4. Faith has all its worth from love, from the love of God, whence it draws and drinks, and the love to God and man which streams out of it. Let us be strong in faith, then shall we abound in love.
5. ‘The love of God hath been shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which was given unto us.’ Let this be our confidence.
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Twenty-sixth Day.
[Contents]
HOLY IN CHRIST.
‘This is the will of God, even your sanctification.’—1 Thess. iv. 3.
‘Lo, I am come to do Thy will. By which will we have been sanctified, through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all.’—Heb. x. 9, 10.
In the will of God we have the union of His Wisdom and Power. The Wisdom decides and declares what is to be: the Power secures the performance. The declarative will is only one side; its complement, the executive will, is the living energy in which everything good has its origin and existence. So long as we only look at the will of God in the former light, as law, we feel it a burden, because we have not the power to perform—it is too high for us. When faith looks to the Power that works in God’s will, and carries it out, it has the courage to accept it and fulfil it, because it knows God Himself is working it out. The surrender in faith to the Divine will as Wisdom thus becomes the pathway to the experience of it as a Power. ‘He [p228] doeth according to His will,’ is then the language not only of forced submission, but of joyful expectation.
‘This is the will of God, your sanctification.’ In the ordinary acceptation of these words, they simply mean that among many other things that God has willed, sanctification is one; it is something in accordance with His will. This thought contains teaching of great value. God very distinctly and definitely has willed your sanctification: your sanctification has its source and certainty in its being God’s will. We are ‘elect in sanctification of the Spirit,’ ‘chosen to be holy;’ the purpose of God’s will from eternity, and His will now, is our sanctification. We have only to think of what we said of God’s will being a Divine power that works out what His wisdom has chosen, to see what strength this truth will give to our faith that we shall be holy: God wills it, and will work it out for all and in all who do not resist it, but yield themselves to its power. Seek your sanctification, not only in the will of God, as a declaration of what He wants you to be, but as a revelation of what He Himself will work out in you.
There is, however, another most precious thought suggested. If our sanctification be God’s will, its central thought and its contents, every part of that will must bear upon it, and the sure entrance to sanctification will be the hearty acceptance of the will of God in all things. To be one with God’s will is to be holy. Let him who would be holy take his place here and ‘stand in all the will of God.’ He will there [p229] meet God Himself, and be made partaker of His Holiness, because His will works out its purpose in power to each one who yields himself to it. Everything in a life of holiness depends upon our being in the right relation to the will of God.