John Wesley on ENTIRE SANCTIFICATION: Our main doctrines are three: repentance, faith and holiness

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ENTIRE SANCTIFICATION: Our main doctrines are three: repentance, faith and holiness #ourCOG

“Our main doctrines, which include all the rest, are three: That of repentance, of faith, and of holiness. The first of these we account, as it were, the porch of religion; the next, the door; the third, religion itself.” – John Wesley

“You cannot be half a saint; you must be a whole saint or no saint at all.” – Therese of Lisieux

 

John Kissinger [02/03/2016 1:27 PM]
Another detail diagram WHAT IS and WHAT IS NOT ENTIRE SANCTIFICATION according to the Wesleyan (legitimate and illegitimate) definitions of faith and ordo solutis in regard of ENTIRE sanctification

John Kissinger [02/03/2016 4:41 PM]
In the March 22, 1899, issue of the Apostolic Faith magazine Parham listed his beliefs: “salvation by faith; healing by faith, laying on of hands, and prayer; sanctification by faith; coming (pre-millennium) of Christ; the baptism of Holy Ghost and Fire, which seals the Bride and bestows the gifts.”

66 Comments

  • Varnel Watson
    Reply November 5, 2016

    Varnel Watson

    i.e. not enough for Trump to say he got saved. Fruits of sanctification must be abundant afterwords Timothy Carter Charles Page Karen Lucas

  • Timothy Carter
    Reply November 5, 2016

    Timothy Carter

    I agree that repentance means to turn completely around.

  • Charles Page
    Reply November 5, 2016

    Charles Page

    Can a Presbyterian be president of the US?

  • Varnel Watson
    Reply November 5, 2016

    Varnel Watson

    And while @ it yall pls notice that
    (1) most of them were sworn on the Book of Mason
    (2) or a the Bible from Grand Mason Lodge in Alexandria, VA
    (3) or on a Bible from 1st Presbyterian in DC open on a passage with masonic significance
    (4) or in most cases a combination of the above open on references of one religion and world domination

    Are you still persuaded you are voting for a political leader and not a spiritual one?

  • Timothy Carter
    Reply November 5, 2016

    Timothy Carter

    Troy Day do you have references for each point or do you present this as common knowledge? Some have said that the Mason connection is conspiracy.

  • Varnel Watson
    Reply November 6, 2016

    Varnel Watson

    Absolutely. All quotes are with reference. Surprised you did not know that but LOC keeps detail record of these things and they are a public record:

    George Washington 1789 Genesis 49:131 (Masonic Bible); opened at random due to haste – verse as you see is anything but random 🙂 “Zebulun will live by the seashore and become a haven for ships; his border will extend toward Sidon. – the masonic basis for the foundation of the United States

    Richard M. Nixon 1969, 1973 Two family Bibles, both open to Isaiah 2:4

    George H. W. Bush 1989 Washington’s Masonic bible

    https://memory.loc.gov/ammem/pihtml/pibible.html

    There is another longer article with explanations and commentaries which you can find. It will tell you why each passage was chosen and how does it relate to the belief system of the masonic cult. Also some had the book of Law as well open on articles with masonic significance. But the so called MASON Bible which is the one always brought specifically for these ceremonies from the Great Loge in Alexandria aka oldest Masonic lodges in the United States officially known as Alexandria-Washington Lodge No. 22. The building of the lodge is built to look alike the Alexandrian Light house – one of the 7 miracles of the ancient world also connected with masonic mastery of building blocks

  • Varnel Watson
    Reply December 30, 2016

    Varnel Watson

    Peter Christian Are you familiar with Wesley’s view on entire sanctification?

  • Peter Christian
    Reply December 30, 2016

    Peter Christian

    Yes I am. Wesley has cleansed himself almost godlike

    • Daniel Blaylock
      Reply December 30, 2016

      Daniel Blaylock

      You obviously haven’t understood Wesley; the goal of salvation is full restoration to the image of God.

    • Peter Christian
      Reply December 30, 2016

      Peter Christian

      Of mankind? Thats the goal?

      Show me text proofs pls.

    • Daniel Blaylock
      Reply December 30, 2016

      Daniel Blaylock

      Peter, that’s what was lost at the Fall. Paul says we were predestined to be conformed to the image of God his dear son. Ephesians chapter 1, Romans 8.

    • Daniel Blaylock
      Reply December 30, 2016

      Daniel Blaylock

      In first John, he says when we see him we will be like him. That’s the goal.

    • Daniel Blaylock
      Reply December 30, 2016

      Daniel Blaylock

      2 Peter 1 says that through God’s promises we were made “partakers of the divine nature” and that we escape the corruption in the world.

    • Peter Christian
      Reply December 30, 2016

      Peter Christian

      You realise that we live in this body which is corruptible and sinful. It will never change.

    • Daniel Blaylock
      Reply December 30, 2016

      Daniel Blaylock

      The flesh in Paul’s theology is not identical with our human bodies. That’s Gnosticism and it’s heresy. Sanctification cleanses our human nature and purifies our motives.

    • Daniel Blaylock
      Reply December 30, 2016

      Daniel Blaylock

      I Thess 5:23-24 says that God will sanctify you wholly and keep your spirit, soul, and BODY blameless until the coming of the Lord.

      “Therefore, having these promises, beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all defilement of flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God.” 2 Cor 7:1

      “25 Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be clean: from all your filthiness, and from all your idols, will I cleanse you.
      26 A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh. 27 And I will put my spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments, and do them.”–Ezekiel 36

    • Peter Christian
      Reply December 30, 2016

      Peter Christian

      Are you clean and free of sins?

    • Daniel Blaylock
      Reply December 30, 2016

      Daniel Blaylock

      I am walking in the light as He is in the light, and His blood continually cleanses me from all sin. (I John 1:7).

    • Daniel Blaylock
      Reply December 30, 2016

      Daniel Blaylock

      Peter Christian I am walking in the light as He is in the light, and His blood continually cleanses me from all sin. (I John 1:7).

    • Daniel Blaylock
      Reply December 30, 2016

      Daniel Blaylock

      Are you free from sin’s power? John 8:38–you can be.

  • Varnel Watson
    Reply December 30, 2016

    Varnel Watson

    Peter Christian The divining of the self was something practiced by most of the Dessert Church Fathers and consecutive Orthodox church. Wesley simply put in writing what many like the Moravian brothers believed and practiced for centuries since the Early Church. One important question before we continue – do you see Wesley as the Pelagian heresy and sine you most probably do, can you explain why? IMHO both have nothing to do with each other but lets here your position on that before proceed with entire sanctification

  • Reply June 7, 2018

    Varnel Watson

    Do you think this is fundamental or cultural Terry Wiles

  • Terry Wiles
    Reply June 7, 2018

    Terry Wiles

    Troy Day

    Just struggling with the various translations presented in current popular bibles that are promoted by Bible Colleges and Seminaries.

  • Reply June 7, 2018

    Varnel Watson

    Give us 1-2-3 examples Terry Wiles

    • Terry Wiles
      Reply June 7, 2018

      Terry Wiles

      NIV, NKJV, NLT, and note in ESV

    • Reply June 8, 2018

      Varnel Watson

      what is your struggle with them? NLT is a major fail

    • Terry Wiles
      Reply June 8, 2018

      Terry Wiles

      Troy Day No struggle. Just noting that NIV is the choice of AoG educators, ESV seems to be the reformed choice, NKJV is a standard substitute for the KJV, and NLT is popular with the buying public.

      All of these use a “mankind” translation of the plural.

    • Reply June 8, 2018

      Varnel Watson

      well now you said above “Just struggling”

  • Reply June 8, 2018

    Varnel Watson

    Terry Wiles how do you feel your struggle with Bible version affects your entire sanctification ?

  • Terry Wiles
    Reply June 8, 2018

    Terry Wiles

    Not at all

  • Reply June 8, 2018

    Varnel Watson

    Terry are you sure? You seem to be siding against Wesley’s desire to challenge the Roman Catholic’s confusion on justification and sanctification which led to his emphasis on justification marking the beginning of the Spirit’s sanctifying work in the lives of the believers. Wesley’s emphasis on holy living underlies the theological difference in the way that the two theologians define justification and sanctification. Sanctification can be illuminated as a process when it is compared against Luther’s focus on justification. If one does not believe free will Weslyan sanctification he/she simple sides with the Catholic confusion brought in the teachings of Augustune Melvin Harter

  • Terry Wiles
    Reply June 8, 2018

    Terry Wiles

    Not at all. I have a righteousness that is not my own but Christ’s. Bible versions have nothing to do with my sanctification. They serve as guides to understanding God’s Word and they remain reliable records of God’s revelation to man.

  • Reply June 8, 2018

    Varnel Watson

    Terry Wiles No one claims righteousness is ours. The matter of discussion is how the righteousness of Christ becomes ours? Wesley says supernaturally through 2nd work of sanctification; Others more Catholic than him say sanctification is progressive and the believer personally progresses in it (not sure how long and until when) Melvin Harter have rightly explained progressive sanctification is nothing else but a Catholic doctrine that borders personal penance -Simply no other way around it

    • Terry Wiles
      Reply June 8, 2018

      Terry Wiles

      Even your own posts contradict that nonsense.

    • Reply June 8, 2018

      Varnel Watson

      YES – my view is Weslyan repentance sanctification baptism Most Pentecostals are mainly Catholic in their soteriological views

  • Reply October 17, 2019

    Varnel Watson

    George Hartwell Lyndsey Dunn Joe Absher and this is where RichardAnna Boyce is ENTIRELY WRONG when writing

    Wesley’s doctrine of entire sanctification leans heavily on his vague definition of sin. He believed that a Christian who has experienced entire sanctification enjoys freedom from deliberate sins.

    As a young man pursuing his education away from home, John Wesley—who later founded the Methodist Church—wrote to his mother seeking her advice on “acceptable pastimes” and “temptations to be resisted.” Instead of sending him a lengthy list of dos and don’ts, this is what she wrote:

    Would you judge the lawfulness of pleasure, take this rule:

    Whatever weakens your reason,

    Whatever increases the authority of your body over your mind,

    Whatever impairs the tenderness of your conscience,

    Whatever takes away your relish for things spiritual,

    Whatever obscures your sense of God,

    That is sin to you, no matter how innocent it may seem in itself.

    There are two kinds, or stages of repentance prior to initial salvation, according to Wesley’s interpretation. The first he calls “legal” repentance, which is “a thorough conviction of sin,” and the second is “evangelical” repentance, or “a change of heart (and consequently of life) from all sin to all holiness.

    Writing to Joseph Benson on December 28, 1770, respecting entire sanctification, he exhorted him to confirm the brethren “with all zeal and diligence” in a two-fold manner, first, “in holding fast that whereto they have attained-namely, the remission of all their sins by faith in a bleeding Lord,” and secondly, “in expecting a second change, whereby they shall be saved from all sin and perfected in love.”

    Wesleyan entire sanctification differs from gnostic Free grace where Wesley writes The Holy Spirit seeks to engender “a deep conviction that we are not yet whole; that our hearts are not fully purified; that there is yet in us a ‘carnal mind,’ which is still in its nature ‘enmity against God’; that the whole body of sin remains in our heart, weakened indeed, but not destroyed.”

    It is very obvious that Wesley’s doctrine of Christian perfection would make it
    necessary for him to make very clear what was his doctrine of sin. He felt it very
    necessary to draw clear lines of distinction in his definitions. These distinctions especially
    show up in his discussion of the subject of sin. It is absolutely impossible to get
    any true concept of Wesley’s doctrine of holiness without coming to a clear understanding
    of what he taught concerning sin. In this paper it is my purpose to clarify
    as much as possible, Wesley’s concept of sin.
    following the topcis of :
    1. Original Sin or Inherited Depravity
    2. The Fallen State of Present Man
    3. The Act of Sin in the Unbeliever
    4. The State of Sin in the Believer
    5. The “Sins” of the Sanctified

    Here is a summary of the five ideas about sin found in Wesley’s writings.
    1. Man fell in the Garden of Eden and became totally depraved and passed this
    depravity on to his descendants.
    2. Though man as he is born into this world inherits the guilt of Adam and is under
    the curse of sin, yet God’s grace is extended to him, removing the guilt of Adam’s
    sin and extending power to lift him to the place of choice and redemption.
    3. The only sin in man which will condemn him eternally is the personal, wilful
    choice rejecting the grace which God has given to him. This is what Wesley
    called wilful transgression of a known law.
    4. Believers are sinners only in the sense that corruption still remains in them and
    they have to fight against this pride and jealousy, which keep exerting themselves
    in the believer’s life.
    5. Though there is cleansing from the corruption of the evil heart and the enablement
    to love God with all the heart in an experience of entire sanctification, there
    still remains in the life of the believer sins of ignorance and sins of infirmity. For
    these the person needs continual cleansing of the blood of Christ.

    http://www.pentecostaltheology.com/back-to-the-basics-of-the-role-of-the-holy-spirit-in-entire-sanctification-in-the-writings-of-john-wesley/

    • Joe Absher
      Reply October 17, 2019

      Joe Absher

      thank you

    • George Hartwell
      Reply October 17, 2019

      George Hartwell

      In spite of faulty theology, Wesley lead many into an experience and life of holiness and the Methodists in prayer sought open communion with God by removing the idols of their heart. They considered the process complete and communication with God open, when they received a baptism in peace. That peace is the experience of Spirit affirmed community and can be found in the literature on community building in groups (Scott Peck). Se Wesley knew what he was talking about. His movement had the keys to sanctification. We lost them, it seems. The life and truth of this practice got plowed to death my men trying to put it into words. Death by theology.

    • Reply October 17, 2019

      Varnel Watson

      George Hartwell While Wesley learned of the doctrine of justification from the Reformers, his
      doctrine of Christian perfection came to him through the tradition of the Anglican
      church. He realized as much as anyone else the aroused opposition to his teaching of
      perfection. He wrote in his sermon on “Christian Perfection” the following words;
      “There is scarce any expression in holy writ which has given more offence than
      this. The word perfect is what many cannot bear. The very sound of it is an abomination
      to them.” In his defense of this doctrine of Christian perfection, Wesley did not
      diminish nor alter his views concerning the doctrine of justification by faith

    • George Hartwell
      Reply October 17, 2019

      George Hartwell

      Perhaps he was a perfectionist?

    • Reply October 17, 2019

      Varnel Watson

      Perhaps GOD is a perfectionist?

    • George Hartwell
      Reply October 18, 2019

      George Hartwell

      God doesn’t have to be.

  • RichardAnna Boyce
    Reply October 17, 2019

    RichardAnna Boyce

    Wesley admitted there is always room for a Christian to develop in maturity.
    He believed Christians can enjoy greater degree of freedom from sin than Reformed theologians thought possible. He went as far as to assert that Christians can be delivered from willful sin.
    and that this level of sanctification can occur before death .
    For this reason, Wesley often said that Christians should not be
    “content with any religion which does not imply the destruction of all the works of the devil, that is, of all sin.” We can fulfill God’s law of love in this life, despite all the failings and imperfections of the world.
    This is what Wesley calls the “optimism of grace.”

    • Reply October 18, 2019

      Varnel Watson

      As far as can be determined, Wesley always painted a dark picture of sin. There
      is no evidence that he had to alter his view when he came to believe in the doctrine
      of justification by faith alone. His opinions concerning the sinfulness of man were
      well established by the time he began his evangelical revival.

    • George Hartwell
      Reply October 18, 2019

      George Hartwell

      Thanks for that breath of fresh air.

  • RichardAnna Boyce
    Reply October 17, 2019

    RichardAnna Boyce

    Reformation tradition, with its emphasis on imputed righteousness,
    neglects Paul’s teaching that existential deliverance from sin is available in Christ.
    Since the life of Jesus is being revealed in them, Christians should “not let sin reign in their mortal bodies.”
    They have been “set free from sin and have become slaves to God.”
    For Wesley and his followers, then, any view of sanctification that doesn’t hold out the possibility of real, experiential deliverance from sin in this life falls short of the full Gospel.

  • RichardAnna Boyce
    Reply October 17, 2019

    RichardAnna Boyce

    Pentecostal theologian Horton cites a number of verses to show that Christians don’t always measure up to their positional sanctification. Corinthians, despite being called sanctified in 1 Cor. 6:11, were still addressed as “infants” in 1 Cor. 3:1.
    Other passages indicate that self-control needs to be learned (1 Thes. 4:3-4),
    and that old habits, like lying, must be renounced (Col. 3:5-10).

    While Wesleyans claim they have been released from willful sin through entire sanctification,
    Horton believes these claims result in “making God out to be a liar.” (Melvin E. Dieter, Anthony A. Hoekema, Stanley M. Horton, J. Robertson McQuilkin, John F. Walvoord, Five Views on Sanctification (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan, 1987), p. 118. )
    He also holds that the blood of Christ cleanses us from our sin in an ongoing way.
    This is in contrast to the notion that there is no need for Christians to repeatedly seek to be cleansed from their sins.

    What does progressive sanctification look like?
    According to Horton, Christians moving forward in this process regularly put God’s will into practice,
    demonstrate the fruits of obedience, and exhibit a selfless willingness to do whatever God asks them to do.

    Entire sanctification
    Pentecostals in the Assemblies of God reject Holiness claims to be able to reach a state of sinless perfection in this life.
    They contend that the old nature is still active in a Christian and that claims of perfection depend on a weakened definition of sin.
    Despite these objections, however, they still use the term “entire sanctification.”
    Instead of abandoning the term, they redefine it as:
    (1) following the purposes and desires of God to the best of one’s ability or
    (2) an event that occurs when Christ comes back and gives us glorified bodies.

    Thus, the term entire sanctification is being used here in a way that is entirely different than Wesley’s usage.

  • RichardAnna Boyce
    Reply October 17, 2019

    RichardAnna Boyce

    Pentecostals, mindful that the work of the Holy Spirit is often neglected by other theological schools, are quick to point out the role the Spirit plays in progressive sanctification.

    Horton believes that of all the works of the Spirit, the New Testament highlights sanctification foremost.
    “The Holy Spirit here is the agent, and His work is the most important means of our progressive sanctification.” To underscore his point, he cites numerous verses that teach the central role that the Holy Spirit plays in our growth (1 Cor. 6:11; 2 Thes. 2:13; Rom. 15:16; 1 Peter 1:1-2).

    One of the most important ways that the Holy Spirit helps sanctify Christians is by helping them to understand and benefit from the Word of God.
    The Word itself is the Spirit’s primary tool in accomplishing our growth and maturity.
    The Spirit teaches us the Word, guides us to the truth (John 14:17,26; 15:26; 16:12-13; 1 John 4:6) and uses the Word to “give us a clear vision of Jesus and inspire us with a deep desire to be like him.”[40]
    Of course, Christians must cooperate with the Spirit’s work in their lives by depending on his Word for guidance and being willing to obey it.

  • RichardAnna Boyce
    Reply October 18, 2019

    RichardAnna Boyce

    Pentecostal Horton admits that being baptized in the Holy Spirit is not a sanctifying experience in and of itself.
    It doesn’t elevate one to a higher level of sanctification like Wesley’s entire sanctification. Christians still need to deepen in maturity and grow as they become more involved in selfless ministry to other people.

    Horton studiously avoids the overemphasis on tongues often associated with the baptism of the Holy Spirit.
    He says that Christians should strive for the “greater gifts” mentioned in 1 Cor. 12:31, and believes gifts in general are most likely to be discovered in the context of active service to God.
    Horton also points out that love is “necessary to make (spiritual) gifts effective to the highest degree and to bring the proper reward.”

    • Reply October 18, 2019

      Varnel Watson

      so you couldnt win with Wesley and jumped on Horton I doubt you have a good grasp on Horton as your theology is gnostic BUT I can take you on that subject as well under a separate topic

    • George Hartwell
      Reply October 18, 2019

      George Hartwell

      Troy Day Does someone win?

  • RichardAnna Boyce
    Reply October 18, 2019

    RichardAnna Boyce

    Horton believes that Christians are indwelled by the Spirit when they are converted.
    In addition to the Spirit’s indwelling,
    Horton claims that Christians receive a second blessing called the baptism of the Holy Spirit.
    The baptism of the Holy Spirit is a post-conversion[44]
    experience in which a Christian enjoys the true fullness of the Spirit.
    It results in a higher level of devotion and increased ability to evangelize and worship. This life-defining event is evidenced by speaking in tongues, and enables believers “to respond to the full working of the Spirit.”[45]

    Free Grace finds no biblical basis for the existence of an additional work of the Spirit as described by Horton.
    His belief that such an experience exists relies on (1) his interpretation of 1 Cor. 12:13 and
    (2) a distinction he makes between baptism by the Spirit and baptism in the Holy Spirit.

  • Reply October 18, 2019

    Varnel Watson

    Wesley had but this one definition of sin. That definition is given
    as “a voluntary transgression of a known law.” It is true that Wesley gave this definition
    of sin and considered it to be the only proper one. For an act to be really a sin,
    then, in Wesley’s mind, there must first be a knowledge of the law and second, the
    disobedience is wilful. Wesley defined this kind of sin in these following words,
    By sin, I here understand outward sin, according to the plain, common
    acceptation of the word; an actual voluntary transgression of the law; of the
    revealed, written law of God; of any commandment of God, acknowledged to
    be such at the time it is transgressed.

    RichardAnna Boyce quite wrong when stated Wesley had no clear definition of sin Seems quite clear to most

  • George Hartwell
    Reply October 18, 2019

    George Hartwell

    I am going to look up Horton.

  • Reply October 19, 2019

    Varnel Watson

    RichardAnna Boyce George Hartwell One needs to understand clearly what Wesley is writing about when he made this
    definition. This was his understanding of I John 3:9 where the apostle declared that
    the believer who is born of God does not commit sin and that he cannot sin because
    he is born of God. It is the sin which the believer cannot commit. The voluntary
    transgression of a known law is the sin which only the unbeliever can commit. Since
    Wesley insisted on this definition for the unbeliever’s sin, one must not make the
    mistake of concluding that it is the only kind of sin that Wesley wrote about.
    Why did Wesley insist on this definition so strongly? Wesley wanted to make
    clear what that sin is which truly separates from God. In the light of divine grace
    he could not believe that Adam’s sin can condemn a person eternally. Nor could
    he believe that those sins which are ignorantly committed, or come as a result of
    the weakness of human nature, can condemn one eternally. Only that is sin which is
    personal, and is “an act of the soul itself,” and is a free act of the individual. Grace
    lifts man to the place that he can resist sin. Therefore, he is accountable when he
    neglects or resists that grace which is given to enable him to resist sin. Wesley believed
    that by grace man can avoid all sin of this kind

  • Reply October 20, 2019

    Varnel Watson

    By sin, I here understand outward sin, according to the plain, common
    acceptation of the word; an actual voluntary transgression of the law; of the
    revealed, written law of God; of any commandment of God, acknowledged to
    be such at the time it is transgressed. JOHN WESLEY

    Would not then the moral depravity within the heart of a sinner make a man
    guilty? Wesley believed that the guilt of this depravity will not condemn one eternally
    until by his own free choice man makes that depravity his own. In a sense, when
    a man becomes accountable, he ratifies the inner nature of sin as his own and is
    therefore condemned for it. Any condemnation before this personal ratification is
    universally removed in Christ. When man chooses to follow die evil within him, he
    becomes a sinner, properly speaking. Wilful sin, therefore, is committed only by the
    unbeliever who is capable of free choice. An infant has not yet committed a sin. Their
    salvation consists in the salvation from the guilt of Adam’s sin. No believer commits
    a wilful sin while he is a believer. Wilful sins are the only ones that can send a person
    to hell.2

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