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STUDY VIII
THE CHANNEL OF THE ATONEMENT
THE HOLY SPIRIT OF GOD
The Operation of the Holy Spirit--Now and in the Millennium--Various
Descriptive Names of the Holy Spirit, "Spirit of Love," "Spirit
of
Truth," etc.--In Contrast, the Unholy Spirit, "Spirit of Error,"
"Spirit of Fear," etc.--Personal Pronouns Applied--The Significance
of the Word Spirit--"God is a Spirit"--"The Holy Spirit Was not
yet
Given"--Gifts of the Spirit--The Transforming Power of the Holy
Spirit--The Spirit by Measure and Without Measure--"The Spirit of
the World," Antichrist--The Battle Between this and the Holy
Spirit--Spirit Fightings Without and Within the Saints--The Spirit
that Lusteth to Envy--Taught of the Spirit--The Parakletos, the
Comforter--He Shall Guide You into all Truth and into Full Atonement
--The Spirit's Supervision None the Less Since the Miraculous
Gifts Were Discontinued.
"For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God
...Ye have received the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father.
The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit that we are the children
of God." Rom. 8:14-16
"And it shall come to pass, afterward, that I will pour out my Spirit
upon all flesh." Joel 2:28
THE GREAT work of the Atonement could not be properly
considered, nor clearly understood, if the work of the
holy Spirit, in connection therewith, were overlooked or ignored.
The holy Spirit has much to do with the presentation
of the Atonement--making manifest to the believer the
divine forgiveness, as well as guiding him into full reconciliation
of heart to God. It was under the begetting influence
of the holy Spirit, received by our Lord Jesus at his baptism,
at the beginning of his ministry, that his consecrated
heart was enabled to see clearly and distinctly the Father's
will, the proper course, the narrow way of sacrifice, and to
appreciate the exceeding great and precious promises,
whose fulfilment lay beyond his humiliation, ignominy and
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death at Calvary. By the holy Spirit, therefore, our Redeemer
was enabled to perform his great work, being
guided thereby to do that which was pleasing and acceptable
before the Father, and which provided the ransom for
all humanity. Similarly the holy Spirit is identified with the
Church: all who have accepted the merits of the great sin-offering,
and who have come unto the Father through the
merit of the Son's sacrifice, and who have presented themselves
living sacrifices, in harmony with the high calling to
the divine nature held out to such during the Gospel age,
have needed and had the holy Spirit's aid. Only in proportion
as any receive the holy Spirit of God are they able to
come into proper lines of fellowship with the Father, and
with the Son, so as to be able to "prove what is that good
and acceptable and perfect will of God," and to do it. Only
by the holy Spirit are we guided beyond the mere letter of
the divine testimony, into a true appreciation of "the deep
things of God," and all those things which God hath in reservation
for them that love him, which the human eye hath
not seen, the human ear hath not heard, neither hath entered
into the human heart to understand and appreciate.
1 Cor. 2:9,10
The holy Spirit's office will be equally important during
the Millennial age, in bringing the world of mankind back
into harmony with God, under the terms of the New Covenant,
through the merits of the dear Redeemer's sacrifice.
Accordingly, through the prophet Joel (2:28,29), the Lord
has drawn attention to this fact, pointing out that while he
will pour his Spirit only upon his servants and handmaidens
during this Gospel age, yet "afterward" his holy
Spirit shall be generally poured upon the world of mankind,
"all flesh."* During the Millennial age, then, the
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world's progress will be in full harmony with the holy
Spirit; and in proportion as men shall come into full harmony
with that holy Spirit will any of them become eligible
to the eternal conditions of life and joy and blessing which
lie beyond the Millennial age. The fact that the holy Spirit
will cooperate with the glorified Church in the blessing of
all the families of the earth is also testified by our Lord. After
picturing to us the glories of the Millennium and its
abundant supply of truth as a mighty river of the water of
life, clear as crystal, he says, "And the Spirit and the Bride
say, Come! And whosoever will may come, and take of the
water of life freely." Rev. 22:17
*The order of this blessing is reversed in the prophetic statement; quite
probably, in order to obscure the matter until the proper time, and thus
to hide some of the length and breadth and height and depth of the divine
plan, until the due time for it to be known and appreciated.
But this subject of the holy Spirit, its office and operation,
has been grievously misunderstood by many of the
Lord's people for centuries: and only in the light of the rising
Sun of Righteousness--in the light of the parousia of the
Son of Man--is this subject becoming thoroughly clear and
reasonable, as it evidently was to the early Church, and in
harmony with all the various Scriptural testimonies pertaining
to it. The doctrine of the Trinity, which, as we have
seen, began to rise in the second century, and reached a
large development in the fourth century, is responsible, in
considerable measure, for much of the darkness which
blends with the truth on this subject in many Christian
minds, much to their disadvantage--confusing and mystifying
all religious convictions.
There is consistency in the Scripture teaching that the
Father and Son are in full harmony and oneness of purpose
and operation, as we have just seen. And equally consistent
is the Scripture teaching respecting the holy Spirit--that it
is not another God, but the spirit, influence or power exercised
by the one God, our Father, and by his Only Begotten
Son--in absolute oneness, therefore, with both of these, who
also are at one or in full accord. But how different is this
unity
of the Father, the Son and the holy Spirit from that held
and taught under the name of Trinitarian doctrine, which
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in the language of the Catechism (Question 5 and 6) declares
--There are three persons in the One God--the Father,
the Son, and the Holy Ghost: "these three are one God,
the same in substance, equal in power and glory." This view
suited well "the dark ages" which it helped to produce. The
period in which mysteries were worshiped instead of unraveled
found a most choice one in this theory, which is as
unscriptural as it is unreasonable. How could the three be one
in person, in substance? And if only "one in substance"
how
could they be "equal?" Does not every intelligent person
know that if God is one in person he cannot be three? and
that if three in person there can be only one sense in which
the three could be one, and that not in person but in purpose,
in mind, in will, in cooperation? Verily, if it were not
for the fact that this trinitarian nonsense was drilled into us
from earliest infancy, and the fact that it is soberly taught
in Theological Seminaries by gray-haired professors, in
many other ways apparently wise, nobody would give it a
moment's serious consideration. How the great Adversary
ever succeeded in foisting it upon the Lord's people to bewilder
and mystify them, and render much of the Word of
God of none effect, is the real mystery which will probably
not be solved until we "know even as we are known," in
glory.
The careful student of the preceding chapters has found
abundant testimony from the Scriptures, to the effect that
there is but one All-mighty God--Jehovah; and that he has
highly exalted his First Begotten Son, his Only Begotten
Son, to his own nature and to his own throne of the universe;
and that next to these in order of rank will be the glorified
Church, the Bride, the Lamb's wife and joint-heir--
otherwise styled his "brethren." These shall be made associates
of his glory, as in the present age they are required to be
associates in his sufferings. The students have noticed also,
that all scriptures harmonize and agree in the above testimony;
and further, that there are no scriptures whatever
which, either directly or indirectly, actually or apparently,
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conflict with these findings. The question then arises, Who,
Where, What, is the holy Spirit?
Let us follow in respect to this question the same course of
investigation followed in the others. Let us go to the law
and to the testimony of God for all our information. Let us
not go to man. Let us not accept the doubts and speculations
of good people who are dead, or of good people who
are living, nor yet our own. Let us remember the Apostle's
declaration that the Word of the Lord is given with the intention--
"that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly
furnished unto every good work." (2 Tim. 3:17) Let us
place our reliance wholly upon the Lord, and seek to know
the meaning of what he declares respecting the holy Spirit,
bringing every Scripture testimony into harmony; assured
that the truth, and it only, will stand such a searching examination.
So doing, prayerfully and carefully, our efforts
shall be rewarded. To him that knocketh, the door of
knowledge shall be opened; to him that seeketh, the knowledge
of the holy Spirit shall be revealed. Isa. 8:20;
Matt. 7:7,8
The holy Spirit is variously defined in the Scriptures, and
to rightly understand the subject these various definitions
must be considered together, and be permitted to throw
light upon each other. Notice that the holy Spirit is variously
styled--"The Spirit of God," "The Spirit of Christ,"
"The Spirit of Holiness," "The Spirit of Truth," "The
Spirit of a Sound Mind," "The Spirit of Liberty," "The
Spirit of the Father," "The Holy Spirit of Promise," "The
Spirit of Meekness," "The Spirit of Understanding," "The
Spirit of Wisdom," "The Spirit of Glory," "The Spirit of
Counsel," "The Spirit of Grace," "The Spirit of
Adoption,"
"The Spirit of Prophecy."
These various titles, repeated many times, and used interchangeably,
give us the full, proper assurance that they
all relate to the same holy Spirit--indeed, frequently the
word "holy" is added in, combined, as for instance, "The
holy Spirit of God," "The holy Spirit of Promise," etc. We
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must seek an understanding of the subject which will reject
none of these appellations, but harmonize them all. It is impossible
to harmonize these various statements with the ordinary
idea of a third God; but it is entirely consistent with
every one of them to understand these various expressions
as descriptive of the spirit, disposition and power of one
God, our Father; and also the spirit, disposition and power
of our Lord Jesus Christ, because he is at one with the Father
--and also to a certain extent it is the spirit or disposition
of all who are truly the Lord's, angels or men, in
proportion as they have come into oneness or harmony,
with him.
It may be helpful to some to notice that there is another
spirit mentioned frequently throughout the Scriptures, and
in opposite terms, namely, "The Spirit of Fear," "The
Spirit of Bondage," "The Spirit of the World," "The Spirit
of Error," "The Spirit of Divination," "The Spirit of
Antichrist,"
"The Spirit of Slumber." No one thinks that these
various definitions, if unitedly considered, would justify the
thought that there are two or more Satans. All naturally
and properly enough recognize the meaning of these terms,
as signifying in general the wrong spirit--the spirit, disposition
or power which has its chief exemplification in Satan;
the spirit manifesting itself in all who are in harmony
with sin and Satan. Very properly also, none think of these
as personal spirits. No more should any one consider the
various applications of the word "spirit" in a good sense, as
signifying different spirit beings, nor as signifying unitedly
another God. These terms, considered unitedly, represent
various features of the character, the disposition, the Spirit
of our God, Jehovah, and proportionately the spirit or disposition
of all who have received his Spirit, become partakers
of his disposition and come into harmony with the
divine mind.
Certain unscriptural ideas, and therefore false ideas, respecting
the spirit of man, which will be examined in a succeeding
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chapter, lie close to the foundation of the unscriptural
and false view of the holy Spirit, now so generally
prevalent. And the wrong thoughts respecting the Spirit of
God and the spirit of man have been intensified and deepened
by the fact that the translators of our Common Version
English Bible have ninety-two times used the phrase
"Holy Ghost" without the slightest authority--the original
Greek word being pneuma--spirit. And the word "ghost," to
the uneducated, has a very vague meaning, which, nevertheless,
is very positively identified with the thought of personality.
It is worthy of note that in the Revised Version of
the New Testament twenty-one of these occurrences of the
word "Ghost" were changed so as to read "Spirit," and that
the American Revision Committee recorded its protest
in respect to the use of the word "Ghost" in the remaining
seventy-one occurrences. And yet both the English
and American Committees were composed of strict
Trinitarians.
There is absolutely no ground whatever for thinking of
or speaking of the holy Spirit as another God, distinct in
personality from the Father and the Son. Quite to the contrary
of this, notice the fact that it was the Father's Spirit
that was communicated to our Lord Jesus, as it is written,
"The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me, because he hath
anointed me to preach the Gospel." (Luke 4:18) Turning to
the prophecy from which this quotation is made, we read
there, in the Hebrew, "The Spirit of the Lord Jehovah is on
me, because Jehovah hath anointed me to proclaim good
tidings to the humble." (Isa. 61:1) And to the same purport
we read again, "And the Spirit of Jehovah shall rest upon
him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of
counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of reverence
of Jehovah." (Isa. 11:2,3) Similarly the same Spirit in
Christ is referred to as "The Spirit of Christ," the mind of
Christ--"Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ
Jesus our Lord." Phil. 2:5
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It is urged by some that our Lord's reference to the holy
Spirit, recorded in John 14:26, proves that the Spirit is a
person, because our Common Version reads this passage
thus: "But the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom
the Father will send in my name, he shall teach you all
things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever
I have said unto you." But a glance at the Greek text
of this passage shows that the translators were influenced
by their prejudices on the subject, for there is no ground for
the use of the words "whom" and "he." The Diaglott
renders
this verse thus: "But the helper, the holy Spirit which the Father
will send in my name, shall teach you all things and
remind you of those things which I said to you."
The same criticism is applicable to the seventeenth verse
of the same chapter, which, in our Common Version, reads:
"The Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because
it seeth him not, neither knoweth him, but ye know
him, for he dwelleth with you, and shall be in you." Here
the
expression, "Spirit of truth," is evidently used in contrast
with the "spirit of error." The passage has no reference
whatever to a person, but to the influence of the truth, and
the effect of the same upon the Lord's people. The Diaglott
translation of this verse reads: "The Spirit of truth, which
the world cannot receive, because it beholds it not, nor
knows it; but ye know it; because it operates with you and
will be in you."
Take another illustration--"When he the Spirit of truth is
come, he will guide you into all truth; for he shall not speak
of himself; but whatsoever he shall hear that shall he
speak;
and he shall show you things to come. He will glorify me, for
he shall receive of mine and shall show it unto you." (John 16:13,14)
In this passage the Greek word, heautou, is translated
"himself," yet the same word is frequently properly
translated "itself." In our Common Version this word
heautou is rendered in the masculine, feminine, common,
and neuter genders. For instance, in the above text it is rendered
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in the masculine;* in 1 Cor. 11:5it is in the feminine
gender--"dishonoreth her head"; similarly in Rev. 2:20--
"which calleth herself a prophetess"; and again in 1 Cor. 13:5
--"Love seeketh not her own." In 1 Cor. 11:31it
is rendered
in the common gender--"would judge ourselves"; likewise
in 1 Cor. 16:15--"have addicted themselves";
again,
Luke 22:17--"divide it among yourselves"; again,
John 6:53
--"ye have no life in you." As illustrations of the
translation
of the word heautou in the neuter form, in our Common
Version, note the following:
*The pronoun follows its noun here, Comforter (Gr. masculine, but
arbitrarily
so, regardless of sex--as in the German, which makes stove and
table, masculine; fork, feminine; woman, neuter gender).
"Let the morrow take thought for the things of itself."
Matt. 6:34
"If a kingdom be divided against itself." Mark 3:24
"If a house be divided against itself." Mark 3:25
"As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself." John 15:4
"There is nothing unclean of itself." Rom. 14:14
"The whole body...maketh increase of the body unto
the edifying of itself in love." Eph. 4:16
"Faith, if it hath not works, is dead, being by itself."
James 2:17
Similarly, the word ekinos, rendered "he" in the passage
under consideration might with equal propriety, be rendered
"that," "this," "those," "the same,"
"she," "it"; and
in our Common Version English Bible it is rendered in all
these different forms, and more frequently than as the masculine
pronouns, "he," "his," "him." Anyone skeptical on
this
subject can readily convince himself by consulting a Greek-English
Concordance of the New Testament, which shows
the various translations of these words. We will give one example
of each of these translations of the word ekinos:
"It shall be more tolerable in that day for Sodom than for
that city." Luke 10:12
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"She, supposing him to be the gardener, saith."
John 20:15
"But know this, that if the goodman of the house."
Matt. 24:43
"I do not say that ye shall pray for it." 1 John 5:16
"On one of those days as he taught." Luke 20:1
"The same day was the Sabbath." John 5:9
"The child was cured from that very hour." Matt. 17:18
It is not infrequent, however, to attach to a virtue or
quality the gender of the person or thing to which it belongs;
thus, for instance, because the heavenly Father is designated
as masculine, therefore it would be but proper that
his power, his spirit, his every influence and characteristic
should be similarly designated in the masculine form. Nor
is it rare for things which are neuter of themselves to be designated
as masculine or feminine, according as they are
strong and active, or passive and delicate. Thus, for instance,
the sun is universally referred to as "he," and the
moon as "she." Hence, if it were not for the general misconception
on the subject, and the prevalent thought that
the holy Spirit is a person (and not merely the divine spirit,
influence or power--the spirit of the Father), there could be
no criticism made of the use of the masculine pronouns in
respect to the holy Spirit; because God is recognized as masculine,
as the Author and source of life and blessing. So,
then, let us not overlook the fact that the use of the personal
pronouns does not prove the holy Spirit of God to be another
person from the Father and the Son--another God.
The holy Spirit or influence is the Father's spirit or influence,
and the Son's also, for these are one in purpose and
influence.
The Meaning of the Word "Spirit"
The question, then properly arises, what senses or meanings
attach to the words "holy Spirit" as used in the Scriptures?
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What qualities or qualifications of the divine
character or power are represented by the word "spirit?"
The answer will best be found by first of all examining the
strict meaning of the word "spirit," and then examining all
the different methods of its use throughout the Scriptures.
(1) The word "spirit," in the Old Testament, is the translation
of the Hebrew word ruach, the primary significance
or root-meaning of which is wind. The word "spirit" in the
New Testament comes from the Greek word pneuma, whose
primary significance or root-meaning likewise is wind. But
let no one hastily conclude that we are about to attempt to
prove that the holy Spirit is a holy wind, for nothing could
be farther from our thought. But we desire to present this
obscure subject in such a manner as will be helpful both to
the learned and the unlearned: hence we begin with the acknowledged
root-meaning of these words, that we may ascertain
how and why it was used in this connection.
Because the wind is both invisible and powerful, these
words, ruach and pneuma, gradually took on much wider
meanings, and came to represent any invisible power or influence,
good or bad. And since divine power is exercised
through channels and by agencies beyond human sight,
therefore this word "spirit" came more and more to be applied
to all of the Lord's dealings. Naturally also it came
into common use in connection with such human influences
as are invisible; for instance, to represent the breath
of life, the power by which the man lives, which is invisible,
designated the "spirit," or "breath of life"; also for the
power of the mind, which is invisible, called "the spirit of
the
mind." Life itself is a power and is invisible, and hence it
also was called spirit by the ancients. A few illustrations of
these various uses of the Hebrew word ruach and the Greek
word pneuma may be helpful.
Ruach in the Old Testament is translated "blast" 4 times,
"breath" 28 times, "mind" 6 times, "smell" 8
times, "wind"
and "windy" 91 times. In every instance the thought behind
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the word is an invisible power or influence. Samples of
these translations of ruach are as follows:
"With the blast of thy nostrils the waters were gathered
together." Exod. 15:8
"All flesh wherein is the breath of life." Gen. 6:17; 7:15
"In whose hand is the...breath of all mankind."
Job 12:10
"They have all one breath: so that a man hath no pre-eminence."
Eccl. 3:19
"Which was a grief of mind unto Isaac." Gen. 26:35
"Jehovah smelleth a sweet savor." Gen. 8:21
"Noses have they but they smell not." Psa. 115:6
"God made a wind to pass over the earth." Gen. 8:1
"Thou didst blow with thy wind." Exod. 15:10
"Stormy wind fulfilling his word." Psa. 148:8
"The trees of the wood are moved with the wind." Isa. 7:2
Pneuma in the New Testament is translated (besides
"ghost" and "spirit") "life,"
"spiritual," and "wind," as
follows:
"To give life to the image of the beast." Rev. 13:15
"Forasmuch as ye are zealous of spiritual gifts."
1 Cor. 14:12
"The wind bloweth where it listeth and ye hear the sound
thereof." John 3:8
And let us not forget that all of these various translations
were made by Trinitarians. We do not object to these translations
--they are quite proper: but we call attention to
them as proofs that the words ruach and pneuma, rendered
"spirit," do not signify personality, but do signify
invisible power
or influence.
"God Is a Spirit"
(2) "God is a Spirit"; that is to say, he is a powerful but
invisible being; likewise the angels are called spirits, because
they also, in their natural condition, are invisible to
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men, except as revealed by miraculous power. Our Lord
Jesus, while he was a man, was not designated a spirit
being, but since his exaltation it is written of him, "Now the
Lord is that Spirit"--he is now a powerful and invisible
being. The Church of this Gospel Age is promised change of
nature, to the likeness of her Lord, as it is written, "We shall
be like him, for we shall see him as he is." The Church is spoken
of as being spiritual, inasmuch as she is in harmony
with the Lord and is declared to be begotten again by the
Spirit to a new nature, a spirit nature, with the assurance that
that which is begotten of the Spirit will, in the resurrection,
be born of the Spirit. This use of the word spirit, it will be
perceived, is related to personality--spirit beings. 2 Cor. 3:17;
1 John 3:2; John 3:6
(3) Another use of the word spirit is in the sense of generative
power or fecundity, as in Gen. 1:2, "And the Spirit of
God moved upon the face of the waters"--that is to say, the
power of God, his vehicle of energy, fecundated waters, or
rendered them fruitful, prolific. Similarly, "Holy men of
old spoke and wrote as they were moved by the holy Spirit,"
the holy influence or power of God fecundated their minds,
causing them to bring forth thoughts such as God wished to
have expressed. (2 Pet. 1:21) Similarly, the skilled workmen
whom Moses selected to prepare the paraphernalia of the
Tabernacle were brought under the influence of the divine
power, to the energizing or quickening of their natural faculties,
without affecting them in any moral sense, even as
the waters of the great deep were not affected in a moral
sense. Thus it is written:
"The Lord hath called by name Bezaleel...and hath
filled him with the Spirit of God, in wisdom, in understanding,
in knowledge, in all manner of workmanship,
and to devise curious works; to work in gold, and in silver,
and in brass; and in covering of stones, to set them; and in
carving of wood, to make any manner of cunning work.
And he hath put in his heart that he may teach, both he
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and Aholiab,...them hath he filled with wisdom of heart
to work all manner of work, of the engraver and of the cunning
workman, and of the embroiderer."
Exod. 35:30-35; 28:3; 31:3,4
Likewise, we are informed that Jehovah God put upon
Moses and the elders of Israel his Spirit, with special power
for judging in Israel's affairs, preserving order, etc. (Num. 11:17-26)
After the same manner God's Spirit was with the
kings of Israel, so long as they were loyal to him. Notice, for
instance, the case of Saul (1 Sam. 11:6); and that this Spirit
of wisdom or judgment pertaining to the government of Israel
departed from Saul, and was conferred upon David,
whose discreetness thereafter is specially noted. (1 Sam. 16:13,14)
Thereafter, instead of the Spirit of wisdom and
courage and confidence, as a servant of the Lord, Saul had
an evil spirit, more literally a spirit of sadness, of dejection,
loss of confidence, in the realization that he was no longer
recognized as the Lord's representative on the throne. And
this spirit of dejection, which brooded on calamities, is said
to have been from the Lord--probably in the sense that it
resulted from the Lord's dealings, in removing from Saul
his recognition and sustaining power and direction in the
affairs of Israel.
"The Holy Spirit Was not yet Given"
But no manifestation of the Spirit of God, prior to the
first advent of our Lord Jesus, was exactly the same as the
manifestation and operation of the Lord's Spirit upon our
Lord Jesus, from the time of his baptism until his crucifixion,
and upon the Church of Christ from the day of Pentecost
until now--until the very end of this Gospel Age, and
the completion of the Church's course in the first resurrection.
In harmony with this we read, "The holy Spirit was
not yet given [except to our Lord Jesus], because Jesus was
not yet glorified." John 7:39
The operation of God's Spirit during this Gospel Age is
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widely different from its operation in previous times; and
this difference is expressed in the words "Spirit of adoption,"
"Spirit of sonship," "Spirit of holiness," "Spirit of
truth," and kindred expressions. As we have already seen,
after Adam's fall none of his posterity were accepted as sons
of God prior to the first advent: the very highest title given
to the father of the faithful, Abraham, was that of friend:
"Abraham was called the friend of God." But, as the
Apostle John explains, when the Logos was made flesh, he
presented himself to his own people, Israel, and to as many
as received him (then and since) gave he power (privilege, opportunity)
to become the sons of God; and these, he declares,
were begotten of God--begotten of the Spirit, as "that which
is born of the Spirit is spirit." John 1:12,13; 3:3-8
The holy Spirit, in this sense of the word, is guaranteed
only to the house of sons; and the house of sons was unknown
until the Beloved Son was manifested in the flesh
and redeemed the world, and granted to those who accept
him the opportunity to receive the adoption of sons. (Gal. 4:5;
Eph. 1:5) This adoption, as the Apostle informs us,
primarily was the inheritance of Israel, but since there was
not a sufficient number in Israel ready to complete the predestinated
number to be adopted, therefore, after accepting
Israel's remnant, "God did visit the Gentiles, to take out of
them a people for his name," to be the sons of God, joint-heirs
with Christ, and this was foreknown and foretold
through the prophets. Rom. 9:4,29-33; Acts 15:14
But in what respects does this manifestation of the divine
power, influence or Spirit, during this Gospel age, differ
from the manifestation of it in previous times? The Apostle
Peter answers this question, assuring us that the ancient
worthies, although highly honored of God, and moved
upon by his holy Spirit, spoke and wrote things which they
did not understand. God used them as his servants to write
out things not due to be understood by them, but which in
due time would be revealed to us, the house of sons, by the
operation of the same holy Spirit or holy power of God
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upon those begotten of his Spirit. In the past the Spirit's operation
was chiefly mechanical: to us its operation is chiefly
explanatory and sympathetic, expounding the divine plan
through apostles and teachers specially "set in the Church"
from time to time, the object being to enable the sons "to
comprehend with all saints the length and breadth, the
height and the depth" of the divine wisdom and goodness,
as exemplified in the divine plan and its revelation. Indeed,
from the Apostle's language, it is evident that even the angels
(who were sometimes used of the Lord as his channels
in communicating with the prophets, the mediums of his
holy Spirit) were not permitted to understand the meaning
of their communications, any more than were the prophets
who wrote out the revelations for our benefit. Note the
Apostle's words:
"Of which salvation the prophets have inquired and
searched diligently, who prophesied of the grace that would
come unto you: searching what [time] or what manner of
time [literal or symbolic] the spirit of Christ which was in
them did signify when it testified beforehand the sufferings
of Christ, and the glory that should follow. Unto whom it
was revealed that not unto themselves but unto us they did
minister the things which are now reported unto you by
them that have preached the gospel unto you with the holy
Spirit sent down from heaven: which things also the angels
desire to look into." 1 Pet. 1:10-12; 2 Pet. 1:21
Gifts of the Same Spirit, the Same Lord,
the Same God
"There are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit, as there
are differences of administration, but the same Lord; there are
divers operations, but it is the same God which worketh all in
all. But a manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man
[in the Church] to profit withal. For to one is given, by the
[E179]
Spirit, the word of wisdom; to another the word of knowledge,
by the same Spirit; to another faith, by the same
Spirit; to another, the gifts of healing, by the same Spirit; to
another, the working of miracles; to another, prophecy; to
another, discernment of spirits; to another, divers kinds of
tongues; to another, the interpretation of tongues; but all
these worketh that one and selfsame Spirit, dividing to every
man severally as he will." 1 Cor. 12:4-11
Here are enumerated some of the gifts given by the holy
Spirit to the Church, but we are to distinguish sharply between
the holy Spirit itself and these gifts or manifestations
granted in the early Church. As they were not to understand
that different spirits were operating in the different
members of the Church, because of the differences of their
gifts, so they were not to understand that it was a different
Lord or Master that gave these gifts, but all were to be identified
as of the one holy influence shed forth by the one
Lord, the representative of the one God over all, Jehovah;
and to be explained as "differences of administration," or of
operation.
Not only so, but the Spirit of God, the holy Spirit,
has varied its administration in the Church: so that,
whereas "gifts" of the kind here mentioned were general in
the early Church, the day came, as the Apostle explained it
would come, when prophecy would fail, tongues would
cease, and special inspirations of knowledge would vanish
away. (1 Cor. 13:8) All of these "gifts" were
evidently necessary
at the inauguration of the Church, at the start of the
new age, but became unnecessary after the Church had
been established and the canon of the inspired writings had
been completed. These, the Apostle declares, are sufficient,
"that the man of God may be thoroughly furnished unto all
good works." 2 Tim. 3:17
True, not all of these gifts have vanished away or ceased;
nor does the cessation of those which have been discontinued
prove that the Lord has less power today than he
had eighteen centuries ago; nor do they prove that the
[E180]
Lord's people are less worthy or less favored of the Lord. On
the contrary, they indicate a "diversity of manifestation,"
and imply that God's people no longer have need of those
cruder methods of instruction and proofs of their acceptance
with the Lord. Now, instead of having such gifts miraculously
bestowed, the operation of God's Spirit or power
seems to be upon each of his consecrated people--partly in
proportion to their natural qualifications, and partly in
proportion to their zeal for his service. And hence we find
that the apostle, in this connection, and in later epistles, incites
the Church to seek to develop spiritual gifts, powers,
abilities, in and for the service of the Lord and his people
and his Truth.
These personally developed gifts are to be esteemed more
highly than these miraculously bestowed; and hence the
Apostle says, "I show unto you a more excellent way"; "follow
after love and desire [cultivate] spiritual gifts, especially
that ye may prophesy [publicly expound]." (1 Cor. 12:31; 14:1)
The Apostle points out that the speaking with
tongues was merely for "a sign," that the attention of the
unbelievers might be drawn to the Church and her methods.
(1 Cor. 14:22) And this gift, therefore, which was
highly esteemed by some of the Corinthians, he points out
as being one of the least spiritual--adapted less to the development
of the spiritual Church, and chiefly useful in connection
with the unregenerate world. This gift, and others
of a somewhat similar class, quickly disappeared from the
Church after she had obtained a footing, and a recognition
in the world.
On the contrary, the "fruits of the Spirit" are to be
encouraged,
to be cultivated more and more, that they may
yield the full, perfect fruitage of love to God, to each other,
and the love of sympathy toward the world. These fruits of
the Spirit are designated by the Apostle to be "love, joy,
peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness,
temperance." (Gal. 5:22,23) The word "fruit," it
will be noticed,
[E181]
conveys a double thought, that it is a gift, but of gradual
development and maturity, and the result of labor. So
with the gifts of the Spirit: "Every good gift and perfect gift
cometh down from our Father," but such-like fruits are not
miraculous gifts but gradual and indirect gifts, inspired by
our Father's promises, and by our Lord's instructions
through the apostles and prophets. They are wrought out
in us in proportion as we come into harmony and obedience
of thought and word and deed with the Spirit of our
Father, by which we are begotten, and by which, if
obedient, we are having developed more and more of the
fruits of holiness, or fruits of the holy Spirit or disposition in
likeness of God's dear Son, our Lord and Redeemer. Thus,
under the ministration of the holy Spirit of the Truth, the
faithful are being fitted to be "born of the Spirit" in the first
resurrection, spirit beings; as they were begotten of the
Spirit at the moment of consecration. Thus perfected as
spirit beings, the Church will be heirs of God, joint-heirs
with Jesus Christ, our Lord, in fulness of unity and fellowship
with the Father and with the Son, complete in him,
who is the head of all principalities and powers, and the Father's
associate in the Kingdom, and full of the Spirit of the
Father and of the Son--the holy Spirit.
It will be seen from the foregoing general views of the
subject that the same Spirit or power of the heavenly Father,
Jehovah, which operated in the creation of the world,
and which operated differently upon his servants of the
past, is, during this Gospel age, operating still differently,
for the development of the Church, in the bringing of the
Church into harmony with God, and in fitting and preparing
it as the "Body of Christ" for a joint share in the
Kingdom. And it will be the same holy Spirit or influence
of God that will operate still differently during the Millennial
age, through Christ and the Church glorified, to bring
the world into harmony and unity with the principles of
righteousness, and with the King of kings and Lord of lords.
[E182]
Nothing connected with this work in any sense or degree
makes necessary another God. Quite the contrary. The fact
that it is the one God who is operating under various circumstances
and conditions, and by various means, for the
accomplishment of his one purpose, gives us all the more
assurance that all his good purposes shall be accomplished,
and that, as he declares, "The word that goeth forth out of
my mouth, it shall not return unto me void, but shall prosper
in the thing whereto I sent it." Isa. 55:11
Divine Will, Influence, Power, Spirit
From the foregoing we perceive that a broad definition of
the words "Spirit of God," or "holy Spirit," would be--the
divine will, influence, or power, exercised any and
everywhere,
and for any purpose in harmony with the divine will,
which, being a holy will, implies that the steps and operations
of the holy Spirit will be in harmony with holiness.
God exercises his Spirit or energy in many ways, using various
agencies in accomplishing various results. Whatever is
accomplished by the Lord through either mechanical or intelligent
agencies, is as truly his work as though he were the
direct actor, since all those agencies are of his creation. Just
as, amongst men, the contracting builder may not be actually
working on every part of the construction, but every
workman is his representative and under his control: the
work, as a whole, is the contractor's work, though he may
never have lifted a tool upon it. He does it with his materials
and through his representatives and agents.
Thus, for instance, when we read, "Jehovah God created
the heavens and the earth" (Gen. 2:4), we are not to suppose
that he personally handled the elements. He used various
agencies--"He spake and it was done [he gave orders
and they were promptly executed]; he commanded, and it
stood fast." (Psa. 33:6,9) Creation did not spring instantly
into order; for we read that time was used--six days or
epochs. And while we are distinctly informed that "All
[E183]
things are of the Father"--by his energy, his will, his Spirit,
yet that energy, as we have previously seen, was exercised
through his Son, the Logos.
The transforming power of God's holy Spirit, as it operates
during this Gospel dispensation, to bring his people
into full at-one-ment with himself, is a more abstruse, a less
easily understood operation, than the exercise of his power
mentioned in Genesis 1:2. It deals with a higher subject--
with mind and free will instead of senseless matter.
In the light of the Scriptures we may understand the holy
Spirit to mean:
(a) God's power exercised in any manner, but always according
to lines of justice and love, and hence always a holy
power.
(b) This power may be an energy of life, a physically creative
power, or a power of thought, creating and inspiring
thoughts and words, or a quickening or life-giving power,
as it was manifested in the resurrection of our Lord, and
will again be manifested in the resurrection of the Church,
his body.
(c) The begetting or transforming power or influence of
the knowledge of the Truth. In this aspect it is designated
"The Spirit of Truth." God rules his own course according
to truth and righteousness; hence, God's Word, the revelation
of his course, is called Truth--"Thy word is Truth."
Similarly, all who come under the influence of God's plan
of Truth and righteousness are properly said to be under
the influence of the Spirit or disposition of the Truth: they
are properly described as begotten of the Truth to newness
of life.
The Father draws sinners to Christ through a general enlightenment
of the mind, a conviction of sin and of their
need of a Redeemer. Those who accept Christ as their Savior
and Advocate, and come to the point of full consecration
to God, through Christ, are said to be begotten of
God, "begotten by the word of truth," begotten by the
[E184]
Spirit of God to a newness of life. That is to say, having
come into harmony with divine conditions and regulations,
God accepts this consecrated attitude as the proper one,
and passing by or covering the weakness of the flesh with
the robe of Christ's righteousness--justification by faith, he
accepts such as "new creatures in Christ Jesus," whose desire
is to be guided by his Spirit into all truth, and to be led
by that holy disposition or Spirit into full obedience to the
extent of self-sacrifice, even unto death. Such are said to
have received "the Spirit of adoption," because from thenceforth
God, through Christ, enters into a special covenant
with these as sons. And the Father, through the Captain of
their Salvation, guarantees to such that if they abide in the
Spirit of the Truth he will cause that all the affairs and incidents
of life shall work together for good to them--to the
development in them of more and more of the spirit of
righteousness, truth, peace, joy; they shall have more and
more of the holy Spirit, as they progress in obedience to the
Spirit of Truth. Hence the exhortation to such is, "Be ye
filled with the Spirit," "walk in the Spirit," "let the
Spirit of
Christ dwell in you richly and abound, and it shall make
you to be neither barren nor unfruitful." This holy Spirit
operating in the believer from the time of his full consecration
to the Lord, is the same holy Spirit or disposition
of the Father which operated in our Lord Jesus Christ, and
hence it is also styled "the Spirit of Christ," and we are assured,
"if any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of
his." Rom. 8:9
The Spirit by "Measure" and
"Without Measure"
Our Lord Jesus was begotten of the holy Spirit at his
baptism, his consecration; and so likewise the members of
his body, his Church, we have seen, are "begotten" at their
"baptism into his death," at the moment of their full consecration:
but there is a distinction to be always remembered;
[E185]
viz., that our Lord Jesus, the Head of the Church,
received the holy Spirit without measure, unlimitedly (John 3:34),
while his followers receive it by measure, or limitedly--
a measure of the Spirit is given to every man (in the
Church). (1 Cor. 12:7; Rom. 12:3) The reason for
this
difference is that our Lord was a perfect man, while we, his
followers, although accepted as reckonedly perfect (justified
by faith), are actually very imperfect. The perfect man
as the very image of God could be in fullest harmony with
God and with his Spirit of holiness, in every and all particulars;
but in proportion to the degradation through the fall,
our harmony with God and with his Spirit of holiness has
been impaired, though it is the duty and privilege of each to
thoroughly seek to know and to do the Lord's will and to
have no will in opposition to his; yet no member of the
fallen race is capable of receiving the Lord's Spirit to the
full--to be in absolute harmony with God in every particular.
And hence, amongst those who believe, and who consecrate
themselves, and who receive the holy Spirit of
adoption, we find it possessed in different measures, these
measures depending upon the degree of our fall from the
divine image, and the degree of grace and faith attained
since coming into the body of Christ. And the rapidity with
which we may acquire more and more of the holy Spirit,
coming into fuller and fuller knowledge and accord with
every feature of the divine plan, is dependent largely upon
our realization of our own imperfections, and the degree of
our consecration to the Lord--to the study of his will, in his
Word, and to the practice of the same in the affairs of life.
To the extent that the consecrated believers resign themselves
to the Lord, and, ignoring their own wills and preferences,
seek to walk in his way, they are "led of the Spirit,"
"taught of the Spirit," and can "serve the Lord in newness
of
Spirit." To continue under this leading and instruction they
must have a "Spirit of meekness" (Gal. 5:22,23; 6:1), so
that the "God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of
glory," can give unto them the "Spirit of wisdom and
revelation,
[E186]
in the knowledge of him; the eyes of their understanding
being enlightened, that they may know what is the hope of
his calling, and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance
in the saints." Eph. 1:17,18
In these various presentations of the work of the holy
Spirit, and in many others which will come to the attention
of Bible students, nothing can be found to necessitate another
God. Quite the contrary: a proper conception of the
one God shows that his omnipotent power and resources
are abundantly sufficient, and that he who said to Israel,
"Hear, O Israel, Jehovah thy God is one," is not in need of
assistance. Indeed, to be consistent, those who claim that
another God is necessary to attend to matters referred to as
the operation of the holy Spirit of God, might with equal
consistency claim many spirit Gods--a spirit of adoption,
spirit of meekness, spirit of Christ, spirit of the Father, spirit
of love, spirit of justice, spirit of mercy, spirit of holiness,
spirit of truth, spirit of patience, spirit of glory, spirit of
knowledge, spirit of grace--a separate God for each department.
But, as the Apostle explains, all these variations of
operation belong to the one Spirit of the one omnipotent
Jehovah.
The Spirit of the World--
The Spirit of Antichrist
The spirit of the world is the opposite to the Spirit of
God. Since the whole world is in a fallen condition, and is
under the blinding and seducing influences of the Adversary,
its spirit or disposition necessarily is in constant conflict
with the holy, the true, the just, the loving Spirit or
disposition of God: in conflict therefore with the holy Spirit
received by his people through his Word, and all his holy
influences variously exercised upon them. As Satan's spirit
of selfishness, hatred, envy and strife works in and largely
controls the children of this world, so the holy Spirit of God,
[E187]
the Spirit of love, gentleness, meekness, patience, goodness,
brotherly kindness, works in and largely controls the children
of God. And these two spirits or dispositions, the one of
love and goodness, the other of selfishness and evil, are in
conflict continually, and wholly irreconcilable.
The Scriptures speak of this spirit which is working in the
world in opposition to the holy Spirit, as "the spirit of
Antichrist"--
the spirit or disposition which is opposed to
Christ. First, it desires to ignore him entirely, to dispute that
he ever came into the world; then if unsuccessful in this, it
will claim that our Lord Jesus was a mere man, a sinful
man; if this position be disproved, it will still claim that
anyway he accomplished nothing, or that he was merely an
example, and not a Redeemer. Hence we are enjoined by
the Scriptures to test, to try, to prove the spirits (the doctrines
that present themselves to us, claiming to be of the
spirit of truth). We are to test them, not merely by their outward
appearance and claims, but by the Word of God. "Beloved,
believe not every spirit, but try the spirits, whether
they are of God...and know the Spirit of truth and the
spirit of error." 1 John 4:1,6
Holy and Unholy Influences at Warfare
God's perfections of character are the standards for holiness,
righteousness and truth for all his creatures. Every
thing and every creature opposed to or not in full accord
with the standards is unholy, untrue, unrighteous. These
adverse influences are sometimes credited to Satan because
he is the arch-enemy of God and was the first conspirator
against righteousness--the originator of error, "the father of
lies" and deceptions. But we are to distinguish between evil
spirit beings and evil spirit influences just as we do between
holy spirit beings and holy spirit influences. The trend of
evolutionary thought among educated people who neglect
the Bible (including so-called Higher Critics), is to ignore
[E188]
the personality of Satan and his associated wicked spirits in
exalted positions (Eph. 6:12), and to claim that there is no
evil influence per se, and that man merely contends with his
own ignorance and misdirection of his own good qualities.
Similarly, others, still farther advanced (in error), still more
highly educated (in untruth), and still further panoplied
with philosophies (falsely so called), are reaching the conclusion
that there is no personal God but merely good influences
which they claim inhere in man and are gradually
being evolved to perfection.
But we are giving heed to the oracle of God, his Word,
which the Apostle assures us is able to make wise unto salvation,
and which we have found to contain a fountain of
life and light and holy Spirit of truth with which human
theories and lights cannot compare. It shows us that God is
a holy Spirit (being) and that his holy Spirit (influence) is
always exercised in harmony with righteousness, and that
all who are in harmony with God and in at-one-ment with
him must have his Spirit of holiness--The Only Begotten
Son in whom dwells the fulness of the divine Spirit--the
holy angels who have no other will than the Father's holy
will or Spirit--the Church from among men who have some
measure of the mind or Spirit of their Head (else they are
none of his), and who are seeking to be more and more
filled with this Spirit of holiness and divested of all unholy
disposition and influences. Likewise the Word teaches that
Satan is a spirit (being) and has an unholy spirit, mind, disposition;
and exercises an unholy spirit or influence
through various channels and agents. The fallen angels,
also spirit beings, fell by losing their spirit of holiness and
devotion to God and his righteous standards, and are now
of unholy spirit or disposition, and exercise an evil influence
or spirit as they have opportunity.* And the world
of mankind, falling through Adam, have become servants
of sin: some sin voluntarily for the pleasures of sin; some involuntarily,
[E189]
though "feeling after God," and blinded and
deceived by the Adversary, and controlled by the spirit of
error.
*"What Say the Scriptures About Spiritism?" Address the
publishers.
Mankind--the minds or "hearts" of men--is the battle
ground on which the holy spirit of light, love, justice, truth,
holiness, the Spirit of Jehovah and of his Son, man's Redeemer,
contends with the evil spirit of Satan, sin, darkness,
untruth, hatred, envy, malice, etc. Sold under sin, by our
first parent, Adam, his family became "slaves of sin"
"through frailty," through the weakness of heredity.
(Rom. 5:12,21; 6:16-23; 7:14; 8:20,21) In this captive condition
they have been blinded by the god (ruler) of the present evil
world (condition) who puts evil before their minds as good,
and darkness for light (2 Cor. 4:4; Eph. 6:12;
Isa. 5:20), and
having thus perverted the vast majority, and made it easy
to do evil and difficult to do good, and having ranged all
the advantages of the present time on the side of evil and
made it impossible to attain these except by conforming to
his unholy spirit, which is "the spirit of the world," he has
general control, first of the masses through ignorance, and
secondly, of the more intelligent through pride, selfishness,
etc.
The battle did not begin until our Lord's first advent; for
the Spirit of Truth came first upon our Lord Jesus and at
Pentecost upon his Church.* The world was dark when our
Lord Jesus appeared in it filled with the Spirit of God, the
light of divine truth, which constituted him "The Light of
the world"; and at once the battle began; the true light, the
holy Spirit, since Pentecost, being represented, not by the
nominal churches, but by the true members of Christ's
[E190]
body, possessors of the holy Spirit of their Head. The battle
could not commence sooner because none of mankind (all
being sinners) could be the channels of God's holy Spirit,
his representatives, ambassadors for righteousness and
truth, soldiers of the cross. Atonement for man's sin must first be
made before there would be any mission for the holy Spirit
to perform--before there would be anything to battle for.
Mankind was sentenced to death--to everlasting destruction,
as enemies of righteousness: why battle for the
doomed? why try to influence them to righteousness, when
no hope of reward for their efforts could be held out? Properly
therefore the ransom came first; and it was as a result of
the acceptance of that ransom by the Father that the holy
Spirit was granted to those adopted into his family as sons
through Christ.
*The battle of the Law of Righteousness was confined to the one little
nation,
Israel, and as God foresaw "The Law made nothing perfect"--none
of the fallen race could or were expected to win in that fight. It was
really to manifest Christ Jesus, the only Law-keeper, as the channel of
divine mercy; and incidentally to discipline a people and make "a
remnant"
of them ready for the Spirit Dispensation and its conflicts by pointing
them to Christ.
But some one may observe that the battle, ever since it began,
seems to be against the holy Spirit and in favor of the
spirit of evil--since the servants of sin today by natural increase
of population are many times more numerous than
they were when the battle began, and are still increasing
much more rapidly than even nominal Christianity,
though the battle has been in progress for nearly nineteen
centuries.
Furthermore the spirit of evil and malice and error
triumphed against the holy Spirit in our Lord to the extent
of crucifying him: and similarly it has triumphed against
all the faithful members of the body of Christ--misrepresenting,
slandering and evilly entreating them, variously,
according to time, place and circumstances. The
object of these attacks of the spirit of evil and its servants
upon the Spirit of holiness and its faithful is ever the same--
to undermine the influence of the Spirit of the truth; to
make the holy appear unholy; to cause that the pure and
unselfish shall appear selfish and impure; to put darkness
for light. Nor do the servants of unholiness always realize
what they do: becoming imbued with the spirit of evil, the
[E191]
spirit of hatred, malice, envy, strife, it blinds them so that
they "know not what they do," and often, evidently, "verily
think that they do God service." Why this defeat of the
Spirit of holiness? Will it always be thus?
We answer that this defeat of the Spirit of holiness is
merely a seeming defeat and not an actual one. Actually
the Spirit of holiness has been triumphing ever since the
battle began. Its twofold mission during this Gospel age
has been well accomplished.
(1) It was to be in God's people according to the degree of
their consecration and zeal toward God and his righteousness,
and by reason of the prevalence and power of the
spirit of evil in the world about them was to prove a test of
their characters, present conditions demanding that
whosoever would live godly in this present time must suffer
persecution--must be willing to have "all manner of evil"
falsely spoken against them and yet take it patiently, as did
their Master, continuing, nevertheless, faithful to the Lord
and his cause at any cost--counting not their earthly lives
dear unto them. 2 Tim. 3:12; Matt. 5:11; 1 Pet. 2:23;
Acts 20:24
(2) The light of the Spirit of holiness in God's people was
to so shine forth upon the world that it would attract all not
thoroughly blinded by the perverse spirit of the Adversary.
It was to shine into the darkness of sin reprovingly--witnessing
against all unrighteousness; thus awakening the conscience
of even the blinded to a realization of responsibility
to God and a future day of reckoning. Thus our Lord instructed
his followers that after receiving the holy Spirit
they were to witness to the Truth amongst all nations--
whether the people hear or whether they forbear.
The holy Spirit has triumphed in both the objects for
which it was sent. It has selected a faithful "little flock" of
"overcomers," followers of the way of righteousness--Jesus
the Captain and his faithful band of soldiers of the cross, all
[E192]
of whom consecrated "even unto death"; and to whom the
Kingdom reward will soon be given--when the last members
have been fully tested and made perfect through sufferings
for righteousness' sake. It has also triumphed in
respect to witnessing to the world. Our Lord foretold that the
effect of the witnessing would be to convince the world of
sin, of righteousness and of a coming day of righteous judgment,
in which evil deeds of the present life will have a just
retribution, according to the degree of light enjoyed by the
transgressor.
This witness has gone far and near, and today the world
as a whole recognizes these three items which the Spirit of
holiness in the Church has set before it--sin, righteousness
and judgment. True, the world has not clear and correct
ideas of righteousness, nor of sin, nor does it understand the
character and object of the coming judgment--nor that it
will be a thousand-year day: nor does the world understand
clearly the Church's call during this age, to escape judgment
with the world and to become its judges in that judgment
day by now voluntarily sacrificing earthly interests for
righteousness' sake--following in the footsteps of the Redeemer.
It is not necessary for the world to know these particulars--
they do not concern it. These are among "the deep
things of God," which none can appreciate except as they
become heartily obedient to the Lord's call to righteousness,
and consecrating themselves receive of the Spirit
of the Father, and as sons are thus made acquainted with
the minutiae of the divine plan. 1 Cor. 2:10,11
In reply to the query, Will it always be thus? we answer,
No. As soon as this age has developed the "little flock,"
called to be joint-heirs with Christ, it will cease. The next
operation of Jehovah's holy Spirit or power will be the establishment
of that Kingdom: and with its establishment
the holy Spirit's operation will be along the Kingdom
lines--establishing judgment and justice in the earth. It will
lay judgment to the line and justice to the plummet, and
falsehood and deception of every kind will give place to
[E193]
clear knowledge of the Truth. Instead of longer witnessing
to the world a "judgment to come," it will witness to it that
judgment has commenced and that every transgression will
promptly receive a just recompense of punishment. Instead
of witnessing to the Church, "Judge nothing before the time,"
it will witness to the contrary that they as God's instruments
have been specially qualified to judge the world
with a righteous judgment. Instead of those in harmony
with God and possessed of his Spirit of righteousness and
truth being required to suffer for righteousness' sake they
will be crowned kings and priests of righteousness and commissioned
to reign over the earth for its blessing and restitution
to perfection, to righteousness, and the "cutting off
from life," in "everlasting destruction" of all who wilfully
reject the opportunities of the blessed day of judgment secured
by the love of God through the ransom given by our
Lord Jesus. Thus shall the great Jehovah and his Spirit of
holiness and all who ally themselves thereto finally
triumph, and sin and Satan and the spirit of evil shall be
forever extinguished and there shall be no more curse. Isa. 28:17;
1 Cor. 4:5; 6:2; Acts 3:23; 2 Thess. 1:9; Rev. 22:3
Spirit Fightings Without and Within the Saints
We have considered the battle as a whole: let us glance at
some of its present phases. While it may be considered as
the Church's conflict it is nevertheless an individual conflict
with sin. While the Church will come off conqueror, it will
be composed only of the individual victors. And as the victory
in the Church is a victory of God's holy Spirit, power
or influence against the spirit of evil, of unrighteousness, it
is the same in the individual saint.
The majority of Christian people (nominal Christians,
even including so-called "spirit wrestlers,"
"sanctificationists,"
etc.) know little about the real spirit battles and victories,
because the majority have never made the proper
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consecration, and have never received the holy Spirit of the
Truth. Some have consecrated themselves to a sect, and
have received a sectarian spirit of love for the sect, devotion
to the sect, service and sacrifice for the sect, etc. Others have
recognized one or more moral principles and have consecrated
themselves never to violate those moralities: these
receive the spirit of moralities, a self-satisfied spirit, a self-righteous
spirit. Others have singled out some virtue which
they worship and whose spirit they receive--for instance,
patience--and they are fully satisfied when they have attained
a good degree of patience and its spirit. Others consecrate
themselves to "work" for Jesus and seem satisfied
only when they are in a bustle of exciting activity; it matters
little to them what kind the work is, so that it is not
openly serving Satan and so that there is plenty of it and
they have a prominent place: it is not so much results they
seek as work, and hence they are quite content to "beat the
air," hoping that in the end they will find that they have
not done much harm. For these to take time to study God's
Word and to ascertain the kind of workmen he seeks, and
the kind of work he desires to have done, would be to them
a violation of their covenant of consecration--for they consecrated
themselves to work and are satisfied of heart only
when they are in a fever of excitement. Others more wise,
but not truly wise either, consecrate themselves to a particular
kind of service for God and man--the service which
they think needs them most. If they consecrate to
"temperance
work," they receive the spirit of that work and have whatever
blessing comes with it. Or if they consecrate to social reform
work they get the spirit of social reform and its
blessings.
All of these consecrations, and the spirits or dispositions
resulting, have both good and evil influences. Any of them
is far better than a consecration to evil and its spirit of evil.
Any of them is far better even than consecration to self and
the spirit of selfishness accompanying it. Any of them is far
better even than an aimless life consecrated to nothing. But
[E195]
none of these can compare in any sense to the consecration
taught in the Scriptures and exemplified in our Lord Jesus
Christ, the Redeemer of the world, the exemplar of his
body, the Church. This, the true consecration, alone brings
to the heart the holy Spirit, the Spirit of the Truth, which
the world cannot receive.
This true proper consecration differs from all others. It
has but the one shrine at which it bows: it bows to Jehovah's
will, surrendering self and self-will a living sacrifice on
the Lord's altar, a reasonable service. It makes no stipulations
or reservations. The language of the Chief Priest is
that of each member of the "royal priesthood": "I came not
to do mine own will, but the will of him that sent me." "Lo I
come (as in the volume of the book it is written of me) to do
thy will, O God." Such are made partakers of the holy
Spirit.
Those who have consecrated their wills, and accepted
unreservedly the Word and will of God, through Christ, are
said to be heavenly or spiritually minded. These are so transformed,
so entirely different from what they were in their
former earthly condition, that they are called New Creatures,
and this name would not be inappropriate to them if
it signified nothing more than the radical change of heart
or will which they have experienced. But it does mean
more; it means that these who are now being selected from
the world by the holy Spirit of Truth, and who are approaching
God through the new and living way which was
opened up by the great sacrifice for sins, are really embryo
new creatures, whose perfection in the divine nature only
waits for the resurrection change, in the end of this age, conditioned
wholly upon their faithfulness as new creatures to
the leadings of the holy Spirit.
However, this new mental creation, or transformed
mind, the embryo of the new creature, which shall come
fully into being in the resurrection, is still identified with a
human body, and thus the Apostle says of this class, "We
have this treasure [the new mind, the new nature] in earthen
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vessels." (2 Cor. 4:7) Speaking of the same thing, the
Apostle assures us that when the earthly house is dissolved,
sacrificed, dead with Christ, we shall, nevertheless, have a
building of God, a new house, a glorious body, in harmony
with and in every way fitted for the indwelling of the new
mind and its Spirit of holiness (2 Cor. 5:1), if we are of the
faithful overcomers who continue to the end of the pilgrimage
of the narrow way, walking in the footsteps of our
Captain.
The word holy is derived from the word whole and signifies
completeness; hence the holy Spirit is a whole or a
complete spirit. And thus we see without surprise that those
who have received the holy Spirit or complete spirit in any
good measure are thereby rounded out on all sides of their
characters--better balanced than ever before in their judgments--
they have "the Spirit of a sound mind," however
the enmitous blinded spirit of the world may declare of
them, "Thou hast a devil and art mad"; because they live
for, labor for and enjoy the things unseen as yet, everlasting
in the heavens. 2 Tim. 1:7; John 10:20; 6:27
Individually considered, one of the most serious foes of
those who have been begotten to holiness of spirit through
the divine counsels and promises, is the evil spirit of fear. It
would persuade us that probably there is some mistake: either
that God did not inspire the exceeding great and precious
promises, or that they are not for us, or that for some
reason we can never attain them. All of God's people are
liable to attack from this wrong spirit of doubt and fear--
some more and some less persistently; and all have need to
fight down this evil spirit courageously and to destroy it,
lest it kill the fruits of the holy Spirit and finally quench it--
drive it out of us entirely.
Yet "the spirit of fear" is neither a spirit god nor a spirit
devil that has gotten into our hearts: it is simply a mental
influence natural to every fallen human being of humble
mind. It is begotten of the realization of personal imperfection
and unworthiness of divine favors. The antidote for
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this spirit of fear is the holy Spirit of Truth, and its instructions
accepted and held in full assurance of faith. The Spirit
of Truth tells us that there were good reasons for our entertainment
of the spirit of fear; but that those reasons no
longer exist since we have come into Christ as new creatures.
It points us away from our unintentional weakness to
the great Atonement accomplished by our Lord Jesus, and
cites us to the words of the inspired Apostle:
"If God be for us, who can be against us? He that spared
not his own Son, but delivered him up [to death] for us all,
how shall he not with him also freely give us all things
[needful]? Who shall lay anything to the charge of those
whom God chooses? It is God that justifieth. Who could
condemn these? It is Christ that died [paying their penalty--
making good all their deficiencies], yea, rather that
[glorified and highly exalted Christ who] is risen again, who
is even at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession
for us." Rom. 8:31-34
If the "Spirit of faith," one of the phases or operations of
the "Spirit of holiness," the "Spirit of the Truth," thus
comes forward and is accepted and supported by the new
creature, the victory over the spirit of fear is speedily won,
and peace and joy in the holy Spirit of faith and love and
confidence in God results. Nevertheless, these battles must
be fought time and again in every Christian's experience.
And, indeed, the "spirit of fear" may be made a valuable
servant of the new creature, while it cannot be tolerated as a
master, nor as a friend and a resident of the heart. Make it
the watchdog, and kennel it just outside the door of the
heart, and it may serve a very useful purpose in calling attention
to thieves and robbers who approach stealthily to
rob us of our treasures of holiness, joy, peace, love and fellowship
with our Father and with the brethren. As the
Apostle urges, "let us fear" attacks from without after we
have gotten all right with God by casting out all opposing
influences and receiving his Spirit into our hearts. Let us
fear lest as those who are ready to go forth with the Bridegroom
[E198]
in the early morning any of us should be overcome
with a spirit of slothfulness, a spirit of carelessness, a spirit
of slumber, and so, like the "foolish virgins," be unprepared
for the great event--"the marriage"--for which all our preparations
have been made.
Let us remember, then, that however useful as a servant,
the spirit of fear is not of God, and must never be admitted
within the castle of the Christian heart, which must be fully
given over to the occupancy of the various members of the
holy Spirit family--love, joy, peace, etc., for perfect love
casteth out fear as well as all the members of the unholy
spirit family--anger, malice, hatred, jealousy, fear, discontent,
pride, worldly ambitions, etc. The Apostle declares--
"God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but the
Spirit of superhuman strength, and of love, and of a sound
mind." 2 Tim. 1:7
Sometimes the attack comes from the rear and not from
the front--fear for friends, fear for the world, etc., an unwillingness
to trust God for others though willing to trust him
for one's self. This is a serious matter, too; for it largely
drives out the spirit of peace and joy and misdirects the
energies. The "spirit of fear" says, It is a great mistake to
think that Christ died for all; and it is a great presumption
to believe that all must eventually obtain some blessing of
opportunity for life, as a result of the ransom. Or, if fear fail
to win us, its evil companion, the "spirit of error," may
attempt
to lead in the opposite direction, to get us to believe
in universal salvation to eternal life--suggesting pride on
God's part, that would hinder him from destroying the wilfully
wicked.
The "spirit of error" assumes to be wiser than the Word
of God, and suggests to human reason that it should judge
God according to its own standards, rather than correct its
own standards by the Word of divine revelation. Thus, in
various ways, the spirit of error, the spirit of fear, and the
spirit of bondage, which are all elements of the spirit of the
Adversary, the unholy Spirit, give the lie to the statements
[E199]
of the Spirit of Truth, which declare that "Christ Jesus by
the grace of God tasted death for every man," and that the
blessed opportunity of coming into harmony with God, under
the conditions of the New Covenant, shall ultimately be
extended to every creature; and that when each one is
brought to a knowledge of the Truth he is judged thereby,
and either approved unto everlasting life, or condemned to
everlasting destruction, the second death. "Hereby discern
we the Spirit of Truth from the spirit of error." 1 John 4:5,6;
Acts 3:23
The Spirit of God, the Spirit of holiness, is a spirit of joy
and peace in all who receive it, in proportion as they receive
it--in proportion as they come into accord with the heavenly
Father and with the Redeemer, who has the same
mind or disposition. The Spirit of the Lord leads to faith in
God's promises; the spirit of error leads in the contrary direction,
to unbelief in the promises of God, and to human
speculations and credulity and superstition--to the believing
of things which God has not spoken, and which are unreasonable
to those who have the "holy Spirit," "the Spirit
of a sound mind." The Spirit of Truth leads to activity and
energy in the divine cause, appreciating the privilege of
being a co-worker together with God to any extent; the
spirit of error, on the contrary, is a "spirit of slumber" and
of carelessness in heavenly things, and of carefulness for
earthly things--of carelessness for the true Church and its
bond of love, and of carefulness for human organizations
and their creed-bonds. Rom. 11:8
The Spirit that Lusteth to Envy
As already noted, God's consecrated children--spirit-begotten
"new creatures" are at present dual beings; the new
not fully developed, not yet "born," and having no body
suitable, lives in the old body of flesh reckoned dead--captured
by the renewed will for its use and service during the
[E200]
period of its development. (This however does not imply
that Christians are of two natures, for such a thought is contrary
to the science of the Bible.) The new spirit, the mind
of Christ, the holy disposition or will, alone is recognized by
God, and should alone be recognized by the "holy brethren,
partakers of the heavenly calling:" nevertheless there is
a continual warfare between this new disposition begotten
by the Word of God and the old will, spirit or disposition of
our fallen flesh. Sometimes in Scripture the contrary will or
disposition of our flesh is spoken of as our spirit, as when we
read, "Do ye think that the scripture saith in vain, The
spirit that dwelleth in us ['In our flesh dwelleth no perfect
thing.'] lusteth to envy?" James 4:5
The new spirit, the new creature, that begotten of the
holy Spirit of love, does not envy; as it is written, "Love envieth
not, is not puffed up, etc." (1 Cor. 13:4) Whenever,
therefore, we find the spirit of envy, hatred, strife or vainglory
in any degree controlling our actions or words or
thoughts, it is a sure sign that our former evil spirit is gaining
a victory over us as new creatures. And proportionately
as we can and do put away all these and are filled with the
elements of the holy Spirit--gentleness, goodness, meekness,
brotherly kindness, love--we are growing in the image of
Christ, who is the image of the Father--in that proportion
we are being filled with the holy Spirit. Not filled with a
spirit person, but filled with the spirit, influence or will of a
person, even of our Father Jehovah--the same spirit which
was and still is in the Only Begotten Son.
The Apostle Paul also writes respecting this same battle
between the spirit, disposition or mind of our flesh and the
new spirit, disposition or mind to which we have been regenerated.
But he treats the subject from the reckoned standpoint--
as though our flesh were no longer we but our
enemies, and we recognized only as new creatures and the
holy Spirit our only spirit or disposition. He says: "This I
say then, Walk in the Spirit and ye shall not fulfil the lust
[desire] of the flesh. For the flesh lusteth [desires] against the
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Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh: and these are contrary
the one to the other: so that ye cannot do the things
that ye [new creatures] would"--the continual opposition
and deceitfulness of the flesh being a hindrance to perfect
deeds, though by God's grace this does not hinder our acceptance
with God as "new creatures," whose hearts, spirits,
intentions, are holy and acceptable to the Father in the Beloved
One. Gal. 5:16,17
Taught of God through the Spirit
From what we have learned respecting the Spirit of the
Lord, and its operation upon his people, through its enlightening
influence upon their minds, its removal of errors,
and its illumination of the Word giving the living truth, we
are prepared to understand and appreciate the Apostle's
words: "Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath entered
into the heart of man [the natural man], the things
which God hath in reservation for them that love him. But
God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit; for the Spirit
searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God." (1 Cor. 2:9,10)
That is to say, having submitted our wills to the
Lord, that we might be taught of him, and walk in his way,
we have come into harmony with his will, mind, Spirit; and
we are prepared, from this new standpoint--the standpoint
of a new mind, rightly directed--to see things in a new
light--all things become new to us. The new mind, the new
will, prompts us to search into the deep things of God, to
study the Word of God, that we may know and do his will,
as obedient sons. Having the mind or Spirit of our Father,
we will take heed to his instructions, in every detail, and
seek to walk in harmony with him. "For what man knoweth
the things [mind, will, plan] of a man, save the spirit [mind]
of man which is in him? Even so the things of God knoweth
no man, but the Spirit of God." (1 Cor. 2:11) That is to
say,
as no man can know another man's mind and plan, except
[E202]
as they are revealed to him, so no one can understand the
divine mind and plan, except he come into harmony with
the divine mind--receive the holy Spirit.
"Now we have received the Spirit [mind, disposition or
will] of God, that we might know the things that are freely
given unto us of God...but the natural man receiveth not
the things of God, for they are foolishness unto him, neither
can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned."
They are understood only by those who have the Spirit or
mind of God, the Spirit of his plan, the Spirit of the Truth.
All such must have dispositions in harmony with righteousness
and truth, so far as they understand these principles,
and must daily seek to know more of the mind of
God, the will of God, and to have more of his Spirit, disposition.
Such obedient sons are more and more "filled with
the Spirit" of Truth, and the spirit of obedience to it. But
they do not gain this condition by comparing spiritual
things with natural things, as the natural man is disposed to
do, but by following the divine counsel, and "comparing
spiritual things with spiritual." (1 Cor. 2:13) "He
that is
spiritual [who has received the holy mind or Spirit] judgeth
all things [he is able to understand and to properly estimate
both human and spiritual things in the light of the divine
plan], yet he himself is judged of no man." No natural man
can understand or rightly judge the motives which prompt
the spiritually minded "new creature" to willingly sacrifice
things valuable to the natural man, for hopes and prospects
which, to the latter, seem unreal and unreasonable. Hence,
the followers of the Lord are "counted as fools" by the
worldly-minded, by those who have the spirit of the world.
1 Cor. 2:12-16; 4:10
The Parakletos, the Comforter
Parakletos is rendered Comforter in John 14:16,26; but
the thought usually conveyed by the word comfort (namely
[E203]
to soothe, to pacify) is not here the correct one. The correct
thought is that of help, encouragement, assistance,
strengthening. Thus our Lord's promise implied that the
holy Spirit which the Father would send in Jesus' name and
as Jesus' representative would be near his followers, a present
help in every time of need--the holy power by which he
would guide and direct his people and enable them to
"walk by faith and not by sight." Indeed, our Lord gives us
to understand that all the ministrations of the Spirit are his
own ministrations, saying, "I will not leave you orphans, I
will come to you" (vs. 18): he thus identifies the holy
Spirit
with himself. "If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is
none of his"--and has not the parakletos, the divine aid.
This power of God is with the whole Church, yet each receives
his share of the holy influence personally--by individual
connection with channels of the Spirit. The Truth
itself is the main channel of the Spirit of the Truth; but all
who are closely connected with the Truth and have its
Spirit are to that extent also channels through which the
Spirit aids and influences others.
The power or Spirit of God is invisible to men; but its effects
are tangible and visible. This may be illustrated by the
electric current in the copper wire; it is invisible, but the
moment the car, properly supplied with a motor, touches
the wire with its arm or "trolley" the power is manifest in
the movement of the car. The same current by another arrangement
lights the car, and by still another device furnishes
it with heat, and by yet a different device communicates
by telegraph or telephone. All these are its blessings
under favorable arrangements, yet it may so be arranged as
to be a death-dealing influence, as in the electrocution
chair. So the holy Spirit is the spiritual energy or power of
God--it moves, enlightens, warms and instructs all who,
having the proper conditions in themselves, are brought
into connection with it through its proper channels; and it
may bring death--Second Death, to all wilful sinners. How
needful, then, that each of the Lord's people have the
[E204]
proper equipment and the proper connections in order to be
filled with the Spirit and made active unto all good works!
Nothing connected with this reference to the holy Spirit
as another comforter or helper or strengthener implies that
another God is meant or another person of a trinity of Gods.
The connections show on the contrary that the comforting
or strengthening holy Spirit is the Spirit of the Father and
the Spirit of the Son. In verses 18 and 23the Father and the
Son are referred to as the ones who strengthen and guide
and comfort the Church--through the Spirit. Thus again
our Lord declared, "Lo, I am with you always, even unto
the end of the age"--by the holy Spirit, not in flesh.
It should be remembered that the words he, him, himself,
used in referring to the parakletos, might with equal propriety
be translated she, her, herself, or it, itself. Heautou,
rendered
himself in this connection, is rendered itself nine times
in our Common Version Bibles. Ekinos, rendered he in this
connection, is much oftener rendered that and those.
Ekinos is
rendered it in 1 John 5:16--"I do not say that ye
shall pray
for it [the sin unto death]."
"He Shall Guide You into All Truth"
Our Lord indicated the channel through which this
power of God, "the Spirit of the Truth," would come to his
people, saying, "The words that I speak unto you, they are
spirit and they are life." That is to say, My words express
the mind, the will, the Spirit of God. Hence we have continually
set before us, as necessary to our victory, the study of
the Word of Truth. We hear our Lord's injunction, "Search
the Scriptures." We hear the Apostle Paul commending the
Bereans' noble conduct, in that "they searched the Scriptures
daily." We hear him again saying that "we ought to
take the more earnest heed to the words which we have
heard"; and we have his exhortation to Timothy, which assures
us that "the Word of God is profitable, that the man
[E205]
of God may be thoroughly furnished unto every good
work." We hear the Apostle Peter also urging that "we have
a more sure word of prophecy [of divine revelation], to
which we do well that we take heed." John 5:39; Acts 17:11;
Heb. 2:1; 2 Tim. 3:17; 2 Pet. 1:19
The promise of being "filled with the Spirit" or mind of
God is not to those who merely possess the Word of God,
nor to those who merely read the Word of God, but is to
those who search it earnestly, seeking to understand it; and
who understanding it are willing, nay, anxious to obey it. If
we would be filled with the Spirit of God, we must drink
deeply of the fountain of Truth--his Word. And since our
earthen vessels are imperfect, leaky, it is easy to let spiritual
things slip (Heb. 2:1); in which case the spirit of the world,
which surrounds us constantly, quickly rushes in to fill the
vacuum. Indeed, there is a constant pressure of the spirit of
the world upon the Lord's people, tending to displace the
new spirit, the new mind, the Spirit or disposition of holiness.
Therefore it behooves all of the Lord's faithful new
creatures to live very close to the fountain of Truth, the
Lord, and very close to his Word, lest the Spirit of God be
quenched, and we be filled instead with the spirit of the
world.
It seems expedient to caution some that although a
knowledge of the Truth, a knowledge of the Scriptures, is
important, essential to the possession of the Spirit of the
Truth, nevertheless, one might have much knowledge of the
Word of God without having any of its Spirit. To receive the
Spirit of the Truth is to come into heart harmony with the
Truth, to come into mental accord and cooperation with
the Divine will expressed in the Word. This condition can
be attained in one way only: by first accepting the Lord
Jesus as our Redeemer and Justifier, and secondly, consecrating
ourselves unreservedly to seek to know and to do
his will.
But this "Spirit of the Truth" this "holy Spirit" or mind
in harmony with God and his righteousness, should not be
[E206]
confounded with the "gifts of the Spirit," nor yet with the
"fruits of the Spirit," though its possession always yields the
latter, "the peaceable fruits of righteousness," meekness,
patience, gentleness, brotherly kindness, love. The Spirit of
the Truth must be ours before it can produce such fruits in
our daily lives: and in some the period of developing mature
fruits, of good size and flavor, is longer than with others;
but each should remember our Lord's words, "Herein is
my Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit--so shall ye be
my disciples." We should remember also his parable of the
Vine, in which the branches represent severally his consecrated
disciples. Of these he declares, "Every branch in
me that beareth fruit the Father purgeth [pruneth] it, that it
may bring forth more fruit, and every branch that beareth
not fruit he taketh away." John 15:2
The Christian is a branch from the moment of his consecration,
and is a partaker of the sap from the root, a partaker
of the holy Spirit, and yet it is not to be expected that
he will instantly bear all the fruits of the Spirit, nor any of
them in their perfection. The first evidences of the relationship
to the Church-Vine will be an association with the
other branches, a connection with the root, and evidences
of life. Next there will be the feelers or tendrils, by which
progress will be sought and attained. Next will come the
leaves, or professions; and next to be looked for should be
the flower, and later the fruit. But the fruit is extremely
small at first, and sour; it requires time to develop grapes of
size and flavor acceptable to the great Husbandman. Such
are "the fruits of the Spirit" of Christ expected in every
"branch" of the Vine--in every member of the body of
Christ, the Church. Unless in due time these fruits of the
Spirit--meekness, gentleness, patience, brotherly kindness,
faith, hope, love--appear, the branch will cease to be considered
a branch, and as a "sucker" will be cut off from further
affiliation and privilege.
We have already seen that "the gifts of the Spirit" granted
at the beginning of the Gospel age, for the establishment of
[E207]
the Church, differed from "the fruits of the Spirit." The
"gifts" were conferred by the laying on of the hands of the
apostles: they came spontaneously only in exceptional cases
(Acts 2:4; 10:45): Simon Magus, though baptized and
granted a gift for his own use, was unable to confer the gifts
to others and was reproved by Peter for offering money to
obtain this purely apostolic power. (Acts 8:13-21) And the
same account makes clear that even Philip the Evangelist,
though able to perform "signs and great miracles," could
not confer the gifts of the Spirit, but was obliged to send for
the apostles to do this for his converts. All this agrees fully
with the statement of the Apostle Paul that many of the
gifts would "fail," "vanish away:" it was necessarily so
when, all the Apostles having died, all those upon whom
they had conferred those "gifts" died also. The gifts of
faith,
hope and love which the Apostle declared would abide
were not miraculous gifts but growths--"fruits" as he elsewhere
describes them. 1 Cor. 13:8; John 15:16
Amongst the gifts of the Spirit the Apostle specifies--
(1) apostles, (2) prophets, (3) teachers. We still have with us
the gift of apostles, in that we have their teachings in the
New Testament, so full and complete as to require no addition;
and hence the twelve apostles have no successors, and
need none, since there are but "twelve apostles of the
Lamb"; they are "the twelve stars," the crown of the
Church; they are the "twelve foundations" of the Church
glorified, the New Jerusalem. (John 6:70; Rev. 12:1; 21:14)
We have also still, in the Church, the gifts of prophets or
expounders and teachers, servants of God and his Church
speaking various languages; but no longer does the Spirit
supply these instantly and miraculously without education
and talents by the laying on of the apostolic hands.
Such miracles are no longer necessary and no longer employed--
assuredly not to the same extent as formerly. Instead,
the Lord generally makes choice of some who by
natural qualifications and education are fitted to his service:
nevertheless we are to remember that the condition of
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the heart is far more important in the Lord's sight than all
other qualifications combined; and that he is fully able to
use those whom he chooses (because full of his Spirit) to be
his special servants and ambassadors: he can providentially
supply them with assistance in any manner he may please;
as, for instance, to Moses--his special servant who was slow
of speech--he gave Aaron to be a mouthpiece.
The Lord's people are not to forget that, although the administration
or method has changed, the same Lord by the
agency of the same holy Spirit is still guiding the affairs of
his Church--less manifestly, less outwardly discernible, but
no less really, no less carefully, and in every detail of its affairs.
And all of the Lord's flock led of his Spirit, and taught
of his Word, are to judge discriminatingly respecting those
who seem to be teachers and evangelists, presenting themselves
as such. The Lord's people are not to receive as such
all who profess to be teachers and evangelists, but only
those whom they discern to be marked of the Lord as having
these gifts; and one of the tests is in respect to their fidelity
to the Word of God--that they preach not themselves,
but Jesus Christ, and him crucified--the power of God and
the wisdom of God to every one that believeth. If any man
come unto us with any other gospel, we are instructed particularly
that we are not to receive him as a teacher of the
Truth, but to consider him as a servant of error, whether
knowingly or ignorantly so.
Thus does the Spirit or influence of God, the holy Spirit
or influence of the Truth, instruct his people, guiding them
(directly or indirectly) into a knowledge of God. Thus it is
the channel of at-one-ment now to the Church, and somewhat
similarly it will be the channel of at-one-ment to the
world in the coming age, when "the Spirit and the Bride
[the glorified Church] shall say, Come, take of the water of
life freely." Rev. 22:17
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