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Heart Talks on Holiness
Heart Talks on Holiness
Heart Talks on Holiness
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Heart Talks on Holiness

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Paphos Publishers offers a wide catalog of rare classic titles, published for a new generation. 


Heart Talks on Holiness is one of Brengle's best known works.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 22, 2018
ISBN9781518376542
Heart Talks on Holiness

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    Book preview

    Heart Talks on Holiness - Samuel Logan Brengle

    HEART TALKS ON HOLINESS

    ..................

    Samuel Logan Brengle

    PAPHOS PUBLISHERS

    Thank you for reading. In the event that you appreciate this book, please consider sharing the good word(s) by leaving a review, or connect with the author.

    This book is a work of nonfiction and is intended to be factually accurate.

    All rights reserved. Aside from brief quotations for media coverage and reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced or distributed in any form without the author’s permission. Thank you for supporting authors and a diverse, creative culture by purchasing this book and complying with copyright laws.

    Copyright © 2016 by Samuel Logan Brengle

    Interior design by Pronoun

    Distribution by Pronoun

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    Preface

    Back Fly-leaf Text

    Chapter 1

    Chapter 2

    Chapter 3

    Chapter 4

    Chapter 5

    Chapter 6

    Chapter 7

    Chapter 8

    Chapter 9

    Chapter 10

    Chapter 11

    Chapter 12

    Chapter 13

    Chapter 14

    Chapter 15

    Chapter 16

    Chapter 17

    Chapter 18

    Chapter 19

    Chapter 20

    Chapter 21

    Chapter 22

    Chapter 23

    Chapter 24

    Chapter 25

    Chapter 26

    Chapter 27

    Heart Talks on Holiness

    By

    Samuel Logan Brengle

    PREFACE

    ..................

    THIS BOOK IS A WELCOME successor to the writer’s former volume on the same subject, which was entitled Helps To Holiness. The aim of both is intensely practical. The former has won for itself a permanent place in the literature of this great subject, and I have little doubt but that the present work will prove equally useful to the plain people for whom it is written—pilgrims, soldiers of Christ, who are seeking how they may order their lives and train their hearts in holiness and righteousness before Him.

    I have said that the aim of these papers is a practical one. Nothing would, I am convinced, be more unsatisfactory to the author, a gifted officer of The Salvation Army, than that the perusal of what he has written here should result merely in a better understanding of the theory of salvation, or even in increased knowledge of the will of God. He has aimed at something more than this—to help men and women to enjoy that salvation, and to enjoy it now, and to lead every reader to do that will, and to do it all the time.

    The glorious experience here described and enforced is the true secret of a life of happiness and usefulness on earth as it is the highest preparation for the life and service of Heaven. That experience is for you.

    Bramwell Booth

    101 Queen Victoria Street London, E.C.

    BACK FLY-LEAF TEXT

    ..................

    ‘HEART TALKS ON HOLINESS’ IS the second of a new and definitive edition of the writings of Samuel Logan Brengle.

    Of colonial stock, Commissioner Brengle, D.D., O.F., left the security of the Methodist Episcopal Church for the uncertainties of officership in the newly-born, but rapidly growing, Salvation Army.

    Return to the United States from training in England brought him his share of that persecution which was the lot of many Salvationists in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, and a brick aimed at his head by a rough nearly ended his life. During the convalescence which followed he started to write, since when more than a million copies of his books have been sold.

    Outstanding Christian leaders such as Barclay Buxton, Archbishop Harrington Lees and John Stuart Holden have acknowledged their indebtedness to Brengle’s writings, but these are also so clear in construction and style that no wayfaring man need err therein.

    CHAPTER 1

    ..................

    DEATH OF ‘THE OLD MAN’

    THE SON OF GOD CAME into this world, and lived, and toiled, and taught, and suffered, and died and rose again in order to accomplish a twofold purpose. The Apostle John explains this twofold work. In I John iii. 5, speaking of Jesus, he says, ‘Ye know that He was manifested to take away our sins. This is His justification, and regeneration, which are done for us and in us. In verse 8 he adds, ‘For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that He might destroy the works of the devil.’ That is entire sanctification, which is a work done in us. Now upon an examination of experience and scripture, we find this is exactly what man needs to have done for him.

    First, he needs to get rid of his own sins, and have a new principle of life planted in him. ‘For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God’ (Rom. iii. 23), and when any man comes to God, he comes burdened with a sense of his own wrongdoings and tempers. His sins condemn him; but, thank God, Jesus came to take away our sins. When a man comes with a penitent heart, acknowledging himself a sinner, and puts his trust in Jesus, he will find himself suddenly freed from his sins. The sense of guilt will vanish. The power of evil will be broken. The burden will roll away. Peace will fill his heart. He will see that his sins were laid on another, even on Jesus, and he will realize that ‘with His stripes we are healed ‘ (Isa. liii. 5).

    This is a result of that free pardon, that free justification for all past offenses, that God gives to every one who surrenders himself heartily to, and trusts in, Jesus. At the same time God plants in the man’s heart a new life. The man is born of God, and receives what Paul calls the washing of regeneration, which washes away all the man’s guilt, and all the sin for which he is responsible.

    At this time, too, there will be planted in the man’s heart love, joy, peace and the various fruits of the Spirit, and if his experience is very marked, as such experiences frequently are, he will probably think there is nothing more to be done. But, if he walks in ‘humbleness of mind’ (which, by the way, is a much-neglected fruit of the Spirit), if he speaks often and freely with those who love the Lord, and if he carefully searches the word of God and meditates therein day and night, he will soon find that sin’s disease is deeper and more deadly than he thought, and that behind and below his own sins are the ‘works of the devil,’ that must also be destroyed before the work of grace in his soul can be complete.

    He will find a big, dark something in him that wants to get mad when things are against him; something which will not be patient; something that is touchy and sensitive; something that wants to grumble and find fault; something that is proud and shuns the shame of the Cross; something that sometimes suggests hard thoughts against God; something that is self-willed and ugly and sinful. He hates this ‘something’ in him and wants to get rid of it, and probably condemns himself for it and maybe will feel that he is a greater sinner now than he ever was before he was converted. But he is not. In fact, he is not a sinner at all so long as he resists this something in himself.

    Now, what is the trouble with the man? What is the name of this troublesome ‘something’? Paul calls it by several names. In Rom. viii. 7 he calls it ‘ the carnal mind,’ and he says it is ‘enmity against God: for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be.’ You cannot fix it up. You cannot whitewash it over. You cannot make it better by culture or growth, or by any effort whatever. It is an enemy of God, and cannot be anything else.

    In the seventh chapter (verse 24) he calls it ‘the body of this death’ and wonders how he can get deliverance from it. In Eph. iv. 22, and in Col. iii. 9, he calls it ‘the old man.’ In Gal. v.17, he calls it ‘the flesh.’ James calls it ‘superfluity of naughtiness,’ which is also well rendered, ‘the remainder of iniquity’ (Jas. i. 21).

    John calls it ‘sin,’ as distinct from ‘sins,’ and the ‘works of the devil.’ In Ezek. xxxvi. 26 it is called a ‘stony heart.’ The theologians call it ‘inbred sin,’ ‘original sin’ and ‘depravity.’ Whatever you wish to call it, it is something evil and awful, that remains in the heart after a man has been converted.

    Some say that it is dealt with at conversion, but I never saw any people who found it so, and John Wesley, who was a much wiser man than I am, and who had a far wider range of observation, examined thousands of people on this very point, and he said he never knew of one who got rid of this troublesome thing at conversion.

    Some people say that growing in grace is the remedy. Others say you never get rid of it while you live. It will remain in you and war against you till you die. They are not altogether prophets of despair, for they say the new life in you will overcome it and keep it down, but that you will have to stand on guard and watch it, club and repress it, as you would a maniac, till death relieves you.

    Personally, this subject once gave me great concern. These warring opinions perplexed me, while the ‘old man ‘ made increasing war against all my holy desires and purposes. But while I found man’s teachings and theories were perplexing, God’s teachings were plain and light as day.

    1. God does not admit that we get rid of this at conversion, for all His teachings and exhortations concerning it are addressed to Christians. And those who hold this doctrine will have to admit one of two things either that it is not removed at conversion, or that a great number of earnest professors who claim to be converted have never been converted at all. Personally, I cannot admit the latter for an instant.

    2. God does, by the mouth of Peter, exhort us to grow in grace, but that simply means to grow in favor with God, by obedience and faith, and does not touch the subject in hand. Corn may grow beautifully and delight the farmer, but all its growth will not rid the field of weeds, and the farmer will have to look to some other method to get rid of those troublesome things.

    3. Neither does God anywhere teach that this thing need be bothering us till death, or that death will destroy it.

    4. Nor do I find any warrant in the whole Bible for purgatorial fires being the deliverer from this evil.

    5. But I do find that God teaches very plainly how we are to get rid of it. Paul says, ‘Put off... the old man" (Eph. iv. 22). James says, ‘... lay apart all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness’ (Jas. i. 21). John says, ‘... the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all sin’ (I John i. 7), not part or some, sin, but ‘all sin.’

    And again, John says, Jesus ‘was manifested’ to ‘destroy the works of the devil’; (I John iii. 8), and God says through Ezekiel, ‘I will take away the stony heart’ (Ezek. xxxvi. 26).

    All these passages teach that we are to

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