“Entire Sanctification” is an odd and exciting term. It is a cornerstone Free Methodist doctrine. It has also vexed and offended many. The doctrine is particularly frightening for
the modern mind when paired with another phrase from our Wesleyan heritage –
“Christian Perfection.” Jesus Christ,
our founder (not John Wesley, contrary to popular opinion), was the first to
voice this concept. “Be perfect,
therefore,” said Jesus (Matthew 5:48), “as your heavenly Father is
perfect.” And “Entire Sanctification”
are the words employed by the Apostle Paul when he prays for the Thessalonian
church, “And may the God of peace Himself fully sanctify you, and may your
whole spirit and soul and body be kept blameless at the coming of our Lord
Jesus Christ” (Literal Translation Bible).
John Wesley, our historic mentor, pointed not to some unique
experience of his own, or novel understanding of the Bible when he called upon
those in the renewal movement of his day (called Methodism today) to be sanctified
through and through. He pointed to the
Bible, Old and New Testaments. He drew
from the writings and experiences of the early church fathers. He gave voice to what he witnessed in the
lives of believers who, through faith alone received God’s forgiveness and (often after a “salvation experience”)
an experience of Spiritual awakening, fullness of the Holy Spirit, which led to
such a transformational life change that the only to explain it was that Jesus
was somehow living in and through these believers in powerful ways.
These life transformations were in stark contrast the common
experience of Wesley’s Christian peers.
His intellectual Oxford peers had lost nearly all sense of experiencing
the power of God in their lives as they traded the treasures of the heart for
an intellectualized, often sanitized, version of Christianity that led to
Deism, moralism, and other ‘isms’ that were less than God’s desire. Wesley’s peers in the streets, mines, prisons
and distilleries of Great Britain believed the church to be by and large
irrelevant for them, with often lifeless spiritual leaders bringing little more
than the ritualistic functions expected of them for marriage, baptism and
burials.
Maybe today’s Free Methodists need to find new
language. But we don’t need to find a
new message. Jesus didn’t call for
half-hearted, lukewarm commitment to the Kingdom. The Apostle’s did not die as martyrs
preaching a gospel of comfortable acceptance of sins, brokenness, injustice,
poverty, self-centeredness. The early
Christian movement did not seize the hearts of slaves and soldiers, artisans
and emperors by asking nothing and promising more of the same. The promise was declared that God’s kingdom
belongs to those who are fully, radically, uncompromisingly devoted to
following the King. The promise was that
a broken life might be made whole. A
broken world might discover restoration.
As the Ambassadors of the new
Kingdom, we go into the nations and teach everything our Lord teaches us,
proclaiming and incarnating through the Spirit God’s holiness and love.
John Wesley used 26 different phrases and Biblical
references to describe what we today narrowly refer to as “Entire
Sanctification.” He did so because he
was deeply concerned that people might become fixated upon or have negative
reactions to any one of the terms that he felt the Bible employed in describing
the concept. So, today, I imagine that
no matter what different terms we may choose to use, someone will doubtless
take exception and claim it is not what they can in any way believe.
I’m going to take a shot at it anyway. Free Methodists believe that God expects AND
empowers those who will turn to God (either to repent of wrongdoing or to
embrace a more beautiful and true life or any combination therein) to be 1) all
in with Jesus, 2) radically devoted to God, 3) refuse compromise with the
world, 4) full of the Holy Spirit, 5) wholly available for God’s purposes, 6)
settling for nothing less than everything God has in store, 7) not holding back
or onto anything that hinders God’s work through us, 8) sacrificing anything to
be everything God intends us to be.
Maybe John Wesley said it best when he said, “What I mean by Christian
Perfection is nothing other than love the Lord your God with all your heart,
mind, soul and strength and love your neighbor as yourself.”
I wonder where Mr. Wesley got that from?
Don’t settle for less than all God wants to be and do in and
through you. Let’s be all in!
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