing of the kind; for 
he speaks of his sufferings, and of these alone. One word more: would 
not the grace and power of Christ appear more conspicuous in slaying 
the lion than in keeping him chained? in destroying sin, root and 
branch, and filling the soul with his own holiness, with love to God 
and man, with the mind, all the holy, heavenly tempers that were in 
himself, than in leaving these impure and unholy tempers ever to live, 
and often to reign, in the heart? The doctrine is discreditable to the 
gospel, and wholly antichristian.</p>

<p id="iii-p50">“If they sin against thee, for there is no man that sinneth not,” 
<scripRef passage="1 Kings viii. 46" id="iii-p50.1" parsed="|1Kgs|8|46|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Kgs.8.46">1 Kings viii. 46</scripRef>. On this verse we may observe that the second clause, 
as it is here translated, renders the supposition in the first clause 
entirely nugatory; for if there be no man that sinneth not, it is 
useless to say, “If they sin;” but this contradiction is taken away 
by reference to the original, which should be translated, “If they 
shall sin against thee;” or, “Should they sin against thee; for there 
is no man that may not sin;” that is, There is no man impeccable; none 
infallible; none that is not liable to transgress. This is the true 
meaning of the phrase in various parts of the Bible, and so our translators have understood the original; for, even in the thirty-first 
verse of this chapter, they have translated yecheta, “If a man trespass;” 
which certainly implies he might or might not do it; and in this way 
they have translated the same word, “If a soul sin” in <scripRef passage="Lev. v. 1" id="iii-p50.2" parsed="|Lev|5|1|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Lev.5.1">Lev. v. 1</scripRef>; <scripRef passage="Leviticus 6:2" id="iii-p50.3" parsed="|Lev|6|2|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Lev.6.2">vi. 2</scripRef>; 
<scripRef passage="1 Sam. ii. 25" id="iii-p50.4" parsed="|1Sam|2|25|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.2.25">1 Sam. ii. 25</scripRef>; <scripRef passage="2 Chron. vi. 22" id="iii-p50.5" parsed="|2Chr|6|22|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Chr.6.22">2 Chron. vi. 22</scripRef>; and in several other places. The truth 
is, the Hebrew has no mood to express words in the permissive or optative 
way; but to express this sense, it uses the future tense of the 
conjugation kal. This text has been a wonderful stronghold for all 
who believe that there is no redemption from sin in this life; that 
no man can live without committing sin; and that we cannot be entirely 
freed from it till we die. 1. The text speaks no such doctrine; it 
only speaks of the possibility of every man sinning; and this must be 
true of a state of probation. 2. There is not another text in the 
divine records that is more to the purpose than this. 3. The doctrine 
is flatly in opposition to the design of the gospel; for Jesus came 
to save his people from their sin, and to destroy the work of the devil. 
4. It is a dangerous and destructive doctrine, and should be blotted 
out of every Christian’s creed. There are too many who are seeking to 
excuse their crimes by all means in their power; and we need not embody 
their excuses in a creed, to complete their deception, by stating that 
their sins are unavoidable.</p>

<p id="iii-p51">The soul was made for God, and can never be united to him, nor be 
happy, till saved from sin. He who is saved from his sin, and united 
to God, possesses the utmost felicity that the human soul can enjoy, 
either in this or the coming world.</p>

<p id="iii-p52">Where a soul is saved from all sin, it is capable of being fully 
employed in the work of the Lord: it is then, and not till then, fully 
fitted for the Master’s use.</p>

<p id="iii-p53">All who are taught of Christ are not only saved, but their 
understandings are much improved. True religion, civilization, mental 
improvement, common sense, and orderly behavior, go hand in hand.</p>

<p id="iii-p54">When the light of Christ dwells fully in the heart, it extends its 
influence to every thought, word, and action; and directs its possessor 
how he is to act in all places and circumstances.</p>

<p id="iii-p55">Our souls can never be truly happy till our wills be entirely 
subjected to, and become one with, the will of God.</p>

<p id="iii-p56">While there is an empty, longing heart, there is a continual 
overflowing fountain of salvation. If we find, in any place, or at 
any time, that the oil ceases to flow, it is because there are no 
empty vessels there; no souls hungering and thirsting for righteousness. 
We find fault with the dispensations of God’s mercy, and ask, “Why were 
the former days better than these?” Were we as much in earnest for our 
salvation as our forefathers were for theirs, we should have equal 
supplies, and as much reason to sing aloud of divine mercy.</p>

<p id="iii-p57">“Be ye holy,” saith the Lord, “for I am holy.” He who can give 
thanks at the remembrance of his holiness is one who loves holiness; 
who hates sin; who longs to be saved from it, and takes encouragement 
at the recollection of God’s holiness, as he seeth in this the holy 
nature which he is to share; and the perfection which he is here to 
attain. But most who call themselves Christians hate the doctrine of 
holiness, never hear it inculcated without pain; and the principal 
part of their studies and those of their pastors, is to find out with 
how little holiness they can rationally expect to enter into the 
kingdom of heaven. O fatal and soul-destroying delusion! How long will 
a holy God suffer such abominable doctrines to pollute his church, and 
destroy the souls of men.</p>

<p id="iii-p58">Increase in the image and favor of God. Every grace and divine 
influence which ye have received is a seed, a heavenly seed, which, 
if it be watered with the dew of heaven from above, will endlessly 
increase and multiply itself. He who continues to believe, love, and 
obey, will grow in grace, and continually increase in the knowledge 
of Jesus Christ, his Sacrifice, Sanctifier, Counsellor, Preserver, 
and final Saviour. The life of a Christian is growth: he is at first 
born of God, and is a little child: becomes a young man and a father 
in Christ. Every father was once an infant; and had he not grown, he 
would never have been a man. Those who content themselves with the 
grace they received when converted to God, are, at best, in continual 
state of infancy; but we find, in the order of nature, that the infant 
that does not grow, and grow daily too, is sickly, and soon dies: so, 
in the order of grace, those who do not grow up into Jesus Christ are 
sickly and will soon die—die to all sense and influence of heavenly 
things. There are many who boast of the grace of their conversion; 
persons who were never more than babes, and have long since lost even 
that grace, because they did not grow in it. Let him that readeth 
understand.</p>

<p id="iii-p59">In order to get a clean heart, a man must know and feel its depravity, 
acknowledge and deplore it before God, in order to be fully sanctified. 
Few are pardoned, because they do not feel and confess their sins; and 
few are sanctified and cleansed from all sin, because they do not feel 
and confess their own sore and the plague of their hearts. As the blood 
of Jesus Christ, the merit of his passion and death, applied by faith, 
purges the conscience from all dead works, so the same cleanses the 
heart from all unrighteousness. As all unrighteousness is sin, so he 
that is cleansed from all unrighteousness is cleansed from all sin. 
To attempt to evade this, and plead for the continuance of sin in the 
heart through life, is ungrateful, wicked, and blasphemous; for, as 
he who says he has not sinned, makes God a liar, who has declared the 
contrary through every part of His revelation, so he that says the 
blood of Christ either cannot or will not cleanse us from all sin in 
this life, gives also the lie to his Maker, who has declared the 
contrary, and thus shows that the word, the doctrine of God, is not 
in him. Reader, it is the birthright of every child of God to be 
cleansed from all sin, to keep himself unspotted from the world, and 
so to live as never more to offend his Maker. All things are possible 
to him that believeth, because all things are possible to the infinitely 
meritorious blood and energetic Spirit of the Lord Jesus.</p>

<p id="iii-p60">Every man whose heart is full of the love of God, is full of humility; 
for there is no man so humble as he whose heart is cleansed from all 
sin. It has been said that indwelling sin humbles us; never was there 
a greater falsity: pride is the very essence of sin; he who has sin has 
pride; and pride, too, in proportion to his sin: this is a mere popish 
doctrine; and, strange to tell, the doctrine on which their doctrine 
of merit is founded! They say, God leaves concupiscence in the heart 
of every Christian, that, in striving with and overcoming it from time 
to time, he may have an accumulation of meritorious acts. Certain 
Protestants say, “It is a true sign of a very gracious state when man 
feels and deplores his inbred corruption.” How near do these come to 
the Papists, whose doctrine they profess to detest and abhor! The truth 
is, it is no sign of grace whatever; it only argues, as they use it, 
that the man has got light to show him his corruptions, but he has not 
yet got grace to destroy them. He is convinced that he should have the 
mind of Christ, but he feels that he has the mind of Satan; he deplores 
it; and, if his bad doctrine do not prevent him, he will not rest till 
he feels the blood of Christ cleansing him from all sin.</p>

<p id="iii-p61">Can any man expect to be saved from his inward sin in the other 
world? None, except such as hold the popish, anti-scriptural doctrine 
of purgatory. “But this deliverance is expected at death.” Where is 
the promise that it shall then be given? There is not one such in the 
whole Bible! And to believe for a thing essential to our glorification, 
without any promise to support that faith in reference to the point 
on which it is exercised, is a desperation that argues as well the 
absence of true faith as it does of right reason. Multitudes of such 
persons are continually deploring their want of faith, even where they 
have the clearest and most explicit promises; and yet, strange to tell, 
risk their salvation at the hour of death on a deliverance that is 
nowhere promised in the sacred oracles! “But who has got this blessing?” 
Every one who has come to God in the right way for it. “Where is such 
a one?” Seek the blessing as you should do, and you will soon be able 
to answer the question. “But it is too great a blessing to be expected.” 
Nothing is too great for a believer to expect, which God has promised, 
and Christ has purchased with his blood. “If I had such a blessing, I 
should not be able to retain it.” All things are possible to him that 
believeth. Besides, like all other gifts of God, it comes with a principle 
of preservation with it; “and upon all thy glory there shall be a defence.” 
“Still, such an unfaithful person as I cannot expect it.” Perhaps the 
infidelity you deplore came through the want of this blessing: and as 
to worthlessness, no soul under heaven deserves the least of God’s 
mercies. It is not for thy worthiness that He has given thee any thing, 
but for the sake of his Son. You can say, “When I felt myself a sinner, 
sinking into perdition, I did then flee to the atoning blood, and found 
pardon: but this sanctification is a far greater work.” No; speaking 
after the manner of men, justification is far greater than sanctification. 
When thou wert a sinner, ungodly, an enemy in thy mind, by wicked works, 
a child of the devil, an heir of hell, God pardoned thee on thy casting 
thy soul on the merit of the great sacrificial offering: thy sentence 
was reversed, thy state was changed, thou wert put among the children, 
and God’s Spirit witnessed with thine that thou wert His child. What 
a change! and what a blessing! What then is this complete sanctification? 
It is the cleansing of the blood that has not been cleansed; it is 
washing the soul of a true believer from the remains of sin; it is the 
making one, who is already a child of God, more holy, that he may be 
more happy, more useful in the world, and bring more glory to his 
heavenly Father. Great as this work is, how little, humanly speaking, 
is it when compared with what God has already done for thee? But suppose 
it were ten thousand times greater, is any thing too hard for God? Are 
not all things possible to him that believes? And does not the blood 
of Christ cleanse from all unrighteousness? Arise, then, and be baptized 
with a greater effusion of the Holy Ghost, and wash away thy sin, 
calling on the name of the Lord.</p>

<p id="iii-p62">Art thou weary of that carnal mind which is enmity to God? Canst 
thou be happy while thou art unholy? Dost thou know anything of God’s 
love to thee? Dost thou not know that he has given his Son to die for 
thee? Dost thou love him in return for his love? Hast thou even a 
little love to him? And canst thou love him a little, without desiring 
to love him more? Dost thou not feel that thy happiness grows in 
proportion to thy love and subjection to him? Dost thou not wish to 
be happy? And dost thou not know that holiness and happiness are as 
inseparable as sin and misery? Canst thou have too much happiness or 
too much holiness? Canst thou be made holy and happy too soon? Art 
thou not weary of a sinful heart? Are not thy bad tempers, pride, 
anger, peevishness, fretfulness, covetousness, and the various unholy 
passion that too often agitate thy soul, a source of misery and woe 
to thee? And canst thou be unwilling to have them destroyed? Arise, 
then, and shake thyself from the dust, and call upon thy God! His ear 
is not heavy that it cannot hear; his hand is not shortened that it 
cannot save. Behold, now is the accepted time! Now is the day of 
salvation! It was necessary that Jesus Christ should die for thee, 
that thou mightest be saved; but he gave up his life for thee eighteen 
hundred years ago! and himself invites thee to come, for all things 
are now ready. Such is the nature of God that he cannot be more willing 
to save thee in any future time than he is now. He wills that thou 
shouldst love him now with all thy heart; but he knows that thou canst 
not thus love him till the enmity of the carnal mind is removed; and 
this he is willing this moment to destroy. The power of the Lord is 
therefore present to heal. Turn from every sin; give up every idol; 
cut off every right hand; pluck out every right eye. Be willing to 
part with thy enemies that thou mayest receive thy chief friend. Thy 
day is far spent, the night is at hand, the graves are ready for thee, 
and here thou hast no abiding city. A month, a week, a day, an hour, 
yea, even a moment, may send thee into eternity. And if thou die in 
thy sins, where God is thou shalt never come. Do not expect redemption 
in death: it can do nothing for thee even under the best consideration: 
it is thy last enemy. Remember then that nothing but the blood of Jesus 
can cleanse thee from all unrighteousness. Lay hold, therefore, on the 
hope that is set before thee. The gate may appear strait; but strive, 
and thou shalt pass through! “Come unto me,” says Jesus. Hear His 
voice, believe at all risks, and struggle into God. Amen and Amen!</p>

<p id="iii-p63">In no part of the Scriptures are we directed to seek holiness 
gradatim. We are to come to God as well for an instantaneous and 
complete purification from all sin, as for an instantaneous pardon. 
Neither the seriatim pardon, nor the gradatim purification, exists in 
the Bible. It is when the soul is purified from all sin that it can 
properly grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ: 
—as the field may be expected to produce a good crop, and all the 
seed vegetate, when the thorns, thistles, briers, and noxious weeds 
of every kind are grubbed out of it.</p>

<p id="iii-p64">From every view of the subject, it appears that the blessing of a 
clean heart, and the happiness consequent on it, may be obtained in 
this life; because here, not in the future world, are we to be saved. 
Whenever, therefore, such blessings are offered, they may be received; 
but all the graces and blessings of the gospel are offered at all 
times; and when they are offered, they may be received. Every sinner 
is exhorted to turn from the evil of his way, to repent of sin, and 
supplicate the throne of grace for pardon. In the same moment in which 
he is commanded to turn, in that moment he may and should return. He 
does not receive the exhortation to repentance today that he may become 
a penitent at some future time. Every penitent is exhorted to believe 
on the Lord Jesus, that he may receive remission of sins:—he does not, 
he cannot, understand that the blessing thus promised is not to be 
received today, but at some future time. In like manner, to every 
believer the new heart and the right spirit are offered in the present 
moment; that they may in that moment, be received. For as the work of 
cleansing and renewing the heart is the work of God, his almighty power 
can perform it in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye. And as it is 
this moment our duty to love God with all our heart, and we cannot do 
this till he cleanse our hearts, consequently he is ready to do it 
this moment, because he wills that we should in this moment love him. 
Therefore we may justly say, “Now is the accepted time, now is the day 
of salvation.” He who in the beginning caused light in a moment to 
shine out of darkness, can in a moment shine into our hearts, and give 
us to see the light of His glory in the face of Jesus Christ. This 
moment, therefore, we may be emptied of sin, filled with holiness, 
and become truly happy.</p>

<p id="iii-p65">Such cleansed people never forget the horrible pit and miry clay 
out of which they have been brought. And can they then be proud? No! 
they loathe themselves in their own sight. They can never forgive 
themselves for having sinned against so good a God and so loving a 
Saviour. And can they undervalue Him by whose blood they were bought, 
and by whose blood they were cleansed? No! That is impossible: they 
now see Jesus as they ought to see him; they see him in his splendor, 
because they feel him in his victory and triumph over sin. To them 
that thus believe he is precious; and he was never so precious as now. 
As to their not needing him when thus saved from their sins, we may 
as well say, as soon may the creation not need the sustaining hand of 
God, because the works are finished! Learn this, that as it requires 
the same power to sustain creation as to produce it; so it requires 
the same Jesus who cleansed to keep clean. They feel that it is only 
through his continued indwelling that they are kept holy, and happy, 
and useful. Were he to leave them, the original darkness and kingdom 
of death would soon be restored.</p>
<p id="iii-p66">—From “Holiness Miscellany and Experiences” By John S. Inskip</p>

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      <h1 id="iv-p0.1">Indexes</h1>

      <div2 title="Index of Scripture References" id="iv.i" prev="iv" next="toc">
        <h2 id="iv.i-p0.1">Index of Scripture References</h2>
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<p class="bbook">Leviticus</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Lev&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=1#iii-p50.2">5:1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Lev&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=2#iii-p50.3">6:2</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Samuel</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Sam&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=25#iii-p50.4">2:25</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Kings</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Kgs&amp;scrCh=8&amp;scrV=46#iii-p50.1">8:46</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">2 Chronicles</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Chr&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=22#iii-p50.5">6:22</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Matthew</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=48#iii-p40.1">5:48</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Ephesians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eph&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=14#ii-p12.1">3:14-21</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Philippians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Phil&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=27#ii-p10.1">1:27-28</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Phil&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=12#iii-p19.1">3:12</a>  
 </p>
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