THE
ATONEMENT BETWEEN GOD & MAN
<PAGE 249>
STUDY
X
THE
SPIRIT OF A SOUND MIND
The Spirit of God in His People Casts Out the Spirit of Fear--Mankind
in General Unsound Mentally and Physically--The Sense in Which
the Holy Spirit is the Spirit of a Sound Mind--The Operations
Producing this Result--The Evidences of the Spirit of a Sound
Mind.
"God
hath not given us the spirit of fear, but of power and of love
and of a sound mind." 2 Tim. 1:7
BY
EVERY law of language, the spirit of fear is here put in contrast
with another spirit. If the Spirit of love, power, a sound mind,
be a person, or three persons, then in all reason the Spirit of
fear should be considered another person. The fallacy of such
an argument is so apparent as to need nothing more than a mere
statement for its disproof.
In
proportion as the Lord's people are filled with his holy Spirit
or influence, and are expanded more and more by it, and enlarged,
they have the less of the spirit of fear. The spirit of fear in
a Christian is the spirit of doubt, and marks a lack of faith,
a lack of the holy Spirit. The spirit of fear is a fruitful source
of evil in spiritual matters, in every feature of the Christian
growth, individually and as a Church; and it is also closely identified
with physical weakness and disabilities. The child of God who
is filled with the holy Spirit is a giant in comparison with his
own natural self; because his fears are quelled, his heart is
established, his faith is
<PAGE 250> rooted and grounded, and his soul
is anchored sure and steadfast, within the veil. Thus he is held
from being driven onto the rocks of disaster, when the stormy
winds of trouble prevail. The holy Spirit is thus a power to those
who possess it, which has often caused amazement to their enemies.
It
is not our claim that the Gospel of Christ takes hold upon the
strong minded and strong bodied, and that therefore those who
are his are strong; quite to the contrary of this, we hold, as
a matter of fact, as well as a matter of Scriptural testimony,
that the Gospel of Christ usually takes hold upon the weaker ones,
who feel their weakness, and who realize more than do the stronger
their need of help. Yet such is the transforming influence of
the holy Spirit upon those who receive it, that in their weakness
they are made strong. The weak things of this world are made mighty
through God (through the Spirit, the power of God) to the pulling
down of strongholds of error and sin, and to the endurance of
a good fight as good soldiers of the Lord Jesus Christ, much to
the surprise of those naturally their superiors. 1 Cor. 1:27;
2 Cor. 10:4; 2 Tim. 2:3,4
This
was true in times past, when the weak ones of the world espoused
the cause of Christ, and were firm to the very end of life, as
martyrs, enduring unwaveringly trials and difficulties before
which the strongest of the world quailed. And the same thing is
still true of the same class, for although the particular features
of persecution have greatly changed, nevertheless it is still
necessary to "endure hardness as good soldiers," and
to "lay down our lives for the brethren"; and the weak
things of the world, yea, those that are naught, whom God hath
chosen, are still confounding the wisdom and might of this world.
1 Cor. 1:27,28
This
Spirit of God in us is not only a Spirit of power, but a Spirit
of love, says the Apostle. The love here mentioned is not the
natural love possessed to some extent by all mankind, and even
by the brute creation--in large measure a spirit of selfishness.
In those who receive the holy Spirit of love this natural love
should become intensified, broadened,
<PAGE 251> deepened, and should more and more
lose its selfish characteristics, and become a generous love,
a self-sacrificing love, based not upon selfishness, but upon
principles of righteousness, truth, goodness, and the possession
in general of the Spirit, disposition of God. And this Spirit
of love should continue, increasing and abounding more and more,
until that which is perfect is come and that which is in part
will be done away. 1 Cor. 13:10
There
is no more wonderful manifestation of the holy Spirit in the Lord's
people than that which the Apostle in our text denominates "the
Spirit of a sound mind." The Lord's people, by nature, are
not more sound of mind than are the world's people. Quite the
contrary. As we have already seen, the tendency of the Gospel
is to attract the more imperfect, who realize their own impotency
and their need of grace and strength from on high, rather than
to influence those who are of stronger and sounder minds--who,
comparing themselves with others, have a self-satisfied, self-righteous
spirit or mind.
But
whenever the Truth is received into good and honest hearts and
brings forth its legitimate fruitage, and the Lord's people become
partakers of his holy Spirit, whether naturally strong or weak,
they thereby obtain the "Spirit of a sound mind"--their
judgments are clearer, truer, more trustworthy, than before; because
they have before their minds, first of all, the explicit directions
of the Lord's Word in respect to what they should do, and what
they should not do--directions which cover almost every feature
and aim of life. Those who have accepted the Lord as their instructor
and teacher, and who have his Spirit of obedience to the Father's
will, have the "Spirit of a sound mind," because
they do not trust merely to their own judgment, not merely to
their own understanding, but by obedience to the Lord's directions
they are preserved in the vicissitudes of life from the snares
and difficulties which befall those who have not the guidance
and direction of superhuman wisdom.
As
a result of the fall of our race into sin and its condemnation,
<PAGE 252> death, the whole world is unsound,
mentally as well as physically--but in varying degrees, according
to circumstances and heredity. As some are physically less sound
than others, so some are mentally less sound than others, yet
all are unsound, as the Scriptures declare, "There is none
righteous [perfect, sound, either in mind or body], no, not one."
(Rom. 3:10) Figuratively, all are covered with wounds and bruises
and putrefying sores--mental and physical. (Isa. 1:5,6) The curse
of sin has laid its heavy hand on the entire man--mind and body.
It
is a well-recognized fact that suffering in one member of the
body causes ailment to the entire body, including the mind. The
mind could not be perfectly sound, while supported and nourished
by an unsound body. The deranged stomach of a dyspeptic has a
direct effect upon his mind, as well as upon his entire physical
system. The person whose lungs are diseased cannot avoid a degree
of mental impairment corresponding; likewise, when other organs,
the heart, the liver, the kidneys, are diseased and perform their
functions imperfectly, the effect unquestionably is disordered
blood, and a disordered nervous system, the center of which is
the brain. Likewise the brain that is harassed by pain or imperfectly
nourished through malnutrition, or fevered through failure of
the action of the secretive organs, is sure to be impaired in
all its various functions: it cannot think and reason as correctly,
as logically, as if in perfect condition. Derangements of the
mind are so common, that the word derangement is not applied except
in quite extreme cases of more than average unsoundness, unbalance.
But no one of judgment and experience will question these conclusions.
The
question arises, How or wherein does the impartation of the holy
Spirit to the Christian serve to repair his judgment, and become
to him the Spirit of a sound mind? We answer that the divine mind
is perfect, "sound," and consequently to whatever extent
Christians are able to set aside their own minds or judgments,
on any or all matters,
<PAGE 253> and to accept instead the divine
mind, will, judgment, for the control of their lives, to that
extent they will have the spirit or disposition of a sound
mind--God's mind. We do not mean by this that the brains of Christians
undergo a change or a reversal of the order of nature in their
operation, but that under the guidance of the holy Spirit, the
Spirit of the Truth, such learn gradually to rectify the errors
of their own judgments in respect to all the various questions
which come before them, to harmonize with the teaching of the
holy Spirit through the Word of God. To illustrate: suppose we
had a clock, a poor timekeeper, and without means for regulation;
suppose also that we had access frequently to a chronometer of
absolute correctness, which showed us that our clock lost thirty
minutes every twenty-four hours, we would learn how to correct
it, by resetting every twenty-four hours. Moreover, we would learn
also how to estimate its error at any point in the day. So with
our judgments, and the various matters and affairs of life: when
we measure them with the perfect standard, we find that we are
either too fast or too slow, too weak or too strong, in our mental
and physical emotions. And while we are quite unable to alter
our methods of thought and action so as to have them perfect and
in full accord with those of our Lord Jesus, our standard, nevertheless
we are enabled to regulate our thoughts, our judgments, according
to the standard which is before our minds, in a way and to a degree
which those who have not this perfect standard, or who are not
seeking to be regulated by it, will neither appreciate nor be
able to copy.
Who
has not noticed in his friends and his neighbors (as well as in
himself) abundant evidence of such unsoundness of mind that they
are unable to manage their affairs creditably, and who nevertheless
cause great annoyance by their attempts to manage the affairs
of others? Through self-conceit they are judging others, gossiping
busybodies in other men's matters, though evidencing thorough
incapacity for the management of their own affairs. Is not this
one evidence
<PAGE 254> of an unsound mind--a measure of
insanity? Do we not find that the same principle, carried to a
still greater extreme, is noticeable in the cases of all whose
judgments are so unsound that they are obliged to be confined
in an asylum? Undoubtedly self-conceit, approbativeness and fear
are the bases of the mental troubles in the majority of those
who are confined in insane asylums--many of the remainder being
demoniacal obsession. If we enter an insane asylum we find some
of the inmates laboring under the delusion that they are very
wealthy, or that they are kings, or queens, or nobles, or princes,
and correspondingly full of pride and touchiness, and easily offended.
Others have endured fancied wrongs, and imagine that they are
not sufficiently appreciated, and their friends are endeavoring
to get them out of the way, for fear of their influence, or to
hide their ability, or to prevent them from securing a fortune.
Others, through fear, imagine that every one is seeking their
life, that the whole world is mad, and that they alone are sane;
or that God is against them, and that their fate is eternal torment,
because they have committed unpardonable sins, etc.
All
these are but extremes of mental conditions and characteristics
which the observing may see about them every day in all the walks
of life. The tendency of the world and the spirit of the world,
with its ambitions and pride, its superstitions and errors and
fears, is to intensify these natural conditions; and as a result
we find that insanity in the extreme form is making rapid increase
throughout the civilized world.
What
these need--what we and all mankind need--are sound minds: but
the time for the general healing of a world's mental and physical
ailments at the hands of the Great Physician is the Millennial
age, when fully introduced; but that age cannot be introduced,
and its relief and blessing cannot come, until the due time. Meantime,
however, the called-out Gospel Church obtains, through her Lord
and his Word, his holy Spirit--the Spirit of his
<PAGE 255> sound mind, which is the same as
the Father's mind or Spirit. And in proportion as each member
utilizes his privileges in this connection he will be helped over
the natural mental and physical troubles which beset us in common
with the whole world of mankind. The Word of the Lord through
the Apostle directs us thus--"I say...to every man that is
among you not to think of himself more highly than he ought to
think; but to think soberly [not according to the flesh, but according
to his new nature] according as God hath dealt to every man the
measure of faith." (Rom. 12:3) It is a life work with many,
to conquer their too high appreciation of themselves, and to obtain
the Spirit of a sound mind as respects their own talents, but
they are assisted in this work of rectifying their pride, by the
words of the Master, which say, "Blessed are the meek, for
they shall inherit the earth." They are assisted also by
the words of the Apostle, which declare that "God resisteth
the proud, but giveth grace [favor] to the humble." "Humble
yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that he may
exalt you in due time." Matt. 5:5; Jas. 4:6; 1 Pet. 5:5,6
But,
as a matter of fact, not many great, not many wise, according
to the course of this world and according to their own estimation
of their own wisdom, hath God chosen; but rather the poor of this
world, rich in faith--who trust not to their own wisdom, nor to
their own righteousness, but accept Christ as their wisdom, their
justification, their all.
Likewise,
also, those who have the "spirit of fear" are helped
to counteract it by the "Spirit of truth," the "Spirit
of love," if they receive it--for, "Perfect love casteth
out fear." (1 John 4:18) As they learn to know God through
his Word and the gracious plan of the ages therein set forth,
it removes from their minds the great incubus of fear and dread
which torments so many. It gives them instead of fear, hope--a
hope that maketh not ashamed, because the love of God is shed
abroad in their hearts through the holy Spirit--the Spirit of
a sound mind.
Thus
also those who are too humble (too lacking in self-confidence)
<PAGE 256> ever to accomplish anything in
life, are encouraged and uplifted and made useful to themselves
and to others, by the same Spirit of truth which reproves and
corrects those who are over-confident, self-assertive, self-conscious,
self-conceited. The former are encouraged by assurances of God's
aid; the latter are restrained, moderated, brought into subjection
and taught what is pleasing to God and helpful to themselves:
as the Apostle says, "If any man [confidently] think that
he knoweth anything [of his own wisdom], he knoweth nothing yet
as he ought to know." (1 Cor. 8:2) But transformations of
character, let us remember, come not from saying, Lord, Lord,
nor from having a Bible in one's possession; nor from joining
a human organization called a church; but from joining Christ,
and receiving from him the Spirit of his Word, the Spirit of truth,
the Spirit of holiness, the Spirit of a sound mind--his holy Spirit
and the Father's.
The
man who has, by the grace of God, and his own acceptance of that
grace, come into possession of the Spirit of a sound mind, has
much advantage every way over the remainder of mankind; for the
Spirit of a sound mind is a Spirit of wisdom. Such an one values
more correctly than others the things of this life--wealth, fame,
social position, etc. From his new standpoint he sees things connected
with all these which others do not notice. His mind, instructed
from the Lord's Word, discerns that if he should amass all the
wealth of the world, he could take none of it with him when he
dies. He sees that fame is a very hollow and very transitory thing,
and that in the busy rush of life the dead are soon forgotten.
He sees that society is shallow, and its professions of esteem,
etc., often insincere, and that its effervescence terminates with
death--if not sooner in financial disaster. They see, in the language
of the world, that--"The game [of chance for earthly fame
and wealth and pleasure] is not worth the candle." And indeed,
from the standpoint of the average man and woman of the world,
life is but a
<PAGE 257> game of cards--unsatisfactory in
its results, because even to the most successful it means comparatively
nothing in the end.
On
the other hand, the children of God, now begotten of the holy
Spirit to the "high calling" of this Gospel age, have
something offered to them which attracts their minds away from
the trifles and delusions which captivate and often frenzy the
minds of mankind in general. Theirs are higher joys, higher ambitions--for
a higher social standing, for greater riches and for a Kingdom--for
heavenly riches and a heavenly and eternal Kingdom. The ambitions
inspired by these heavenly promises are holy ambitions,
full of mercy and good fruits, and operate along the lines of
love, while the operations of the earthly ambitions are along
the lines of selfishness.
The
man or woman whose aim is lifted from these earthly toys and vanities
and ambitions, and placed upon the heavenly, certainly has much
better opportunities for exercising a sound judgment in respect
to all the affairs of this present life--because he looks upon
them from a comparatively disinterested standpoint. He is in the
world, and obliged to live, and to this end to provide things
needful and decent and honest in the sight of all men; but being
relieved of inordinate ambitions toward worldly things, he is
proportionately relieved from the pressure of avarice, covetousness,
pride, etc., and the better enabled to think and to act justly,
and to exercise kindly sympathy toward all. This Spirit of a sound
mind, or better judgment of the experienced Christian, is not
reckoned as a correction or repair of his earthly or fleshly mind,
but as a new mind or disposition, begotten in him from
above by the exceeding great and precious promises of the Word
of the Lord. (2 Pet. 1:4) He is thus helped by reason of his new
disposition, the Spirit or disposition of a sound mind, the holy
Spirit of the Lord. And his mind will be sound in proportion as
he receives and is filled with the holy Spirit. And this will
be
<PAGE 258> rapid or slow in proportion as
his love for the Lord and his righteousness is fervent or cool.
It
was the Master who inquired, "For what will a man exchange
his soul [his being--his existence]?" (Matt. 16:26) A man
with a sound mind would not exchange the most valuable thing which
he possesses (his being), for anything-- wealth, fame or office.
And in proportion as any receive the Spirit of a sound mind, this
will be their estimate. On the contrary, we see the world today
doing the reverse, and thus proving their mental unsoundness.
What are known as the wisest men of the world are spending their
labor for that which satisfieth not--in the accumulation of wealth;
in strife for honor, social standing and preferment; in vainglorious
display and pleasures of sin. Even were there no future life,
all who have the Spirit of a sound mind can see that such courses
are unwise; for the majority spend the present life in getting
ready for enjoyment, and then lie down in death, realizing that
they have not obtained what they sought--and that the wealth or
fame which they leave behind them will soon be scattered, or if
not scattered, that it will remain a monument of their folly,
avarice and unsoundness of mind.
The
world's life, devoid of reasonable aims and ambitions, is what
the Apostle calls "your vain [fruitless] conversation
[life] received by custom from your fathers." (1 Pet. 1:18)
The custom of laboring for unworthy objects is hereditary; men
do not stop to reason the matter out, but drop into the grooves
in which their parents moved. But the Apostle points out that
our change of course is because we have learned that we were redeemed
by the precious blood of Christ. We have discovered through the
Word of grace that the course of the world is vain and that all
follow the vain course because of depravity--unsoundness of mind
through the fall--and having learned of the great purchase we
<PAGE 259> gladly consecrate to him who redeemed
us and receive of his Spirit--the Spirit of a sound mind.
When
the present life is viewed from the standpoint of the holy Spirit,
presented in the Holy Word, it is seen to be but a schooling season,
a preparation for a future life, for all who see that prize and
hear the "call." However, only those whose eyes are
opened and who see from the inside can realize how unwise
is the course of the majority, who, so far from curbing their
own selfish propensities, and cultivating the nobler and truer
elements of their fallen nature, are in many instances undermining
character, and leaving the world at death weaker in character
than when they were born into it, with oftentimes a legacy of
weakness also entailed upon their offspring.
On
the other hand, while the Word of God and the holy Spirit of that
Word restrain our ambitions for earthly riches, and assure us
that the "love of money is the root of all evil" (1
Tim. 6:10), they protect us from the opposite extreme of slothfulness,
indolence--instructing that each should provide things honest
in the sight of all men, and especially for the necessities of
his own household. They exhort us to be "Not slothful in
business, but fervent in spirit, serving the Lord." (Rom.
12:11) Thus, those who have the Lord's Spirit are guarded against
the folly of those who spend life with Bunyan's "muck-rake,"
gathering to themselves treasures of no real worth; they are also
guarded against the unsoundness of indolence, and exhorted to
be energetic in all good services, which will be helpful to humanity
and which will meet with the divine approval, and be accepted
as a service "done unto the Lord," which will have his
abundant reward in the life everlasting.
The
Spirit of a sound mind sees in the present life opportunities
for the attainment of riches of character, riches of grace, and
for the laying up of treasures which neither
<PAGE 260> moth nor rust will consume, but
which will be enduring-- eternal joys. Not that the Spirit of
a sound mind leads us to live in the future, to the neglect of
the present: rather it lives wisely in the present, by keeping
in memory the future.
The
Spirit of a sound mind broadens and deepens character along all
its good lines; it not only helps its possessor to take correct
views of himself, but also to take correct views of his fellows
in degradation, and it enlarges his sympathies. He realizes the
impairment of his own mind and body through the fall, and his
own need of mercy and helpful correction, as well as the similar
derangement of the whole world of mankind, and the general need
for sympathy and aid for correction. As he learns to rectify the
deficiencies and inequalities of his own mind, he sympathizes
the more with others who are without this regulating principle,
this Spirit of a sound mind, and who are hindered from accepting
it by reason of the opposition of the Adversary, "the god
of this world," who blinds the minds of them that believe
not, lest the glorious light of divine goodness, in the face of
Jesus Christ, should shine into their hearts, and should bring
to them the Spirit of a sound mind. 2 Cor. 4:4
In
proportion as he develops in this holy Spirit of his adoption,
a "new creature in Christ Jesus," he becomes, through
its operation, gradually more patient, more sympathetic, more
generous, more loving--more Godlike. And these benevolences of
character will affect not only the outward acts of his life, but
also his words and his thoughts. In proportion as his holy Spirit
discountenances a dishonorable or dishonest action, in the same
proportion it discountenances a dishonorable or a dishonest word,
in respect to friend or neighbor or enemy; and similarly it discountenances
the slightest injustice or unkindness of thought to any of these.
The
Spirit of a sound mind will therefore gradually but surely make
the husband a better husband, the father a better
<PAGE 261> father, the son a better son, the
wife a better wife, the mother a better mother, the daughter a
better daughter. It will do this, because the basis of thought
and word and conduct has changed from selfishness to love. The
one possessed of this Spirit of a sound mind, the holy Spirit,
the Spirit of love, will, in proportion as he comes into possession
of it, be less touchy in respect to his own rights, privileges,
preferments, and more considerate for the rights and feelings
and preferences of others. The will of the Lord must, of course,
stand first, but next to pleasing the Lord he will take pleasure
in pleasing others with whom he may come in contact, especially
those of his own family: and in harmony with this desire to serve
and to please the Lord first, and then the Lord's family, and
all men as he may have opportunity, his thoughts will operate,
his words be guided and regulated, and his conduct shape itself.
It
does not follow that the man or woman who has received the Spirit
of a sound mind will therefore be the best husband, the best wife,
the best brother, the best sister, the best father, the best mother,
in every particular; because, as we have already suggested, the
mission of the gospel of Christ, in its effect upon the civilized
world, is to take hold of the mean things of this world, and the
things that are not [of value], and to uplift these in proportion
as they come into consecration to the Lord, and receive the Spirit
of a sound mind. On the contrary, some were better born, on a
higher plane, are more inclined to self-righteousness, and to
decline the assistance which the Lord offers. These may be noble
husbands, noble wives, noble children, noble parents, by reason
of being of more noble birth, by reason of inheriting through
Christian parents minds of better poise and greater wisdom. But
unless such accept the Savior, and the offer of the new mind,
they are very sure to degenerate, and their kindness, gentleness,
etc., to become more of a matter of outward form, covering an
inward selfishness, which
<PAGE 262> soon or later will crop out in
their posterity, bringing them in turn to a lower plane.
The
thought we wish to impress is that on whatever plane of mental
decrepitude, immorality or unwisdom the truth and grace of God
shall reach a man or woman it will lift him up and make him or
her the nobler, the purer, the kinder, the gentler, the more considerate
of others--in proportion as he or she receives this new mind,
the Spirit of a sound mind.
The
unsoundness of the human mind in general is illustrated in the
matter of the reckless propagation of the human race. It progresses
almost without regard to the laws of health, and almost without
provision for the proper sustenance of the offspring, and in utter
violation of the laws of nature, recognized in breeding of lower
animals, cattle, sheep, horses, dogs. No wonder the Apostle enjoins
upon the believers the exercise of a sound mind in the use of
man's highest natural power, procreation, saying, "Husbands,
deal with your wives according to knowledge." (1 Pet.
3:7) If this advice were followed, if the Spirit of a sound mind
prevailed, how much more consideration would be shown for delicate
and overburdened wives, by husbands who truly love them--dealing
with them according to knowledge.
But
only the servants and handmaids of the Lord have yet received
this holy Spirit of God--this Spirit of a sound mind. Thank God
the time is near when through the ministries of these servants
and handmaids, glorified and empowered with the King of glory,
all the world shall be blessed and the Lord shall pour out his
holy Spirit, the Spirit of a sound mind "upon all flesh."
THE
ATONEMENT BETWEEN GOD & MAN
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