The
Person and Work of the Holy Spirit as Revealed in His Names.
At least twenty-five different names are used in the Old and New
Testaments in speaking of the Holy Spirit. There is the deepest
significance in these names. By the careful study of them, we find a
wonderful revelation of the Person and work of the Holy Spirit.
I. The
Spirit.
The simplest name by which the Holy Spirit is mentioned in the Bible
is that which stands at the head of this paragraph—“The
Spirit.” This name is also used as the basis of
other names, so we begin our study with this. The Greek and Hebrew
words so translated mean literally, “Breath” or “Wind.” Both
thoughts are in the name as applied to the Holy Spirit.
1. The thought of breath is brought out in John xx. 22 where we
read, “And
when He had said this, He
breathed on them, and saith unto them, Receive ye the
Holy Ghost.” It is
also suggested in Gen. ii. 7, “And
the Lord God
formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into
his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.” This
becomes more evident when we compare with this Ps. civ. 30, “Thou
sendest forth Thy
Spirit, they are created: and Thou
renewest the face of the earth.” And
Job xxxiii. 4, “The
Spirit of God hath made me, and the
breath of the
Almighty hath given me life.” What
is the significance of this name from the standpoint of these
passages? It is that the Spirit is the outbreathing of God, His
inmost life going forth in a personal form to quicken. When we
receive the Holy Spirit, we receive the inmost life of God Himself
to dwell in a personal way in us. When we really grasp this thought,
it is overwhelming in its solemnity. Just stop and think what it
means to have the inmost life of that infinite and eternal Being
whom we call God, dwelling in a personal way in you. How solemn and
how awful and yet unspeakably glorious life becomes when we realize
this.
2. The thought of the Holy Spirit as “the
Wind” is brought
out in John iii. 6-8, “That
which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the
Spirit is spirit. Marvel not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born
again. The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound
thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth:
so is every one that is born of the Spirit.” In
the Greek, it is the same word that is translated in one part of
this passage “Spirit” and
the other part of the passage “wind.” And
it would seem as if the word ought to be translated the same way in
both parts of the passage. It would then read, “That
which is born of the flesh is flesh and that which is born of the ‘Wind’ is
wind. Marvel not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born again. The
wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound
thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh or whither it goeth: so
is every one that is born of the ‘Wind.’ ” The
full significance of this name as applied to the Holy Spirit (or
Holy Wind) it may be beyond us to fathom, but we can see at least
this much of its meaning:
(1) The Spirit like the wind is sovereign. “The
wind bloweth where it listeth” (John
iii. 8). You cannot dictate to the wind. It does as it wills. Just
so with the Holy Spirit—He is sovereign—we cannot dictate to Him. He “divides
to each man” severally
even “as
He will”(1 Cor. xii. 11, R. V.). When the wind is
blowing from the north you may long to have it blow from the south,
but cry as clamorously as you may to the wind, “Blow
from the south” it
will keep right on blowing from the north. But while you cannot
dictate to the wind, while it blows as it will, you may learn the
laws that govern the wind's motions and by bringing yourself into
harmony with those laws, you can get the wind to do your work. You
can erect your windmill so that whichever way the wind blows from
the wheels will turn and the wind will grind your grain, or pump
your water. Just so, while we cannot dictate to the Holy Spirit we
can learn the laws of His operations and by bringing ourselves into
harmony with those laws, above all by submitting our wills
absolutely to His sovereign will, the sovereign Spirit of God will
work through us and accomplish His own glorious work by our
instrumentality.
(2) The Spirit like the wind is invisible
but none the less perceptible and real and mighty. You
hear the sound
of the wind (John iii. 8) but the wind itself you never see. You
hear the voice of the Spirit but He Himself is ever invisible. (The
word translated “sound” in
John iii. 8 is the word which elsewhere is translated “voice.” See
R. V.) We not only hear the voice, of the wind but we see its mighty
effects. We feel the breath of the wind upon our cheeks, we see the
dust and the leaves blowing before the wind, we see the vessels at
sea driven swiftly towards their ports; but the wind itself remains
invisible. Just so with the Spirit; we feel His breath upon our
souls, we see the mighty things He does, but Himself we do not see.
He is invisible, but He is real and perceptible. I shall never
forget a solemn hour in Chicago Avenue Church, Chicago. Dr. W. W.
White was making a farewell address before going to India to work
among the students there. Suddenly, without any apparent warning,
the place was filled with an awful and glorious Presence. To me it
was very real, but the question arose in my mind, “Is
this merely subjective, just a feeling of my own, or is there an
objective Presence here?” After the meeting was over, I asked
different persons whether they were conscious of anything and found
that at the same point in the meeting they, too, though they saw no
one, became distinctly conscious of an overwhelming Presence, the
Presence of the Holy Spirit. Though many years have passed, there
are those who speak of that hour to this day. On another occasion in
my own home at Chicago, when kneeling in prayer with an intimate
friend, as we prayed it seemed as if an unseen and awful Presence
entered the
room. I realized what Eliphaz meant when he said, “Then
a spirit passed before my face; the hair of my flesh stood up” (Job
iv. 15). The moment was overwhelming, but as glorious as it was
awful. These are but two illustrations of which many might be given.
None of us have seen the Holy Spirit at any time, but of His
presence we have been distinctly conscious again and again and
again. His mighty power we have witnessed and His reality we cannot
doubt. There are those who tell us that they do not believe in
anything which they cannot see. Not one of them has ever seen the
wind but they all believe in the wind. They have felt the wind and
they have seen its effects, and just so we, beyond a question, have
felt the mighty presence of the Spirit and witnessed His mighty
workings.
(3) The Spirit like the wind is inscrutable. “Thou
canst not tell whence it cometh and whither it goeth.” Nothing
in nature is more mysterious than the wind. But more mysterious
still is the Holy Spirit in His operations. We hear of how suddenly
and unexpectedly in widely separated communities He begins to work
His mighty work. Doubtless there are hidden reasons why He does thus
begin His work, but often-times these reasons are completely
undiscoverable by us. We know not whence He comes nor whither He
goes. We cannot tell where next He will display His mighty and
gracious power.
(4) The Spirit, like the wind, is indispensable.
Without wind, that is “air
in motion,” there
is no life and so Jesus says, “Verily,
verily, I say unto you, except a man be born of water and of the
Spirit, he cannot
enter into the kingdom of God.” If
the wind should absolutely cease to blow for a single hour, most of
the life on this earth would cease to be. Time and again when the
health reports of the different cities of the United States are
issued, it has been found that the five healthiest cities in the
United States were five cities located on the great lakes. Many have
been surprised at this report when they have visited some of these
cities and found that they were far from being the cleanest cities,
or most sanitary in their general arrangement, and yet year after
year this report has been returned. The explanation is simply this,
it is the wind blowing from the lakes that has brought life and
health to the cities. Just so when the Spirit ceases to blow in any
heart or any church or any community, death ensues, but when the
Spirit blows steadily upon the individual or the church or the
community, there is abounding spiritual life and health.
(5) Closely related to the foregoing thought, like the wind the Holy
Spirit is life
giving. This thought comes out again and again in the
Scriptures. For example, we read in John vi. 63, A. R. V., “It
is the Spirit that giveth life,” and
in 2 Cor. iii. 6, we read, “The
letter killeth, but the Spirit giveth life.” Perhaps
the most suggestive passage on this point is Ezek. xxxvii. 8, 9, 10, “And
when I beheld, lo, the sinews and the flesh came up upon them, and
the skin covered them above: but there was no
breath in
them. Then said He unto me, Prophesy unto the
wind, prophesy, son of man, and say to the
wind, Thus saith the Lord God;
Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe
upon these slain, that they may live. So I prophesied as He
commanded me, and the
breath came into them, and they lived, and stood upon
their feet, an exceeding great army” (cf.
John iii. 5). Israel, in the prophet's vision, was only bones, very
many and very dry (vs. 2, 11), until the prophet proclaimed unto
them the word of God; then there was a noise and a shaking and the
bones came together, bone to his bone, and the sinews and the flesh
came upon the bones, but still there was no life, but when the wind
blew, the breath of God's Spirit, then “they
stood up upon their feet an exceeding great army.” All
life in the individual believer, in the teacher, the preacher, and
the church is the Holy Spirit's work. You will sometimes make the
acquaintance of a man, and as you hear him talk and observe his
conduct, you are repelled and disgusted. Everything about him
declares that he is a dead man, a moral corpse and not only dead but
rapidly putrefying. You get away from him as quickly as you can.
Months afterwards you meet him again. You hesitate to speak to him;
you want to get out of his very presence, but you do speak to him,
and he has not uttered many sentences before you notice a marvellous
change. His conversation is sweet and wholesome and uplifting;
everything about his manner is attractive and delightful. You soon
discover that the man's whole conduct and life has been transformed.
He is no longer a putrefying corpse but a living child of God. What
has happened? The Wind of God has blown upon him; he has received
the Holy Spirit, the Holy Wind. Some quiet Sabbath day
you visit a church. Everything about the outward appointments of the
church are all that could be desired. There is an attractive
meeting-house, an expensive organ, a gifted choir, a scholarly
preacher. The service is well arranged but you have not been long at
the gathering before you are forced to see that there is no life,
that it is all form, and that there is nothing really being
accomplished for God or for man. You go away with a heavy heart.
Months afterwards you have occasion to visit the church again; the
outward appointments of the church are much as they were before but
the service has not proceeded far before you note a great
difference. There is a new power in the singing, a new spirit in the
prayer, a new grip in the preaching, everything about the church is
teeming with the life of God. What has happened? The Wind of God has
blown upon that church; the Holy Spirit, the Holy Wind, has come.
You go some day to hear a preacher of whose abilities you have heard
great reports. As he stands up to preach you soon learn that nothing
too much has been said in praise of his abilities from the merely
intellectual and rhetorical standpoint. His diction is faultless,
his style beautiful, his logic unimpeachable, his orthodoxy beyond
criticism. It is an intellectual treat to listen to him, and yet
after all as he preaches you cannot avoid a feeling of sadness, for
there is no real grip, no real power, indeed no reality of any kind,
in the man's preaching. You go away with a heavy heart at the
thought of this waste of magnificent abilities. Months, perhaps
years, pass by and you again find yourself listening to this celebrated
preacher, but what a change! The same faultless diction, the same
beautiful style, the same unimpeachable logic, the same skillful
elocution, the same sound orthodoxy, but now there is something
more, there is reality, life, grip, power in the preaching. Men and
women sit breathless as he speaks, sinners bowed with tears of
contrition, pricked to their hearts with conviction of sin; men and
women and boys and girls renounce their selfishness, and their sin
and their worldliness and accept Jesus Christ and surrender their
lives to Him. What has happened? The Wind of God has blown upon that
man. He has been filled with the Holy Wind.
(6) Like the wind, the Holy Spirit is irresistible.
We read in Acts i. 8, “But ye
shall receive power, after that the Holy Ghost is come
upon you: and ye shall be witnesses unto Me both in Jerusalem, and
in all Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost parts of the
earth.” When this
promise of our Lord was fulfilled in Stephen, we read, “And
they were not
able to resist the
wisdom and
the Spiritby which he spake.” A
man filled with the Holy Spirit is transformed into a cyclone. What
can stand before the wind? When St. Cloud, Minn., was visited with a
cyclone years ago, the wind picked up loaded freight cars and
carried them away off the track. It wrenched an iron bridge from its
foundations, twisted it together and hurled it away. When a cyclone
later visited St. Louis, Mo., it cut off telegraph poles a foot in
diameter as if they had been pipe stems. It cut off enormous trees
close to the root, it cut off the corner of brick buildings where it
passed as
though they had been cut by a knife; nothing could stand before it;
and so, nothing can stand before a Spirit-filled preacher of the
Word. None can resist the wisdom and the Spirit by which he speaks.
The Wind of God took possession of Charles G. Finney, an obscure
country lawyer, and sent him through New York State, then through
New England, then through England, mowing down strong men by his
resistless, Spirit-given logic. One night in Rochester, scores of
lawyers, led by the justice of the Court of Appeals, filed out of
the pews and bowed in the aisles and yielded their lives to God. The
Wind of God took possession of D. L. Moody, an uneducated young
business man in Chicago, and in the power of this resistless Wind,
men and women and young people were mowed down before his words and
brought in humble confession and renunciation of sin to the feet of
Jesus Christ, and filled with the life of God they have been the
pillars in the churches of Great Britain and throughout the world
ever since. The great need to-day in individuals, in churches and in
preachers is that the Wind of God blow upon us.
Much of the difficulty that many find with John iii. 5, “Jesus
answered, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born of
water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God,” would
disappear if we would only bear in mind that “Spirit” means “Wind”and
translate the verse literally all through, “Except
a man be born of water and Wind (there is no ‘the’ in
the original), he cannot enter the kingdom of God.” The
thought would then seem to be, “Except a
man be born of the cleansing and quickening power of the Spirit (or
else of the cleansing Word—cf. John xv. 3; Eph. v. 26; Jas. i. 18; 1
Pet. i. 23—and the quickening power of the Holy Spirit).”
II. The
Spirit of God.
The Holy Spirit is frequently spoken of in the Bible as the Spirit
of God. For example we read in 1 Cor. iii. 16, “Know
ye not that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God
dwelleth in you.” In
this name we have the same essential thought as in the former name,
but with this addition, that His Divine origin, nature and power are
emphasized. He is not merely “The
Wind” as seen
above, but“The
Wind of
God.”
III. The
Spirit of Jehovah.
This name is used of the Holy Spirit in Isa. xi. 2, A. R. V., “And
the Spirit of Jehovah shall rest upon him.” The
thought of the name is, of course, essentially the same as the
preceding with the exception that God is here thought of as the
Covenant God of Israel. He is thus spoken of in the connection in
which the name is found; and, of course, the Bible, following that
unerring accuracy that it always exhibits in its use of the
different names for God, in this connection speaks of the Spirit as
the Spirit of Jehovah and not merely as the Spirit of God.
IV. The
Spirit of the Lord Jehovah.
The Holy Spirit is called the Spirit of the Lord Jehovah in Isa. lxi.
1-3, A. R. V., “The
Spirit of the Lord
Jehovah is upon Me; because Jehovah hath anointed Me to preach good
tidings to the meek; He hath sent Me to bind up the broken-hearted,
to proclaim liberty to the captives, etc.” The
Holy Spirit is here spoken of, not merely as the Spirit of Jehovah,
but the Spirit of the Lord Jehovah because of the relation in which
God Himself is spoken of in this connection, as not merely Jehovah,
the covenant God of Israel, but as Jehovah Israel's Lord as well as
their covenant-keeping God. This name of the Spirit is even more
expressive than the name “The
Spirit of God.”
V. The
Spirit of the Living God.
The Holy Spirit is called “The
Spirit of the living God” in
2 Cor. iii. 3, “Forasmuch
as ye are manifestly declared to be the epistle of Christ ministered
by us, written not with ink, but with the
Spirit of the living God; not in tables of stone, but in
fleshy tables of the heart.” What
is the significance of this name? It is made clear by the context.
The Apostle Paul is drawing a contrast between the Word of God
written with ink on parchment and the Word of God written on “tables
that are hearts of flesh” (R.
V.) by the Holy Spirit, who in this connection is called “the
Spirit of the living God,” because
He makes God a living reality in our personal experience instead of
a mere intellectual concept. There are many who believe in God, and
who are perfectly orthodox in their conception of God, but after all
God is to them only an intellectual theological proposition. It is
the work of the Holy
Spirit to make God something vastly more than a theological notion,
no matter how orthodox; He is the Spirit of
the living God, and it is His work to make God a living
God to us, a Being whom we know, with whom we have personal
acquaintance, a Being more real to us than the most intimate human
friend we have. Have you a real God? Well, you may have. The Holy
Spirit is the Spirit of the living God, and He is able and ready to
give to you a living God, to make God real in your personal
experience. There are many who have a God who once lived and acted
and spoke, a God who lived and acted at the creation of the
universe, who perhaps lived and acted in the days of Moses and
Elijah and Jesus Christ and the Apostles, but who no longer lives
and acts. If He exists at all, He has withdrawn Himself from any
active part in nature or the history of man. He created nature and
gave it its laws and powers and now leaves it to run itself. He
created man and endowed him with his various faculties but has now
left him to work out his own destiny. They may go further than this:
they may believe in a God, who spoke to Abraham and to Moses and to
David and to Isaiah and to Jesus and to the Apostles, but who speaks
no longer. We may read in the Bible what He spoke to these various
men but we cannot expect Him to speak to us. In contrast with these,
it is the work of the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of
the living God, to give us to know a God who lives and
acts and speaks to-day, a God who is ready to come as near to us as
He came to Abraham, to Moses or to Isaiah, or to the Apostles or to
Jesus Himself. Not that He has any
new revelations to make, for He guided the Apostles into all the
truth (John xvi. 13, R. V.): but though there has been a complete
revelation of God's truth made in the Bible, still God lives to-day
and will speak to us as directly as He spoke to His chosen ones of
old. Happy is the man who knows the Holy Spirit as the Spirit of the
living God, and who, consequently, has a real God, a God who lives
to-day, a God upon whom he can depend to-day to undertake for him, a
God with whom he enjoys intimate personal fellowship, a God to whom
he may raise his voice in prayer and who speaks back to him.
VI. The
Spirit of Christ.
In Rom. viii. 9, “But
ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit
of God dwell in you. Now if any man have not the
Spirit of Christ, he is none of His.” The
Holy Spirit is called the
Spirit of Christ. The Spirit of Christ in this passage
does not mean a Christlike spirit. It means something far more than
that, it means that which lies back of a Christlike spirit; it is a
name of the Holy Spirit. Why is the Holy Spirit called the
Spirit of Christ? For several reasons:
(1) Because
He is Christ's gift. The
Holy Spirit is not merely the gift of the Father, but the gift of
the Son as well. We read in John xx. 22 that Jesus “breathed
on them and saith unto them, Receive ye the Holy Ghost.” The
Holy Spirit is therefore the breath of Christ, as well as the breath
of God the Father. It is Christ who breathes upon us and imparts to
us the Holy Spirit. In John xiv. 15 and the following verses Jesus
teaches us that it is in answer to His prayer that the Father gives
to us the Holy Spirit. In Acts ii. 33 we read that Jesus “Being
by the right hand of God exalted and having received of the Father
the promise of the Holy Spirit,” shed
Him forth upon believers; that is, that Jesus, having been exalted
to the right hand of God, in answer to His prayer, receives the Holy
Spirit from the Father and sheds forth upon the Church Him whom He
hath received from the Father. In Matt. iii. 11 we read that it is
Jesus who baptizes with the Holy Spirit. In John vii. 37-39 Jesus
bids all that are thirsty to come
unto Him and
drink, and the context makes it clear that the water that He gives
is the Holy Spirit, who becomes in those who receive Him a source of
life and power flowing out to others. It is the glorified Christ who
gives to the Church the Holy Spirit. In the fourth chapter of John
and the tenth verse Jesus declares that He is the One who gives the
living water, the Holy Spirit. In all these passages, Christ is set
forth as the One who gives the Holy Spirit, so the Holy Spirit is
called “the
Spirit of Christ.”
(2) But there is a deeper reason why the Holy Spirit is called “the
Spirit of Christ,” i.
e., because
it is the work of the Holy Spirit to reveal Christ to us.
In John xvi. 14, R. V., we read, “He
(that is the Holy Spirit) shall glorify Me: for He shall take of
Mine, and shall declare it unto you.” In
a similar way in John xv. 26, R. V., it is written, “But
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 bear
witness of Me.” This
is the work of the Holy Spirit to bear witness of Christ and reveal
Jesus Christ to men. And as the revealer of Christ, He is called “the
Spirit of Christ.”
(3) But there is a still deeper reason yet why the Holy Spirit is
called the Spirit of Christ, and that is because
it is His work to form Christ as a living presence within us.
In Eph. iii. 16, 17, the Apostle Paul prays to the Father that He
would grant to believers according to the riches of His glory to be
strengthened with might by His Spirit in the inner man, that Christ
may dwell in their hearts by faith. This then is the work of the
Holy Spirit, to cause Christ to dwell in our hearts, to form the
living Christ within us. Just as the Holy Spirit literally and
physically formed Jesus Christ in the womb of the Virgin Mary (Luke
i. 35) so the Holy Spirit spiritually but really forms Jesus Christ
within our hearts to-day. In John xiv. 16-18, Jesus told His
disciples that when the Holy Spirit came that He Himself would come,
that is, the result of the coming of the Holy Spirit to dwell in
their hearts would be the coming of Christ Himself. It is the
privilege of every believer in Christ to have the living Christ
formed by the power of the Holy Spirit in his own heart and
therefore the Holy Spirit who thus forms Christ within the heart is
called the Spirit of Christ. How wonderful! How glorious is the
significance of this name. Let us ponder it until we understand it,
as far as it is possible to understand it, and until we rejoice
exceedingly in the glory of it.
VII. The
Spirit of Jesus Christ.
The Holy Spirit is called the
Spirit of Jesus Christ in
Phil. i. 19, “For
I know that this shall turn to my salvation through your prayer, and
the supply of the
Spirit of Jesus Christ.” The
Spirit is not merely the Spirit of the eternal Word but the Spirit
of the Word incarnate. Not merely the Spirit of Christ, but the
Spirit of
Jesus Christ. It is the Man Jesus exalted to the right
hand of the Father who receives and sends the Spirit. So we read in
Acts ii. 32, 33, “This Jesus hath
God raised up, whereof we all are witnesses. Therefore being by the
right hand of God exalted, and having received of the Father the
promise of the Holy Ghost, He hath shed forth this, which ye now see
and hear.”
VIII. The
Spirit of Jesus.
The Holy Spirit is called the
Spirit of Jesus in
Acts xvi. 6, 7, R. V., “And
they went through the region of Phrygia and Galatia, having been
forbidden of the Holy Ghost to speak the word in Asia; and when they
were come over against Mysia, they assayed to go into Bithynia; and
the Spirit
of Jesus suffered
them not.” By the
using of this name, “The
Spirit of Jesus” the
thought of the relation of the Spirit to the Man
Jesus is
still more clear than in the name preceding this, the Spirit of
Jesus Christ.
IX. The
Spirit of His Son.
The Holy Spirit is called the
Spirit of His Son in
Gal. iv. 6, “And
because ye are sons, God hath sent forth the
Spirit of His Son into
your hearts, crying, Abba,
Father.” We see
from the context (vs. 4, 5) that this name is given to the Holy
Spirit in special connection with His testifying to the sonship of
the believer. It is “the
Spirit of His Son” who
testifies to our sonship. The thought is that the Holy Spirit is a
filial Spirit, a Spirit who produces a sense of sonship in us. If we
receive the Holy Spirit, we no longer think of God as if we were
serving under constraint and bondage but we are sons living in
joyous liberty. We do not fear God, we trust Him and rejoice in Him.
When we receive the Holy Spirit, we do not receive a Spirit of
bondage again to fear but a Spirit of adoption whereby we cry, Abba,
Father (Rom. viii. 15). This name of the Holy Spirit is one of the
most suggestive of all. We do well to ponder it long until we
realize the glad fullness of its significance. We shall take it up
again when we come to study the work of the Holy Spirit.
X. The
Holy Spirit.
This name is of very frequent occurrence, and the name with which
most of us are most familiar. One of the most familiar passages in
which the name is used is Luke xi. 13, “If
ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children:
how much more shall your heavenly Father give the
Holy Spirit to
them that ask Him?” This
name emphasizes the essential moral character of the Spirit. He is holy in
Himself. We are so familiar with the name that we neglect to weigh
its significance. Oh, if we only realized more deeply and constantly
that He is the Holy Spirit.
We would
do well if we, as the seraphim in Isaiah's vision, would bow in His
presence and cry,“Holy,
holy, holy.” Yet
how thoughtlessly oftentimes we talk about Him and pray for Him. We
pray for Him to come into our churches and into our hearts but what
would He find if He should come there? Would He not find much that
would be painful and agonizing to Him? What would we think if vile
women from the lowest den of iniquity in a great city should go to
the purest woman in the city and invite her to come and live with
them in their disgusting vileness with no intention of changing
their evil ways. But that would not be as shocking as for you and me
to ask the Holy Spirit to come and dwell in our hearts when we have
no thought of giving up our impurity, or our selfishness, or our
worldliness, or our sin. It would not be as shocking as it is for us
to invite the Holy Spirit to come into our churches when they are
full of worldliness and selfishness and contention and envy and
pride, and all that is unholy. But if the denizens of the lowest and
vilest den of infamy should go to the purest and most Christlike
woman asking her to go and dwell with them with the intention of
putting away everything that was vile and evil and giving to this
holy and Christlike woman the entire control of the place, she would
go. And as sinful and selfish and imperfect as we may be, the
infinitely Holy Spirit is ready to come and take His dwelling in our
heart if we will surrender to Him the absolute control of our lives,
and allow Him to bring everything in thought and fancy and feeling
and purpose and imagination and action into
conformity with His will. The infinitely Holy Spirit is ready to
come into our churches, however imperfect and worldly they may be
now, if we are willing to put the absolute control of everything in
His hands. But let us never forget that He is the
Holy Spirit,
and when we pray for Him let us pray for Him as such.
XI. The
Holy Spirit of Promise.
The Holy Spirit is called the
Holy Spirit of promise in
Eph. i. 13, R. V., “In
whom ye also, having heard the Word of truth, the Gospel of your
salvation,—in whom, having also believed, ye were sealed with the
Holy Spirit of promise.” We
have here the same name as that given above with the added thought
that this Holy Spirit is the great promise of the Father and of the
Son. The Holy Spirit is God's great all-inclusive promise for the
present dispensation; the one thing for which Jesus bade the
disciples wait after His ascension before they undertook His work
was “the
promise of the Father,” that
is the Holy Spirit (Acts i. 4, 5). The great promise of the Father
until the coming of Christ was the coming atoning Saviour and King,
but when Jesus came and died His atoning death upon the cross of
Calvary and arose and ascended to the right hand of the Father, then
the second great promise of the Father was the Holy Spirit to take
the place of our absent Lord. (See also Acts ii. 33.)
XII. The
Spirit of Holiness.
The Holy Spirit is called the
Spirit of holiness in
Rom. i. 4, “And
declared to be the Son of God with power,
according to the
Spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead.” At
the first glance it may seem as if there were no essential
difference between the two names the Holy Spirit and the Spirit of
holiness. But there is a marked difference. The name of the Holy
Spirit, as already said, emphasizes the essential moral character of
the Spirit as holy, but the name of the
Spirit of holiness brings
out the thought that the Holy Spirit is not merely holy in Himself
but He imparts holiness to others. The perfect holiness which He
Himself possesses He imparts to those who receive Him (cf. 1 Pet. i.
2).
XIII. The
Spirit of Judgment.
The Holy Spirit is called the
Spirit of judgment in
Isa. iv. 4, “When
the Lord shall have washed away the filth of the daughters of Zion,
and shall have purged the blood of Jerusalem from the midst thereof
by the
Spirit of judgment, and by the Spirit of burning.”
There are two names of the Holy Spirit in this passage;
first, the
Spirit of judgment. The Holy Spirit is so called because
it is His work to bring sin to light, to convict of sin (cf. John
xvi. 7-9). When the Holy Spirit comes to us the first thing that He
does is to open our eyes to see our sins as God sees them. He judges
our sin. (We will go into this more at length in studying John xvi.
7-11 when considering the work of the Holy Spirit.)
XIV. The
Spirit of Burning.
This name is used in the passage just quoted above. (See XIII.) This
name emphasizes His searching, refining,
dross-consuming, illuminating and energizing work. The Holy Spirit
is like a fire in the heart in which He dwells; and as fire tests
and refines and consumes and illuminates and warms and energizes, so
does He. In the context, it is the cleansing work of the Holy Spirit
which is especially emphasized (Isa. iv. 3, 4).
XV. The
Spirit of Truth.
The Holy Spirit is called the
Spirit of truth in
John xiv. 17, “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” (cf.
John xv. 26; xvi. 13). The Holy Spirit is called the Spirit of truth
because it is the work of the Holy Spirit to communicate truth, to
impart truth, to those who receive Him. This comes out in the
passage given above, and, if possible, it comes out even more
clearly in John xvi. 13, R. V., “Howbeit
when He, the
Spirit of truth, is come, He shall guide you into all
the truth: for He shall not speak from Himself; but what things
soever He shall hear, these shall He speak: and He shall declare
unto you the things that are to come.” All
truth is from the Holy Spirit. It is only as He teaches us that we
come to know the truth.
XVI. The
Spirit of Wisdom and Understanding.
The Holy Spirit is called the Spirit of wisdom and understanding in
Isa. xi. 2, “And
the Spirit of the Lord shall
rest upon him, the
Spiritof wisdom and understanding, the Spirit of counsel
and might, the Spirit
of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord.” The
significance of the name is so plain as to need no explanation. It
is evident both from the words used and from the context that it is
the work of the Holy Spirit to impart wisdom and understanding to
those who receive Him. Those who receive the Holy Spirit receive the
Spirit “of
power” and “of
love” and “of
a sound mind” or
sound sense (2 Tim. i. 7).
XVII. The
Spirit of Counsel and Might.
We find this name used of the Holy Spirit in the passage given under
the preceding head. The meaning of this name too is obvious, the
Holy Spirit is called “the
Spirit of counsel and of might” because
He gives us counsel in all our plans and strength to carry them out
(cf. Acts viii. 29; xvi. 6, 7; i. 8). It is our privilege to have
God's own counsel in all our plans and God's strength in all the
work that we undertake for Him. We receive them by receiving the
Holy Spirit, the Spirit of counsel and might.
XVIII. The
Spirit of Knowledge and of the Fear of the Lord.
This name also is used in the passage given above (Isa. xi. 2). The
significance of this name is also obvious. It is the work of the
Holy Spirit to impart knowledge to us and to beget in us a reverence
for Jehovah, that reverence that reveals itself above all in
obedience to His commandments. The one who receives the Holy Spirit
finds his delight in the fear of the Lord.
(See Isa. xi. 3, R. V.) The three suggestive names
just given refer especially to the gracious work of the Holy Spirit
in the servant of the Lord, that is Jesus Christ (Isa. xi. 1-5).
XIX. The
Spirit of Life.
The Holy Spirit is called the
Spirit of life in
Rom. viii. 2, “For
the law of the
Spirit of life in
Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death.” The
Holy Spirit is called the Spirit of life because it is His work to
impart life (cf. John vi. 63, R. V.; Ezek. xxxvii. 1-10). In the
context in which the name is found in the passage given above,
beginning back in the seventh chapter of Romans, seventh verse, Paul
is drawing a contrast between the law of Moses outside a man, holy
and just and good, it is true, but impotent, and the living Spirit
of God in the heart, imparting spiritual and moral life to the
believer and enabling him thus to meet the requirements of the law
of God, so that what the law alone could not do, in that it was weak
through the flesh, the Spirit of God imparting life to the believer
and dwelling in the heart enables him to do, so that the
righteousness of the law is fulfilled in those who walk not after
the flesh but after the Spirit. (See Rom. viii. 2-4.) The Holy
Spirit is therefore called “the
Spirit of life,” because
He imparts spiritual life and consequent victory over sin to those
who receive Him.
XX. The
Oil of Gladness.
The Holy Spirit is called the “oil
of gladness” in
Heb. i. 9, “Thou
hast loved righteousness, and hated iniquity;
therefore God, even thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil
of gladness above
thy fellows.” Some
one may ask what reason have we for supposing that “the
oil of gladness” in
this passage is a name of the Holy Spirit. The answer is found in a
comparison of Heb. i. 9, with Acts x. 38 and Luke iv. 18. In Acts x.
38 we read “how
God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power,” and
in Luke iv. 18, Jesus Himself is recorded as saying, “The
Spirit of the Lord is upon Me,
because He hath anointed Me
to preach the Gospel to the poor,” etc.
In both of these passages, we are told it was the
Holy Spirit with which Jesus was anointed and
as in the passage in Hebrews we are told that it
was with the oil of gladness that He was anointed; so,
of course, the only possible conclusion is that the oil of gladness
means the Holy Spirit. What a beautiful and suggestive name it is
for Him whose fruit is, first, “love” then “joy” (Gal.
v. 22). The Holy Spirit becomes a source of boundless joy to those
who receive Him; He so fills and satisfies the soul, that the soul
who receives Him does not thirst forever (John iv. 14). No matter
how great the afflictions with which the believer receives the Word,
still he will have “the
joy of the Holy Ghost” (1
Thess. i. 6). On the Day of Pentecost, when the disciples were
baptized with the Holy Spirit, they were so filled with ecstatic joy
that others looking on them thought they were intoxicated. They
said, “These
men are full of new wine.” And
Paul draws a comparison between abnormal intoxication that comes
through excess of wine and the wholesome exhilaration from which there
is no reaction that comes through being filled with the Spirit (Eph.
v. 18-20). When God anoints one with the Holy Spirit, it is as if He
broke a precious alabaster box of oil of gladness above their heads
until it ran down to the hem of their garments and the whole person
was suffused with joy unspeakable and full of glory.
XXI. The
Spirit of Grace.
The Holy Spirit is called “the
Spirit of grace” in
Heb. x. 29, “Of
how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy,
who hath trodden underfoot the Son of God, and hath counted the
blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing,
and hath done despite unto the
Spirit of grace?” This
name brings out the fact that it is the Holy Spirit's work to
administer and apply the grace of God: He Himself is gracious, it is
true, but the name means far more than that, it means that He makes
ours experimentally the manifold grace of God. It is only by the
work of the Spirit of grace in our hearts that we are enabled to
appropriate to ourselves that infinite fullness of grace that God
has, from the beginning, bestowed upon us in Jesus Christ. It is
ours from the beginning, as far as belonging to us is concerned, but
it is only ours experimentally as we claim it by the power of the
Spirit of grace.
XXII. The
Spirit of Grace and of Supplication.
The Holy Spirit is called “the
Spirit of grace and of supplication” in
Zech. xii. 10, R. V., “And
I will pour
upon the house of David, and upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem, the
Spirit of grace and of supplication; and they shall look
unto Me whom they have pierced: and they shall mourn for him, as one
mourneth for his only son, and shall be in bitterness for his
first-born.” The
phrase, “the
Spirit of grace and of supplication” in
this passage is beyond a doubt a name of the Holy Spirit. The name “the
Spirit of grace” we
have already had under the preceding head, but here there is a
further thought of that operation of grace that leads us to pray
intensely. The Holy Spirit is so called because it is He that
teaches to pray because all true prayer is in the Spirit (Jude 20).
We of ourselves know not how to pray as we ought, but it is the work
of the Holy Spirit of intercession to make intercession for us with
groanings which cannot be uttered and to lead us out in prayer
according to the will of God (Rom. viii. 26, 27). The secret of all
true and effective praying is knowing the Holy Spirit as “the
Spirit of grace and of supplication.”
XXIII. The
Spirit of Glory.
The Holy Spirit is called “the
Spirit of glory” in
1 Pet. iv. 14, “If
ye be reproached for the name of Christ, happy are ye; for the
Spirit of glory and
of God resteth upon you: on their part He is evil spoken of, but on
your part He is glorified.” This
name does not merely teach that the Holy Spirit is infinitely
glorious Himself, but it rather teaches that He imparts the glory of
God to us, just as the Spirit of truth imparts truth to us, and as
the Spirit of life imparts life to
us, and as the Spirit of wisdom and understanding and of counsel and
might and knowledge and of the fear of the Lord imparts
to us wisdom and understanding and counsel and might and knowledge
and the fear of the Lord,
and as the Spirit of grace applies and administers to us the
manifold grace of God, so the Spirit of glory is the administrator
to us of God's glory. In the immediately preceding verse we read, “But
rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings: that,
when His glory shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding
joy.” It is in
this connection that He is called the Spirit of glory. We find a
similar connection between the sufferings which we endure and the
glory which the Holy Spirit imparts to us in Rom. viii. 16, 17, “The
Spirit Himself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are children
of God: and if children, then heirs; heirs of God and joint-heirs
with Christ; if
so be that we suffer with Him,
that we may be
also glorified with Him.” The
Holy Spirit is the administrator of glory as well as of grace, or
rather of the grace that culminates in glory.
XXIV. The
Eternal Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is called “the
eternal Spirit” in
Heb. ix. 14, “How
much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the
eternal Spiritoffered Himself without spot to God, purge
your conscience from dead works to serve the living God.” The
eternity and the Deity and infinite majesty of the Holy Spirit are
brought out by this name.
XXV. The
Comforter.
The Holy Spirit is called “the
Comforter” over
and over again in the Scriptures. For example in John xiv. 26, we
read, “But the
Comforter which
is 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.” And
in John xv. 26, “But
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.” (See
also John xvi. 27.) The word translated “Comforter” in
these passages means that, but it means much more beside. It is a
word difficult of adequate translation into any one word in English.
The translators of the Revised Version found difficulty in deciding
with what word to render the Greek word so translated. They have
suggested in the margin of the Revised Version “advocate” “helper” and
a simple transference of the Greek word into English, “Paraclete.” The
word translated “Comforter” means
literally, “one
called to another's side,” the
idea being, one right at hand to take another's part. It is the same
word that is translated “advocate” in
1 John ii. 1, “My
little children, these things write I unto you, that ye sin not. And
if any man sin, we have an
advocate with
the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous.” But“advocate,” as
we now understand it, does not give the full force of the Greek word
so rendered. Etymologically “advocate” means
nearly the same thing. Advocate is Latin (“advocatus”)
and it means “one
called to another to take
his part,” but in
our modern usage, the word has acquired a restricted meaning. The
Greek word translated “Comforter” (Parakleetos)
means “one
called alongside,” that
is one called to stand constantly by one's side and who is ever
ready to stand by us and take our part in everything in which his
help is needed. It is a wonderfully tender and expressive name for
the Holy One. Sometimes when we think of the
Holy Spirit, He seems to be so far away, but when we
think of the Parakleetos, or in plain English our “Stand-byer” or
our “part-taker,” how
near He is. Up to the time that Jesus made this promise to the
disciples, He Himself had been their Parakleetos. When they were in
any emergency or difficulty they turned to Him. On one occasion, for
example, the disciples were in doubt as to how to pray and they
turned to Jesus and said, “Lord,
teach us to pray.” And
the Lord taught them the wonderful prayer that has come down through
the ages (Luke xi. 1-4). On another occasion, Peter was sinking in
the waves of Galilee and he cried, “Lord,
save me,” and
immediately Jesus stretched forth His hand and caught him and saved
him (Matt. xiv. 30, 31). In every extremity they turned to Him. Just
so now that Jesus is gone to the Father, we have another Person,
just as Divine as He is, just as wise as He, just as strong as He,
just as loving as He, just as tender as He, just as ready and just
as able to help, who is always right by our side. Yes, better yet,
who dwells in our heart, who will take hold and help if we only
trust Him to do it.
If the truth of the Holy Spirit as set forth in the name “Parakleetos” once
gets into our heart and abides there, it will banish all loneliness
forever; for how can we ever be lonely when this best of all Friends
is ever with us? In the last eight years, I have been called upon to
endure what would naturally be a very lonely life. Most of the time
I am separated from wife and children by the calls of duty. For
eighteen months consecutively, I was separated from almost all my
family by many thousands of miles. The loneliness would have been
unendurable were it not for the one all-sufficient Friend, who was
always with me. I recall one night walking up and down the deck of a
storm-tossed steamer in the South Seas. Most of my family were
18,000 miles away; the remaining member of my family was not with
me. The officers were busy on the bridge, and I was pacing the deck
alone, and the thought came to me, “Here
you are all alone.” Then another thought came, “I
am not alone; by my side as I walk this deck in the loneliness and
the storm walks the Holy Spirit” and
He was enough. I said something like this once at a Bible conference
in St. Paul. A doctor came to me at the close of the meeting and
gently said, “I
want to thank you for that thought about the Holy Spirit always
being with us. I am a doctor. Oftentimes I have to drive far out in
the country in the night and storm to attend a case, and I have
often been so lonely, but I will never be lonely again. I will
always know that by my side in my doctor's carriage, the Holy Spirit
goes with me.”
If this thought of the Holy Spirit as the ever-present Paraclete
once gets into your heart and abides there, it will
banish all fear forever. How can we be afraid in the face of any
peril, if this Divine One is by our side to counsel us and to take
our part? There may be a howling mob about us, or a lowering storm,
it matters not. He stands between us and both mob and storm. One
night I had promised to walk four miles to a friend's house after an
evening session of a conference. The path led along the side of a
lake. As I started for my friend's house, a thunder-storm was coming
up. I had not counted on this but as I had promised, I felt I ought
to go. The path led along the edge of the lake, oftentimes very near
to the edge, sometimes the lake was near the path and sometimes many
feet below. The night was so dark with the clouds one could not see
ahead. Now and then there would be a blinding flash of lightning in
which you could see where the path was washed away, and then it
would be blacker than ever. You could hear the lake booming below.
It seemed a dangerous place to walk but that very week, I had been
speaking upon the Personality of the Holy Spirit and about the Holy
Spirit as an ever-present Friend, and the thought came to me, “What
was it you were telling the people in the address about the Holy
Spirit as an ever-present Friend?” And
then I said to myself, “Between
me and the boiling lake and the edge of the path walks the Holy
Spirit,” and I
pushed on fearless and glad. When we were in London, a young lady
attended the meeting one afternoon in the Royal Albert Hall. She had
an abnormal fear of the dark. It was absolutely impossible for her
to go into a dark room alone, but the thought of the Holy
Spirit as an ever-present Friend sank into her mind. She went home
and told her mother what a wonderful thought she had heard that day,
and how it had banished forever all fear from her. It was already
growing very dark in the London winter afternoon and her mother
looked up and said, “Very
well, let us see if it is real. Go up to the top of the house and
shut yourself alone in a dark room.” She
instantly sprang to her feet, bounded up the stairs, went into a
room that was totally dark and shut the door and sat down. All fear
was gone, and as she wrote the next day, the whole room seemed to be
filled with a wonderful glory, the glory of the presence of the Holy
Spirit.
In the thought of the Holy Spirit as the Paraclete there is also a
cure for insomnia. For two awful years, I suffered from insomnia.
Night after night I would go to bed apparently almost dead for
sleep; it seemed as though I must sleep, but I could not sleep; oh,
the agony of those two years! It seemed as if I would lose my mind
if I did not get relief. Relief came at last and for years I went on
without the suggestion of trouble from insomnia. Then one night I
retired to my room in the Institute, lay down expecting to fall
asleep in a moment as I usually did, but scarcely had my head
touched the pillow when I became aware that insomnia was back again.
If one has ever had it, he never forgets it and never mistakes it.
It seemed as if insomnia were sitting on the foot-board of my bed,
grinning at me and saying, “I
am back again for another two years.” “Oh,” I
thought, “two
more awful years of insomnia.” But
that very morning,
I had been lecturing to our students in the Institute about the
Personality of the Holy Spirit and about the Holy Spirit as an
ever-present Friend, and at once the thought came to me, “What
were you talking to the students about this morning? What were you
telling them?” and I looked up and said, “Thou
blessed Spirit of God, Thou art here. I am not alone. If Thou hast
anything to say to me, I will listen,” and He began to open
to me some of the deep and precious things about my Lord and Saviour,
things, that filled my soul with joy and rest, and the next thing I
knew I was asleep and the next thing I knew it was to-morrow
morning. So whenever insomnia has come my way since, I have simply
remembered that the Holy Spirit was there and I have looked up to
Him to speak to me and to teach me and He has done so and insomnia
has taken its flight.
In the thought of the Holy Spirit as the Paraclete there is a cure
for a breaking heart. How many aching, breaking hearts there are in
this world of ours, so full of death and separation from those we
most dearly love. How many a woman there is, who a few years ago, or
a few months or a few weeks ago, had no care, no worry, for by her
side was a Christian husband who was so wise and strong that the
wife rested all responsibility upon him and she walked care-free
through life and satisfied with his love and companionship. But one
awful day, he was taken from her. She was left alone and all the
cares and responsibilities rested upon her. How empty that heart has
been ever since; how empty the whole world has been. She has just
dragged through
her life and her duties as best she could with an aching and almost
breaking heart. But there is One, if she only knew it, wiser and
more loving than the tenderest husband, One willing to bear all the
care and responsibilities of life for her, One who is able, if, she
will only let Him, to fill every nook and corner of her empty and
aching heart; that One is the Paraclete. I said something like this
in St. Andrews' Hall in Glasgow. At the close of the meeting a
sad-faced Christian woman, wearing a widow's garb, came to me as I
stepped out of the hall into the reception room. She hurried to me
and said, “Dr.
Torrey, this is the anniversary of my dear husband's death. Just one
year ago to-day he was taken from me. I came to-day to see if you
could not speak some word to help me. You have given me just the
word I need. I will never be lonesome again.” A
year and a half passed by. I was on the yacht of a friend on the
lochs of the Clyde. One day a little boat put out from shore and
came alongside the yacht. One of the first to come up the side of
the yacht was this widow. She hurried to me and the first thing she
said was, “The
thought that you gave me that day in St. Andrews' Hall on the
anniversary of my husband's leaving me has been with me ever since,
and the Holy Spirit does satisfy me and fill my heart.”
But it is in our work for our Master that the thought of the Holy
Spirit as the Paraclete comes with greatest helpfulness. I think it
may be permissible to illustrate it from my own experience. I
entered the ministry because I was literally forced to. For years I
refused to
be a Christian, because I was determined that I would not be a
preacher, and I feared that if I surrendered to Christ I must enter
the ministry. My conversion turned upon my yielding to Him at this
point. The night I yielded, I did not say, “I
will accept Christ” or “I
will give up sin,” or
anything of that sort, I simply cried, “Take
this awful burden off my heart, and I will preach the Gospel.” But
no one could be less fitted by natural temperament for the ministry
than I. From early boyhood, I was extraordinarily timid and bashful.
Even after I had entered Yale College, when I would go home in the
summer and my mother would call me in to meet her friends, I was so
frightened that when I thought I spoke I did not make an audible
sound. When her friends had gone, my mother would ask, “Why
didn't you say something to them?” And
I would reply that I supposed I had, but my mother would say, “You
did not utter a sound.” Think of a young fellow like that
entering the ministry. I never mustered courage even to speak in a
public prayer-meeting until after I was in the theological seminary.
Then I felt, if I was to enter the ministry, I must be able to at
least speak in a prayer-meeting. I learned a little piece by heart
to say, but when the hour came, I forgot much of it in my terror. At
the critical moment, I grasped the back of the settee in front of me
and pulled myself hurriedly to my feet and held on to the settee.
One Niagara seemed to be going up one side and another down another;
my voice faltered. I repeated as much as I could remember and sat
down. Think of a man like
that entering the ministry. In the early days of my ministry, I
would write my sermons out in full and commit them to memory, stand
up and twist a button until I had repeated it off as best I could
and would then sink back into the pulpit chair with a sense of
relief that that was over for another week. I cannot tell you what I
suffered in those early days of my ministry. But the glad day came
when I came to know the Holy Spirit as the Paraclete. When the
thought got possession of me that when I stood up to preach, there
was Another who stood by my side, that while the audience saw me God
saw Him, and that the responsibility was all upon Him, and that He
was abundantly able to meet it and care for it all, and that all I
had to do was to stand back as far out of sight as possible and let
Him do the work. I have no dread of preaching now; preaching is the
greatest joy of my life, and sometimes when I stand up to speak and
realize that He is there, that all the responsibility is upon Him,
such a joy fills my heart that I can scarce restrain myself from
shouting and leaping. He is just as ready to help us in all our
work; in our Sunday-school classes; in our personal work and in
every other line of Christian effort. Many hesitate to speak to
others about accepting Christ. They are afraid they will not say the
right thing; they fear that they will do more harm than they will
good. You certainly will if you do
it, but if you will just believe in the Paraclete and trust Him to
say it and to say it in His way, you will never do harm but always
good. It may seem at the time that you have accomplished nothing, but
perhaps years after you will find out you have accomplished much and
even if you do not find it out in this world, you will find it out
in eternity.
There are many ways in which the Paraclete stands by us and helps us
of which we will speak at length when we come to study His work. He
stands by us when we pray (Rom. viii. 26, 27); when we study the
Word (John xiv. 26; xvi. 12-14); when we do personal work (Acts
viii. 29); when we preach or teach (1 Cor. ii. 4); when we are
tempted (Rom. viii. 2); when we leave this world (Acts vii. 54-60).
Let us get this thought firmly fixed now and for all time that the
Holy Spirit is One called to our side to take our part.
“Ever present, truest
Friend,
Ever near, Thine aid to
lend.”
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