| THEOL0GYThe Holy SpiritBy Dr. J. Rodman WilliamsTheologian
 
Ten 
        Teachings
 
 Chapters: 1 -  
          2 -  3 - 4 
          -  5 -  
          6 - 7 -  
          8 -  9 -  
          10 
  6: The Holy Spirit
 
 There is a story in the book of Acts which records Pauls coming to 
          the city of Ephesus, and there finding some disciples. Whereupon Paul 
          inquired, "Did you receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?" 
          They replied, "No, we have never even heard that there is a Holy 
          Spirit" (Acts 19:1-2). This incident seems quite relevant to our situation today. The typical 
          church member may be heard to say, "I can understand the reason 
          for God and Christ, but the Holy SpiritI dont quite see what its 
          all about." It is not that he has never heard that there is a Holy 
          Spirit but that there is little understanding and experience. Let us then think upon the meaning and the place of the Holy Spirit, 
          considering this doctrine under three heads: the nature of the 
          Holy Spirit, the operation of the Holy Spirit, and finally the 
          reception of the Holy Spirit. Or it could be put in question 
          form: Who is the Holy Spirit? What does the Holy Spirit do? How is the 
          Holy Spirit received? I. Who Is the Holy Spirit? The Holy Spirit is God. Christian faith speaks of God the Father, 
          God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. In the Great Commission (Matthew 
          28:19, 20), Jesus sends His disciples forth to proclaim His message, 
          "Baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of 
          the Holy Spirit." God is spoken of as one "who gives his 
          Holy Spirit" (1 Thessalonians 4:8). The Holy Spirit is God. The Holy Spirit, being God, is therefore personal. It is improper, 
          indeed incorrect, to refer to the Holy Spirit as "it." "He", 
          "Me", etc.personal pronounsmore adequately convey the personal 
          nature of the Holy Spirit. For example, we read in Acts 13:2, "The Holy 
          Spirit said, Set apart for me Barnabas and Saul for the work 
          to which I have called them." The Holy Spirit is frequently throughout the Bible referred to simply 
          as "the Spirit." Note, as an illustration, how the terms are 
          interchangeable in Acts 8:17, 18: "Then they laid their hands on 
          them and they received the Holy Spirit. Now when Simon saw that the 
          Spirit was given." Instances such as this could be multiplied. Again the Holy Spirit may be referred to as "the Spirit of God," 
          "the Spirit of the Lord," or "the Spirit of (Jesus) Christ." 
          In the Old Testament almost all mention of the Holy Spirit is of Him 
          as "the Spirit of God," "the Spirit of the Lord," 
          or merely "the Spirit." This begins with Genesis 1:2, "The 
          Spirit of God was moving over the face of the waters," and abundant 
          references may be found throughout to "the Spirit of the Lord" 
          and "the Spirit." As a pertinent New Testament illustration 
          of the interchangeableness of terms, observe Romans 8:9"You are in 
          the Spirit, if the Spirit of God really dwells in you. 
          Anyone who does not have the Spirit of Christ does not belong 
          to him." The Holy Spirit is the third person of the Trinity. Such biblical quotations 
          as already given show that however much the Holy Spirit is distinct 
          (as in the Great Commission), He is also the Spirit of God and the Spirit 
          of Christ. One God in three persons is the mystery of the Trinity, and 
          the Holy Spirit is always referred to as the third. He proceeds from 
          the Father through the Son"The Holy Spirit, whom the Father 
          will send in my name" (John 14:26). Therefore, the order 
          is invariable: "Father, Son, and Holy Spirit." God as Holy Spirit points also to a twofold fact about the divine nature. 
          First, God as spirit is noncorporeal: 
           He has neither body nor form as does man. All references in the 
          Bible to Gods face or hand or eyes, and so on, are anthropomorphisms. 
          They are human ways of speaking of Him who is spirit and yet also personal. 
          As spirit, God is not limited in space or time; He is everywhere and 
          always present. As said the Psalmist, "Whither shall I go from thy Spirit? 
          Or whither shall I flee from thy presence? If I ascend to heaven, thou 
          art there!" (Psalm 139:7-8). Second, God as holy means that He by nature is pure, undefiled, 
          without evil. In Him is all moral perfection. God is holy 
          spirit. One further word about the nature of the Holy Spirit. The name is of 
          course interchangeable with Holy Ghost. Due to the present connotation 
          of the word ghost as some kind of an apparition or phantom that 
          belongs to the realm of the weird and occult, the more meaningful term 
          is now Spirit. This accords also with the words of Jesus about 
          God in John 4:24"God is spirit." In worship we often, however, 
          hold on to the older name, as in the Doxology and the Gloria 
          Patri. II. What Does the Holy Spirit Do? The Holy Spirit is depicted in Genesis 1:2 as "moving over the 
          face of the waters." The earth was yet unshaped; all was darkness; 
          there was neither light nor life. Then followed the various moments 
          of creation. The Spirit was instrumental in creation, especially in 
          bringing order out of chaos, cosmos out of emptiness, light out of darkness. 
          "Brooding upon the waters," intimately in contact with the stuff of 
          creation, by the Spirit's ordering and vivifying power a universe comes 
          to be. The Holy Spirit in relation to creation therefore represents God at 
          work "down among" the materials, bringing forth by His power 
          the heavens and the earth. God's word may be spoken from afar"Let 
          there be light," etc.but it is against the background of, or coincidental 
          with, the brooding, energizing Spirit. An understanding of God as Holy Spirit makes us aware that God is not 
          only transcendent, far beyond all things, but also immanent, close to 
          all things. His vast power streams from infinity "beyond," 
          but His Spirit is also constantly moving over, brooding upon, working 
          within all that He does and makes. So it is that "He is not far 
          from each one of us, for in him we live and move and have our being"(Acts 
          17:27-28). As the Old Testament unfolds, God as Spirit is seen again and again 
          as the power of God working with, "coming upon," and sometimes 
          entering into man. This is invariably for a special task or calling. 
          For example, Bezalel, master craftsman for the Tabernacle, was "filled...with 
          the Spirit of God...to devise artistic designs" (Exodus 35:31, 
          32). Of such men as Gideon, Samson, and David, it is written that "the 
          Spirit of the Lord took possession" or "came mightily upon" 
          them (Judges 6:34; 14:6; 1 Samuel 16:13). Ezekiel speaks in various 
          ways of how "the Spirit entered into me," "the Spirit 
          lifted me up...and brought me," the Spirit of the Lord fell upon me" 
          (Ezekiel 3:24; 8:3; 11:5). Many other like references could be cited. Also, and quite significantly in the Old Testament, there is prophecy 
          of the Messiah to come"A shoot from the stump of Jesse.... And 
          the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him" (Isaiah 11: 1, 2). 
          Again, not only shall the Spirit rest upon Him but, says the Lord, "I 
          will pour my Spirit upon your descendants" (Isaiah 44:3). Ezekiel 
          looks forward to the day when for Israel and Judah, "I will put 
          my Spirit within you, and you shall live" (37:14). Climactically, 
          in Joel are the words, "I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh" 
          (2:28). Hence, the Old Testament with its occasional manifestations 
          of the Spirit looks forward to a great day when the Spirit shall be 
          poured out upon all people. Let us now turn to the New Testament and note the operation of the 
          Holy Spirit in the life of the Messiah, Jesus Christ. First, He is conceived 
          by the Holy Spirit. The angel says to Joseph about Mary, "That 
          which is conceived in her is of the Holy Spirit" (Matthew 1:20). 
          Jesus is unique in that in Him a new creation, a union of God and man, 
          is for the first time existent. He is "the spiritual man" 
          by birthright. Second, at baptism "the heaven was opened, and the 
          Holy Spirit descended upon him" (Luke 3:21, 22). Third, as He began 
          His ministry, "Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, returned from the 
          Jordan, and was led by the Spirit for forty days in the wilderness, 
          tempted by the devil" (Luke 4:1, 2). Following this testing period 
          "Jesus returned in the power of the Spirit into Galilee," 
          and at Nazareth He read from the Old Testament the words "The Spirit 
          of the Lord is upon me, because He has anointed me to preach good news" 
          (Luke 4:14, 18). Jesus therefore to the fullest possible degree represents 
          the Holy Spirit in power and immediacy. Conceived of the Spirit, anointed 
          by the Spirit, filled with the Spirit, empowered through the Spirit: 
          such is His life from beginning to end. It is a life of power, of purpose, 
          of abundanceGod-inspired, God-filled, God-directed. We come next to the operation of the Spirit in the life of the disciples 
          and the early Church. From Jesus' earliest ministry He was proclaimed 
          as one "who will baptize you with the Holy Spirit" (Mark 1:8). 
          In John's Gospel Jesus says, "Unless one is born of water and the 
          Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God" (3:5). Jesus promises 
          that the Spirit will come after He goes away bodily, and "He will 
          bear witness to me...he will convince the world of sin and of righteousness 
          and of judgment...he will guide you into all truth" (John 15:26; 
          16:8, 13). After Jesus resurrection, that same evening "He breathed 
          on them and said, Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins 
          of any, they are forgiven; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained" 
          (John 20:22-23). Then there follows an instruction period of forty days 
          during which time Jesus tells them "not to depart from Jerusalem, 
          but to wait for the promise of the Father, whichyou heard from me, 
          for John baptized with water, but before many days you shall be baptized 
          with the Holy Spirit" (Acts 1:4, 5). Then He adds, "You shall 
          receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall 
          be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria and to the 
          end of the earth" (Acts 1:8). Ten days later, on the Day of Pentecost, "Suddenly a sound came 
          from heaven like the rush of a mighty wind...and there appeared unto 
          them tongues as of fire...and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit" 
          (Acts 2:24). Not only are the disciples filled with the Holy Spirit, but they assure 
          their listeners that the prophecy of Joel is now being fulfilled for 
          all others"this is that which was spoken by the prophet Joel...that 
          I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh" (Acts 2:16, 17). The 
          result: "the gift of the Holy Spirit" (Acts 2:38) that day to many 
          others. They are baptized with power, the power of the Holy Spirit. 
          The story continues in Acts of the Holy Spirit being given to many people 
          in the early Church. Let us seek to summarize thus far the operation of the Holy Spirit 
          in the life of the disciples and Church. "Baptism with the Holy 
          Spirit" is a tremendous promise of Jesus, for it means not only 
          forgiveness and cleansing symbolized by baptism in water but also a 
          new life filled with a new kind of power and wisdom. The wind at 
          Pentecost represents this power; the tongues of fire this witness. Now 
          the disciples can witness for Christ "to the end of the earth"as 
          they could not beforebecause they are filled with divine power and 
          truth. Filled with the Holy Spirit, they may bear true witness to Jesus 
          Christ, bring others to conviction of sin, and help them receive the 
          same wonderful gift they have known. Lives take on new order, new purpose, 
          new meaning. Hence, the operation of the Holy Spirit in relation to human lives 
          is similar to that of His role in the creation of the physical universe. 
          Even as the Holy Spirit in creation moved "over the face of the 
          waters," down among the darkness and void, and brought order, cosmos, 
          light, meaning, so the Holy Spirit may "move over" an individuals 
          life and bring new life, new purpose. There is a new witness: the witness 
          to Christ with convincing power that brings others to salvation; there 
          are charismatic manifestations (tongues, prophecy, gifts of healing, 
          etc.); and there is guidance and grace for living lives of "love, 
          joy, peace" (Galatians 5:22), which are fruits of that same Spirit. The Holy Spirit essentially means a new life, no longer a natural man 
          but a spiritual one; God is at the center, not man. Man is a new creation, 
          with God the directive powerand day by day there may be continuous 
          growth into the likeness of Jesus Christ as the Holy Spirit directs. Such is the magnificent, wonderful operation of the Holy Spirit who 
          is now "poured out upon all flesh." III. How Is the Holy Spirit Received? We come finally to the critical question: How is the Holy Spirit received? 
          For surely the Holy Spirit is not poured out willy-nilly on all flesh. 
          Nor is He obtainable by human ingenuity or plan. Recall the story in 
          Acts of Simon the magician who offered money to get the power of the 
          Spirit and was severely reprimanded, "Your silver perish with you, 
          because you thought you could obtain the gift of God with money!" 
          (Acts 8:20). Perhaps the most direct answer to the question of how the Holy Spirit 
          is received is to say that He comes through believing in Jesus Christ 
          and is received as a gift. On the Day of Pentecost Simon Peter declared, "Repent, and be 
          baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness 
          of your sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit" 
          (Acts 2:38). Believing in Jesus Christ is basic (and baptism in His 
          name is the outward sign of commitment), for he who believes in Him 
          receives forgiveness and is promised the gift of the Holy Spirit. A thrilling account of the gift of the Holy Spirit is found in Acts 
          10. Peter was saying in his first sermon to a Gentile audience, "To 
          him all the prophets bear witness that every one who believes in him 
          receives forgiveness of sins through his name" (Acts 10:43). He 
          has not mentioned the promise of the Holy Spirit, but "while Peter 
          was still saying this, the Holy Spirit fell on all who heard the word." 
          There had not been any water baptism yet either; it follows (note verse 
          47). Genuine belief in Jesus Christ brought forgiveness and at the same 
          time ("while Peter was still saying this") the gift of the 
          Holy Spirit. It is also apparent, from the witness in Acts, that not everyone who 
          believed in Jesus Christ received at the moment of initial faith the 
          promised gift of the Holy Spirit. The question of Paul, "Did you 
          receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?" (19:2) suggests the 
          possibility of a reception of the Spirit not concurrent with belief. 
          And a prior account, in Acts 8, specifically demonstrates a later gift 
          of the Holy Spirit. Philip had preached the word in Samaria, so that 
          the Samaritans "believed" and "were baptized" (verse 
          12), but it was only at a later time when Peter and John came down from 
          Jerusalem that the Samaritans received the gift. The apostles first 
          prayed for them (verse 15), and then "they laid their hands upon them 
          and they received the Holy Spirit" (verse 17). The Holy Spirit is promised to all who believe. As Paul puts it elsewhere, 
          "Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law...that we might receive 
          the promise of the Holy Spirit through faith" (Galatians 3:14). 
          The question accordingly is this: Has the promise been fulfilled in 
          our own lives? Unlike the Ephesians of Acts 19, we have doubtless heard 
          that there is a Holy Spirit, and if we have known Christs redemption 
          we have received the promise of the Spirit. Has that promise 
          been fulfilled on our behalf? Here it is essential to keep ones eyes focused on Jesus Christ. For 
          it is He through whom the Holy Spirit is given. Even as by Him redemption 
          is wrought, so through Him the Holy Spirit is poured out. Not only is 
          He Savior, He is also the risen and exalted Lord who gives the Holy 
          Spirit. Thus the words of Peter on the Day of Pentecost: "This 
          Jesus God raised up....Being therefore exalted at the right hand of 
          God, and having received from the Father the promise of the Holy Spirit, 
          He has poured out this" (Acts 2:32, 33). Hence, even as we have 
          looked to Jesus Christ for forgiveness, believing that His death on 
          the cross is our only hope, so we look to Him as Lord, the one who pours 
          out His Spirit for a new life of power and witness in His name. Thus are we called to believe in the promise of the Spirit and to receive 
          Him in faith. This means to be expectant and open, for God delights 
          to give His Spirit to those who are eager to receive. Recall the words 
          of our Lord: "If you then, who are evil, know how to give good 
          gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give 
          the Holy Spirit to those who ask him?" (Luke 11:13). Jesus, in this 
          same context, teaches the importance of asking, seeking, and knocking 
          (Luke 11:9, 10). Thus not only an attitude of openness and expectancy, 
          but also a willingness to persist in prayer is important. This is particularly 
          shown in the account of the disciples who, awaiting the promise of the 
          Spirit, "devoted themselves to prayer" (Acts 1:14). So did 
          they pray persistently, expectantly, and in this atmosphere of faith 
          the Holy Spirit was poured out. One only need add that on the human side there is nothing one can do 
          to receive the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is a gift, and thus 
          cannot be earned, worked for, or achieved. Rather there is the forswearing 
          of all effort in the realization of complete need. This signifies total 
          surrender, yielding of oneself wholly in body, mind, and spirit so that 
          the Holy Spirit may have full possession. Those who are hungry and thirsty, 
          empty before the Lord, He satisfies with all good things: He grants 
          His power and presence; He gives His Holy Spirit. Is it possible that we have found forgiveness in Christ's death but 
          have failed to receive from the exalted Lord the Holy Spirit which He 
          pours forth beyond measure? Do we really look to Him not only as Savior 
          but also as Lord? These are questions of urgent importance today. For 
          it may well be that the lack of vitality and power, of joy and radiant 
          witness, in the lives of many people is due to failure to receive the 
          promised gift of Gods Holy Spirit. Let us conclude by offering the simple prayer, "O Lord, send your 
          Spirit upon your people, fill us to overflowing with your presence and 
          power, and send us forth with fresh joy to be your witnesses to the 
          ends of the earth. In your blessed name we pray. Amen.   Chapters: 1 -  
          2 -  3 - 4 
          -  5 -  
          6 - 7 -  
          8 -  9 -  
          10    
 Content Copyright 2003 by J. Rodman Williams, 
  Ph.D. 
 
 
 
 
 
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