By W. H. Griffith Thomas
THE SPIRIT OF CHRIST.The specific and distinctive feature of the New Testament on the present subject is the close and intimate association of the Holy Spirit with Jesus Christ. It is not in His Absolute Being, but as the Spirit of Christ that He is revealed in the New Testament (Acts xvi. 7, R.V.).
This is the most natural view of the New Testament teaching, and the steps leading up to it call for fresh consideration. As we have already seen, the Holy Spirit in the earlier books of the Old Testament is depicted as the Energy of God for human life, with particular reference to the covenant with Israel. Then gradually the doctrine deepens and widens until the Spirit is seen to be the indwelling life of God in man, and is specially associated with the promises connected with the Messiah (Isa. xi.). In the Synoptic Gospels the Spirit is pre-eminently the possession of the Man Christ Jesus, though even there the disciples are bidden to wait for ' the promise of the Father,' while the baptismal formula clearly associates Father, Son, and Holy Spirit in relation to the new work of Christian initiation. In the Fourth Gospel this promise of the Spirit is clearly connected with Christ Himself, His glorification (ch. vii. 39), and His Word (ch. xvi.). The relation of the Spirit to Christ is thus made clear, more particularly in the use of the word ' Paraclete.'2 Then follows the specific bestowal of the Holy Spirit on the disciples on the day of Christ's resurrection.
In the Acts the ' promise of the Father ' is interpreted to mean the promise of the Father to the Son, received at the Ascension and poured out by the Son on the Day of Pentecost (ch. ii. 33).
When we turn to St. Paul we find substantially the same set of ideas. The language about the indwelling of Christ and of the Spirit is practically identical. ' The Lord is that Spirit: and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty ' (2 Cor. iii. 17). ' Because ye are sons, God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts ' (Gal. iv. 6). Thus, in St. Paul, as also in St. John, the Holy Spirit is the Divine power in a personal form through which the Christian life is realised in the believer, the means by which God makes Himself known to and felt by the Christian man. As the Spirit of Christ, the Spirit is the Revealer and Bestower of Redemption. Everything we have of and from Christ comes through the Spirit. He is the Spirit of Life, of Truth, of Holiness, of Power, of Grace. His work it is to make Christ real, to recall to us the words of Christ, to reveal to us His Person, and to bestow upon us His grace. While the title ' Spirit of God ' expresses the oneness of essence with God, and ' the Holy Spirit ' the nature of His word, ' the Spirit of Christ ' indicates the method of His coming as the Giver of Life, the Revealer of truth, and the Bestower of sanctification. And we believe that God can only become known to us in the historic Jesus, the experience of Whom is mediated to us by the Holy Spirit.
We are therefore not at all surprised at the variation of the theological expression connected with the Holy Spirit. Sometimes He is regarded as a separate Personality within the Godhead, having a self-consciousness separate from and yet connected with Jesus and the Father. At other times the Spirit is used for the Name of God's own personal activity, as He dwells in the soul of man. But however difficult it may be to express the difference between Christ and the Spirit regarded as within God Himself, no difficulty must allow us to ignore the plain teaching of the New Testament and the personal testimony of Christian consciousness. In our Lord's discourses, while He distinguishes between the relations of the Father and the Spirit with Himself to the disciples, yet there is no essential difference or separation. Whether the Father lives or the Son lives; whether the Father comes or the Son comes; whether the Father gives the Spirit or the Son gives Him, the essential relationship is the same. But while closely and intimately connected, Christ and the Spirit are never identical.
It is essential to preserve with care both sides of this truth. Christ and the Spirit are different yet the same, the same yet different. Perhaps the best expression we can give is that while their Personalities are never identical, their presence always is.
It is this close association between Christ and the Spirit that gives point to the historical and theological question of the ' Procession ' of the Spirit, The relation between the Father and the Son is usually expressed by ' Generation,' and in order to express at once the unity and yet the distinctness, we are accustomed to speak of the ' Eternal Generation.' But the relation between the Son and the Spirit is described by ' Procession,' and on this there is a historical, and, it would seem, vital difference between the two great sections of the Eastern and Western Church. In the East this ' Procession ' is related only to the time of the Incarnation and the fact of Redemption. The passages in St. John which speak of the Spirit being given by the Son are interpreted in a temporal way. In the West, on the other hand, this ' Procession ' is regarded as an eternal, essential fact of the Deity. Godet thus states the position:
The question is often raised whether the doctrine itself is justified, and whether it really represents a vital difference between the East and West. A number of modern writers hold very strongly that it is this addition which has given to the West its admitted spiritual superiority over the East. One writer goes so far as to say that the denial of the Procession from the Son
To the same effect is the following:
Another and very different writer expresses the same opinion:
So also, the Bishop of Durham is of opinion that the doctrine is
On the other hand, Dr. Burn believes that all the spiritual results for which these writers contend
Certainly no Western theologian wished for a moment to imply that there were two Sources or Founts of Deity, but only to associate in the closest possible way the Holy Spirit with the Incarnate and Glorified Son, and it must be admitted that in so doing they were keeping very close to the predominant New Testament conception of the Spirit, as the Spirit of Jesus Christ, the Spirit of Jesus, the Spirit of Christ, the Spirit of God's Son. But whether or not we attribute the undoubted spiritual superiority of the West over the East to this cause, the fact itself does not admit of doubt. And so we may say that ' without the Holy Spirit we have practically no Christ,' while, on the other hand, it is equally true that without Christ we have practically no Holy Spirit.14 |
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Literature. — Swete, The Holy Spirit in the New Testament, p. 295; Moule, Veni Creator, p. 31; ch. vi.; Walker, The Holy Spirit, ch. iv.; Smeaton, The Doctrine of the Holy Spirit, p. 116; Martensen, Christian Dogmatics, p. 322; Ridout, The Person and Work of the Holy Spirit, ch. vii.; j' M. Campbell, After Pentecost, What? ch. ii.; Elder Cumming, Through the Eternal Spirit, ch. xiii.; p. 89; Elder Cumming, After the Spirit, pp. 62, 231; Parker, The Paraclete, p. 96. 1 D'Arcy, Idealism and Theology, p. 256. See also Moberly, Atonement and Personality, p. 195, quoted below, p. 145. 2 Walker, The Holy Spirit, p. 128. 3 Moberly, op. cit. p. 197. 4 Denney, Studies in Theology, p. 157. 5 Owen's Works, Goold's edition, iii. p. 195. 6 Godet, Commentary on St. John's Gospel, Vol. III. pp. 146, 147. 7 Moberly, op. cit. p. 168. 8 Godet, op. cit. p. 175. 9 Smeaton, The Doctrine of the Holy Spirit, p. 291. 10 Moberly, op. cit. p. 195. 11 Milligan, The Ascension of our Lord, p. 189. 12 Veni Creator, pp. 26, 27, 29. 13 The Nicene Creed, p. 91. 14 Laidlaw, Questions of Faith, p. 123.
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