[E209]
STUDY IX
THE BAPTISM, WITNESS AND SEAL
OF THE SPIRIT OF AT-ONE-MENT
Spirit Baptism, One Only--in Three Parts--The Significance of this Baptism--
"The Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven"--Another Baptism of the
Spirit Promised "Upon all Flesh"--Its Significance--Prayer for the
Spirit--The Witness of the Spirit--Its Importance--No Peace With God
Without It--Few Know Whether They Have It or Not--"'Tis a Point I
Long to Know"--How to Recognize the Spirit's Witness--Differences
of Administration--The Spirit's Testimony--"Sanctified by the
Spirit"--"Filled With the Spirit"--The Seal of the
Spirit--"The Promise"
which it Seals--Unto the Day of Deliverance--The Highest Attainment
to be Sought--and Retained.
"When the day of Pentecost was fully come, they were all with one accord
in one place. And suddenly there came a sound from heaven as of a rushing
mighty wind, and it filled all the house where they were sitting. And
there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire, and they sat upon
each of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and began
to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance." Acts 2:1-4
THE DAY of Pentecost was a most notable one in the history
of the Gospel Church. It indicated that our Redeemer
had appeared in the presence of God for us, as our great
High Priest; that he had offered before the Father the merits
of his sacrifice, finished at Calvary fifty days previously;
that the Father had accepted the sacrifice fully; and consequently
that the apostles and believers who had accepted
Jesus, and who were desirous of approaching to the Father,
[E210]
and becoming sons of God (John 1:12), were now recognized
as such--the holy Spirit thus testifying their acceptance:
hence it is termed the "Spirit of adoption" into the
family of God. It was appropriate that so important a matter
should be clearly demonstrated: it was not only important
that the apostles and believers should receive the holy
Spirit, the Spirit of divine favor, in their hearts, but that
they should have an outward manifestation which would
be a satisfactory proof, not only to themselves but to all
subsequent believers, that God had fully accepted the
Church as sons and joint-heirs with Christ.
But nothing in connection with this narrative in any
sense of the word necessitates the thought of a personal holy
Spirit, separate from the Father and the Son. Quite the contrary:
the fact that the holy Spirit was received in them all
of itself implies that the holy Spirit is not a person, but an
influence, a power exerted by a person--the power or influence
of God exerted in and upon his newly adopted children.
This is further evidenced by the fact that the various
powers and talents of the apostles were energized, quickened
and enlarged by this influence. The Apostle explains
that it was here that our Lord Jesus "gave gifts unto men"--
spiritual gifts. (Psa. 68:18; Eph. 4:8) The great
gift of his
own life had already been given, and constituted the redemption
price for the whole world--and a portion of the ransomed
myriads, a little flock, having been especially given
to Christ to be his joint-heirs and associates in the Kingdom,
and the selection of this little flock having already
begun, as represented in those who waited for the Pentecostal
blessing, the time had come for their recognition.
It was the Father who there recognized the Church of
Christ, in the sense that the impartation of his holy Spirit,
as an influence and power, implied the reconciliation of
believers; so that they were no longer treated as sinners and
aliens, nor even as servants; now as sons they were made
"partakers of the heavenly gift." We are informed that this
holy Spirit, holy influence, holy power, which emanates
[E211]
from its fountain or source, the Father, was poured out,
nevertheless, appropriately by God's honored representative,
through whom every Blessing of God has come and
will come, namely, Christ Jesus our Lord and Head.
The Apostle Peter, speaking under the inspiring influence
of the holy Spirit, explained the matter, that it was
of the Father and by the Son, saying, "Jesus--being by the
right hand of God exalted, and having received of the Father
the promise of the holy Spirit, he hath shed forth this
which ye now see and hear." (Acts 2:33) Accordingly, there
can not be too much stress laid upon this baptism of the
holy Spirit, seeing that it marks the acceptance of the
Church, and that without it we would have no proof of the
acceptance of our Lord's sacrifice and of our justification.
However, we must most emphatically object to the common
but erroneous and thoroughly unscriptural idea
which prevails amongst many very earnest Christians, to
the effect that frequent baptisms of the holy Spirit are to be
expected and sought. Such an expectation not only is unwarranted
by any promises given us in the Word of God,
but is thoroughly at variance with the divine arrangement
therein laid down. It should be noticed that the Scriptures
mention only three baptisms of the holy Spirit; and the necessity
for each of these, and for no more, is manifest--the
three being parts or divisions of the one baptism. (1) The
baptism of our Lord Jesus. (2) The baptism at Pentecost.
(3) The baptism of Cornelius, the first Gentile convert accepted
as a "son." Let us examine these baptisms of the
Spirit in this order.
(1) Not only was our Lord's baptism of the holy Spirit
necessary to himself, that he might be a partaker of the divine
power; as the divine agent, and as the earnest of his
inheritance, his begetting to the divine nature; but it was
proper also that there should be such an outward manifestation
or recognition of him as would permit others to know
him as God's Anointed. The manifestation was that of a
dove descending and lighting upon him. Nor are we given
[E212]
to understand that the people in general witnessed this
manifestation of divine favor; the understanding rather is
that John the Baptist, who was at the time doing a reformatory
work in Israel, and who was recognized as a prophet, a
servant of the Lord, alone witnessed the descent of the
Spirit upon our Lord, and he bore testimony to the fact.
The statement is, "And John bare record, saying, I saw the
Spirit descending from heaven, like a dove, and it abode
upon him; and I knew him not [knew not that he was the
Messiah]: but he that sent me to baptize with water, the
same said unto me, Upon whom thou shall see the Spirit
descending and remaining upon him, the same is he which
baptizeth with the holy Spirit. And I saw, and bare record,
that this is the Son of God." John 1:33
(2) The baptism of the Church at Pentecost, as John here
explains, was to be done by Christ, "he which baptizeth
with the holy Spirit." Peter confirms this, as we have seen,
declaring that Christ did shed forth his holy Spirit. He
alone can so baptize, because he has redeemed the world,
bought all with his precious blood; and because no man
cometh unto the Father but by him, and because the Father
judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment unto
the Son; and because the Son, highly exalted, acts as the
Father's representative, to introduce into full fellowship
with the Father those who come unto the Father by him.
We have already seen that this baptism of the Church with
the holy Spirit was necessary, as a testimony, as a witness, in
the same manner that it was necessary that the baptism
of the Spirit upon our Lord Jesus should be witnessed and
testified.
The rushing wind filling the place, and the "cloven
tongues of flame" which "sat on each of them" (probably
the eleven apostles only--designating them as the Lord's
special representatives and the holy Spirit's mouthpieces--
see verse 14), were not the holy Spirit, but merely
manifestations
to their senses representing the invisible. Similarly the
dove which John saw was not the Spirit but a manifestation
[E213]
to his senses. The dove, the emblem of peace and purity,
fitly represented the fulness of Jehovah's spirit of love in
Jesus; as the cloven tongues fitly represented the mission of
the apostles to be, under the holy Spirit, to testify as
"witnesses."
Acts 2:32; 3:15; 5:32; 10:39,41; 13:31
(3) A special manifestation of the divine power in connection
with the acceptance of Cornelius, the first Gentile
convert, was necessary; because hitherto Gentiles had been
outcasts, unacceptable to God even as servants; consequently
it would not occur to the Jewish believers that the
Gentiles would be accepted into the high position of sons of
God, unless some pointed manifestation of divine favor to
that effect were granted.
As already seen, it was not the divine program that any
Gentiles should be accepted until the end of the "seventy
weeks" of Jewish special favor, three and a half years after
Pentecost;* hence the fact that converts from among the
Gentiles were to be fellow-heirs (on an equality) with converts
from among the Jews, could not be indicated in the
baptism of the Spirit at Pentecost. And in view of the deep-rooted
prejudices of the apostles as well as other Jews, it was
most appropriate that the acceptance of Cornelius should
be manifested to the senses of the Apostle by the same evidences
given at Pentecost. Nor is it necessary to suppose
that the "cloven tongues of flame" sat on Cornelius: in
common with the converts from Judaism, he probably received
some of the "gifts" which came upon all at Pentecost.
*See SCRIPTURE STUDIES, Vol. II, Chap. 7.
How else could we have ever known that the Gentiles
were accepted of the Lord? If the baptism of the Spirit and
the Pentecostal blessings had come only upon the believers
who were of the natural seed of Abraham, it might have left
us in doubt all the way down through the Gospel age, as
respects the standing of the Lord's people who by natural
progeniture were Gentiles. But by the baptism of the holy
Spirit coming upon Cornelius, the Lord made fully manifest
[E214]
the fact that there was no longer any difference between
Jew and Gentile, bond and free, male and female, so far as
acceptance with him in Christ was concerned. None are acceptable
of themselves, in their own unrighteousness--
hence only those who come unto the Father through the Beloved
One are accepted in him. 1 Cor. 12:13
Aside from these three baptisms of the holy Spirit there is
no other reference to the subject in the Scriptures: consequently
the thought of many of the Lord's people, that
they must expect, labor for and pray for another or repeated
baptisms of the holy Spirit is quite unwarranted.
Such baptisms are wholly unnecessary, because the one
baptism at Pentecost, supplemented by that upon Cornelius,
fills every requirement. Those baptisms came not
merely upon the individuals who enjoyed the blessing, but
representatively were for and upon the Church, the Body of
Christ, as a whole. The fact that this representative work for
the Church was made in two parts--upon the first Jewish
believers at Pentecost, and upon the first Gentile believers
in the house of Cornelius, is only in harmony with our
Lord's statement on the subject to Peter, before his crucifixion,
saying, "I will give unto thee the keys of the Kingdom
of Heaven." (Matt. 16:19) A key signifies power to unlock,
to open; and keys, in the plural implies that more than one
door was to be opened. As a matter of fact, there were just
two doors, and just two keys; and the Apostle Peter used
both keys--doing the opening work to both Jews and Gentiles,
as the Lord had predicted. He used the first key at
Pentecost, where he was the first, chief, principal speaker,
who introduced the new dispensation of the Spirit to the
three thousand who at once believed and entered the door.
(Acts 2:37-41) Again, when the due time had come for the
Gospel to be preached to the Gentiles, the Lord, in accordance
with his choice, sent Peter to do this work, telling
Cornelius to send for Peter, and telling Peter to go to Cornelius,
and to speak the words of the Gospel to him and his
household. On this occasion Peter used the second key,
[E215]
opening the Gospel door before the Gentiles, God witnessing
to the fact by the miraculous manifestations of his holy
Spirit upon Cornelius and the other consecrated believers
from among the Gentiles with him.
The proper thought respecting the baptism of the holy
Spirit is that of an outpouring, a shedding forth, an anointing,
which, however, is so complete (covering every member
of the body) as to be properly designated an immersion, or
"baptism." And this same anointing or baptism continues
upon the Church down through the age--covering, permeating,
sanctifying, blessing, anointing, from then until
now, each one who comes into the anointed "body." And this
will continue until the last member has been received and
fully anointed. The Apostle John speaking also of this baptism,
styling it an anointing, says, "The anointing which ye
have received of him abideth in you." (1 John 2:27;
Psa. 133:2)
He does not say, the numerous anointings which you
have received, but the anointing, the one anointing, more
being quite superfluous and out of harmony with the divine
arrangement.
From the divine standpoint the entire Church is recognized
as one--as a whole, for, "As the body is one, yet hath
many members, so also is Christ...Ye are members in particular
of the body of Christ." (1 Cor. 12:12,27) In harmony
with this thought the Scriptural presentation of the
matter is that although the Lord considers us individually,
and in many respects deals with us individually, yet our
standing before the Father is not so much as units, but as
members or parts of a unit, which unit is Christ, head and
body. Hence we are informed that after we have believed
our next step is to get into the body of Christ--to be baptized
into his body.
We will not here discuss the subject of baptism in general,
leaving that for future consideration, but we note the
fact that believers are invited to be baptized into Christ, in
order that they may come into or under his baptism of the
holy Spirit. The holy Spirit not being a person, but a holy
[E216]
Spirit or power possessed by the Church, all who would
have this blessing must come into relationship with this
Church, Christ's body. It is not to be obtained otherwise. Nor
do we mean by this a membership in an earthly Church--a
Methodist body, a Presbyterian body, a Lutheran body, a
Roman Catholic body, or any other body of human organization.
We mean a membership in the ecclesia, whose members
can be assuredly recognized only by their possession of
the holy Spirit of love--attested by its various fruits and
witnessed to as we have seen foregoing.
Whoever becomes truly united with Christ, and thus
truly united with all the members of the body of Christ,
needs not to pray for present or future Pentecostal blessings,
but may look back with joy and confidence to the original
Pentecostal blessing and the blessing upon Cornelius, as the
evidences which the Father gave, through Christ, of his acceptance
of the Church as a whole: and with the divine arrangement
all should be fully content. We do not say that
our Lord is wroth with those who, with mistaken thoughts,
ask, contrary to his will, for numerous Pentecosts: rather,
we will suppose that he will have compassion upon their ignorance
and misdirected prayers, and without altering his
own plans and arrangements will pour them out a blessing--
as much of a blessing as their erroneous expectations
and neglect of his Word will permit--accepting the groanings
of their spirits for heavenly communion.
It is strange that these dear friends who continually pray
for baptisms of the Spirit have never noticed that the
apostles did not pray for future Pentecosts, neither did they
instruct the Church so to pray. Do such friends think themselves
wiser than the inspired apostles, or holier than they,
or more anxious to be filled with the Spirit? We will trust
that they have no such egotistical and presumptuous imaginations,
and that their feelings are merely those of ignorant
children, who thoughtlessly and sometimes peevishly
tease indulgent parents for unnecessary and unpromised
blessings and mercies, which cannot be granted them.
[E217]
The General Baptism of the Spirit
"Afterward I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh." Joel 2:28
The holy Spirit is to be the channel of reconciliation between
the Almighty and the race of sinners redeemed with
the precious life of Christ. As the object of the sacrifice of
Christ was to open up the way by which God could be just,
and yet be the justifier of all who believe in him, and who
seek to come unto the Father by him, so his work, as the glorified
Mediator, is to bring back into full fellowship with
God so many of the redeemed race as are willing to return
when granted full knowledge and opportunity. We have
seen that this work of bringing back the members of the
fallen race into harmony with God is divided into two
parts: (1) the Church of this Gospel age, and (2) so many as
will, of the remainder of mankind, during the coming Millennial
age.
We have seen that the basis of harmony is not that God
condones sin, and excuses it, and permits us to return to his
favor as sinners, but that the sinners are to put away their
sins, accept heartily the divine standard of righteousness,
and to come back into full harmony with God; so that they
will seek and attain, through appointed channels, and under
the supervision of Christ, the heavenly Father's holy
Spirit, mind, will, disposition--receiving it as their own
mind, will or disposition, and thus be transformed by the
renewing of their minds. This, which we have seen is God's
program for the Church, is also declared to be God's program,
through Christ, for the reconciliation of the world
unto himself during the next age. Not one iota of the divine
law will be modified; sin and imperfection will not be excused
and counted as perfection and righteousness.
The world of mankind will be in the hands of the Christ
for reformation and restoration to the image of God, lost
through father Adam through transgression; and as a part
of the means for bringing the world back into harmony
[E218]
with God, the influence of Satan, which now is upon the
world, binding and blinding mankind, will be removed (2 Cor. 4:4;
Rev. 20:2), and thereafter, instead of the world
being under the influence or spirit of deception and error
and ignorance and superstition, it shall be under the influence
or Spirit of truth and righteousness and love. Instead
of outside influences being a pressure upon the hearts
of men, to fill them with anger and malice, hatred, strife
and selfishness, this influence or spirit will be restrained and
ultimately destroyed, and the contrary influence or Spirit
of righteousness, goodness, mercy, sympathy, love, will be
developed. Thus, through Christ, the holy Spirit of God
will be poured out upon the world of mankind--first, in giving
them enlightenment; secondly, in giving them help, assistance,
strength, to overcome their own inherited
tendencies; and third, in instructing them and leading
them back to the image and likeness of God, lost through
father Adam's disobedience.
While these prospective privileges and blessings for the
world are glorious, and rejoice our hearts far beyond anything
that the Lord's people have seen in times past, they
nevertheless offer no comfort to enemies of the Lord, or to
those who, when they have the opportunity, refuse to receive
of his holy Spirit, and to be filled by it. It will be
poured out for all flesh, but it will be necessary for those
who would enjoy it and be profited thereby to avail themselves
of its privileges: just as it is necessary for believers of
this Gospel age, who would come under and be blessed by
the holy Spirit, to make use of the means; to consecrate
themselves and to eat the truth, that they may have "the
Spirit of the truth." When the great Prophet and Life-giver,
the great Priest after the order of Melchizedek (Christ, head
and body, complete), stands forward to bless the world, it
will mean a blessing for all who will receive the words of
that prophet, and obey them, and obtain the blessing of
eternal life, by obedience; and it will mean the destruction
by the Second Death for all those who refuse to hear him, as
[E219]
it is written, "Every soul which will not hear [obey] that
Prophet shall be destroyed from among the people." Acts 3:23
Joel's prophecy, it will be noticed, is stated in the reverse
order to that of its fulfilment; the blessing of all flesh is
stated first, and the blessing upon the Church last.
No doubt this order of statement was of the Lord's design,
so as to cover or hide some of the glorious features of
this great promise, until the due time for it to be understood.
(Dan. 12:9,10) Although it has been read over for
centuries, it could not open up and disclose all of its wonderful
treasure until God's "due time" had come. Throughout
this Gospel age the Lord has poured out his Spirit upon
his servants and handmaidens only; and blessed has been
the experience of all those who received it--all who were immersed
into the body of Christ, and made partakers of his
anointing as sons; and it was to this feature that the Apostle
Peter referred in his discourse at Pentecost. He quoted both
parts of the prophecy, but, under the guidance of the holy
Spirit, he did not expound or illuminate the first part; because
the time for it to be understood had not yet come.
Hence, instead of explaining the difference between the holy
Spirit upon the servants and the handmaidens during this
Gospel age ("in those days"), and the holy Spirit upon all
flesh "afterward," in the next age, he merely says, referring
to
the holy Spirit upon himself and the other believers, "This
is that which was spoken by the Prophet Joel"--a part of
that, the beginning of that which was spoken. It will not all
be complete until the pouring out of the Spirit upon all
flesh, which is not yet. Moreover, the prophet mentions
other things, which are not yet fulfilled. He refers to the
darkening of the sun and the moon, and the coming of the
great and notable day of the Lord, which are events now
nigh at hand, the great day of wrath, which intervenes and
separates between the outpouring of the holy Spirit upon
the Church, "the servants and handmaidens," in these days,
and "all flesh," afterward.
[E220]
As we have seen, there will be no difference between the
Spirit of God, as it will come upon the world in the next
age, and the Spirit of God as it comes upon the Church in
this age, because it is the same Spirit of truth, Spirit of
righteousness,
Spirit of holiness, Spirit of sanctification, Spirit of
harmony with God--the Spirit or influence which God will
exert in favor of righteousness and goodness and truth.
Nevertheless, it will not mean the same thing in every particular
then that it means now. To receive the holy Spirit of
God now, and to live in harmony therewith, means necessarily
a conflict with the spirit of the world, which abounds
on every hand. For this reason it is that those who receive
the holy Spirit now, and who walk in harmony with it, are
instructed to expect persecution and opposition from all
who do not have the Spirit--the vast majority.
To receive the holy Spirit in the future will not mean persecution,
because the order, arrangement, government, of
the next age will be very different from the present one:
whereas the prince of this world is Satan, the prince of the
world or age to come will be Christ; and whereas the majority
of mankind are now under the influence of Satan, willingly
or unwillingly, knowingly or unknowingly, in the
next age the whole world will be under the influence of
Christ and his righteous government. And the Truth will
then be made free and common to all, from the least unto
the greatest. Since the law of the next age will be the law of
righteousness, truth, goodness, and will be ruling, as the
Kingdom of God, those who come into harmony with that
government and its law, and who have the Spirit of Truth,
will not suffer persecution as a result thereof, but, on the
contrary, will experience favor and blessings and make
progress in proportion as they receive of that Spirit of
holiness.
The possession of the holy Spirit, during the Millennial
age, will not as during this age signify a begetting of the
Spirit to a spirit-nature, nor will it signify an acceptance to
joint-heirship with Christ in the Kingdom. That promise
[E221]
belongs only to this Gospel age, to the servant and handmaiden
class, who receive the holy Spirit and are actuated
by it during this age, when, in consequence of the present
prevalence of evil, they are obliged to suffer for righteousness'
sake; and upon whom, therefore, "the Spirit of glory and of
God resteth." 1 Pet. 4:14
The possession of the holy Spirit during the Millennial
age will simply signify that the recipient has come into harmony
with Christ, the Mediator, and is to that extent in
harmony with God and in line with the blessings which
God has provided for mankind in general, which blessings
are not a change of nature, to the divine, but a restitution to
all
that was lost through the failure of the first Adam. (Acts 3:19-21)
The possession of the holy Spirit by such will be an
evidence that the work of regeneration by the second Adam
to perfection of human nature "bought" for them by the
great sin-offering has commenced in them; and that if continued
it will ultimately bring perfection of restitution to
the human likeness of the divine Father.
We are to remember that the blessings which Christ will
give to the world during the Millennial age, as the regenerator
of the world, are the blessings which he bought
for them by the sacrifice of himself. As he gave himself, as
"the man Christ Jesus," a corresponding price for the man
Adam, upon whom the condemnation came, so it was the
manhood, rights, privileges and life and kingdom of Adam
that were purchased by the great sacrifice for sins; and these
purchased things are the things which are to be restored to
the regenerated world, through their regenerator or father,
Christ Jesus our Lord, the second Adam. Eph. 1:14;
Acts 3:19-23
The fact that our Lord Jesus was not the second Adam
while in the flesh, but is the second Adam as a spirit being
(since his resurrection), would not imply that he, as the second
father of the race, would give to mankind spirit life or
spirit being in their regeneration. On the contrary, we are
to remember that the thought conveyed by the word "father"
[E222]
is merely "life-giver," without respect to the nature.
Thus in father Adam's creation he is called a son of God,
because created in the moral likeness and image of God,
and not as implying that he was created in the divine nature;
for we know that he was of the earth, earthy, while
God is a spirit. The principles underlying this power by
which God, as the life-giver, has become the Father of all
creation, through his active agent, our Lord, is more particularly
shown in a preceding chapter, under the caption,
"The Undefiled One:" we merely call attention to the matter
here, to guard against misapprehension. God's purpose
in connection with the creation of the world, and man as its
inhabitant and lord, and the lower animals as his subjects,
has not been changed by reason of the permitted disobedience
and fall: the original plan remains as at first. After
the evil attempted by the Adversary shall be ultimately
expunged, the divine plan, as originally designed, will be
fully accomplished through Christ. The Church of this
Gospel age, which shall, as we have seen, be highly exalted
and glorified as the Bride and joint-heir of Christ, is an exception
to the restitution of mankind: it is called out or selected
for a special purpose, and is particularly tried and
tested, fitted and prepared for high exaltation, joint-heirship
with Christ--a change from the human nature to a
nature above the angelic nature--"far above angels, principalities
and powers," partakers of the divine nature.
But while we ought not to pray for unpromised new baptisms
of the holy Spirit, we are taught most positively to seek
and pray for the Spirit as a satisfying portion.
Praying for the Holy Spirit
"If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children,
how much more shall your heavenly Father give the holy Spirit to them
that ask him." Luke 11:13
Although "all things are by the Son," yet here as everywhere
[E223]
he gives the glory and honor, as the fountain of blessing,
to the Father. The entire work of redemption and
reconciliation is the Father's work--through the Son. And
our Lord declares that it is the Father's good pleasure that
we should have more and more of his Spirit of holiness. He
bids us seek for and ask for this, as the great supreme blessing.
As for earthly blessings, our Redeemer tells us that our
Heavenly Father knoweth what things we have need of--he
knoweth better than we know what earthly blessings will be
helpful, and which would be injurious to us. We need not,
therefore, as do the unregenerate and the heathen, think
of and pray for earthly blessings; but rather, as those who
have come into the relationship of sons, and who have full
confidence in the Father's provision, we may expect that he
will give what is best, and we may rest ourselves content in
that promise and faith.
The Heavenly Father is pleased to have us desire and ask
for more and more of the holy Spirit--a disposition more
and more fully in harmony with his Spirit: and all who thus
desire and ask and seek it shall obtain their good desires;
the Father will be pleased to so order the affairs of such that
hindrances to the Spirit, whether in them or in their environment,
shall be overcome, that his loving Spirit may
abound in them--that they may be filled with the Spirit.
But in this there is no suggestion of necessity for fresh baptisms
of the holy Spirit: the baptism came at the beginning,
and now all there remains to do is to open the sluices in every
direction, so as to let the holy Spirit of love and truth
penetrate into and permeate every action, word and
thought of our beings. We need divine aid, the operation of
the Lord's wisdom and providence, to show us what clogs
the sluices and to help us to remove the obstructions.
The Spirit of holiness in abundance can only be received
by those who earnestly desire it and seek it by prayer and
effort. The mind or spirit of the world must be driven out of
our hearts, in proportion as we would have them filled with
the holy Spirit, mind, influence. Self-will must also give
[E224]
place. And because it is in proportion as we are emptied of
all things else that we are ready to receive of his fulness,
therefore the Lord would have us come into this condition
of earnest desire for filling with his Spirit of holiness, that
we may be willing and anxious to displace and eradicate
every other contrary influence and will.
This evidently is the thought of the Apostle, in his prayer
for the Church at Ephesus, that "Christ [the Spirit of
Christ] may dwell in your hearts by faith [that figuratively
he may sit as king, ruler, director of every thought, word
and deed]; that ye being rooted and grounded in love [the
holy Spirit or disposition] may be able to comprehend with
all saints what is the breadth, and length, and depth and
height, and to appreciate the love of Christ, which passeth
knowledge, that ye may be filled with all the fulness of God."
(Eph. 3:19) He who is filled with the Spirit of Christ, and
with a full appreciation of the love which he manifested,
will have the Father's Spirit in full measure.
Nothing in the scripture under examination can in any
manner be construed to imply that the Heavenly Father
would be pleased to have his children ask him for another
God--a third person of a trinity of coequal Gods. Such a
thought is repugnant to the passage and its connections:
and those who entertain such an erroneous view must necessarily
be blinded to that extent to the true beauty and
force of this promise. It would be strange indeed if one
member of a coequal trinity of Gods referred to another as
able and willing to give the third as earthly parents give
bread, fish and eggs to their children. (See preceding
verses.) The entire passage is consistent only when the holy
Spirit is properly understood to be the divine mind or influence
bestowed variously for the comfort and spiritual
upbuilding of God's children.
Our text institutes a comparison between kind earthly
parents giving natural food to their children, and our kind
[E225]
heavenly Parent giving his holy Spirit to them that ask
him. But as the earthly parent sets the food within the reach
of his family, but does not force it upon them, so our heavenly
Parent has set within the reach of his spiritual family
the good provisions of his grace, but he does not force them
upon us. We must hunger and thirst for them, we must seek
for them, not doubtfully, but with faith respecting his willingness
to give us good gifts. When, therefore, we pray for
the holy Spirit, and to be filled with the Lord's Spirit, we
are to look about us and find the provision which he has
made for the answer to these prayers, which he has thus inspired
and directed.
We find this provision in the Word of truth; but it is not
enough to find where it is: if we desire to be filled we must
eat; assuredly we must partake of the feast or we will not
experience the satisfaction which the eating was designed to
give. He who will not eat of a full table will be empty and
starved, as truly as though there were no food. As the asking
of a blessing upon the food will not fill us, but thereafter we
must partake of it, so the possession of the Word of God,
and the offering of our petition to be filled with the Spirit,
will not suffice us; we must eat the Word of God, if we
would derive his Spirit from it.
Our Master declared, "The words that I speak unto you,
they are Spirit and they are life" (John 6:63); and of all
who are filled with the Spirit it is true, as spoken by the
prophet, "Thy words were found and I did eat them." (Jer. 15:16;
Rev. 10:9) It is absolutely useless for us to pray Lord,
Lord, give us the Spirit, if we neglect the Word of truth
which that Spirit has supplied for our fulfilling. If we
merely pray for the Spirit and do not use the proper means
to obtain the Spirit of truth, we will continue to be at most
only "babes in Christ," seeking outward signs, in proof of
relationship to the Lord, instead of the inward witness,
through the Word of truth, which he has provided.
[E226]
The Witness of the Holy Spirit
"The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit that we are the children
of God." Rom. 8:16
Few doctrines are of more importance to God's people
than this one; because on it depends to a considerable extent
their possession of "the peace of God which passeth all
understanding." (Phil. 4:7) How can they have "full
assurance
of faith" (Heb. 10:22) if they lack the witness of the
Spirit testifying to their sonship--to their adoption into the
family of God? Yet how few have the slightest conception of
what is meant by this expression "witness of the Spirit," or
what kind of experiences should be expected and looked for
as constituting the Spirit's witness to our sonship.
The question is therefore a very important one--How
does the holy Spirit witness to us respecting our at-one-ment
with the Father--that we have become sons of God,
and that under divine providence we are being prepared
for the glorious things which God hath in reservation for
them that love him, and who are to be joint-heirs with Jesus
Christ our Lord, in the Millennial Kingdom? On few subjects
have Christians in general felt more disturbed than on
this--the witness of the Spirit. Not knowing what the witness
of the Spirit is, many of the best of the Lord's people
must confess that they know not whether they have it or
have it not. Others, more full of assurance than of knowledge,
claim that they have the witness of the holy Spirit,
and refer to their happy feelings as the evidence. But soon or
later such, if candid, must confess that the "witness" they
rely on is a most unsatisfactory one: it fails them in the
times of greatest need. When all men speak well of them,
when health is favorable, when they are financially prosperous,
when friends are numerous, they feel happy; but in
proportion as some or all of these conditions are reversed
they feel unhappy: they lose what they suppose was the
"witness of the Spirit," and cry in anguish of soul:
[E227]
"Where is the blessedness I knew,
When first I found the Lord?"
Such are deceived and misled by their feelings: they feel
themselves happier and think themselves drawing nearer to
God at times when really they are, under the Adversary's
leading, going straight into temptations. This accounts for
some of the frequent and sudden "falls from grace" which
some experience and which astonish themselves as well as
their friends. Deceived by an unreliable "witness" they felt
secure, were off guard and fell an easy prey to temptation at
the very time they felt "so happy in the Lord" (?). Again,
the trials and disappointments of life designed to draw us
near to our Father, and to make us most appreciative of our
Savior's loving sympathy and care, are partially lost upon
this class; because losing the witness of their feelings, which
they falsely consider the witness of the Spirit, they feel
so bereft, and so hungry and thirsty for a return of the
good feelings, that they lose many precious lessons obtainable
only when leaning confidently on the Lord's
bosom and communing with him, whilst passing through
life's Gethsemanes.
Another class of Christians learning the unreliability of
the "witness" of feelings seem to conclude that God has denied
(to them at least) any reliable evidence of his favor--
any sure "witness" on the subject of their acceptance as
"sons" into his family. Their doubts are expressed in the
well-known hymn:
"'Tis a point I long to know--
Oft it causes anxious thought:
Do I love the Lord or no?
Am I his or am I not?"
This uncertainty arises in part also from a misapprehension
of the doctrine of election: and yet these
friends are quite correct in concluding that their changeable
[E228]
feelings could not be a proper criterion by which to
judge of their sonship. Others, because the Scriptures declare,
"Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is
stayed on thee," judge of their sonship by their peace of
mind: but when they look at the heathen and at the
worldly, and see that many of them apparently have peace
of mind too, their view of the Spirit's witness proves insufficient
to sustain their hopes, or to give them assurance.
Then the dark hour comes, and they say, How easy a matter
to be deceived, and are in torment lest they have grieved
the Spirit--for "fear hath torment."
Persons of large credulity (misnamed faith) will imagine
they hear the Spirit's "whisper" to an inner ear and they
congratulate themselves accordingly--even though they
should subsequently ascertain that the information "whispered"
was absolutely untrue. Other Christians of more
logical mind, who cannot thus delude themselves, are
perplexed that their friends should so confidently assert the
witness of the Spirit, while they themselves have no such
assurance.
The difficulty lies largely in the erroneous view that the
Spirit is a person, and which seeks to apply personality to its
witnessings. When the fact is recognized that the Spirit of
God is any power or influence which God may be pleased to
exercise, the subject is clarified and the "witness of the
Spirit" becomes a matter easy of distinguishment. It will be
a blessing to those who have this witness to know it of a
surety: and it will be a blessing to those who have not this
witness to ascertain their lack; so that they may fulfil the
conditions and obtain the witness, without which none are
authorized to consider themselves sons of God, in acceptable
standing with the Father.
But what a joy and peace divine comes to those who have
the true witness--to those who have the correct experiences
and who have learned how to read them! It is to them indeed
joy in sorrow, light in darkness, comfort in affliction,
strength in weakness. And the full and explicit directions on
[E229]
this subject, as on all subjects, are found in that wonderful
book, our Father's Word--the Bible. In it and through its
testimonies God's Spirit witnesseth with our spirits.
"How firm a foundation, ye saints of the Lord,
Is laid for your faith in his excellent Word.
What more can he say than to you he hath said:
You who unto Jesus for refuge have fled!"
How to Know the Spirit's Witness
A man's mind or spirit may be known by his words and
conduct; and so we may know God's mind or Spirit by his
words and dealings. The testimony of his Word is that
whosoever cometh unto him (by faith, and reformation
from bad works and dead works, through Jesus) is accepted.
(Heb. 7:25) Hence the questions to be asked of
themselves by those who are seeking a witness of the Spirit
respecting their sonship are:
Was I ever drawn to Christ?--to recognize him as my
Redeemer, through whose righteousness alone I could have
access to the heavenly Father, and be acceptable with him?
If this can be answered in the affirmative, the next question
would be:
Did I ever fully consecrate myself--my life, my time, my
talents, my influence, my all--to God?
If this question also can be answered in the affirmative,
the inquirer may rest fully assured that he has been accepted
with the Father, in the Beloved One, and recognized
of him as a son. And if scrutinizing his own heart's desires
and sentiments he finds it still trusting in the merit of Jesus,
and still consecrated to do the Lord's will, he may allow the
sweet confidence and peace which this thought of harmony
and relationship to divinity brings, to fully possess his
heart. This conviction of the Lord's grace toward us in
Christ constructed from facts of our own experience, built
upon the unalterable character and Word of God, is not
[E230]
mutative, not changeable, as it would be if built upon the
shifting sands of feelings. If doubts or fears intrude in some
dark hour, we have only to take the "Lamp" (God's Word)
and examine afresh the facts and the foundation, and if our
hearts are still loyal to the Lord, faith, joy and peace will
instantly return to us; if we find our faith in "the precious
blood" crumbling, or our consecration slipping away, we
know the true condition of affairs, and can at once make
the proper repairs and thus re-establish our "full assurance
of faith." (Heb. 10:22) But be it noticed that each one who
would have this assurance must "set to his seal that God is
true" (John 3:33): that our Lord changeth not, but is
"the
same yesterday, today and forever." The Lord's people may
therefore rest assured that having once come into the conditions
of divine favor, they may continue under those conditions
so long as their hearts are loyal to God and their
desires in harmony with his will: so long as they are at heart
obedient to the divine commands--briefly comprehended
in the word Love--to God and men. Heb. 11:6; 13:8
Whoever has taken the specified steps has the assurance,
the "witness" of the Word of God, that he is a child of God;
and this, during the Gospel age, signifies that he is a branch
of the true vine, a probationary member of the true
Church. (John 15:1) To such the Word of God witnesses that
they have joined the true Church, which is Christ's body.
This witness is given to their spirit, their mind, by God's
Spirit, which testifies through his Word. And the same
Spirit of Truth assures such that if their hearts continue
faithful to the Lord to the close of their probation--if they
willingly and gladly take up the cross daily, seeking as best
they are able to follow in the Master's footsteps, their
probationary membership in the Church of Christ will
shortly be changed to actual membership--after they have
finished their course, and been made sharers in his resurrection,
the first resurrection. Phil. 3:10
However, the Spirit of God, through his Word, witnesses
[E231]
with equal clearness that it is possible for those who have
already become branches of the true Vine to be cut off, if
unfaithful--if they fail to bring forth the proper fruits of the
Spirit of love. "Every branch in me that beareth not fruit he
[the Father] taketh away, and every branch that bringeth
forth fruit he purgeth [pruneth] it, that it may bring forth
more fruit." The Spirit of God, through his Word, thus testifies
or witnesses to us the rule of our heavenly Father's
dealing with his sons--chastisements, pruning, taking away
of the dross, and a development of the fruit-bearing qualities.
Hence, to have these experiences, after having become
identified with the "Vine," is to have the witness of the
Spirit that we are still in the "Vine," and still recognized as
"branches" of it--still under our Lord's care and discipline.
On the contrary, if any one lack these disciplines, prunings,
etc., after having become identified with the Vine, he lacks
this "witness of the Spirit," and correspondingly has reason
to doubt his acceptance with the Lord. Heb. 12:7
If we were all perfect, absolutely perfect, and had been
proven so by tests, the case would be different; God would
then love us for our perfection and harmony with himself;
then chastisement and bitter experiences would be signs of
his disfavor. But as it is, we all know that all are imperfect,
that we all come far short of the divine standard; and that
our new hearts, our new wills, our transformed minds or
spirits, alone are acceptable with God--and that through
the merit of Christ, and in a probationary sense, with a view
to our testing, development and final perfecting. Only in
proportion as we learn to appreciate the divine perfections,
and our own deficiencies, can we appreciate the many and
important lessons to be learned, and the necessity for the
trying experiences we are required to undergo in order to
develop in us the divine likeness.
The Scriptures inform us that the Heavenly Father is
preparing a glorious spiritual Temple, in and through
which the world of mankind is to have the privilege of coming
[E232]
to at-one-ment, reconciliation with himself. We see in
the Scriptures the great Architect's ideal in respect to this
temple--that the ideal of the whole was represented in the
person of our Lord Jesus Christ, its chief corner stone, and
"top-stone," "laid in Heaven." We can see the better what
is required of all those who will be acceptable to God as the
"living stones" of that Temple--to be builded together with
Christ the Head, "for an habitation of God through his
Spirit." And we discern our own roughness by nature, our
inharmony with the graceful lines of the Temple, delineated
in its "top-stone." We can readily discern that much
chiseling and much polishing are absolutely necessary to
us, if we would be fitted and prepared for the place in this
Temple to which, through the grace of God, we aspire. And
hence those who find that they are not receiving the blows
from the Lord's hammer and chisel, lack this "witness"
which the Spirit of God through his Word testifies must
come to all the living stones of his Temple: and which even
the grand Top-stone did not escape. If divine providence
does not mark out for us a "narrow way" with a certain
amount of difficulty and adversity--if we are simply permitted
to rest without afflictions, trials, etc., then we may
know of a surety that God is not dealing with us as with the
living stones which shall form part of the Temple--the
sons--because we lack this "witness" of our acceptance and
preparation. A realization that such is our condition ought
to send us promptly to the Lord to inquire why we have no
tribulations and adversities, and to "examine ourselves"
whether or not we be still in the faith (2 Cor. 13:5); and
whether or not we are still endeavoring to walk faithfully in
the footsteps of our Master, in fulness of consecration to the
Father's will. But if we have this "witness" of chiselings,
polishings, prunings, disciplines, chastisements, let us take
them patiently, joyfully, appreciatively, as evidences of our
Father's love essential to our attainment to our high calling--
in full accord with the Spirit's testimony or witness--
that we are sons of God, "heirs of God, joint-heirs with Jesus
[E233]
Christ our Lord, [only] if so be that we suffer with him, that we
may be also glorified together." Rom. 8:17
The Spirit's "Differences of Administration"
"Whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth
every son whom he receiveth. If ye be without chastisement,
then, are ye bastards and not sons." (Heb. 12:8) Afflictions
and troubles come upon the world, as well as upon the
Lord's saints, but these are not marks of sonship, except to
those fully consecrated to the Father's will and work. The
Spirit and Word of God "witness" only to his sons. Nor are
the prunings and chastenings in the Lord's family always
the same. As earthly children require different kinds and
degrees of discipline, so with God's children: to some, a look
of disapproval is sufficient; to others a word of rebuke is
necessary, while still others must be scourged, and some repeatedly.
An earthly parent rejoices most in the obedient
and promptly submissive child, for whom the word or look
of reproof is sufficient to prune away the evil; and so also
our Father in Heaven declares his approval of those who
"tremble at his word." Isa. 66:5
Such cooperate with God in the development of their
own characters, noting their own defects and seeking to correct
them--hearkening for the Father's voice of direction,
instruction or loving reproof, and ever seeking his approving
smile: their sentiments are well described by the words
of the poet:
"Sun of my soul, my Father dear,
I know no night when thou are near.
O let no earthborn cloud arise,
To hide thee from thy servant's eyes."
This is the class of whom the Apostle writes, who judge
themselves, and who, therefore, need less chastening of the
Lord. (1 Cor. 11:31) To be of this class requires fulness of
[E234]
consecration; and these are and will be the overcomers, who
shall be deemed worthy of joint-heirship with Christ Jesus
their Lord in his Kingdom. To this class, obedient and
watchful, the Lord says, "I will guide thee with mine eye,"
"Thou shall guide me with thy counsel and afterward receive
me to glory." Those who can be guided only by continual
scourging are not of the overcoming class, and will
not be accounted worthy to be of the Lord's Bride, and
have such a "witness" from the Lord through the Spirit of
the Truth. Psa. 32:8; 73:24; contrast Rev. 7:9,14.
Nor are chastenings always proofs of faults, or a "witness"
of the Lord's disapproval. On the contrary, as with
our Lord, so also with his faithful followers, divine providence
leads the faithful and obedient into the path of suffering
and self-denial, not as chastisement of a contrary
will, but as tests, by self-sacrifice, of the measure of love and
devotion to the Father's will, and to the cause of righteousness.
As our Lord was chastened for our transgressions,
not his own, when he bore the sins of many, so his followers
in many respects suffer, not for their own wrongdoings, but
by reason of the wrongdoings of others, for they are called
as the Apostle declares, to "fill up that which is behind of
the afflictions of Christ, for his body's sake, which is the
Church." Col. 1:24
What the Holy Spirit Witnesses
In the light of the foregoing, let each of the Lord's professed
sons examine himself whether or not he have "the
witness of the Spirit," that he is one of the children of God:
and let us repeat the examination frequently, and thus
"watch" and keep ourselves in the love of God, rejoicing in
the witness of his Spirit.
Are we being pruned continually? Are we passing
through such experiences, great or small, as are removing
[E235]
from us more or less rapidly the fleshly tendencies, which
war against the soul--anger, malice, hatred, envy, strife,
selfishness, rudeness, and all things contrary to the law of
the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus--the Spirit of love? If so, to
the extent that we can realize this pruning work in progress,
we will no doubt be able to recognize growth in the proper
direction--in meekness, patience, gentleness, brotherly
kindness, love. Whoever, after a careful examination along
these lines, marked out in the Lord's Word, can realize such
experiences in progress may know of his continued acceptance
with God, because he has this witness of the Spirit.
Again, the Spirit witnesses that "Whosoever is born [begotten]
of God, sinneth not." (1 John 5:18) The child of
God may be overpowered by his old nature (reckoned dead,
but not fully, actually so); he may be overtaken in a fault,
may err in judgment or in word, but he will never willingly
transgress the divine law. So then, if our hearts can respond
that we delight to do God's will, and would not willingly
violate or in any manner oppose it--that we would rather
have God's will done, and his plan fulfilled, even though it
should dash our fondest hopes and break every tender tie--
then we have this witness that our spirit or mind agrees with
the witness of the Spirit of the Truth here recorded: and this
is a witness, not only that we were once accepted into God's
family, but that we are there still.
The Spirit witnesses, through the Word of God, that
those who are the Lord's people are separate from the
world--that their hopes and aims and general spirit, disposition,
are different. "If ye were of the world, the world
would love his own; but because ye are not of the world,
therefore the world hateth you." "Yea, and all that will live
godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution." John 15:19;
2 Tim. 3:12
Can our hearts testify that these words properly represent
our experience in life? If so, the Spirit (mind) of God is thus
again witnessing with our spirit (mind) that we are his. Nor
should we forget that the world spoken of by our Lord includes
[E236]
all the worldly-minded ones, in whom the spirit of
the world has a footing. In our Lord's day this was true of
the nominal Jewish Church: in fact, all of his persecutions
came from professors of religion. Hence, we must not marvel
if all who are walking in our Lord's footsteps should
have a similarly disappointing experience, and find that
the spirit of the world, in its most antagonistic form, will be
manifested in a quarter where we might naturally expect it
least--amongst those who profess to be the children of God.
It was the chief religionists of our Lord's day who called
him Beelzebub, a prince of devils. And the holy Spirit witnesseth
through our Lord's Word, saying, "If they have
called the Master of the house Beelzebub, how much more
shall they call them of his household." (Matt. 10:25) If,
therefore, we have been evilly spoken of, because of our
identification with the Truth, and our service of it, we have
in this an additional evidence or witness of the Spirit that
we are in the right pathway.
Had our Lord Jesus joined hands with the popular leaders
in the Jewish Church, and abstained from speaking the
truth in love, abstained from pointing out the false doctrines
of his day, he would not have been "hated," nor
"persecuted";
on the contrary, he probably would have been
"highly esteemed amongst men." But, as he himself declared,
much that is "highly esteemed amongst men is an
abomination in the sight of God." Luke 16:15
Had our Lord simply kept quiet and refrained from exposing
the hypocrisies, shams, long prayers and false teachings
of the Scribes and Pharisees, they no doubt would have
let him alone, would not have persecuted him; and he
would not have suffered for the Truth's sake. So also it is
with his followers: from a similar class, the Truth and those
who have the Spirit of the Truth, and who follow the Lord's
instruction, letting their lights shine, will now incur hatred
and persecution. And if some, for these reasons, and while
doing their best to speak the truth in love, suffer therefor,
[E237]
happy are they, for as the Apostle said, "The Spirit of glory
and of God resteth on you." They have this witness of the
Spirit to their faithfulness in the narrow way. 1 Pet. 4:14
Again, the holy Spirit witnesses, through our Lord's testimony,
that whosoever is ashamed of the Redeemer and of
his Truth which he taught, of him will the Lord be
ashamed when he comes to make up his jewels. (Mark 8:38)
Whoever, therefore, finds his heart so in love with the Lord
and his Word that he takes pleasure, on every suitable occasion,
in acknowledging Jesus as his Redeemer and Master,
and to faithfully present the Word of his testimony, so long
does such an one have this as another witness of the holy
Spirit that he is a child of God, and an heir of the Kingdom.
Such have reason to rejoice in the Master's promise that
they are just the kind whom he will be glad to confess before
his Father and before the holy angels. But if any have not
this witness--if, on the contrary, their hearts witness that
they are ashamed of the Lord, ashamed to confess themselves
his followers, ashamed to own his "brethren," the
members of his body, and ashamed to confess the doctrines
which he taught--any who have these experiences have the
witness of the Spirit that if this condition of things be not
altered the Lord will be ashamed of them at his second
coming, and will not confess them before the Father and his
holy messengers.
Further, the holy Spirit witnesses that, "Whosoever is
born [begotten] of God overcometh the world: and this is the
victory that overcometh the world, even your faith." (1 John 5:4)
Let us examine our hearts, our spirits, our minds,
in the light of this testimony of the holy Spirit. Are we overcomers,
according to this standard? The standard is that to
be the Lord's we must be out of harmony with the world, in
conflict with it--its aims, its hopes, its ambitions. The
thought of conflict is contained in the expression, "overcometh
the world." And we can readily see that no one can
be an overcomer of the world who is in sympathy and affiliation
[E238]
with it, and its general spirit of selfishness, pride, ambition,
etc.
Before we decide positively whether we are overcoming
the world or not, let us notice that we are not to overcome
the world by flattery, nor by joining with it in its follies and
attempting to give these a religious twist; nor are we to
overcome the world by engaging in some moral or religious
work, such as teaching a Sunday-school class, or helping
the poor, or joining a sectarian church. In none of these
ways does the Lord indicate or "witness" that we can overcome
the world. His statement is positive, that the victory
which overcometh the world is our faith. The Spirit thus
witnesses that to be overcomers we must "walk by faith, and
not by sight." We must look not at the things that are seen--
popularity, worldly show, denominational greatness, etc.--
but must look at the things which are not seen--the spiritual
and eternal things. (2 Cor. 4:18) We are to have the faith
expressed by the poet's words:
"I would rather walk in the dark with God,
Than go with the throng in the light."
Furthermore, the holy Spirit witnesses to us, through the
Word, that if we are the children of God we will not be ignorant
of things present nor of "things to come," because we
will be enlightened and taught of God, through the Word
of his grace--the Word of his Spirit. As we mature, "grow in
grace," we will desire and seek and obtain, in addition to
the milk of the Word, the "strong meat" which the Apostle
declares is for those of fuller development. (1 Pet. 2:2;
Heb. 5:13,14)
The development in the graces of the Spirit, faith,
fortitude, knowledge, self-control, patience, piety, brotherly
kindness, love, will bring us into closer fellowship with
the Father and with the Lord Jesus, so that the Lord will be
able and willing to communicate to us more and more
clearly a knowledge of his gracious plans, as well as of his
own gracious character.
[E239]
Referring to this growth, the Apostle Peter says: "If these
things be in you and abound, they make you that ye shall
be neither barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of the Lord
Jesus Christ; but he that lacketh these things is blind, and
cannot see afar off....For if ye do these things ye shall never
fall; for so an entrance shall be ministered unto you abundantly
into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Savior
Jesus Christ." 2 Pet. 1:5-11. Compare John 16:12,15.
Each should ask himself whether or not he has this witness
of the Spirit, this testimony to his growth as a new creature
in Christ Jesus, and whether or not he is developing
and maturing the kind of fruit here specified. Let us remember
also that our growth in love and in all the fruits of
the Spirit is dependent largely upon our growth in knowledge;
and our growth in knowledge of divine things is dependent
also upon our growth in the fruits of the Spirit.
Each step of knowledge brings a corresponding step of duty
and obedience, and each step of duty and obedience taken
will be followed by a further step in knowledge, for so, the
Spirit witnesseth, shall be the experience of all those who shall
be taught of God in the school of Christ. If we have this witness
of the Spirit of growth, both in grace and in knowledge,
let us rejoice therein, and let us follow on in the same
pathway until it shall bring us, under divine guidance, to
that which is perfect, both in knowledge and in grace.
The Holy Spirit's Future Testimony
The holy Spirit will witness to the reconciled world of
mankind in the next age, very similarly as to manner, but
very dissimilar as to facts. Those possessing the Spirit will
no longer be the few special servants and handmaids, but as
the Prophet Joel declares "all flesh." (Joel 2:28) The
Spirit's
"witness" will no longer be "whosoever will live godly shall
suffer persecution"; for no persecution will then be permitted.
[E240]
It will no longer "witness" to a "narrow way" of sacrifice,
for the day of sacrifice will be past: "A highway shall
be there" and it shall be without stumbling stones. (Isa. 35:8; 62:10)
It will "witness" that "Evildoers shall be cut
off: but those who wait upon the Lord, they shall inherit the
earth." (Acts 3:23; Psa. 37:7-11) It will
"witness" blessings
to the welldoer and punishments and destruction to wilful
evildoers. It is the same Spirit of God but under differences
of administration.
Having learned how the holy Spirit "witnesses" and what
are some of its testimonies through God's holy Word, we do
indeed find these very much more satisfactory than all the
doubts and fears inspired by mental and physical conditions--
feelings, falsely called by some the witness of the holy
Spirit. Nevertheless, we should call attention to the fact
that all Christians cannot have the same witnessings from
the Spirit of God with their spirits or minds. All Christians
of large experience and development should have testimony
or witness on all these points, and on other points set
forth in the Scriptures: but there are young Christians who
have not yet progressed far enough to have all of these witnessings;
some, perhaps, may be truly begotten of the Lord,
and as yet have but few of them. The great Husbandman
does not expect fruitage, neither green nor yet the developed
and ripe fruit, from the fresh and tender sprout of a
branch.
The first witness that the newly begotten may have is,
that they are accepted with the Lord; that they are young
branches in the true Vine; and that the Spirit of the Vine is
in them--the desire to grow and to be like the Vine, and to
bring forth fruitage. Nor should it be long after the branch
first shoots forth, before the sign of leaves and the buds of
promise for fruit will be discernible. The newborn babe in
the spiritual family manifests its relationship to the older
and more developed members of the family, not by its eating
of the strong meat, which might strangle it, but by desires
for the strengthening milk, to grow thereby. 1 Pet. 2:2
[E241]
Those who find themselves possessed of any of the foregoing
witnessings of the Spirit should rejoice correspondingly;
and every particular they are lacking they should
endeavor to cultivate and develop, so that they may ultimately
have the witness of the Spirit in their favor on every
point of the Scriptural testimony respecting the pathway
and experiences of the Lord's faithful people. Such will no
longer need to sing--"'Tis a point I long to know." On the
contrary, they will know, will have full assurance of faith,
and will be rooted and grounded and built up and established
in the faith. This is the divinely arranged way: we
wholly escape from fear--from "Doubting Castle"--for our
trust rests securely in the divine promises, which never fail.
This is as true in the time of trial and adversity and darkness
as when we are more particularly enjoying the light of
our heavenly Father's smile. The poet expresses the correct
thought, saying:
"When darkness seems to veil his face
I rest in his unchanging grace.
His oath, his covenant, his blood,
Support me in the whelming flood.
When all around my soul gives way,
He then is all my hope and stay."
Sanctified by the Spirit
"But ye are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are holy, in the name
of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God." 1 Cor. 6:11
Sanctification signifies a setting apart or separating. All
who are sanctified, set apart, fully consecrated to God, must
first be washed or justified--either actually cleansed from sin,
or reckonedly cleansed--"justified by faith." Actual
justification
will be the route of approach toward God on the part
of the world during the Millennium, under the guidance
and help of the great Mediator, and as part of the process of
the Atonement. Reckoned justification, that is, justification
[E242]
by faith--is the arrangement which operates during this
Gospel Age, by which we who are sinners by nature, and in
whose flesh dwells no perfection, are reckoned clean, holy,
justified, acceptable to God through our acceptance of
Christ as our Redeemer. We believe the Scriptural testimony
that "Christ died for our sins, according to the Scriptures";
and believing this, and desirous of escaping from
sin, we are accepted of God as though perfect, sinless, as justified
through the merit of the precious blood. Being thus
justified by faith, we have peace with God, and can approach
him, and will be received by him, and can begin to
do works acceptable to the Father, through the merit of our
Lord Jesus Christ. The evidence which we have of our justification
and sanctification comes to us through the Word,
and is called the "seal" and "witness" of the Spirit in us.
The power which enables us to live up to our consecration
vows is the holy Spirit or holy mind of God, which we receive
as a result of our faith in Christ, and our consecration
to be "dead with him." The Spirit of the Truth, which we
obtain through the study of our Father's Word, in our
Spirit of obedience thereto, furnishes us the needed strength
for overcoming the world and our own perverted appetites.
Accordingly, the text under consideration declares that all
the cleansing which we have experienced, all of our justification,
and all of our setting apart to righteousness, and our
separation from sin--all the victories and blessings in these
directions have come to us through the merit of our Lord
Jesus, and by or through the channel of the Spirit of holiness,
the Spirit of God, which we have received.
Other scriptures are in full harmony with these findings.
The same Apostle Paul prayed for the Church, "The very
God of peace sanctify you wholly." (1 Thess. 5:23) He is not
here contradicting the statement foregoing, that it is the
holy Spirit of God, which sanctifies. It is God who sanctifies,
and the medium, method or channel is his holy Spirit and
not another person.
[E243]
The Apostle Peter declares the Church to be "elect [chosen]
through sanctification [setting apart] of the Spirit unto
obedience." (1 Pet. 1:2) The thought here is that those
whom God now recognizes as his chosen ones, and who are
exhorted to make their calling and election sure, are chosen,
not arbitrarily, but according to fixed principles, viz., that
if the holy Spirit of God (influence of the Truth) operating
upon them shall bring them to the condition of full obedience
(sanctification) to the Father's will and plan and
providence, then they shall constitute the elect.
The Apostle Paul, in another of his epistles (Eph. 5:26),
attributes this sanctification and cleansing power in the
Church to the Word of God, saying, "Christ loved the
Church, and gave himself for it, that he might sanctify and
cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word." We are
not to suppose that the Apostle is here contradicting his
previous statement, to the effect that God sanctifies the
Church, nor contradicting his other statement, that it is the
Spirit of God that sanctifies the Church. Clearly and unmistakably,
his thought in every instance is, that it is the holy
Spirit of God, operating through the Word of his truth, that
he has designed shall produce in us cleansing, justification,
sanctification.
Thus also our Lord Jesus prayed, "Sanctify them
through thy Truth: thy Word is truth." (John 17:17) Thus
we see that the various scriptures upon the subject taken
together, teach that the sanctification of the Church is accomplished
by the Spirit of the Truth, imparted to the consecrated
ones through the Word of God which he provided
for this very purpose.
All who are thus sanctified are thenceforth "new creatures
in Christ Jesus," and are addressed as "them that are
sanctified
in Christ." (1 Cor. 1:2) Yet this sanctification in Christ
is not aside from the Spirit of God, nor aside from the Word
of God; for it is by reason of our acceptance of the divine
plan and provision, by reason of our coming to the point of
[E244]
sanctification of the Spirit, that we are one with Christ our
Lord. And this is further shown by the scripture which
says, "Both he that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified
are all of one [of one spirit, of one mind, begotten of the
Spirit of Truth], for which cause he is not ashamed to call
them brethren." (Heb. 2:11) Thus it is that we are
"washed,
sanctified, justified, in the name of our Lord Jesus and by
the Spirit of our God"--the Spirit of Truth.
Be Ye Filled with the Spirit
"Be filled with the Spirit; speaking to yourselves in psalms and hymns
and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord;
giving thanks always." Eph. 5:18-20
The intimation of this scripture is that the Lord's people
may have a greater or less degree or fulness of his Spirit. To
be his they must have some of his Spirit for "if any man have
not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his." (Rom. 8:9) It rests
with ourselves largely with our use of the means which God
had provided, how fully we may be filled with his Spirit
and disposition, his influence--the Spirit or influence of his
Truth, which he has revealed for the very purpose of sanctifying
our hearts and lives, and separating us from those
who have the spirit of the world.
Nothing in this and similar texts involves the thought of
a personal holy Spirit: quite the contrary. If a person were
meant, it would be inconsistent to urge the recipient to a
greater or less filling. The person who could enter could
alone have to do with the filling; if he is great, he will fill the
more, if small, he will fill the less. The holy Spirit conceived
of as a person, one of a trinity of Gods, equal with the Highest,
could not be supposed to get into the small compass of
an imperfect man, and then not even fill that little heart.
But when the correct thought of the divine power and influence
is understood the Apostle's exhortation is thoroughly
[E245]
reasonable. We should continue seeking to be filled
with the holy mind or disposition of our God, so beautifully
exemplified in the person and obedience of our dear Redeemer,
his Only Begotten Son.
And this thought of being filled with the holy Spirit is in
harmony with the Apostle's suggestion in another place,
that our mortal bodies are like leaky vessels, cracked,
marred, which God permits to be filled with his holy Spirit.
The Apostle's suggestion is that in view of what we know of
our own imperfections, and our liability to let slip from us
the holy influence, inspired of God through the Gospel, we
should give the more earnest heed lest we should let these
things slip from us, because "we have this treasure [the holy
Spirit, the renewed mind in harmony with God] in earthen
vessels." (Heb. 2:1; 2 Cor. 4:7) It behooves
all who would
walk in the footsteps of our Master, who would share in the
sufferings of Christ, and in the glory that shall follow, to
seek in the Lord's way to be filled with his Spirit. To this end
we need to keep close to the Lord, and to the fellow-members
of his body--close in sympathy, in love, in cooperation;
and we need also to keep close to the Word, which is the
fountain of the sanctifying influence to the entire Church.
"Sanctifying them through thy Truth: thy Word is truth."
It is in vain that we seek to be filled with the holy Spirit if
we do not give attention to the divine arrangement provided
for this very purpose. If we neglect the Word of God
we are neglecting this sanctifying power; if we neglect
prayer we are neglecting another privilege, and the helpfulness
which it brings. If we neglect to assemble ourselves
with those who are the Lord's people, and in whom we
see the "seal" of this Spirit, we will fail to get the benefits
and helps which "every joint supplieth"--including the
helps which God has promised to the Church as a whole,
through various members which he sets in the body for the
exposition of his Word, and the obtaining therefrom of its
sanctifying power or Spirit. 1 Cor. 12:25-28; Eph. 4:16
[E246]
The exhortation, therefore, "Be ye filled with the Spirit,"
implies much: it implies that we should make use of the
various arrangements and provisions which the Lord has
made for our spiritual development. Though we cannot
have personal contact with the Lord, we may have intercourse
through prayer and through the members of his
body, and through the Scriptures. Though we cannot have
actual contact with the Apostles, we may have contact with
their words. If we cannot have actual contact and personal
fellowship with the members of the Church, we may have
intercourse with them through the mails, and through the
medium of the printed page. If we desire to be filled with the
Lord's Spirit, we must obey these, his instructions.
The Seal of the Spirit
"In whom [Christ] ye also trusted, after that ye heard the word of Truth,
the gospel of your salvation; in whom also, after that ye believed, ye were
sealed with the holy Spirit of the promise, which is the earnest of our
inheritance." Eph. 1:13,14
Seals in olden times were used for various purposes.
(1) As a signet or signature, a mark of attestation or acknowledgment.
(2) To make secret, to render secure against
intrusion--as in Matt. 27:66; Rev. 10:4; 20:3.
It is in the first of these senses that the Lord's people are
said to be "sealed with the holy Spirit of the promise." The
Apostle does not say, as some seem to suppose, that we were
sealed by the holy Spirit as a person, the so-called third person
of a trinity of coequal Gods: he declares that we were
sealed "with the holy Spirit of the promise"; quite a
different
thought, as all will perceive. The holy Spirit is from the Father:
he does the sealing through Christ with the holy Spirit,
which itself is the seal. This is attested by the Apostle (Acts 2:33),
and is in full accord with the record respecting our
Lord Jesus, who was the first of the house of sons to be thus
sealed. We read, "Him hath God the Father sealed"--with
the holy Spirit. John 6:27
[E247]
The expression "Spirit of the promise," like other terms
used in reference to the holy influence of God, as the "Spirit
of holiness," "the Spirit of Truth," is descriptive: it shows
that there is a connection between this sealing and the promise
which God has given us. It is an advanced evidence or
attestation of God's covenant with the "sealed" one, that
"the exceeding great and precious promises" of the "things
which God hath in reservation for them that love him [supremely]"
are true; and that he shall inherit those promised
blessings after he has endured faithfully the tests of his love
and devotion which God will apply.
The Apostle refers to this same sealing later on in the
same epistle, and there identifies the "promise" with the
"day of deliverance." (Eph. 4:30) In other words then,
the
seal of the Spirit of promise unto the day of deliverance is
but another form of expressing the thought--we (the
Church) "have the first-fruits of the Spirit"--the hand-payment
as it were, binding the contract or covenant between
the Lord and us, and assuring us that if we faint not we
shall inherit the promise to the full.
This seal of covenant relationship, of sonship and heirship,
is not an outward sign upon our foreheads; nor is it a
mark or manifestation of God's favor in earthly affairs, in
worldly prosperity; nor is it now, nor was it ever, the "gifts"
of healing, or of speaking with tongues, etc., for many who
possessed those miraculous "gifts" lacked the seal and witness
of the Spirit. Acts 8:13-23; 1 Cor. 13:1-3
The seal or pledge of the holy Spirit is in the heart of the
sealed, and hence it is that no man knoweth it save he that
receiveth it (Rev. 2:17), except as others may see the fruits
of it in his daily life. "He who establisheth us with you in
Christ, and hath anointed us, is God; who hath also sealed
us and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts."
2 Cor. 1:21,22
This earnest or seal of sonship is the Spirit of love which is
at-one with the Father and all his holy arrangements,
crying out, Abba, Father; I delight to do thy will, O my
[E248]
God. He who has this seal or mark of sonship is he who not
only seeks to do the will of the Father, but doing it finds it
"not grievous," but delightsome. 1 John 5:3
The Spirit of adoption or sealing as sons, the possession of
the first-fruits or earnest of the coming inheritance, is, then,
one of the most advanced "witnesses" of the Spirit--the
very cream of Christian experiences in the present life. Before
attaining this stage of experience we must receive our
share of the anointing by coming into the anointed body of
Christ, the Church, by being begotten of the Spirit of Truth
unto sanctification of our spirits to know and do the Lord's
will. This experience comes after we have been quickened of
the Spirit to the service of righteousness: it is an evidence, so
to speak, that we have passed from the embryo condition to
one in which God can consider us sons and seal us as such.
As all believers should seek to come under the anointing
and begetting influence of the holy Spirit of God, the Spirit
of the Truth--so all who have been thus begotten of the
Spirit to sonship should seek to attain that position of fulness
of harmony with the Father that he can acknowledge
and seal. And having attained this position, let all be careful
not to mar or blur the seal--not to quench or extinguish
this precious treasure--not to turn this spirit of love and joy
in the holy Spirit of fellowship and communion into a spirit
of heaviness, darkness, grief. Not to spoil this seal, but to
keep it ever bright and fresh, should be the constant effort
of all who receive it.
|