The
Holy Spirit Guiding the Believer Into a Life as a Son.
The Apostle Paul writes in Rom. viii. 14, R. V., “For
as many as are led
by the Spirit of God, these are the sons of God.” In
this passage we see the Holy Spirit taking the conduct of the
believer's life. A true Christian life is a personally conducted
life, conducted at every turn by a Divine Person. It is the
believer's privilege to be absolutely set free from all care and
worry and anxiety as to the decisions which we must make at any turn
of life. The Holy Spirit undertakes all that responsibility for us.
A true Christian life is not one governed by a long set of rules
without us, but led by a living and ever-present Person within us.
It is in this connection that Paul says, “For
ye received not the spirit of
bondage again to
fear.” A
life governed by rules without one is a life of bondage.
There is always fear that
we haven't made quite rules enough, and always the dread that in an
unguarded moment we may have broken some of the rules which we have
made. The life that many professed Christians lead is one of awful
bondage; for they have put upon themselves a yoke more grievous to
bear than that of the ancient Mosaic law concerning which Peter said
to the Jews of his time,
that neither they nor their fathers had been able to bear it (Acts
xv. 10). Many Christians have a long list of self-made rules, “Thou
shalt do this,” and “Thou
shalt do this,” and “Thou
shalt do this,” and “Thou
shalt not do that,” and “Thou
shalt not do that,” and “Thou
shalt not do that”; and if by any chance they break one of
these self-made rules, or forget to keep one of them, they are at
once filled with an awful dread that they have brought upon
themselves the displeasure of God (and they even sometimes fancy
that they have committed the unpardonable sin). This is not
Christianity, this is legalism. “We
have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear,” we
have received the Spirit who gives us the place of sons (Rom. viii.
15). Our lives should not be governed by a set of rules without us
but by the loving Spirit of Adoption within us. We should believe
the teaching of God's Word that the Spirit of God's Son dwells
within us and we should surrender the absolute control of our life
to Him and look to Him to guide us at every turn of life. He will do
it if we only surrender to Him to do it and trust Him to do it. If
in a moment of thoughtlessness, we go our own way instead of His, we
will not be filled with an overwhelming sense of condemnation and of
fear of an offended God, but we will go to God as our Father,
confess our going astray, believe that He forgives us fully because
He says so (1 John i. 9) and go on light and happy of heart to obey
Him and be led by His Spirit.
Being led by the Spirit of God does not mean for a moment
that we will do things that the written Word of God tells us not to
do. The Holy Spirit never leads men contrary to the Book of which He
Himself is the Author. And if there is some spirit which is leading
us to do something that is contrary to the explicit teachings of
Jesus, or the Apostles, we may be perfectly sure that this spirit
who is leading us is not the Holy Spirit. This point needs to be
emphasized in our day, for there are not a few who give themselves
over to the leading of some spirit, whom they say is the Holy
Spirit, but who is leading them to do things explicitly forbidden in
the Word. We must always remember that many false spirits and false
prophets are gone out into the world (1 John iv. 1). There are many
who are so anxious to be led by some unseen power that they are
ready to surrender the conduct of their lives to any spiritual
influence or unseen person. In this way, they open their lives to
the conduct and malevolent influence of evil spirits to the utter
wreck and ruin of their lives.
A man who made great professions of piety once came to me and said
that the Holy Spirit was leading him and “a
sweet Christian woman,” whom
he had met, to contemplate marriage. “Why,” I
said, in astonishment, “you
already have one wife.” “Yes,” he
said,
“but you know we are not congenial, and we have not lived together
for years.” “Yes,” I
replied, “I
know you have not lived together for years, and I have looked into
the matter, and I believe that the blame for that lies largely at
your door. In any event, she is your wife. You have no reason to
suppose she has
been untrue to you, and Jesus Christ explicitly teaches that if you
marry another while she lives you commit adultery” (Luke
xvi. 18). “Oh,
but,” the man
said, “the
Spirit of God is leading us to love one another and to see that we
ought to marry one another.” “You
lie, and you blaspheme,” I
replied. “Any
spirit that is leading you to disobey the plain teaching of Jesus
Christ is not the Spirit of God but some spirit of the devil.” This
perhaps was an extreme case, but cases of essentially the same
character are not rare. Many professed Christians seek to justify
themselves in doing things which are explicitly forbidden in the
Word by saying that they are led by the Spirit of God. Not long ago,
I protested to the leaders in a Christian assembly where at each
meeting many professed to speak with tongues in distinct violation
of the teaching of the Holy Spirit through the Apostle Paul in 1
Cor. xiv. 27, 28 (that not more than two or at the most, three,
shall speak in a tongue in one gathering and that not even one shall
speak unless there was an interpreter, and that no two shall speak
at the same time). The defense that they made was that the Holy
Spirit led them to speak several at a time and many in a single
meeting and that they must obey the Holy Spirit, and in such a case
as this were not subject to the Word. The Holy Spirit never
contradicts Himself. He never leads the individual to do that which
in the written Word He has commanded us all not to do. Any leading
of the Spirit must be tested by that which we know to be the leading
of the Spirit in the Word. But while we need to be on our guard
against the leading of false spirits, it is our privilege to be led
by the Holy Spirit, and to lead a life free from the bondage of
rules and free from the anxiety that we shall not go wrong, a life
as children whose Father has sent an unerring Guide to lead them all
the way.
Those who are thus led by the Spirit of God are “sons of
God,” that is,
they are not merely children of
God, born it is true of the Father, but immature, but they are the
grown children, the mature children of God; they are no longer babes
but sons. The Apostle Paul draws a contrast in Gal. iv. 1-7 between
the babe under the tutelage of the law and differing nothing from a
servant, and the full grown son who is no more a servant but a son
walking in joyous liberty. It sometimes seems as if comparatively
few Christians to-day had really thrown off the bondage of law,
rules outside themselves, and entered into the joyous liberty of
sons. |