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Dougan Clark

Dougan Clark (January 26, 1828 – May 10, 1896) was an American preacher, physician, and author whose ministry emphasized holiness and the work of the Holy Spirit within the Quaker tradition. Born in New Vienna, Ohio, to Jesse and Anna Clark, he grew up in a devout Quaker family. He graduated from Haverford College in 1848 and pursued medical training at the University of Pennsylvania, earning an M.D. in 1852. Converted in his youth, he initially practiced medicine before fully dedicating himself to ministry, preaching in Quaker meetings across Ohio and beyond. Clark’s preaching career focused on sanctification and spiritual renewal, serving as a prominent voice in the Holiness movement among Friends. He taught at Earlham College in Richmond, Indiana, as Professor of Latin and Greek from 1868 to 1872, using his academic platform to preach and influence students. Author of books like The Offices of the Holy Spirit (1879) and The Theology of Holiness (1893), he emphasized the second blessing of entire sanctification, impacting evangelical thought. Married to Amy G. Allen in 1854, with whom he had several children, he died at age 68 in Richmond, Indiana, leaving a legacy of fervent preaching and theological writings within the Quaker and Holiness traditions.
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Dougan Clark preaches on the parallel between justification and sanctification, emphasizing that both are by God's grace, Christ's blood, and our faith. Just as we are justified by the grace of God and the blood of Christ, we are also sanctified by the same means. The vicarious sacrifice of Jesus Christ is the foundation of all gospel blessings, including justification and sanctification, and we are forever linked to His atonement for the cleansing of our hearts. The atoning sacrifice of Jesus not only removes our guilt but also aims at saving us from sin, leading to entire sanctification.
Sanctified by God the Son
As the source of our entire sanctification is in the unmerited love and grace of God the Father, so the ground of it is in the blood of Christ the Son. Justification and Sanctification are by no means identical, but as regards the origin, the ground, and the means, they are precisely parallel. We are told that justification is by grace, and, again, that it is by the blood of Jesus, and, still again, that it is by faith. It is, therefore, God’s grace, it is Christ’s blood, it is man’s faith by which we are justified. The originating cause of our justification is the grace of God. The procuring cause is the blood of Jesus Christ. The instrumental cause is our own faith. And all this is equally true of our entire sanctification. We are not justified in one way and sanctified in another. We are sanctified as well as justified by the grace of God. We are sanctified as well as justified by the blood of Christ. We are sanctified as well as justified by our own faith. All gospel blessings are founded upon the vicarious sacrifice of the Lord Jesus Christ. He “of God is made unto us wisdom and righteousness, (justification) and sanctification and redemption.” And sanctification, no more than justification, releases us from our dependence upon the atonement. If we are either justified or sanctified today it is not because we deserve it, but because Christ died for us. If we shall be either justified or sanctified at any future period of our eternity, it will not be because we deserve it but because Christ died for us. And so forever and forever we shall need the merit of His death, and we shall rejoice to join in the song of redemption “unto Him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in His own blood, and hath made us kings and priests unto God and His Father; to Him be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.” We are everlastingly linked to the atonement of Jesus Christ, and this both for the pardon of past sins, and the entire cleansing of the heart. “Thou shalt call His name Jesus because He shall save His people from their sins,” which signifies, I apprehend, both the forgiveness of sins already committed and saving them from the commission of sins in the future. Here, then, we have justification and regeneration. “Behold the Lamb of God who taketh away the sin of the world.” This must mean the sin of our nature, the sin that dwelleth in us, the sin that doth so easily beset us, in a word, inbred sin. And to have the inbred sin taken away means nothing more and nothing less and nothing else, than entire sanctification. Yes, beloved, we are sanctified by God the Son. “The blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, cleanseth us from all sin.” Here we have a positive statement that upon certain conditions to be fulfilled by us, we shall experience a cleansing from outward sin, and inward sin, and sin of ignorance, and conscious sin, and open sin and secret sin, and all sin. There is no mistaking the length and breadth and all comprehensiveness of this glorious promise. Beloved, let us walk in the light as He is in the light, and so know, for ourselves, that this wondrous declaration is divinely true. And this is a result of His atoning sacrifice, which result He had in view, no less than the removal of our guilt when He laid down His life for us. “Wherefore, Jesus, also, that He might sanctify the people with His own blood, suffered without the gate.” Glory to His Name. He died, therefore, not alone that we might be saved from guilt and condemnation and penalty, but that we might be saved from sin, or sanctified wholly. And I would that every one of my Christian readers might unite in the hymn. “The cleansing stream I see, I see, I plunge and oh, it cleanseth me. It cleanseth me. Yes, cleanseth me.”
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Dougan Clark (January 26, 1828 – May 10, 1896) was an American preacher, physician, and author whose ministry emphasized holiness and the work of the Holy Spirit within the Quaker tradition. Born in New Vienna, Ohio, to Jesse and Anna Clark, he grew up in a devout Quaker family. He graduated from Haverford College in 1848 and pursued medical training at the University of Pennsylvania, earning an M.D. in 1852. Converted in his youth, he initially practiced medicine before fully dedicating himself to ministry, preaching in Quaker meetings across Ohio and beyond. Clark’s preaching career focused on sanctification and spiritual renewal, serving as a prominent voice in the Holiness movement among Friends. He taught at Earlham College in Richmond, Indiana, as Professor of Latin and Greek from 1868 to 1872, using his academic platform to preach and influence students. Author of books like The Offices of the Holy Spirit (1879) and The Theology of Holiness (1893), he emphasized the second blessing of entire sanctification, impacting evangelical thought. Married to Amy G. Allen in 1854, with whom he had several children, he died at age 68 in Richmond, Indiana, leaving a legacy of fervent preaching and theological writings within the Quaker and Holiness traditions.