Holy
Spirit
I. The “personhood” of the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is a
personal being just as the Father and the Son. The Spirit is not
an impersonal “it” or simply an influence.
A. The Spirit has personal
characteristics.
1. He has intelligence
(1 Cor.2:10-11).
2. He has emotions (Eph.4:30
– “Do not grieve the Holy Spirit”).
3. He has will (1 Cor.2:11).
B. The Spirit acts in
personal ways.
1. He teaches us (John
14:26).
2. He commands (Acts 8:29).
3. He intercedes for us
in prayer (Rom.8:26).
C. The Spirit is described
in personal terms grammatically. The Greek word for Spirit (pneuma)
is neuter in gender, yet the Bible uses masculine pronouns (“He,”
“Him”) to refer to the Spirit (John 16:13-14; 15:26; 16:7-8. To
be grammatically correct, personal neuter pronouns (“it”) would
be expected.
II. The deity of the Holy Spirit
A. He has the names and
titles of deity.
1. Yahweh – What the Lord
(Yahweh) said in Is.6:8-13 is ascribed to the Holy Spirit in Acts
28:25.
2. Spirit of God (Rom.8:9,14;
1 Cor.2:11; 12:3; Eph.4:30)
B. He possesses incommunicable
attributes.
1. Self-existence (Rom.8:2)
2. Omnipresence (Ps.139:7
ff)
C. He performs incommunicable
works (no one but God can do them).
1. Creation (Gen.1:2)
2. Resurrection (Rom.8:11)
D. He is equated with
deity.
1. Acts 5:3,4 – a lie to
Spirit equals lie to God
2. 2 Cor.3:17,18 – “The
Lord is the Spirit”
III. The Holy Spirit’s role prior to the Church
Age
A. He took part in creation
(Gen.1:2; Job 33:4; Psalm 104:30).
B. He guided and protected
Israel (Isaiah 63:10-14).
C. He spoke through prophets
to produce Scripture (1 Peter 1:11: 2 Peter 1:20,21).
D. He selectively and
conditionally indwelt certain people in the Old Testament (Joseph
– Gen.41:38; Joshua – Num.27:18; Saul – 1 Sam.10:9,10; David –
1 Sam.16:13 etc.). The Spirit’s indwelling was specifically related
to enabling someone to do a particular task. The Holy Spirit could
cease to indwell a person because of their disobedience. The Spirit
left Saul (1 Sam.16:14). When David sinned he pled that the Spirit
not be taken from him (Psalm 51:11).
E. He was the empowering
Agent in Christ’s earthly life.
1. He was the Agent of
Christ’s virgin birth (Luke 1:35).
2. He empowered Christ’s
ministry (Matt.12:28; Luke 4:1,18).
3. He was the Agent of
Christ’s resurrection (Rom.1:4; 8:11).
IV. The Holy Spirit’s role in the Church Age
A. He is central in salvation
(How people are saved).
1. He directs and enables
evangelistic efforts (Philip/Ethiopian – Acts 8:26,29; Great Commission
– Acts 1:8).
2. He convicts the unbeliever
of sin (John 16:8-11).
3. He regenerates (saves)
the person.
a. He cleanses the person
from sin and gives them the new nature (Titus 3:5).
b. As He performs this
spiritual “new birth,” the person enters “the kingdom of God”
(=eternal life – John 3:3-7,16).
4. He seals (eternally
secures) the person. The presence of the Holy Spirit is the “seal”
or guarantee that a person is saved and will remain saved (Eph.1:13).
5. He baptizes (places)
the person into the body of Christ.
a. What is the baptism
of the Holy Spirit?
- It is the Spirit’s work
of uniting us with Christ – spiritually identifying us with Christ’s
death, burial and resurrection (Rom.6:3-5).
- It is the Spirit’s work
of incorporating us into the universal church (=the “body of Christ”
– all church age believers – 1 Cor.12:13).
b. When is the baptism
of the Spirit?
- In each believer it occurs
once and for all at their conversion (1 Cor.12:13; Gal.3:26-28).
- In history it is limited
to church age believers (predicted – Acts 1:5; accomplished –
1 Cor.12:13).
- Note: Exceptions – On
the Day of Pentecost when the church age began, both new and existing
believers were baptized by the Spirit (Acts 1:5; 11:15,16). Also
in 2 other cases in the early church it seems the Spirit was not
given to believers until an apostle was present (Acts 8:14-17;
19:1-6).
B. He is central in sanctification
(How saved people grow).
1. He indwells believers.
a. The Spirit indwells
all believers in this age (Rom.5:5; 8:9; 1 Cor.3:16; 6:19).
(unlike the Old Testament where the Spirit indwelt some)
b. The Spirit indwells
believers permanently in this age (John 14:16). (unlike
the Old Testament where the Spirit could depart)
c. The Spirit’s indwelling
is the basis for His other ministries in believer’s lives. (He
teaches/illumines us about scripture – John 16:13; He aids in
prayer – Rom.8:26; He assures us of our salvation – Rom.8:16;
He enables us to grow – see “filling” below – Eph.5:18).
2. He “fills” believers.
- The “filling of the
Spirit” describes the crucial work of God enabling the believer
to live a transformed life. The only way we grow spiritually is
by the empowering work of God (1 Peter 1:3). It is specifically
the ministry of the Holy Spirit that gives a Christian the capability
of change and growth in righteousness (by the Spirit…”
– putting to death the deeds of the body” – Rom.8:13; the fruit
of the Spirit…” – Gal.5:22,23).
- Spiritual growth us
a issue of control. We are either controlled by our self-centered
flesh or by the Holy Spirit who indwells us (Rom.8:4-11; Gal.5:16,17).
Ephesians 5:18 describes this controlling/empowering ministry
of Spirit as the “filling” of the Spirit. “Filling” is a metaphor
(picture) of control. We can be filled/controlled by fleshly desires
(like alcohol) or be filled/controlled by the Spirit (Eph.5:18).
- Although it’s the Spirit’s
power that is at work, the believer must choose to be controlled/empowered
by the Spirit. It is a command to “Be filled” and likewise to
“Walk in the Spirit” (Gal.5:16). The Spirit’s presence is permanent
(indwelling) but we must repeatedly choose to yield to God to
experience the Spirit’s transforming power to change and grow
us (filling). In actual experience, “walking in the Spirit” or
“being filled with the Spirit” means living the Christian life
(facing temptations, making decisions, etc.) with a conscious
dependence on the Holy Spirit. He is the one who enable us – producing
godly “fruits” (Gal.5:22,23).
3. He gives spiritual gifts
to believers.
a. Where do I find out
about spiritual gifts? Four key passages describe spiritual gifts:
Romans 12:3-8; 1 Corinthians 12; Ephesians 4:7-16; 1 Peter 4:10,11.
b. What are spiritual
gifts?
1) Definition: Spiritual
gifts are God-given abilities to serve. The Greek word for spiritual
gift (charisma) is a form of the word “grace.” So these special
abilities are privileges. God graciously enables all believers
to serve in spiritual ministry.
2) Spiritual gifts are
not particular positions. Youth ministry leader or nursery
worker are not gifts although those ministries definitely can
put to use spiritual gifts such as teaching, serving, etc.
3) Spiritual gifts are
not the same as natural talent (music ability or mechanical
aptitude, etc.) although God may often give spiritual gifts that
make use of natural abilities. A musician may have the gift of
encouragement. An experienced school teacher may have the gift
of teaching, etc.
c. How do we get spiritual
gifts?
1) The Giver – The Holy
Spirit in particular imparts these special abilities (1 Cor.12:7-11).
But it is also accurate to say that they are “Christ’s gifts”
to the church (Eph.4:7,8,10).
2) The Time – We receive
spiritual gifts when we trust Christ as Savior. That’s when we
received the Spirit; that’s when we became part of the body of
Christ.
3) The Recipients – Each
believer has at least one but perhaps several gifts.
d. What is the purpose
of spiritual gifts?
1) Spiritual gifts accomplish
spiritual ministry that God desires.
2) Spiritual gifts equip
others to minister (Eph.4:12).
3) Spiritual gifts glorify
God (1 Pet.4:11).
e. What are the different
spiritual gifts?
1) Some of the gifts listed
seem to have been temporary, serving to establish the early church
and to verify the gospel to people as Christianity began (Eph.2:20;
Heb.2:3,4 – See supplement “The Charismatic Question” for more
detail.). The temporary sign gifts included apostleship, healing,
miracle-working, tongues, interpretation of tongues, etc. Also
temporary were the word of wisdom, word of knowledge, and prophecy
– by which God gave direct revelation to man. These gifts were
needed before the New Testament was complete. They were also seemingly
the gifts needed to write the New Testament.
2) Gifts that doubtless
exist today include teaching, helps (serving), giving, administration
(leadership), showing mercy, evangelism, pastor-teacher (shepherding)
and exhortation. These gifts are crucial to the ongoing function
of the church throughout this age.
f. How do we discover
and use our spiritual gift(s)?
1) We should concentrate
on meeting needs, not pin-pointing our gifts. Ministry experience
may expose unused gifts.
2) We should allow the
advice of other mature Christians to guide us into areas of service
for which we are suited and away from areas for which we are not.
3) We should not use spiritual
gifts as an excuse to avoid certain ministries. Christians are
universally told to do some types of ministry (Show mercy
– James 2:13; 3:17; Evangelize – Acts 1:8; Exhort one another
– Heb.3:13; 10:25; Give – 2 Cor.8:7) which are also the specific
spiritual gifts of some Christians (Mercy – Rom.12:8; Evangelist
– Eph.4:11; Exhortation – Rom.12:8; Giving – Rom.12:8).
4) We must realize that
spiritual gifts do not benefit others automatically.
- We must obediently
put our gift(s) to use. No one benefits if we don’t use them (Rom.12:6-8;
1 Pet.4:10,11).
- We must be diligent
to become effective in using our gift (1 Tim.4:14; 2 Tim.1:6,7).
- We must use our gifts
with proper attitudes (Rom.12:8; 1 Pet.4:11) and at appropriate
times and places (1 Cor.14:9-12,22,23,40). Otherwise they can
be worthless or even harmful to God’s purposes.
V. The Holy Spirit’s role in the End Times
A. In the 7-year Tribulation
Period
1. In unbelievers – The
Holy Spirit will be instrumental in the salvation of Israelites
at the close of the tribulation (Zech.12:10).
2. In believers – The Holy
Spirit will provide special enablement for spiritual tasks as
in Old Testament times (Acts 2:17-21).
B. In the Millennium
1. In believers – The Holy
Spirit will enable believing Israelites to live righteously (Ezek.36:27).
2. In Christ – The Holy
Spirit will be active in Christ’s righteous rule (Isa.11:2).