"Re-minting or (re-imaging) Christian holiness" has become the catchphrase for people wanting to communicate the biblical call to holiness to people today. This book chapter may help!
Entire sanctification is the distinctive teaching of churches in the Wesleyan-holiness theological tradition. Tragically, both inside the movement and out, this mirroring of and partaking of God's holiness is often misunderstood.
by Howard Culbertson, Roger Hahn, and Dean Nelson
Answer: Wesleyans believe that, after conversion, but before death, a believer's heart may be cleansed from all sin.
Answer: Sanctified people can sin, just like Adam and Eve could sin -- and did. However, believers who have moved to this level of Christian life and experience are more likely not to sin than believers who haven't. Before experiencing entire sanctification, believers often lose struggles against inborn tendencies toward sinning and selfishness. After the experience, they find themselves most often feeling a tendency toward righteousness.
Answer: Christian Perfection doesn't mean perfect in the sense that many often think (and thus react negatively to the idea). The Biblical word for perfect means that a person is as complete as he or she was designed to be at that moment. A seven-year-old piano player might be able to perform a one-handed version of a song perfectly. When the child does so, his or her piano teacher might exclaim: "Perfect!" However, as that little musician grows up and matures, the same teacher will expect a great deal more.
Jonathan Hahn has always been more motivated by recess than by any other of his classes. Take it from his dad, Roger Hahn -- one of the co-authors of this chapter.
When he was in second grade, Jonathan managed to spend an entire hour one day avoiding working on a sheet of math problems. Finally, the teacher reminded him that, before he could go out for recess, every problem on the sheet had to be completed.Within two minutes, his teacher reported, Jonathan had written an answer to every single problem. Sadly, every single one of those answers was wrong. So, the teacher sent the worksheet home for Jonathan to re-do it under the watchful eyes of his parents.
At home, his dad read the note from the teacher and then said, "Jonathan, you'll have to do all these problems again."
"Why?" asked Jonathan.
"Your answers are all wrong."
"So?" Jonathan shrugged. "Nobody's perfect."
Jonathan's concluding phrase pretty well sums up why many people reject the idea of entire sanctification. His words echoed a once-popular bumper sticker: "Christians aren't perfect -- they're just forgiven." Those who have felt they need more authority than a bumper sticker to sound the "I'm-not-perfect-and-that's-OK" theme turn to 1 John 1:8: "If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us."
Answer: Contrary to conventional wisdom, catchy bumper sticker phrases, and some interpretations of 1 John 1:8, Christians within the Wesleyan theological tradition have insisted on teaching a transforming experience they label "entire sanctification." Why do they do that?
Well, those in the Wesleyan theological tradition teach and preach entire sanctification because the Bible does call us to love perfectly, to live with a pure heart, and to be free from slavery to sin. Those three ideas are integral to the biblical concept of entire sanctification.
The possibility of deliverance from all sin and of renewal in God's image permeates the Holy Scriptures. Take Bible prayers, for instance. Several contain clear yearnings for a holy relationship with God (Psalm 51; John 17:17-23); To the believers in Thessalonica, Paul wrote that sanctification was his heart's desire for them: "May God himself, the God of peace, sanctify you through and through" (1 Thessalonians 5:23).
In addition to prayers for holiness, the Bible contains commands for Christ's followers to be holy. "Be holy because I, the LORD your God, am holy" is one of several passages that call us to a high plane of living (Leviticus 19:2; see also Matthew 5:48 and Hebrews 6:1).
The Bible also has examples of people who lived in a holy relationship with God. Noah was called "a righteous man, blameless" (Genesis 6:9). Job, it was said, was "blameless and upright" (Job 1:1). In his first letter, John remarks: "Love has been perfected among us" (1 John 4:17, NRSV).
Such Bible passages clearly point to holiness as a core message of God's revelation to us. At its heart, the Bible is not about the bad news of inevitable defeat or an inescapable enslavement to sin or of the repulsiveness of humanity. Rather, woven through the whole fabric of Scripture is the vision of a people set apart to enjoy a holy relationship with our holy God.
Scripture sings out the optimistic Good News that God's grace can give us victory over sin and can move us into a holy, joyful relationship with our Creator — a relationship we were created to have.
Some people have difficulty understanding entire sanctification because various terms have been used to talk about it, including perfect love, Christian perfection, full consecration, baptism with the Holy Spirit, second work of grace, second-blessing, and heart holiness.
At times, Holiness theologians seem to say that all these terms refer to exactly the same experience. At other times, they try to separate them a bit. That can be perplexing.
The confusion is a bit like the "system overload" a young sportswriter experienced at a sports journalism conference in Florida. A group of high school sports writers from around the country joined seasoned professionals covering a National Hockey League game between the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Buffalo Sabres. A student from Mississippi had never seen a hockey game. So, he launched a barrage of questions. A veteran sports writer sitting nearby tried to explain the meaning of offsides, icing, a two-line pass, and penalties unique to the game of hockey. The student grew visibly irritated at the complexity of the game. As irritation evolved into boredom, he pulled out his headphones and music player, abandoning the effort to understand the hockey game going on in front of him.
Suddenly, as often happens during a hockey game, a fight broke out among the players. At that point, the Mississippi student came alive. He nudged the veteran sports writer, saying, "Now, this part of the game, I understand!" he said.
We don't need a fight to break out in the church to help everyone understand the concept of entire sanctification. In fact, fights over the doctrine of holiness (which does happen) only complicate things. What we do need is a clear explanation that can be understood.
Here is what Wesleyan Christians believe: After conversion, but before death, a believer's heart may be cleansed from all sin. Expressions like "entire sanctification," "perfect love," and "Christian perfection" are some of the terms Wesleyans use to describe this experience.
That is an explanation Christians in other theological traditions are hesitant to fully embrace. Two words -- "entire" and "perfect" -- have often led to a misunderstanding of this doctrine. To clarify these and other areas of misunderstanding, we'll try answering questions that we have often heard from people.
Answer: The doctrine and experience are called sanctification because that's the biblical word for the act of being made holy that begins at the new birth (conversion) and continues until death. The adjective entire comes from 1 Thessalonians 5:23, where Paul prays that the God of peace will sanctify believers "entirely" (NRSV) or "wholly" (RSV).
In the 1700s, the founder of Methodism, John Wesley, understood this. He often spoke of the experience of being sanctified "entirely" or "wholly." (John Wesley's influence today)
Using those two adjectives can raise even further questions, however. Scripture clearly says that though sanctification begins in a moment, growth in becoming more like Christ happens throughout one's lifetime. Thus, one can legitimately ask: How can one point fairly early in that process be called entire if further sanctification comes after it?
Answer: John Wesley himself said that the only reason he used this word the word "perfect" is because the Bible spoke of perfection. Wesley, however, did insist that the words perfect and perfection never be used by themselves to describe the experience. He urged his followers to always say Christian perfection rather than simply perfection and perfected in love rather than just perfected.
The original biblical words for perfect and perfection do not mean absolute perfection with no possibility for more improvement. The Hebrew and Greek words mean that a person or thing is as complete as it was designed or expected to be at that moment.
This can be illustrated by the marriage relationship. When two people decide to get married, they make commitments to each other. They decide that they will no longer live their lives separately. On their wedding day, the marriage relationship is as complete as it can be that day. It can be said they are "entirely" devoted to one another. As the marriage continues, however, the couple can grow in the relationship.
Was this couple's relationship less complete on the wedding day than it was at an anniversary many years later? No. It was as complete as it could be at each moment.
That is what Christian perfection is like. We can — and must — grow each day in our relationship with God. We are perfect at each moment of growth as a result of having a perfect God residing in us.
Remember the example of the piano player? A little girl would likely play a simple one-hand piece on the piano for her first recital. Her teacher may well exclaim, "That was perfect!" Years later, when that girl has grown into an accomplished musician, she could not expect to play the same simple piece and have her teacher still exclaim: "That was perfect!" Much more would be expected of her.
Likewise, when a person comes to love God with an undivided heart, the Bible says this is perfect love. That does not mean that no further growth is possible. In fact, the contrary is true. Once we love perfectly or completely, that's when growth becomes possible.
Answer: Sin, in the sense of worshiping self instead of God, rules the life of an unbeliever. In conversion, the ruling power of sin is broken, but the results of that life of sin remain.
Wesley and other theologians have described this sin that crops up in the lives of believers as including things like pride, self-will, and inappropriate desires. These are not outward acts that clearly break the commands of Scripture, for Wesley taught that such blatant sins stopped when a person was converted.
The sin remaining in believers, he said, reflects a disposition or tendency of the heart toward self-centeredness rather than God-centeredness. Entire sanctification cleanses the heart of this self-centeredness, bringing victory over this sin that remains in the believer. To describe what happens here, Wesley used Paul's words in Romans 6:11-12: "Count yourselves dead to sin but alive to God in Christ Jesus. Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body so that you obey its evil desires."
Answer: No, being entirely sanctified doesn't mean a person will not sin again. Entire sanctification is not a Wesleyan form of eternal security, teaching that once we're in, we're in for good.
The point of entire sanctification is to restore people to the kind of holiness that Adam and Eve enjoyed before the Fall. They had a perfect relationship with God. Yet, inexplicably, they chose to sin.
Entire sanctification means that a person's tendency -- some call it "bent" -- is toward righteousness rather than toward sinning. The goal and the reasonable expectation of the entirely sanctified life is to not sin, as 1 John 2:1 makes clear: "My dear children, I write this to you so that you will not sin." The expectation was that the believers would live as Christ lived and do His will. Sanctified people not only do the will of God but also want to do the will of God. [ see illustration from Greek mythology ]
Answer: First John 2:1-2 answers the question of what a believer should do when he or she sins:
So, those of us who talk about entire sanctification must resist the temptation to deny that we have sinned, if indeed we have. We should also refrain from giving less offensive names to sin, such as "mistake," to downplay what we have done. (By the same token, we do not use the word "sin" for honest mistakes or even plain poor judgment.) [ Susanna Wesley's definition of sin ]
Sins of unbelievers and Christians alike violate God's law and need Christ's atoning blood. When promptly confessed and forsaken, sins need not break the relationship between the believer and God.
Answer: A believer with little or no "hunger and thirst for righteousness" — as Jesus said in Matthew 5:6 — is not a candidate for entire sanctification. The experience comes only after the new birth and growth in grace.
Total commitment — sometimes called entire consecration — is the necessary human preparation for entire sanctification.
Wesley himself cautioned against preaching this experience to believers who were not pressing on toward the goal of spiritual maturity mentioned in Philippians 3:14.
Entire sanctification builds on a certain measure of spiritual maturity, so in most believers, there is a gradual leading up to it. However, since entire sanctification is also death to sin, there is a noticeable crisis or instant in which the experience occurs.
Some people say they can point to more than one occasion when this death occurred. However, Wesley compared death to sin with physical death. A person may be dying for some time, but there is an instant when life ceases. Likewise, a person may be gradually dying to sin and becoming more Christlike over a long period of time. Wesley and others would say there does come a point when death finally happens, and the believer may be said to be dead to the power of sin.
Paul Pate -- a 45-year-old landscaper, husband, and father of three in San Diego -- describes his experience of entire sanctification. He had been a Christian for 20 years when it began to gnaw at him that he was missing something in his spiritual life:
"I was a believer -- I had had a powerful conversion experience -- but there was no power in my life. Instead of attempting to be victorious over sin, I rationalized away its existence in my life. I was like most people around me: good folks who love God, love our neighbors, share our testimony when asked, and focus our lives on our rents, mortgage payments, jobs, and getting ahead."
After spending a lot of time in God's Word, Paul Pate came upon Deuteronomy 4:28-29: "There you will worship gods made by human hands out of wood and stone, gods that can neither see nor hear, neither eat nor smell. But if from there you seek the LORD your God, you will find him, if indeed you search with all your heart and soul" (NEB).
Paul described what happened at that point: "I was so dissatisfied with my life at that point, and when I read this, I decided that is what I wanted. I felt like I had only known God as a concept. Now Jesus was saying to me what He said to His disciples in John 14: Have I been with you so long, and you still don't know Me?
"I wanted to know Christ as I had never known Him before."
More than a year after that search began, Paul was driving home from his sister's house in Ramona, California. Suddenly, he says, "I connected."
The presence of God filled Paul's truck in such a way that he began to weep. "On that drive," he said, "I reached a new level of intimacy. And then I wondered how I could have known Christ so long and missed this!"
Brennan Manning described a similar experience in his book The Ragamuffin Gospel. Manning was on a winter retreat when one thought kept resounding in him during times of solitude: "Jesus did not say this on Calvary, though He could have, but He is saying it now; I'm dying to be with you. I'm really dying to be with you." "It was as if He were calling to me for a second time," Manning said, "I realized that what I thought I knew was straw. I had scarcely glimpsed, I had never dreamed what His love could be. The Lord drove me deeper into solitude. I sought not tongues, healing, prophecy, or good religious experience each time I prayed. My quest was for understanding and for pure, passionate Presence."1
More important than human consecration and the length of time involved is the fact that it is God who entirely sanctifies. Cleansing from sin is not something we do for ourselves; it is a gift from God. Because it is God's gift, there is also a certain mystery to it. As Brennan Manning and Paul Pate discovered, we cannot schedule entire sanctification to happen at our command.
Answer: Entire sanctification is not the final goal of the Christian life. It's really the beginning point -- a vital step in the lifelong process of being made more like Christ.
John Wesley put it this way: justification (forgiveness of sins) is the porch; entire sanctification is the door; but the house is full fellowship with God.
So, entire sanctification is the way we enter the fullness of the Christian life. The door is not where we're headed; we want to get inside the house so that we can enjoy full fellowship with God.
Maintaining full fellowship with God is something the apostle Paul said was his lifelong passion: "Not that I have already obtained all this, or have already been made perfect, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me" (Philippians 3:12).
Answer: Wesley said that entire sanctification enables people to fulfill the Great Commandments enunciated by Jesus: Love God with the whole heart, soul, mind, and strength, and to love one's neighbor as oneself (Mark 12:30-31).
Wesley observed that someone who had entered the experience usually felt great joy and peace. However, he also noticed that most who had experienced entire sanctification did encounter fluctuations -- peaks and valleys -- in their sense of joy and peace.
So, though entire sanctification radically changes our desire and ability to show love, it rarely changes our basic personality. "Driven" sinners become "driven" Christians, and may remain so through a lifetime of sanctification. Laid-back sinners become laid-back Christians who rarely show outward signs of excitement when they are entirely sanctified. In this vein, religion professor Malcolm Shelton would often quip: "Some people are better by nature than others are by grace."
People tend to make their own experiences the standard for other people. Thus, the search for clear evidence of entire sanctification has led to some unpleasant results. Some people have given up hope of being entirely sanctified because they were fairly sure their personalities would not allow them to exactly match another person's experience. Recognizing the variety of ways the work of sanctification affects individuals may help us restore this hope.
Through the years, some people who believed they were entirely sanctified have shown unusual responses at that moment. Shouting, running, jumping, and weeping have all been described -- and in some cases promoted -- as evidence of entire sanctification. It is clear, however, that people who have exhibited dramatic physical demonstrations have had no better track record of growing in grace following entire sanctification than those who have not experienced dramatic outward responses. Clearly, outward physical demonstrations are not a dependable confirmation of the inward work of sanctification.
Some Christians today teach that speaking in tongues is evidence of entire sanctification. That belief is not supported either in Scripture or by experience.
We humans cannot precisely measure the real evidence of entire sanctification. That's because the evidence is an increasing Christ-likeness. The evidence is the image of God becoming increasingly visible in a believer's life.
Answer:
One popular theological tradition says that all believers sin every day in thought, word, and deed. That seems so much less than the victory over sin promised by the Bible. Across the years far too many Christians have settled for too little, emphasizing human frailties and the pervasiveness of sin. Caving into the argument that a person is doomed to stumble along in constant failure, they have lived defeated lives. Some have given up Christianity altogether. Not only did individuals suffer personal defeat, but the reputation of the Kingdom also suffered.
As human beings, we were created in the image of God to live in holy fellowship with Him. Much of that fellowship was lost to sin. The experience of heart holiness offers a restoration that puts us back on track to fulfilling God's original plan.
Because of this, genuine, wholehearted love for God, our neighbors, and the rest of His creation is possible for us again. The doctrine of entire sanctification is the door that leads us into glorious, full, and perfect fellowship with God.
1 Brennan Manning, The Ragamuffin Gospel (Portland, Oregon: Multnomah Press), 168.
Commentary on Luke 10:25-28
What is the meaning of Jesus' explanation of the greatest commandment?
25 On one occasion, an expert in the law stood up to test Jesus. "Teacher," he asked, "what must I do to inherit eternal life?"
26 "What is written in the Law?" he replied. "How do you read it?"
27 He answered, "'Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind'; and, 'Love your neighbor as yourself.'"
28 "You have answered correctly," Jesus replied. "Do this and you will live."
In the latter third of the 20th century, the heretical cultists calling themselves Jehovah's Witnesses had astounding success in Italy. When we were there as missionaries, they claimed to have upward of 100,000 adherents in that country. [ PowerPoint presentation on Jehovah's Witnesses ]
To push their distorted doctrines to the Italians, Jehovah's Witnesses often emphasize that the members of their group look after each other -- not only spiritually, but also in practical, material ways. Again and again in their relentless door-to-door canvassing, the Jehovah's Witnesses pound home this point.
That the Jehovah's Witnesses continually emphasize this caring ministry evidently means they've discovered it to be a good selling point in Italy. It would also indicate the longing people feel to belong to a loving, caring group.
Jesus' response to a crafty lawyer who asked about the way to receive eternal life wasn't a shallow, off-the-cuff answer. That day, Jesus managed to get his questioner to reach into what we now call the Old Testament to find what, on another occasion, Jesus said were the two greatest commandments: 1) To love God with our entire being, and 2) To love our fellow human beings (Mark 12:29-31).
When Jesus pointed to these words from Leviticus and Deuteronomy, He knew He was speaking to humanity's greatest need. We were created to be loved and to give ourselves to love.
Sin has, however, so distorted the world that these two commandments have an alien ring to them. Instead of love, the world is full of hate, jealousy, prejudice, and fear.
To the idealists among us, that condition doesn't seem all that natural, however. In fact, political leaders have tried all kinds of ways to eradicate hate, prejudice, and jealousy. However, in their more candid moments, they will admit that their methods have failed.
For example, when Joseph Califano was near the end of his time as head of what is now the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, he granted an interview to the Los Angeles Times. In that interview, Califano said, "I don't know how to solve (racial tension). I'm puzzled by the fact it persists, but it's there . . . I don't think it's a problem we can solve with government programs."
Califano was right. Hate or prejudice can't be solved by government programs. But that doesn't mean these attitudes can't be eliminated. In fact, Jesus said they had to be eliminated from the life of the true Christian. Jesus said the two most important requirements of Christianity are: "Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind and love your neighbor as yourself" (Luke 10:27)
It was the second of those Great Commandments that the First Century Jewish lawyer tried to use to trap Jesus. In response, Jesus stood His ground, insisting that the worship of God was only one side of the coin. The other side is the Good Samaritan type of involvement in practical, caring ministries.
Some years ago, Barbara and I belonged to the Overland Park (Kansas) Church of the Nazarene. At that time, the church's letterhead and publicity included the phrase "a fellowship of concern."
What that local church leadership was trying to say, of course, is that our love for God must be accompanied by increasing sensitivity to human needs.
This is the perfect love that we preach about. It can be perfect in its intensity toward God and perfect in its all-inclusiveness as regards other human beings.
We do not keep these two commandments to provide a selling point for Christianity. We keep them simply because that's the kind of radical lifestyle to which Christ calls us as we live for Him in a sin-infested, pleasure-bloated world that is on an ego trip.
I wrote these devotional thoughts while Barbara and I served as missionaries in Italy. They were published in Standard, a weekly take-home curriculum piece for adult Sunday school classes produced by what is now called The Foundry.
-- Howard Culbertson,
Recently, someone asked me, "Are you being sanctified by church attendance?"
No, I don't believe that active participation in a community of faith in itself "sanctifies" a person. Isn't Paul pretty clear in 1 Thessalonians 5 that it is God himself who sanctifies us.? Isn't that also in line with Jesus' prayer in John 17, where our Savior prayed to the Father to sanctify His followers?
To be sure, active involvement with fellow believers in worship, discipleship, and outreach puts us in the best position for God to sanctify us. Indeed, if we follow the metaphor of the church as being like a physical body (Romans 12, 1 Corinthians 12, and Ephesians 4), then wouldn't an attempt to be a solitary Christian be like an arm or other part of a human body trying to be alive and flourish apart from being connected to that body?
Scott Daniels, who now serves as a Nazarene General Superintendent, recorded these sermons while pastoring the Richardson Church of the Nazarene in the Dallas-Ft. Worth metro area. Before that, Dr. Daniels was a professor in the School of Theology and Ministry at Southern Nazarene University. He received his BA from Northwest Nazarene University and his M.Div. and Ph.D. in theology and ethics from Fuller Theological Seminary.
According to Wesleyan-Arminian theology, perfect love involves wholehearted devotion to God. One way that is expressed is through love for one's neighbors and enemies alike. Perfect love signifies a state of spiritual maturity where one's desires, intentions, and actions are aligned with God's will. This love is not a mere sentiment or emotion. Rather, it is something active, characterized by selflessness, sacrificial giving, and a deep commitment to God and others.
The idea of perfect love is often associated with John Wesley's understanding of Christian perfection. Wesley uses the labels "perfect love for God and neighbor" and"entire sanctification" to describe that love. To be clear, Wesley did not claim perfection in the sense of being without fault or error. Rather, he meant being filled with the love of God to such an extent that sin no longer reigns in one's life.