ARTICLE V.
The Gift of the Holy Ghost.
By Rev. John Morgan,
Prof. of the Lit. of the N. Test., in the Oberlin C. Instutute.
August 1845.
[Retyped by Rick Friedrich in May of 1999.]
A long line of prophets had, since the world began, predicted the
incarnation of the Word, who was with God and was God,—and when he was to
be manifested to Israel, his approach was heralded by a great prophet of
miraculous birth and transcendent endowments, than whom a greater had
never been born of woman. No mightier preacher had ever stirred up the
tribes of the Lord. There went out to him Jerusalem and all Judea and all
the region round about the Jordan, and were baptized of him in the Jordan
confessing their sins. That was a great day in Israel—the people were in
expectation, and all men mused in their hearts of John whether he were the
Christ or not. Could the Christ be a more powerful preacher than
John—could the results of his ministry be more extensive and glorious?
here was all Israel trembling at God's word, all Israel making humble
confession, all Israel yielding themselves to the baptism of repentance
for the remission of sins. Now John's ministry was indeed the culmination
of prophetic instruction, so that no prophet was ever better qualified
than he to tell expectant, anxious Israel in what respect the work of the
Christ would transcend his own We pass over the testimony of John to the
preeminent dignity of Christ's person and confine ourselves to what he
says, of his work. John's testimony was emphatically given to the central
truth that Christ is the victim by whose stripes we are healed. "John
seeth Jesus coming to him and saith, Behold the Lamb of God that taketh
away the sin of the world. Again, the next day after, John stood and two
of his disciples; and looking upon Jesus as he walked, he saith, Behold
the Lamb of God." Christ was also, according to John to destroy the
incorrigibly wicked " to baptize them with fire,—to burn them up as chaff
with fire unquenchable," and in this respect he would differ entirely from
the greatest of mere human prophets. But to another point the testimony of
the great prophet is chiefly directed, that in which his own ministry
might be drawn into comparison with the work of him whose way he had come
to prepare. His own baptism was a divine rite, no less than the baptism of
repentance for the remission sins,—it could not be the design of the
Baptist to disparage it. But that which was made glorious had no glory by
reason of the glory that excelleth. "I indeed" earnestly cries the
faithful prophet, "baptize you with water; but one mightier than I cometh,
the latchet of whose shoes I am not worthy to unloose, he shall baptize
you with the Holy Ghost. He that sent me to baptize with water, the same
said unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending, and
remaining on him, the same is he which baptizeth with the holy Ghost. I
have need to be baptized of thee, and comest thou to me." On this single
point of John's testimony it is that all evangelists have dwelt, and it is
to this that our Lord himself (Acts 1: 5.) referred as he was about to
ascend to his Father; "John truly baptized with water, but ye shall be
baptized with the holy Ghost not many days hence."
The testimony of the Baptist is appropriately colored by a beautiful
allusion to the characteristic rite of his own mission; and it is, as was
fit for the Messiah's immediate herald, more express than that of any
preceding prophet to the personal agency of the Savior in the bestowment
of the great blessing. But the glowing language of Messianic prophecy
expatiates variously upon the same theme. "I will pour water upon him that
is thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground; I will pour my Spirit upon thy
seed, and my blessing upon thine offspring. I will dwell in them and walk
in them. I will put my Spirit within you. It shall come to pass that I
will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh: and your sons and daughters shall
prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see
visions ; and also upon the servants and upon the handmaids in those days
will pour out my Spirit." The language of prophecy is frequently such that
its import is sufficiently obvious to a cursory reader; but more
frequently the light of New Testament exposition is needed to blend with
the beautiful yet misty rays that shone upon the ancient church, in order
that twilight or the early dawn may be turned into noon-day.
We might naturally be led to conclude from the language of prophecy and
the testimony of John, that the Savior's earthly ministry would be
signalized by the bestowment of the great promised gift. But the blessing
was not to descend till he had finished his work on earth, and had
ascended up on high, leading captivity captive. It was not, however, fit
that our Lord himself should leave untouched the theme on which his
forerunner had so emphatically dwelt. We accordingly find that the
instructions of the Redeemer are more full and explicit on the subject
than those of the whole line of prophets. "If any man thirst, let him come
unto me and drink, he that believeth on me, as the Scripture hath said,
out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water." "This spake he of the
Spirit," says the Evangelist, "which they that believe on him should
receive; for the Holy Ghost was not yet given, because that Jesus was not
yet glorified." "Whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him,
shall never thirst; but the water that I shall give him, shall be in him a
well of Water springing up into everlasting life." "No one knoweth the
Father save the Son, and he to whom the Son shall reveal him. "Come unto
me all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." But
some of these passages need the light of those exceedingly explicit
declarations which overflowed from the Savior's lips on the "same night
that he was betrayed." "If ye love me, keep my commandments and I will
pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may
abide with you forever, even 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." "These things have I
spoken to you, being yet present with you; but the Comforter, 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." "When the Comforter is come, whom I will send unto you from the
Father, even the Spirit of Truth, which proceedeth from the Father, he
shall testify of me." "I tell you the truth ; it is expedient for you that
I go away, for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you; but
if I depart, I will send him unto you. And when he is come, he will
reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment."...
I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now.
Howbeit, when he, the Spirit of Truth is come, he will guide you into all
the truth; for he shall not speak of himself; but whatsoever he shall
hear, that shall he speak; and he will show you the things to come. He
shall glorify me, for he shall receive of mine and shall show it unto you.
All things that the Father hath are mine : therefore said I, that he shall
take of mine and show it unto you." (John 14: 15- 17, 25, 26; 16: 7, 8,
12—15.) As the Lord was about to be taken from his disciples, "being
assembled together with; them, he commanded them that they should not
depart from Jerusalem, but wait for the promise of the Father, which,
saith he, ye have heard of me; for John truly baptized with water, but ye
shall be baptized with the holy Ghost, not many days hence." " Behold I
send the promise of my Father upon you; but tarry ye in the city of
Jerusalem until ye be endued with power from on high." (Acts 1: 4, 5; Luke
24: 49.) Nothing can be plainer than that most of these interesting
passages relate to the same glorious theme on which the illustrious
Baptist loved to dwell, the baptism which would, to the joy of his holy
soul, eclipse his own, and which he most deeply felt and acknowledged, he
needed to receive at the hands, of that lowly Jesus who came to him to be
baptized with water.
But at length the earthly work of the Savior was accomplished, and he was
parted from his disciples, and a cloud received him out of their sight. He
who had descended to the lower parts of the earth that he might die,
ascended far above all heavens that he might fill all things; and seated
at the right hand of the Father, he possesses gifts, and among them the
most excellent of all gifts, to dispense to men. The inspired history of
the early fulfilments of the great promise of the Father given in the
predictions of prophets, and repeated by the Son with amplifications
befitting him, is explicit and glorious. The disciples, as they were
commanded, tarried at Jerusalem awaiting the promised baptism; but they
waited not in supine idleness—they "continued with one accord in prayer
and supplication." "And when the day of Pentecost was fully come, they
were all with one accord in one place. And suddenly there came a sound
from heaven as of a mighty rushing wind, and it filled all the house where
they were sitting. And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of
fire, and it sat upon each of them: and they were all filled with the Holy
Ghost, and began to speak with other tongues as the Spirit gave them
utterance." It was no wonder that "when this was noised abroad, and the
multitude came together," that they wore confounded, and totally at a loss
to account for the phenomena they witnessed. But an Apostle of the Lord,
with his brethren, was at hand, to expound the mystery and the marvel. He
took his stand in one of the most ancient and most explicit of the
prophecies—of which the predictions of Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel,
pertaining to spiritual blessings, were mere expansions :—"This is that,
which was spoken of by the prophet Joel, And it shall come to pass in the
last days, saith God, I will pour out of my Spirit upon all flesh: and
your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see
visions, and your old men shall dream dreams: and on my servants and on my
hand-maidens I will pour out in those days of my Spirit, and they shall
prophesy." We have a glowing account of the effects of this effusion of
the Holy Ghost, of the superhuman wisdom, energy, boldness, and success
with which the before timid an inefficient Apostles preached the Gospel.
Neither the high nor the low were able to resist the wisdom and the spirit
by which they spoke.
For a time, the blessing was confined to Jews; but when persecution
scattered the disciples, Philip went down to a city of Samaria, and
preached Christ unto them; and they believed Philip preaching the things
pertaining to the kingdom of God and the name of Jesus Christ. When the
Apostles Peter and John came to the city, they prayed for the new
converts, that " they might receive the Holy Ghost; for as yet he was
fallen upon none of them, only they were baptized in the name of the Lord
Jesus. Then laid they their bands on them, and they received the holy
Ghost."
The Samaritans had Israelitish blood in them, and were not among the
uncircumcised; and the personal ministry of their Master had taught the
disciples of unmixed Jewish blood, not to count them "common or unclean."
But soon the partition wall between the Jewish and the Gentile world, was
to be utterly thrown down, and the case of Cornelius was to show, that "in
every nation," God could give "to him that feared him and worked
righteousness," the most glorious of all blessings. While Peter, by God's
command, was preaching the Gospel to the pious Cornelius and his friends,
"the Holy Ghost fell on all those who heard the word. And they of the
circumcision were astonished, as many as were with Peter, because that on
the Gentiles also was poured out the gift of the Holy Ghost; for they
heard them speak with tongues and magnify God."
The Apostles letters are sprinkled with passages which inform us that the
gift of the Spirit was the universal privilege of the saints, and the most
illustrious token of their adoption. Paul, in writing to his Ephesians,
reminds them that in Christ, after they believe, they were sealed with
Holy Spirit of promise, which was the earnest of their inheritance." He
expatiates on the great theme in his epistles to his Corinthians, to whom
the Spirit bad discovered "what eye had not seen, nor ear heard, nor the
heart of man conceived." He reminds his faltering Galatians of the
blessedness they once had—of the Spirit they had received by the hearing
of faith—of the Spirit of the Son of God sent forth into their hearts,
which as a second and superior soul in them, had cried to God, Abba,
Father. He tells the Romans of their possessing the first fruits of the
Spirit, which was life to them, while they were groaning under earthly
ills waiting for the adoption, the revelation of the sons of God.
We have thus briefly sketched the tenor of the prophecies which relate to
the effusion of the Holy Ghost,—given in some detail the words of Jesus
Christ on the subject,—and exhibited an outline history of the first
fulfillment of promises, in order to prepare the way for an inquiry into
the nature of the blessing, and its relations to the church of God in the
present and future generations.
1. It seems plain that the gift of the Holy Ghost, spoken of in the
passages quoted, and bestowed on the Christian church, for the first time
on the day of Pentecost, is not the same influence of the Spirit of God by
which sinners are converted. On the other hand, of whatever nature it may
be, it can be received and enjoyed only by the saints, as to them only is
it promised. They only who believed on the Savior were to receive it; (Jno.
7: 39,) and the Lord Jesus expressly declares, (Jno. 14: 17,) that because
the world seeth not the Comforter, neither knoweth him, it cannot receive
him ; but that he dwelt with his disciples and should be in them. The
Apostle Peter, in his sermon on the day of Pentecost, made repentance and
faith in the Lord Jesus indispensable conditions of the reception of the
gift. (Acts '2: 38.) "Then Peter said unto them, Repent and be baptized
every one of you in the name of the Lord Jesus for the remission of sins ;
and ye shall receive the gift of the holy Ghost."
The history corresponds with the promises. It was on believing Jews,
including even the Savior's immediate followers, that the gift of the holy
Ghost was poured out on the memorable day of Pentecost—it was to believing
Samaritans it was given when the blessing passed the bounds of Judea—and
it was on pious men it was bestowed when, as Peter preached Christ, the
Holy Ghost fell on Cornelius and his friends. Paul tells his Ephesians
(Eph. 1: 13.) that "after they believed they were sealed with that Holy
Spirit of promise"—and it was on twelve disciples (Acts 19: 1—7.) that the
same Apostle laid his hand, when he found that "since they believed they
had not yet received the Holy Ghost. "Because ye are sons," says he to his
Galatians, (4: 6,) "God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your
hearts, crying, Abba, Father." Thus it is the uniform testimony of the
Scriptures, that the promise of the Spirit must be received by faith, and
is not given in order to produce the first faith that the believer
exercises.
But if it is plain that the baptism of the Spirit is the peculiar
privilege of the saints, it is equally clear that, till they have received
it, they are not prepared to turn ungodly men from the power of Satan to
God. We will not say that the Apostles had no success before they were
baptized with the Holy Ghost; but it was not without reason, apparent
enough in the results of their subsequent labors, that the Lord Jesus bade
them tarry in the city of Jerusalem till they were endued, with power from
on high, and that he assured them that they should receive power when the
Holy Ghost should come upon them. He had told them before (John 16: 7—8,)
that when he went away he would send them the Paraclete, and that when he
came, he would convict the world of sin, and of righteousness and of
judgment. It was not to convert their own hearts that they needed the
Spirit. The Savior had testified that they were already clean and were not
of the world as he was not of the world. But for the purposes of their
mission as under Christ the light of the world and the salt of the earth,
they needed a full measure of that Spirit which without measure dwelt in
their Lord. They needed this to be one with their Savior as He is one with
the Father—that he should give to them the glory which the Father had
given to him, in order that the world might believe that the Father had
sent him. When they had obtained the promised blessing, many of those to
whom they spoke were pierced to the heart, and cried out, Brethren, what
shall we do? Now, "preaching the gospel with the holy Ghost sent down from
heaven," the word was as a sword wielded by a more than fleshly hand; and
the slain of the Lord were many. And many too, were those who were made
alive. The before feeble preachers were made able ministers of the New
Testament, not of the letter but of the Spirit. Their ministration was not
the ministration of condemnation, but of righteousness as they went from
place to place, they needed not letters of commendation as other men
needed them. Their converts were their letters, known and read of all
men—showing themselves to be letters of Christ ministered by them,
written, not with ink, but with the Spirit of the Living God--not in
tables of stone, but in fleshly tables of the heart. Such confidence they
were permitted to have through Christ towards God.
A little consideration will make it evident that the baptism of the Spirit
did not consist in the communication of miraculous powers. Long before
they received it the Apostles wrought miracles ; and even the seventy
returned with joy to Christ from a mission on which he had sent them
saying, "Lord, even the devils are subject to us through thy name." We
know not that the descent of the holy Ghost on the day of Pentecost made
any essential difference in the miraculous powers of the disciples. But it
appears that persons might have the Spirit and be destitute of the gift of
miracles. Paul in the 12th chapter of the First Epistle to the Corinthians
has put this question forever at rest. The Apostle's whole discussion
proceeds on the supposition that the Spirit is the common privilege of the
saints. But in the conclusion he asks, "Are all workers of miracles? have
all the gifts of healing? Do all speak with tongues? Do all interpret ?"
And yet all had been made to drink into one Spirit.
We may, however, fairly draw one inference from Paul's
representation,—that when the saints received the promised baptism of the
Spirit, whatever gifts or graces they possessed before, they now all came
under the sway and direction of him who had come to abide with them
forever as the Spirit of Christ, the Paraclete, now the sole organ in them
of their Lord and their God.
It seems from the history in the Acts that when the Spirit first came, the
gift of tongues frequently, if not always, was the eternal token and
evidence of his presence. But Paul plainly tells us in the above quoted
passage that all who were endued with the Spirit by no means spoke with
tongues. Still it will appear upon investigation that the gift of tongues
was a most appropriate and beautiful symbol of that change in the inner
man which the baptism of the Holy Ghost always effected. When the Spirit
took of the things of Christ and showed them to them that believed on him
and loved him, it seemed as though they needed many languages and many
tongues, and those like as of fire, "to magnify God and speak forth his
wonders."
But even if there were no positive evidence of the kind we have adduced,
to show that the baptism of the Spirit did not consist in the gift of
miracles or of tongues, there is enough in the nature of the case to
demonstrate the justness of the position we assume. Ancient prophecy, John
the Baptist's testimony, and the teachings of Jesus himself, set forth the
effusion of the Spirit on the saints as the grand privilege and
characteristic blessing of the Messiah's time. It was to be a blessing to
which John's baptism was as nothing,—a blessing worthy to be the earnest
of that day when complete redemption and adoption shall wipe away all
tears from the faces of the saints, and death shall be swallowed up in
eternal victory. And is this illustrious blessing the gift of prophecy,
which a Balaam might possess? Is it the gift of miracles, which might be
bestowed on a Judas? Was it even the gift of tongues so excellent as a
symbol, but which an Apostle thought fit to disparage in comparison with
prophecy? What can be more evident from the nature of the Gospel
dispensation, than that its great characteristic privilege and prerogative
cannot be any external endowment whatever, or any gift compared with which
some other privilege and blessing must appear to the eye of reason and the
heart of piety to excel. It plainly must be, in its essence, an internal
blessing—a blessing, in the highest and best sense of the term, spiritual
and divine. In short, it must be such a blessing that when the: child of
God receives it, it must be to his mind and heart the very thing which
meets the highest aspirations of his holy soul, and the deepest longings
of his earnest and pious spirit.
3. Our readers who have been devout students of the Bible, will remember
that it is to this effect that the word of God speaks. It speaks of
pouring out water for him that is thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground.
"Ho, every one that thirsteth," was the prophet's cry, "come ye to the
waters." "Hearken diligently unto me, and eat ye that which is good, and
let your soul delight itself in fatness." "On the last day, that great day
of the feast, Jesus stood and cried if any man thirst, let him come unto
me and drink, he that believeth on me, as the Scripture hath said, out of
his belly shall flow rivers of living water." We have already seen that an
inspired interpreter tells us that this saying related to the gift of the
Holy Ghost. Not only the plain import of the words themselves, so
decidedly internal and spiritual, but the occasion on which they were
uttered, gives them a most interesting significance. "The eighth day of
the feast, which was also the last festival day of the year," says Tholuck,
"was celebrated with peculiar pomp and splendor. On the same day there was
an universal Jubilee among the people, of which the Rabbins were
accustomed to say, Whosoever has not witnessed these festive scenes, has
no conception of what a Jubilee is. On every one of the eight feast days,
at the time of the morning sacrifice, a priest brought in a golden vessel,
full of water taken from the fountain Siloa and which sprung up in the
innermost part of the temple mount, and carrying it into the inner court
mingled it with the sacrificial wine and then poured it out upon the
altar. The priests then sounded the trumpets and cymbals and sang the
words of Isaiah l2: 3: "With joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of
salvation," [which words form the central gem of a most beautiful
Messianic prophecy.] Under these circumstances it is altogether probable
that Christ made the exclamation of John 7: 38 at the very time when the
priest was carrying that holy water through the forecourt, and when the
people had given themselves up to ecstasies of joy on beholding that holy
symbol. He tells them that the reality of what they rejoiced in seen under
the shadow of a figure, was offered to them in his person. The ancient
Jews understood the passage in Isaiah, of the gift of the Holy Spirit to
be enjoyed in the time of the Messiah ; and our Lord himself manifestly
sanctioned the interpretation promising to those who believed in him wells
and even rivers of salvation in their own bosoms.
4. But the Scriptures place it in our power to be much more definite in
our account of the gift of the Holy Ghost. In that most affecting
discourse of our Lord with his disciples (14, 15, 16,) which contains the
principal promises of the Spirit that proceeded from his own gracious
lips, we have very satisfactory information respecting the chief function
of the Paraclete. He is there called emphatically three times, "the Spirit
of Truth," and we are left at no loss to determine why he is so
denominated; for our Lord tells his anxious friends, "He shall teach you
all things and bring all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have said
unto you; he shall testify of me; he will guide you into all the truth; he
will show you the things to come; he shall glorify me, for he shall
receive of mine and shall show it unto you: all things that the Father
hath are mine—therefore said I that he shall take of mine and shall show
it unto you." In accordance with these words of the Lord himself speak
other passages of inspiration: "Eye bath not seen, nor ear heard, neither
have entered into the heart of man the things which God bath prepared for
them that love him ; but God bath revealed them unto us by his Spirit, for
the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep, things of God. Now we have
received, not the Spirit of the world, but the Spirit which is of God that
we might know the things that are freely given to us of God." "Ye have an
unction from the Holy One," says John to the saints of Jesus, "and ye know
all things." " The anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you;
and ye need not that any man teach you ; but as the same anointing
teacheth you of all things, and is truth, and is no lie, and even as it
bath taught you, ye shall abide in him." "We now with unveiled face
beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are changed into, the same
image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord."
The principal function, then, of the holy Ghost with respect to the saints
is "to shine into their hearts to give them the light of the knowledge of
the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ." It is not such a knowledge
of God as could be secured by the diligent study of the Bible, by the
instructions of learned and pious Theologians, or as could be communicated
by the oral eloquence of prophets and apostles, or even by the divine
eloquence and wisdom of him who spake as mere man never spake. Without the
communication of his Spirit, not even the Son of God himself could so make
known either the Father or himself as that the knowledge imparted should
be in the highest sense, Eternal Life. It is by the Spirit only that God
commands the avenues to the human soul and its wondrous interior
mechanism, so as to make it discern and appreciate the glory of his
perfections.
The Apostle's were good men before the baptism of the Pentecost. But
though they listened to the instructions, not of a prophet who was of the
earth, therefore earthly and speaking from the earth, but of him who was
from heaven and above all, and who spake the very words of God, how dull
of apprehension ! How little they saw the glory or felt the power of the
truth they heard ! Yet they knew more, believed more, loved more than all
the rest of mankind. They possessed truth which flesh and blood had not
revealed unto them, but the Father in heaven. But when the holy Ghost fell
on them, what a glorious transformation! It was as if meridian day had
burst upon them from the obscurity of an eclipse. As with tongues of fire
they spoke forth the wonders which, though they knew them before, they
till now had not known. God had passed before them and proclaimed his
name—shown them his glory. The Spirit had taken the all glorious beams
that blaze from the grace of Christ and had carried them far into their
hearts. The chambers of their inner being had become all luminous; and
every ray of light there glowed with a dissolving, melting warmth. The
fountains of the great deep of their sensibilities were broken up, and
floods of happy tears were shed over a thousand remembrances of their
beloved Lord. His instructions, his miracles, his holiness, his love, his
majesty, his sufferings, his cross, his resurrection, his ascension, his
seat at his Father's right hand, his whole manifestation and work stood
before them in a new and resplendent light and bathed in glory. They were
now "endued with power from on high" and were prepared to act as ministers
of the Everlasting Gospel of Salvation. They now "drank water with joy out
of the wells of salvation," and could sing to each other in the words of
the prophet:
"Praise Jehovah; call upon his name;
Make known among the people his deeds;
Make record that his name is exalted.
Sing to Jehovah: for he hath done glorious things;
Be this known in all the earth.
Cry out and shout, thou inhabitant of Zion;
For great is the Holy One of Israel in the midst of thee."
Isaiah 12th cht Barnes Trans.
The disciples now knew the meaning of many things which till now they
little understood. They knew now the import of many words, of the meaning
of which before, they had but faint ideas, such as Salvation, Peace, Rest
for the Soul, Life, Eternal Life, Glory, Fellowship with God, Love, Faith,
Hope. They had an interpreter who realized to them the import of many of
their dear Lord's precious sayings: "I will not leave you orphans: I will
come to you. Yet a little while and the world seeth me no more, but ye see
me: because I live, ye shall live also." "At that day [the blessed day had
arrived,] ye shall know that I am in my Father, and you in me and I in
you." "He that hath my commandments and keepeth them, he it is that loveth
me; and he that loveth me, shall be loved of my Father, and I will love
him and will manifest myself to him. And my Father will love him, and we
will come unto him and make our abode with him." They had a more perfect
view of their heavenly Master, than they ever enjoyed while his corporeal
presence was with them; and though now, as to the natural eye they did not
see him, yet emphatically they loved him—though they beheld him not,
believing, they rejoiced with joy unspeakable and full of glory.
5. In another point of view the Spirit is spoken of in those passages
where his presence is represented as the token or seal of adoption. The
Spirit was doubtless given in certain relations and measures before the
Lord Jesus Christ was glorified; but he appears to have been then, at
best, the Spirit of servitude, given to guide and comfort accepted
servants, who looked up to an approving Lord and Sovereign, on the throne
in the heavens. (Rom. 8: 15.) But the Spirit of Christ received by his
disciples, was not a second effusion of the Spirit of servitude in order
to fear, but the Spirit of sonship whereby they cried Abba, Father. That
very Spirit of adoption bore witness to their spirit that they were
children of God—and if children then heirs ; heirs of God and joint heirs
with Christ. The words of Paul, (Gal. 4: 6,) on this point, are of
peculiar interest. "Because ye are sons, God hath sent forth into your
hearts the Spirit of his Son, crying, Abba, Father." Here the
representation is, that it is not so much their own feeble souls that make
the filial cry, and put forth the filial claim, as the Spirit within their
hearts of the only Son of God himself, with whom, by the communication of
the Spirit, they have become one. It is as if the Savior himself had put
his own soul within them, and led them up to the throne of his Father and
theirs, and in their hearts, trembling with humble,. reverent fear had
said, Abba, Father, for them. And what wonder that the soul which
experiences this condescending tenderness of the Savior, waxes bold, and
recognizes itself not only as an accepted servant but a child of God. "The
same Spirit [of adoption,] bears witness to our spirit that we are God's
children." The Apostolic inference easily follows : "If children, then
heirs of God through Christ." But we do injustice to the Apostle—he
individualizes: "If a son, an heir of God through Christ."
6. We have spoken of the union between Christ and his saints effected by
the Holy Ghost. It is not merely the Spirit that is sent forth from God to
act on the world that takes up his abode in believers. It is the Spirit of
Christ dwelling in him as the Son. When John saw the Spirit descend on
Jesus and abide on him, there came forth a voice from heaven, This is my
beloved Son in whom I am well pleased. And it is the Spirit, thus publicly
given to the beloved Son, that is defused through the hearts of all his
brethren, because they are beloved sons too, with whom their Father is
well pleased also, and to whom their Elder Brother delights to communicate
of his own fulness, even grace for grace. The union of Christ and his
people, then, is a real union, a union in the participation of the
self-same Spirit of the one Father in heaven. This accords with the
Savior's prayer, so often inadequately interpreted of a mere union of
affection: "Holy Father, keep [my disciples] in thy name which thou hast
given me, that they maybe one, as we are: neither pray I for these alone,
but for them also that believe on me through their word, that they may be
one as thou Father art in me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in
us, that the world may believe that thou didst send me. And the glory
which thou gavest me, I have given them, that they may be one as we are
one; I in them and thou in me, that they may be perfected into one,—that
the world may believe that thou didst send me, and hast loved them as thou
hast loved me." In reference to the same humbling as well as elevating
truth, the Apostle represents Christ and his people under the image of a
body, He being the head and they the members, but all animated by one and
the same spirit. The unifying instrumentality is not muscle or ligament,
but "by one Spirit we have all been baptized into one body, and have all
been made to drink into the same Spirit." At times Christ is made a great
model temple, and each individual saint is also by the communication of
the spirit, a temple of the living God. Again, Christ and his saints
constitute one great temple, (he himself being the chief corner stone,)
together for a habitation of God through the Spirit.
This joint sonship and joint heirship with the only-begotten of God, into
which believers are adopted by the Most High, and to which they are sealed
by a kind, of conscious personal union with Jesus, in the participation of
the same Spirit—what an unspeakable blessing it is to those who enjoy it!
What an astonishing honor put upon those "who were-nature children of
wrath, even as others !" The adopted sons of the Most High, are in an
exalted sense "partakers of the Divine Nature," and by a birth superior to
conversion, having become really children, with Christ, of the Living God!
And they are children too, who through the indwelling Spirit of the
Only-Begotten, entertain thoughts, feelings, and aspirations suited to the
high dignity and rank in the universe, to which, in Christ, they are
advanced.
7. We have already remarked that whatever gifts or graces were possessed
by the saints before the reception of the Holy Ghost, they were all, on
his descent, doubtless taken under his sway and direction. Miracles might
be performed, and prophecies be uttered, by wicked men ; and the All-wise
God ordained that a few such instances, (and it was obviously fit that
such instances should be but few,) should exist and have a place in Sacred
History, to counteract that tendency to an over-valuation of external
wonders, as "the best gifts" which human weakness has exhibited in every
age—a melancholy, phenomenon which marred the glory of the Corinthian
church, and which led the Apostle to expatiate with such impressive
eloquence on the "more excellent way." Before the Spirit of adoption came,
the saints exercised what miraculous gifts the exigencies of the case
demanded; but they did it as those, who, sons though they were, differed
in their present condition not at all from favored and beloved servants.
The Spirit of Adoption at once exalted the gifts before exercised by those
who received it, into endowments of sons. The graces before possessed,
became the graces and virtues of children—who were called not merely to
honor, by becoming conduct and a becoming character, a gracious Sovereign
and Lord, but a tender, affectionate, smiling Father. A servant may
sustain a very endearing relation to his master; but all the privileges
and powers conferred upon him in that relation, great though they may be,
do not make him a son. Let him be exalted to sonship, and he may be
equally humble and reverent towards him who has thus favored him, but the
filial element, introduced into his heart as well as into his condition
will give a totally different cast to his spirit and his deportment. Not
that his Father ceases to be his Lord: a king is lord and sovereign to his
children as well as to his servants. He may not employ his Sons in more
important stations, nor entrust them with higher powers than those enjoyed
by some faithful, devoted servants. But after all, the son is more than
the servant. He is conscious of a freedom, a dignity, a buoyant spirit, to
which the servant is a stranger. The gifts his Father bestows on him, come
from his Father, and all his feelings, and virtues, and actions bear the
filial stamp. This we know to be so in mere human relations; and how much
more emphatically would it be so, did every human father possess a spirit
which he could in its living consciousness impart to all his children in a
manner analogous to that in which God dwells and walks in all his sons and
daughters. If these things are so, the same gifts and graces might have
been possessed by the saints before they received the great promise of the
Father, and the Spirit of Adoption might have so changed them, or the
saints in the exercise of them, that they were no longer the gifts and
graces of mere servants, but the appropriate endowments and
characteristics of sons. But we should not say enough if we did not add
that the graces, though not the purely miraculous gifts of the saints, did
most certainly gain by the filial spirit an exaltation and expansion, an
invigoration and a stability, greatly beyond what appeared in them before.
Till the Paraclete came, how obscure the spiritual vision of even the
Apostles! how feeble their love! how faltering their faith! how infirm
their resolution! The Pentecost transformed them into Christian heroes of
the highest order, each of them a terror to Satan and his whole realm.
We wish to add a little to the hints already thrown out on the relations
of the gift of the Holy Ghost to the success of primitive preachers.
Excepting a few sporadic cases like that of Saul of Tarsus where God
exercises his grace in a peculiarly sovereign manner, the Lord employs his
people as the channels of his mercy to the unconverted. As an almost
universal rule, where there are no saints there are no conversions. Where
the Gospel is not preached, mankind remain dead in trespasses and sins. We
are, therefore, never told to pray God to send his Spirit down upon the
millions in the remotest depths of Asia and Africa, but to beseech "the
Lord of the harvest to send forth laborers into his harvest ;" and it
seems to be assumed that if this is not done, the harvest must perish. It
was no more truly necessary to the extensive conquests of Alexander, that
his soldiers should march into the country he aimed to subjugate and fight
there, than it is, according to God's plan, indispensable that the
sacramental host of the elect should invade all the nations of the earth
and fight in them the spiritual battles of the Lord. Now, in order that
men may be converted, it is obviously necessary that they should learn the
truth, and learn it in a powerfully impressive form. Good men as the Old
Testament saints were, and as the disciples of Christ were before they
received the promise, they in general did not themselves so know the truth
as to be able to pierce with it the steel-clad souls of the masses of men.
They needed that the truth should be manifested in more effulgent, burning
power and glory to their own souls, till every fiber of their being was
instinct with the life of God. They needed to be so penetrated and
saturated with the mighty relations of man to God, Christ, Sin, Holiness,
heaven, hell, that their whole external life should plainly be the efflux
of the volcanic thoughts and emotions of their inner being. They needed no
less, that this burning energy should be chastened by a divine sweetness,
calmness, and wisdom; so that their whole character should commend itself
to every man's conscience in the sight of God. They needed too, language
fit to convey to men's minds the wondrous, things that God had taught
them—that utterance should be given them to open their mouths boldly as
behooved them to speak. All these necessities were met by the gift of the
Holy Ghost; and in the characters, and mighty words and deeds of the first
preachers, the holy Ghost bore testimony to the gospel they proclaimed.
But we must go farther, fully to express our view of the truth on this
subject. In them, the Spirit of God came himself in contact with
rebellious man. From them, as from his war-chariots, he fought his battles
love, and shot his arrows of light, and power, and salvation. While the
personal agency of the saints was fully exerted-- and they were infinitely
far from being mere passive organs of another's activity—the Spirit so
worked in them and by them that they were always ready to acknowledge that
the excellency of the power was not of them but of God. how felicitous the
expression of Paul's humility: "Yet not I, but the grace of God that was
with me,"—an undesigned echo of the Savior's saying: "It is not ye that
speak, but the Spirit of your Father that speaketh in you."
In the same spirit the Old Testament worthies were accustomed to sing
respecting achievements of another kind : "O, Lord, thou hast wrought all
our works for us." It was not only the effects of the Spirit's immediate
action on men's minds that they saw and acknowledged to be God's work and
not theirs—they felt that in the results produced by their own transformed
impressive characters, and their words of burning power and majestic
wisdom, they were themselves so little and the Holy Ghost so much, that to
ascribe any thing to themselves was to give a value to an infinitesimal in
the presence of an infinite quantity. They were like the dry bones in
Ezekiel's valley, entirely powerless, till God brought bone to its bone,
and clothed the skeletons with flesh and "the Spirit of life from God"
entered into them. They then had a mouth and wisdom which none of their
enemies were able to gainsay or resist. Endued with the holy Ghost,
whether the disciple was an Apostle, or an Elder, or a private Christian,
he was in his sphere a man of power, and his testimony was to felt more
than human.
9. We have as yet said nothing of the holy Ghost as the Spirit of prayer.
The language of Paul to this point (Rom. 8: 26-27) is peculiarly striking
: "The Spirit also helpeth our infirmities; for we know not what we should
pray for as we ought, but the Spirit itself maketh intercession for us
with groanings that cannot be uttered. And He that searcheth the hearts
knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit because He maketh intercession for
the saints according to the will of God." The Spirit as here spoken of, is
the Spirit of adoption, the Comforter placed within the being of God's
children. The language seems to say that as the Spirit cries, Abba,
Father, in them, so he prays in them, and prays with an earnestness which
is expressed in the deepest sighings or groans. But the saint is not in
this exercise passive,—he prays in the Holy Ghost (Jude 20,)—prays with
all prayer and supplication in the Spirit, watching thereunto with all
perseverance. Eph. 6: 18.. We may, perhaps, obtain a faint idea of the
meaning of Paul in Romans, if we call to mind the efforts which a wise and
holy mother makes to teach her little ones to pray after she hopes God has
blessed her endeavors for their conversion. They know not what they should
pray for as they ought; but she spreads out before their feeble minds the
objects of prayer, and as her own soul kindles, she breathes into them the
fire of her own pious spirit, puts herself into their little place, and
alluring them upward, utters with her own mouth the petition which through
her own teachings swell their young bosoms and excite tender sighings in
her own mouth, the petition which could go into the interior being of her
children or send her soul there, and become to them as it were a higher
and better self, we should have a much closer analogy. We sometimes see an
instance of the same thing in the endeavors of a mature saint, who has had
long and deep experience of prevalence in prayer, to bear up the soul of a
young convert with his own soul as he leads him in supplication. "It is as
when the eagle stirreth up her nest, fluttereth over her young, taketh
them, beareth them on her wings."
Prayer thus offered by the Holy Ghost and in the Holy Ghost, is answered;
for he that searcheth the hearts, knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit
because he maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of
God.
10. We read of specific directions occasionally given to the first
Christians, distinct entirely from illumination respecting the glory of
Christ, and the truths of his Gospel. "The Spirit said unto Philip, Go and
join thyself to that chariot." "While Peter thought on the vision, the
Spirit said unto him, Behold three men seek thee." "The Spirit bade me go
with thee nothing doubting." "They were forbidden of the holy Ghost to
preach the word in Asia." "They essayed to go into Bithynia, but the
Spirit suffered them not." Directions of this kind, whether the common
privilege of saints or not, are plainly not to be placed on a level with
spiritual illumination and discoveries of the glories and perfections of
Jehovah—that knowledge of the only true God and of Jesus Christ which is
life eternal; because such things a Balaam might receive, as his history
plainly shows. But still they were given to Philip, and Peter, and Paul,
not as the passive organs, but free children of God ; and they were not
despised by those who valued every token of their Savior's presence, and
his superintendence of their way.
11. We have occasionally, in the course of our remarks, employed the word
Paraclete, rendered in our English Bible Comforter, because there is no
word in our language that fully expresses its import, and it sometimes
occurs in English books. The word is rendered in other versions, Monitor,
Instructor, and in our version, (1 Jn. 2: 1,) Advocate. Calvin retains the
original word, Paraclete, in the Gospel, and renders by the word Advocate
in the Epistle. Recent investigations have made it clear that the meaning
of the word is very comprehensive, and that it was intended to express, so
far as one word could do it, all that the Holy Ghost is to the children of
God--Instructor, Illuminator, Monitor, Guide, Comforter, Encourager,
Advocate. By its etymology, the word denotes a friend whom we, or another
for us, may, at any time when we need aid, call to our side. This accords
with the saying, He dwelleth with you, or more literally, by you. The
nearer and more intimate relation he was about to assume, is indicated by
the subjoined promise, He shall be in you. We should choose to incorporate
the word into our language rather than to dilute its import by the use of
any single English word, and leave the delightful and appropriate task of
explaining its significance to ministers of the Gospel. We have precedents
for such a course, in the words Baptism, Paradise, Hades, the Christ or
Messiah, and a number of other terms. It would be difficult to pursue the
same course with respect to the cognate nouns and verbs when they refer to
the Spirit's work, and perhaps the attempt is hardly desirable.
12. It is an inquiry of much interest and importance, whether each
disciple experienced but one baptism of the Spirit, so that the blessing
was thereafter never increased or repeated. In Acts 4: 31, it is said that
when the disciples,—some of whom had enjoyed the Pentecostal blessing,—had
prayed, "The place was shaken where they were assembled together, and they
were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and they spake the word with
boldness." A special fullness of the Spirit, imparted for the occasion,
appears to be spoken of in the cases of Peter and Stephen, Acts 4: 8; 7:
55, when they were called to address the Sanhedrin, the Supreme Court of
the Jewish nation. Analogous illapses of the Spirit of the Lord acting in
totally different relations, are mentioned in the Old Testatament as
having fallen upon Gideon, Samson, Jepthah, and other heroes of the
ancient people of God. It is true that some modern commentators explain
such language as being a mere figure of speech; but we choose to recognize
the actings of God's mighty Spirit, where the Lord is pleased to tell us
he vouchsafed his presence, whether he put forth his strength to nerve his
children for a corporeal or spiritual victory—for a battle with flesh and
blood, or with the spiritual powers of the air.
As the blessing of the Spirit might be increased, so it might be
diminished. A Peter might dissemble so as to deserve the rebuke of his
faithful brother Paul. The Spirit might be quenched. The Holy Spirit of
God, whereby the saints were sealed unto the day of redemption, might be
grieved. Nay, possibly, a temple of the holy Ghost might be so desecrated,
that he would move to the threshold of the house, and prepare to go far
off from his sanctuary.
13. Persons of an enthusiastic temperament, have entertained the notion
that those who enjoy the internal teachings of the Spirit, need no
instruction from the Scriptures, and no spiritual aid from their fellow
men, or from the diligent and vigorous exertion of their own intellectual
faculties. According to this notion, the sayings of the Savior, which the
Paraclete, the Spirit of Truth, was to call to the remembrance of his
disciples, were of no use ; the Holy Scriptures were not able to make the
spiritual Timothy wise unto salvation through faith in Christ Jesus ; and
it was very preposterous for the Apostle John to say, "I have not written
unto you because ye know not the truth, but because ye know it, and
because no lie is of the truth." It seems that the Apostle's hope of the
good success of his letter, was founded in the fact that they had an
unction from the Holy One, and knew all things. According to Paul, 1 Cor.
3: 1, there were things to be spoken to those who were spiritual and which
the spiritual only could bear, as well as things to be addressed to babes
in Christ. The body of Christ is not such an anomaly that each member can
say to the rest, I have no need of you. "The eye cannot say to the hand, I
have no need of thee; nor again the head to the feet, I have no need of
you. Nay, much more, those members of the body which seem to be more
feeble, are necessary." Vain delusion, therefore, is the pretence that
God's Spirit was designed to create among the members of the body of
Christ such an independence as would be the disastrous occasion of
everlasting schism. It is a glorious instance at once of the divine wisdom
and love of him who gives gifts to men, that "he gave some [to be]
apostles; and some prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and
teachers: for the perfecting of the saints for the work of the ministry,
for the edifying of the body of Christ: till we all come in the unity of
the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect man,
unto the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ: that we
henceforth be no more children tossed to and fro, and carried about with
every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness,
whereby they lie in wait to deceive ; but speaking the truth in love may
grow up into him in all things, which is the head, even Christ: from whom
the whole body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every
joint supplieth, according to the effectual working in the measure of
every part, maketh increase of the body, unto the edifying of itself in
love."
As to the exertion of our own intellectual faculties: the prophetic
character of Daniel did not render it needless, to him "to learn by books
the number of the years" of the captivity; the spiritual endowments of
Timothy did not render reading useless to him or the study even of the Old
Testament Scriptures, so despised by enthusiasts; nor did Luke's
inspiration save him from the necessity of "following along from the
beginning," (as the words of the original mean) all things which eye
witnesses of the matter had declared; nor did even Paul's apostolic
character make" books and parchments" superfluous to him. The blessing of
the Holy Ghost was designed not only to be an unspeakable good in itself
but to make every other blessing a blessing indeed; and especially to make
the sayings of Jesus Christ "spirit and life" to the soul—to spread a
glory over the whole sacred page—to
give effective value to all heaven-taught words—and to prosper every
endeavor to "grow in grace and in the knowledge of the Lord and Savior
Jesus Christ."
14. The view we have exhibited of the nature of the gift of the Holy
Ghost, makes it almost self-evident that it was not designed for the
ungodly. Still it was by no mere arbitrary decree that they were excluded
from its benefits. "The world cannot receive Him, because it seeth Him
not, neither knoweth Him." Only the pure in heart can see God—only such
can appreciate those disclosures which the Holy Ghost makes of the Divine
Glory. "The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God ;
for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they
are spiritually discerned." Were God to hide him in a cleft of a rock, as
he hid Moses, and pass by him, and proclaim his name—the words that spoke
forth the moral perfections of the Eternal One, though expounded by the
Spirit, would be to him little else than empty sounds. He has no organ, no
receptivity for such communications. A man must have a heart to love the
of the things of the Spirit before he can understand them.
Besides how would it consist with the honor of the Holy One of Israel to
place the Shechinah of his glory, (not a resplendent cloud merely, but the
Spirit himself,) in a temple still a "habitation of devils and a cage of
unclean birds?" "What fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness?
And what communion hath light with darkness? And what concord hath Christ
with Belial ?" Those that receive the Holy Ghost are the temple of the
Living God; "as God hath said, I will dwell in them and walk in them.
Wherefore, [this the unalterable condition,] Come out from among them and
be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not an unclean thing; and I will
receive you, and will be a Father to you, and ye shall be my Sons and
daughters saith the Lord Almighty."
The Holy Ghost is the Spirit of Adoption, given to sons as such--such in
character and claims. Shall the gift be bestowed on those who are of their
Father the Devil, whose lusts they will do? How would Abba, Father, sound
from lips which have never uttered a word of filial penitence? And what
have those who are still "children of wrath" to do with he Earnest of the
glorious inheritance of the "heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ ?"
15. The baptism of the Spirit appears to have been such a blessing, that
those who received it were fully conscious of possessing it. Not that they
all doubted of their own piety before, and that this blessing assured them
of their acceptance. It seems plain that Peter and others were sure that
they loved the Savior before the events of the Pentecost occurred. The
lips of Christ had told his disciples that they were clean while as yet
the Paraclete was not in them; and an angel had, assured Cornelius of his
acceptance before the Apostle preached to him the Gospel and the holy
Ghost fell on them that heard the word. If they were conscious of a
relation of acceptance before the reception of the promise, how much more
when the Spirit of adoption in their hearts cried Abba, Father ! "I think"
says Calvin, "that the Apostle used this participle [crying] to express
greater confidence ; for doubt does not suffer us to speak boldly, but
holds the jaws as it were compressed, so that half-broken words hardly
come forth from a faltering tongue. On the other hand, crying is a mark of
security and of a confidence not at all vacillating. For we have not
received the Spirit of servitude again to fear, but of liberty to full
confidence."
16. The baptism of the Spirit was not always received ever after the
Savior's glorification at the moment or hour of repentance and faith. The
disciples waited ten days from the Savior's ascension before the promise
came. The believing Samaritans did not receive it till Peter and John went
down from Jerusalem and prayed for them that they might receive the Holy
Ghost. The twelve disciples at Ephesus had not so much as heard whether
the holy Ghost was yet given. It was, probably, some years after the first
effusion of the Spirit that the devout Cornelius and his friends obtained
the gift. We have before spoken somewhat at large upon repentance and
faith as necessary previous conditions. We here speak of the fact that it
was manifestly in some instances a considerable time after those
conditions existed before the promise was fulfilled. We merely suggest
whether the delay till Pentecost had not respect, not to the subjective
state of the disciples, but the fact that it was fit that the first
effects of the great blessing should be witnessed by a great crowd of
spectators from Israel both in Palestine and of the Dispersion. The
connexion of the spiritual baptism of the Samaritans with the visit of
Peter and John might have been intended to endear the Apostles as such to
those first non-Jewish converts. The delay in the other recorded cases was
perhaps owing to the general principle in the divine administration, that
God does not bestow a particular blessing till he has told his people he
has such a blessing to bestow and till he has thus called forth their
believing desires and prayers. "He gives the Holy Spirit to those that ask
it ;" and how shall they ask it till they know of the existence of such a
blessing? The greater the blessing, the greater the necessity of
previously rousing the soul, to long for it and to seek it by earnest
supplication. This will cause it to be valued when it is bestowed, and to
be cherished with the most watchful care. We may be quite sure that when
holy desire and believing prayer have had their scope, the hand of the
gracious Savior will not be held back so long that "hope deferred shall
make the heart sick."
But what shall be said of those who know these things and do not care for
them, or care for them not enough to seek the transcendent blessing with
all their hearts? Too surely, such treat with practical contempt the great
characteristic spiritual work of the Son of God—to baptize with the Holy
Ghost. If we have not been spiritually baptized, and the fact is not owing
to our ignorance, as in the case of Cornelius and the Ephesian disciples,
but to wilful supineness and neglect, or to proud obstinate unbelief, the
words of Paul (Rom. 8: 9) certainly belong to us, "If any man have not the
Spirit of Christ, he is none of his."
16. It remains to enquire whether the gift of the Holy Ghost was confined
to the primitive age, or is the common privilege of the children of God in
all ages. We know not that much which we have said will appear to have
answered this inquiry. The answer is certainly to be found in many of the
quotations we have made from the Holy Scriptures. It seems quite
ridiculous to understand the predictions of the prophets, the emphatic
language of John the Baptist, and the glowing words of Christ, of a
handful of his first followers, and their immediate disciples. The
interpretation which gives the oracles of God such a turn, is the blindest
and most stupid infatuation. The eyes that see only miracles, and tongues,
and other external marvels in the baptism of the Spirit, deserve not to be
called eyes at all. Those wonders had their place and their importance in
arousing the attention of a sense-besotted world, and in gaining a hearing
for the words of salvation from those who "unless they saw signs and
wonders would not believe ;" and we see not that God has uttered any
declaration that should hinder him from granting their testimony again if
the exigencies of the cause of truth should call for it. But still, to us
the view of Pres. Edwards seems not irrational, that miracles belong
rather to the infancy than the manhood of religion; but the indwelling of
the Holy Ghost in the soul as the author of Life, Light, Faith and Love,
and the bond of union between the Savior and his people, the Infinite
Father and his children—this belongs not to the childhood of religion
only, but is the highest glory of its maturest and most exalted state, in
heaven as well as on earth. For though the external condition and
appointment of God's children in the future world will correspond with the
splendors of their glorified Savior, (faintly exhibited in the
transfiguration when "his face shone as the sun and his raiment was white
as the light,") the manifestations which are made to their souls of the
glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ will be to them the great stream
of the river of life; "for this is Life Eternal, to know Thee, the only
true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent." Evermore as they gaze,
with unveiled eyes,—and not in a mirror, but face to face,--on the glory
of the Lord, they will be changed into the same image from glory to glory
as by the Spirit of the Lord. In this world, however, the same discoveries
are their life, while in compassion for their present weakness, the
paternal tenderness of God interposes a mirror, lest beneath the full
effulgence of divine glory their feeble corporeal frames should sink in
death; "for no man," God himself told his beloved servant Moses, "shall
see my face and live." Our salvation in the present and in the future
worlds are essentially identical,—internal, spiritual, and consisting in
the vision of God and filial fellowship with him.
With respect to the question whether the baptism of the Holy Ghost is
designed for Christians of all generations, the words of the Apostle
Peter, uttered in the ears of Israel assembled on the day of Pentecost,
are perfectly explicit. "Repent and be baptized, every one of you in the
name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins ; and ye shall receive the
gift of the Holy Ghost: for the promise is unto you and to your children,
and "to all that are afar off, even as many as the Lord our God shall
call." The language of Paul to the Galatians, (3:7-14) if not quite so
explicit as that of Peter, is entirely clear. We quote only enough of the
passage to present the Apostle's view of the point we are discussing. "The
Scripture foreseeing that God would justify the heathen through faith
preached the gospel before to Abraham, saying, in thee shall all nations
be blessed, &c.—that the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles
through Jesus Christ, that we might receive the promise of the Spirit
through faith. This was the ultimate point. The salvation of the Gospel
was not properly enjoyed till the Spirit of adoption was received, it is
for this reason that the same Apostle asks these Gentiles (3: 2) so
emphatically, "This only would I learn of you, Received ye the Spirit by
the works of the law, or the hearing of faith ?" Nor does the language of
Christ, (John 7: 38) divinely interpreted of the gift of the Holy Ghost
not to be bestwed till our Lord was glorified, admit of any other sense,
"If any man thirst, let him come unto me and drink, he that believeth on
me—as the Scripture bath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of
living water."
The baptism of the Holy Ghost, then, in its Pentecostal fulness, was not
to be confined to the Primitive Church; but it is the common privilege of
all believers—of believers even of this generation, and of every
generation to come. It was at first indispensable to the appropriate
happiness and befitting characteristics of children of God and brethren of
Jesus Christ--a happiness and dignity Impossible except by becoming one
with him, not by an external bond like that which unites the famous
Siamese twins, but an internal union through the indwelling of the same
Spirit. We say it was at first indispensable for these ends; and it has
not ceased to be indispensable for the same ends by the lapse of time. It
was necessary to make Apostles, and Prophets, and Saints, able, efficient
ministers of the New Testament. Till endued by this baptism with power
from on high, they were not prepared to convert the nations to God. The
same necessity exists at the present day and will continue to exist, till
the last sinner is converted through the Gospel preached with the Holy
Ghost sent down from Heaven. Who without the Holy Ghost is sufficient for
these things? And of what other sufficiency from God does the inspired
word make mention ? Nor will a less effusion of the Spirit, a less degree
of the Spirit and power of sonship, answer now, than was found necessary
in the Apostolic age. The human heart is not less rebellious and stubborn,
Satan is not less active and wily, Christians are not in themselves less
weak. The Cross is not less a stumbling-block to the Jew and foolishness
to the Greek. The sensualities, the superstitions, the philosophies of
Asia, Africa, and Papal Europe, are not less potent for infatuation, nor
do they hold their victims with a grasp less firm than the formalism of
Palestine and the wisdom of Greece. If, as some have strangely intimated,
the Holy Ghost was more mighty in the freshness of his first effusions,
than we can ever expect him to be again, either in ourselves or in the
Christians who are to come after us, alas for the millions of our race.
For aught we see, the doom is passed upon them; for salvation shall no
more go forth from Zion. Her God has put his hand into his bosom and will
no more pluck it out. But no. Cry out and shout, thou inhabitant of Zion ;
for great is the Holy One of Israel in the midst of thee. The Holy Ghost
shall yet descend on the Sons of God in greater power than has ever yet
been displayed, and a nation shall be born in a day. Judgment shall run
down as water, and righteousness as a mighty stream. "As for me, [they are
the words of God to Israel, Is. 59: 21; 60: 3,] this is my covenant with
them saith the Lord: My Spirit which is upon thee, and my words which I
have put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth, nor out of the
mouth of thy seed, nor out of the mouth of thy seed's seed, henceforth and
forever. Arise, shine, for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is
risen upon thee. For behold darkness covereth the earth, and gross
darkness the people; but the Lord shall arise upon thee, and his glory
shall be seen upon thee. And the Gentiles shall come to thy light, and
kings to the brightness of thy rising." Does not the voice of God's word
demand of us, the professed Christians of the present generation, to lay
hold upon these great promises," lest that come upon us which is spoken of
by the prophets :—Behold, ye despisers, and wonder, and perish; for I work
a work in your days, a work which you will in no wise believe, though a
man declare it unto you ?" Enlargement and deliverance for the laboring
cause of God, will arise from some quarter. It will be most melancholy for
us, if when we get to the end of our swift-passing probation, God should
remind us of all the gracious promises of his lips of which we have known,
and all the wonders of his grace of which we have heard, as he reminded
obdurate Israel of the signs and great miracles done in their behalf upon
Pharaoh and his land, and should be obliged to tell us, too, "Yet the Lord
hath not given you a heart to perceive, and eyes to see, and ears to hear
unto this day."
|
|