Page 305 - Lift Him Up (1988)

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Purity, October 10
Don’t let anyone look down on you because you are young, but set an example
for the believers in speech, in life, in love, in faith and in purity.
1
Timothy 4:12
, NIV.
By accepting Christ as His personal Saviour, man is brought into the same close
relation to God, and enjoys His special favor as does His own beloved Son. He is
honored and glorified and intimately associated with God, his life being hid with
Christ in God. O what love, what wondrous love!
This is my teaching of moral purity. The opening of the blackness of impurity
will not be one half as efficacious in uprooting sin as will the presentation of these
grand and ennobling themes.... The Bible and the Bible alone has given the true
lessons upon purity. Then preach the Word.
Such is the grace of God, such the love wherewith He hath loved us, even when
we were dead in trespasses and sins, enemies in our minds by wicked works, serving
divers lusts and pleasures, the slaves of debase appetites and passion, servants of
sin and Satan. What depth of love is manifested in Christ, as He becomes the
propitiation for our sins. Through the ministration of the Holy Spirit souls are led to
find forgiveness of sins.
The purity, the holiness, of the life of Jesus as presented from the Word of God
possess more power to reform and transform the character than do all the efforts put
forth in picturing sins and crimes of men and the sure results. One steadfast look to
the Saviour uplifted upon the cross will do more to purify the mind and heart from
every defilement than will all the scientific explanations by the ablest tongue.
Before the cross the sinner sees his unlikeness of character to Christ. He sees the
terrible consequences of transgression; he hates the sin that he has practiced, and he
lays hold upon Jesus by living faith. He has judged his position of uncleanness in
the light of the presence of God and the heavenly intelligence. He has measured it
by the standard of the cross. He has weighed it in the balances of the sanctuary. The
purity of Christ has revealed to him his own impurity in its odious colors. He turns
from the defiling sin; he looks to Jesus and lives.
He finds an all-absorbing, commanding, attractive character in Jesus Christ, the
one who died to deliver him from the deformity of sin, and with quivering lip and
tearful eye he declares, “He shall not have died for me in vain.” “Thy gentleness
hath made me great” (
Letter 102, 1894
).
As a shield from temptation and an inspiration to purity and truth, no other
influence can equal the sense of God’s presence (
Education, 255
).
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