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Holiness and Redemption
B.H. Clendennen

Bertram H. Clendennen (1922–2009). Born on May 22, 1922, in Vidor, Texas, into a large, poor family, B.H. Clendennen, known as Bert, grew up with little exposure to faith, despite churches dotting his hometown. After graduating high school in 1940, he joined the U.S. Marines post-Pearl Harbor, serving in the South Pacific at Peleliu, where combat stirred spiritual questions. Saved in 1949 at age 27, he felt called to ministry in 1953 and was ordained by the Assemblies of God. In 1956, he founded Victory Temple (later Victory Tabernacle) in Beaumont, Texas, pastoring for 35 years and growing it into a missions-focused church. One of the first three preachers to broadcast on U.S. television, he reached wide audiences with his conservative Pentecostal sermons emphasizing repentance and the Holy Spirit’s power. In 1967, he ministered in Tanzania, raising funds to build 15 churches, and preached globally in Vietnam, Iran, India, and Zaire, often in perilous conditions. At 70, in 1992, he moved to Russia with his wife, Janice, founding the School of Christ International, which trained leaders in over 130 nations across every continent by his death. Clendennen authored books like The Prodigal Church and The Ultimate Thing, urging a return to Pentecost’s simplicity. He died on December 13, 2009, in Beaumont, survived by his wife, daughter Brenda, and son Mark. He said, “The purpose of Pentecost is to reproduce Christ in the believer.”
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Sermon Summary
In this sermon, the preacher discusses how God reveals himself as the redeemer of his chosen people. He allowed them to go through oppression, slavery, and misery to prepare their hearts for redemption. The Passover is seen as a transition from the physical to the spiritual, symbolizing God's deliverance from bondage and the angel of death. The preacher emphasizes the need for believers to be conformed to Christ and to focus on the spiritual rather than the temporal things of the world.
Sermon Transcription
I want you to turn with me this morning. Our message, we're dealing with the subject of holiness. And our message today, holiness and redemption. And I want to read in Numbers chapter 3, Numbers chapter 3, verse 13, and Numbers chapter 8 and verse 17. Here in 3 and 13, Because all the firstborn are mine, for on the day that I smote all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, I hallowed unto thee all the firstborn in Israel, both man and beast. Mine shall they be. I am the Lord. Then in the 8th chapter of the book of Numbers, in verse 17, 8 and 17, For all the firstborn of the children are mine, both man and beast. On the day that I smote every firstborn in the land of Egypt, I sanctified them for myself. Now, another verse of scripture I just want to give you here is in Leviticus chapter 9 and verse, chapter 9 and verse 45, For I am the Lord your God that bringeth you up out of the land of Egypt to be your God. You shall therefore be holy, for I am holy. That's Leviticus 9.45. In Isaiah, he spoke of Israel and he said, I have redeemed thee, thou art mine. I have redeemed thee. I believe that's Isaiah 58 and 1, right in there. But I have redeemed thee, thou art mine. Now, in our messages on this subject of holiness, we found that Moses at Horeb, there where God dealt with him about taking the shoes off his feet, we saw how the first mention of the word holy in the history of fallen man was connected with the inauguration of a new period in the revelation of God, and that was of redemption, of redemption. The word holy was connected vitally. We saw that. We saw the first time that the word holy was used in the Bible was where God said He sanctified, that means made holy, the Sabbath. The second time we find it here with Moses there at the Mount and how that that word was connected with this new era of redemption. Now, in the Passover, we have the manifestation, the first manifestation of what redemption really is. That's in the Passover, in the moving out of Egypt, of Moses delivering the people. And here the most frequent use of the word holy begins with the Passover. We find this word really begins to be accelerated and brought to us over and over twice. Once in Genesis, not again until Exodus do we find this word. But from the Passover onward, we really begin to see the use of this word. In the feast of the unleavened bread, we have the symbol of the putting off of the old and putting on of the new to which redemption through the blood is to lead. There in the Passover. Now, the seven days we read these words. In the first day, there shall be a holy convocation. Dealing with the Passover now and the leaving out of Egypt and the one they celebrated all the way through. It was a type of Christ coming, redeeming. That Passover was kept as a part of the Jewish system of religion, and now they're back there. It's kept again. The sacrifices, I don't know what's been offered again yet, the animal sacrifices, but there certainly will be again all of it in the keeping of the Passover. And in the first day, he says, there shall be, what? A holy convocation. In the seventh day again, he says, there shall be a holy convocation. Now, the meeting of the redeemed people to commemorate its deliverance is a holy gathering. That's what he's saying. Israel redeemed out of Israel. They are commemorating this. And, of course, you know all of the nations involved in the history of Israel, the very name and the place has great significance in the spiritual world. Egypt is a type of the world. Ethiopia is a type of the darkened understanding. Tyre is the commercial, Babylon. All of this has to do with those things that interfere with God's people being what they should be. And now, here as we see Israel as a type, they're delivered out of Egypt. And they gather together to commemorate the deliverance. And God says it's a holy gathering because He's there. They meet under the covering of the Redeemer, their Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel. They meet under the covering of Him. Now, as soon as the people have been redeemed from Egypt, God's very first word to them was this. Listen. In Exodus 13 and 2, He says, Sanctify, make holy unto Me all the firstborn. It is Mine. That's the first words that God gives to them after they come out of Egypt. Sanctify or make holy the firstborn. It's Mine. Now, this word reveals how proprietorship is one of the central thoughts both in redemption and in sanctification, the link that binds the whole thing together, the ownership, God. Amen. It is Mine. And it is here that we see it. And though the word is here only used to the firstborn, they're regarded as a type of the whole people. You know, the tithe, the giving of the tithe, if we really understood, amen, what God is saying with the tithe, you know, we say, well, that belongs to God. But that's the first fruit of everything that belongs to God. I mean, I give my tithe. I bring my tithe into the storehouse of God. And I give that. I'm saying that I pledge the whole night and the rest of it to God also. I'm His. So the bulk of that has to go to keep body and soul together. He knows that. But it's His. And if we understand that, that we're His, so whatever we have is His, then there's no problem in God getting from us what He uses of ours. And so though this is the firstborn, here it is also representative of the whole people of God. We know how all growth and organization commenced from a center around which is ever-widening circles in the life, as the life of the organism spreads, begins. And if holiness in the human race is to be true and real, free as that of God, it must be the result of a self-appropriating development. It must be. If holiness is going to be. Now, as we see this, and what it is in redemption, what a marvelous thing. So the firstborn are sanctified. Afterward, the priests in their place as a type of what the whole people is to be as God's firstborn among many nations, and His peculiar treasure is an holy nation, a holy nation. That is a nation that God can live in. Now, Peter talked about the church as being a holy nation because the church is to be the habitation of God. And we saw this over and over again that the only thing that makes holy is God being in that very thing. Whatever God joins Himself to is holy. Is that right? And so it is a holy nation that we have here. Now, the idea of ownership or proprietorship as related to redemption and sanctification comes out with special clearness when God speaks of the exchange of the priests for the firstborn. In Numbers 3, verses 12 and 13, He said, The Levites are wholly given unto me. Instead of the firstborn, have I taken them unto me. For all the firstborn are mine. In the day of it I smote every firstborn in the land of Egypt. I sanctified them for myself. I separated that firstborn for myself. Now, God now has taken the Levites in that place unto Himself. The Levites, the priests. You see, now, if we could try to realize here the relation existing, the relation now existing between redemption and holiness. Now, in the garden or in paradise, we saw what God sanctifying the seventh day was. That is, God entered into it and rested. We saw how God went out of Himself and for six days created. On the seventh day He came back into Himself. The Bible said, used the term for us, rested. But it don't mean He laid down and took a nap because God never slumbers or sleeps. He doesn't get fatigued or tired in that way, but meant God entered into it. That's what made it holy. Now, He took possession of it, that seventh day. He blessed it. He rested in it and refreshed Himself, so to speak. Now, where God enters and rests, there is what? Holiness. Wherever God enters and rests, there is holiness. Now, the more perfectly the object is fitted for Him to enter and dwell, then, of course, the more perfect the holiness. That certainly applies then to the church as it moves into the spiritual, the more perfect. Now, the seventh day was sanctified as a period for man's sanctification. This is, that's what it was all about, that He come and gave Himself on that day holy unto God. They stoned a man to death for picking up sticks on the Sabbath day. That's not just a violation of a day, but that's a violation of the very holiness of God, you see. That's the reason the punishment was so severe unto that human being because God had entered into that. And now when a man, that Sabbath day was given to man as a period for man's sanctification, and to violate that was to violate the very holiness of God. Now, at the very first step God took to lead him to His holiness, the command not to eat of the tree, the very first command that God gave man to lead him into that holiness was that command not to eat of the tree. Man fell. Man fell, he failed the test, he fell. But God did not give up His plan, but have now to pursue it along a different and a slower path to sanctification, one that involved a lifetime of a human being, the total sanctification of that human. I said to you that now sanctification and holiness are convertible terms. It's the same thing. The word saint means holy. We're called to be saints and it simply means that we're called to be holy. Sanctification is both progressive and instantaneous. Christ is our sanctification. In redemption we receive Christ, but it's a lifetime of walking with Him to be made into His likeness. So it is a more slower path. After 25 centuries, slow but needful preparation, He now reveals Himself as the Redeemer, as the Redeemer. A people whom He had chosen and formed for Himself, He gives up to oppression and slavery that their hearts may be prepared for a long and welcome delivery, 2,500 years. And during the course of time He allowed those people to go into slavery, bondage and misery that they passed through. You know, the more that I contemplate the thought, God says, I will supply your every need. You know what the need is for? Conform you to Christ. There is nothing else incorporated in that, folks. What every takes to conform us to Christ is the need that God will supply. Amen. You can't make that just material thing. He said, I've never saw the righteous forsaken or a seed begging bread. They may be without caviar, but they'll have bread. Amen. He knows what we need. But God's need is what every takes to conform Joe to Jesus Christ, to that image. Whatever. Or Clint Bennett or Jerome or whoever. Whatever. That need. For Paul, it took a messenger of Satan. For Joseph, it took a trip to an Egyptian jail. Amen. All of this in God supplying the need. And we'll discover one day how merciful He was. No wonder He said through much tribulation we enter into the kingdom. That's not the great tribulation. That's not God's wrath poured out on us. But that is the squeezing. God puts the gospel, the life on the inside. And He puts the pressure on the outside. And there isn't any other way that it can work. No other way that it can work. Now, God had chosen. He allowed them to go through the series of slavery and oppression. Then in a series of great wonders, He proves Himself to be the conqueror of all of their enemies. And then in the blood of the Paschal Lamb on their doors now, teaches them what redemption is. Not only from the unjust oppressor upon this earth, but from the righteous judgment that their own sins deserve. God teaches them there. They are no better than the Egyptians as far as their sins. They, they, they, if it had not been for that blood, then the firstborn of Egypt dies also. The firstborn of Israel dies also. Without that blood on the door. Amen. I know it's, you know, it's a difficult, you know, when we say I'm a sinner saved by grace. And I heard a man going great lengths saying I'm not a sinner, you know, but it's simply because he wasn't understanding what's being said here. If there is no blood on that door, when that death angel passed through Egypt, then that Jewish baby will die. The firstborn of every animal in that house will die. Everything will die and left as blood there. But they learned about redemption that night not only from the hand of a cruel earthly tyrant, but also deliverance from their own sins for which they ought to have died. That blood. They are learning. You see what I'm saying? Amen. That you and I, we learn about this holiness in redemption. Amen. God chose them. Now the Passover is to be to them at all time the transition from the seen and the temporal to the unseen and the spiritual. That's what it's supposed to be. It's supposed to minister this. Revealing God not only as the mighty, but as the Holy One. Freeing them not only from the house of bondage, but from the destroying angel of death that's passing through that night. This is moving from the seen to the unseen. From the temporal to the spiritual. That's the whole of it. That's what happened at Calvary when Jesus said it's finished. It literally means it's perfected and man can move now from the temporal to the spiritual. From the seen to the unseen. To what we were speaking of a moment ago. We are pilgrims and strangers here. What we look at in that world out there and deem good may not be good at all folks when it's the overall picture. That has to grip our minds or else we're always governed by the world about us. Amen. I just never had the revelation of Romans 8, 29 until recently. I knew it said all things work together for good to them that love God. Amen. I realize now whatever it is the tight money policy the hard time policy the difficulties every single thing that comes and touches my life as I walk with God is good for me. I do not have an enemy on this earth. Paul three times he prayed God get this thing off of my back. Amen. But God said to him my grace is sufficient. I have supplied you with that messenger of darkness. Amen. Else you would be exalted and be lost. So all the time in the jails fighting the beasts of Ephesus all of it is a part of it to keep the man sanctified so they can write over half of the New Testament Scripture. Boy that doesn't fit today's theology does it? My my that sure doesn't fit in with today's theology. That isn't the way it's said but that's the way it is anyway. Amen. Now having thus redeemed them through that Passover he tells them that they are now what? His own. He bought them. He brought them out. Moses didn't. God brought them out. What does he say to them? You are mine. The firstborn is mine. That just meant the people are mine. Said the firstborn of every animal out there is mine. That meant everything you got is mine. He said the firstborn of an ass you'll either redeem it or break its neck. That's because everything is mine. I bought you. You still belong to that Pharaoh down there the devil. You'd never got out. You'd be making bricks for him from now on. But I brought you out. And when he brought them out redeemed them he said to them you're mine. That means he drove home to us. Because we live like we are our own. I said we live like we are our own. That our time is ours. That our money is ours. And what we do is of no business to God. But if you're saved this morning you belong to God. You're not saved you belong to the devil. And you're doing what he tells you to do. I mean your whole life has been steered by him. Or else if you're God then he says you're my own. Now during their stay at Sinai in the wilderness the thought is continually pressed upon them that there are now the Lord's people. You go read that account again and you'll see how much he pressed this upon that brain. That they are now the Lord's people whom he's made his own by the strength of his arm that he may take them and make them holy for himself and as the scripture said even as he is holy. Not a different kind of holiness but there to be holy as he is holy. God took them to himself. Now he took possession of it. Amen. He blessed it the seventh day because he got into it. Now he's brought them out redeemed them. They're the Lord's. They're his possession. And over and over again God reminds them that they are to be holy as he is holy. Now the purpose of redemption is possession and the purpose of possession is the likeness to him who is redeemer and owner. His holiness. He possesses them to make them into his own image. The same holiness that is in God must be found in us. Amen. Now in regards to his holiness and the way it is to be obtained as a result of redemption there is more than one lesson the sanctifying firstborn I believe will teach us as we look at Israel the sanctifying. Now first of all you and I want to realize how inseparable redemption and holiness are. We have some kind of a grotesque creature that we want to call Christian today that is supposed to be saved yet goes on serving the devil hasn't made Christ his Lord yet. Now we've really led ourselves to believe that such a thing is possible. But let me remind you this morning that the narrow gate doesn't happen ten years down the road that's where you get in at. Holiness and redemption are inseparable. You cannot separate the two. Neither can exist without the other. You cannot have redemption without holiness and you certainly cannot have holiness without redemption. Is that right? There's no way that that can be. Only redemption leads to holiness. If I'm seeking holiness I must abide in the clear and full experience of being a redeemed person and as such of being owned and possessed by God. I must ever remind myself that I am owned by another. I'm not my own. I've been bought with a price from the hand of the devil and I'm not my own and as I seek after holiness I must remember this. Redemption is too often looked at from its negative side as deliverance from but its real glory is the positive element of being redeemed unto himself. You know Lorene, we have trouble in our flesh with the message of self-denial. That's a repugnant thing to the to the carnal nature. But you know, when I realize that self-denial is simply my turning loose of the lesser that I may have the greater there is no other grounds that I can have it on. Amen. I must decrease if God is to increase and the loosing of the lesser is only to gain the fuller. Full possession of a house means occupation doesn't it? That means occupation. Yes sir. If I own a house without occupying it, it may be the home of all that's evil and foul. I had one time when I came here, I bought a little house the Downey brothers had a model they sold it to me for $3,000 had a little log, I moved it on and we lived there we built us a house but I still for a long time owned that little house and I rented it to a fella and I'm telling you when I finally threw him out I had to pull a carpet up and throw it out. You never saw such a foul spirit been in that house Amen. If I own a house and don't occupy that house that house can be full with all kinds of foul and evil spirit. Is that right? God has redeemed me made me his own with the viewing of getting complete possession of me of occupying me you you is that right? Amen a possession he says of my soul it is mine and he seeks to have his right of ownership acknowledged and made fully manifest by every last one of us. Now that will be perfect holiness where God has entered in to complete the entire possession when all has been dealt with and moved and God has total possession that will be perfect holiness it is redemption and in redemption and it is redemption rather that gives God his right and power over me you know it's something when we act like we've done God a favor by letting him save us and that's our attitude. You listen testimony some folks I've been those that's run on testimony and you hear them talk about all the money they've got and what a favor they've done God by letting him by coming in to his kingdom before I was saved I was a slave to the devil you couldn't have told me that while I was out there but the minute I got in that altar I knew I was. The minute I took that package of cigarettes out of my pocket I knew because I put them back in there. Amen I fought darkness and demons and still fighting hope that he's got in pocket areas of our lives. Is that right? A guerilla warfare going on all the time Amen. Inside pockets and areas of that rotten world that we've been redeemed from. Amen. If we just realize that it is in redemption that God's right of ownership comes because he bought you back from the devil He bought you. He paid a price for you. That means he owns you. It is redemption that sets me free for God now to possess and bless Is that right? It is redemption realized and filling my soul and spirit that will bring me the assurance and experience of all his power will work in me The reason that you and I as a church do not perform as Jesus performed is just one reason because we are not what he was. Sanctification the process of it is to make us what he was and to the degree that we're made what he was we'll do what he did because what he did didn't come out of merely what he said. It was out of what he was Anybody could repeat his sermons. Why those preachers in the ninth chapter of Mark couldn't cast that devil out. They tried They saw him do it I'm sure they went through the same routine he did. Yes sir Come out, but he didn't come out. So it wasn't words It's what he was. When they stood there as Christ, the devil come out. And they said why couldn't we cast this one out and that question was we did it before why can't we do it now because you lost something that's what he was saying You're trying to do it in your own name your own name In God, redemption and sanctification are one Oh, if you don't hear nothing else this morning hear that. In God redemption and sanctification are one. Amen Redemption is sanctification begun. The sanctifier comes in. But in in regeneration is continued until one day I awake in his likeness. Oh hallelujah. My my that's the excitement of Christianity Thank God one day awake in his likeness. Amen The more redemption as a divine reality possesses me, the closer I'm linked to the Redeemer God, the Holy One The more that redemption possesses me and that's the process of sanctification then the closer I come to the Holy One and just so, only holiness brings the assurance and enjoyment of redemption Only holiness does that I'm seeking the whole fast redemption on the lower ground the lower level I may be deceived probably will be if I'm trying to hold it there. Amen If I become unwatchful or careless, I ought to tremble at the idea of trusting in redemption apart from holiness as its object. Ought to be a great fear. Take a hold of it Just coming to church on a Sunday morning ain't gonna make it folks. I must have the end results of redemption must be holiness Amen. Set apart under God. Which just simply means possessed by God God entered into that Sabbath. He sanctified it God enters into me. He sanctifies me. And the whole process is to possess you Amen. Possess you. Make you totally absolutely His own Amen. Oh my if we could know to God, to Israel rather God said, I brought you up out of the land of Egypt. Therefore you should be holy for I am holy It is God, the Redeemer who made us His own who calls us to be holy Let holiness be to us the most essential and the most precious thing of redemption I said one thing we must repent of We have made happiness a greater criteria than holiness We've been more concerned about being happy than we have about being holy. Amen A second thing that I believe a lesson rather, that's suggested in the connection between God and man's working in sanctification Listen, to Moses the Lord speaks, sanctifying to me all the firstborn Afterward he says, I sanctified all the firstborn for myself Now what God does, He does to be carried out and appropriated through us God said to Moses, sanctify the firstborn unto me But He said, I have sanctified the firstborn unto myself. That's just saying to you and I, God has sanctified you unto Himself But He leaves it up to you to carry that out His purpose must be carried out by us Through our carelessness we can lose it or else we can have it. Amen When He tells us that we're made holy in Christ Jesus that we're His holy ones He speaks not only of His purpose but what He's really done That's not only, as far as God is concerned, that's what He's done We've been sanctified in the one offering of Christ or we'll never be sanctified at all We have been sanctified in the one offering of Christ and in our being created anew in Christ Jesus Amen. But this work has a human side Do you believe that? I said this work has a human side To us comes the call to be holy God said we're made holy in Christ but then comes the call to be holy, to follow after holiness, to perfect holiness This is all a part of it from our side When God sees us in Christ, then God reckons the experience of Christ to be ours And as we abide there, that's the sole thing we must do As we abide there then God works it out Hallelujah How marvelous that is, thank God He says I've sanctified all You and I must do it God has made us His own He's allowed us to say that we're His but He awaits for you and I now to yield Him and enlarge entrance into the secrets of our inmost being. Amen You know it's a marvelous thing that even in your imperfect state that God allows us to say to the world I'm God's and God is mine. But on those grounds of letting us say that God is waiting for us to open ourselves up for the greater work of holiness in our lives that He can possess it totally absolutely. He's made us His own in sanctification or in redemption that He might make Himself our own in sanctification. Amen This is God's way Our work in becoming holy is the bringing of our whole life every part of it, leaving not one hoof behind. Amen No, no, not one hoof behind, but the whole of it into that act and subjection to the rule of a holy God. That's exactly what He meant when He said Seek you first the kingdom of God. That is to seek the absolute rule of God over every part of our life, the whole of our being. It does not matter Amen. Nothing is to be left on the outside unsanctified. All is to be brought in It doesn't matter. You know I believe if my job won't allow me to be holy and live for God, then I must change that job Yes sir. I cannot be governed by this world or anything by it. Why? Because I don't belong to this world I have been bought I have been bought Amen. You know You own something You are the one that governs. I had a fella in the church here years ago and you know, I'd been here I had an old Nash First, I'd have been better off with a bicycle A fella had run into the side I couldn't get out on my side. I had to push it every morning to get it started. And when I go visit folks, I had to leave it running out in the drive because I couldn't get it going. And we struggled for years, you know, with all kinds of machines Finally in 1962 Amen. I got up enough faith and courage and I bought me a new car. A 1962 Buick LeSabre Amen. And a guy come to me and he said, we're going on a vacation and our car don't have an air condition and he said, wonder if you'd let us have yours I said, I don't believe. I don't want to be ugly But I said, I've sanctified this car to the Lord and I don't believe I'd do it. He got angry with me but I still didn't believe that I'd done wrong I mean, if he needed it for emergency or something, that'd have been one thing I'm just saying that is I own that car therefore I have the right to tell him whether he could or could not have that car or anybody else for that matter Well, God bought me He owns me and He has every right, every right to tell Bob Bontaine where he can go, what he can do what he can't do. God has every right If you don't allow Him to do that you are violating the terms on which you were redeemed on You're violating them and one day you'll have to answer to Him Amen. About all this He bought us Now our work in becoming as I said bring the whole body, the whole life in absolute subjection and this teaches us the answer to the question as to the connection between the sudden and the gradual sanctification. Now between it being a thing once for all complete and yet imperfect and needing to be perfected. Isn't that right? I mean on God's side it's once and all finished If you stay with God it's assured to happen as that sun comes up. So with God it's an absolute thing but with me there's a lot of working out to be done on my side So you have the absolute sudden eradication. The Bible says in the book of Romans They that are Christ have crucified the flesh. Is that what it says? But yet it says to you to mortify those things You see I believe that answers the question It does to my heart in explaining some of the greatest folks I know have an instantaneous sanctification I discovered they're right. Amen But they, you know But they must discover also that I'm right in the progressiveness of it. Because on God's side it's an instant When you was born again God looked at you. There was a finished product. On God's side. And if you stay with it then the working of that in you brings you to that fullness Hallelujah. Amen God's side of it When God sanctifies what God sanctifies is holy with a divine and perfect holiness as its gift Man has to sanctify by acknowledging and maintaining and carrying out that holiness in relation to what God has made holy. Man has to do that. God sanctified the Sabbath day. Man has to sanctify it. That is to keep it holy. Man had to. Amen. God sanctified the firstborn of His own Israel had to sanctify them to treat them and give them up to God as holy He sanctified them but Israel when that first calf was dropped had to take it and give it to God You and I. He sanctified us holy. But I must give Him everything about me I believe that ought to clear it in our minds as to sanctification and holiness and redemption God is holy We are to sanctify Him in acknowledging and adoring and honoring that holiness God has sanctified His great name His name is holy Now we sanctify and hallow that name as we fear and trust and use it as the revelation of His holiness We sanctify it. Hallelujah That's the only way it works God sanctified Christ God did Christ sanctified Himself manifesting in His personal will and action perfect conformity to the holiness which God had made Him holy. Christ as a man. Amen God has sanctified us in Christ Jesus. We are to be holy by yielding ourselves to the power of that holiness by acting it out and manifesting it in all of our life and walk all of it. The objective divine gift bestowed once for all completely must be appropriated by you and I to fulfill the purpose of God. On God's side it's a finished work On our side it's a lifetime of yielding ourselves to Him who makes holy Hallelujah. Sanctified or made holy in Christ is the most marvelous statement and to realize that we are called for this thing to be holy we are called to be holy. Be ye holy for I am holy is the very call of God upon our lives Let's lift our hands and love Him and thank Him for being here today
Holiness and Redemption
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Bertram H. Clendennen (1922–2009). Born on May 22, 1922, in Vidor, Texas, into a large, poor family, B.H. Clendennen, known as Bert, grew up with little exposure to faith, despite churches dotting his hometown. After graduating high school in 1940, he joined the U.S. Marines post-Pearl Harbor, serving in the South Pacific at Peleliu, where combat stirred spiritual questions. Saved in 1949 at age 27, he felt called to ministry in 1953 and was ordained by the Assemblies of God. In 1956, he founded Victory Temple (later Victory Tabernacle) in Beaumont, Texas, pastoring for 35 years and growing it into a missions-focused church. One of the first three preachers to broadcast on U.S. television, he reached wide audiences with his conservative Pentecostal sermons emphasizing repentance and the Holy Spirit’s power. In 1967, he ministered in Tanzania, raising funds to build 15 churches, and preached globally in Vietnam, Iran, India, and Zaire, often in perilous conditions. At 70, in 1992, he moved to Russia with his wife, Janice, founding the School of Christ International, which trained leaders in over 130 nations across every continent by his death. Clendennen authored books like The Prodigal Church and The Ultimate Thing, urging a return to Pentecost’s simplicity. He died on December 13, 2009, in Beaumont, survived by his wife, daughter Brenda, and son Mark. He said, “The purpose of Pentecost is to reproduce Christ in the believer.”