PREFACE
The following Letters were, in the first instance, addressed to weekly meetings of
Salvation Soldiers. They called forth so many expressions of thankfulness, and so
many requests that they might be printed in a permanent form, that I have
gathered them together in this little book.
They do not, of course, profess to treat this great subject with anything like
completeness, nor do I make any claim for them to literary elegance or power;
and yet, if they are used at all, they must go as they are, for I have no opportunity
to properly revise them.
William Booth
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1 - Purity: What It Is
Chapter 2 - Purity Commanded
Chapter 3 - Purity Means Deliverance
Chapter 4 - Purity Described
Chapter 5 - Purity And Love
Chapter 6 - Purity Possible
Chapter 7 - Purity, God's Gift
Chapter 8 - Purifying Faith
Chapter 9 - Witnesses
Chapter 10 - How To Keep Pure
PURITY COMMANDED
Chapter 2
Hebrews 12:14 -- Follow ... holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord.
My Dear Comrades,
I want again to take up the subject on which I wrote in my last Letter. It is,
indeed, a precious topic. I have loved it and talked about it all the way through my
religious life; and, today, I regard the enjoyment and publication of the Blessing
of a Clean Heart as being as essential to my own peace, power, and usefulness,
and as necessary to the progress and prosperity of The Army as ever it was.
Let me proceed, then, with the work of explanation. A right understanding of the
subject will help you to obtain this Blessing for yourselves, and enable you to
explain it to others.
In my last Letter I talked about Purity in general: in this I want to say something
on the subject in its practical application to yourselves. What did our dear Lord
mean when He spoke of the "Pure in Heart," and pronounced them blessed? What
is it to have a Pure Heart? To answer that question, I must begin by asking
another:
What is meant by the Heart? To which question I answer, we do not mean that
organ which you can feel beating in your breast, and which is the central force of
the bodily system. That is a very important part of a man, and the keeping of it in
good condition is most essential.
But it is not the heart in your body to which Jesus Christ referred in this passage,
and about which I want to talk to you; but that power which, being the central
force of your soul, may be said to answer to it. As the heart which palpitates in
your bosom is the great driving-force of the Natural Man, so the heart we are
talking about is the great driving force of the Spiritual Man.
(a) In this sense it is your Heart that feels joy or sorrow. When you say, "That
poor woman died of a broken heart on account of the ill-treatment of her
husband," you mean that it was the bitter anguish of her soul which killed her.
(b) It is the Heart that chooses between right and wrong. When you say, "My
brother's heart is on the side of God, and goodness, and truth," you mean that
these things are the supreme choice of his soul.
(c) It is the Heart that decides on the particular line of conduct to be pursued.
When you say, "This young man went to the Mercy-Seat and gave his heart to
God," you mean that he decided, in his inmost soul, to accept Salvation and
become a Soldier of Christ.
(d) It is the Heart that loves righteousness and hates iniquity. When God says,
"My son, give Me thy heart, He means "Come along, young man or woman, and
love Me and holiness, and Souls, and hate the Devil and Sin, with all the powers
you possess."
(e) It is the Heart that molds the character, guides the choice, and masters all the
course and conduct of a man's life. The heart is the captain of the ship. It
determines whether a man shall accept mercy, serve God, follow righteousness,
live for the Salvation of his fellows, and finally enter the Heavenly Harbor in
triumph, or whether he shall live a life of rebellion, die in his sins, and finish up a
wreck on the rocks of everlasting despair. How important it is to each one of us
that we should have a good -- a right -- a Pure Heart.
Now, seeing that the Heart is so thoroughly the master of the man, nothing can be
much plainer, can it, my Comrades, than the necessity for that Heart being pure?
But what is a Pure Heart? What is it to have a Heart that has been cleansed by the
Power of the Holy Spirit through the Blood of Jesus Christ? That is a very
important inquiry. and I do hope that my dear Soldiers will give me their careful
attention while I strive to answer it.
1. And first, a Pure Heart is not a Heart that is never Tempted to do evil Possibly
there is no such thing in this world, nor ever has been, as a Non-Tempted Heart,
that is, a man or a woman who has never been exposed to temptation to commit
sin, of one kind or the other. Not only was our Blessed Lord tempted by the Devil
in the wilderness, but He was beset with evil attractions all the way through His
life. St. Paul expressly tells us that our Saviour was in all points tempted like as
we are, but hallelujah! He effectually resisted the world, the flesh, and the devil,
and came through the trying ordeal without a stain. He triumphed over all, for the
Apostle exultingly assures us, that "He was without sin."
You will be tempted, my Comrades, all through your earthly journey, even to the
very gates of Heaven; but, thank God, temptation is not sin, and Grace, abundant
Grace, is provided to enable you to triumph over all the fascinations of earth and
all the devices of hell. You can come off more than conqueror. But, remember,
although you may have a Pure Heart you will have to fight temptation.
2. A Pure Heart is not a Heart that cannot suffer. Beyond question, Jesus Christ
had a Pure Heart; He was Holy and undefiled, and yet He was "The Man of
Sorrows." Paul tells us that although he exercised himself to have always a
conscience void of offense towards God and towards man, yet was he not saved
from being, at times, "in heaviness through manifold temptations."
All the Saints of old had hours of darkness and depression, many of them going
through seas of anguish. And as with the Saints of old, so is it with the Saints of
modern times. It is not sinful to weep and be cast down, if in our distress we do
not give way to unbelief and despair and wrong-doing. Cheer up, brothers and
sisters! "By floods and flames surrounded," you must "still your way pursue." If
you keep believing you will not be confounded; God will deliver you.
3. By a Pure Heart we do not mean a Heart that cannot sin. The Devil was once a
beautiful, sinless creature. But he yielded to temptation. The sinless crown fell
from his beautiful brow, and from a pure archangel he was changed into a foul
fiend, and hurled all the way from his bright and sinless Heaven to his dark and
gloomy hell. Adam was pure when he came from the hands of his Maker. God
pronounced him to be good; but, led away by Satan, he lost his Purity, and was
cast out of Eden into a world of sin and sorrow and death.
Alas! alas! we have the unspeakable sorrow of too frequently seeing Saints and
Soldiers fall from Holiness into sin. Some of the many miserable Backsliders
around us once walked closely with God, kept their garments unspotted from the
world, and were examples of all that is pure and good. But they have gone back to
the beggarly elements of the world, and, like the sow that was washed, they are
again wallowing in the mire.
So, my Comrades, you will see that no matter however pure you may become, it
will be possible for you to sin. Though you wash your garments white, and for a
season walk with God in holy communion, and have Faith so that you can remove
mountains and save multitudes, you must remember that while you are in this life
it is possible for you to fall from Grace. Nay, you must remember that unless you
take heed to yourselves, and watch and pray, the probabilities are that you will be
overtaken by some besetting sin, and, after having saved others, become yourself
a castaway. Therefore, "let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall."
4. By a Pure Heart, we do not mean any experience of Purity, however blessed it
may be, that cannot increase in enjoyment, usefulness, and power. Pull the weeds
out of your garden, and the flowers and plants and trees will grow faster, flourish
more abundantly, and become more fruitful.
Just so, this very moment, let Jesus Christ purge the garden of your souls of envy
and pride, and remove the poisonous plants of malice and selfishness and every
other evil thing, and Faith and peace, and hope and love, and humility and
courage, and all the other beautiful flowers of Paradise will flourish in more
charming beauty and more abundant fruitfulness.
Oh, will you not go down now before God, and give yourselves fully over into the
hands of your precious Saviour'? He is waiting to sanctify you. Cast overboard all
that hinders. It is God that purifies the Heart. Will you let Him do the work? Now
cry out in Faith: "Anger and sloth, desire and pride, This moment be subdued; Be
cast into the crimson tide Of my Redeemer's Blood."
But you must go a little further, my Comrades, and, boldly and believingly, sing
that song of triumph:
'Tis done, Thou dost this moment save,
With full Salvation bless;
Redemption through Thy Blood I have,
And spotless love and peace."
Yours affectionately,
William Booth
"Come, Holy Ghost, all Sacred Fire,
Come, fill Thy earthly temples now;
Emptied of every base desire,
Reign Thou within, and only Thou.
"Thy sovereign right, Thy gracious claim
To every thought and every power;
Our lives to glorify Thy name,
We yield Thee in this sacred hour.
"Fill every chamber of the soul;
Fill all our thoughts, our passions fill,
Till under Thy supreme control
Submissive rests our cheerful will.
'Tis done! Thou dost this moment come,
My longing soul is all Thine own;
My heart is Thy abiding home.
Henceforth I live for Thee alone."
Continued >>
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