also argues against the position he terms “supression of the old nature.”[1] He writes:
“Perhaps the most widely-held view of sanctification is that it is to be
gained through our own personal efforts by trying to suppress the flesh in us. Justification, it is believed, is by faith,
but sanctification is by works—at least to a large extent.”[2] Barabas argues against this position in three
ways. First, he sets forth the erroneous Keswick view of Romans 7:14-25.[3] Second, he argues for the teaching Keswick
adopted from Hannah W. Smith and the Broadlands Conference[4]
that sanctification is by faith alone, not works.[5] Third, he makes arguments such as: “Neither a tree nor a man grows by effort.[6]
. . . It is a kind of sanctification of the flesh. . . . the [failed attempt
at] the conquest of self by self . . . [the] legalism . . . to assume that
justification is by faith, [but] sanctification is somehow by struggle.”[7] Barabas warns that to “fall back upon mere
moral processes to overcome sin is not Christianity, but pagan philosophy,
which offers nothing better than self-effort as the only way of improvement.”[8] Based on such reasoning, he concludes: “It is the teaching of Keswick that an
important reason for the defeat and failure of so many Christians is that they
try to supress the old nature. . . .
Sanctification is therefore not by works but by faith. . . . That is the
distinctive method of Keswick.”[9]
entirely different ideas, combined with some faulty exegesis. If he only wished to prove that anyone
who attempted to be holy without depending upon the Triune God for strength was
doomed to failure, and that believers need, consequently, to live by faith
(Habakkuk 2:4), his exhortation would be correct, and its warning well
taken. The necessity of living by faith
and of experiential and personal communion with Jesus Christ by the Spirit is
extremely important, and it has been regarded as such by Christians who lived
centuries before the invention of the Keswick theology in association with the
preaching of Hannah W. Smith. If
self-dependence, seeking the ultimate ground for growth in holiness within
one’s own person, and “mere moral processes to overcome sin” as in “pagan
philosophy” were all Barabas wished to combat when he warned of the “man who is
trying to be good and holy by his own efforts and is defeated every time,”[10]
he would be right on target, warning against a serious sin that the believer’s
fleshliness naturally inclines him to commit.
“most widely-held view of sanctification,” which Barabas seeks to argue is in
error, is not actually an independent moralism, based on pagan philosophy, that
fails to depend upon Christ and the Spirit—although such errors are indeed taught
in large portions of the apostate denominations which Keswick ecumenicalism
refuses to repudiate. Rather than
restricting his argument to the real error of an independent moralism, Barabas
argues that believers are not to try to suppress the old nature or to struggle
against sin in sanctification.
Regretably, when Barabas warns against the “man who is trying to be good
and holy by his own efforts,” he does not just condemn self-dependence, but
also the truth that the Christian himself should personally make effort and
strive to mortify sin, depending upon Christ and the power of the Spirit. Barabas’s opposition to “sanctification . . .
by struggle” is an error ignores the many texts such as “Ye have not yet
resisted unto blood, striving against sin” (Hebrews 12:4). Indeed, Paul’s conclusion, after setting
forth in a lengthly chapter the necessity of living by faith (Hebrews 11), is
“wherefore”[11]
(Hebrews 12:1)—in light of Hebrews 11 and those who lived by faith in that
chapter—“lay aside every weight . . . run with patience . . . consider [Christ]
. . . resis[t] unto blood, striving against sin . . . nor faint . . . endure
chastening . . . be in subjection . . . [be] exercised . . . lift up the hands
which hang down, and the feeble knees, and make straight paths for your feet .
. . follow peace . . . and holiness. . . loo[k] diligently,” and so on (Hebrews
12:1-16). Living by faith, Biblically,
is not only compatible with struggling and striving for holiness, but it
necessarily produces it. Biblical sanctification does not state: “We cease from labor because we trust in
God,” but “we . . . labour . . . because we trust in the living God” (1 Timothy
4:10). For Paul, living by faith means
one will “run . . . striv[e] for the mastery . . . fight . . . keep under [the]
body, and bring it into subjection” (1 Corinthians 9:24-27). The Bible says to do exactly what Barabas
says not to do. The Christian’s attitude
must not be “let go and let God,”[12]
but “trust God and get going!”[13] Faith in sanctification does not lead the
believer to cease striving, but to strive ever the harder, trusting in the Lord
for strength to fight. The Christian
does not labor independently and faithlessly, but “labour[s], striving
according to [God’s] working, which worketh in [him] mightily” (Colossians
1:29). For Keswick to affirm a genuine
dichotomy between independent moralism and ending all “trying to conquer the
old nature . . . effort . . . [and] struggle,”[14]
so that one must choose the one or the other, is a serious misrepresentation,
one that ignores the true position that sanctification involves a faith-based,
God-dependent struggle.[15] By discouraging believers from striving to
mortify their indwelling sin, Keswick theology hinders the work of
sanctification.
the Keswick theology recognizes other “other erroneous methods”[16]
of sanctification. Following Hannah W.
Smith,[17]
Barabas warns that believers must not “trust for their sanctification to a
diligent use of the means of grace, to watchfulness over their own heart and
life, taking themselves to task ever and again for the coldness of their
heart.”[18] It is an amazing thing that Barabas’s book
explaining the Keswick theology never once quotes any of the numerous verses in
Scripture that connect sanctification with the Word of God, but attacks as an
“unscriptural wa[y] of pursuing holiness”[19]
employing the means that God has given to increase and strengthen inward grace,
such as, centrally, the Word.[20] Rejecting watchfulness over one’s heart and
life as a means of avoiding sin and growing holy is astonishing when the Son of
God specifically states that watching and praying protect one from temptation
(Matthew 26:41) and are essential for spiritual preparedness for His second
coming (Mark 13:33-36). The Lord Jesus
said, “Watch ye therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted worthy”[21]
(Luke 21:36), thus demonstrating that watching helps the believer be more
holy. Scripture is filled with commands
to watch,[22]
and the Lord Jesus Himself commanded, “What I say unto you I say unto all,
Watch” (Mark 13:37)—but Barabas rejects such watchfulness as an unscriptural
means of growing in grace! As for its
being “unscriptural” to take oneself to task over the coldness of one’s heart,
it is evident that some of the psalms, which the Spirit-filled Christian is to
sing (Ephesians 5:18-19), are not appropriate for the advocate of Keswick. God’s inspired songbook teaches the righteous
man to pray: “For in thee, O LORD, do I hope: thou wilt hear, O Lord my God”
(Psalm 38:15) and yet complain: “There is
no soundness in my flesh because of thine anger; neither is there any rest in my bones because of my sin. For mine
iniquities are gone over mine head: as an heavy burden they are too heavy for
me” (Psalm 38:3-4).[23]
The saint who can say “I waited patiently for the LORD . . . thou art my help and my deliverer” (Psalm
40:1, 17) also prays, “mine iniquities have taken hold upon me, so that I am
not able to look up; they are more than the hairs of mine head: therefore my
heart faileth me” (Psalm 40:12). The
holy man in the Bible, who says “I put my trust in thee” (Psalm 25:20), can
nonetheless pray: “Mine eyes are ever toward the LORD; for he shall
pluck my feet out of the net. Turn thee
unto me, and have mercy upon me; for I am
desolate and afflicted. The troubles of
my heart are enlarged: O bring thou
me out of my distresses. Look upon mine
affliction and my pain; and forgive all my sins” (Psalm 25:15-18). Keswick is dead wrong when it condemns
sanctification through the diligent use of the means God has appointed to grow
in grace, when it deprecates watchfulness, and when it affirms that the saint
should not take himself to task over the coldness of his heart. Following this unscriptural advice of Keswick
will hinder the believer’s sanctification.
Keswick critique of the Biblical facts that believers grow inwardly more holy
by sanctification and that indwelling sin is actually reduced in its strength
through mortification is a total failure.
Barabas misrepresents the classical orthodox doctrine of sanctification
held by his theological opponents, such as Warfield, refutes straw men of his
own creation, and then concludes that actually untouched non-Keswick
alternatives have been refuted.
Scripture employed by Barabas is often misused, and Scripture that
refutes the Keswick position is often ignored.
One actually convinced by the Keswick position advocated by Barabas
would be led to many unbiblical actions:
despiaring of any hope that the Holy Spirit would make him a particle
more holy; ceasing to mortify indwelling sin; stopping diligent Bible study to
grow in grace; ceasing from watchfulness as a means to avoid sin and become
more holy; and failing to lament the remaining sinfulness of his heart. These positions of Keswick theology are
blatently unscriptural and, if adopted, will hinder the sanctification of God’s
people if adopted.
Great Salvation, Barabas.
Great Salvation, Barabas.
Life.” The Keswick position is evaluated in that chapter. It will not be discussed further here.
the Broadlands doctrine of faith was “[s]ome of the most valuable of the
teaching at Broadlands,” preached there by “Mrs. Smith” (pgs. 263-264, The Life that is Life Indeed: Reminiscences of the Broadlands Conferences,
Edna V. Jackson. London: James Nisbet & Co, 1910).
alone, just as justification is by faith alone, is evaluated in the chapter “Does
Colossians 2:6-7 Teach Sanctification by Faith Alone?”
stops eating, drinking, exercising, and the like, he will grow weak and sickly
with great speed. The man who grows
physically strong so that he can become the winner of a race works very hard (1
Corinthians 9:24). So spiritual eating,
drinking, and exercise are necessary for spiritual growth. It is pushing an analogy far beyond its
proper limits, and ignoring the many plain statements about the striving and
struggle God commands the believer to employ in sanctification, to draw Keswick
conclusions from growth metaphors. While
Keswick conclusions about effortlessness in the Christian life are not
validated by the metaphors of Scripture, they are the indisputable fruit of the
pre-Keswick Conventions at Broadlands, Oxford, and Brighton, e. g.: “Fruit is an effortless thing, it comes by
abiding in the vine . . . not by struggles” (pg. 241, Account of the Union Meeting for the Promotion
of Scriptural Holiness, Held at Oxford, August 29 to September 7, 1874.
Chicago: Revell, 1874).
Great Salvation, Barabas.
Great Salvation, Barabas.
Great Salvation, Barabas.
Great Salvation, Barabas.
(BDAG), an “emphatic marke[r] of
result, often associated with exhortation — ‘for this very reason, therefore,
hence, therefore indeed, so then’” (Louw-Nida).
by Victorious Life leader Mark Trumbull.
Note the comments on pgs. 155-157, Keep
in Step with the Spirit, Packer.
Snodgrass notes:
of God. . . . [b]ut . . . it is important in another view that we should regard
it as the work and the duty of man. The subject of it . . . is bound to be
holy[.] . . . [H]e is properly dealt with in the use of arguments,
exhortations, and motives. He has a duty
to perform and work to do; and that is to follow holiness, to purify himself,
to cleanse himself from all filthiness both of the flesh and of the
spirit. In prosecuting this work, his
reliance for success must be [o]n the Spirit of God working by appointed
means. He must be active, yet he must
not depend on himself. He must have
recourse to meditation and prayer, to watchfulness and self-examination, to
[C]hristian intercourse and counsel, and to all positive institutions,
especially the reading and hearing of the word; but, in all this, he must
remember that the means are nothing without an influence from God to render
them effectual. Their whole efficiency
lies in the fact . . . that they are of God’s appointment, and that he has
promised to bless them. And hence, our
only encouragement to be active in the use of means, is made to rest upon our
knowledge of the interposition and the agency of God. “Work out your own salvation with fear and
trembling; for it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his
good pleasure” [Philippians 2:12-13].
Nor is the[re] any inconsistency or confusion in the idea of these two
agencies as working together in the production of the same result. They are not of the same kind; the sphere of
their operation is not the same; one is efficient, the other instrumental. And,
so accustomed are we to assign to each the place and position of a real agency,
that we often ascribe the same event, sometimes to God, and sometimes to
man. We say of an individual that he has
risen from indigence to affluence, or from obscurity to distinction, by the
Providence of God; but we are not supposed to contradict ourselves, if we
afterwards say, that he has succeeded by his own prudence, wisdom, and
skill. Both statements are true, though
in different senses. And accordingly
they are both adopted by the sacred writers in reference to the work of
sanctification. In one place, we are
taught to call upon God to sanctify us; in another, we are commanded to
sanctify ourselves. One introduces God
as promising us a new heart and a right spirit, and another commands us to make
to ourselves a new heart and a right spirit.
And both these views are important in practice, as well as true and
consistent in theory. We need the idea
of human agency to incite us to activity; and we need the doctrine of Divine
influence and efficiency to remind us of our dependence, to make us “pray
without ceasing[.]” . . . [Thus] sanctification . . . [is properly] considered
both as the work of God and the duty of man. (pgs. 13-18, The Scripture Doctrine of Sanctification, W. D. Snodgrass)
pg. 128, Keep In Step With the Spirit,
J. I. Packer.
Great Salvation, Barabas.
follows from the erroneous [Keswick] conception of holiness is the
representation that pervades these writings of the attainment of holiness by
the believer without effort on his part.
The idea which they have suggested to us is that of a man put into a
boat, lying in it in absolute rest, and being carried down a gently flowing
stream; whereas that suggested by the apostolic writings is that of a strong
rower, straining every muscle to stem the current, with the knowledge that he
shall ultimately succeed in reaching the goal, but only in virtue of strength
imparted to him by Christ, and received by faith. The one representation is that of faith
dispensing with effort, the other of faith enabling for effort. The one seems to say, “Work not out your salvation, for God worketh for you;” the other says, “Work out your salvation, for God worketh
in you.” In both cases a certain work of God is the
premise, but the conclusions are directly the opposite of each other, just
because the works postulated in the premises are altogether different. Somewhere in the course of our reading of
[Higher Life] works, we have fallen upon the expression, “sanctification by
works,” as opposed to “sanctification by faith,” and descriptive of the prevalent
[classical evangelical, non-Keswick] view of sanctification. No one who understands that view, and who
does not design to misrepresent it, could possibly state such an antithesis. .
. . The question is as to the specific action of faith in the production of
holiness in the heart and life of the believer.
We hold as strongly as our [Higher Life] friends can hold that Christ is
made to his people sanctification, quite as really and quite as much as he is
made unto them righteousness or justification; but in ways according with the
essential difference between justification and sanctification, between judicial
righteousness and personal holiness. (pgs. 267-268, “Means and Measure of
Holiness,” Thomas Smith. The British and Foreign Evangelical Review
(April 1876) 251-280)
Great Salvation, Barabas.
support Barabas, at least Hannah W. Smith’s writings do so. She taught:
“[W]e are passive of choice and willingly . . . are to grow . . .
without any concern about our own growing[.]”
We are to “tak[e] no . . . care for . . . spiritual growth” (Letter to
Daughter, May 25, 1878 & Letter to Anna, July 27, 1878, reproduced in the
entries for August 26-28 & September 3 of The Christian’s Secret of a Holy Life, Hannah W. Smith, ed.
Dieter).
Great Salvation, Barabas. Of course,
one must trust ultimately in Christ, not in the means through which Christ
gives His people grace, but Barabas does not merely speak against such an
error.
Great Salvation, Barabas.
Sanctification,” by James Petigru Boyce, for the role of the Word of God in
sanctification and its connection with other things termed “means of grace” in
Protestantism, such as baptism and the Lord’s Supper. Were Barabas warning against
sacramentarianism or an ex opere operato
form of doctrine, his warning would be wholesome and welcome. Unfortunately, he never even mentions or
gives a single word of warning against sacramental corruptions, while attacking
as unscriptural the idea that sanctification comes through the means God has
appointed for the believer’s growth in holiness.
other uses of the verb in Luke 20:35; Acts 5:41; 2 Thessalonians 1:5.
1 Peter 4:7; Revelation 3:3, etc.
concept that the righteous man should not complain about the sinfulness of his
own heart:
38:0 A Psalm of David, to bring to remembrance. 1 O
LORD, rebuke me not in thy wrath: neither chasten me in thy hot
displeasure. 2 For thine arrows stick
fast in me, and thy hand presseth me sore.
3 There is no soundness in my
flesh because of thine anger; neither is
there any rest in my bones because of my sin. 4 For mine iniquities are gone over mine
head: as an heavy burden they are too heavy for me. 5 My wounds stink and are corrupt because of my foolishness. 6 I am troubled; I am bowed down greatly; I
go mourning all the day long. 7 For my
loins are filled with a loathsome disease:
and there is no soundness in my
flesh. 8 I am feeble and sore broken: I
have roared by reason of the disquietness of my heart. 9 Lord, all my desire is before thee; and my groaning is not hid from thee. 10 My heart panteth, my strength faileth me:
as for the light of mine eyes, it also is gone from me. 11 My lovers and my friends stand aloof from
my sore; and my kinsmen stand afar off. 12 They also that seek
after my life lay snares for me: and
they that seek my hurt speak mischievous things, and imagine deceits all the
day long. 13 But I, as a deaf man, heard not; and I was as a dumb man that openeth not his mouth.
14 Thus I was as a man that heareth not, and in whose mouth are no reproofs. 15 For in thee, O LORD, do I hope: thou wilt
hear, O Lord my God. 16 For I said, Hear me, lest otherwise they should rejoice over me: when my foot slippeth, they
magnify themselves against me. 17 For I am
ready to halt, and my sorrow is
continually before me. 18 For I will
declare mine iniquity; I will be sorry for my sin. 19 But mine enemies are lively, and they are
strong: and they that hate me wrongfully are multiplied. 20 They also that render evil for good are
mine adversaries; because I follow the
thing that good is. 21 Forsake me not, O LORD: O my God, be not
far from me. 22 Make haste to help me, O
Lord my salvation.
poor fit at a Keswick convention, and Hannah. W. Smith would be much displeased
with the Scriptural holiness set forth in it.
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