ENTIRE SANCTIFICATION
AS TAUGHT IN THE BOOK OF ROMANS
WILBER T. DAYTON, Th.D.
I. A Problem
of Terminology
This topic
begins with an interesting bit of semantics. The term "entire sanctification"
does not occur in Romans at all. However, this is not strange. One of the
richest books on holiness in the New Testament, I John, never uses the word
"holy," "holiness," nor "sanctify." Less technical and more universal words are
used to express the same concept. Perhaps a still more striking observation is
that the English word "atonement" appears but once in the King James Version of
the New Testament, and there the less than ideal translation is corrected in the
margin. Yet, redemption is the heart and fiber of New Testament teaching, with
atonement in Christ Jesus the core of that redemption.
It is true that
there are a few references in Romans which use the words "holy," "holiness," and
"sanctified." But, for the most part, they are not used in a very discriminating
theological context of Christian experience, and certainly not often in clearly
definitive references to a second crisis. The one use of the word "sanctify" is
to describe the "offering up of the Gentiles." One word for "holiness" (hagiosynę)
is used but once of the "spirit of holiness" (1:4). Another word (hagiosmos)
is used twice of the ethical goal in Christian living: "servants to
righteousness unto holiness" (6:19), and "fruit unto holiness" (6:22). The only
other references that include the word "holy" as related to the Scriptures are
(1:2), the law (7-12), the commandment (7:12), corporate bodies of Jewish and
Gentile believers (11:16), a holy kiss (16:16), and once in the great appeal for
believers to present their bodies "holy and acceptable to God" (12:1).
Apparently our study cannot be a simple running of references in a concordance
for words that state clearly in technical theological terms the specific
experience which we wish to expound from the book of Romans. The Bible simply is
not written on the pattern of a systematic theology-at least not a formal
theology of experience not even the book of Romans. It speaks freely of life and
is addressed to life's needs. Therefore, its most pungent statements come not in
technical terms for systems of thought, but in practical terms addressed to
human needs-often expressed in almost homespun simplicity.
II. Emphasis
on Experience and Life
This elusive
quality in the doctrine of experience is, of course, not limited to the book of
Romans. It has always plagued the theorist. It almost seems as though God were
turning the key in the door against intellectual sophistication and telling man
that the way into the kingdom is not through human wisdom but through divine
grace. Socrates was wrong. It was not a charmer to charm away our ignorance that
we needed. It was a Savior to take away our sins. And, though man by wisdom knew
not God, any man who "will do his will shall know the doctrine" (John 7:17).
Faith that works by obedience is the key that unlocks the door. Spiritual things
are more than intellectually discerned. The spiritual is broader than
theoretical knowledge. Man is too prone to worship his own neat packages of
doctrinal creeds. Perhaps God is not willing that our human formulations should
appear so air-tight and canonical. In any case, one must be more than a
harmonizer of proof texts to mine the gold of Christian experience and
consequent doctrine from Romans, or the rest of the Bible. He must be a humble
believer, walking in the light. Then that which is "hidden from the wise and the
prudent is revealed unto babes."
In common with
the ancient fathers and the host of witnesses from more recent centuries, both
inside and outside the Wesleyan tradition, we do hasten to affirm that the Bible
in general, and Romans in particular, presents a fulness of transforming grace
through a perfect work of God that meets man's total need. This is sometimes
designated in Scripture as an entire or whole sanctification (cf. I Thess.
5:23). Since the affirmation in Scripture is so clear and strong, we have no
hesitation in using the same term wherever the same provision and experience
appear.
III. The
Term "Holiness"
But our method
will require more than word study and grammatical exegesis in terms of a
specific designation. It is not the term, but the experience and the life that
the Scripture stresses. And the experience is of the broadest possible
dimensions. Therefore it is couched in a variety of terms. First and foremost,
it must be remembered that "holiness" is the principal term used to describe the
nature of God. It refers to the balance of His perfections and the sum-total of
His attributes. It is His utter self-consistency and the perfect harmony that
exists between His inner choices and His outer actions. His holiness always
expresses itself in love, and His love always seeks to bring its object to
holiness. In God, holiness is absolute and underived. In man, it is relative and
derived. Coming from God, it is enjoyed in a relationship with God. And that
intimacy, depth, and efficacy of relationship is the deepest fact in man's
holiness. As Girdlestone (1) implies, the moral and spiritual qualities in
themselves alone do not constitute holiness in man so much as the relationship
with God which demands purity and righteousness, and from which these flow. This
relationship thus requires and imparts holiness in its proper sense, which
Stevens calls "characteristically godliness." He says:
It is evident
that hagios and its kindred words are best adapted to represent the New
Testament idea. They express something more and higher than hieros, "sacred,' "outwardly associated with God"; something more than hosios, "reverent," "pious"; something more than semnos, "worthy," "honorable";
something more than hagnos, "pure," "free from defilement.' Hagios
is more positive, more comprehensive, more elevated, more purely ethical and
spiritual. It is characteristically godlikeness, and in the Christian system
godlikeness signifies completeness of life. (2)
IV. Other
Terms
But the
Scripture writers do not highlight a single word which can be separated from
normal life, venerated, and made an object of worship instead of a way of life.
New Testament sainthood is not something conferred on the exceptional after
death. It is a way of life. It is "righteousness," "spiritual mindedness,"
"freedom from sin," "yieldedness," "living sacrifice," the "law of the Spirit of
life in Christ Jesus," life "in the Spirit" and "that good, and acceptable and
perfect will of God." To misinterpret or misapply one term does not destroy the
teaching. The Scriptures in general, and Romans in particular, are full of the
subject of grace adequate for man's total need.
V. Entire
Sanctification The term "entire
sanctification" is not the exact equivalent of any of the above terms, but is
used to describe the entrance into such an experience of fullness of grace. As
sanctification, even in the new convert, is a separation from sin and a
dedication to God, so entire sanctification is defined as a complete freedom
from sin, and a correspondingly complete dedication to God. The term is used to
denote a crisis in the believer's life in which the remains of "inner sin" or
"inherited depravity" are dealt with in a manner which makes possible the
scriptural experience of a full righteousness, purity, spiritual mindedness,
life in the Spirit, or holiness. This, of course, presupposes definitions of sin
and holiness that are sufficiently restricted to make allowance for the
imperfections inherent in the human, at the same time that a real transformation
is accomplished in the realm of heart, motivation, and the springs of life.
VI. General
Survey
It is obvious
that in a non-technical, life-centered document such as Romans, the line will
not always be clear between first and second crises, or between grace known to
the converted as distinct from that of the entirely sanctified. If a survey of
the issues fails to spell out every technicality, and to dot every I and cross
every t, at least it is hoped that something helpful can be said as to the scope
and general principles of investigation that must be followed for an
understanding of the subject.
VII. The
Principle of "Totals"
One basic
observation is that the Scriptures in general, and Paul in particular, tend to
refer to vast totals of experience rather than to particulars that lend
themselves to theological definition. That is, the reference is generally to "sin"-not to "acquired guilt," "inherited depravity," the "sin nature," "sin in
believers," or the "remains of sin." The term refers to sin in its awful
completeness. To mention it is to loathe it. Right-thinking people, then, if
unconverted, want to be set free from its bondage and guilt and become children
of God. If they are converted, they have two interests. They want, on the
negative side, to be freed from all "remains of sin" and "sinful attitudes" that
survived their conversion experience. To state the positive side of the same
crisis experience, they want the life of the Spirit and divine love to so fill
them that they, fully renewed in the image of Christ, will be able to serve God
with single eye and heart. And, secondly, they want to learn the new skills of
Christian living by the power of the Holy Spirit in a manner as different from
the old way of sin as possible. This unfolding life in the Spirit is the process
of growing in grace and experiencing the continuing transformation that
characterizes vital Christians, who "with unveiled face, continually beholding
as in a mirror the manifestation of the Lord, are being transformed continually
into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord" (II
Cor. 3:18). In this paper we must be alert to emphases in Romans that highlight
the second crisis, but we will not be able or willing to take it out of its
vital context of a dynamic, expanding experience of Christlikeness.
VIII. "The
Righteousness of God" Concept
One of the most
misunderstood expressions in Romans is "the righteousness of God." It is
generally thought of in such restricted terms that it loses its meaning. But it
is a term almost as big as "holiness," as used here. There are perhaps two main
reasons why Paul uses the term here instead of holiness. Though both terms make
God the standard and source of the Christian life, "righteousness" lends itself
more to an analysis of the ways in which sin comes into conflict with the life
in grace, and the ways in which the conflict can be resolved. Then, too, the
comparisons and contrasts in the Epistle were to be with "law" as a means of
salvation. The connotations of "righteous-ness" were easier to elaborate in this
context than of the more mystical and mystifying aspects of God's majesty and
holiness.
IX.
Righteousness As a "Total" Term
"Righteousness"
is used in its "total" sense of God's own "rightness," in the sense of moral
propriety or integrity, and as the standard for His moral creatures. It stands
as the eternal opposite to sin and evil. Though there is a sense in which
"holiness" is a still broader term, "righteousness" still bespeaks the nature of
God as the absolute standard of moral rightness, and the proper source of any
worthy human copy of the divine. Hence "righteousness of God," as used in
Romans, is not just a description of God. It is rather a God-kind of
righteousness that is communicable. Throughout human history God had demanded
righteousness. What kind would satisfy Him? It is the God-kind-that which
conforms to God, flows from Him, and meets His demand. Paul throws out the
challenge: Whence does it come? From law or by grace through faith?
X. Imparted
Righteousness
Justification
obviously speaks of more than an acquittal-the dismissing of charges, or even a
forgiveness. It certainly refers to more than calling one righteous when he is
not. Its connotations lie in the realm of "being," at least as much as in the
realm of "being considered." As Paul handles the term in the first five chapters
of Romans, this is very clear in the original language. And it becomes clear to
all if we realize that there is no term for "just" or "justify" in Paul's
writings that does not come from the same root as the word for "righteous" or
"righteousness." There would be less confusion in English if the word "justify"
had never been coined, and if instead the words "make righteous" had always been
used. Of course that is what the Latin word "justify" means, except as it is
used in the accommodated sense of a human court's ability to declare a thing so
without the power to make it so. It seems that Liddon writes accurately when he
says:
There is no
place in Scripture in which the Righteousness of Jesus Christ is said to be
imputed as distinct from being imparted. When Scripture says that Faith is
reckoned to a man for righteousness, it does not thereby say that the
Righteousness of Christ is imputed without being imparted. Faith is imputed for
righteousness on a common sense and almost a natural principle. Faith is the
initial act of all union with God or Christ. Accordingly an all-gracious God
does not wait until the sinner has done such or such good works before He
receives him into favour; He sees the fruit in the germ, He takes the will for
the deed. (5)
XI. An
Aspect of Holiness
Thus, when Paul
has established a "justification by faith," he has also established, in a true
sense, the God-kind of righteousness as received by faith. Once this is posited,
it is seen that something of eternal significance has been begun. The term
"righteousness" may be caught up in the bigger and warmer term "holiness" as a
result of a further crisis in "entire sanctification," but it is no loss of the
one for the sake of the other. Righteousness is simply an aspect or component of
the holiness which is a balance of perfections in God and a god likeness in His
creatures.
XII.
Holiness in the Justification Section
It is most
natural that the "justification section" of Romans (3:21--5:21) should sparkle
and flash with something more than the minimums of saving grace. It is no wonder
that the greatest of the Patriarchs (Abraham) should be the prime illustration
of this righteousness by faith, and that chapter 5 should revel in the peace,
hope, glory, standing grace, triumph, love of God shed abroad through the gift
of the Holy Spirit, abundance of grace, the reign of grace, the reign in life,
the gift of righteousness, justification of life, and the assurance of triumph.
It is impossible to keep holiness, or even heaven, out of the justification
section, simply because holiness is begun in the first valid experience of
saving grace--the new birth, by which we become God's children partakers of His
nature. The God-kind of righteousness is a total that implies a fulfillment not
only in a further crisis and a daily life, but also in heaven itself. This is as
natural and logical as to see in the birth of a baby a supposition in favor of
adulthood, responsible living, and a worthy destiny. Such is God's provision.
XIII.
Dangers in a Narrow View
To conceive of
justification apart from the grand total of which it is an aspect is to miss the
meaning of the word and to throw the door open to heresy. From such narrower
approaches come distressing views of the atonement, or of the lack of it,
ridiculous teachings concerning sinning saints (holy sinners), and the like. But
the broader view coincides perfectly with the bold generalization of the Apostle
John that "If we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have fellowship one
with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin" (I John 1:7).
XIV.
Holiness Implied in Justification
It is natural
then that there should be no sharp break as one approaches the sanctification
section (Rom. 6--8). Rather, a practical question is raised and answered about
the new life. Shall we who have this gift of righteousness continue sinning? How
ridiculous! This would nullify the whole meaning of the righteousness we
received, and the way we received it through Christ. The answer to the ethical
problem is not involvement in sinning, but a still deeper involvement in
redemption. The provision of Calvary was not only an initial and basic
restoration from the old life to an acceptance with God. It includes a
crucifixion of the old sinful self in the sense of the destruction of sin as a
working principle in even the depths of the heart (6:6). More than a correction
of conduct and standing is involved. It is death not just to acts of
sinning--but also to the sin nature. He that is dead is emancipated from sin.
The appeal to Christian living becomes an appeal to holiness of heart--to an
entire sanctification. Hence it is treated in Romans 6:1-11 as freedom from sin.
This negative
aspect of freedom from sin is followed by the positive idea of a holy life
(12:23). Instead of sin, there is a new king reigning over us. It is grace,
reigning by our consent. We have become voluntary servants of righteousness unto
holiness. Now our fruits unto holiness and everlasting life.
XV. Greek
Tenses
At the crucial
points in chapter 6 it is interesting to note the tenses of the Greek verbs. The
provision for this freedom from sin as provided in the crucifixion of Christ is
given in the aorist tense, as of a simple occurrence or crisis (v.6); as is the
destruction of sin (v.6). Likewise the word for dying is in the aorist tense
(vv. 7, 8), and the word for "present" or "yield" in the exhortations for the
believer to make a full commitment to God (vv. 13 and 19). These all lend
themselves to the idea of a crisis and are used in a context that appeal to
those already converted. On the other hand, the verbs which speak of the process
of Christian living are in the present tense, indicating continuity, for
example, "living" (v. 11), "reign" and "obey" (v. 12).
XVI.
Sanctification Not By Law
Chapter 7 has
to re-enact the battle between law and faith (or grace) as a means of salvation.
But here it is in the broader context of holiness or sanctification. Grudgingly,
it is assumed, the Jew had to admit that justification is by faith (chaps.
3--5). But certainly, he would argue, it is law that makes one a better
Christian--that sanctifies--that brings to perfection. Paul's answer is clear.
No, one's experience is quite the contrary. Law is no more able to restore the
fine balance of the inner nature in holiness than it was to clarify our forensic
relationships before God. Legalism can but deepen the frustration, failure, and
despair of the poor soul that sees a better way and has no power to attain it.
Law sharpens the conflict, but it can never resolve it. Only grace, received by
faith, can solve the problem.
XVII. Grace
For Man's Total Need
Having tested
the alternate method for victory, he now places full emphasis again on the
totality of grace that is found in the finished work of Christ. Paul does not
recapitulate the grace involved in justification. Nor does he seek to draw the
limits of what one can have in "only a justified state." Obviously such would be
impossible. A child of God can have all that his faith can embrace. And some
older Christians still long for particulars which the infant faith of others has
claimed early. Things and blessings are not the point, in the narrower sense of
the terms. Rather, Paul holds up to view the normal Christian life--full-orbed
and free. The argument is not theological insistence on so many trips to an
altar. It is the offer of Christian fullness. If one does not have this
fullness, let him be assured that it is provided for him. There is but a step of
faith between the fully yielded heart and this fulness. This is the scriptural
method of preaching entire sanctification. It is not a plea for theological
consistency so much as provision for man's total need. Though some knowledge
generally precedes the crisis, the theology comes much more naturally and easily
after the experience. One needs the experience and life as a basis for analysis
and interpretation. Religion and life come first. Theology and rules tend to
follow.
XVIII.
Totals in Romans 8
This totality
of grace in the normal Christian life is shown first in terms of the triumph of
grace in the human personality (8:1-11). The answer is not in one's own efforts
under law. The victorious Christian does not walk after the patterns and
inclinations of the human, but he obeys the guidance and prompting of the Spirit
(v.1). Thus a higher power has entered and has gained supremacy. It is the
Spirit of life in Christ Jesus that rules and delivers from the rule of sin and
death (v.2). It was not that the human in itself was bad. God created it. But
sin was the real trouble. Man's own struggling could not break sin's power. Nor
could any law enable him to keep its requirement. But what law and humanity
could not do, Christ did. He condemned to death the villain. Sin is destroyed.
Humanity is delivered. Righteousness is then fulfilled in walking after the
Spirit.
A. Life
After the Spirit
This brings up
a fundamental question. What is meant by "after the flesh" and "after the
Spirit"? Is this an outward pattern of conformity accepted as a goal or required
as a law? Indeed not! It is a heart attitude. Paul defines it in terms of a
"mindedness." Those who set their minds upon (phroneô), and give priority
to the flesh, walk after the flesh. And those who mind the things of the Spirit
walk after the Spirit. There are only the two ways. Sooner or later life's
values become sorted to the point that a definite pattern is clear. Then one is
obviously either spiritually minded or carnally minded. He cannot be both. So he
is alive or dead. The carnal must be displaced by a higher principle. And indeed
it will be, or the soul perishes. Again, it is the conflict between two totals:
Spirit or flesh--life or death--holiness or hell. Whatever of inconsistencies or
contradictions in the human heart may survive conversion, these must and will be
resolved upward or downward. One will not permanently remain saved, but not "sanctified wholly." The mindedness toward the flesh (v.7) is enmity against
God. The enemy will be cast out or it will make a counter attack and recapture
the soul.
Just as truly
as the human is delivered and the carnal is displaced, so the spiritual is
enthroned (vv. 9-11). The crux of the matter is the presence and power of the
Holy Spirit. Through Him comes life, righteousness, and even physical
enablement. A new monarch makes new reign of righteousness and well-being. This
is normalcy for the Christian.
B. Assets of
Grace
Having the
Spirit of God, we have all that we need (vv. 12-25). There is freedom from the
enslaving demands of the flesh (vv. 12, 13). Sonship is not just a name; it
involves a power and assurance that makes life vibrant, rich, and secure (vv.
14-17). Sonship carries a hope of fulfillment that will eventually cure the ills
that now test our faith and patience. All creation will join in the final
triumph (vv. 17-23). Meanwhile the hope gives motivation and meaning to the
present, outweighing the trials and distresses that would otherwise mar our
lives (vv. 24, 25).
C. Adequacy
of Grace
The utter
adequacy of grace is seen in verses 26-39. At the point of our weaknesses we
have the Holy Spirit interceding for us and in us (vv. 26, 27). God's good
providence so shields us that nothing can happen to us but what can be used to
our good and His glory (v.28). He has been working for us since long before we
were born. Nothing can stop Him from taking the yielded believer clear through
(vv. 29-33). Christ is also on our side as both redeemer and Intercessor (v.34).
With all this in our favor, we are invincible in Him (vv. 35-39).
XIX. Life of
Holiness
This life in
the Spirit then expresses itself in appropriate ethics--a life of holiness
(chaps. 12--16). It requires more than a reluctant cease-fire. "Brethren"(12:1,
converted people) have to respond to the goodness and saving mercies of God by
an appropriate dedication or consecration of themselves. They do not dedicate
their sins. Those are already forsaken. Rather, they yield their ransomed
powers, their bodies, as living sacrifices, holy and well-pleasing to God. This
is the reasonable service of the redeemed. The "presentation" (aorist tense) is
decisive action. The "transformation" (present tense) is continuous. Thus the
life of holiness is launched with a full consecration to God, which is followed
by constant access to His renewing and transforming grace (12:1, 2).
From this
launching pad of dedication to God, Christian living proceeds to a right
attitude toward self (12:3-8), right attitude toward the brethren (12:9-16), to
a right attitude toward all men (12:17-21). It involves good citizenship in
terms of meeting one's obligations to government (13:1-7), justice in private
relations (13:8-10), and holiness in personal living (13:11-14). It even
includes a responsibility to those with whom one differs. It demands a basic
unity even in diversity(14:1-12), a love that softens and sweetens one's liberty
(14:13--15:2), and primary attention to the purpose and example of Christ
(15:3-13).
XX. Holiness
Enjoyed and Pursued
Thus, Romans is
full to the brim of scriptural holiness as a vital experience and a way of life.
But this holiness is not a "thing" or an "it." Rather it is the attitude of a
heart fully renewed and victorious in the love and grace of God. The pattern is
God in Christ. It is God likeness, Christlikeness, fullness of life. The
enabling power is the indwelling Holy Spirit. The mood is triumph in a perfect
Redeemer. The goal is ever-expanding. The heavenly vision becomes clearer. As we
see, so we become. There is no static goal for the Christian. The infinite
Christ keeps one ever stretching. The finite is captivated by the Infinite. The
life has its achievements and accomplishments, but it never loses the joy of the
perpetual pursuit (Heb. 12:14).
XXI. The
Crisis
Where then is
entire sanctification? It is the term used for the crossing over of a born-again
Christian from less than a full cleansing, renewal, and fulfillment of heart
motivation to such a fullness and singleness of life and purpose in the pursuit
of Christlikeness. There is a sense in which the crossing is an inference of
one's presence on the other side of the line. But there are also signposts along
the way (as seen in the scriptural terms of crisis experience), and often
memories of difficult crossings (as, for instance, when self did not want to
die).
XXII. The
Christlike Life
Though Romans
may not abound in simple proof texts for entire sanctification, it is a gold
mine for one whose search is for Christlikeness, fullness of life, and a hope
that is secure. This is scriptural holiness. And the gate to the fulness of this
experience is called entire sanctification.
Documentation
1. Robert Baker Girdlestone, Synonyms
of The Old Testament (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company,
1897, rep. n.d.), p.175.
2. G. D. Stevens, "Holiness," Hastings Dictionary of the Bible,
II, 400.
3. H. P. Lidden, Explanatory Analysis
of St. Paul's Epistle to the
Romans, p. 85.
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