The Cost of Sanctification

Oswald Chambers 90x115by Oswald Chambers

May the God of peace Himself sanctify you completely . . . —1 Thessalonians 5:23

When we pray, asking God to sanctify us, are we prepared to measure up to what that really means? We take the word sanctification much too lightly. Are we prepared to pay the cost of sanctification? The cost will be a deep restriction of all our earthly concerns, and an extensive cultivation of all our godly concerns. Sanctification means to be intensely focused on God’s point of view. It means to secure and to keep all the strength of our body, soul, and spirit for God’s purpose alone. Are we really prepared for God to perform in us everything for which He separated us? And after He has done His work, are we then prepared to separate ourselves to God just as Jesus did? “For their sakes I sanctify Myself . . .” (John 17:19). The reason some of us have not entered into the experience of sanctification is that we have not realized the meaning of sanctification from God’s perspective. Sanctification means being made one with Jesus so that the nature that controlled Him will control us. Are we really prepared for what that will cost? It will cost absolutely everything in us which is not of God.

Are we prepared to be caught up into the full meaning of Paul’s prayer in this verse? Are we prepared to say, “Lord, make me, a sinner saved by grace, as holy as You can”? Jesus prayed that we might be one with Him, just as He is one with the Father (see John 17:21-23). The resounding evidence of the Holy Spirit in a person’s life is the unmistakable family likeness to Jesus Christ, and the freedom from everything which is not like Him. Are we prepared to set ourselves apart for the Holy Spirit’s work in us?

by Oswald Chambers

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Yes, God Is good!

Martyn Lloyd Jones 90x115by Martyn Lloyd Jones

Things may be going wrong with you … Blow upon blow may be descending upon you. You have been living the Christian life, reading your Bible, working for God, and yet the blows have come … Everything seems to be going wrong … One trouble follows hard after another … Are you able to say in the face of it all, God is always good?’ … Are you able to say, ‘All things work together for good’ without any hesitation? That is the test. But … while the Psalmist says, ‘God is always good to Israel’, he is careful to add, ‘Even to such as are of a clean heart’ … if you and I are sinning against God, then God will have to deal with us, and it is going to be painful. But even when God chastises us He is still good to us. It is because He is good to us that He chastises us … But … if we want to see this clearly we must be of a clean heart …

by Martyn Lloyd Jones