| TESTIFY TO THE BLESSING 
			
												'And they overcame him by the Blood of the Lamb, and by the word 
			of their testimony ' (Rev. xii. 11). 
 A lieutenant got the blessing of a clean heart in one of my meetings 
			the other day, and then told us that he had had the blessing once 
			before but had lost it because he failed to testify to it. The devil 
			suggested that it was a great thing to testify to cleansing from all 
			sin; that people would not understand it; that they would criticize 
			him; that he would do better to live it and say nothing about it; 
			and so on. He heeded these suggestions, kept quiet, and so lost the 
			blessing.
 
 That is an old trick of the devil's, by which he has cheated many a 
			soul out of this pearl of greatest price.
 
 Paul says: 'For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and 
			with the mouth confession is made unto salvation' (Rom. x. 10). The 
			confession is as necessary as the believing. We insist upon this in 
			the matter of justification and it is equally important in the 
			matter of sanctification. If we do not testify definitely, humbly 
			and constantly to the blessed experience, we put our light under a 
			bushel and it goes out.
 
 The late Miss Frances E. Willard received the blessing definitely, 
			was filled with joy and the sweet peace of Heaven and gave a burning 
			testimony of the fulness of the Spirit. Soon afterwards she became a 
			teacher in a ladies' school in a section of the country where there 
			was much controversy over the doctrine of holiness. She was advised 
			by her mistaken friends to keep still about sanctification, which 
			she did. Years afterwards she sorrowfully wrote: 'I kept still until 
			I soon found I had nothing in particular to keep still about. The 
			experience left me. That sweet persuasiveness, that heaven in the 
			soul of which I came to know in Mrs. Palmer's meeting, I do not now 
			feel.'
 
 Fletcher of Madeley, whom John Wesley believed to be the holiest man 
			that had lived since the days of the Apostle John, made this 
			confession to his people: 'My dear brethren and sisters, God is 
			here, I feel Him in this place; but I would hide my face in the 
			dust, because I have been ashamed to declare what He has done for 
			me. For many years I have grieved His Spirit, but I am deeply 
			humbled and He has again restored my soul. Last Wednesday evening He 
			spoke to me by these words: "Reckon ye also yourselves to be dead 
			indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord" 
			(Rom. vi. 11). I obeyed the voice of God; I now obey it, and tell 
			you all to the praise of His love, I am freed from sin, dead unto 
			sin and alive unto God. I received this blessing four or five times 
			before, but I lost it by not obeying the order of God, who has told 
			us, "with the heart man believeth unto righteousness and with the 
			mouth confession is made unto salvation." But the enemy offered his 
			bait under various colors to keep me from a public declaration of 
			what God had wrought. When I first received the grace, Satan made me 
			wait awhile till I saw more of the fruits. I resolved to do so, but 
			I soon began to doubt the witness which before I had felt in my 
			heart, and I was in a little while sensible that I had lost both.
 
 'A second time after receiving this salvation (with shame I confess 
			it) I was kept from being a witness for my Lord by the suggestion, 
			"Thou art a public character; the eyes of all are upon thee; and if; 
			as before, by any means thou lose the blessing, it will be a 
			dishonor to the doctrine of heart holiness." I held my peace, and 
			again forfeited the gift of God.
 
 'At another time I was prevailed upon to hide it by reasoning thus: 
			"How few even of the children of God will receive this testimony! 
			Many of them suppose that every transgression of the Adamic law is 
			sin, and therefore, if I profess myself to be free from sin, all 
			these will give my profession the lie. Because I am not free in 
			their sense, I am not free from ignorance, mistakes and infirmities. 
			I will therefore enjoy what God hath wrought in me, but I will not 
			say I am perfect in love." Alas! I soon found again: "He that hideth 
			his Lord's talent, and improveth it not, from that unprofitable 
			servant shall be taken away even that which he seemeth to have."
 
 'Now, my brethren, you see my folly. I have confessed it in your 
			presence, and now I am resolved before you all to confess my Master. 
			I will confess Him to all the world. And I declare unto you in the 
			presence of God the Holy Trinity, I am now dead indeed unto sin and 
			alive unto God, through Jesus Christ, who is my indwelling 
			holiness.'
 
 This confession put Mr. Fletcher on record, and was the beginning of 
			a life of holiness that has but few parallels for beauty and power. 
			It is only at this point of glad, definite testimony that Christian 
			life and experience become irresistibly catching, like fire when it 
			bursts into flame.
 
 Those who profess this blessing are often accused of boasting. But 
			this is not true. They are simply declaring that Jesus has done for 
			them what He died to do -- that is, to save them from sin, and they 
			do it in the spirit of a man who, healed of a deadly disease, 
			declares what the doctor has done for him. It is done to bring 
			honour to the doctor, and to encourage other poor sufferers to apply 
			to him; and to withhold such testimony in the presence of multitudes 
			of needy ones would be a crime.
 
 David said: 'My soul shall make her boast in the Lord: the humble 
			shall hear thereof; and be glad' (Ps. xxxiv. 2). Hallelujah!
 
 As for me, I feel I am under a solemn obligation to let everybody 
			know that Jesus is alive and that He can save to the uttermost.
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