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THE HOLY SPIRIT: FLOODLIGHT TO CHRIST Few people are more
obnoxious than those who keep talking about themselves.
Regardless of what is being discussed, the self-advertising
"blowers" insert themselves. They
have out-travelled even the tour-guide, out-achieved the genuinely accomplished,
out-lived the most vivacious. Their
attraction-grabbing neuroticism is as incessant as it is offensive. Not so the Holy
Spirit. The Spirit is that person of
the Trinity who is the opposite of all this.
Jesus maintained that the Spirit would glorify him. (John 16:14)
Scripture insists that the Father sends the Spirit in the name of the
Son, never in the Spirit's own name. In
other words, the Spirit is a floodlight. Floodlights
are positioned in such a way that one does not see the floodlight itself, only
that which it lights up and to which it therefore directs attention.
The Holy Spirit is the power of God within us and among us, turning our
attention to Jesus Christ at the same time as it binds our hearts to his.
(Any "spirit" which draws attention to itself is plainly not
the Holy Spirit.) And whereas the world
always thinks that effectiveness is the result of strong-arm coercion,
Christians know that effectiveness in matters of the kingdom occurs as the
Spirit honours the self-forgetful servanthood found first in the Vulnerable One
himself. When even the religious
world is shouting or suggesting that God's strength is made perfect in the
strength of his people, Christians
know that God's strength is made perfect in their weakness.(2 Corinthians
12:9) For this reason the apostle glories
in his weakness (the world always boasts of its strength), for it is weakness
only which God can use. (What, after
all, is weaker than a humiliated representative of that people which the world
has always despised dying the death of a felon, abandoned together with the
city's refuse?) Whenever the church
has forgotten the unique ministry of the Spirit, the church has ceased to serve
and begun to tyrannize, even persecute. The
church's responsibility is always and only, in word and deed, to bear witness to
Jesus Christ. It is the Holy
Spirit's responsibility (i.e., God's responsibility) to Since Christians inhabit the same world that proved hostile to their Lord, it is the Spirit -- and only the Spirit -- who can render Christians joyful in the midst of circumstances which foster misery. "You received the word in much affliction, with joy inspired by the Holy Spirit", says the apostle to those whose joy in the midst of distress was the Spirit's "secret".(1 Thessalonians 1:6) But of course in the midst of the "brainwashing" of a pagan environment the Christians in Thessalonica had found the gospel credible -- even self-authenticating as the truth -- only because the Spirit had surged over them and disarmed the rebel citadel of their Christless hearts. "For our gospel came to you not only in word, but also in power and in the Holy Spirit and with full conviction."(1 Thessalonians 1:5) Those who become sons
and daughters of God by adoption (only Jesus is son by nature) are granted
access to all the resources of their new parent.
One of the ever-needed riches is assurance that they are a child
of God whom the Father will cherish eternally.
And just as a happy person can't help smiling nor a perplexed person
frowning nor an excited person trembling, so the new heir to the Father's riches
can't help crying out, "Abba! Father!"
Assurance is pressed upon her that she is now and will ever be that
daughter whose place in the family of God is secured.
The cry welling up out of her heart, says Paul, is "the Spirit
himself bearing witness with our spirit that we are children of
God...".(Romans 8:15) Everywhere in
scripture the Holy Spirit is evidently associated with Christian experience.
Early-day Christians knew that life in the company of the living,
ascended One was more than intellectual apprehension (the onesidedness of those
who magnify doctrine above all else), and more than lifeless legalism (the
pitfall of those who magnify duty above all else).
It was "righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy
Spirit."(Romans 14:17) There
was a stomach-grabbing immediacy to their life in Christ which is the common
experience of those who cling to the same Lord.
When the Christians in Galatia were in danger of giving up a discipleship
which was gospel-fired and Spirit- Needless to say, it is
the Holy Spirit's penetration of us now which quickens our hunger for the final,
full flowering of God's work in us on the Great Day.
Since the primary fruit of the Spirit is love, the Spirit-birthed love
which seeps out of us now longs for that Day when love and nothing but love will
pour out of us in self-forgetful self-giving.
Since the same Spirit which floodlights Jesus Christ also floodlights our
adoration of him, we find ourselves longing for that Day when we are finally and
fully "lost in wonder, love and praise."
Since the Spirit is so intimately associated with gifts for ministry, we
eagerly The New
Testament speaks of the Spirit as an "arrabon", a pledge.
In modern Greek "arrabon" is a woman's engagement ring.
Delighted as she is now, she knows that something better, something to be
consummated, awaits her. The
Christian, moved by God's Spirit now, knows that the Spirit is but the promise
and pledge of something so grand as to leave God's people filled so as never
more to hunger.
O "floodlight" the Lord with me,
and let us exalt his name together.
Psalm 34:3
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