The Holy Spirit
Filling
1. The Holy Spirit INDWELLS for the purpose of glorifying the Lord Jesus
Christ; this indwelling teams up with the filling of the Holy Spirit to glorify
however. Indwelling alone does not guarantee glorification of Christ.
2. In indwelling of the Holy Spirit
is permanent — John 14:16.
3. The command in Ephesians 5:18 is:
Be habitually refilled with the Holy Spirit.
4. Sin grieves the Holy Spirit
(Ephesians 4:30) and human good quenches His power in us (1 Thessalonians
5:19).
6. Therefore it follows that the
hindrance to the filling of the Holy Spirit is unconfessed sin in the life, and
thus to be filled with the Holy Spirit sin must be confessed (1 John 1:9) which
results in the Holy Spirit filling the life, motivating and producing divine
good.
7. Result: Christ is
glorified in the believer’s life because the Holy Spirit produces the fruit of
the Spirit in the believer, which is the character of Christ.
8. Nothing good is produced in the
Christian life apart from the filling of the Holy Spirit — Romans 8:8;
Galatians 3:3.
9. Imitation is the great issue in
spirituality.
a) The believer in
fellowship imitates God: Ephesians 5:1, the Greek says, “Keep on becoming an
imitator of God, beloved children.” Ephesians 1:6, “accepted in the beloved.”
b) The believer out of
fellowship imitates the unbeliever — 1 John 1:6; 2 Corinthians 3:3.
10. Results of the filling of the
Spirit:
a) Imitation of Christ —
John 16:14; 2 Corinthians 3:3; Philippians 1:20; Galatians 4:19.
b) Perception of the
Word — John 14:26; 16:12-14; 1 Corinthians 2:9-16.
c) Witnessing — Acts
1:8; 2 Corinthians 3-5.
d) Guidance — Romans
8:14; Ephesians 5:16-18.
e)
Assurance — Romans 8:14-16; Galatians 4:5,6 (Knowing eternal security is true)
f)
Worship — Philippians 3:3; John 4:24.
g) Prayer — Ephesians
6:18 with Psalm 66:18.
h) Helping other
Christians to rebound (1 John 1:9) — Galatians 6:1.
Fruit
of the Spirit — Galatians 5:22,23
I. Definition: The fruit of the
Spirit is the character of Christ being formed in the believer while being
filled with the Spirit.
II. Types of Production of the Fruit
of the Spirit:
A. Inward or selfward:
1. Love: Mental attitude
— what you think. 1 Corinthians 13:4-7. Mental attitude which describes the
divine attitude of love. A relaxed mental attitude toward the human race, free
from envy, jealousy, hatred, implacability, etc.
2. Joy: Stimulated
mental attitude of inner happiness. This comes from knowing doctrine.
3. Peace: Mental
attitude stability. a) First: Peace with God (Reconciliation) Romans 5:1; b)
Next: Peace of God (filling of the Holy Spirit).
B. Outward or Neighbourward:
4. Long-suffering:
Relaxed overt attitude toward the human race. Result of having love, joy,
peace. This is faith-rest under pressure from people and circumstances.
Ephesians 4:1-3 “ … walk worthy … in love” (in the filling of the Spirit).
5. Gentleness: Mental
attitude kindness and grace toward others (give others the benefit of the
doubt). 2 Timothy 2:24, “strive” bully others — wrong. Speaks of good manners.
6. Goodness: Overt
expression of grace. If you think gentleness, you will act goodness. Ephesians
4:32; 1 Thessalonians 5:15; Colossians 3:13.
C. Upward or Godward:
7. Faith: Using faith as
the sole means of perception in transferring gnwsij
to e)pignwsij, not operating on
rationalism and empiricism.
8. Meekness: Humility.
The mental attitude of grace with regard to divine provision. An attitude of
grace orientation — not who and what we are, it is who and what He is. Passive
— we receive humility.
9. Temperance:
Self-control. Self-discipline. Controlling your tongue, thoughts, actions. When
it is time to study, you do it. 1 Corinthians 9:27.
When you are in fellowship (filled
with the Spirit) you do not necessarily manifest all of the fruit of the
Spirit, but various situations bring out various manifestations.
Indwelling
(Church Age)
1. The Holy Spirit INDWELLS every regenerate person —
Romans 5:5; 8:8,9.
2. The Holy Spirit indwells at the MOMENT of SALVATION — Galatians 3:2; 4:6.
3. In the Old Testament times, the
Holy Spirit empowered certain believers TEMPORARILY for specific purposes — 1
Samuel 16:13 with Psalm 51:11.
4. In the New Testament (Church Age)
from the Day of Pentecost to the Rapture of the Church, the Holy Spirit
indwells every believer at the moment of salvation — 1 Corinthians 12:13b.
5. The indwelling of the Holy Spirit
cannot be lost; it is permanent as is salvation — John 14:16,17.
6. The indwelling of the Holy Spirit
is the potential power resident IN the believer, the use of which depends upon
the filling of the Holy Spirit — 1 John 1:9.
7. New Testament: The
indwelling of the Holy Spirit makes the body of the believer the sanctuary
(temple of God). 1 Corinthians 3:16,17; 6:19.
Old Testament: Sanctuary
was the tabernacle (tent in the desert).
8. Because we are INDWELT we should stay FILLED — 1 Corinthians 6:20.
9. Sin will NOT remove the indwelling Holy Spirit in the Church Age — John 14:16.
10. Provision has been made for sin
in 1 John 1:9.
11. The purpose of the INDWELLING of the Holy Spirit is to:
a) Understand spiritual
truth — John 16:13; 1 Corinthians 2:12.
b) Glorify Christ by
living a supernatural life — John 16:14; 1 Corinthians 6:20; Galatians 5:22.
c) Witness for Christ —
Acts 1:8.
The
Holy Spirit: “I will pour out of my
Spirit.” (Joel 2:28-32 as quoted in Acts 2)
.1. A quotation does not always interpret, a quotation sometimes
illustrates, as in Acts 2:17.
2. Peter quotes Joel 2:28-32 in Acts
2:16-21.
3. This is NOT the fulfillment of Joel 2:28-32 but is an illustration to refute the
accusation of drunkenness.
4. These believers are actually
using the gift of tongues under the power of the Holy Spirit and can no more be
charged with drunkenness than the believers in the Joel passage.
5. These people are familiar with
the book of Joel. They knew that the activities of Joel reflected spirituality
in the Millennium.
6. The Joel 2 passage by
interpretation is the Millennium. The phenomenon which they observed is in the
first 38 years of the Church Age.
7. Peter does not say that the Joel
passage is fulfilled. He is merely establishing a parallel between the
phenomenon which is described in Joel 2 and the phenomenon which is occurring
at that moment.
8. The Joel passage could not be
fulfilled at this point because of the doctrine of the mystery. Doctrine of the
mystery: Ephesians 3:1-6; Colossians 1:25,26; Romans 16:25,26.
9. The book of Joel is in the Old
Testament and NO Church Age doctrine is
given in the Old Testament, therefore Joel is not talking about the Church Age.
10. The Joel passage refers to the
Spirit-filled believer in the Millennium only (interpretation). Therefore, what
is being said here, is that the Joel passage merely illustrates, but does not fulfill.
11. The charge of drunkenness is
going to be refuted by Peter by saying that what they see is not drunkenness,
it is a spiritual phenomenon. They are no more drunken than the Millennial
saints as depicted in Joel 2:28-32.
12. Acts 2:16: “this is that”: THIS IS THE SAME KIND OF THING AS THAT. The
Day of Pentecost occurrence parallels the Millennium.
The
Holy Spirit in the Millennium
1. Believers of all ages will be in resurrection bodies in the
Millennium with the exception of (see point 2).
2. Tribulational believers who are
alive at the second advent will go into the Millennium in their physical
bodies.
3. Those believers in physical
bodies will be indwelt by the Holy Spirit.
4. All believers in physical bodies
(non-resurrection bodies) will have old sin natures:
a) Physical birth from
these believers who are indwelt by the Holy Spirit will produce unbelievers
with old sin natures. Therefore they must personally believe in Christ for
salvation.
b) The old sin nature is
restrained in the Millennium because:
1. The Lord Jesus will be present and
visible. (Omniscient)
2. believers in resurrection bodies will
be present and observing.
3. Angels will be observing.
4. Universal indwelling of the Holy
Spirit.
5. Maximum knowledge of doctrine.
5. When Jesus Christ returns to the
earth at the 2nd advent, Operation Footstool is completed: All demons are
removed from the earth, including Satan, therefore no religion.
6. Because Christ is on the earth
and it is not necessary to produce the character of Christ, spirituality
becomes a matter of ecstatics — an appreciation of the person of Christ as he
lives and reigns on the earth.
7. There will be great spirituality
in the Millennium. The Lord Jesus Christ will be present, and there will be
perfect environment. Joel 2:28,29.
a) Verse 28:
“afterward”: After the second advent.
“my spirit”: Holy Spirit.
“upon all flesh”: Tribulational believers
alive at the second advent in physical bodies.
“prophesy”: Old Testament manifestation
of the Spirit’s control.
b) Verse 29: “upon the servants and upon the handmaids”:
All believers in the Millennium will be indwelt by the Holy Spirit.
8. Isaiah 65:24 — Prayer system of
the Millennium. All will be controlled by the Holy Spirit.
9. System of worship in the
Millennium — Zechariah 14:16,17.
The
Holy Spirit in the Old Testament
I. . God the Holy Spirit is eternal life — Hebrews 9:14.
II. God the Holy Spirit has helped
mankind and influenced the world from the beginning — Genesis 1:2b.
III. In Creation:
a) The Father planned or
designed — 1 Corinthians 8:6a; Psalm 102:25.
b) The Son did the
creating — Ephesians 3:9; Colossians 1:16
c) The Holy Spirit
restored original creation after it was destroyed — Psalm 104:30; Genesis 1:2b.
IV. After creation the Holy Spirit
did not leave the world but continued to:
a) Reveal God’s will to
me.
b) Inspire the prophets
to write scripture: 2 Peter 1:21.
c) Work miracles through
the prophets and preachers.
V. Purpose of the Holy Spirit in the
Old Testament:
a) God is sovereign:
Psalm 135:6, “Whatsoever the Lord pleased, that did He ...”
b) The Holy Spirit
empowered some believers in the Old Testament, but not all.
c) It was not God’s
purpose to fill or live in every believer in the Old Testament.
d) God CHOSE to give certain believers the Holy Spirit for His purpose; it was not
their qualification, but was God’s SOVEREIGN decision.
e) It is not who and
what they were but who and what God is.
f) The Holy Spirit was WITH all believers (omnipresent) but the Holy Spirit was not IN
(empowering) all believers.
g) In Old Testament
times one could ask for the Holy Spirit and receive Him under special
conditions. Elisha’s request was granted — 2 Kings 2:9, 15.
h) The Father is the one
who sends the Holy Spirit on these special missions. Matthew 10:20 — “Spirit of
your Father.”
i) Empowering of the
Holy Spirit could be lost. David prayed: “Take not thy Holy Spirit from me” —
Psalm 51:11, this prayer was the result of sin in his life.
j) Empowering of the
Holy Spirit was removed when the work was finished..
John 14:17b “with you”: para plus the accusative = alongside of.
“shall be”: future from
then.
“in you”: en plus the dative case =
“in.”
VI. Three occasions in the Old
Testament where the Holy Spirit had a ministry with a carnal believer:
a) Balaam — Numbers 24:2
b) Samson — Judges
13:25; 14:6; 15:14.
c) King Saul — 1 Samuel
19:23,24. (Today, sin in the life hinders the Holy Spirit’s power but not His
indwelling)
VII. Those empowered in the Old
Testament:
a) Joseph was the first
believer mentioned as being empowered — Genesis 41:38: Empowered with the Holy
Spirit to preserve a nation from starvation during a famine.
b) Bezaleel, Aholiab:
Workers on the tabernacle were given special wisdom and ability through power
of the Holy Spirit — Exodus 35:30-35.
c) Workers on Aaron’s
garments — Exodus 28:3.
d) Moses and the elders
(70) who helped him were empowered by the Holy Spirit to lead the children of
Israel out of Egypt — Numbers 11:16,17.
e) King David was
empowered — 1 Samuel 16:13.
f) King Saul was
empowered — 1 Samuel 10:6. Perhaps Saul could have been Israel’s greatest king
but through sin and continued disobedience, the Holy Spirit left Saul — 1
Samuel 16:14.
g) The prophets were
empowered. Elijah, Elisha, 1 & 2 Kings (Isaiah, Daniel, 2 Peter 1:21)
h) Samson, a judge, was
empowered — Judges 13:25; 14:6; 15:14.
VIII. Summary:
a) The Holy Spirit
empowered SPECIFIC PEOPLE for SPECIFIC JOBS.
b) The Holy Spirit gave
some people special understanding and wisdom:
1. Became great leaders of God’s people,
such as some of the judges.
2. Reveal God’s Word (Writers of the Old
Testament)
c) The Holy Spirit gave
some special skills, or unusual physical strength for use in God’s service,
such as:
1. Workers in the tabernacle.
2. Samson.
d) The Holy Spirit was
removed because:
1. Word was finished, or
2. Because of sin.
Sealing
Ministry
I. The sealing work of the Holy Spirit is the basis of our ETERNAL
SECURITY — Ephesians 4:30.
II. Three phases to salvation is
given in Ephesians 1:13:
a) You must hear the
Word of truth — “after that (when) ye heard the Word of Truth.”
b) You must be a
believer. “ … in whom also after that ye believed.”
c) “Ye were sealed with
that Holy Spirit of promise.”
III. Sealing indicates:
a) A seal is used on
invoices to authenticate them — to establish them as genuine.
b) A seal involves
ownership. We are in the plan of God. We belong to God.
c) A seal ratifies
(approves) treaties and documents. The Holy Spirit ratifies the New Covenant
(salvation).
d) A seal is used to
guarantee, preserve, and protect. The Holy Spirit is the guarantee of eternal
security.
IV. A portion of our inheritance —
Ephesians 1:14.
a) The Holy Spirit is
the “earnest” (down-payment) of our inheritance until the “redemption of the
purchased possession.” (Resurrection of the believer’s body at the Rapture) 1
Thessalonians 4:16-18.
b) “Earnest” in the
Greek means a dot with a circle around it. The Lord has a circle around us. We
are His possession. Our POSITION in Christ.
c) “Who hath sealed us,
and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts” — 2 Corinthians 1:22.
The
Holy Spirit: Five Sins Against
I. By Unbelievers Only:
A. Resistance of the
Holy Spirit — Acts 7:51. Rejection of the Lord Jesus Christ in the Church Age.
Pre-salvation ministry of the Holy Spirit is the convicting ministry (John
16:7-11) of:
1. Sin of
unbelief.
2. The
righteousness of God, the minus righteousness of man.
3. Judgement.
Rejecting Jesus Christ is resisting
this ministry of the Holy Spirit.
B. Blasphemy against the
Holy Spirit — Matthew 12:31-32.
Rejection of
Jesus Christ while Jesus Christ was ministering on earth (previous
dispensation: Jewish Age). Jesus Christ was filled with the Holy Spirit during
His earthly ministry and to reject Him was blasphemy against the Holy Spirit.
II. By believers: (All are a result
of being controlled by the old sin nature)
A. Lying to the Holy
Spirit — Acts 5:3.
False
motivation — Approbation lust sin.
B. Grieving the Holy
Spirit — Ephesians 4:30.
Producing
sins from the area of weakness in the old sin nature: Moral issues
(immorality), sins of the tongue , mental attitude sins. Any sin in the life of
the believer which involves moral or ethical issues.
C. Quenching the Holy
Spirit — 1 Thessalonians 5:19
Producing human good from the area
of strength in the old sin nature, such as witnessing, giving money, etc., to
gain approbation. Human good soothes the conscience and keeps the believer from
using rebound (1 John 1:9).
Do it as unto the Lord,
or don’t do it!
Disobedience
to God’s Word that doesn’t involve an ethical or moral issue.
Sustaining
Ministry to Jesus Christ
1. Prophecy of the sustaining ministry in the life of Jesus Christ was
given over 700 years before He came. Isaiah 11:2-3; 42:1-4; 61:1-2. Isaiah
prophesied that when Messiah would come, the Holy Spirit would sustain, empower
and fill Him so that the Father’s perfect will would be accomplished in His
life.
2. The Holy Spirit sustained the
humanity of Jesus Christ at His birth — Matthew 1:18-21; Luke 1:35.
3. Jesus Christ was sustained by the
Holy Spirit only in His humanity because Jesus Christ is co-equal with the Holy
Spirit in His deity.
4. As the God-Man He revealed the
essence box — Hebrews 1:3.
5. As humanity he relied on the
sustaining ministry of the Holy Spirit, and was led and guided by the Holy
Spirit — Matthew 4:1; Mark 1:12.
6. He didn’t depend upon His divine
attributes to perform functions — Hebrews 2:14,15; Philippians 2:6-8, Greek
says “He emptied Himself.”
7. Jesus Christ subordinated His
deity to the will of the Father. He did not use the characteristics of His
deity independently of the Father’s plan.
8. Therefore, Jesus Christ, during
His incarnation, depended entirely upon the sustaining ministry of the Holy
Spirit.
9. He did not give up His divine
essence. (Deity was always present: omnipresent) but He walked as a man, and as
true humanity (indwelt by the Holy Spirit).
a) He was never
commanded to be filled with the Holy Spirit.
b) He was always filled
with the Holy Spirit.
c) The Holy Spirit was
given without measure to Him — John 3:34.
10. The Holy Spirit was present in a
special way at the baptism of Jesus Christ to guarantee that He would sustain
Jesus Christ during His ministry — Matthew 3:16.
11. The Holy Spirit empowered the
humanity of Jesus Christ during His ministry, in His preaching and performing
miracles in the power of the Spirit — Luke 4:14, 15, 18; Matthew 12:18, 28.
“if”: 1st class condition, “and I do.”
12. Jesus Christ gave Himself for
crucifixion in the power of the Holy Spirit — Hebrews 9:14.
13. The ministry of the Holy Spirit
ceased when Jesus was on the cross — Psalm 22:1; 3; Matthew 27:46. The first
“my God” refers to God the Father, the second “my God” refers to the Holy
Spirit.
14. The Holy Spirit had a part in
the resurrection of Jesus Christ — Romans 8:11; 1 Peter 3:8; Romans 1:4.
15. The present ministry of the Holy
Spirit to Jesus Christ is to glorify Jesus Christ in the life of the believer —
John 16:14; 7:39.
a) The believer in
fellowship is set to glorify Christ.
b) Glorifying Jesus
Christ is a result of soul breathing and the edification complex. The
manifestation of the new nature.
16. Jesus Christ set the pattern of
the Church Age.
The doctrine of the sins
against the Holy Spirit
There are five sins which are
committed against the Holy Spirit but they fall into two categories. Two of
these are committed by the unbeliever and three of them by the believer.
1. The sins committed by the
unbeliever.
a) The first of these is
called blaspheming against the Holy Spirit — Matthew 12:14-32. It is tantamount
to rejection of the Lord Jesus Christ as saviour — actually, rejection of
Christ during the earthly ministry of the Son of God in that context. When the
unbeliever says no to the gospel this in effect is blasphemy against the Holy
Spirit because the unbeliever is minus a human spirit, therefore there is no
way for him to take in the gospel or spiritual phenomena so that he can act
upon it one way of the other with his volition. So God the Holy Spirit and
makes the gospel a reality and then the individual takes a good look at it. He
now understands it because God the Holy Spirit has made it clear. The individual
now understands it and has the right to say yes or no to the gospel message. If
he says no this is called blasphemy against the Holy Spirit.
b) The second sin of the
unbeliever in this connection is called “resistance of the Holy Spirit” — Acts
7:51. Rejection of Christ as saviour during the Church Age is resisting the
Spirit. This emphasises the ministry of God the Holy Spirit in making the
gospel clear — 1 Corinthians 1:18; 2:14; John 16:7-11; Genesis 6:3. Resistance
is also described in terms of 2 Corinthians 4:3,4.
Basically these two phrases,
blasphemy and resistance against the Holy Spirit, are sins committed by the
unbeliever. In effect, it is the only sin that he can actually commit and go to
hell. It is simply rejection of the Lord Jesus Christ. The last three sins
which follow are committed by the believer.
3. Lying to the Holy Spirit is the
first — Acts 5:3. This is the function of a believer in reversionism, in this
case the function of a believer in monetary reversionism. We have in this case
a combination of approbation lust plus false motivation under conditions of
blackout of the soul. It is the sin of false motivation, doing something for
personal glory rather than for the honour of the Lord.
4. Grieving the Holy Spirit is the
function of the believer in reversionism whereby he produces extensive
carnality in one of three categories: mental attitude sins, sins of the tongue,
or overt sins. Grieving the Holy Spirit can occur under the following phases of
reversionism. The first is the reaction phase, the one in which the sin
accompanies disillusion. For example, if you are disillusioned about something
and get bitter that would be grieving the Holy Spirit. In phase two of reversionism
there is a frantic search for happiness and the sins here can run the gamut.
These are grieving the Holy Spirit in phase two of reversionism. In phase three
of reversionism we have emotional revolt of the soul. This is when the emotion
of the soul takes over everything. The heart or the right lobe which usually
dominates the soul is now dominated by the emotion. Example; the “gift” of
tongues and the holy-rollers. This actually becomes a blasphemy, a faking out
of the gift of tongues. The fourth phase of reversionism is the negative
volition phase. It may be apathy or antagonism which is grieving the Holy
Spirit. The fifth phase is the blackout of the soul which means you are now
under Satanic influence. Now you have become a bleeding heart, a hippy, and
have got into some activity of socialism or welfare, etc. In this phase
blackout of the soul leads to
pride, bitterness, jealousy, vindictiveness, implacability. This is also the
stage at which criminal activity becomes quite extensive. Phase six is the scar
tissue phase and in this phase it is anything goes. When you grieve the Holy
Spirit in the scar tissue phase there is no sin that the worst unbeliever in
the world has committed that you as a believer cannot commit. You are not going
to lose your salvation, you are going to be under divine discipline and will
die the sin unto death. Phase seven is reverse process reversionism in which we
have the same principle.
The principle should be obvious.
Grieving the Holy Spirit is something the believer does in one of the seven
phases of reversionism.
5. Quenching the Holy Spirit — 1
Thessalonians 5:19 is the function of the believer in reversionism by which he
produces human good. This is the basic difference from grieving the Holy Spirit
which is sin.