Chapter 5
The Gift of the Spirit
WHEN Christ gave His disciples the promise of the Spirit, He was nearing the close of His
earthly ministry. He was standing in the shadow of the cross, with a full realization of
the load of guilt that was to rest upon Him as the Sin Bearer. Before offering Himself as
the sacrificial victim, He instructed His disciples regarding a most essential and
complete gift which He was to bestow upon His followers--the gift that would bring within
their reach the boundless resources of His grace. "I will pray the Father," He
said, "and He shall give you another Comforter, that He may abide with you forever;
even the Spirit of truth; whom the world cannot receive, because it seeth Him not, neither
knoweth Him: but ye know Him; for He dwelleth with you, and shall be in you." John
14:16, 17. The Saviour was pointing forward to the time when the Holy Spirit should come
to do a mighty work as His representative. The evil that had been accumulating for
centuries was to be resisted by the divine power of the Holy Spirit.
What was the result of the outpouring of the Spirit on the Day of Pentecost? The glad
tidings of a risen Saviour were carried to the uttermost parts of the inhabited world. As
the disciples proclaimed the message of redeeming grace, hearts yielded to the power of
this message. The church beheld converts flocking to her from all directions. Backsliders
were reconverted. Sinners united with believers in seeking the pearl of great price. Some
who had been the bitterest opponents of the gospel became its champions. The prophecy was
fulfilled, "He that is feeble. . . shall be as David; and the house of David . . . as
the angel of the Lord." Zechariah 12:8. Every Christian saw in his brother a
revelation of divine love and benevolence. One interest prevailed; one subject of
emulation swallowed up all others. The ambition of the believers was to reveal the
likeness of Christ's character and to labor for the enlargement of His kingdom.
"With great power gave the apostles witness of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus:
and great grace was upon them all." Acts 4:33. Under their labors were added to the
church chosen men, who, receiving the word of truth, consecrated their lives to the work
of giving to others the hope that filled their hearts with peace and joy. They could not
be restrained or intimidated by threatenings. The Lord spoke through them, and as they
went from place to place, the poor had the gospel preached to them, and miracles of divine
grace were wrought.
So mightily can God work when men give themselves up to the control of His Spirit.
The promise of the Holy Spirit is not limited to any age or to any race. Christ declared
that the divine influence of His Spirit was to be with His followers unto the end. From
the Day of Pentecost to the present time, the Comforter has been sent to all who have
yielded themselves fully to the Lord and to His service. To all who have accepted Christ
as a personal Saviour, the Holy Spirit has come as a counselor, sanctifier, guide, and
witness. The more closely believers have walked with God, the more clearly and powerfully
have they testified of their Redeemer's love and of His saving grace. The men and women
who through the long centuries of persecution and trial enjoyed a large measure of the
presence of the Spirit in their lives, have stood as signs and wonders in the world.
Before angels and men they have revealed the transforming power of redeeming love.
Those who at Pentecost were endued with power from on high, were not thereby freed from
further temptation and trial. As they witnessed for truth and righteousness they were
repeatedly assailed by the enemy of all truth, who sought to rob them of their Christian
experience. They were compelled to strive with all their God-given powers to reach the
measure of the stature of men and women in Christ Jesus. Daily they prayed for fresh
supplies of grace, that they might reach higher and still higher toward perfection. Under
the Holy Spirit's working even the weakest, by exercising faith in God, learned to improve
their entrusted powers and to become sanctified, refined, and ennobled. As in humility
they submitted to the molding influence of the Holy Spirit, they received of the fullness
of the Godhead and were fashioned in the likeness of the divine.
The lapse of time has wrought no change in Christ's parting promise to send the Holy
Spirit as His representative. It is not because of any restriction on the part of God that
the riches of His grace do not flow earthward to men. If the fulfillment of the promise is
not seen as it might be, it is because the promise is not appreciated as it should be. If
all were willing, all would be filled with the Spirit. Wherever the need of the Holy
Spirit is a matter little thought of, there is seen spiritual drought, spiritual darkness,
spiritual declension and death. Whenever minor matters occupy the attention, the divine
power which is necessary for the growth and prosperity of the church, and which would
bring all other blessings in its train, is lacking, though offered in infinite plenitude.
Since this is the means by which we are to receive power, why do we not hunger and thirst
for the gift of the Spirit? Why do we not talk of it, pray for it, and preach concerning
it? The Lord is more willing to give the Holy Spirit to those who serve Him than parents
are to give good gifts to their children. For the daily baptism of the Spirit every worker
should offer his petition to God. Companies of Christian workers should gather to ask for
special help, for heavenly wisdom, that they may know how to plan and execute wisely.
Especially should they pray that God will baptize His chosen ambassadors in mission fields
with a rich measure of His Spirit. The presence of the Spirit with God's workers will give
the proclamation of truth a power that not all the honor or glory of the world could give.
With the consecrated worker for God, in whatever place he may be, the Holy Spirit abides.
The words spoken to the disciples are spoken also to us. The Comforter is ours as well as
theirs. The Spirit furnishes the strength that sustains striving, wrestling souls in every
emergency, amidst the hatred of the world, and the realization of their own failures and
mistakes. In sorrow and affliction, when the outlook seems dark and the future perplexing,
and we feel helpless and alone,--these are the times when, in answer to the prayer of
faith, the Holy Spirit brings comfort to the heart.
It is not a conclusive evidence that a man is a Christian because he manifests spiritual
ecstasy under extraordinary circumstances. Holiness is not rapture: it is an entire
surrender of the will to God; it is living by every word that proceeds from the mouth of
God; it is doing the will of our heavenly Father; it is trusting God in trial, in darkness
as well as in the light; it is walking by faith and not by sight; it is relying on God
with unquestioning confidence, and resting in His love.
It is not essential for us to be able to define just what the Holy Spirit is. Christ tells
us that the Spirit is the Comforter, "the Spirit of truth, which proceedeth from the
Father." It is plainly declared regarding the Holy Spirit that, in His work of
guiding men into all truth, "He shall not speak of Himself." John 15:26; 16:13.
The nature of the Holy Spirit is a mystery. Men cannot explain it, because the Lord has
not revealed it to them. Men having fanciful views may bring together passages of
Scripture and put a human construction on them, but the acceptance of these views will not
strengthen the church. Regarding such mysteries, which are too deep for human
understanding, silence is golden.
The office of the Holy Spirit is distinctly specified in the words of Christ: "When
He is come, He will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment."
John 16:8. It is the Holy Spirit that convicts of sin. If the sinner responds to the
quickening influence of the Spirit, he will be brought to repentance and aroused to the
importance of obeying the divine requirements.
To the repentant sinner, hungering and thirsting for righteousness, the Holy Spirit
reveals the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world. "He shall receive of
Mine, and shall show it unto you," Christ said. "He shall teach you all things,
and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you." John
16:14; 14:26.
The Spirit is given as a regenerating agency, to make effectual the salvation wrought by
the death of our Redeemer. The Spirit is constantly seeking to draw the attention of men
to the great offering that was made on the cross of Calvary, to unfold to the world the
love of God, and to open to the convicted soul the precious things of the Scriptures.
Having brought conviction of sin, and presented before the mind the standard of
righteousness, the Holy Spirit withdraws the affections from the things of this earth and
fills the soul with a desire for holiness. "He will guide you into all truth"
(John 16:13), the Saviour declared. If men are willing to be molded, there will be brought
about a sanctification of the whole being. The Spirit will take the things of God and
stamp them on the soul. By His power the way of life will be made so plain that none need
err therein.
From the beginning, God has been working by His Holy Spirit through human
instrumentalities for the accomplishment of His purpose in behalf of the fallen race. This
was manifest in the lives of the patriarchs. To the church in the wilderness also, in the
time of Moses, God gave His "good Spirit to instruct them." Nehemiah 9:20. And
in the days of the apostles He wrought mightily for His church through the agency of the
Holy Spirit. The same power that sustained the patriarchs, that gave Caleb and Joshua
faith and courage, and that made the work of the apostolic church effective, has upheld
God's faithful children in every succeeding age. It was through the power of the Holy
Spirit that during the Dark Ages the Waldensian Christians helped to prepare the way for
the Reformation. It was the same power that made successful the efforts of the noble men
and women who pioneered the way for the establishment of modern missions and for the
translation of the Bible into the languages and dialects of all nations and peoples.
And today God is still using His church to make known His purpose in the earth. Today the
heralds of the cross are going from city to city, and from land to land, preparing the way
for the second advent of Christ. The standard of God's law is being exalted. The Spirit of
the Almighty is moving upon men's hearts, and those who respond to its influence become
witnesses for God and His truth. In many places consecrated men and women may be seen
communicating to others the light that has made plain to them the way of salvation through
Christ. And as they continue to let their light shine, as did those who were baptized with
the Spirit on the Day of Pentecost, they receive more and still more of the Spirit's
power. Thus the earth is to be lightened with the glory of God.
On the other hand, there are some who, instead of wisely improving present opportunities,
are idly waiting for some special season of spiritual refreshing by which their ability to
enlighten others will be greatly increased. They neglect present duties and privileges,
and allow their light to burn dim, while they look forward to a time when, without any
effort on their part, they will be made the recipients of special blessing, by which they
will be transformed and fitted for service.
It is true that in the time of the end, when God's work in the earth is closing, the
earnest efforts put forth by consecrated believers under the guidance of the Holy Spirit
are to be accompanied by special tokens of divine favor. Under the figure of the early and
the latter rain, that falls in Eastern lands at seedtime and harvest, the Hebrew prophets
foretold the bestowal of spiritual grace in extraordinary measure upon God's church. The
outpouring of the Spirit in the days of the apostles was the beginning of the early, or
former, rain, and glorious was the result. To the end of time the presence of the Spirit
is to abide with the true church.
But near the close of earth's harvest, a special bestowal of spiritual grace is promised
to prepare the church for the coming of the Son of man. This outpouring of the Spirit is
likened to the falling of the latter rain; and it is for this added power that Christians
are to send their petitions to the Lord of the harvest "in the time of the latter
rain." In response, "the Lord shall make bright clouds, and give them showers of
rain." "He will cause to come down . . . the rain, the former rain, and the
latter rain," Zechariah 10:1; Joel 2:23.
But unless the members of God's church today have a living connection with the Source of
all spiritual growth, they will not be ready for the time of reaping. Unless they keep
their lamps trimmed and burning, they will fail of receiving added grace in times of
special need.
Those only who are constantly receiving fresh supplies of grace, will have power
proportionate to their daily need and their ability to use that power. Instead of looking
forward to some future time when, through a special endowment of spiritual power, they
will receive a miraculous fitting up for soul winning, they are yielding themselves daily
to God, that He may make them vessels meet for His use. Daily they are improving the
opportunities for service that lie within their reach. Daily they are witnessing for the
Master wherever they may be, whether in some humble sphere of labor in the home, or in a
public field of usefulness.
To the consecrated worker there is wonderful consolation in the knowledge that even Christ
during His life on earth sought His Father daily for fresh supplies of needed grace; and
from this communion with God He went forth to strengthen and bless others. Behold the Son
of God bowed in prayer to His Father! Though He is the Son of God, He strengthens His
faith by prayer, and by communion with heaven gathers to Himself power to resist evil and
to minister to the needs of men. As the Elder Brother of our race He knows the necessities
of those who, compassed with infirmity and living in a world of sin and temptation, still
desire to serve Him. He knows that the messengers whom He sees fit to send are weak,
erring men; but to all who give themselves wholly to His service He promises divine aid.
His own example is an assurance that earnest, persevering supplication to God in
faith--faith that leads to entire dependence upon God, and unreserved consecration to His
work--will avail to bring to men the Holy Spirit's aid in the battle against sin.
Every worker who follows the example of Christ will be prepared to receive and use the
power that God has promised to His church for the ripening of earth's harvest. Morning by
morning, as the heralds of the gospel kneel before the Lord and renew their vows of
consecration to Him, He will grant them the presence of His Spirit, with its reviving,
sanctifying power. As they go forth to the day's duties, they have the assurance that the
unseen agency of the Holy Spirit enables them to be "laborers together with
God."
Previous Chapter | Index |
Next Chapter