By W. H. Griffith Thomas
THE ANTE-NICENE PERIOD.It forms a natural transition from the Biblical revelation to the enquiry how the Christian consciousness has interpreted the Biblical data.
Opinions on the relation of the Spirit to the Church are so different, that it becomes essential to study with care the course and development of Christian thought and life. It is significant that so many movements in Christian history, which may be said to have developed into ' heresies,' have arisen in connection with the Holy Spirit. This fact alone makes it imperative to enquire as to the relation of Christian doctrine and history to the outstanding teaching of the Bible. It is impossible, and in some respects unnecessary, to go into detail. For the purpose of arriving at true ideas on the subject, it seems better to concentrate on the chief eras of Church History. The progress of Christian thought through the centuries seems to be characterised by the six landmarks indicated in these chapters. Sub-Apostolic Christianity was characterised by a real Christian experience without much reflection on what was involved in that experience. The remarkable difference between the leading ideas of the New Testament and the thought of the sub-Apostolic age is observed by all writers. As Swete says, ' The spiritual giants of the Apostolic age are succeeded by men of lower stature and poorer capacity.'2
In Clement of Rome and Ignatius the teaching seems to be solely personal and experimental, and only indirectly doctrinal, and the Shepherd of Hernias has the fullest of references to the Spirit of God.4 But the fact that the threefold name of Father, Son, and Spirit was used in worship shows that implicitly and in practice the Deity and Personality of the Spirit were acknowledged. The experience of the Spirit was sufficient for the present.
When we turn to the Apologists, we become conscious of the fact that the Logos doctrine occupies the first place, and that which the New Testament attributes to the Holy Spirit is usually connected with the Logos.
But it is quite clear that this immaturity of thought on the question of the Holy Spirit does not show any indication of error in experience, for,
As in other cases, so here, it was heresy that compelled the Church to pay closer attention to the doctrine of the Holy Spirit. Gnosticism played some part in this process. Bishop Moule considers that the Gnostic systems bear a curious testimony to belief in the Personality of the Holy Spirit, since their ' Holy Spirit ' is as personal as their ' Christ,' though ' their theory is indeed wholly distorted from the Scripture view.'10 Swete, however, remarks that, while the Gnostics who accepted the Gospels could not ignore the subject,
It was in Montanism that the subject came more prominently into notice, and there seems no doubt that the original impetus of this movement was a reaction in favour of the recognition of the presence and power of the Holy Spirit in a Church that was already tending to become too rigid in its intellectual conceptions and ecclesiastical organisation.
Unfortunately the movement developed along extravagant lines; its original beneficent purpose became wholly lost, and it ' exerted no lasting influence over the thought of the Church.'14 But notwithstanding the extremes into which Montanism went, it is also true that
Monarchianism also had a very definite bearing on the ante-Nicene doctrine of the Holy Spirit. It was impossible for Christian thought to ignore the relation of the Spirit to the Son in the face of the Christological teaching of the various schools of Monarchianism represented by Paul of Samosata, Praxeas, Noetus, and especially Sabellius, and it is to TertuUian, influenced by Montanism, that we owe the fullest ante-Nicene statement of the Holy Spirit's relation to the Father and the Son.16 The main ante-Nicene writers on this subject are Irenaeus, Tertullian, and Origen. Of Irenaeus, Swete writes as follows:
We have already seen Tertullian's testimony in connection with Montanism and Monarchianism. It is scarcely possible to exaggerate the importance of this writer, who ' lays the foundation of the Catholic doctrine of Divine processions,'18 and who is described as far in advance of Western Christian thought.19 It should be noted in passing that both in the Apologists and in Tertullian the doctrine does not seem to be as yet fully Nicene. The Spirit is Divine, but not eternal.20 While it is true that the tendencies of Alexandria were speculative rather than dogmatic and practical,21 yet it is ' in the writings of Origen we find the first attempt, after Tertullian, at a scientific treatment of the doctrine of the Holy Ghost ';22 and although Origen's daring mind led him into speculations,
But the strongest confirmation of the true doctrine of the Holy Spirit in this non-reflective period is found in connection with the devotional life of the Church. Experience has often proved the best witness to what is in reality doctrinally implicit in the Christian community, and all the evidences we possess of the life of the Church of these days bear unquestioned testimony to the reality of the Holy Spirit of God. (a) The earliest form of the Apostles' Creed is now acknowledged to date from the middle of the second century, and this is a record of facts rather than a theological interpretation. (b) Doxologies and other hymns of praise bear the same testimony. (c) In the ordinance of Baptism the Trinitarian form is found as early as the Didache, and whatever view we may hold as to the association of regeneration with the water, the testimony to the presence and power of the Spirit is unmistakable. (d) In connection with the Lord's Supper, recent liturgical research goes to show that the earliest form of ' Invocation ' referred not to the elements, but to the communicant, thereby witnessing to an essential adherence to New Testament teaching, which never connects the Holy Spirit with the elements.24 But this ' Invocation ' is sufficient to indicate what the Church of that day thought of the Holy Spirit. On the whole subject there can be no doubt that the devotional life and experience of the Church was the best and most convincing proof of what Christians believed concerning the Holy Spirit.
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Literature. — Smeaton, The Doctrine of the Holy Spirit, p. 256; Denio, The Supreme Leader, p. 55; Moule, Outlines of Christian Doctrine, p. 119; Welldon, The Revelation of the Holy Spirit, ch. v.; Swete, Article ' Holy Ghost,' Dictionary of Christian Biography, Vol. III.; Orr, The Progress of Dogma, p. 124; Mansfield College Essays, p. 287; Warfield, Introduction to Kuyper's The Work of the Holy Spirit. 1 Swete, The Holy Spirit in the Ancient Church, p. 4. 2 Swete, op. cit. p. 3. 3 Winstanley, Spirit in the New Testament, p. 156. 4 Swete, Article ' Holy Ghost,' Dictionary of Christian Biography, Vol. III. p. 114. 5 Swete, op. cit. p. 31. 6 Swete, Article ' Holy Ghost,' Dictionary of Christian Biography, Vol. iii. p. 115. 7 T. Rees, ' The Holy Spirit as Wisdom,' Mansfield College Essays, p. 302. 8 Swete, The Holy Spirit in the Ancient Church, p. 48. 9 Swete, ut supra, p. 49. 10 Outlines of Christian Doctrine, p. 147. 11 The Holy Spirit in the Ancient Church, p. 66. 12 Swete, The Holy Spirit in the Ancient Church, p. 79. 13 Swete, ut supra, p. 83. 14 Swete, Article ' Holy Ghost,' Dictionary of Christian Biography, Vol. III. p. 116. 15 A. V. G. Allen, Christian Institutions, p. 103. 16 Swete, The Holy Spirit in the Ancient Church, p. 107. 17 Swete, The Holy Spirit in the Ancient Church, pp. 92, 93. 18 Swete, Article ' Holy Ghost,' Dictionary of Christian Biography, Vol. III. p. 118. 19 Swete, The Holy Spirit in the Ancient Church, p. 107. 20 Orr, Progress of Dogma, p. 125 f. 21 Swete, The Holy Spirit in the Ancient Church, p. 124. 22 Swete, Article ' Holy Ghost,' Dictionary of Christian Biography, Vol. III. p. 119. 23 Swete, The Holy Spirit in the Ancient Church, p. 143. 24 Maclean, Ancient Church Orders, p. 51; R. W. Woolley, The Liturgy of the Primitive Church; Upton, Outlines of Prayer Book History, pp. 16-19 and refs. 25 Swete, The Holy Spirit in the Ancient Church, p. 159.
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