| FAITH IS WHAT YOU WANT 
			
												Once in one of our holiness meetings I met a sister who was 
			evidently in great spiritual distress, with intense hunger for full 
			salvation. After a few moments' conversation, I felt assured that 
			she was ready to accept the blessing, and so we knelt in prayer; but 
			for some reason our prayers did not prevail. I then asked her if she 
			was sure her consecration was complete. She at once declared it was; 
			she was willing to die for it. 
 'Then,' said I, 'sister, there are three things you must believe. 
			First, do you believe God is able to sanctify you wholly?'
 
 'Yes.'
 
 'Second. Do you believe He is willing?'
 
 'Yes.'
 
 'Then, with your perfect consecration, there is but one other step 
			to take, and the wonder work of grace will be done. Will you believe 
			that He doeth it? For the promise is: "What things soever ye desire, 
			when ye pray, believe that ye receive (are receiving) them, and ye 
			shall have them' (Mark xi. 24). Will you believe this?'
 
 'But I don't feel that He does.'
 
 'That makes no difference, sister; your faith must precede all 
			feeling.'
 
 'But I can't believe that He has done it.'
 
 'I don't ask you to believe that He has done it, but that He is 
			doing it, in answer to your present faith. You must believe that He 
			doeth it, if ever you are to get the witness of the Spirit. Say, "I 
			will believe God."
 
 'Well, I will try.'
 
 'No, that won't do; you must believe, not try to believe.'
 
 'Well, I am determined to struggle on till the blessing comes.'
 
 'No, sister, your struggles will do no good unless you believe; and, 
			until you do this, you are making God a liar.'
 
 'But won't I be lying to say I will believe, when I don't feel like 
			it?'
 
 'No, for "faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God" 
			(Rom. x. 17), and the word of God to you is, "Now ye are clean 
			through the word which I have spoken unto you" (John xv. 3). "Ask, 
			and ye shall receive" ' (John xvi. 24).
 
 That evening I saw the sister again. She said, 'I have committed 
			myself to God, and shall trust Him, till the witness of my 
			acceptance comes.'
 
 The next day she was in the meeting, and related her experience, 
			telling us that in the night God awoke her with an assurance of His 
			love, and gave her the clear witness of the Spirit that she was 
			entirely sanctified, putting glory in her heart, and hallelujahs on 
			her tongue.
 
 Entire consecration is not entire sanctification. You are commanded 
			to 'present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto 
			God' (Rom. xii. 1). This is entire consecration; but it is also 
			said, 'For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and with 
			the mouth confession is made unto salvation' (Rom. x. 10). So then, 
			there must be entire consecration, unwavering faith, and a frank, 
			artless confession of both to Jesus. This is man's part, and, when 
			these simple conditions are met and steadfastly maintained, against 
			all contrary feelings, God will suddenly come into His Holy temple, 
			filling the soul with His presence, purity, and power. This twofold 
			work by man and God constitutes the one experience of entire 
			sanctification. When this experience is yours, at your very earliest 
			opportunity confess it before men.
 
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