The School of Sanctification
In Egypt God delivers us from sin’s penalty. In the wilderness He is delivering us from sin’s power.
Spurgeon said of the wilderness journey that it was “the Oxford and Cambridge for God’s students”.
After the first great victory came the first big test.
Salvation delivers us out of Egypt and sanctification delivers Egypt out of us.
In Egypt God delivers us from sin’s penalty. In the wilderness He is delivering us from sin’s power.
Israel was first rescued and given their requirements.
These requirements were not the basis of their salvation. God brought them out of Egypt, and then He instructed them on how to live.
The book of Exodus illustrates salvation’s tenses. ; salvation as deliverance from sin’s penalty. ; salvation as deliverance from sin’s power.
Sanctification 101: Process.
They do not go into the wonder of The Promise Land but into wilderness wandering.
In other words, the purpose of God in the wilderness was not rapid transportation. It was education. It was counseling. It was training. That’s the reason why Moses says, “The reason why you didn’t immediately go to Canaan was, even though you can get people out of slavery in an instant, you can’t get slavery out of the people except through a long process.”
This wandering was not aimless but calculated.
In other words, the purpose of God in the wilderness was not rapid transportation. It was education. It was counseling. It was training.
Therefore, the simple fact is you can be zapped legally into freedom, you can be pardoned, you can be forgiven, you can be liberated in all those kinds of ways, but it’s only through the wilderness experience that the principle of liberation becomes our practice of life.
Sanctification 102: Provision
Sin wants you to live by your reality and trust your feelings.
God’s Spirit wants our faith to interpret our reality and inform our feelings.
“Do not pray for easy lives. Pray to be stronger men and women. Do not pray for tasks equal to your powers. Pray for powers equal to your tasks.”
Often after a great victory of faith, the Lord permits a trial to come to test us. When Abraham arrived in the Promised Land, he discovered a famine (Gen. 12:10), and after the glorious occasion of His baptism, our Lord was tempted by Satan in the wilderness (Matt. 3:13–4:11). Elijah won a great victory on Mount Carmel, but after that faced a trial of faith (1 Kings 18–19).
Often after a great victory of faith, the Lord permits a trial to come to test us. When Abraham arrived in the Promised Land, he discovered a famine (Gen. 12:10), and after the glorious occasion of His baptism, our Lord was tempted by Satan in the wilderness (Matt. 3:13–4:11). Elijah won a great victory on Mount Carmel, but after that faced a trial of faith (1 Kings 18–19).
Expect trials to come (Ex. 15:22–16:3)
“Let us be as watchful after the victory as before the battle,” wrote saintly Andrew Bonar. It’s possible to win the battle and yet lose the victory, which is what the Jews did as they left the Red Sea and began to march toward Mount Sinai. They forgot that life is a pilgrimage during which we must learn new lessons and fight new battles. One great victory doesn’t settle everything; we need challenging new experiences that will help us mature and glorify God. Yes, life is a school, and the Lord knows just when to give us an examination.1
Expect trials to come ()
The Lord tests us to encourage spiritual growth and bring out the best in us, but the devil tempts us to bring out the worst in us and to encourage spiritual immaturity