Wrongs cannot be righted, nor can reformations
in character be made, by a few feeble, intermittent efforts.
Sanctification is the work, not of a day, or of a year, but of
a lifetime. The struggle for conquest
over self, for holiness and heaven, is a lifelong struggle. Without
continual effort and constant activity there can be no advancement
in the divine life, no attainment of the victor's crown.
The strongest evidence of man's fall from
a higher state is the fact that it costs so much to return. The
way of return can be gained only by hard fighting, inch by inch,
every hour. By a momentary act of will, one may place himself
in the power of evil; but it requires more than a momentary act
of will to break these fetters and attain to a higher, holier
life. The purpose may be formed, the work begun; but its accomplishment
will require toil, time, and perseverance, patience and sacrifice.
Beset with temptations without number,
we must resist firmly or be conquered. Should we come to the
close of life with our work undone, it would be an eternal loss.
Paul's sanctification was the result of
a constant conflict with self. He said: "I die daily."
1 Corinthians 15:31. His will and his desires every day conflicted
with duty and the will of God. Instead of following inclination,
he did God's will, however crucifying to his own nature.
God leads His people on step by step. The
Christian life is a battle and a march. In this warfare there
is no release; the effort must be continuous and persevering.
It is by unceasing endeavor that we maintain the victory over
the temptations of Satan. Christian integrity must be sought
with resistless energy and maintained with a resolute fixedness
of purpose.
No one will be borne upward without stern, persevering effort in his own behalf. All must engage in this warfare for themselves. Individually we are responsible for the issue of the struggle; though Noah, Job, and Daniel were in the land, they could deliver neither son nor daughter by their righteousness.