The
Holy Spirit as a Teacher.
Our Lord Jesus in His last conversation with His disciples before
His crucifixion said, “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” (John
xiv. 26).
Here we have a twofold work of the Holy Spirit, teaching and
bringing to remembrance the things which Christ had already taught.
We will take them in the reverse order.
I. The
Holy Spirit brings to remembrance the words of Christ.
This promise was made primarily to the Apostles and is the guarantee
of the accuracy of their report of what Jesus said; but the Holy
Spirit does a similar work with each believer who expects it of Him,
and who looks to Him to do it. The Holy Spirit brings to our mind
the teachings of Christ and of the Word just when we need them for
either the necessities of our life or of our service. Many of us
could tell of occasions when we were in great distress of soul or
great questioning as to duty or great extremity as to what to say to
one whom
we were trying to lead to Christ or to help, and at that exact
moment the very Scripture we needed—some passage it may be we had
not thought of for a long time and quite likely of which we had
never thought in this connection—was brought to mind. Who did it?
The Holy Spirit did it. He is ready to do it even more frequently,
if we only expect it of Him and look to Him to do it. It is our
privilege every time we sit down beside an inquirer to point him to
the way of life to look up to the Holy Spirit and say, “Just
what shall I say to this inquirer? Just what Scripture shall I use?” There
is a deep significance in the fact that in the verse immediately
following this precious promise Jesus says, “Peace
I leave with you, My peace I give unto you.” It
is by the Spirit bringing His words to remembrance and teaching us
the truth of God that we obtain and abide in this peace. If we will
simply look to the Holy Spirit to bring to mind Scripture just when
we need it, and just the Scripture we need, we shall indeed have
Christ's peace every moment of our lives. One who was preparing for
Christian work came to me in great distress. He said he must give up
his preparation for he could not memorize the Scriptures. “I
am thirty-two years old,” he
said, “and
have been in business now for years. I have gotten out of the habit
of study and I cannot memorize anything.” The
man longed to be in his Master's service and the tears stood in his
eyes as he said it.
“Don't be discouraged,” I
replied. “Take
your Lord's promise that the Holy Spirit will bring His words to
remembrance, learn one passage of Scripture, fix
it firmly in your mind, then another and then another and look to
the Holy Spirit to bring them to your remembrance when you need
them.” He went on
with his preparation. He trusted the Holy Spirit. Afterwards he took
up work in a very difficult field, a field where all sorts of error
abounded. They would gather around him on the street like bees and
he would take his Bible and trust the Holy Spirit to bring to
remembrance the passages of Scripture that he needed and He did it.
His adversaries were filled with confusion, as he met them at every
point with the sure Word of God, and many of the most hardened were
won for Christ.
II. The
Holy Spirit will teach us all things.
There is a still more explicit promise to this effect two chapters
further on in John xvi. 12, 13, 14, R. V. Here Jesus says, “I
have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now.
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. He shall glorify Me:
for He shall take of Mine, and shall declare it unto you.” This
promise was made in the first instance to the Apostles, but the
Apostles themselves applied it to all believers (1 John ii. 20, 27).
It is the privilege of each believer in Jesus Christ, even the
humblest, to be “taught
of God.” Each
humblest believer is independent of human teachers—“Ye need
not that any teach you” (1
John ii. 27, R. V.). This, of course, does not mean that we may not
learn much from others who are taught of the Holy Spirit. If John
had thought that he would never have written this epistle to teach
others. The man who is the most fully taught of God is the very one
who will be most ready to listen to what God has taught others. Much
less does it mean that when we are taught of the Spirit, we are
independent of the written Word of God; for the Word is the very
place to which the Spirit, who is the Author of the Word, leads His
pupils and the instrument through which He instructs them (Eph. vi.
17; John vi. 33; Eph. v. 18, 19; cf. Col. iii. 16). But while we may
learn much from men, we are not dependent upon them. We have a
Divine Teacher, the Holy Spirit.
We shall never truly know the truth until we are thus taught
directly by the Holy Spirit. No amount of mere human teaching, no
matter who our teachers may be, will ever give us a correct and
exact and full apprehension of the truth. Not even a diligent study
of the Word either in the English or in the original languages will
give us a real understanding of the truth. We must be taught
directly by the Holy Spirit and we may be thus taught, each one of
us. The one who is thus taught will understand the truth of God
better even if he does not know one word of Greek or Hebrew, than
the one who knows Greek and Hebrew thoroughly and all the cognate
languages as well, but who is not taught of the Spirit.
The Spirit will guide the one whom He thus teaches “into
all the truth.” The
whole sphere of God's truth is for each one of us, but the Holy
Spirit will not guide us into all the truth in a single day, nor in
a week, nor in a year, but step by step. There are two especial
lines of the Spirit's teaching mentioned:
(1) “He
shall declare unto you the things that are to come.” There
are many who say we can know nothing of the future, that all our
thoughts on that subject are guesswork. It is true that we cannot
know everything about the future. There are some things which God
has seen fit to keep to Himself, secret things which belong to Him
(Deut. xxix. 29). For example, we cannot “know
the times, or the seasons” of
our Lord's return (Acts i. 7), but there are many things about the
future which the Holy Spirit will reveal to us.
(2) “He
shall glorify
Me (that is,
Christ) for He shall take of Mine and shall declare it unto you.” This
is the Holy Spirit's especial line of teaching with the believer, as
with the unbeliever, Jesus Christ. It is His work above all else to
reveal Jesus Christ and to glorify Him. His whole teaching centers
in Christ. From one point of view or the other, He is always
bringing us to Jesus Christ. There are some who fear to emphasize
the truth about the Holy Spirit lest Christ Himself be disparaged
and put in the background, but there is no one who magnifies Christ
as the Holy Spirit does. We shall never understand Christ, nor see
His glory until the Holy Spirit interprets Him to us. No amount of
listening to sermons and lectures, no matter how able, no amount of
mere study of the Word even, would
ever give us to see “the
things of Christ”; the Holy Spirit must show us and He is
willing to do it and He can do it. He is longing to do it. The Holy
Spirit's most intense desire is to reveal Jesus Christ to men. On
the day of Pentecost when Peter and the rest of the company were “filled
with the Holy Spirit,” they
did not talk much about the Holy Spirit, they talked about Christ.
Study Peter's sermon on that day; Jesus Christ was his one theme,
and Jesus Christ will be our one theme, if we are taught of the
Spirit; Jesus Christ will occupy the whole horizon of our vision. We
will have a new Christ, a glorious Christ. Christ will be so
glorious to us that we will long to go and tell every one about this
glorious One whom we have found. Jesus Christ is so different when
the Spirit glorifies Him by taking of His things and showing them
unto us.
III. The
Holy Spirit reveals to us the deep things of God which are hidden
from and are foolishness to the natural man.
We read in 1 Cor. ii. 9-13, “Eye
hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of
man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love Him. But God
hath revealed them unto us by His Spirit: for the
Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God.
For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man
which is in him? Even so the things of God knoweth no man, but the
Spirit of God. Now we have received, not the spirit of the world,
but the spirit which is of God; that we might
know the things that are freely given to us of God. Which things
also we speak, not in the words which man's wisdom teacheth, but
which the Holy Ghost teacheth; comparing spiritual things with
spiritual.” This
passage, of course, refers primarily to the Apostles but we cannot
limit this work of the Spirit to them. The Spirit reveals to the
individual believer the deep things of God, things which human eye
hath not seen, nor ear heard, things which have not entered into the
heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love
Him. It is evident from the context that this does not refer solely
to heaven, or the things to come in the life hereafter. The Holy
Spirit takes the deep things of God which God hath prepared for us,
even in the life that now is, and reveals them to us.
IV. The
Holy Spirit interprets His own revelation. He imparts power to
discern, know and appreciate what He has taught.
In the next verse to those just quoted we read, “But
the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for
they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because
they are spiritually discerned” (1
Cor. iii. 14). Not only is the Holy Spirit the Author of revelation,
the written Word of God: He is also the Interpreter of what He has
revealed. Any profound book is immeasurably more interesting and
helpful when we have the author of the book right at hand to
interpret it to us, and it is always our privilege to have the
author of the Bible right at hand
when we study it. The Holy Spirit is the Author of the Bible and He
stands ready to interpret its meaning to every believer every time
he opens the Book. To understand the Book, we must look to Him, then
the darkest places become clear. We often need to pray with the
Psalmist of old, “Open
Thou mine eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of Thy law” (Ps.
cxix. 18). It is not enough that we have the revelation of God
before us in the written Word to study, we must also have the inward
illumination of the Holy Spirit to enable us to apprehend it as we
study. It is a common mistake, but a most palpable mistake, to try
to comprehend a spiritual revelation with the natural understanding.
It is the foolish attempt to do this that has landed so many in the
bog of so-called “Higher
Criticism.” In
order to understand art a man must have ęsthetic sense as well as
the knowledge of colours and of paint, and a man to understand a
spiritual revelation must be taught of the Spirit. A mere knowledge
of the languages in which the Bible was written is not enough. A man
with no ęsthetic sense might as well expect to appreciate the
Sistine Madonna, because he is not colour blind, as a man who is not
filled with the Spirit to understand the Bible, simply because he
understands the vocabulary and the laws of grammar of the languages
in which the Bible was written. We might as well think of setting a
man to teach art because he understood paints as to set a man to
teach the Bible because he has a thorough understanding of Greek and
Hebrew. In our day we need not only to recognize the
utter insufficiency and worthlessness before God of our own
righteousness, which is the lesson of the opening chapters of the
Epistle to the Romans, but also the utter insufficiency and
worthlessness in the things of God of our own wisdom, which is the
lesson of the First Epistle to the Corinthians, especially the first
to the third chapters. (See for example 1 Cor. i. 19-21, 26, 27.)
The Jews of old had a revelation by the Spirit but they failed to
depend upon the Spirit Himself to interpret it to them, so they went
astray. So Christians to-day have a revelation by the Spirit and
many are failing to depend upon the Holy Spirit to interpret it to
them and so they go astray. The whole evangelical church recognizes
theoretically at least the utter insufficiency of man's own
righteousness. What it needs to be taught in the present hour, and
what it needs to be made to feel, is the utter insufficiency of
man's wisdom. That is perhaps the lesson which this twentieth
century of towering intellectual conceit needs most of any to learn.
To understand God's Word, we must empty ourselves utterly of our own
wisdom and rest in utter dependence upon the Spirit of God to
interpret it to us. We do well to lay to heart the words of Jesus
Himself in Matt. xi. 25, “I
thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because Thou hast
hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them
unto babes.” A
number of Bible students were once discussing the best methods of
Bible study and one man, who was in point of fact a learned and
scholarly man, said, “I
think the best method
of Bible study is the baby method.” When
we have entirely put away our own righteousness, then and only then,
we get the righteousness of God (Phil. iii. 4-7, 9; Rom. x. 3). And
when we have entirely put away our own wisdom, then, and only then,
we get the wisdom of God. “Let
no man deceive himself,” says
the Apostle Paul. “If
any man among you seemeth to be wise in this world, let
him become a fool, that he may be wise” (1
Cor. iii. 18). And the emptying must precede filling, the self
poured out that God may be poured in.
We must daily be taught by the Spirit to understand the Word. We
cannot depend to-day on the fact that the Spirit taught us
yesterday. Each new time that we come in contact with the Word, it
must be in the power of the Spirit for that specific occasion. That
the Holy Spirit once illumined our mind to grasp a certain truth is
not enough. He must do it each time we confront that passage. Andrew
Murray has well said, “Each
time you come to the Word in study, in hearing a sermon, or reading
a religious book, there ought to be as distinct as your intercourse
with the external means, the definite act of self-abnegation,
denying your own wisdom and yielding yourself in faith to the Divine
teacher” (“The
Spirit of Christ,” page
221).
V. The
Holy Spirit enables the believer to communicate to others in power
the truth he himself has been taught.
Paul says in 1 Cor. ii. 1-5, “And
I, brethren, when I came to you, came not with excellency of speech
or of
wisdom, declaring unto you the testimony of God. For I determined
not to know anything among you, save Jesus Christ, and Him
crucified. And I was with you in weakness, and in fear, and in much
trembling. And my speech and my preaching was not with enticing
words of man's wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and of
power: That your faith should not stand in the wisdom of men, but in
the power of God.” In
a similar way in writing to the believers in Thessalonica in 1
Thess. i. 5, “For
our Gospel came not unto you in word only, but also in power, and in
the Holy Ghost, and in much assurance; as ye know what manner of men
we were among you for your sake.” We
need not only the Holy Spirit to reveal the truth to chosen apostles
and prophets in the first place, and the Holy Spirit in the second
place to interpret to us as individuals the truth He has thus
revealed, but in the third place, we need the Holy Spirit to enable
us to effectually communicate to others the truth which He Himself
has interpreted to us. We need Him all along the line. One great
cause of real failure in the ministry, even when there is seeming
success, and not only in the regular ministry but in all forms of
service as well, comes from the attempt to teach by “enticing
words of man's wisdom” (that
is, by the arts of human logic, rhetoric, persuasion and eloquence)
what the Holy Spirit has taught us. What is needed is Holy Ghost
power, “demonstration
of the Spirit and of power.” There
are three causes of failure in preaching to-day. First, Some other
message is taught than the message which the Holy Spirit has
revealed in the Word. (Men preach
science, art, literature, philosophy, sociology, history, economics,
experience, etc., and not the simple Word of God as found in the
Holy Spirit's Book,—the Bible.) Second, The Spirit-taught message of
the Bible is studied and sought to be apprehended by the natural
understanding, that is, without the Spirit's illumination. How
common that is, even in institutions where men are being trained for
the ministry, even institutions which may be altogether orthodox.
Third, The Spirit-given message, the Word, the Bible studied and
apprehended under the Holy Ghost's illumination is given out to
others with “enticing
words of man's wisdom,” and
not in
“demonstration of the Spirit and of power.” We
need, and we are absolutely dependent upon the Spirit all along the
line. He must teach us how to speak as well as what to speak. His
must be the power as well as the message. |