FILLED WITH THE SPIRIT.
"Be filled with the Spirit." Eph. v: 18.
"Ye are complete (filled) in Him."
Col. ii: 10.
The emphatic word in both these verses "filled." It is the Greek plaroo
which means to fill full, so full that there will be no room left empty.
This is the thought which, with the assistance of the Holy Spirit, we desire
to impress in this message. It does not mean to have a measure of the Holy
Spirit, and to know a good deal of Christ, but to be wholly filled with,
and possessed by, the Holy Ghost, and utterly lost in the life and fullness
of Jesus. It is the completeness of the filling which constitutes the very
essence of the perfect blessing. A fountain half full will never become a
spring. A river half full will never become a water power. A heart half filled
will never know "the peace which passeth all understanding" and the power
which flows from the inmost being, as "rivers of living water."
I. THE NATURE OF THIS FILLING.
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It is all connected with a living Person. We are not filled with an influence;
we are not filled with a sensation; we are not filled with a set of ideas
and truths ; we are not filled with a blessing, but we are filled with a
Person. This is very strange and striking. It is wholly different from all
other teaching. Human systems of philosophy and religion all deal mainly
with intellectual truths, moral conditions or external acts. Greek philosophy
was a system of ideas; Confucianism is a system of morals; Judaism is a system
of laws and ceremonies; Christianity all centres in a living Person, and
its very essence is the indwelling life of Christ Himself. He was not only
its Head and Founder, but He is forever its living Heart and Substance, and
the Holy Spirit is simply the agent and channel through whom He enters, possesses
and operates in the consecrated heart. This reduces Christian life to great
simplicity. We do not require to get filled in a great many compartments,
and with a great many different experiences, ideas, or influences, but, in
the centre of our being to receive Him in His personal life and fullness,
and then He flows into every part and lives out His own life in all the
diversified experiences and activities of our manifold life.
In the one garden we plant the living seed, and water it from the same great
fountain, and lo! it springs up spontaneously with all the varied beauty
and fruitfulness of the lily and the rose, the foliage plant and the fruit
tree, the clinging jessamine and the spreading vine. We have simply to turn
on the fertilizing spring and nature's spontaneous life bursts forth in all
its beautiful variety.
This, by a simple figure, is Christ's theory of a deeper life. Our being
is the soil, He is the seed, His Holy Spirit is the Fountain of living Waters,
and "the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness,
goodness, faith, meekness, temperance."
Out in the great West lie millions of acres of barren land. They are a great
possibility, but practically fruitless and waste. Beneath the soil of these
Saharas lie undeveloped riches, all that is needed being one single element
that would develop them into fruitfulness. That element is water. Let the
mountain stream be turned into yonder valley, let the irrigating channels
spread their network over all their vast fields, and lo! you behold a paradise,
as lovely as the streets of Salt Lake City or some of the sweet villages
and towns of California, with a luxuriance of beauty such as none of our
eastern lands can show. The soil was empty and barren until it became filled
with the seed and the springs, and then the transformation sprang up with
spontaneous luxuriance. So the human heart is not self-constituted or
self-sufficient; it is a bare and barren possibility. It may struggle its
best to develop itself, but it will only develop, as those Western deserts
the sage brush and stunted palm which cover them to-day. But give it two
things. Drop into that soil the living Christ, and flood it with the water
of the Spirit's fullness, and lo! it reaches the realization of its true
idea, and the promise of His own simple parable is perfectly fulfilled,"He
that abideth in me and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit; for
apart from me ye can do nothing."
Shall we then realize, beloved, that God has made each of us, not a
self-contained world of power and perfection, but simply a capacity to receive
Him, a shell to hold His fullness, a soil to receive His Living Seed and
fertilizing streams, and to produce, in union with Him, the fruits of grace?
And shall we realize, on the other hand, that God has so constituted Christ
and the Holy Spirit, who is just the Spirit of Christ, as perfectly to meet
and satisfy the capacities and possibilities of our being; so that, while
we are nothing without Him, His life and grace equally require us for their
full development? Into His living Son God has poured all His fullness, so
that "in Him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily." The Holy Spirit
has now become the great Reservoir and system of distributing pipes and channels
through which His fullness flows into us, and there is nothing which God
requires of a man, or which man can ever need in the varied exigencies of
life but Christ possesses for us, and we may have an exact adjustment to
our every need, by simply receiving Him. This is the meaning of that beautiful
expression, "Of His fullness have all we received, even grace for grace.
For the law was given by Moses, but grace and reality came by Jesus Christ."
All other systems gave us merely the ideas of things or the commandments
or laws which require them of us. But Christ brings the power to realize
them and is Himself the reality and substance in our hearts and lives. He
is the Great Typical Man. But He is more than a pattern or a type, exhibiting
what we ought to be, and demanding our imitation. He is also the Living Head
and Progenitor of the very life which He Himself exhibits, begetting it in
each of us by a living impartation of His very being, and reproducing Himself
in us by the very power of His own life, and then feeding and nourishing
this life by the Holy Spirit out of His own being.
Christ's Person, therefore, is far more than a pattern. It is a power, a
seed, a spring of Living Water, nay, the very substance and support of the
life He requires of us.
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This Person is the true fullness of every part of our life. The idea of filling
implies universality and completeness in the range within which He fills
us. We are not filled unless we are filled in every part. This is just what
Christ proposes to do in our full salvation.
He fills all the requirements of our salvation, all the conditions involved
in connection with our redemption, reconciliation, justification. He just
takes the indictment against us and fills it in with His own precious atonement,
and in His own blood writes, "Settled forever." He takes the broken law and
the sad and humiliating record of our failures, omissions and transgressions,
and fills it up with its own perfect righteousness and writes over all our
record, "Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that
believeth," "Accepted in the Beloved;" "He was made sin for us who knew no
sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him."
And so "we are complete in Him." "By one offering He hath perfected forever
them that are sanctified," and we are as fully saved as if we had never
sinned.
Now, beloved, the great thing is to realize right here that this is complete,
and, at the very threshold, to begin to enter into the fullness of Christ
by recognizing ourselves as fully justified and forever saved from all past
sin and transgression through the complete redemption of Jesus Christ. The
lack of fullness in our subsequent experience is largely due to doubts and
limitations which we allow to enter here. Christ's work for our redemption
was finished, and when we accept it, it is a complete and eternal
salvation.
Again, Christ fills the deeper need of sanctification. He has provided for
this in His atonement and in the resources of His grace. It is all wrapped
up in Him, and must be received as a free and perfect gift through Him alone.
"For of Him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us sanctification."
Is sanctification the death of the sinful self? Well, this has been crucified
with Him already upon the Cross, and we have but to hand it over to Him in
unreserved committal, and He will slay it and bury it forever in His grave.
Is sanctification a new life of purity, righteousness, peace and joy in the
Holy Ghost? Still more emphatically is it true that Christ Himself must be
our life, our peace, our purity, and our full and overflowing joy?
Again, He is the fullness of our heart life. There is no place so sacred
to us as our affections, no place so claimed by the great adversary of our
souls, and so impossible to regulate by our own power and will. But Christ
will give us His heart as well as His Spirit, and will love in us with the
love which loves "the Lord our God with all our heart and soul and strength
and mind," and which loves "one another even as He has loved us." Oh, how
blessed that we have One who will really fill all the delicate and infinitely
difficult and varied requirements of these sensibilities and affections,
which carry with them such a world of possibility for our own or others'
weal or woe.
Again, Christ will fill all the needs of our intellectual life. Our mental
capacities will never know their full wealth of power and spiritual effectiveness
until they become simply the vessels of His quickening life, and these brains
of ours are laid at His feet simply as the censers which are to hold His
holy fire. He will think in us, remember in us, judge in us, impart definiteness
and clearness to our conceptions of truth, give us the tongue of fire, the
illustration that both illuminates and melts, the accent and tone of
persuasiveness and sympathy, the power of quick expression and utterance,
and all the equipment necessary to make us workmen "that need not to be ashamed,
rightly dividing the word of truth." Not of course without diligent and faithful
attention to His wise and holy teaching, as He leads us in His work to see
at once our own shortcomings and His full purpose for us. We must be taught
of God, and teaching is sometimes very gradual, and even slow; but "He will
guide us into all truth," and "perfect that which concerneth" our education
and preparation for His work and will; and the mind that the Holy Spirit
quickens and uses shall accomplish results for God which all the brilliancy
of human genius and the scholarship of human learning can never approach.
Again, He will fill the needs of our body, for His body has been constituted,
by the resurrection from the dead, a perpetual source of physical energy,
sufficient for every member of His body the church, and adapted to every
physical function and every test that comes in the pressure of human life,
and the experience of a world where every step is beset with the elements
of disease, suffering and physical danger. Christ is the true life of a redeemed
body, and His Holy Spirit is able so to quicken these mortal bodies, as He
dwells within us, that they shall receive a supernatural vigor directly derived
from our exalted Head.
Again, Christ will fill all the situations of providence and all the needs
that arise in our secular callings and the circumstances of our daily life.
There is not one of them that may not be recognized as coming from Him, and
meant to prove His all-sufficiency in some new direction. Oh, had we the
faith to see God in everything as it meets us day by day, every chapter of
life's history would be a new story of the romance of heavenly love in its
magical power to transform darkness into light, difficulty into triumph,
sorrow into joy, and the earthly into the heavenly; and Christ would be enabled
to manifest Himself in His grace and power to innumerable witnesses, who
never hear of Him from a pulpit, or read the story of His grace in anything
else but human lives, in whom they could thus behold Him.
Again, Christ will fill our capacities for happiness. He is the fullness
of our peace and joy. He is the true portion of the souls that He has made;
and, wholly filled with Him, there is no room for either care or fear.
Finally, Christ will fill that fundamental need on which every other experience
of His fullness depends, namely, the faith that receives Him. This too, is
but the life of Christ within us, and our highest part in the life of faith
is to so abandon even our highest and hardest efforts to trust God, and so
boldly venture that we can receive the very faith of God and claim the "all
things that are possible to him that believeth."
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To be filled with Christ is not only to be filled with the Divine life in
every part, but it is to be filled every moment. It is to take Him into the
successive instants of our conscious existence and to abide in His fullness.
For this is not a reservoir but a spring. It is a life which is continual,
active and ever passing on with an outflow as necessary as its inflow, and
if we do not perpetually draw the fresh supply from the living fountain,
we shall either grow stagnant or empty. It is, therefore, not so much a perpetual
fullness as a perpetual filling.
It is true there are periodical experiences of spiritual elevation which
are part of God's plan for our life in Christ, and are designed no doubt
to lift us to a higher plane of abiding union with Him. There are the Pentecosts
and second Pentecosts, the great freshets and flood-tides, all of which have
their necessary place in the spiritual economy. But there is the continual
receiving, breath by breath and moment by moment, between these long intervals
and more marked experiences, which is even more needful to spiritual
steadfastness and healthfulness. God would have us alive to all His approaches,
and open to all the "precious things of heaven, the dew, and the deep that
coucheth beneath, the precious fruits brought forth by the sun, the precious
things put forth by the moon, the precious things of the earth and the fullness
thereof." Such lives will find that there is no moment of existence, and
no part of our being which may not be some minister of God and draw some
blessing from Him.
II. THE EFFECTS OF THE DIVINE FILLING.
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It is the secret of holiness. There is a measure of the Holy Spirit's life
in every regenerate soul, but it is when every part of our being is filled
with His love and possessed for His glory that we are wholly sanctified,
and it is this divine fullness which excludes and keeps out the power of
sin and self, even as it was the descending cloud upon the tabernacle which
left no room for Moses within.
Would you have continual purity of heart and thought and feeling, and entire
conformity to the will of God? "Be filled with the Spirit;" "Of his fullness
have we received, even grace for grace." Let the heavenly water flow into
every channel of irrigation and by every garden bed and plant, until all
the graces of our Christian life shall be replenished by His grace, and bloom
like the garden of the Lord. Only abide in Him and have His abiding, and
you shall bring forth all the fruit of the Spirit.
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It is the secret of happiness. A heart half full is only full enough to make
it conscious of its lack. It is when the cattle are filled that they lie
down in the green pastures. "These things have I spoken unto you that my
joy might remain in you and that your joy might be full."
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It is the secret of power. The electric current can so fill a little wire
that it will become a force to turn the great wheels of the factory, and
the overflowing sluice of the village stream has power enough to run a score
of factories all along the river banks, but it is simply because it is
overflowing. Only full hearts accomplish effectual work for God. Only the
overflow of our blessing blesses others.
III. THE CONDITIONS OF BEING FILLED.
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He has promised to fill the hungry. "Blessed are they which do hunger and
thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled." Many who read these
lines are no doubt longing for this experience and thinking with discouragement
of how far short they come. Dear friend, this deep desire is the very beginning
of the blessing you seek, and already the Holy Spirit is at work preparing
your heart for the answer to your cry. No soul finds the fullness of Jesus
so speedily as the one that is most deeply conscious of its failure and its
needs. Thank God for that intense desire that will not let you rest short
of His blessing.
An eastern caravan was overtaken once in the desert with the failure of the
supply of water. The accustomed fountains were all dried, the oasis was a
desert, and they halted an hour before sunset to find, after a day of scorching
heat, that they were perishing for want of water. Vainly they explored the
usual wells, for they were all dry. Dismay was upon all faces and despair
in all hearts, when one of the ancient men approached the sheik and counselled
him to unloose two beautiful harts that he was conveying home as a present
to his bride, and let them scour the desert in search of water. Their tongues
were protruding with thirst, and their bosoms heaving with distress. But
as they were led out to the borders of the camp and then set free on the
boundless plain, they lifted up their heads on high, and sniffed the air
with distended nostrils, and then, with unerring instinct, with course as
straight as an arrow, and speed as swift as the wind, they darted off across
the desert. Swift horsemen followed close behind, and an hour or two later
hastened back with the glad tidings that water had been found, and the camp
moved with shouts of rejoicing to the happily discovered fountains.
So still there is a hart that can ever find the springs of living water.
It is the heart that hungers and thirsts for God. Thank God, beloved, if
you have this deep spiritual instinct in your soul! Follow it as it leads
you to the Throne of grace, to wait, and cry, and receive, until you can
say, "Satisfied with favor and full with the blessing of the Lord."
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The empty are always filled. "He hath filled the hungry with good things,
but the rich He hath sent empty away." "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for
theirs is the kingdom of heaven." "Having nothing and yet possessing all
things." This is the paradox of grace. We never can be filled until we have
room for God. Every great blessing begins with a great sacrifice, a great
severance, a great dispossessing. "He brought them out that He might bring
them in." Abraham must let Lot have his choice before he can have his full
inheritance. Isaac must be offered on Mount Moriah before God can make it
the seat of His future temple. Moses must let go the honors and prospects
of his Egyptian princedom before he can receive his great commission, the
lasting honor of his life work. The heart must be emptied of self and the
world before it can be filled with Jesus and the Holy Ghost. Probably each
of us is as full as we can hold, because the places God does not fill are
crammed with something else and God finds no room. Are we willing to be emptied?
"Make the valley full of ditches," is still the prophet's command, "and the
valley shall be filled with water." Are we in the valley of humiliation,
and have we opened in the valley the still deeper ditches of need and conscious
insufficiency? In proportion as we can say, "I am not sufficient,"
we shall be able to add, "My sufficiency is of God." Have we not only emptied
out the old pirate self-will and his crew of worldliness and sin, but also
all the cargo of our own strength, faith and religious experience, and made
room for Christ to be our All and in all always? Do we habitually cease from
ourselves in everything and thus make it necessary for God to assume the
responsibility and supply the proficiency, and in this spirit of
self-renunciation and absolute dependence are we growing poorer and richer
every day?
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The open heart shall be filled. "Open thy mouth wide and I will fill it."
We know what it is for the flower-cup to close its petals and also to open
to the sunlight, the dew and the refreshing shower. The heart has its
susceptibilities and receptive sensibilities, but often it is so tightened
up with unbelief, doubt, fear, and self-consciousness that it cannot take
in the love which God is waiting to pour out. Do we not know what it is to
meet people, with a heart full of love, and find them all tightened up and
heart-bound? We become conscious at once of the repulsion and feel all the
fountains of our love obstructed and rolled back again upon our own aching
hearts. They cannot receive us. It is like the mother who found her long-lost
child after years of separation, but the child could not recognize the mother,
and as she tried to awaken its response and to pour out the full tides of
her bursting heart and found no recognition, but only the dull stare of
strangeness and suspicion, and all her caresses and tender overflowings of
affection rejected and met with cold indifference and even recoil, her heart
broke in grief and disappointment, and she wept and sobbed in agony.
The heart of God is pouring out His love to many a soul who cannot, will
not, take it in. It does not know its Father. His face is strange. There
seems no avenue to the dull earthly heart, and even the love of God has cause
to exclaim, "How often would I have gathered you as a hen gathereth her brood
under her wings, and ye would not!" I have seen a man dying for months simply
because he could not swallow more than a single grain of food or spray of
moisture. Many a Christian's spiritual larynx is just as shrunken, and millions
are starving to death in the midst of plenty, because their hearts are not
open to receive God. There must be confidence, trust, the love that draws
near and takes the faith that accepts and receives, and the quietness of
spirit that stays long enough open to be wholly filled.
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Again, we are filled by waiting upon the Lord in prayer, and especially in
continued and persevering prayer. It was after they had waited upon the Lord
that they were all filled with the Holy Ghost. Prayer is not only an asking
but also a receiving. Many of us do not wait long enough before the Lord
to get filled. You can take your breakfast in half an hour, but you cannot
be filled with the Holy Spirit as quickly. There should be seasons of special
waiting upon the Lord for this very purpose, and then there should be a ceaseless
abiding in the Lord for the quiet replenishing, moment by moment. The one
may be compared to the great rain storms that flood the river, and the other
to the ceaseless moisture of the air and the morning and evening dews. No
child of God who, in a proper spirit, and with an entire self-surrender and
trust, waits upon God for the full baptism of His Holy Ghost, will ever be
disappointed, but we shall surely go forth from such seasons refreshed and
overflowing with the love and life of God, and will find that special influences
of power and blessing will follow such seasons, both in our own lives and
the lives of others.
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Service for God and for others is perhaps the most effectual condition of
receiving continually the fullness of the Spirit. As we pour out the blessing
God will pour it in. We have a pump in one of our institutions which is worked
by steam. We have a way of always knowing when the reservoir on the roof
is full. There is a little tell-tale downstairs which begins to run and a
little bell to ring. Then we know that the overflow has begun, and the signal
has sounded. As long as the pump is silent we know that it is not full, but
that little signal and the accompanying stream running from the open tap
are as good as a telegram from the distant roof. So we can always tell in
the Church of God when it is not full. There are some Christians whose bell
only rings once in a very long time and whose overflow is so feeble and
infrequent that it would scarcely furnish one good drink to a poor thirsty
wayfarer.
Beloved, let us keep pouring out more of God's blessing and see if He will
not more abundantly pour in the floods of His grace. Let us be very practical
about this. Every blessing that we have received from God is a sacred trust,
and it will be continued only as we use it for Him. Our salvation is not
our own; it belongs to every perishing soul on the face of the globe who
has not yet had the opportunity of accepting Jesus. Our sanctification and
our great secret of the fullness of Jesus is a sacred trust for every Christian
who has not yet received the fullness of God, and if we do not let this light
shine, it will surely become obscure and we will not be able to tell out
the story of our blessing. Our healing belongs to some sufferer. Our every
experience is adjusted to some heart, and will enable us to meet some brother's
need if we are but faithful to the opportunities of God's providence. Oh,
how clear a truth becomes to us when we are trying to tell it to others!
Oh, how real the baptism of the Holy Ghost when we are kneeling by another's
side to claim it for them! Oh, how the streams of Christ's healing flow through
our very flesh as we are leading some poor sufferer into the truth! Oh, how
the joy of our salvation swells as we see it spring in the heart that we
have just led to the fountain! Oh, the fullness that God is longing to share
with every vessel that has room to receive it and readiness to give! As we
have therefore received His fullness let us pass it on, drinking as the living
waters flow through our hands, until we shall realize in some measure, the
largeness and blessedness of the great promise of the Lord, "If any man thirst,
let him come unto Me and drink. He that believeth on Me (as the Scripture
saith), out of his inmost being shall flow rivers of. living water."
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