The
Holy Spirit Setting the Believer Free From the Power of Indwelling
Sin.
In Rom. viii. 2 the Apostle Paul writes, “The
law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the
law of sin and death.” What the law of sin and death is we
learn from the preceding chapter, the ninth to the twenty-fourth
verses. Paul tells us that there was a time in his life when he was “alive
apart from the law” (v.
9). But the time came when he was brought face to face with the law
of God; he saw that this law was holy and the commandment holy and
just and good. And he made up his mind to keep this holy and just
and good law of God. But he soon discovered that beside this law of
God outside him, which was holy and just and good, that there was
another law inside him directly contrary to this law of God outside
him. While the law of God outside him said, “This
good thing” and “this
good thing” and “this
good thing” and “this
good thing thou shalt do,” the
law within him said, “You
cannot do this good thing that you would;” and
a fierce combat ensued between this holy and just and good law
without him which Paul himself approved after the inward man, and
this other law in his members which warred against the law of his
mind and kept constantly saying, “You
cannot do the good that you would.” But
this law in his members (the law that the good that he would do, he
did not, but the evil that he would not he constantly did, v. 19)
gained the victory. Paul's attempt to keep the law of God resulted
in total failure. He found himself sinking deeper and deeper into
the mire of sin, constrained and dragged down by this law of sin in
his members, until at last he cried out, “Oh,
wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me out of the body of this
death?” (v. 24, R.
V.). Then Paul made another discovery. He found that in addition to
the two laws that he had already found, the law of God without him,
holy and just and good, and the law of sin and death within him, the
law that the good he would he could not do and the evil he would
not, he must keep on doing, there was a third law, “the
law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus,” and
this third law read this way, “The
righteousness which you cannot achieve in your own strength by the
power of your own will approving the law of God, the righteousness
which the law of God without you, holy and just and good though it
is, cannot accomplish in you, in that it is weak through your flesh,
the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus can produce in you so that the
righteousness that the law requires may be fulfilled in you, if you
will not walk after the flesh but after the Spirit.” In
other words when we come to the end of ourselves, when we fully
realize our own inability to keep the law of God and in utter
helplessness look up to the Holy Spirit in Christ Jesus to do for us
that which we cannot do for ourselves, and surrender our every thought
and every purpose and every desire and every affection to His
absolute control and thus walk after the Spirit, the Spirit does
take control and set us free from the power of sin that dwells in us
and brings our whole lives into conformity to the will of God. It
is the privilege of the child of God in the power of the Holy Spirit
to have victory over sin every day and every hour and every moment.
There are many professed Christians to-day living in the experience
that Paul described in Rom. vii. 9-24. Each day is a day of defeat
and if at the close of the day, they review their lives they must
cry, “Oh,
wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me out of the body of this
death?” There are
some who even go so far as to reason that this is the normal
Christian life, but Paul tells us distinctly that this was “when
the commandment came” (v.
9), not when the Spirit came; that it is the experience under law
and not in the Spirit. The pronoun “I” occurs
twenty-seven times in these fifteen verses and the Holy Spirit is
not found once, whereas in the eighth chapter of Romans the pronoun “I” is
found only twice in the whole chapter and the Holy Spirit appears
constantly. Again Paul tells us in the fourteenth verse that this
was his experience as “carnal,
sold under sin.” Certainly,
that does not describe the normal Christian experience. On the other
hand in Rom. viii. 9 we are told how not to be in the flesh but in
the Spirit. In the eighth chapter of Romans we have a picture of the
true Christian life, the life that is possible to each one of us and
that God expects from each one of us. Here we have
a life where not merely the commandment comes but the Spirit comes,
and works obedience to the commandment and brings us complete
victory over the law of sin and death. Here we have life, not in the
flesh, but in the Spirit, where we not only see the beauty of the
law (Rom. vii. 22) but where the Spirit imparts power to keep it
(Rom. viii. 4). We still have the flesh but we are not in the flesh
and we do not live after the flesh. We “through
the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body” (v.
13). The desires of the body are still there, desires which if made
the rule of our life, would lead us into sin, but we day by day by
the power of the Spirit do put to death the deeds to which the
desires of the body would lead us. We walk by the Spirit and
therefore do not fulfill the lusts of the flesh (Gal. v. 16, R. V.).
We have crucified the flesh with the passions and lusts thereof
(Gal. v. 24, R. V.). It would be going
too far to say we had still a carnal nature, for a
carnal nature is a nature governed by the flesh; but
we have the flesh, but in the Spirit's power, it is our
privilege to get daily, hourly, constant victory over the flesh and
over sin. But this victory is not in ourselves, nor in any strength
of our own. Left to ourselves, deserted of the Spirit of God, we
would be as helpless as ever. It is still true that in us, that is
in our flesh, dwelleth no good thing (Rom. vii. 18). It is all in
the power of the indwelling Spirit, but the Spirit's power may be in
such fullness that one is not even conscious of the presence of the
flesh. It seems as if it were dead and gone forever, but it is only
kept in place of death by the Holy
Spirit's power. If for one moment we were to get our eyes off from
Jesus Christ, if we were to neglect the daily study of the Word and
prayer, down we would go. We must live in the Spirit and walk in the
Spirit if we would have continuous victory (Gal. v. 16, 25). The
life of the Spirit within us must be maintained by the study of the
Word and prayer. One of the saddest things ever witnessed is the way
in which some people who have entered by the Spirit's power into a
life of victory become self-confident and fancy that the victory is
in themselves, and that they can safely neglect the study of the
Word and prayer. The depths to which such sometimes fall is
appalling. Each of us needs to lay to heart the inspired words of
the Apostle, “Wherefore,
let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall” (1
Cor. x. 12). I once knew a man who seemed to make extraordinary
strides in the Christian life. He became a teacher of others and was
greatly blessed to thousands. It seemed to me that he was becoming
self-confident and I trembled for him. I invited him to my room and
we had a long heart to heart conversation. I told him frankly that
it seemed as if he were going perilously near exceedingly dangerous
ground. I said that I found it safer at the close of each day not to
be too confident that there had been no failures nor defeats that
day but to go alone with God and ask Him to search my heart and show
me if there was anything in my outward or inward life that was
displeasing to Him, and that very often failures were brought to
light that must be confessed as sin. “No,” he
replied, “I
do not
need to do that. Even if I should do something wrong, I would see it
at once. I keep very short accounts with God, and I would confess it
at once.” I said
it seemed to me as if it would be safer to take time alone with God
for God to search us through and through, that while we might not
know anything against ourselves, God might know something against us
(1 Cor. iv. 4, R. V.), and He would bring it to light and our
failure could be confessed and put away. “No,” he
said, “he
did not feel that that was necessary.” Satan
took advantage of his self-confidence. He fell into most appalling
sin, and though he has since confessed and professed repentance, he
has been utterly set aside from God's service.
In John viii. 32 we read, “Ye
shall know the truth and the
truth shall set you free.” In
this verse it is the truth, or the Word of God, that sets us free
from the power of sin and gives us victory. And in Ps. cxix. 11 we
read, “Thy
Word have I
hid in my heart, that I might not sin against Thee.” Here
again it is the indwelling Word that keeps us free from sin. In this
matter as in everything else what in one place is attributed to the
Holy Spirit is elsewhere attributed to the Word. The explanation, of
course, is that the Holy Spirit works through the Word, and it is
futile to talk of the Holy Spirit dwelling in us if we neglect the
Word. If we are not feeding on the Word, we are not walking after
the Spirit and we shall not have victory over the flesh and over
sin. |