- [Taken from “Old Paths” as first
published in 1878AD]
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- HAVING THE SPIRIT.
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by
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- JOHN
Charles Ryle D.D.
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- “Having not the Spirit.”—JUDE
19.
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I TAKE it for granted that every reader of this paper believes
in the Holy Spirit. The number of people in this country who are infidels,
deists, or Socinians, and openly deny the doctrine of the Trinity, is happily
not very great. Most persons have been baptized in the name of the Father, and
of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. There are few Churchmen, at any rate, who
have not often heard the well-known words of our old Catechism, “I believe in
God the Holy Ghost, who sanctifieth me and all the elect people of God.”
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But, notwithstanding all this, it would be well for many if
they would consider what they know of the Holy Spirit beyond His name. What
experimental acquaintance have you with the Spirit’s work? What has He done
for you? What benefit have you received from Him? You can say of God the
Father, “He made me and all the world;” you can say of God the Son, “He died
for me and all mankind:” but can you say anything about the Holy Ghost? Can
you say, with any degree of confidence, “He dwells in me, and sanctifies me”?
In one word, Have you the Spirit? The text which heads this paper will
tell you that there is such a thing as “not having the Spirit.” This is the
point which I press upon your attention.
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I believe the point to be one of vital importance at all
seasons. I hold it to be one of special importance in the present day. I
consider that clear views about the work of the Holy Spirit are among the best
preservatives against the many false doctrines which abound in our times.
Suffer me then, to lay before you a few things, which by God’s blessing, may
throw light on the subject of having the Spirit.
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I. Let me explain the immense
importance of “Having the Spirit.”
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II. Let me point out the great general principle by which alone
the question can be tried,—“Have you the Spirit?”
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III. Let me describe the particular
effects which the Spirit always produces on the souls in which He dwells.
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I. Let me, in the first place, explain
the immense importance of having the Spirit.
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It is absolutely necessary to make this point clear. Unless you
see this I shall appear like one beating the air all through this paper. Once
let your mind lay hold on this, and half the work I want to do is already done
for your soul.
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I can easily fancy some reader saying, “I do not see the use of
this question! Supposing I have not the Spirit, where is the mighty harm? I
try to do my duty in this world: I attend my church regularly: I receive the
Sacrament occasionally: I believe I am as good a Christian as my neighbours. I
say my prayers: I trust God will pardon my sins for Christ’s sake. I do not
see why I should not reach heaven at last, without troubling myself with hard
questions about the Spirit.”
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If these are your thoughts, I entreat you to give me your
attention for a few minutes, while I try to supply you with reasons for
thinking differently. Believe me, nothing less than your soul’s salvation
depends on “Having the Spirit.” Life or death, heaven or hell, eternal
happiness or eternal misery, are bound up with the subject of this paper.
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(a) Remember, for one thing, if you have not the Spirit,
you have no part in Christ, and no title to heaven.
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The words of St. Paul are express and unmistakable “If any man
have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of His.” (Rom. viii. 9.) The words
of St. John are no less clear: “Hereby we know that He abideth in us by the
Spirit which He hath given us.” (1 John iii. 24.) The indwelling of God the
Holy Spirit is the common mark of all true believers in Christ. It is the
Shepherd’s mark on the flock of the Lord Jesus, distinguishing them from the
rest of the world. It is the goldsmith’s stamp on the genuine sons of God,
which separates them from the dross and mass of false professors. It is the
King’s own seal on those who are His peculiar people, proving them to be His
own property. It is “the earnest” which the Redeemer gives to His believing
disciples while they are in the body, as a pledge of the full and complete
“redemption” yet to come in the resurrection morning. (Ephes. i. 14.) This is
the case of all believers. They all have the Spirit.
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Let it be distinctly understood that he who has not the Spirit
has not Christ. He who has not Christ has no pardon of his sins,—no peace with
God,—no title to heaven,—no well-grounded hope of being saved. His religion is
like the house built on the sand. It may look well in fine weather. It may
satisfy him in the time of health and prosperity. But when the flood rises,
and the wind blows,—when sickness and trouble come up against him, it will
fall and bury him under its ruins. He lives without a good hope, and without a
good hope he dies. He will rise again only to be miserable. He will stand in
the judgment only to be condemned; he will see saints and angels looking on,
and remember he might have been among them, but too late; he will see lost
myriads around him, and find they cannot comfort him, but too late. This will
be the end of the man who thinks to reach heaven without the Spirit.
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Settle these things down in your memory, and let them never be
forgotten. Are they not worth remembering? No Holy Spirit in you,—no part in
Christ! No part in Christ,—no forgiveness of sins! No forgiveness of sins,—no
peace with God! No peace with God,—no title to heaven! No title to heaven, no
admission into heaven! No admission into heaven,—and what then? Aye: what
then? You may well ask. Whither will you flee? Which way will you turn? To
what refuge will you run? There is none at all. There remains nothing but
hell. Not admitted into heaven, you must sink at last into hell.
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I ask every reader of this paper to mark well what I say.
Perhaps it startles you: but may it not be good for you to be startled? Have I
told you anything more than simple scriptural truth? Where is the defective
link in the chain of reasoning you have heard? Where is the flaw in the
argument? I believe in my conscience there is none. From not having the Spirit
to being in hell, there is but a long flight of downward steps. Living without
the Spirit, you are already on the top; dying without the Spirit, you will
find your way to the bottom.
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(b) Remember, for another thing, if you have not the Spirit
you have no holiness of heart, and no meetness for
heaven.
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Heaven is the place to which all people hope to go after death.
It would be well for many if they considered calmly what kind of
dwelling-place heaven is. It is the habitation of the King of kings, who is
“of purer eyes than to behold iniquity,” and it must needs be a holy place. It
is a place into which Scripture tells us there shall enter in nothing “that
defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination.” (Rev. xxi. 27.) It is a
place where there shall be nothing wicked, sinful, or sensual,—nothing
worldly, foolish, frivolous, or profane. There, let the covetous man
remember, shall be no more money; there, let the pleasure-seeker
remember, shall be no more races, theatres, novel reading, or balls; there,
let the drunkard and the gambler remember, shall be no more strong drink, no
more dice, no more betting, no more cards. The everlasting presence of God,
saints, and angels,—the perpetual doing of God’s will,—the complete absence of
everything which God does not approve,—these are the chief things which shall
make up heaven. It shall be an eternal Sabbath day.
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For this heaven we are all by nature utterly unfit. We have no
capacity for enjoying its happiness; we have no taste for its blessings; we
have no eye to see its beauty; we have no heart to feel its comforts. Instead
of freedom, we should find it bondage; instead of glorious liberty, we should
find it constant constraint; instead of a splendid palace, we should find it a
gloomy prison. A fish on dry land, a sheep in the water, an eagle in a cage, a
painted savage in a royal drawing room, would all feel more at ease and in
their place than a natural man in heaven. “Without holiness no man shall see
the Lord.” (Heb. xii. 14.)
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For this heaven it is the special office of the Holy Ghost to
prepare men’s souls. He alone can change the earthly heart, and purify the
worldly affections of Adam’s children. He alone can can bring their minds into
harmony with God, and tune them for the eternal company of saints, and angels,
and Christ. He alone can make them love what God loves, and hate what God
hates, and delight in God’s presence. He alone can set the limbs of human
nature, which were broken and dislocated by Adam’s fall, and bring about a
real unity between man’s will and God’s. And this He does for every one that
is saved. It is written of believers that they are “saved according to God’s
mercy,” but it is, “by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy
Ghost.” They are chosen unto salvation, but it is “through sanctification of
the Spirit,” as well as “belief of the truth.” (Titus iii. 5; 2 Thess. ii.
13.)
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Let this also be written down on the tablet of your memory. No
entrance into heaven without the Spirit first entering your heart upon earth!
No admission into glory in the next life without previous sanctification in
this life! No Holy Spirit in you in this world,—then no heaven in the world to
come! You would not be fit for it; you would not be ready for it; you would
not like it; you would not enjoy it. There is much use made in the present day
of the word “holy.” Our ears are wearied with “holy church,” and “holy
baptism,” and “holy days,” and holy water,” and “holy services,” and “holy
priests.” But one thing is a thousand times more important: and that is, to be
made a really holy man by the Spirit. We must be made partakers of the Divine
nature, while we are alive. We must “sow to the Spirit,” if we would ever reap
life everlasting. (2 Peter i. 4; Gal. vi. 8.)
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(c) Remember, for another thing, if you have not the Spirit,
you have no right to be considered a true Christian,
and no will or power to become one.
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It requires little to make a Christian according to the
standard of the world. Only let a man be baptized and attend some place of
worship, and the requirements of the world are satisfied. The man’s belief may
not be so intelligent as that of a Turk: he may be profoundly ignorant of the
Bible. The man’s practice may be no better than that of a heathen: many a
respectable Hindoo might put him to shame.—But what of that? He is an
Englishman! He has been baptized! He goes to church or chapel, and behaves
decently when there! What more would you have? If you do not call him a
Christian you are thought very uncharitable!
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But it takes a great deal more than this to make a man a real
Christian according to the standard of the Bible. It requires the co-operation
of all the Three Persons of the Blessed Trinity. The election of God the
Father,—the blood and intercession of God the Son,—the sanctification of God
the Spirit,—must all meet together on the soul that is to be saved. Father,
Son, and Holy Ghost must unite to work the work of making any child of Adam a
true Christian.
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This is a deep subject, and one that must be handled with
reverence. But where the Bible speaks with decision, there we may also speak
with decision; and the words of the Bible have no meaning if the work of the
Holy Spirit be not just as needful in order to make a man a true Christian, as
the work of the Father or the work of the Son. “No man,” we are told, “can say
that Jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost.” (1 Cor. xii. 3.) True
Christians, we are taught in Scripture, are “born of the Spirit” They live in
the Spirit; they are led by the Spirit; by the Spirit they mortify the deeds
of the body; by one Spirit they have access through Jesus unto the Father.
Their graces are all the fruit of the Spirit; they are the temple of the Holy
Ghost; they are a habitation of God through the Spirit; they walk after the
Spirit; they are strengthened by the Spirit. Through the Spirit they wait for
the hope of righteousness by faith. (John iii. 6; Gal. v. 25; Rom. viii.
13,14; Eph. ii. 18; Gal. v. 22; 1 Cor. vi. 19; Eph. ii. 22; Rom. viii. 4; Eph.
iii. 16; Gal. v. 5.) These are plain Scriptural expressions. Who will dare to
gainsay them?
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The truth is that the deep corruption of human nature would
make salvation impossible if it were not for the work of the Spirit. Without
Him the Father’s love and the Son’s redemption are set before us in vain. The
Spirit must reveal them, the Spirit must apply them, or else we are lost
souls.
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Nothing less than the power of Him who moved on the face of the
waters in the day of creation can ever raise us from our low estate. He who
said, “Let there be light, and there was light,” must speak the word before
any one of us will ever rise to newness of life. He who came down on the day
of Pentecost, must come down on our poor dead souls, before they will ever see
the kingdom of God. Mercies and afflictions may move the surface of our
hearts, but they alone will never reach the inner man. Sacraments, and
services, and sermons may produce outward formality, and clothe us with a skin
of religion, but there will be no life. Ministers may make communicants, and
fill churches with regular worshippers: the almighty power of the Holy Ghost
alone can make true Christians, and fill heaven with glorified saints.
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Let this also be written in your memory, and never forgotten.
No Holy Spirit,—no true Christianity! You must have the Spirit in you,
as well as Christ for you, if you are ever to be saved. God must be
your loving Father, Jesus must be your known Redeemer, the Holy Ghost must be
your felt Sanctifier, or else it will be better for you never to have
been born.
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I press the subject on the serious consideration of all who
read these pages. I trust I have said enough to show you that it is of vital
importance to your soul to “have the Spirit.” It is no abstruse and mysterious
point of divinity; it is no nice question of which the solution matters little
one way or another. It is a subject in which is bound up the everlasting peace
of your soul.
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You may not like the tidings. You may call it enthusiasm, or
fanaticism, or extravagance. I take my stand on the plain teaching of the
Bible. I say that God must dwell in your heart by the Spirit on earth, or you
will never dwell with God in heaven.
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“Ah,” you may say, “I do not know much about it. I trust Christ
will be merciful. I hope I shall go to heaven after all.” I answer, No man
ever yet tasted of Christ’s mercy who did not also receive of His Spirit.—No
man was ever justified who was not also sanctified.—No man ever went to heaven
who was not led there by the Spirit.
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II. Let me, in the second place, point out the
great general rule and principle by which the question may be
decided, whether we have the Spirit.
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I can quite understand that the idea of knowing whether we
“have the Spirit” is disagreeable to many minds. I am not ignorant of the
objections which Satan at once stirs up in the natural heart. “It is
impossible to know it,” says one person: “it is a deep thing, and beyond our
reach.”—” It is too mysterious a thing to inquire into,” says another: “we
must be content to leave the subject in uncertainty.”—“It is wrong to pretend
to know anything about it,” says a third: “we were never meant to look into
such questions. It is only fit for enthusiasts and fanatics to talk of having
the Spirit.”—I hear such objections without being moved by them. I say that it
can be known whether a man has the Spirit. It can be known,—it may
be known,—it ought to be known. It needs no vision from heaven, no
revelation from an angel to discern it; it needs nothing but calm inquiry by
the light of God’s Word. Let us enter upon that inquiry.
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All men have not the Holy Spirit.
I regard the doctrine of an inward spiritual light enjoyed by all mankind as
an unscriptural delusion. I believe the modern notion of universal inspiration
to be a baseless dream. Without controversy, God has not left Himself without
a witness in the heart of fallen man. He has left in every mind sufficient
knowledge of right and wrong to make all men responsible and accountable. He
has given to every child of Adam a conscience: but He has not given to
every child of Adam the Holy Ghost. A man may have good wishes like Balaam, do
many things like Herod, be almost persuaded like Agrippa, and tremble like
Felix, and yet be as utterly destitute of the grace of the Spirit as these men
were. St. Paul tells us that before conversion men may “know God” in a certain
sense, and have “thoughts accusing or excusing one another.” But he also tells
us that before conversion men are “without God “and “without Christ,” have “no
hope,” and are “darkness” itself. (Rom. i. 21; ii. 15; Eph. ii. 12; v. 8.) The
Lord Jesus Himself says of the Spirit,” The world seeth Him not, neither
knoweth Him: but ye know Him, for He dwelleth with you, and shall be in you.”
(John xiv. 17.)
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All members of Churches and baptized persons have not the
Spirit. I see no ground in
Scripture for saying that every man who receives baptism receives the Holy
Ghost, and that we ought to regard him as born of the Spirit. I dare not tell
baptized people that they all have the Spirit, and that they only need “stir
up the gift of God” within them in order to be saved. I see, on the contrary,
that Jude speaks of members of the visible Church in his day as “not having
the Spirit.” Some of them probably had been baptized by the hands of apostles,
and admitted into full communion with the professing Church. No matter! they
“had not the Spirit.” (Jude 19.)
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It is vain to attempt to evade the power of this single
expression. It teaches plainly that “having the Spirit” is not the lot of
every man, and not the portion of every member of the visible Church of
Christ. It shows the necessity of finding out some general rule and principle
by which the presence of the Spirit in a man may be ascertained. He does not
dwell in every one. Baptism and churchmanship are no proofs of His presence.
How, then, shall I know whether a man has the Spirit?
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The presence of the Spirit in a man’s soul can only be known
by the effects which He produces. The fruits He causes to be brought forth
in a man’s heart and life, are the only evidence which can be depended on. A
man’s faith, a man’s opinions, and a man’s practice, are the witnesses we must
examine, if we would find out whether a man has the Spirit. This is the rule
of the Lord Jesus “Every tree is known by his own fruit.” (Luke vi. 44.)
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The effects which the Holy Spirit produces may always be
seen. The man of the world may not understand them: they may in many cases
be feeble and indistinct; but where the Spirit is, He will not be hid. He is
not idle when He enters the heart: He does not lie still; He does not sleep:
He will make His presence known. He will shine out little by little through
the windows of a man’s daily habits and conversation, and manifest to the
world that He is in him. A dormant, torpid, silent indwelling of the Spirit is
a notion that pleases the minds of many. It is a notion for which I see no
authority in the Word of God. I hold entirely with the Homily for Whit-Sunday:
“As the tree is known by his fruit, so is also the Holy Ghost.”
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In whomsoever I see the effects and fruits of the Spirit, in
that man I see one who has the Spirit. I believe it to be not only charitable
to think so, but presumption to doubt it. I do not expect to behold the Holy
Ghost with my bodily eyes, or to touch Him with my bands. But I need no angel
to come down to show me where He dwells; I need no vision from heaven to tell
me where I may find Him. Only show me a man in whom the fruits of the Spirit
are to be seen, and I see one who “has the Spirit.” I will not doubt the
inward presence of the almighty cause, when I see the outward fact of an
evident effect.
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Can I see the wind on a stormy day? I cannot: but I can
see the effects of its force and power. When I see the clouds driven before
it, and the trees bending under it,—when I hear it whistling through doors and
windows, or howling round the chimney tops, I do not for a moment doubt its
existence. I say, “There is a wind.” Just so it is with the presence of the
Spirit in the soul.
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Can I see the dew of heaven as it falls on a summer
evening? I cannot. It comes down softly and gently, noiseless and
imperceptible. But when I go forth in the morning after a cloudless night, and
see every leaf sparkling with moisture, and feel every blade of grass damp and
wet, I say at once, “There has been a dew.” Just so it is with the presence of
the Spirit in the soul.
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Can I see the hand of the sower when I walk through the
corn fields in the month of July? I cannot. I see nothing but millions of ears
rich with grain, and bending to the ground with ripeness: but do I suppose
that harvest came by chance, and grew of itself? I suppose nothing of the
kind. I know when I see those corn fields that the plough and the harrow were
at work one day, and that a hand has been there which sowed the seed. Just so
it is with the work of the Spirit in the soul.
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Can I see the magnetic fluid in the compass-needle I
cannot. It acts in a hidden mysterious way: but when I see that little piece
of iron always turning to the north, I know at once that it is under the
secret influence of magnetic power. Just so it is with the work of the Spirit
in the soul.
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Can I see the mainspring of my watch when I look upon
its face? I cannot. But when I see the fingers going round and telling the
hours and minutes of the day in regular succession, I do not doubt the
mainspring’s existence. Just so it is with the work of the Spirit.
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Can I see the steersman of the homeward-bound ship, when
she first comes in sight, and her sails whiten on the horizon? I cannot. But
when I stand on the pier-head and see that ship working her course over the
sea towards the harbour’s mouth, like a thing of life, I know well there is
one at the helm who guides her movements. Just so it is with the work of the
Spirit.
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I charge all my readers to remember this. Establish it as a
settled principle in your mind, that if the Holy Ghost really is in a man, it
will be seen in the effects He produces on his heart and life.
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Beware of supposing that a man may have the Spirit when there
is no outward evidence of His presence in the soul. It is a dangerous and
unscriptural delusion to think so. We must never lose sight of the broad
principles laid down for us in Scripture: “If we say that we have fellowship
with Him, and walk in darkness, we lie, and do not the truth.”—“In this the
children of God are manifest and the children of the devil: whosoever doeth
not righteousness is not of God.” (1 John i. 6; iii. 10.)
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You have heard, I doubt not, of a wretched class of Christians
called Antinomians. They are persons who boast of having an interest in
Christ, and say they are pardoned and forgiven, while at the same time they
live in wilful sin and open breach of God’s commandments. You have been told,
I dare say, that such people are miserably deceived. They are going down to
hell with a lie in their right hand. The true believer in Christ is “dead to
sin.” Every man that has real hope in Christ “purifieth himself even as He is
pure.” (1 John iii. 3.)
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But I will tell you of a delusion quite as dangerous as that of
the Antinomians, and far more specious. That delusion is,—to flatter yourself
you have the Spirit dwelling in your heart, while there are no fruits of the
Spirit to be seen in your life. I firmly believe that this delusion is ruining
thousands, as surely as Antinomianism. It is just as perilous to dishonour the
Holy Ghost, as it is to dishonour Christ. It is just as offensive to God to
pretend to an interest in the work of the Spirit, as it is to pretend to an
interest in the work of Christ.
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Once for all, I charge my readers to remember that the effects
which the Spirit produces are the only trustworthy evidences of His presence.
To talk of the Holy Ghost dwelling in you and yet being unseen in your life,
is wild work indeed. It confounds the first principles of the Gospel: it
confounds light and darkness,—nature and grace,—conversion and unconversion,—faith
and unbelief,—the children of God and the children of the devil.
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There is only one safe position in this matter. There is only
one safe answer to the question, “How shall we decide who have the Spirit?” We
must take our stand on the old principle laid down by our Lord Jesus Christ
“By their fruits ye shall know them.” (Matt. vii. 20.) Where the Spirit is
there will be fruit: he who has no fruit of the Spirit has not the Spirit. A
work of the Spirit unfelt, unseen, inoperative, is a positive delusion. Where
the Spirit really is He will be felt, seen, and known.
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III. Let me, in the last place,
describe the particular effects which the Spirit produces on the souls in
which He dwells.
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I regard this part of the subject as the most important of all.
Hitherto I have spoken generally of the great leading principles which must
guide us in inquiring about the work of the Holy Ghost. I must now come
closer, and speak of the special marks by which the presence of the Holy Ghost
in any individual heart may be discerned. Happily, with the Bible for our
light, these marks are not hard to find out.
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Some things I wish to premise before entering fully into the
subject. It is needful in order to clear the way.
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(a) I grant freely that there are some deep mysteries
about the work of the Spirit. I cannot explain the manner of His coming into
the heart. “The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound
thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh and whither it goeth: so is every
one that is born of the Spirit.” (John iii. 8.) I cannot explain why He comes
into one heart and not into another.—why He condescends to dwell in this man
and not in that. I only know that so it is. He acts as a sovereign. To use the
words of the Church Catechism, He sanctifieth “the elect people of God.” But I
remember also that I cannot explain why I was born in Christian England, and
not in heathen Africa. I am satisfied to believe that all God’s work is well
done. It is enough for me to be in the King’s court, without being of the
King’s counsel.
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(b) I grant freely that there are great diversities in
the operations by which the Spirit carries on His work in men’s souls.—There
are differences in the ages at which He begins to enter the heart. With some
He begins young, as with John the Baptist and Timothy: with some he begins
old, as with Manasseh and Zacchaeus.—There are differences in the feelings
which He first stirs tip in the heart. He leads some by strong terror and
alarm, like the jailer at Philippi. He leads some by gently opening their
hearts to receive the truth, as Lydia, the purple-seller.—There are
differences in the time occupied in effecting this complete change of
character. With some the change is immediate and sudden, as it was with Saul
when he journeyed to Damascus: with others it is gradual and slow, as it was
with Nicodemus the Pharisee.—There are differences in the instruments He uses
in first awakening the soul from its natural death. With some He uses a
sermon, with others the Bible, with others a tract, with others a friend’s
advice, with others a sickness or affliction, with others no one particular
thing that can be distinctly traced. All this is most important to understand.
To require all persons to be squared down to one kind of experience is a most
grievous mistake.
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(c) I grant freely that the beginnings of the Spirit’s work
are often small and imperceptible. The seed from which the spiritual
character is formed is often very minute at first. The fountain-head of the
spiritual life, like that of many a mighty river, is frequently at its outset
a little trickling stream. The beginnings therefore of the Spirit’s work in a
soul are generally overlooked by the world,—very frequently not duly valued
and encouraged by other Christians,—and almost without exception thoroughly
misunderstood by the soul itself which is the subject of them. Let that
never be forgotten. The man in whom the Spirit begins to work is never
hardly aware, till long afterwards, that his state of mind about the time of
his conversion arose from the entrance of the Holy Spirit.
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But still, after all these concessions and allowances, there
are certain great leading effects which the Spirit produces on the soul in
which He dwells, which are always one and the same. Those who have the Spirit
may be led at first by different paths, but they are always brought,
sooner or later, into one and the same narrow way. Their leading
opinions in religion are the same; their leading desires are the same; their
general walk is the same. They may differ from one another widely in their
natural character, but their spiritual character, in its main features, is
always one. The Holy Ghost always produces one general kind of effects. Shades
and varieties there are no doubt in the experience of those on whose hearts He
works, but the general outline of their faith and life is always the same.
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What then are these general effects which the Spirit always
produces on those who really have Him? What are the marks of His presence in
the soul? This is the question which now remains to be considered. Let us try
to set down these marks in order.
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1. All who have the Spirit are quickened by Him, and made
spiritually alive. He is called in Scripture, “The Spirit of life.” (Rom.
viii. 3.) “It is the Spirit,” says our Lord Jesus Christ, “that quickeneth.”
(John vi. 63.) We are all by nature dead in trespasses and sins. We have
neither feeling nor interest about religion; we have neither faith, nor hope,
nor fear, nor love: our hearts are in a state of torpor; they are compared in
Scripture to a stone. We may be alive about money, learning, politics, or
pleasure, but we are dead towards God.—All this is changed when the Spirit
comes into the heart. He raises us from this state of death, and makes us new
creatures. He awakens the conscience, and inclines the will towards God. He
causes old things to pass away, and all things to become new. He gives us a
new heart; He makes us put off the old man, and put on the new. He blows the
trumpet in the ear of our slumbering faculties, and sends us forth to walk the
world as if we were new beings. How unlike was Lazarus shut up in the silent
tomb, to Lazarus coming forth at our Lord’s command! How unlike was Jairus’
daughter lying cold on her bed amidst weeping friends, to Jairus’ daughter
rising and speaking to her mother as she was wont to do! Just as unlike is the
man in whom the Spirit dwells to what he was before the Spirit came into him.
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I appeal to every thinking reader. Can he whose heart is
manifestly full of everything but God,—hard, cold, and insensible,—can he be
said to “have the Spirit”? Judge for yourself.
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2. All who have the Spirit are taught by Him. He is
called in Scripture, “The Spirit of wisdom and revelation.” (Eph. i. 17.) It
was the promise of the Lord Jesus, “He shall teach you all things;” “He shall
guide you into all truth.” (John xiv. 26; xvi. 13.) We are all by nature
ignorant of spiritual truth. “The natural man receiveth not the things of the
Spirit of God: they are foolishness to him.” (1 Cor. ii. 14.) Our eyes are
blinded. We neither know God, nor Christ, nor ourselves, nor the world, nor
sin, nor heaven, nor hell, as we ought. We see everything under false
colours.—The Spirit alters entirely this state of things. He opens the eyes of
our understandings; He illumines us; He calls us out of darkness into
marvellous light; He takes away the veil; He shines into our hearts, and makes
us see things as they really are. No wonder that all true Christians are so
remarkably agreed upon the essentials of true religion! The reason is that
they have all learned in one school,—the school of the Holy Ghost. No wonder
that true Christians can understand each other at once, and find common ground
of communion! They have been taught the same language by One whose lessons are
never forgotten.
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I appeal again to every thinking reader. Can he who is ignorant
of the leading doctrines of the Gospel, and blind to his own state, can he be
said to “have the Spirit”? Judge for yourself.
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3. All who have the Spirit are led by Him to the Scriptures.
This is the instrument by which He specially works on the soul. The Word is
called “the sword of the Spirit.” Those who are born again are said to be
“born by the Word.” (Eph. vi. 17; 1 Peter i. 23.) All Scripture was written
under His inspiration: He never teaches anything which is not therein written.
He causes the man in whom He dwells to “delight in the law of the Lord.”
(Psalm i. 2.) Just as the infant desires the milk which nature has provided
for it, and refuses all other food, so does the soul which has the Spirit
desire the sincere milk of the Word. Just as the Israelites fed on the manna
in the wilderness, so are the children of God taught by the Holy Ghost to feed
on the contents of the Bible.
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I appeal again to every thinking reader. Can he who never reads
the Bible, or only reads it formally,—can he be said to “have the Spirit”?
Judge for yourself.
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4. All who have the Spirit are convinced by Him of sin.
This is an especial office which the Lord Jesus promised He should fulfil.
“When He is come, He shall reprove the world of sin.” (John xvi. 8.) He alone
can open a man’s eyes to the real extent of His guilt and corruption before
God. He always does this when He comes into the soul. He puts us in our right
place; He shows us the vileness of our own hearts, and makes us cry with the
publican, “God be merciful to me a sinner.” He pulls down those proud,
self-righteous, self-justifying notions with which we are all born, and makes
us feel as we ought to feel,” I am a bad man, and I deserve to be in hell.”
Ministers may alarm us for a little season; sickness may break the ice on our
hearts; but the ice will soon freeze again if it is not thawed by the breath
of the Spirit, and convictions not wrought by Him will pass away like the
morning dew.
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I appeal again to every thinking reader. Can the man who never
feels the burden of his sins, and knows not what it is to be humbled by the
thought of them,—can he “have the Spirit”? Judge for yourself.
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5. All who have the Spirit are led by Him to Christ for
salvation. It is one special part of His office to “testify of Christ,” to
“take of the things of Christ, and to show them to us.” (John xv. 26; xvi.
15.) By nature we all think to work our own way to heaven: we fancy in our
blindness that we can make our peace with God. From this miserable blindness
the Spirit delivers us. He shows us that in ourselves we are lost and
hopeless, and that Christ is the only door by which we can enter heaven and be
saved. He teaches us that nothing but the blood of Jesus can atone for sin,
and that through His mediation alone God can be just and the justifier of the
ungodly. He reveals to us the exquisite fitness and suitableness to our souls
of Christ’s salvation. He unfolds to us the beauty of the glorious doctrine of
justification by simple faith. He sheds abroad in our hearts that mighty love
of God which is in Christ Jesus. Just as the dove flies to the well-known
cleft of the rock, so does the soul of him who has the Spirit flee to Christ
and rest on Him. (Rom. v. 5.)
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I appeal again to every thinking reader. Can he who knows
nothing of faith in Christ, be said to “have the Spirit”? Judge for yourself.
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6. All who have the Spirit are by Him made holy. He is
“the Spirit of holiness.” (Rom. i. 4.) When He dwells in men, He makes them
follow after “love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, meekness, faith,
patience, temperance.” He makes it natural to them, through their new “Divine
nature,” to count all God’s precepts concerning all things to be right, and to
“hate every false way.” (2 Pet i. 4; Ps. cxix. 128.) Sin is no more pleasant
to them: it is their sorrow when tempted by it; it is their shame when they
are overtaken by it. Their desire is to be free from it altogether. Their
happiest times are when they are enabled to walk most closely with God: their
saddest times are when they are furthest oft from Him.
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I appeal again to every thinking reader. Can those who do not
even pretend to live strictly according to God’s will, be said to “have the
Spirit”? Judge for yourself.
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7. All those who have the Spirit are spiritually minded.
To use the words of the Apostle Paul, “They that are after the Spirit, mind
the things of the Spirit.” (Rom. viii. 5.) The general tone, tenor, and bias
of their minds is in favour of spiritual things. They do not serve God by fits
and starts, but habitually. They may be drawn aside by strong temptations; but
the general tendency of their lives, ways, tastes, thoughts and habits, is
spiritual. You see it in the way they spend their leisure time, the company
they love to keep, and their conduct in their own homes. And all is the result
of the spiritual nature implanted in them by the Holy Ghost. Just as the
caterpillar when it becomes a butterfly can no longer be content to crawl on
earth, but will fly upwards and use its wings, so will the affections of the
man who has the Spirit be ever reaching upwards toward God.
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I appeal again to every thinking reader. Can those whose minds
are wholly intent on the things of this world be said to “have the Spirit”?
Judge for yourself.
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8. All that have the Spirit feel a conflict within them,
between the old nature and the new. The words of St. Paul are true, more
or less, of all the children of God: “The flesh lusteth against the Spirit,
and the Spirit against the flesh, so that ye cannot do the things that ye
would.” (Gal. v. 17.) They feel a holy principle within their breasts, which
makes them delight in the law of God: but they feel another principle within,
striving hard for the mastery, and struggling to drag them downwards and
backwards. Some feel this conflict more than others: but all who have the
Spirit are acquainted with it; and it is a token for good. It is a proof that
the strong man armed no longer reigns within, as he once did, with undisputed
sway. The presence of the Holy Ghost may be known by inward warfare as well as
by inward peace. He that has been taught to rest and hope in Christ, will
always be one who fights and wars with sin.
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I appeal again to every thinking reader. Can he who knows
nothing of inward conflict, and is a servant to sin, the world, and his own
self-will, can he be said to “have the Spirit”? Judge for yourself.
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9. All who have the Spirit love others who have the Spirit.
It is written of them by St. John, “We know that we have passed from death to
life, because we love the brethren.” (1 John iii. 14.) The more they see of
the Holy Ghost in any one, the more dear he is to them. They regard him as a
member of the same family, a child of the same Father, a subject of the same
King, and a fellow-traveller with themselves in a foreign country towards the
same father-land. It is the glory of the Spirit to bring back something of
that brotherly love which sin has so miserably chased out of the world. He
makes men love one another for reasons which to the natural man are
foolishness, for the sake of a common Saviour, a common faith, a common
service on earth, and the hope of a common home. He raises up friendships
independent of blood, marriage, interest, business, or any worldly motive. He
unites men by making them feel they are united to one great centre, Jesus
Christ.
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I appeal again to every thinking reader. Can he who finds no
pleasure in the company of spiritually-minded persons, or even sneers at them
as saints,—can he be said to “have the Spirit”? Judge for yourself.
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10. Finally, all who have the Spirit are taught by Him to
pray. He is called in Scripture, “The Spirit of grace and supplication.”
(Zech. xii. 10.) The elect of God are said to “cry to Him night and day.”
(Luke xviii. 7.) They cannot help it: their prayers may be poor, and weak, and
wandering, but pray they must; something within them tells them they must
speak with God and lay their wants before Him. Just as the infant will cry
when it feels pain or hanger, because it is its nature, so will the new nature
implanted by the Holy Ghost oblige a man to pray. He has the Spirit of
adoption, and he must cry, “Abba, Father.” (Gal. iv. 6.)
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Once more I appeal to every thinking reader. Can the man who
never prays at all, or is content with saying a few formal heartless words,
can he be said to “have the Spirit”? For the last time I say, Judge for
yourself.
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Such are the marks and signs by which I believe the presence of
the Holy Ghost in a man may be discerned. I have set them down fairly as they
appear to me to be laid before us in the Scriptures. I have endeavoured to
exaggerate nothing, and to keep back nothing. I believe there are no true
Christians in whom these marks may not be found. Some of them, no doubt, stand
out more prominently in some, and others in others. My own experience is
distinct and decided,—that I never saw a truly godly person, even of the
poorest and humblest classes, in whom, on close observation, these marks might
not be discovered.
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I believe that marks such as these are the only safe evidence
that we are travelling in the way that leads to everlasting life. I charge
every one who desires to make his calling and election sure, to see that these
marks are his own. There are high-flying professors of religion, I know, who
despise the mention of “marks,” and call them “legal.” I care nothing for
their being called legal, so long as I am satisfied they are scriptural. And,
with the Bible before me, I give my opinion confidently, that he who is
without these marks is without the Spirit of God.
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Show me a man who has these marks about him, and I acknowledge
him as a child of God. He may be poor and lowly in this world; he may be vile
in his own eyes, and often doubt of his own salvation. But he has that within
him which only comes from above, and will never be destroyed,—even the work of
the Holy Ghost. God is his, Christ is his. His name is already written in the
book of life, and before long heaven will be his own.
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Show me a man in whom these marks are not to be found, and I
dare not acknowledge him to be a true Christian. I dare not as an honest man;
I dare not as a lover of his soul; I dare not as a reader of the Bible. He may
make a great religious profession; he may be learned, high in the world, and
moral in his life. It is all nothing if he has not the Holy Ghost. He is
without God, without Christ, without solid hope, and, unless he changes, will
at length be without heaven.
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And now let me finish this paper by a few practical remarks
which arise naturally out of the matter which it contains.
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(a) Would you know, first of all, what is your own immediate
duty? Listen, and I will tell you.
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You ought to examine yourself calmly about the subject which I
have been trying to set before you. You ought to ask yourself seriously how
the doctrine of the Holy Ghost affects your soul. Look away, I beseech you,
for a few minutes, to higher things than the things of earth, and more
important things than the things of time. Bear with me, while I ask you a
plain question. I ask it solemnly and affectionately, as one who desires your
salvation,—Have you the Spirit?
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Remember, I do not ask whether you think all I have been saying
is true, and right, and good. I ask whether you yourself, who are reading
these lines, have within you the Holy Spirit?
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Remember, I do not ask whether you believe that the Holy Ghost
is given to the Church of Christ, and that all who belong to the Church are
within reach of His operations. I ask whether you yourself have the Spirit in
your own heart?
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Remember, I do not ask whether you sometimes feel strivings of
conscience, and good desires flitting about within you. I ask whether you have
really experienced the quickening and reviving work of the Spirit upon your
heart?
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Remember, I do not ask you to tell me the day or month when the
Spirit began His work in you. It is enough for me if fruit trees bear fruit,
without inquiring the precise time when they were planted. But I do ask, Are
you bringing forth any fruits of the Spirit?
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Remember, I do not ask whether you are a perfect person, and
never feel anything evil within. But I do ask, gravely and seriously, whether
you have about your heart and life the marks of the Spirit?
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I hope you will not tell me you do not know what the marks of
the Spirit are. I have described them plainly. I now repeat them briefly, and
press them on your attention. 1. The Spirit quickens men’s hearts. 2. The
Spirit teaches men’s minds. 3. The Spirit leads to the Word. 4. The Spirit
convinces of sin. 5. The Spirit draws to Christ. 6. The Spirit sanctifies. 7.
The Spirit makes men spiritually. ,minded. 8. The Spirit produces inward
conflict, 9. The Spirit makes men love the brethren. 10. The Spirit teaches to
pray. These are the great marks of the Holy Ghost’s presence. Put the question
to your conscience like a man,—Has the Spirit done anything of this kind for
your soul?
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I charge you not to let many days pass away without trying to
answer my question. I summon you, as a faithful watchman knocking at the door
of your heart, to bring the matter to an issue. We live in an old, worn. out,
sin-laden world. Who can tell what “a day may bring forth? “Who shall live to
see another year? Have you the Spirit? (Prov. xxvii. 1.)
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(b) Would you know, in the next place, what is the grand
defect of the Christianity of our times? Listen to me, and I will tell
you.
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The grand defect I speak of is simply this,—that the
Christianity of many people is not real Christianity at all. I know that such
an opinion sounds hard and shockingly uncharitable. I cannot help that: I am
satisfied that it is sadly true. I only want people’s Christianity to be that
of the Bible; but I doubt exceedingly, in many cases, whether it is so.
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There are multitudes of English people, I believe, who go to
church or chapel every Sunday merely as a form. Their fathers or mothers went,
and so they go; it is the fashion of the country to go, and so they go; it is
the custom to attend a religious service and hear a sermon, and so they go.
But as to real, vital, saving religion, they neither know nor care anything
about it. They can give no account of the distinctive doctrines of the Gospel.
Justification, and regeneration, and sanctification, are “words and names”
which they cannot explain. They may have a sort of vague idea that they ought
to go to the Lord’s Table, and may be able to say a few vague words about
Christ, but they have no intelligent notion of the way of salvation. As to the
Holy Ghost, they can scarcely say more about Him than that they have heard His
name, and repeated it in the Belief.
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Now, if any reader of this paper is conscious that his religion
is such as I have described, I will only warn him affectionately to remember
that such religion is utterly—useless. It will neither save, comfort, satisfy,
nor sanctify his soul. And the plain advice I give him is to change it for
something better without delay. Remember my words. It will not do at the last.
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(c) Would you know, in the next place, one truth in the
Gospel about which we need to be specially jealous in this day. Listen,
and I will tell you.
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The truth which I have in view is the truth about the work of
the Holy Ghost. All truth no doubt is constantly assailed by Satan. I have no
desire for a moment to exaggerate the office of the Spirit, and to exalt Him
above the Sun and Centre of the Gospel,—Jesus Christ. But I do believe that,
next to the priestly office of Christ, no truth in the present day is so
frequently lost sight of, and so cunningly assailed, as the work of the
Spirit. Some injure it by ignorant neglect: their talk is all about Christ.
They can tell you something about “the Saviour;” but if you ask them about
that inward work of the Spirit which all who really know the Saviour
experience, they have not a word to say.—Some injure the work of the Spirit by
taking it all for granted. Membership of the Church, participation of the
Sacraments, become their substitutes for conversion and spiritual
regeneration.—Some injure the work of the Spirit by confounding it with the
action of natural conscience. According to this low view, none but the most
hardened and degraded of mankind are destitute of the Holy Ghost.—Against all
such departures from the truth let us watch and be on our guard. Let us beware
of leaving the proportion of Gospel statements. Let one of our chief
watchwords in the present day be,—No salvation without the inward work of the
Spirit! No inward work of the Holy Spirit unless it can be seen, felt, and
known! No saving work of the Spirit which does not show itself in repentance
towards God, and living faith towards Jesus Christ!
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(d) Would you know, in the next place, the reason why we,
who are ministers of the Gospel, never despair of any one who hears us so long
as he lives? Listen, and I will tell you.
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We never despair, because we believe the power of the Holy
Ghost. We might well despair when we look at our own performances: we are
often sick of ourselves. We might well despair when we look at some who belong
to our congregations: they seem as hard and insensible as the nether
mill-stone. But we remember the Holy Ghost, and what He has done; we remember
the Holy Ghost, and consider that He has not changed. He can come down like
fire and melt the hardest hearts; He can convert the worst man or woman among
our hearers, and mould their whole character into a new shape. And so we
preach on. We hope, because of the Holy Ghost. Oh, that our hearers would
understand that the progress of true religion depends “not on might or on
power,” but on the Lord’s Spirit! Oh, that many of them would learn to lean
less on ministers, and to pray more for the Holy Spirit! Oh, that all would
learn to expect less from schools, and tracts, and ecclesiastical machinery,
and, while using all means diligently, would seek more earnestly for the
outpouring of the Spirit. (Zech. iv. 6.)
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(e) Would you know, in the next place, what you ought to do,
if your conscience tells you you have not the Spirit? Listen, and I will
tell you.
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If you have not the Spirit, you ought to go at once to the Lord
Jesus Christ in prayer, and beseech Him to have mercy on you, and send you the
Spirit. I have not the slightest sympathy with those who tell men to pray for
the Holy Spirit in the first place, in order that they may go to Christ in the
second place. I see no warrant of Scripture for saying so. I only see that if
men feel they are needy, perishing sinners, they ought to apply first and
foremost, straight and direct, to Jesus Christ. I see that He Himself says,
“If any man thirst, let him come unto Me and drink.” (John vii. 37.) I know
that it is written, “He hath received gifts for men, even for the rebellious,
that the Lord God might dwell among them.” (Psal. lxviii. 18.) I know it is
His special office to baptize with the Holy Ghost, and that “in Him all
fulness dwells.” I dare not pretend to be more systematic than the Bible. I
believe that Christ is the meeting place between God and the soul, and my
first advice to any one who wants the Spirit must always be, “Go to Jesus,
and tell your want to Him.” (Col. i. 19.)
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Furthermore I would say, if you have not the Spirit, you must
be diligent in attending those means of grace through which the Spirit works.
You must regularly hear that Word, which is His sword; you must habitually
attend those assemblies where His presence is promised; you must, in short, be
found in the way of the Spirit, if you want the Spirit to do you good. Blind
Bartimeus would never have received sight had he sat lazily at home, and not
come forth to sit by the wayside. Zacchaeus might never have seen Jesus and
become a son of Abraham, if he had not run before and climbed up into the
sycamore tree. The Spirit is a loving and good Spirit. But he who despises
means of grace resists the Holy Ghost.
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Remember these two things. I firmly believe that no man ever
acted honestly and perseveringly on these two pieces of advice who did not,
sooner or later, have the Spirit.
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(f) Would you know, in the next place, what you ought to do,
if you stand in doubt about your own state, and cannot tell whether you have
the Spirit? Listen, and I twill tell you.
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If you stand in doubt whether you have the Spirit, you ought to
examine calmly whether your doubts are well-founded. There are many true
believers, I fear, who are destitute of any firm assurance as to their own
state: doubting is their life. I ask such persons to take their Bibles down,
and consider quietly the grounds of their anxiety. I ask them to consider
whence came their sense of sin, however feeble,—their love to Christ, however
faint,—their desire after holiness, however weak,—their pleasure in the
company of God’s people,—their inclination to prayer and the Word? Whence came
these things, I say? Did they come from your own heart? Surely not! Nature
bears no such fruit.—Did they come from the devil? Surely not! Satan does not
war against Satan. Whence then, I repeat, did these things come? I warn you to
beware lest you grieve the Holy Ghost by doubting the truth of His operations.
I tell you it is high time for you to reflect whether you have not been
expecting an inward perfection which you had no right to expect, and at the
same time thanklessly undervaluing a real work which the Holy Ghost has
actually wrought in your souls.
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A great statesman once said that if a foreigner visited
England, for the first time, with his eyes bandaged and his ears open, hearing
everything, but seeing nothing,—he might well suppose that England was on the
road to ruin; so many are the murmurings of the English people. And yet if
that same foreigner came to England with his ears stopped and his eyes
open,—seeing everything and hearing nothing,—he would probably suppose that
England was the most wealthy and flourishing country in the world, so many are
the signs of prosperity that he would see.
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I am often disposed to apply this remark to the case of
doubting Christians. If I believed all they say of themselves I should
certainly think they were in a bad state. But when I see them living as they
do,—hungering and thirsting after righteousness, poor in spirit, desiring
holiness, loving the name of Christ, keeping up habits of Bible reading and
prayer,—when I see these things I cease to be afraid. I trust my eyes more
than my ears. I see manifest marks of the Spirit’s presence, and I only grieve
that they should refuse to see them themselves. I see the devil robbing them
of their peace, by instilling these doubts into their minds, and I mourn that
they should injure themselves by believing him. Some professors, without
controversy, may well doubt whether they “have the Spirit,” for they have no
signs of grace about them. But many nurse up a habit of doubt in their minds
for which they have no cause, and of which they ought to be ashamed.
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(g) Would you know, last of all, what you ought to do if you
really have the Spirit. Listen to me, and I will tell you.
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If you have the Spirit, seek to be “filled with the Spirit.”
(Ephes. v. 18.) Drink deep of the living waters. Do not be content with a
little religion. Pray that the Spirit may fill every corner and chamber of
your heart, and that not an inch of room may be left in it for the world and
the devil.
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If you have the Spirit, “grieve not the Spirit.” (Ephes. iv.
30.) It is easy for believers to weaken their sense of His presence, and
deprive themselves of His comfort. Little sins not mortified, little bad
habits of temper or of tongue not corrected, little compliances with the
world,—are all likely to offend the Holy Ghost. Oh, that believers would
remember this! There is far more of “heaven on earth” to be enjoyed than many
of them attain to: and why do they not attain to it? They do not watch
sufficiently over their daily ways,—and so the Spirit’s work is damped and
hindered. The Spirit must be a thoroughly sanctifying Spirit if He is to be a
comforter to your soul.
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If you have the Spirit, labour to bring forth all “the fruits
of the Spirit.” (Gal. v. 22.) Read over the list which the Apostle has drawn
out, and see that no one of these fruits is neglected. Oh, that believers
would seek for more “love,” and more “joy!” Then would they do more good to
all men; then would they feel happier themselves; then would they make
religion more beautiful in the eyes of the world!
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I commend the things that I have written to the serious
attention of every reader of these pages. Let them not have been written in
vain. Join with me in praying that the Spirit may be poured out from on high
with more abundant influence than He has ever been yet. Pray that He may be
poured out on all believers, at home and abroad that they may be more united
and more holy. Pray that He may be poured out on Jews, Mahometans, and
Heathen, that many of them may be converted.
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Pray that He may be poured out on Roman Catholics, and
especially in Italy and Ireland. Pray that He may be poured out on your own
country, and that it may be spared the judgments it deserves. Pray that He may
be poured out on all faithful ministers and missionaries, and that their
numbers may be increased an hundredfold.
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Pray, above all, that He may be poured out, in abundant power,
on your own soul, that if you know not the truth, you may be taught to know
it,—and that if you know it, you may Know it better.