By W. H. Griffith Thomas
SUMMARY OF THE BIBLICAL REVELATION.The perspective of truth in the Bible is clear and significant. There are three dispensations of the Divine revelation to man, involving a progressive economy of grace.1 First, God is revealed as transcendent, and exercises His ministry either by prophecy, or by symbol, or by wisdom. Then, the Father becomes manifested in the Incarnate Son and God is revealed to man in Christ. Then, when the work of the Incarnate Son is accomplished, the revelation of God to man becomes real and actual in the presence and power of the Holy Spirit; the ' other Comforter,' or Advocate, Whose presence was only possible when the first Advocate, Jesus Christ, had ascended into heaven. We are therefore now living in what is called the dispensation of the Holy Spirit. Everything else was preparatory to this, and the purpose of the two prior dispensations was to prepare for the gift of the Holy Spirit whereby man could be brought into fellowship with God, the power of sin overcome, and human life in relation to God truly restored.
As we review the teaching of the Bible on this profound theme, it is essential to remind ourselves again that the true way of approach is by means of personal experience.
Four lines of teaching stand out with great prominence, 1. The intimate and essential relation of the Spirit to Christ. While in the later books of the Old Testament the Spirit becomes associated with Messianic prophecy, it is the unique feature of the New Testament revelation that the Spirit of God is the Spirit of Jesus Christ (Acts ii. 33). Most modern writers call special attention to this essential relationship of the Spirit to our Lord. Thus, Sanday says:
And Moberly, similarly:
2. The Spirit is ' the Executive of the Godhead ' in and for the Christian Church. He is the Spirit of God, of Christ, of Truth, of Holiness, of Grace, of Glory, of Adoption, of Life, of Jesus, of His Son, of the Lord. By the Holy Spirit the work of Christ is applied and realised, and any subordination recorded is only in the sense of that self-abnegation which is true of each Person of the Trinity in relation to the others. Thus the Father glorifies the Son, and the Son the Father; the Spirit glorifies the Son, and the Son sends the Spirit. No blessing comes to us from God apart from the Spirit of God. 3. The Deity of the Spirit. The association of the Spirit with the Father and the Son in the baptismal formula (Matt, xxviii. 19), and the Benediction (2 Cor. xiii. 14) clearly implies and teaches the Godhead of the Spirit. And yet no embarrassment is felt by New Testament writers from any contradiction with the unity of the Godhead. The Deity of the Spirit is always found in the closest association with Jewish Monotheism. 4. The Personality of the Spirit. This, again, seems clear, even if it be only by implication, in the New Testament. The Spirit is personal because God is personal, and Divine because God is Divine, and although it cannot be said that the Personality of the Spirit is made as clear as the Personality of the Father and the Son, yet it is impossible to think truly of the Spirit as impersonal, since definite personal attributes and powers are given to the Spirit.
It will be seen from the foregoing that the distinctions in the Godhead involved in the New Testament doctrine of the Spirit are always connected closely with the Divine operations rather than with the Divine nature. There is nothing philosophical or speculative in the Biblical revelation. All is vital and personal.
Not the least significant point in the New Testament is the incidental and almost constant mention of the Holy Spirit. This feature is to be specially observed. It represents an atmosphere, a life. The Holy Spirit is regarded as normal in the life of the believer, who is enabled thereby to ' live ' and ' walk ' and even ' step ' in the Spirit (Gal. V. 16, 25, Greek). 6. The fundamental conceptions and experiences are the same throughout the whole of the New Testament. The only varieties are found in the types of thought and mental expression. It is impossible to trace any development of the doctrine of the Spirit through Ebionism to Orthodoxy. From the earliest to the latest the essential ideas are the same, however they may vary in aspect and degree of presentation.
Everything connected with the Spirit of God in the Bible can be summarised in the one thought that from first to last the life of the believer depends upon God for its complete realisation, and this dependence is connected at each point with the Spirit of God. All that Jesus Christ was, and did, and is, becomes vital only by means of the action of the Spirit of God on those who are willing to receive Him.
And thus we see the force of the conclusion that
So that whatever lines of thought may be followed by the Church, and whatever avenues of experience may be entered, it will be impossible to arrive at any point, or to come upon any discovery, that is not in some way or other explicit or implicit in Holy Scripture.
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2 Warfield, Presbyterian and Reformed Review, Vol. VI. p. 687. 3 A. J. Gordon, The Ministry of the Spirit, p. 44. 4 Criticism of the Fourth Gospel, p. 215. 5 Atonement and Personality, p. 194. 6 Denney, Article ' Holy Spirit,' Dictionary of Christ and the Gospels, p. 744. 7 Winstanley, Spirit in the New Testament, p. 161. 8 Swete, Article ' Holy Spirit,' Hastings' Bible Dictionary, p. 410. 9 H. W. Robinson, The Christian Doctrine of Man, p. 324. 10 Wood, The Spirit of God in Biblical Literature, p. 269. 11 Winstanley, op. cit. p. 166.
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