Can You Become a “Fully Devoted Follower
of Christ?
John Wesley, like many of the early church fathers before
him, preached that it is possible in this life to experience God’s power in
such a way that we are actually able to live a love-filled obedient life. He taught that through God’s power we could
be enabled to actually obey the two greatest commandments—loving God completely
and loving neighbor as ourselves. The
term for this experience has shifted through the years and has included Perfect
love, the Upper Room Experience, being filled with the Spirit, baptism with the
Holy Ghost, the deeper life, the higher way, Entire Sanctification, and
Holiness. The current edition of this
ageless notion is probably best represented in the term, “Fully devoted
follower of Christ.” So what do you
think? Can a person become a fully
devoted follower of Christ? In this
life? Is it possible? If so, how?
The following are the seven answers
most common in today’s church.
- Seek now and receive by faith.
Becoming a fully devoted follower of Christ is possible right now for you
and you are urged to seek this life now by consecrating your all to God
and receiving this second work of grace now by faith. (Historically, this
has been the view of the Holiness Movement as associated with Pheobe
Palmer and The Wesleyan Church.)
- Keep seeking until you receive.
a fully devoted follower of Christ is possible before death or old age,
but you cannot experience it just by asking and believing—God can cleanse
and fill you in His own good timing and thus you should keep on seeking
until God responds with a second work of grace enabling this life of power
and purity. (Although John Wesley’s teaching here is greatly debated, many
scholars would contend this was Wesley’s view.)
- Gradual growth process. While
it is possible to become a fully devoted follower of Christ in this life,
it can be achieved only after many years of a gradual process of spiritual
growth—putting off sin and putting on deeds of righteousness through
Christ’s power. By putting sins to
death and moving gradually closer to Christ you can eventually—usually
after many years—become a fully devoted follower of Christ. Your job now is to follow the Spirit’s
leading in one area at a time. (This is the generally held position of The
United Methodist Church, at least those who take seriously their
Methodism, such as Thomas C. Oden.)
- A sustainable experience with
momentary lapses. Becoming
a fully devoted follower of Christ can be the normative experience in a
believer’s life. The Holy Spirit enables a believer to suppress the sin
nature and live in sustained victory over it. However, because the root of
sin remains until death, there will be moments in which sin will cloud or
diminish victory. Sin or disobedience is seen as an exception, rather than
the rule of Christian living. (This is the classic understanding of
holiness in Keswick theology.)
- A momentary but unsustainable
experience. Becoming a fully devoted follower of Christ can be
experienced in moments or short periods of life, but can’t be sustained
for the long haul. There are times when a believer can truly act out of
the complete love of God and the love of neighbor, untainted by
selfishness and pride, but the “old man” is too strong to be completely
vanquished in life. (This would
represent a modern evangelical Lutheran perspective, as seen in the work
of Gerhard Forde. Some scholars would argue this was Martin Luther’s
position.)
- Worthy goal but impossible dream. While it is clearly impossible in this
life to ever actually become a fully devoted follower of Christ you should
head that direction anyway, trusting God to deliver you increasingly from
sinful thoughts, words and deeds, and gradually to empower you in love—but
you will never get there: you will never become fully devoted. Holiness is a journey of devotion—not a
destination you ever actually achieve. (This view represents well the
position of Reformed theology and can be seen in the work of John Calvin,
Reinhold Niebuhr, J. I. Packer, and Sinclair Ferguson.)
- Holiness of Christ. All humans—including Christians—are so
sinful at the core that even becoming a partially devoted follower to
Christ can’t even be achieved in this life—rather true Christians should
confess our sinfulness and realize that God has imputed Christ’s
righteousness to us—God can’t see my sinfulness, but sees only the
holiness of Christ; holiness is about Christ, not me. (While this view
enjoys some degree of popularity in contemporary evangelicalism, it has
not been held historically by credible and respected orthodox theologians.
Some have placed Martin Luther and/or John Calvin in this camp by focusing
on their understanding of imputed righteousness. It may be that because Luther,
and to a much lesser degree Calvin, focused so much attention on our
objective standing before God, and he was preoccupied with it, his
understanding of imparted righteousness has been missed or inadvertently
dismissed by his theological heirs, leading to this perspective today.
Luther’s primary focus was on justification, but he does address
sanctification.)
By Chris Bounds and Keith Drury. Chris Bounds is an Assistant Professor of
Theology, Keith Drury is Professor of Applied Ministry. Both teach at Indiana
Wesleyan University. September, 2003
Questions to think
about:
- Position #3 & #4 are the most
common position among our students—and they claim that’s all they ever
heard in their home churches.
- Charismatics tend toward the lower
numbers; Presbyterians toward the higher ones.
- My own denomination has traditionally
taken position #1, but that is increasingly a “hard sell” in today’s world
so many have taken a “fallback position” in #2 or #3 arguing that it
cultivates the soil for later return to #1 or #2. Does it?
Emerging Thoughts: We welcome your comments on this holiness
taxonomy… what input can you give?
Write to chris.bounds@indwes.edu
or keith.drury@indwes.edu with your
observations.