By William Burt Pope, D.D.,
THE HOLY SPIRIT: As the Incarnate Son is the Redeemer of Mankind in virtue of His perfect work of Reconciliation, so the Holy Ghost in His Divine personality is the Administrator of that redemption. His revelation as such has kept pace with the revelation of the redeeming Son. In the Old-Testament age He was the promise of the Father, even as the Christ was: and, as the promised Christ already was the world's unrevealed Savior, so the Spirit was the unrevealed Dispenser of His salvation. The Redeemer made the promise of the Father His own promise; and, on His ascension, obtained and sent, as the fruit of His mediatorial obedience, the Holy Ghost in His most abundant influence as the Third Person of the Godhead and the Personal Agent in the final accomplishment of the purpose of the Mediatorial Trinity THE HOLY SPIRIT IN THE PREPARATIONS OF REDEMPTION The distinct personality of the Holy Ghost is not made prominent in Scripture until the act of atonement is on the eve of completion. But the light of the later Scriptures thrown back upon the earlier reveals Him as a Divine Person present and active throughout the preparatory economy. With the coming of Christ His agency becomes more distinct; and it is from that time forward intimately connected with our Lord's redeeming Person and work. The full disclosure, however, of the Person and Offices of the Spirit, and of His relation to the finished redemption of the world, was not given until the set time for the Pentecostal revelation of the Third Person was fully come; that is, until the Redeemer had ended His work upon earth and ascended to heaven THE SPIRIT IN THE OLD TESTAMENT The Holy Ghost in His special relation to the Christian economy was not sent down until Pentecost. But, as the Person in the Holy Trinity by Whom the Father's Revelation of Himself through the Son, whether in Creation or Providence or Redemption, is accomplished in act, He has been present and operative from the beginning: the Administrator of the work of the Three-One God in every dispensation 1. The Spirit, like the Son, but without concealment of His name, is throughout the Old Testament disclosed as the Agent of the Godhead in the production of all life, especially of the living spirit of man. In anticipation, as it were, of Pentecost, He was at the beginning THE LORD AND GIVER OF LIFE; and Job's word may be used in the widest extent concerning man as such: the Spirit of God hath made me.1 The Son from the beginning has been the Life of men; but it was not till the Incarnation that He gave that life more abundantly, and was fully revealed as THE LIFE.2 This distinction also holds good between the unrevealed and the revealed relation of the Personal Medium of the gift of life. The same Spirit Who moved upon the face of the waters3 was breathed into the face of man and made him a living soul.4 And, as the Son was from the beginning the Light of men,5 so the Spirit is represented as moving upon and striving with man from the beginning.6 The unrevealed Second Person gave special and mysterious manifestations of Himself as the Angel of Jehovah, the Word of the Lord, and so the unrevealed Third Person is often referred to as the Divine Agent in spiritual gifts and influences. Thus of Bezaleel it is said: I have filled him with the Spirit of God.7 And of Moses,8 Joshua,9 and the Judges,10 and the first kings, it is recorded that the Spirit endowed them for their office. Thus, carrying back the personality of the Holy Ghost from the New Testament to the Old, we are taught that without Him the Eternal did not act on the world throughout the ancient economy1 Job 33:4; 2 John 1:4; 3 Gen. 1:2; 4 Gen. 2:7; 5 John 1:4; 6 Gen. 6:3; 7 Exo. 31:3; 8 Num. 11:17; 9 Num. 27:18; 10 Jud. 3:10 2. But specifically in the administration of the prophetic preparations of the Gospel is this truth seen. 1 The doctrine of the Saviour's Person and Work has made it plain that the revelation of the Son was mediated by the Spirit of Christ which was in the prophets; that the entire Old Testament as the record of the Gospel before the Advent was given by His inspiration; and that He, no less than the Son Himself, was the Promise of the Father.2
1 1 Sam. 16:13,14;
2 Acts
1:4
The Holy Spirit in the history of the Lord's manifestation and
life upon earth occupies a
midway position between the Old Testament and the Pentecost. As
the Administrator of
Redemption He appears as the actual Agent in the raising up and
the mission of the
Incarnate Savior; while He is at the same time the Object of our
Lord's prophecy as His
future Agent in carrying out His work. Every reference to the
Holy Ghost in the Gospels
falls under one or other of these heads
1. With regard to the former, it is enough to recapitulate what
has already been
established: first, that the human nature of the Son was the
special Divine production of
the Holy Ghost; and, secondly, that whatever in the Incarnate
Person and Work of Jesus
belongs to Him as the representative of mankind is under the
Spirit's direction; while all
that belongs to Him as the representative of Deity is the act of
His own Eternal Spirit as
the Son. The Third Person presides especially over the humble
and subordinate relation
of the Mediatorial Second Person in the economy of redemption
2. With regard to the latter, the records of the Evangelists
furnish a series of testimonies
of the Savior Himself concerning the future dispensation of the
Spirit which culminate in
the farewell discourses and the resurrection promise
(1.)
(2.)
(3.) Passing over the specific promises of the Spirit to the
Apostles, as contained in the
Synoptists, we have our Lord's most full foreannouncement of the
coming and function
of His Divine Representative. The farewell discourse is in truth
a revelation of the
Trinity; our Lord, setting out with a declaration of His own
identity with the Father in the
Divine nature, proceeds to declare that the Spirit should come
as a Person, to
THE HOLY SPIRIT AFTER PENTECOST
With Pentecost begins the dispensation of the Spirit. His office
has supreme reference to
the administration of Christ and His redemption. And this is
under three aspects. He is the
Revealer of the Son generally, and of the Godhead as revealed in
Him. He is the
Saviour's Agent in dispensing individual salvation: being a
witness for Him
This assemblage of topics must be exhibited only in epitome. To
a great extent they have
been anticipated in the discussion of the Trinity and the Person
and Offices of Christ
They arise also in separate discussion throughout the whole
course of this part of our
subject: the work and influences of the Spirit meet us
everywhere, being so ubiquitous
that it is almost impossible to reduce all to summary. But the
honor due to the everblessed
Spirit of the Father and the Son, and the just demands of
dogmatic system, alike
require that some general analysis of the agency of the Holy
Ghost be placed here in the
forefront. A third reason also may be assigned, arising out of
the indistinctness which has
prevailed on this subject in much of the theology of earlier and
later times. As to the
earlier development of the doctrine enough has been already said
when treating of the
Trinity. As to later ages, it cannot be said that there has been
any development: there has
been no such controversy, and no such decisions have been
formulated, as we have to do
with in the Person of Christ. The offices of the Holy Ghost have
been obscured by
exaggerations of sacramental efficacy; and His personal
relations to the believer have
been undervalued in many systems. But what requires to be noted
on these points will
occur under the several heads of His general administrations. No
separate historical
review will be needed
1. The New Testament does not sanction the thought that with
Pentecost began a
dispensation of the Spirit in the sense of a new economy or
2. But there is a sense in which Pentecost introduced a new
economy: that of the Holy
Ghost, as the final revelation of the Holy Trinity. The One God,
known in the Old
Testament as Jehovah, a Name common to the Three Persons, was
then made known in
the Third Person:
The Church is the
1 2 Cor. 3:17;
2 Acts
2:3; 3
Eph. 2:22;
4 John
1:18; 5
1 Cor. 2:10;
6 Mat.
11:27;
7 1 Cor. 12:3
We do not find in the New Testament any term which directly
sanctions the phrases
current in theology concerning the Holy Spirit's office as the
Redeemer's Representative
The Lord does not speak of Him as His Successor, or Deputy, or
Agent, or Administrator
But, though these words are not used, what they signify is
plainly to be gathered from the
tenor of the final discourses in St. John. These enlarge upon
the vicarious relation of the
Spirit generally; and that particularly in regard to both the
Person and the Work of Christ
I. The Saviour's departure was expedient in order to His coming.
He was
II. The Person and the Work of Jesus are one. The Spirit is the
Representative of the
Redeemer generally, and in His several offices; in His relation
to the world, and in His
special relation to His people, Through Him alone He acts as the
Savior
1. When our Lord cried
2. The Spirit represents Christ to the world. While the
Incarnate Lord was not yet
glorified He was limited to one sphere: and, though the world
was in His heart, His feet
ran not so fast as His desire. But now the Spirit presents Jesus
and exhibits His claims to
all men.
3. He is the representative of Christ to His people. To them He
is the Paraclete:
THE AGENT IN PERSONAL SALVATION
As the Intermediary between the Savior and the individual soul
the Spirit has two classes
of office: one more external and one more internal. And these
functions He discharges
in respect to two orders of men: those not yet in Christ and
those who are by faith united
to Him
1. His external function is that of bearing witness, or applying
the truth to the mind: to the
unconverted for the conviction of sin, the awakening of desire
for Jesus and His
salvation, and the revelation to penitence of the promises of
grace; to the believer for the
assurance of acceptance, the unfolding of the knowledge of
Christ, the application of the
several promises of grace, and all that belongs to His personal
instruction and guidance
through the Word. These administrations will reappear in detail
2. His internal function is the exercise of Divine power on the
heart, or within the soul: to
the unconverted in infusing the grace of penitence and the power
of faith, issuing in an
effectual inward conversion; to the believer in renewing the
soul by communicating a
new spiritual life, and carrying on the entire work of
sanctification to its utmost issues, as
we shall hereafter see
3. This distinction rules the phraseology of the New Testament:
a large class of passages
refer to the Holy Spirit's communications
The Spirit's administration is closely connected with the
institution of the Christian
Church. This also must have its appropriate place in the sequel.
Meanwhile it is necessary
and sufficient to indicate its bearing on the offices of the
Holy Ghost generally
1. The order of this connection must be noted. It is not first
the Church, and then the
Spirit
2. In that body He is supreme, as the Representative of the Holy
Trinity and of Christ its
Head. From the time when the interval of interregnum ended, and
the little company, who
had waited ten days without the Lord and without His Successor,
were filled with the
Holy Ghost, He has been in the Christian fellowship what Christ
was in the midst of His
disciples. He gave to its keeping the New Scriptures written
under His inspiration. He
calls, and consecrates, and orders its various ministry. He
regulates and animates all
worship. He dispenses His various gifts to all classes according
to His own will. He is not
the Head of the Church, but the Representative of its Head
3. That body is the instrument of His agency in general. It is
true that He is not limited to
this one organ. Wherever His word is He is, and that word is
never without His influence
And, even beyond the written word, and beyond the visible
community, He is a Divine
Presence everywhere. But it is in the congregation of Christ, in
the Church of God, that
He has set up the means of grace efficacious in His hands for
the conversion of sinners,
for the sealing and sanctifying of the saints, and for the
spread of the kingdom of heaven
upon earth. As the Spirit Who applies the work of Christ His
field is the world, but His
agents are His called and chosen and faithful people. This view
of His indwelling and
agency runs through the New Testament from Pentecost, the day of
the Holy Ghost,
down to the last reference in Scripture, when
What has been again and again directly or indirectly asserted
must be made emphatic in
conclusion: that the Holy Ghost, in the unity of the Father and
the Son, is a personal,
Divine agent in all His offices. In the economical Trinity
subordinate, and administering
the covenant of redemption which originated in God as the Father
and was ratified by
God as the Son, He is nevertheless Himself the Fullness of God.
As Christ is that fullness
I. There is a class of texts which assign to the Third Person a
peculiar relation to each of
the other Persons of the Trinity: these must always be connected
with passages which
contain predicates of His Divine Person as Subject, so to speak,
independent of those
other Persons. Under the doctrine of the Godhead the Personality
and Deity of the Holy
Ghost has been discussed: it is introduced here only in
reference to His Mediatorial
relation to the Christian economy. Though we believe, with the
ancient Church, that there
was, or rather is, an eternal procession from the Eternal
Father, the Head of the Holy
Trinity, and from the Eternal Son, the Only-begotten God, we
have most to do, in the
present section, with the Temporal Mission corresponding on
earth to the Eternal
Procession in heaven
1. The Holy Ghost is the Spirit of the First Person, proceeding
2. But with these must be connected other passages in which He
is named
II. There is a large class of texts which refer to the Holy
Ghost as a gift and an influence
sent down through the mediation of Christ and as its most
comprehensive result
1. The great majority of the testimonies of Scripture are of
this order. The Old-Testament
predictions, whether of symbol or of promise, speak of the
future gift as the searching
effect of fire, as water poured out, as a rushing wind, and, in
special relation to the Christ,
as an oil of unction. These four symbols were merged into the
great Personal Gift of the
Pentecost; but they govern the language of the entire
New-Testament, from the baptizing
2. But two things must be remembered here: over and above the
general principle, so
often referred to, of a mediatorial subordination of Two Persons
in the Holy Trinity
(1.) The phraseology used in the New Testament seems to
distinguish between the Person
and the Gift. The distinction is not constant, but it is nearly
so, between
(2.) The gifts of the Spirit are not always said to be poured
out by the Father on the Son,
and through Him on the Church: sometimes they are the
dispensations of the Holy Ghost
Himself. As the Son is both Priest and Sacrifice, so the Spirit
is both Gift and Giver. One
classical passage is sufficient to illustrate this.
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