Do You Walk In White?
DO
YOU WALK IN WHITE?
“We were buried with
Him . . . that just as Christ was raised from the dead . . . even so we also
should walk in newness of life” (Romans 6:4)
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one experiences complete sanctification without going through a “white funeral”—the
burial of the old life. If there has never been his crucial moment of change
through death, sanctification will never be more than an elusive dream. There
must be a “white funeral,” a death with only one resurrection—a resurrection
into the life of Jesus Christ. Nothing can defeat a life this. It has oneness
with God for only one purpose—to be a witness for Him.
Have you really come to your last
days? You have often come to them in your mind, but have you really experienced
them? You cannot die or go to your funeral in a mood of excitement. Death means
you stop being. You must agree with God and stop being the intensely striving
kind of Christian you have been. We avoid the cemetery and continually refuse
our own death. It will not happen by striving, but b yielding to death. It is
dying—being “baptized into His death” (Romans 6:3).
Have you had your “white funeral,”
or are you piously deceiving your own soul? Has there been a point in your life
which you now mark as your last day? Is there a place in your life to which you go back in memory
with humility and overwhelming gratitude, so that you can honestly proclaim. “Yes,
it was then, at my ‘white funeral,’ that I made an agreement with God.”
“This is the will God, your
sanctification . . .” (1 Thessalonians 4:3). Once you truly realize this is God’s
will, you will enter into the process of sanctification as a natural response.
Are you willing to experience that “white funeral” now? Will you agree with Him
that this is your last day on earth? The moment of agreement depends on you.
MY
UTMOST FOR HIS HIGHEST
OSWALD
CHAMBERS
Edited by James Reimann
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