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STUDY XI
THE HOLY SPIRIT OF AT-ONE-MENT
SUPPOSED OBJECTIONS CONSIDERED
Apparently Contradictory Scriptures Examined--Quench not the Spirit--
Grieve not the Holy Spirit--The Spirit of Truth--The Comforter--
Filled with the Holy Spirit--Lying to the Holy Spirit--Tempting the
Spirit of the Lord--Sin Against the Holy Spirit--"The Spirit Said"--
"It Seemed Good to the Holy Spirit"--"Forbidden of the Holy
Ghost"--"The Holy Ghost Witnesseth"--"The Holy Ghost hath
Made You Overseers"--The Holy Spirit a Teacher--"An Unction from
the Holy One"--The Spirit Maketh Intercessions with Groanings--
How the Spirit Reproves the World--"Hereby Know Ye the Spirit of
God" from "The Spirit of Antichrist."
IN CONSEQUENCE of the translating of the Scriptures
having been done by Trinitarians (both the Common Version
and the Revised) many passages have been given a
bias or twist which causes an apparent disagreement between
some of these and what we have seen foregoing to be
the Scriptural as well as the reasonable view of the subject
under discussion--that the holy Spirit of the Father and by
the Son is in the Lord's people the Spirit of at-one-ment.
We will, therefore, now take up a variety of scriptures--all
that we can think of as likely to be confusing to the minds of
many. Let us examine these together, with our hearts fully
loyal to the Word of God, and desirous of being led by the
Spirit of Truth: then we will proceed to other phases of the
subject, which cannot so well be understood until these supposed
objections are removed.
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"Quench Not the Spirit"
1 Thess. 5:19
To quench signifies to extinguish, as when we quench a
fire, or extinguish a light. The Greek word here rendered
"quench" occurs eight times in the New Testament, and in
every other instance it refers to quenching fire or light.
Carrying this thought with us, let us remember that by reason
of our possession of the holy Spirit or mind of God, enlightening
us, we are called "the light of the world" (Matt. 5:14):
thus we see that the Apostle meant that if we should
be seduced into worldliness by the spirit of the world, the
effect would be to extinguish or quench the light of the holy
mind or Spirit of God in us, and shining from us upon others.
In harmony with this is our Lord's expression, "If the
light that is in thee become darkness [be extinguished], how
great is that darkness." Matt. 6:23
"Grieve Not the Holy Spirit of God,
Whereby Ye Are Sealed unto the Day of Redemption"
Eph. 4:30
To seal signifies to mark or designate. The children of
this world may be distinguished by certain marks, and the
children of God, the new creatures in Christ, by other
marks or characteristics. The mark of the one class is the
spirit (mind, disposition, will) of the world; in the other
class the seal or mark is of the Spirit (mind, disposition,
will) of God. From the moment of true consecration to God,
the evidence, marks or sealing may be noted in the words,
thoughts and conduct. These marks grow more and more
distinct as the new mind grows in grace, knowledge and
love. In other words, the Spirit (mind) of God becomes our
mind or spirit, in proportion as we give up our human will
or spirit, and submit in all things to the will or Spirit of
God. Thus we are exhorted to permit or let the same mind
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be in us which was also in Christ Jesus our Lord--a mind or
disposition to do only the Father's will. Hence, our new
mind or Spirit is holy or God-directed. In the text under
consideration the Apostle urges that we do nothing which
would be a violation of our covenant--that we do nothing
to cause grief to our new minds or smiting of conscience
from dereliction of duty--nothing that would wound our
conscience, as new creatures in Christ. Grieve not the holy
Spirit, mind of God, in you, which is your seal of divine
sonship.
"The Spirit of the Truth"
"The Spirit of Truth...shall not speak of himself, but whatsoever he
shall hear he shall speak, and he will show you things to come." John 16:13
This scripture has already had consideration on page 170,
but some additional features require consideration here.
The disciples, as Jews and natural men, had been looking at
matters from an earthly standpoint, expecting a human deliverance,
and an earthly kingdom in the hands of fallen
men. Our Lord had talked to them concerning the Kingdom
of God, but not until now had he explained that he
must die, must leave them, and go into a far country, to receive
the Kingdom authority, and to return to establish his
Kingdom and glorify his faithful ones with himself as joint-heirs
in that Kingdom. (Luke 19:12) Consoling them, in
view of the disappointment awakened by his declaration,
he assures them that they shall not be left wholly alone, but
that as the Father had sent him to do a work, so, during his
absence, the Father would send another Comforter, in his
name, or as his representative for the time. They must not
get the idea that the coming Comforter is to be another
Messiah, or a different teacher; hence he says, "He shall not
speak of himself"; he shall not teach independently and out
of harmony with my teaching, which you already have received;
"but whatsoever he shall hear that shall he speak."
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That is to say, this Comforter will be merely a channel of
communication between the Father and myself, on the one
hand, and you, my faithful followers, on the other: the
Spirit of Truth, as my representative, will elaborate and
bring to your attention more particularly various truths
which I have already stated to you, but which you are not
yet prepared to clearly comprehend--which, indeed, it is
not proper for you to understand until first I shall have paid
your ransom, and have ascended into the Father's presence,
and presented it before him on your behalf. Then in harmony
with the Father's plan, I shall be enabled, through
this Comforter, to communicate to you the spiritual things,
for which you are now unprepared, and to which now,
being not yet atoned for, you have no right. And as future
things become due to be understood by you, this Spirit of
the Father, my Spirit, sent in my name, and as a result of
my redemptive work, shall guide you step by step into the
full understanding of everything necessary and proper for
you to understand--"He [the Father's holy Spirit, influence
or power] shall glorify me, for he shall receive of mine, and
shall show it unto you. All things that the Father hath are
mine [his plans and mine are in perfect union]; therefore
said I that he shall take of mine and show it unto you."
You are not, therefore, to expect a new teaching, subversive
of my teaching, but rather a further development and
instruction along the lines of my teaching: for all the teachings
of the coming Comforter will be in harmony with
mine, and designed to show you more fully that I am the
Messiah. Neither need you doubt the truth of this Comforter's
teachings, for it is the very Spirit of Truth, and proceeds
from the Father. This Spirit of Truth will be my
messenger to communicate to you my doctrines, and will
show you things to come. John 16:13
And thus it has been: the Spirit of Truth has been showing
to the Church throughout this Gospel age more and
more respecting the sufferings of Christ and the necessity
for every member of his "body" to share them, and the
pathway that we should take in following our Redeemer
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and Lord: showing us also the height of the glory of his reward,
and our privilege of becoming "heirs of God, joint-heirs
with Jesus Christ our Lord, if so be that we suffer with
him, that we may be also glorified together." Jehovah, the
Father of all, is the Author of all this truth, and hence all
that we have received throughout this age has proceeded
from him, from whom cometh every good and every perfect
gift. He has sent it through channels long since prepared--
through the prophetic and typical teachings of the past
opened up to us through the inspired words of our Lord
Jesus and his inspired apostles: and by receiving of the holy
Spirit in our hearts, and by conduct into harmony with the
Father's Word and plan, we are enabled to appreciate the
things which God hath in reservation for them that love
him, and to walk by faith and not by sight.
"But the Comforter, Which Is the Holy Ghost,
Whom the Father Will Send in My Name"
--John 14:26--
We have already examined this misleading word "ghost"
(page 169), but we now notice the statement that the holy
Spirit is to be sent by the Father, which indicates that it is
an influence or power wholly under the Father's control;
and not another being equal in power and glory, as the
creeds of men falsely assert. All of God's powers are fully
under his own control, as our powers are under our control,
and hence the declaration that the Father would send his
Spirit, or, as the prophet has expressed it, "I will put my
Spirit within thee." Moreover, the holy Spirit is declared to
have been sent in Jesus' name--just as a servant is sent in the
name of his master and not in his own name. Here we have
another contradiction of the unscriptural theory of three
Gods of equal power and glory. Here the Father's superiority
is clearly stated: the holy Spirit is the Father's Spirit,
power, influence, sent at the instance and in the name of
our Redeemer, Jesus. Why in the name of Jesus? Because
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the entire work of redemption and restitution of sinners, the
entire work of Atonement, has been committed unto the
Son, and the holy Spirit of the Father is the channel by
which the Son operates in conferring the blessings purchased
by his precious blood.
When the holy Spirit of the Father came upon our Lord
Jesus at his baptism and consecration, it was a comfort indeed,
a great blessing, but it nevertheless meant to him the
sacrifice of every earthly aim and hope in the execution of
the divine plan. Had our Lord been otherwise minded, self-willed
and self-seeking, the guidance of the holy Spirit, instead
of being comforting to him, would have been disquieting;
his heart would have been full of dissatisfaction,
discontent, rebellion. And so it is with the Lord's people:
the more of the mind of the Lord the natural man can discern,
the more unhappy and uncomfortable he becomes,
because it conflicts with his spirit, mind or will, and reproves
him. But the "new creature in Christ," whose own
will is dead, and who seeks to know the Father's will, and to
do it--to him the clear apprehension of the Father's will
and plan and the leading of divine providence in connection
with the instruction of the divine Word, are comforting
indeed--bringing peace, joy and contentment, even
in the midst of tribulations and persecutions. In harmony
with this thought is the Apostle's declaration respecting the
Word of truth, whose Spirit must be received and appreciated
in order to give comfort. He says, "Whatsoever
things were written aforetime were written for our admonition,
that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures
might have hope." Rom. 15:4
"Filled with the Holy Spirit"
"They were all filled with the holy Spirit, and began to speak with
tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance." Acts 2:4
This text describes a twofold operation of the holy Spirit:
(1) It was the mind, disposition, Spirit of God, operating in
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the disciples, as the Spirit of adoption, bringing their hearts
into closeness of sympathy and touch with the Father and
with the glorified Redeemer. (2) God's holy Spirit or power
or influence acted also upon them, conferring special miraculous
gifts for a testimony to the world, and for the establishment
of the Church. While it would be unreasonable
in the extreme to think of a God getting personally into one
man, and still more unreasonable to think of God getting
personally into a hundred, a thousand, or a million men,
there is not the slightest unreasonableness in the thought
that the power of the Highest, the power, the influence
of Jehovah could be in and upon hundreds, thousands
or millions without in anywise interfering with
the personal presence of Jehovah upon the throne of the
universe.
Lying to the Holy Spirit
"Peter said, Ananias, why hath Satan filled thy heart, to lie to the holy
Spirit, and to keep back part of the price of the land?" Acts 5:3
Satan filled Ananias' heart in the same manner as God
fills the hearts of his people--by his Spirit, his influence. Satan's
Spirit is one of covetousness and selfishness, which
does not hesitate at deceit to accomplish its ends. Peter, who
had been made the recipient of a special "gift of discerning
of spirits," was able to read the heart, to read the mind, and
thus could see that Ananias and Sapphira were acting dishonestly,
pretending to do what they were not really doing.
It will be noticed, in this connection, that the Apostle uses
the words "God" and "holy Spirit" interchangeably,
saying, in verse 3, that they had lied unto the holy Spirit,
and, in verse 4, that they had lied unto God. The thought is
the same. God's holy Spirit, acting through the apostles,
was God's representative, most emphatically; and consequently,
in lying to the apostles who represented God and
his holy Spirit, Ananias and Sapphira were lying to God,
lying to the holy Spirit of God, whose agent and representative
Peter was.
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Tempting the Holy Spirit
"Then Peter said unto her [Sapphira], How is it that ye have agreed
together to tempt the Spirit of the Lord?" Acts 5:9
This is to be understood in the same way as the foregoing,
but the same Spirit is here referred to as being "the Spirit of
the Lord," by which the Apostle probably meant the Lord
Jesus. We can readily see the reasonableness of this also.
The Spirit of the Father, the holy Spirit, was especially in
the Church, the representative of the Church's Lord or
Head--operating through the mind of his "body"--in this
instance his Spirit-inspired and actuated Apostle.
Sin Against the Holy Spirit
"Whosoever speaketh against the holy Spirit, it shall not be forgiven
him, neither in this world, neither in the world to come." Matt. 12:32
The thought generally deduced from this statement by
those who consider the holy Spirit to be a personal God,
separate and distinct from the Father and the Son, is that
the holy Spirit is a much more important personage than
either the Father or the Son. But as we have already seen,
the Scriptures nowhere acknowledge more than one God,
the Father, of whom are all things, and he superior to all;
and one Lord, Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and he
next to the Father, exalted to that position by the Father's
power. The holy Spirit was of the Father and by the Son,
and hence could not be superior to them, if a person; but we
have seen that there is no personality connected with the
holy Spirit; rather it is the Spirit of a person or being, the
Spirit of the Lord, his influence, his power, and, in this sense
of the word, himself, representative of all his wisdom, majesty,
power and love. Let us see, then, what the passage does
signify.
From the context, we notice that our Lord Jesus had just
been using this divine power, or holy Spirit, conferred upon
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him by the Father, to cast out a devil. The Pharisees who
saw the miracle, and could not deny it, sought to turn aside
its force by claiming that it was performed by Satanic
power. In reply to them our Lord distinctly disclaimed the
power he used as being his own, and asserts that it was divine
power or influence, saying, "I cast out devils by the
Spirit of God." He then upbraided the Pharisees for being
so malicious as to attribute to an evil source that which they
could not deny was a good work, and accompanied by no
evidence whatever of sin, selfishness, or even ambition. He
denominates them a generation of vipers, so set upon the
traditions of their church that their minds were blinded to
most simple and manifest truths. It was plainly evident that
the power or influence which had possessed the afflicted one
was devilish, malignant; and that any power which would
dispossess it must be out of harmony with that evil disposition,
so that these teachers were inexcusable, when they
claimed, without any cause, that the miracle was performed
by the power of Satan.
Our Lord pointed out further, that although they had
not intentionally blasphemed Jehovah, nor had they particularly
blasphemed himself, they had blasphemed
against the holy power or Spirit which was operating in him.
For them to have misunderstood and misrepresented the
invisible God would have been a much lighter offense; and
to have spoken evil of our Lord Jesus and to have misinterpreted
his motives, claiming that he was merely trying
to usurp a throne and to exalt himself in power, would also
have been a comparatively light offense--measuring his
motives by their own selfish ambition and pride. But their
conduct was worse: after they had witnessed the manifestation
of divine power in performing a good deed for the relief
of one of their fellow-creatures from the power of the
devil--to blaspheme this holy power, meant a degree of
wickedness and animosity of heart of much deeper dye than
either of the other offenses would have implied.
Our Lord pointed out to them that in their ignorance
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and blindness they might have misinterpreted him, his
words, his efforts; and in similar blindness they might have
misinterpreted many of God's dealings, and spoken evil
thereof; but when once the power of God had been witnessed
by them, in direct contrast with the power of the devil, the
fact that they spoke evil of it implied most unmistakably
that their hearts were in a most unholy condition. Sins of
ignorance may be forgiven men--will be forgiven men--
because the ignorance came through the fall, and a ransom
has been paid for all who shared in the fall and its curse.
But sins against clear manifestations of divine grace cannot
be attributed to weakness of the flesh and heredity, but
must be properly charged up as wilful viciousness of the
heart, which is unforgivable.
Wilful, intentional evil will never have forgiveness--neither
in this age, nor in the coming age. God's proposition is
not to force men into harmony with himself; but after redeeming
them he will furnish to all an opportunity of coming
to a knowledge of the truth and witnessing the goodness
of God through the operation of his holy Spirit: whoever
then continues out of harmony with the divine arrangement
proves himself a wilful sinner, an intelligent opponent
of the holy power of God--for such the Lord has no further
provisions of grace.
Whether or not the Scribes and Pharisees came to a sufficiently
clear appreciation of God's holy power to constitute
them amenable to the Second Death, for reproaching it as
an evil power, we cannot judge. We are not able to judge,
because we are unable to read their hearts, and because our
Lord did not fully state the matter in this connection. If assured
they sinned against clear light, sinned to the full
against the power of God, we could have no further hope
for them, but should merely expect them to perish in the
Second Death, as wilful rejectors of God's grace. But if they
did not receive a sufficiency of light and knowledge, sufficient
contact with the holy power of God, to constitute for
them a full trial, they must ultimately come to such a full
trial, before they could suffer the full penalty--Second Death.
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But every sin against the holy Spirit, against clear light
and knowledge of divine power, is unforgivable, because wilful.
If it be a wilful sin against a measure of light, then
"stripes," punishment, will result, unavoidably; if it be wilful
sin against a larger measure of light and a greater favor
in connection with the holy power of God, then a greater
measure of stripes; but if the transgression involves a full,
clear conception of right and wrong, and full, knowing opposition
to the holy power of God, it would mean everlasting
destruction, the Second Death, the full wages of sin.
The forgiveness of sins secured by the ransom covers sins of
ignorance or weakness resulting from the fall, and not personal,
wilful, deliberate sins against light. We are not to forget,
however, that many sins which contain a measure of
wilfulness blend with it a measure of weakness or of ignorance
of right principles or of both. To the proportion of its
ignorance and weakness any sin is forgivable through the
grace of God in Christ--through faith in and acceptance of
his atonement: and to the proportion that any sin was wilful,
intentional sin it is unforgivable--must be expiated by
punishment--"stripes," so long as some forgivable quality
inheres in the sin; death, destruction, when no forgivable
quality can be found in the sin.
Thus seen, all wilful sin is sin against light, sin against the
holy Spirit of truth--and such sin hath never forgiveness.
"The Spirit Said Unto Philip,
Go Near, and Join Thyself to This Chariot"
--Acts 8:29--
Nothing associated with these words, nor with the context,
seems to imply the necessity for another God. On the
contrary, every requirement is met, and harmony with the
remainder of the Scriptures maintained, when we understand
that the Lord, by his Spirit, influence, power, directed
and instructed Philip to approach the chariot of
the eunuch. In what manner Philip was directed of the holy
Spirit we are not informed, and it would be unwise to speculate.
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Our God has at his disposal unlimited means for
communicating his wishes to his people. Compare verse 39.
"The Spirit Said Unto Him, Behold,
Three Men Seek Thee"--Acts 10:19
The same answer is applicable to this as to the preceding
objection. It is quite immaterial to us how the power, influence,
Spirit of God, addressed Peter, giving him this information.
It is sufficient that we know that the Lord did
direct the Apostle, and in such a manner that the Apostle
clearly discerned it, and that correctly, as is shown by the
sequel of the narrative.
"The Holy Ghost Said, Separate Me Barnabas
and Saul for the Work Whereunto
I Have Called Them"--Acts 13:2
Here, as in other instances, the holy Spirit uses the personal
and masculine form of expression, according to our
text. No objection certainly can be found to this, since God
everywhere uses the personal and masculine form of expression
respecting himself. It is not less appropriate here, in
speaking of Jehovah's power, and the information which he
gave. In what manner the holy Spirit communicated,
"said," or indicated the setting apart of Paul and Barnabas
we are not informed. We do know, however, that all the
Lord's consecrated people are called by his Spirit to be ministers
or servants of the truth, and according to their abilities
and opportunities they should be faithful and active
servants. The Spirit says to all such through the general
call, "Why stand ye here idle?...Go ye also into the
vineyard." And special ability and favorable opportunity
should be recognized as a special call of the Lord to more
public work in the service of the truth. But while the talents
possessed by Paul and Barnabas should be considered as
emphasizing the general call of the holy Spirit to them, to
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render services for which they had special talents, it is quite
probable that the holy Spirit at this time made use of one of
the "gifts" which were then operative in the Church--the
gift of prophecy--to indicate the Lord's will respecting Paul
and Barnabas, for we read: "Now there were in the Church
that was at Antioch certain prophets." Acts 13:1
We are to remember, however, the Apostle's words to the
Galatians (1:1)respecting his call to the ministry. He declares
that his authority came from the Father and the Son,
but entirely ignores the holy Spirit as another and coequal
God, saying: "Paul, an apostle, not of men, neither by man,
but by Jesus Christ, and God the Father who raised him
from the dead." If the holy Spirit were a person, if it were
the God, whose special providence it is to appoint the ministers
of the truth (and this is the general claim), such an
omission to mention the holy Spirit would be thoroughly
inconsistent, unreasonable; but when we have the proper
view of the holy Spirit, viz., that it is the Spirit, influence,
power, or authority of the Father and of the Son, or of both
conjointly, because their purposes are one, then all is harmonious
and reasonable.
"It Seemed Good to the Holy Spirit and
to Us"--Acts 15:28
The apostles met as a Conference, to answer the questions
of the Church at Antioch, respecting the obligations
to the Jewish or Law Covenant of those who were not Jews
by birth. The decision reached was, we are assured, not
merely the judgment of the apostles themselves; but additionally,
their judgment was corroborated in some manner
by the Lord, and they had the evidence that their decision
was the mind of the Lord, the Spirit of the Lord, the will of
the Lord.
The Apostle James, the chief speaker of the council, gives
a clue as to how God's will or mind was then ascertained:
and we find it the same method commended to the entire
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Church, and used by the faithful today; namely, through
searching the Scriptures in the light of divine Providence.
He reasons out the mind of the Lord on the subject, by reviewing
the special providential leading of Peter--sending
him to Cornelius, the first Gentile convert--he followed this
by an appeal to an unfulfilled prophecy, which he quotes.
The conclusion drawn from these, he and all the Church
accepted as the holy Spirit's teaching. Examine
Acts 15:13-18.
"Forbidden of the Holy Ghost to Preach
The Word in Asia"--Acts 16:6
The form of expression here would seem to imply the
common thought, that the holy Spirit is a person, and
spoke and forbade, etc. Yet an examination of this text in
the light of its context shows it to be in full accord with all
that we have seen on the subject: corroborating the thought
that the holy Spirit is the holy influence or power of Jehovah
God, and of our Lord Jesus Christ, by which the will of
the Father and the Son are brought to the attention of the
consecrated--whatever the process. We are not informed
specifically how the Apostle and his companions were forbidden
to prosecute the preaching work in Asia, but apparently
they were hindered or not permitted to go into Asia--
unfavorable circumstances preventing. But no matter how
they were hindered; the lesson is that God himself was guiding
his own work, and that the direction and course of the
apostles was a matter of divine supervision; they were directed
by the Lord's Spirit; he used invisible power to direct
them as his servants.
In any event, we may be sure that the Lord's guidance
was more than a mere mental impression to the Apostle. An
illustration of one of the Spirit's ways of leading in such
matters is furnished by the context: A vision appeared to
Paul in the night. There stood a man of Macedonia, and
prayed him, saying, Come over into Macedonia, and help
us; and after he had seen the vision, immediately they endeavored
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to go into Macedonia, assuredly gathering that the
Lord had called them to preach the Gospel unto them. (Verse 9)
These various dealings show us that the methods by which
God taught and led in those days were not so very different
from those he now employs in the guidance of his servants.
And all such indirect, non-personal instructions are properly
described as from or by the Lord's holy Spirit or influence
or power. Had an angel delivered the message, as to
Peter in prison (Acts 5:19; 12:7), or had our Lord addressed
Paul personally, as he did when he was on the way to Damascus
(Acts 9:4; 1 Cor. 15:8), it would not be
credited to
the holy Spirit or power of the Lord but to the Lord himself
or to the angel.
"The Holy Ghost Witnesseth in Every City,
Saying that Bonds and Afflictions Abide Me"
--Acts 20:23--
Nothing here necessitates the thought of the personality
of the holy Spirit. On the contrary, as an illustration of the
agencies by which God's holy will or Spirit informed Paul
of the bonds awaiting him at Jerusalem, note the account of
one of these occasions of witnessing at Caesarea. In the
Church at that place was one named Agabus, who had the
gift of prophecy common at this time. The record is, "When
he was come unto us, he took Paul's girdle, and bound his
own hands and feet, and said, Thus saith the holy Ghost, so
shall the Jews at Jerusalem bind the man that owns this
girdle, and shall deliver him into the hands of the Gentiles."
(Acts 21:11) The friends of the cause attempted at first to
dissuade the Apostle from going to Jerusalem, but he determined
that he would in no manner interfere with the Lord's
program in respect to himself; declaring, on the contrary,
that he was not only ready to be bound, but also to die at
Jerusalem, for the name of the Lord Jesus. (It should be noticed
that the Apostle did not refer to the holy Spirit--that
he would be willing to die for the holy Spirit's name.)
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When the friends at Caesarea perceived the Apostle's
steadfastness, they said, "The will of the Lord be done."
Thus, in every instance, the testimony of the holy Spirit was
accepted by the early Church as merely being the will of
our Lord Jesus, whose will was also the Father's will.
Acts 21:10-14
The Holy Spirit Made Some Overseers
"Take heed therefore unto yourselves, and to all the flock, over which
the holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed the Church of God."
Acts 20:28
These words were addressed to the Elders of the Church
at Ephesus. The Apostle here calls attention to the fact that
their position in the Church as servants of the truth was not
merely a self-appointment, nor merely an appointment or
recognition by the Church: but that the Lord had operated
by his holy Spirit in the matter of their selection. He would
have them realize that all the virtue of their office was in
view of the fact that it had the divine recognition, and that
they were servants of the Church, by the Lord's appointment,
through his holy Spirit or influence which had
guided, directed and overruled in the matter of their selection.
So, in another place, the Apostle says, addressing the
Church, not the world, "The manifestation of the Spirit is
given to every man [in Christ] to profit withal...God hath
set some in the Church, first apostles, secondarily prophets,
thirdly teachers...And there are diversities of operations,
but it is the same God that worketh all [things] in [among]
all." 1 Cor. 12:6,7,28
In this statement the Apostle shows that the appointment
of all the servants of the Church is of God, by or through
the manifestation of his holy Spirit--and not a work of the
holy Spirit separate and apart from the Father and the
Son. God in Christ supervises the affairs of his own people,
the Church, by his Spirit--his holy power operative omnipotently
and omnisciently--throughout his universe. This
contradicts the thought that the holy Spirit is another person,
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and shows that the work was accomplished by the Lord
through his holy Spirit. Those elders of the Church had
consecrated themselves to the Lord's service, and were chosen
to be ministers, teachers, elders, of the Church, because
of special fitness and talent under the direction of the holy
Spirit--in accord with the will, or Spirit, or mind, or purpose
of God. And although called to office through human
instrumentality, they had accepted the service as of God's
direction and appointment, and were to consider the responsibilities
of their position accordingly.
The Holy Spirit a Teacher
"God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit; for the Spirit searcheth
all things, yea, the deep things of God...which things also we speak, not
in the words which man's wisdom teacheth, but which the holy Ghost
teacheth." 1 Cor. 2:10,13and context.
This scripture, as we have already suggested, proves that
the holy Spirit or mind of God, when received by his children,
fits or prepares or enables their minds to comprehend
his plan. Only by coming into full harmony with God,
through his Word of truth, and through the spirit or real
meaning of that Word, are we enabled to comprehend the
deep things of God. Here the Apostle, it will be noticed,
contrasts "the Spirit which is of [from] God," which operates
in us, with "the spirit of the world," which dwells in
and influences the natural man. How clear it is that the
spirit of the world is not a person, but a worldly mind or
disposition or influence! Likewise the Spirit of God in his
people is not a person, but the holy mind or influence or
disposition of God in them.
"The Things of the Spirit of God"
"But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, for
they are foolishness unto him. Neither can he know them, because they
are spiritually discerned." 1 Cor. 2:14
This is a very forceful statement, and fully in harmony
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with all that we have seen. The man who is filled with the
worldly spirit is proportionately unprepared to see and appreciate
the deep, hidden, glorious things of God--"the
things which God hath in reservation for them that love
him." These deep things, or as our Lord designates them,
"pearls," are not for the swinish, the selfish, full of the spirit
of this world; but for those who are cleansed by the washing
of water through the Word, who are brought nigh to the
Lord through faith in the precious blood, and sanctified,
fully consecrated to the Lord. To these God is pleased to reveal
his deep things, yea, all the riches of his grace, step
by step--as the various items of truth become "meat in due
season."
This is a very crucial test, as all may discern. It distinguishes
sharply between the fallen man and the new creature,
the spiritual. Whoever is blind to the deeper spiritual
truths certainly lacks the witness or evidence here mentioned
as proof of his sonship, his relationship to the heavenly
Father, and his fidelity under such a relationship.
Those who are indifferent to the matters which the Apostle
here mentions, "The things which God hath in reservation
for them that love him," have, in this statement, a suggestion
that the reason for their indifference is that they lack
the Lord's Spirit. And yet we have known professed teachers
in the church who not only admitted their own ignorance
of these things, but who boasted of that ignorance.
Thereby they proclaim that they have not the mind of God,
do not know of his plans, and hence cannot have much of
his Spirit, the Spirit of the truth--and proportionately they
cannot have much of the truth. The test is here given of our
possession of the Spirit, and our ability to discern and appreciate
the things of God, which are hidden from the
worldly--"God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit."
An Unction from the Holy One
"Ye have an unction from the Holy One and ye know all things."
"The anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you, and ye
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need not that any man teach you: but as the same anointing teacheth you
of all things and is truth and is no lie, and even as it hath taught you, ye
shall abide in him." 1 John 2:20,27
These words unction and anointing awaken in intelligent
Bible students recollections of the holy anointing oil poured
upon the heads of each successor to the offices of High
Priest and King in Israel. As the people of Israel were typical
of "the true Israel of God," so their priests and kings
were typical of Christ, the great antitypical High Priest and
King. And as their priests and kings were anointed with the
"holy anointing oil" as an induction into office, so our Lord
Jesus was anointed with the holy Spirit at the time of his
consecration. He thus became the Christ--the anointed of
Jehovah.
The elect church is to be a "royal priesthood" (king-priests)
under their Lord and Head--"members of the body
of the Anointed [the Christ]." The holy Spirit of anointing
which came to our Lord Jesus at his baptism at Jordan, and
with "all power in heaven and in earth," when he was
raised from the dead by the holy Spirit or power of the Father
(Matt. 28:18; Eph. 1:19,20), he with the Father's
approval
"shed forth" or poured out as the antitypical
anointing oil upon the representatives of his Church at
Pentecost. There (keeping in thought the type) the anointing
oil passed from the "Head" to his "body," the Church,
and thenceforth the faithful, abiding in the body, were recognized
in the divine Word as "the very elect" of God,
anointed of him (in Christ) to rule and bless the world after
being first "taught of God" under the guidance of the
anointing Spirit.
The signification of unction (and of its Greek original
chrisma) is smoothness, oiliness, lubrication. From custom
the word carried with it also the thought of fragrance, perfume.
How beautifully and forcefully this word represents
the effect of God's influence toward goodness, upon those
who come under this antitypical anointing--holiness, gentleness,
patience, brotherly kindness--love! What a sweet,
pure perfume does this anointing of the holy Spirit of love
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bring with it to all who receive it! However ungainly or
coarse or rude or ignorant the outer man, "the earthen vessel,"
how speedily it partakes of the sweetening and
purifying influence of the treasure of the "new heart," the
new will within--anointed with the holy Spirit and brought
into harmony with "whatsoever things are true, whatsoever
things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever
things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely!" Phil. 4:8
These words "unction" and "anointing" are in full accord
with the correct view of the holy Spirit--that it is an
influence from God, an invisible power of God exercised
through his precepts, his promises, or otherwise as may seem
good to the all-wise omnipotent One. These words certainly
do not convey the thought of a person. How could we
be anointed with a person?
But some one perhaps will suggest that in the expression,
"an unction from the Holy One," not the unction but the
Holy One represents the holy Spirit. We answer, No; the Holy
One is the Father. Peter, describing the Pentecostal blessing,
declares that it was "shed forth" or poured out--as
anointing oil, but not as a person would be said to be sent.
He says, speaking of Jesus, "Having received of the Father
the holy Spirit promised [in Joel] he hath shed forth this
which ye see and hear"--this miraculous power or influence
which manifests itself variously, in quickening thoughts, in
tongues of flame and divers languages uttered by unlearned
men. Again Joel's prophecy was "I will pour out my
Spirit." Can any one claim that this would be appropriate
language to use respecting any person? That he was given by
the Father to the Son, and that he was poured or shed forth
and seen and heard as "this"? Surely not. And surely such
language would be disrespectful, if applied to a third person
of a trinity of Gods "equal in power and glory."
The item however which strikes everyone as most astounding
is that those who have this unction "know all
things." How many of the Lord's people have felt absolutely
certain that they did not "know all things," and therefore
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doubted if they had received the anointing of the holy
Spirit! How the matter is simplified when translated, "Ye
have an unction from the Holy One and ye all know it!"*
Yes, indeed; all the true children of God know very well the
difference between the natural mind or heart or will and
the new heart, new mind, new disposition, controlled by
love and righteousness.
*The words "all things" are omitted by oldest Greek MSS.
And how many of God's best and humblest children
have read with amazement the words, "The anointing
which ye have received of him abideth in you and ye need not
that any man teach you!" Alas! they said, we have received no
such anointing, for we have very much need that some man
teach us, and know very little that has not come to us either
directly or indirectly through human instrumentality. And
these humble souls would feel greatly cast down and discouraged
by reason of their honesty of thought, did they
not see that the very best of the saints of their acquaintance
similarly need and appreciate human teachers. On the
other hand, some of the less honest, less candid, less saintly,
endeavor to deceive themselves and others by claiming that
they have learned nothing of men but have been taught all
they know by direct inspiration of the holy Spirit. They see
not that they are thus claiming infallibility for their
thoughts and words, in the most absolute sense. They fail,
too, to see that their errors of thought, word and deed,
claimed to be under plenary inspiration of the holy Spirit,
reflect against God's holy Spirit, as the author of their errors
and follies.
Taking this passage just as it stands, it contradicts the
general testimony of Scripture. Does not the Apostle Paul
mention among the Spirit's gifts to the Church--apostles,
prophets [orators], pastors, teachers, evangelists? And why
give these if the Church had no need that any man teach
them? What does the Apostle say of the reason for setting
these special gifts in the Church? Hear him: "For the perfecting
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of the saints for the work of the ministry, for the
edifying of the body of Christ: till we all come to the unity
of the faith and the knowledge of the Son of God." (Eph. 4:11-13)
Compare 1 Cor. 12:28-31.
It is not supposable that the Apostle John was contradicting
the Apostle Paul and the other apostles--all of
whom were teachers and who instructed the Church to seek
out the Spirit's choice of pastors, teachers and overseers,
and to honor those who thus had the "rule over" the
Church and who were to watch for the interests of souls as
those who must give an account to the Lord. (Heb. 13:17) It
was undoubtedly in full accord with the Apostle Paul's advice
that the Church had need to select as its servants men
"apt at teaching," "able by sound doctrine both to exhort
and to convince the gainsayers," and when necessary to "rebuke
sharply that they may be sound in faith." They were
to recognize under-shepherds, who would not "lord it over
God's heritage," but would "feed the flock" with meat in
due season--avoiding teachers having ears which itched for
popularity and flattery. 1 Pet. 5:2-4; 1 Tim. 3:2;
2 Tim. 2:25;
Titus 1:9,13
Furthermore, John himself was a teacher, and in this
very epistle was teaching what he and we appreciate as
sound doctrine--necessary to be taught. Surely no one reading
John's writings could draw the inference that he meant
them merely as social letters, devoid of doctrine or teaching.
Does he not open the epistle by saying, "That which we
have seen and heard declare [teach] we unto you, that ye
also may have fellowship with us?" (1:3) Again he says,
"These things write I unto you [to teach you] that ye sin
not." (2:1) Again, "A new commandment [teaching]
I write
unto you." (2:8) Again, "Little children, let no man
deceive
you [but heed my teaching]: he that doeth righteousness is
righteous." (3:7) Again, "We are of God: he that
knoweth
God heareth us [obeys our instructions, our teachings]."
(4:6) Again, "These things have I written unto you...that
ye may know [be taught]." (5:13) He closes his epistle with
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a very important teaching, saying, "Little children, keep
yourselves from idols [permit no person or thing to supplant
God himself in your affections and reverence]."
Seeing then that the Apostle cannot be understood as
meaning that the Church has no need of human teachers--
seeing on the contrary that he recognized human teachers
as the agency employed by the holy Spirit specially "set in
the Church" for this very service, what can he mean by
these words, "Ye need not that any man teach you," and
"the same anointing teacheth you all things"? The proper
answer to this query will be readily seen by examining the
context in the light of facts already discussed.
This epistle is supposed by scholars to have been written
in the year A.D. 90. By that date Christianity had attained
considerable prominence in the world. It had gathered the
"remnant" of fleshly Israel and drawn upon itself the hatred
and persecution of the vast blinded majority of that
people and been scattered everywhere throughout the then
civilized world. Many things in Christianity commended it
to the Greek philosophers of that time who sought to combine
with it and to become philosophic Christians and
Christian philosophers--still holding their philosophies
which the Apostle Paul points out were "falsely so-called."
(1 Tim. 6:20) These philosophers were quite willing to
acknowledge
Jesus as a good man and a wise teacher but not
as the Son of God who left a spirit nature, "a form of God,"
and was "made flesh," to thereby become man's Redeemer,
and the author of eternal life to all who obey him. They
were, however, teaching a future, eternal life and were glad
to find Christians teaching the same: the difference being
that the philosophers (Plato and others) taught that eternal
life is a human quality, an inherent power in mankind--
deathlessness, immortality, whereas the Christians taught
that eternal life was not inherent in man but a gift of God
through Christ, intended only for those who accept him.
Rom. 2:7; 5:15,21; 6:23; 2 Cor. 9:15
These philosophers practically said to the Christians--
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We are glad to meet so respectable and sensible and free a
people. Your great teacher, Jesus, surely did make you free
from many of the customs and superstitions of the Jews and
we congratulate you accordingly. But you are still in a
measure of bondage: when you have investigated our
philosophies you will have still more liberty and will find that
much you still hold in common with the Jews--their hopes
of a Messianic kingdom, their peculiar ideas of one God
and your peculiar ideas that your Teacher, Jesus, was his
only Son, etc., these things you will soon outgrow, with the
aid of our philosophy. 2 Pet. 2:19; Jude 4
John's epistle is written to fortify Christians against these
subversive doctrines. He exhorts them in this chapter (2:24)
to hold fast the teachings heard by them from the beginning
and to consider these philosophizing teachings as lies
and all such false teachers representatives of the Antichrist
which they had so often heard would be manifested in the
Church. (2 Thess. 2:3-7; 1 John 2:18) He says,
"These
things have I written unto you concerning them that [seek
to] seduce you [from Christ]." Verse 26
Then comes the peculiar language of verse 27, now under
discussion, which we paraphrase thus:
But, dearly beloved, the true children of God cannot be
seduced by any such philosophies: with us no philosophy
can take the place of Christ in our hearts--no theory could
cause us to question the fulness and the correctness of the
great message which we received as the Gospel of our Lord
Jesus Christ--the Father's Beloved, the Father's Anointed.
Besides the reasonableness of "the faith once delivered unto
the saints," consider the marvelous effect of that message
upon you: it was accompanied by miraculous "gifts" of
"tongues," "miracles," etc., which these philosophers
declare
are duplicated by the fakirs of the East; but aside from
this you have another testimony in your own new hearts--
in the anointing which has transformed and renewed your
minds, producing in your daily life fruits of the Spirit of
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holiness which the fakirs cannot duplicate and which the
philosophers who would seduce you cannot deny.
On these fundamentals of our holy religion--that Christ
Jesus was not an impostor but the very Son of God and our
Redeemer; and that eternal life can be obtained only
through vital union with him--you have no need of instruction,
neither from these false teachers nor from me. And so
long as you have this holy Spirit of love abiding in you, it
will serve as a guard against all such blasphemous, antichristian
theories. So long as you remember that "the peace
of God which passeth all understanding" came to your
hearts through an acceptance of Jesus as the Son of God
and the only power of God unto salvation, so long will this
spirit hold you firm, steadfast, on this point. And you will
find this same test (of loyalty to the holy Spirit of love received
through the Father and the Son) helpful in proving
all matters: for whatever contradicts or ignores this Spirit of
love is an unholy spirit--a false teaching. And remember
that its teaching is that if we would receive any reward we
must "abide in him"--to abandon Christ is to abandon all.
Groanings Which Cannot Be Uttered
"The Spirit itself maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot
be uttered; and he that searcheth the heart, knoweth what is the mind
of the Spirit." Rom. 8:26,27
This expression, intended to convey to God's people an
understanding of the heavenly Father's love and care toward
them, has been sadly misunderstood by many. They
tell us that the holy Spirit groans for them to the Father;
and some attempt to give audible utterance to the groans
themselves; and by some it is supposed that the amount of
groaning which they do, somehow helps the holy Spirit in
the matter, compensating for the groanings which it cannot
utter--though they cannot see just how. It would indeed be
strange, if the holy Spirit were a person, and, as the catechisms
assert, "equal in power" with the Father and the
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Son, that he should find it necessary to address the Father
and the Son on behalf of the Lord's people, with unutterable
groans. Our Lord Jesus said that we might come direct
to him and that we might come direct to the Father, assuring
us, "The Father himself loveth you." Yet from this
scripture under consideration some have gotten the idea
that we must needs go to the Father and to the Son through
the holy Spirit as a mediator, who would groan for us, and
intercede for us, that we might be accepted of the Father
and of the Son. This is in harmony with the prevailing confusion
of thought respecting the holy Spirit and its office.
The error of this interpretation is further noticeable
when we consider that if the groans could not be uttered
they would not be groans at all; for what is not uttered is
not a groan. But this passage would appear equally strange
and inconsistent, if we were to interpret it to mean that the
holy Spirit, the influence or power of Almighty Jehovah, is
unable to express itself intelligently. We know that in past
ages God's mind, will, Spirit, found abundant expression
through the words and deeds of the prophets, and we cannot
suppose that he has any less power or ability today.
What, then, can this scripture signify--"The Spirit itself
maketh intercession for us, with groanings which cannot be
uttered"?
The mistake is in supposing that it is God's Spirit which
supplicates. On the contrary, the Spirit which maketh intercession
for us is our own spirit, the spirit of the saint, which
supplicates God, and often fails to express itself properly. A
glance at the text, with its connections, will make manifest
the propriety of this interpretation. The Apostle had just
been writing of the sin-burdened humanity groaning in its
fetters. He assures us that it shall be granted liberty from
the bondage, when the Church, the "sons of God," under
the Captain of their Salvation, shall have been glorified.
(Verses 19-21) He then passes from the groanings of the
world to the present condition of the Church, in which we
groan: "Ourselves also, which have the first fruits of the
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Spirit, even we groan within ourselves, waiting for the
adoption, to wit, the deliverance of our body." Verse 23
The renewed or transformed mind or spirit in the
Church, once worldly, is now holy and spiritual: but our
bodies are still human, and have the Adamic imperfections.
Hence we, as new creatures, are burdened by the flesh, and
groan for the promised deliverance into Christ's likeness in
the first resurrection. The Apostle explains that we may, by
faith, reckon the earthly body dead, and think of ourselves
as new creatures perfected, and thus realize ourselves saved
now--"saved by hope." (Verse 24) Then,
having shown how we
may reckon ourselves, he explains to us that from the divine
standpoint we are reckoned as "new" and "holy" and
"spiritual"
beings: he shows that God, viewing us from this
standpoint, recognizes not the flesh and its weaknesses and
imperfections--but the spirit, the mind, the intentions, the
will, the "new creature," devoted to his service. God knows
when our holy spirit (new mind) is willing and the flesh
weak, and he judges us not according to the flesh, but according
to the spirit.
It was our begetting of the Spirit, our adoption of a new
will, fully consecrated to the Lord, that brought us into a
new relationship to God, and into these new hopes wherein
we rejoice: and so "likewise the spirit [our new, holy mind]
also helpeth [maketh up for] our [bodily] infirmities. For we
know not [even] what we should pray for as we ought
[much less are we always able to do as we would like]; but
the spirit itself [our holy mind] maketh intercession [for us--
omitted by oldest MSS] with groanings which cannot be
uttered [in words]. And he that searcheth the hearts [God]
knoweth what is the mind [Greek phronema--inclination] of
[our] spirit, because he [or it--our spirit] maketh intercession
for the saints according to the will of God."
In other words, God is pleased to accept the heart desires
of his people, both in prayer and in service, notwithstanding
the imperfection of their flesh--their earthen vessels.
And he does accept these heart desires.
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How fortunate for us, in our ignorance and weakness,
that our heavenly Father accepts the intentions of our
hearts instead of our words; for frequently his people have
seriously asked amiss! We think of this whenever we hear
God's people pray that God would baptize them with the
holy Spirit and with fire. The prayer is offered in a good
conscience, and with a desire for a blessing only; but not
understanding the passage of scripture which he quotes,
the petitioner really asks for a blessing to be followed by a
curse. The prediction that Christ would baptize with the
holy Spirit and with fire was made by John the baptizer.
The blessing portion of this came upon the waiting Church,
at Pentecost, and subsequently upon all the faithful "remnant"
of Israel, but its latter feature was fulfilled upon the
rejected Jewish nation--in the baptism of fire, destruction,
trouble, which wholly destroyed their polity in the year
A.D. 70. But very graciously God does not answer his
people's prayers according to their asking, but according to
the intentions of the petitioner--he granting them blessing
only.
Some have had the experience of being overtaken in a
fault, and trapped by the Adversary through some weakness
of the fallen human nature: they felt almost disheartened as
they approached the throne of the heavenly grace in
prayer. They had no words for utterance, but merely
groaned in spirit to God, "being burdened." But the heavenly
Father did not insist that they must formulate the petition
in exactly proper language before he would hear them: instead
he graciously answered their heart's desires, the unexpressed
groans of their heart, which sought his forgiveness,
his blessing and comfort. He answered the unuttered
prayers, granted strength and blessing, with a blessed realization
of forgiveness.
This is the Apostle's argument in this whole connection,
and it will be observed that he sums up the argument by
saying, "What shall we say then? [In view of the fact that
God has made every arrangement on our behalf, ignoring
our weaknesses and imperfections, which are contrary to
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our wills, and not reckoning them as our deeds--and ignoring
the lameness of our petitions, and our inability to express
our desire, and on the contrary, making arrangements
to bless us according to the spirit of our minds, as we are
unable even to give utterance to our groans in our imperfect
prayers, we will conclude--] If God be [thus] for us, who
can be against us?" Verse 31
How the Spirit Reproves the World
"When he [the Spirit of truth] is come he will reprove the world of sin
and of righteousness and of judgment." John 16:8
We have already considered the ground upon which the
masculine pronoun is applied to the Spirit of truth--because
it represents God who is masculine. We now examine
this text, used by some as a proof that the holy Spirit operates
in sinners for their reformation. We contend that such a
view is wholly incorrect--that the Scriptures, rightly understood,
teach that the holy Spirit is granted only to the consecrated
believers; that it is not given to the unbelievers and
consequently could not operate in them, after the manner
generally claimed. Quite to the contrary, the children of
this world have the spirit of the world; and only the children
of God have the Spirit of God, the holy Spirit, mind,
disposition or will. "The spirit of the world," or "the carnal
mind, is enmity against God." Neither can the carnally
minded know the things of the Spirit of God, because they
are spiritually discerned--can be discerned only by those
who have the holy Spirit. Hence it is, that wherever we find
it, the holy Spirit of harmony with God and obedience to
his will and providence, evidences regeneration, begetting
to newness of life. In harmony with this we read the Apostle's
words, "If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is
none of his." Those who have not the Spirit of Christ, and
who are not of his, are the world in general--they are not
Christ's, because they have not received of the Father's Spirit.
The Spirit of God, by means of its fruits and its witnessing
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through the Word, is the evidence of our having been
regenerated. It is evident to all that the holy Spirit of God
which is in the Church is not the same Spirit which is in the
worldly--that the Spirit of God is in no sense in the worldly,
carnally minded, who consequently in the Scriptures are
designated "children of wrath," "children of this world"
and "children of their father, the devil." Nevertheless, we
should not forget that the "Spirit of truth," the "Spirit of
love" has, to a considerable extent, modified the spirit of
the world; so that while it is still a spirit of darkness, a spirit
of selfishness, a carnal spirit, yet the world to some extent is
copying, in a formal, outward manner, some of the graces
of the holy Spirit. It would be strange, indeed, if the beauties
of the Spirit of holiness, as represented in gentleness,
kindness and patience, made no impression upon the
unregenerate.
Some people of the world cultivate these graces of the
Spirit because they are styled part of the amenities of life,
signs of good breeding, etc., and many whose hearts are
wholly out of harmony with the principles of the Spirit of
holiness, copy these graces as a gloss or surface gilding, to
cover the baser metal of a depraved nature--unregenerate,
unsanctified, selfish, out of harmony with the Lord and the
Spirit of his holiness. We are, therefore, to closely distinguish
between those who gild the surface of their conduct
and those whose hearts have been transformed by the
Spirit of the Lord. The latter only are the sons of God,
who have his favor, and who will shortly be blessed and
glorified.
The question then arises, If the Spirit of the Lord is communicated
only to those who are his, through faith in
Christ and consecration, what did our Lord mean by the
above statement, that the Spirit of truth would reprove the
world of sin, of righteousness, and of coming judgment?
The meaning of our Lord's words will be readily discernible
when we remember his declaration, that his followers,
upon whom his Spirit would come, and in whom it
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would dwell richly, in proportion to their faith and obedience,
were to be the light of the world. It is this light of
truth which shines forth from the truly consecrated
Church, upon the world and the worldly minded of the
nominal church, that tends to reprove their darkness. Our
Lord said of himself, after he had been anointed with the
Spirit of God, "I am the light of the world," and again, "As
long as I am in the world I am the light of the world." (John 8:12; 9:5)
And addressing his Church of this Gospel age,
sanctified by the same holy Spirit, he said, "Ye are the
light of the world....Let your light shine before men."
Matt. 5:14-16
The Apostle Paul, addressing the same body of Christ,
says, "Ye were at one time darkness, but now are ye light in
the Lord: walk as children of the light." (Eph. 5:8; 1 Thess. 5:5)
Again he says, "For God [the Spirit of God, the Spirit
of truth] hath shined into our hearts, to give the light of the
knowledge of the glory of God." (2 Cor. 4:6) Thus we see
that it is the light of God's truth, the holy Spirit, mind or
disposition, shining in our hearts, which shines out upon the
world; and hence the exhortation, "Do all things without
murmurings and disputings, that ye may be blameless and
harmless, the sons of God, without rebuke, in the midst of a
crooked and perverse nation, amongst whom ye shine as
lights in the world." Phil. 2:14,15
Thus we see that the holy Spirit shines upon the world--
not directly but reflexly. It is not the Spirit of God communicated
to them and operating in them, but the holy Spirit
of God operating in his people, who are sealed by it, which
shines forth upon the darkness of the world.
The Apostle gives us a clue as to how the world is to be
reproved by the Spirit of holiness in the consecrated
Church, saying, "Walk as children of the light...and have
no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but
rather reprove them....All things that are reproved are
made manifest [shown to be wrong] by the light." (Eph. 5:8,11,13)
The light of God's truth, which is the expressing of
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his mind or Spirit, as it shines through a sanctified life, is
the holy Spirit, reproving the darkness of the world, showing
those who see it what sin is, in contrast with righteousness.
And from this enlightenment will come to them the conviction
of a coming judgment, when righteousness will receive
some reward, and sin some punishment. A godly life
is always a reproof to the ungodly, even where no word of
truth may be possible or proper.
It is because the holy Spirit in God's people reproves the
unholy and selfish spirit in those about them that the
Apostle urges the sanctified to remember that they are living
epistles, known and read of all men. (2 Cor. 3:2) The
justified and sanctified Church, following in the footsteps of
Christ, has always been a light in the world, even though its
light has not always had as much influence as it desired.
Thus it was also with our Lord, who declared that all who
were of the spirit of darkness hated him the more because
their spirit of darkness was reproved by his Spirit of light.
For this reason, not only the Lord, the great Light-bearer,
was persecuted unto death, but similarly all the light-bearers
who follow in his footsteps must be sharers also of his
persecution and suffering. John 16:3; Rom. 8:17,18
While the chief mission of the Church has been her own
development, "building up yourselves on your most holy
faith," etc. (Jude 20), yet she has always had a secondary
mission, that of witnessing to the truth, letting the light
shine, reproving the world. And this reproving has necessarily
been more toward nominal professors than toward
the openly worldly, just as in our Lord's day his light was
shed upon the professedly godly and holy, reproving their
darkness. And our Lord warns us of the necessity of letting
our light shine continually, saying, "If the light that is in thee
be [become] darkness, how great is that darkness!" both to
the individual soul in whom the light has gone out, and to
the world, from whom the light is thus obscured. Satan
achieves no greater triumph than when he seduces a soul
which was once enlightened and sanctified by the truth.
The influence of such an one for evil is more than doubled.
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"Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall,"
and remember that to put his "light under a bushel" is a
sure step toward darkness.
"Hereby Know Ye the Spirit of God"
From the Spirit of Antichrist
--1 John 4:2,3; 2 John 7--
"Hereby know ye the Spirit of God: Every spirit that confesseth that
Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is of God, and every spirit that confesseth
not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is not of God: and this is that
spirit of Antichrist."
Nothing should be plainer to any intelligent mind than
that the Apostle is not referring to a person, but to an influence,
doctrine or teaching. The context (verses 1 and 3)
shows beyond a doubt that the Apostle's meaning is that
the Lord's people must discriminate between doctrines presented
to them as truth--they must "try the spirits,"
whether they be holy or evil, of God or of the Evil One--the
Spirit of truth or the spirit of error. These both are introduced
by prophets or teachers. Our Lord and the
apostles and others following in their footsteps sowed the
truth or "wheat" seed, begetting consecrated believers to
newness of life and holiness of spirit. The enemy and his servants
sowed error or "tare" seed, which has brought into
the nominal church (or wheat field) multitudes of "tares"--
having not the holy "Spirit of Christ," but a modified,
sugar-coated "spirit of the world." Hence every one presenting
himself as a teacher and claiming to be a servant of
the truth and to have holiness of spirit is to be tried, tested,
as to whether he is preaching truth or error--inculcating the
Spirit of truth or the spirit of error. The Word of God is to
be the standard by which each is to be received as a true
teacher or rejected as a false teacher: "for many false
prophets are gone forth."
The Apostle points out one general test respecting true
and false faith, true and false teachers--the Spirit of truth
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and the spirit of error--the holy Spirit of Christ guiding
into all truth, and the unholy spirit of Antichrist, leading
into all error, destructive to the faith once delivered to the
saints and leading to a denial of the Lord's having bought us
with his own precious blood. (2 Pet. 2:1) This test was
the
affirmation or denial of Messiah's having come in the flesh.
And this was and still is a sure test--the ransom test stated in
one of its forms: every doctrine that denies it is an active opponent
of the truth, is anti-(against) Christ: every doctrine
that ignores it is seriously wrong, not of God, however much
of good may be blended with it; it is dangerous: every doctrine
that confesses it is fundamentally correct--"of God,"
tending in the right direction.
Very early the Adversary began attacks on the true faith
set forth by the Lord and the apostles from two standpoints,
both of which denied that he came in the flesh.
(1) The heathen philosophies (against which the Apostle
Paul also warned, 1 Tim. 6:20,21) claimed that Jesus was
indeed a great prophet, a great teacher, and ranked him
with their own philosophers; but they insisted that he was
not the Son of God more than the others--not the Messiah
of the Jews, whose hopes and prophecies they accredited to
narrowness and national pride and ambition to consider
themselves the divinely favored nation. Thus they denied
our Lord's pre-human existence--denied that he came in the
flesh--denied that he was anything else than a member of
the fallen race, though admitting that he was a bright specimen
of it.
(2) According to his usual custom the Adversary early
began to set one extreme of error against another extreme,
that in the warfare between the two errors the truth between
them might be left undefended and be forgotten.
Hence he started the other extreme error on this subject,
whose claim was and still is that Messiah was not a man at
all--that he was the very God, the Father, who merely pretended
to be flesh for a time, while really maintaining all
his divine powers--using the body of flesh as a covering or
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disguise to hide his glory and to permit him to appear to
weep and hunger and thirst and die. This view also denies
that Messiah came in the flesh--that "he was made flesh."
John 1:14
As we look about us today we may well be astonished to
find that the majority of Christian people hold one or the
other of these false doctrines opposed to the Spirit of truth--
of the spirit of antichrist; and the remainder are generally
quite confused--bewildered--do not see the truth on this
subject clearly, and accordingly are not firmly founded on
the ransom. For all who fail to see clearly that "the Word
[Logos] was made flesh," became "the man Christ
Jesus," are
as unable to see the ransom [corresponding price] as are those
who see Jesus as an imperfect man, begotten of the flesh by
an earthly father. Thus we see that the simple test set forth
by the holy Spirit through the Apostle is still a test of doctrines--
whether they be of God and the holy Spirit, or of Satan
and the spirit of antichrist.
While considering these texts we will note an objection
raised against the translation of our common version Bibles
to show that it is not valid--that the translation is a good
one; that the fault lies in the critic who evidently has not a
sufficient knowledge of Greek grammar rules on syntax to
attempt a criticism. His claim is:
(1) That the Greek words in these two texts rendered "has
come" signify coming.
(2) That with this change the Apostle's words would signify
that any teaching which denies that the second advent of
our Lord will be in the flesh is an antichrist spirit.
We reply to this claim--
(1) It is true that the word erchomai, the root word from
which is derived eleluthota (1 John 4:2) and
erchomenon (2 John 7)
signifies coming or arrival; but whether the coming
referred
to is a past or a future event must be determined by
the construction of the sentence, just as we may use our
English word "coming" in referring to matters past and future
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and say--"Faith in the first coming of our Lord is general
among Christians, but not so general is the faith in his
second coming." The context proves beyond peradventure
that an occurrence of the past is referred to, for the record is
"many deceivers are gone forth" or "went forth"; and
the two
statements quite evidently refer to the same thing.
(2) This claim is put forth by some who have an object in
claiming that the text refers to a future event--they claim
that our Lord is not "changed" to the divine nature, that he
is still flesh and that he will continue to be a man, a human,
fleshly being, and bear the scars of his human sufferings to
all eternity. They deny, or at least ignore, the many Scriptural
declarations to the effect that "Him hath God highly
exalted"; "Now the Lord is that Spirit," and "Though we
have known Christ after the flesh [yet] henceforth know we
him [so] no more." (Phil. 2:9; 2 Cor. 3:17; 5:16) Their wish
to find some Scriptural statements to support their unreasonable
and unscriptural position deceives them as respects
these passages. Indeed we may say that the vast majority of
Christian people hold this erroneous view, among them
nearly all who have ever had anything to do with translating
the Scriptures.
But we will buttress our position by quoting the criticisms
of these texts by Prof. J. R. Rinehart, Ph.D., Professor
of Languages in Waynesburg College (Cumberland Presbyterian).
After quoting the text of 1 John 4:2and 2 John 7,
Prof. Rinehart says:
"(1) The foregoing quotations are from the Emphatic
Diaglott of Wilson, purporting to be from the original
Greek text of the New Testament. The word eleluthota is the
accusative, singular masculine, of the second perfect participle
of the verb erchomai, having the same relation to this
verb that any other perfect participle has to its verb. It
stands with the verb homolegei in indirect discourse, and represents
a finite, perfect tense, according to ordinary Greek
syntax. Goodwin's Greek Grammar, ##1588, 1288
"The following translation of the first quotation is, therefore,
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essentially correct. 'Every spirit that confesseth that
Jesus Christ has come in the flesh, is of God.'
"(2) The word erchomenon in the second quotation is the
accusative, singular, masculine, of the present participle of
the verb erchomai, and is subject to the same rules of syntax
as the word above. Its relation to eiselthon through
homologountes,
as well as the context, justifies its translation as of
past time. Ibid, #1289
"The translation of the second quotation, therefore, is
properly given as follows: 'For many deceivers went forth
into the world--those who do not confess that Jesus Christ
did come in the flesh.'"
No Greek scholar, we believe, will ever be found to contradict
this definition, even though he hold to the second
coming of our Lord in flesh, and might thus have a preference
for a construction favorable to his conceptions.
Finally, we notice that as a confession that Christ came in
the flesh at his first advent is essential to a proper belief in
the ransom, and a denial of that fact means a denial of the
ransom (because otherwise he could not give a corresponding
price for man), so all who believe that Christ is a man since
his resurrection and that he will come a second time as a
man, are thereby denying the ransom--for if our Lord is still
a man he either did not give his manhood as our ransom, or,
giving it for three days, took it back again--took back the redemption
price and thus vitiated the purchase. But on the
contrary the purchase was final; our Lord's humanity never
was taken back: Him hath God highly exalted and given a
name and nature far above angels, principalities and powers
and every name that is named (the Father's alone excepted).
He is no longer a man nor in any sense like us: we
if faithful shall be "changed" and made like him and "see
him as he is." 1 John 3:2
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He is Altogether Lovely
Majestic sweetness sits enthroned
Upon the Savior's brow;
His head with radiant glories crowned,
His lips with grace o'erflow.
None other could with him compare
Among the sons of men;
He's fairer too than all the fair
Who fill the heavenly train.
He saw men plunged in deep distress,
And flew to their relief;
For us he bore the shameful cross,
And carried all our grief.
God's promises, exceeding great,
He makes to us secure;
Yea, on this rock our faith may rest,
Immovable, secure.
O! the rich depths of love divine,
Of grace a boundless store!
Dear Savior, since I'm owned as thine,
I cannot wish for more.
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