No Other Means
Justification delivers us from the penalty of sin. Sanctification delivers us from the power of sin. And there is no other means to control it except by the cross of Christ. We have labeled our address toward the sin nature, and the believer deals with it in several different ways: The first one is ignorance. The second is denial. The third is license. Number four is struggle, and number five is grace. The only one that’s legitimate is the last one, grace.
Ignorance
Let’s touch on ignorance. The modern church has no understanding of the sin nature. There are a few that do, but so few that they’re almost non-existent. They don’t know anything about it.
Years ago, traveling from city to city in evangelistic work, which we did for twenty-odd years, Frances and I would go into a place to preach a meeting, and the next morning I would find a used book store in the city—they always had a section of religious books—and I’d buy several of them, some written by the greatest preachers who ever lived. But in reading hundreds of these books—and I read them all—hundreds and hundreds of books, hundreds of messages—not one time did I read a single message on the sin nature; not one time. Coming up in an Assembly of God church, not one time did I hear a message on the sin nature. I’m going to go further than that: Not one single time do I remember hearing the term sin nature used in any message that I heard coming up as a kid, all the way up to when I was grown—not a single one. It’s because they didn’t know anything about it; they didn’t understand it.
I was writing one of the commentaries on the sixth chapter of Romans (I later rewrote it, as would be understandable), and I looked in my desk, and there was a book by Kenneth Wuest, the Baptist theologian and Greek scholar and probably one of the best Greek scholars of the twentieth century. He had a whole dissertation on the sin nature from Romans 6, and the strange, odd thing about it is, I had read it before; this was not the first time I saw it, I had read it maybe two or three times, but somehow or another it never clicked, it never connected. But that morning, before daylight, in my office, the Holy Spirit began to outline it and open up what the man said. In dealing with Romans 6, I think it’s seventeen times that the sin nature is mentioned—really the word sin is mentioned. And every time but one, it is speaking of the sin nature, meaning that Paul is not talking about acts of sin; he’s dealing with the sin nature. And, if we don’t function ourselves as we should, we will be taken over by the sin nature no matter how much we love God. No matter how sincere and earnest we are. It doesn’t matter if we’re ignorant, the Lord will deal with us in that capacity just so long, and after a while, we’re going to have to answer for it.
I remember the morning before daylight that I read what the brother wrote about the sin nature, walking across the floor in that office, tears rolling down my face. For the first time, I understood why. To fail and you don’t know why, and you’re struggling not to fail—Paul said the thing I hate, that’s what I do—it’s a terrible situation. And it’s because My people fail because of lack of knowledge, and I did not know; I had no knowledge of it. But still, the laws were there, and God made those laws, and He’s a patient God; He’s longsuffering—thank God He is—but after a while, it’s going to catch up with us.
Some might say, “Well, if you’re ignorant, and you don’t know, then you’re not responsible.” Yes, you are.
A few years ago, I was stopped by a police officer on the interstate. He pulled me over and said, “Did you see that sign back there that said the speed limit is 45? You were making 60.” I really hadn’t seen the sign; I didn’t know—it was just a straight highway with no businesses or housing around, so I’d put the pedal to the metal you know. I wasn’t lying to that officer, I just didn’t know that it was a 45 mph zone. But it didn’t matter, I had broken the law, and he had the power within his hand to write me out a $300 ticket if he wanted to do so. Thank the Lord he didn’t, but I was still responsible.
Likewise, the believer who doesn’t know anything about the sin nature—and most out there don’t; some few do; I’m sure there are preachers somewhere preaching it, but it’s not many—it’s a problem of ignorance, and that’s why we’re teaching it as we are.
Dominion
“For sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are not under the law, but under grace” (Rom. 6:14). In effect, he’s saying, if we are under law, sin will have dominion over us, and the sad fact is, the far greater majority of the modern church is functioning under law. It’s done through ignorance; they don’t know any different, any better. But they’re functioning under law, and there’s a curse to law. And I mean no good thing is going to come out of it because we can’t keep it ourselves—whether it’s the law of Moses or laws that we devise out of our own minds, or some other person or preacher devises. If you’re under law, the sin nature is going to rule you—it’s a guarantee. And most of the modern church is not understanding the cross of Christ and not understanding grace because grace comes from the cross; it’s functioning under law and is ruled by the sin nature, and the situation just gets worse and worse and worse as it goes along. “For sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are not under the law, but under grace” (Rom. 6:14). In effect, he’s saying, if we are under law, sin will have dominion over us, and the sad fact is, the far greater majority of the modern church is functioning under law. It’s done through ignorance; they don’t know any different, any better. But they’re functioning under law, and there’s a curse to law. And I mean no good thing is going to come out of it because we can’t keep it ourselves—whether it’s the law of Moses or laws that we devise out of our own minds, or some other person or preacher devises. If you’re under law, the sin nature is going to rule you—it’s a guarantee. And most of the modern church is not understanding the cross of Christ and not understanding grace because grace comes from the cross; it’s functioning under law and is ruled by the sin nature, and the situation just gets worse and worse and worse as it goes along.
JSM