On the Holy Spirit
Preached at St.
Mary’s, Oxford, on Whitsunday, 1736.
“Now the Lord is that Spirit.”
2 Cor.
3:17.
The Apostle had been showing how the gospel ministry was
superior to that of the law: The time being now come when types and shadows
should be laid aside, and we should be invited to our duty by the manly and
ingenuous motives of a clear and full revelation, open and free on God’s part,
and not at all disguised by his ambassadors. But what he chiefly insists upon
is, not the manner, but the
subject of their ministry: “Who hath
made us able ministers,” saith he, “of the New Testament: Not of the letter, but
of the Spirit: For the letter killeth, but the Spirit giveth life.” Here lies
the great difference between the two dispensations: That the law was indeed
spiritual in its demands, requiring a life consecrated to God in the
observance of many rules; but, not conveying spiritual assistance, its effect
was only to kill and mortify man, by giving him to understand, that he must
needs be in a state of great depravity, since he found it so difficult to obey
God; and that, as particular deaths were by that institution inflicted for
particular sins, so death, in general, was but the consequence of his universal
sinfulness. But the ministration of the New Testament was that of a “Spirit
which giveth life;” — a Spirit, not only promised, but actually conferred; which
should both enable Christians now to live unto God, and fulfil precepts even
more spiritual than the former; and restore them hereafter to perfect life,
after the ruins of sin and death. The incarnation, preaching, and death of Jesus
Christ were designed to represent, proclaim, and purchase for us this gift of
the Spirit; and therefore says the Apostle, “The Lord is that Spirit,” or the
Spirit.
This description of Christ was a proper inducement to Jews to
believe on him; and it is still a necessary instruction to Christians, to
regulate their expectations from him. But [we] think this age has made it
particularly necessary to be well assured what Christ is to us: When that
question is so differently resolved by the pious but weak accounts of some
pretenders to faith on one hand, and by the clearer, but not perfectly
Christian, accounts of some pretenders to reason on the other: While some
derive from him a “righteousness of God,” but in a sense somewhat improper and
figurative; and others no more than a charter of pardon, and a system of
morality: While some so interpret the gospel, as to place the holiness they are
to be saved by in something divine, hut exterior to themselves; and others, so
as to place it in things really within themselves, but not more than human. Now,
the proper cure of what indistinctness there is one way, and what infidelity in
the other, seems to be contained in the doctrine of my text: “The Lord is that
Spirit.”
In treating of which words, I will consider,
I. The nature of our fall in Adam; by which it will appear,
that if “the Lord” were not “that Spirit,” he could not be said to save or
redeem us from our fallen condition.
II. I will consider the person of Jesus Christ; by which it
will appear that “the Lord is that Spirit.” And,
III. I will inquire into the nature and operations of the Holy
Spirit, as bestowed upon Christians.
I. I am to consider the nature of our fall in Adam.
Our first parents did enjoy the presence of the Holy Spirit;
for they were created in the image and likeness of God, which was no other than
his Spirit. By that he communicates himself to his creatures, and by that alone
they can bear any likeness to him. It is, indeed, his life in them; and so
properly divine, that, upon this ground, angels and regenerate men are called
his children.
But when man would not be guided by the Holy Spirit, it left
him. When be would be wise in his own way, and in his own strength, and did not
depend in simplicity upon his heavenly Father, the seed of a superior life was
recalled from him. For he was no longer fit to be formed into a heavenly
condition, when he had so unworthy a longing for, or rather dependence upon, an
earthly fruit, which he knew God would not bless to him; no longer fit to
receive supernatural succours, when he could not be content with his happy state
towards God, without an over-curious examination into it.
Then he found himself forsaken of God, and left to the
poverty, weakness, and misery of his own proper nature. He was now a mere
animal, like unto other creatures made of flesh and blood, but only possessed of
a larger understanding; by means of which he should either be led into greater
absurdities than they could be guilty of, or else be made sensible of his lost
happiness, and put into the right course for regaining it; that is, if he
continued a careless apostate, he should love and admire the goods of this
world, the adequate happiness only of animals; and, to recommend them and
dissemble their defects, add all the ornament to them that his superior wit
could invent. Or else (which is indeed more above brutes, but no nearer the
perfection of man as a partaker of God, than the other) he should frame a new
world to himself in theory; sometimes by warm imaginations, and sometimes by
cool reasonings, endeavour to aggrandize his condition and defend his practice,
or at least divert himself from feeling his own meanness and disorder.
If, on the other hand, he should be willing to find out the
miseries of his fall, his understanding might furnish him with reasons for
constant mourning, for despising and denying himself; might point out the sad
effects of turning away from God and losing his Spirit, in the shame and anguish
of a nature at variance with itself; thirsting after immortality, and yet
subject to death; approving righteousness, and yet taking pleasure in things
inconsistent with it; feeling an immense want of something to perfect and
satisfy all it faculties, and yet neither able to know what that mighty thing
is, otherwise than from its present defects, nor how to attain it, otherwise
than by going contrary to its present inclinations.
Well might Adam now find himself
naked; nothing less
than God was departed from him. Till then he had experienced nothing but the
goodness and sweetness of God; a heavenly life spread itself through his whole
frame, as if he were not made of dust; his mind was filled with angelic wisdom;
a direction from above took him by the hand; he walked and thought uprightly,
and seemed not to be a child or novice in divine things. But now he had other
things to experience; something in his soul that he did not find, nor need to
fear, while he was carried on straight forward by the gentle gale of divine
grace; something in his body that he could not see nor complain of; while that
body was covered with glory. He feels there a self-displeasure, turbulence, and
confusion; such as is common to other spirits who have lost God: He sees here
causes of present shame and a future dissolution; and a strong engagement to
that grovelling life which is common to animals that never enjoyed the divine
nature.
The general character, therefore, of man’s present state is
death, — a death from God, whereby we no longer enjoy any intercourse with him,
or happiness in him; we no longer shine with his glory, or act with his powers.
It is true, while we have a being, “in him we must live, and move, and
have our being;” but this we do now, not in a filial way, but only in a
servile one, as all, even the meanest creatures, exist in him. It is one
thing to receive from God an ability to walk and speak, eat and digest, — to be
supported by his hand as a part of this earthly creation, and upon the same
terms with it, for farther trial or vengeance; and another, to receive from him
a life which is his own likeness, — to have within us something which is not of
this creation, and which is nourished by his own immediate word and power.
Yet this is not the whole that is implied in man’s sin. For he
is not only inclined himself to all the sottishness of appetite, and all the
pride of reason, but he is fallen under the tutorage of the
evil one, who
mightily furthers him in both. The state he was at first placed in, was a state
of the most simple subjection to God, and this entitled him to drink of his
Spirit; but when he, not content to be actually in Paradise, under as full a
light of God’s countenance as he was capable of; must know good and evil, and be
satisfied upon rational grounds whether it was best for him to be as he was, or
not; when, disdaining to be directed as a child, he must weigh every thing
himself; and seek better evidence than the voice of his Maker and the seal of
the Spirit in his heart; then he not only obeyed, but became like to, that
eldest son of pride, and was unhappily entitled to frequent visits, or rather a
continued influence, from him. As life was annexed to his keeping the command,
and, accordingly, that Spirit, which alone could form it unto true life, dwelt
in his body; so, being sentenced to death for his transgression, he was now
delivered unto “him who has the power of death, that, is, the devil,” whose
hostile and unkindly impressions promote death and sin at once.
This being the state of man, if God should send him a
Redeemer, what must that Redeemer do for him? Will it he sufficient for him to
be the promulgator of a new law, — to give us a set of excellent precepts? No:
If we could keep them, that alone would not make us happy. A good conscience
brings a man the happiness of being consistent with himself; but not that of
being raised above himself into God; which every person will find, after all, is
the thing he wants. Shall he be the fountain of an
imputed righteousness,
and procure the tenderest favour to all his followers? This is also not enough.
Though a man should be allowed to be righteous, and be exempt from all
punishment, yet if he is as really enslaved to the corruptions of nature, as
endued with these privileges of redemption, he can hardly make himself easy; and
whatever favour he can receive from God, here or hereafter, without a
communication of himself; it is neither the cure of a spirit fallen, nor the
happiness of one reconciled. Must not then our Redeemer be (according to the
character which St. John, his forerunner, gave of him) one that “baptizeth with
the Holy Ghost,” — the Fountain and Restorer of that to mankind, whereby they
are restored to their first estate, and the enjoyment of God? And this is a
presumptive argument that “the Lord is that Spirit.”
II. But it will appear more plainly that he is so, from the
Second thing proposed; which was the consideration of the person of Jesus
Christ.
He was one to whom “God gave not the Spirit by measure: but in
him dwelt all the fulness of the Godhead bodily; and of his fulness we have all
received, and grace for grace.” Indeed, all the communications of the Godhead,
which any creatures could receive, were always from him as the Word of God; but
all that mankind now in an earthly state were to receive, must be from him by
means of that body, at first mortal, like unto theirs, and then glorious “in the
likeness of God,” which he took upon him for their sake.
In the beginning, the heavenly Word, — being a Spirit that
issued from the Father, and the Word of his power, — made man an image of
immortality, according to the likeness of the Father; but he who had been made
in the image of God, afterwards became mortal, when the more powerful Spirit was
separated from him. To remedy this, the Word became Man, that man by receiving
the adoption might become a son of God once more; that the light of the Father
might rest upon the flesh of our Lord, and come bright from thence unto us; and
so man, being encompassed with the light of the Godhead, might be carried into
immortality. When he was incarnate and became man, he recapitulated in himself
all generations of mankind, making himself the centre of our salvation, that
what we lost in Adam, even the image and likeness of God, we might receive in
Christ Jesus. By the Holy Ghost coming upon Mary, and the power of the highest
overshadowing her, the incarnation or Christ was wrought, and a new birth,
whereby man should be born of God, was shown; that as by our first birth we did
inherit death, so by this birth we might inherit life.
This is no other than what St. Paul teaches us: “The first
man, Adam, was made a living soul, but the Second Adam was made a quickening
spirit.” All that the first man possessed of himself, all that he has
transmitted to us, is “a living soul;” a nature endued with an animal life, and
receptive of a spiritual. But the Second Adam is, and was made to us, “a
quickening spirit;” by a strength from him as our Creator, we were at first
raised above ourselves; by a strength from him as our Redeemer, we shall again
live unto God.
In him is laid up for us that supplement to our nature, which
we shall find the need of sooner or later; and that it cannot be countervailed
by any assistance from the creatures, or any improvement of our own faculties:
For we were made to be happy only in God; and all our labours and hopes, while
we do not thirst after our deified state, — to partake as truly of God as we do
of flesh and blood, to be glorified in his nature, as we have been dishonoured
in our own, — are the labours and hopes of those who utterly mistake
themselves.
The divine wisdom knew what was our proper consolation, though
we did not. What does more obviously present itself in the Saviour of the world,
than an union of man with God? — an union attended with all the propriety of
behaviour that we are called to, as candidates of the Spirit; such as
walking with God in singleness of heart, perfect self-renunciation, and a life
of sufferings, — an union which submitted to the necessary stages of our
progress; where the divine life was hid, for the most part, in the secret of the
soul till death; in the state of separation, comforted the soul, but did not
raise it above the intermediate region of Paradise; at the resurrection, clothed
the body with heavenly qualities, and the powers of immortality; and at last
raised it to the immediate presence and right hand of the Father.
Christ is not only God above us; which may keep us in awe, but
cannot save; but he is Immanuel, God with us, and in us. As he is the Son of
God, God must be where he is; and as he is the Son of man, he will be with
mankind; the consequence of this is, that in the future age “the tabernacle of
God will be with men,” and he will show them his glory; and, at present, he will
dwell in their hearts by faith in his Son.
I hope it sufficiently appears, that “the Lord is that Spirit.
Considering what we are, and what we have been, nothing less than the receiving
that Spirit again would be redemption to us; and considering who that heavenly
person was that was sent to be our Redeemer, we can expect nothing less from
him.
III. I proceed now to the Third thing proposed, viz., to
inquire into the nature and operations of the Holy Spirit, as bestowed upon
Christians.
And here I shall pass by the particular extraordinary gifts
vouchsafed to the first ages for the edification of the Church and only consider
what the Holy Spirit is to every believer, for his personal sanctification and
salvation. It is not granted to every one to raise the dead, and heal the sick.
What is most necessary is, to be sure, as to ourselves, that we are “passed from
death unto life;” to keep our bodies pure and undefiled, and let them reap that
health which flows from a magnanimous patience, and the serene joys of devotion.
The Holy Spirit has enabled men to speak with tongues, and to prophesy; but the
light that most necessarily attends it is a light to discern the fallacies of
flesh and blood, to reject the irreligious maxims of the world, and to practice
those degrees of trust in God and love to men, whose foundation is not so much
in the present appearances of things, as in some that are yet to come. The
object which this light brings us most immediately to know is ourselves; and by
virtue of this, one that is born of God, and has a lively hope may indeed see
far into the ways of Providence, and farther yet into the holy Scriptures; for
the holy Scriptures, excepting some accidental and less necessary parts, are
only a history of that new man which he himself is; and Providence is only a
wise disposal of events for the awakening of particular persons, and ripening
the world in general for the coming of Christ’s kingdom.
But I think the true notion of the Spirit is, that it is some
portion of, as well as preparation for, a life in God, which we are to enjoy
hereafter. The gift of the Holy Spirit looks full to the resurrection; for then
is the life of God completed in us.
Then, after man has passed through all the
penalties of
sin, the drudgery and vanity of human life, the painful reflections of an
awakened mind, the infirmities and dissolution of the body, and all the
sufferings and mortifications a just God shall lay in his way; when, by this
means, he is come to know God and himself, he may safely be entrusted with true
life, with the freedom and ornaments of a child of God; for he will no more
arrogate anything to himself. Then shall the Holy Spirit be fully bestowed, when
the flesh shall no longer resist it, but be itself changed into an angelical
condition, being clothed upon with the incorruption of the Holy Spirit; when the
body which, by being born with the soul, and living through it, could only be
called an animal one, shall now become spiritual, whilst by the Spirit it rises
into eternity.
Everything in Christianity is some kind of anticipation of
something that is to be at the end of the world. If the Apostles were to preach
by their Master’s command, “that the kingdom of God drew nigh;” the meaning was,
that from henceforth all men should fix their eyes on that happy time, foretold
by the Prophets, when the Messiah should come and restore all things; that by
renouncing their worldly conversation, and submitting to the gospel institution,
they should fit themselves for, hasten, that blessing. “Now are we the sons of
God,” as St. John tells us; and yet what he imparts to us at present will hardly
justify that title, without taking in that fulness of his image which shall then
be displayed in us, when we shall be “the children of God, by being the children
of the resurrection.”
True believers, then, are entered upon a life, the
sequel of which they know not; for it is “a life hid with Christ in God.”
He, the forerunner, hath attained the end of it, being gone unto the Father; but
we can know no more of it than appeared in him while he was upon earth. And even
that, we shall not know but by following his steps; which if we do, we shall be
so strengthened and renewed day by day in the inner man, that we shall desire no
comfort from the present world through a sense of “the joy set before us;”
though, as to the outward man, we shall be subject to distresses and decays, and
treated as the offscouring of all things.
Well may a man ask his own heart, whether it is able to admit
the Spirit of God. For where that divine Guest enters, the laws of another world
must be observed: The body must be given up to martyrdom, or spent in the
Christian warfare, as unconcernedly as if the soul were already provided of its
house from heaven; the goods of this world must be parted with as freely, as if
the last fire were to seize them to-morrow; our neighbour must be loved as
heartily as if he were washed from all his sins, and demonstrated to be a child
of God by the resurrection from the dead. The fruits of this Spirit must not be
mere moral virtues, calculated for the comfort and decency of the present life;
but holy dispositions, suitable to the instincts of a superior life already
begun.
Thus to press forward, whither the promise of life calls him,
— to turn his back upon the world, and comfort himself in God, — every one that
has faith perceives to be just and necessary, and forces himself to do it: Every
one that has hope, does it gladly and eagerly, though not without difficulty;
but he that has love does it with ease and singleness of heart.
The state of love, being attended with “joy unspeakableand
full of glory,” with rest from the passions and vanities of man, with the
integrity of an unchangeable judgment, and an undivided will, is, in a great
measure, its own reward; yet not so as to supersede the desire of another world.
For though such a man, having a free and insatiable love of that which is good,
may seldom have need formally to propose to himself the hopes of retribution, in
order to overcome his unwillingness to his duty; yet surely he must long for
that which is best of all; and feel a plain attraction towards that country in
which he has his place and station already assigned him; and join in the earnest
expectation of all creatures, which wait for the manifestation of the sons of
God. For now we obtain but some part of his Spirit, to model and fit us for
incorruption, that we may, by degrees, be accustomed to receive and carry God
within us; and, therefore, the Apostle calls it, “the earnest of the Spirit;’
that is, a part of that honour which is promised us by the Lord. If, therefore,
the earnest, abiding in us, makes us spiritual even now, and that which is
mortal is, as it were, swallowed up of immortality; how shall it be when, rising
again, we shall see him face to face? when all our members shall break to forth
into songs of triumph, and glorify Him who hath raised them from the dead, and
granted them everlasting life? For if this earnest or pledge, embracing man into
itself, makes him now cry, “Abba, Father;” what shall the whole grace of the
Spirit do, when, being given at length to believers, it shall make us like unto
God, and perfect us through the will of the Father?
And thus I have done what was at first proposed: I have
considered the nature of our fall in Adam; the person of Jesus Christ; and the
operations of the Holy Spirit in Christians.
The only inference I will draw from what has been said, and
principally from the account of man’s fall, shall be, the reasonableness of
those precepts of self-denial, daily suffering, and renouncing the world, which
are so peculiar to Christianity, and which are the only foundation whereon the
other virtues, recommended in the New Testament, can be practised or attained,
in the sense there intended.
This inference is so natural, that I could not help
anticipating it in some measure all the while. One would think it should be no
hard matter to persuade a creature to abhor the badges of his misery; to dislike
a condition or mansion which only banishment and disgrace have assigned him; to
trample on the grandeur, refuse the comforts, and suspect the wisdom of a life
whose nature it is to separate him from his God.
Your Saviour bids you “hate your own life.” If you ask the
reason, enter into your heart, see whether it be holy, and full of God; or
whether, on the other hand, many things that are contrary to him are wrought
there, and it is become a plantation of the enemy. Or, if this is too nice an
inquiry, look upon your body. Do you find there the brightness of an angel, all
the vigour of immortality? If not, be sure your soul is in the same degree of
poverty, nakedness, and absence from God. It is true, your soul may sooner he
re-admitted to some rays of the light of God’s countenance, than your body can;
but if you would take any step at all towards it, to dislike your present self
must be the first.
You want a reason why you should renounce the world. Indeed
you cannot see the prince of it walking up and down,
“seeking whom he may devour;” and you may be so far ignorant
of his devices, as not to know that they take place, as well in the most
specious measures of business and learning, as in the wildest pursuits of
pleasure. But this, however, you cannot but see, that the world is not still a
paradise of God, guarded and ennobled with the light of glory; it is, indeed, a
place where God has determined he will not appear to you at best, but leave you
in a state of hope, that you shall see his face when this world is
dissolved.
However, there is a way to rescue ourselves, in great measure,
from the ill consequences of our captivity; and our Saviour has taught us that
way. It is by suffering. We must not only “suffer many things,” as he did, and
so enter into our glory; but we must also suffer many things, that we may get
above our corruption at present, and enjoy the Holy Spirit.
The world has no longer any power over us, than we have a
quick relish of its comforts; and suffering abates that. Suffering is, indeed, a
direct confutation of the pretences which the flattering tempter gains us by:
For I am in human life; and if that life contains such soft ease, ravishing
pleasure, glorious eminence, as you promise, why am I thus? Is it because I have
not yet purchased riches to make me easy, or the current accomplishments to make
me considerable. Then I find that all the comfort you propose is by leading me
off from myself; but I will rather enter deep into my own condition, bad as it
is: Perhaps I shall be nearer to God, the Eternal Truth, in feeling sorrows and
miseries that are personal and real, than in feeling comforts that are not so. I
begin already to find that all my grievances centre in one point: There is
always at the bottom one great loss or defect, which is not the want of friends
or gold, of health or philosophy. And the abiding sense of this may possibly
become a prayer in the ears of the Most High; — a prayer not resulting from a
set of speculative notions, but from the real, undissembled state of all that is
within me; nor, indeed, so explicit a prayer as to describe the thing I want,
but, considering how strange a want mine is, as explicit a one as I can make.
Since, then, suffering opens me a door of hope, I will not put it from me as
long as I live: It helps me to a true discovery of one period of my existence,
though it is a low one; and bids fairer for having some connexion with a more
glorious period that may follow, than the arts of indulgence, the amusements of
pride and sloth, and all the dark policy of this world, which wage war with the
whole truth, that man must know and feel, before he can look towards God. It may
be, while I continue on the cross, I shall, like my Saviour, put off
“principalities and powers;” recover myself more and more from the subjection I
am indeed in (which he only seemed to be) to those wicked rulers, and to
“triumph over them in it.” At least, it shall appear, in the day when God shall
visit, that my heart, though grown unworthy of his residence, was too big to be
comforted by any of his creatures; and was kept for him, as a place originally
sacred, though for the present unclean.
But supposing that our state does require of us to “die
daily,” — to sacrifice all that this present life can boast of, or is delighted
with, before we give up life itself; supposing also, that in the hour we do
somewhat of this kind, we receive light and strength from God, to grow superior
to our infirmities, and are carried smoothly towards him in the joy of the Holy
Ghost; yet how can a man have such frequent opportunities of suffering? Indeed,
martyrdoms do not happen in every age, and some days of our lives may pass
without reproaches from men; we may be in health, and not want food to eat and
raiment to put on; (though health itself, and nutrition itself, oblige us to the
pain of a constant correction of them;) yet still, the love of God and heavenly
hope will not want something to oppress them in this world.
Let a man descend calmly into his heart, and see if there be
no root of bitterness springing up; whether, at least, his thoughts, which are
ever in motion, do not sometimes sally out into projects suggested by pride, or
sink into indolent trifling, or be entangled in mean anxiety. Does not he find a
motion of anger, or of gaiety, leavening him in an instant throughout; depriving
him of the meekness and steady discernment he laboured after? Or, let him but
conceive at any time, that unfeigned obedience, and watchful zeal, and dignity
of behaviour, which, is suitable, I do not say to an angel, but to a sinner that
has “a good hope through grace,” and endeavour to work himself up to it; and if
he find no sort of obstacle to this within him, he has indeed then no
opportunity of suffering. In short, if he is such an abject sort of creature, as
will, unless grace should do him a perpetual violence, relapse frequently into a
course of thinking and acting entirely without God; then he can never want
occasions of suffering, but will find his own nature to he the same burden to
him, as that “faithless and perverse generation” was to our Saviour, of whom he
said, “How long shall I be with you? How long shall I suffer you?”
I will conclude all with that excellent Collect of our Church:
— “O God, who in all ages hast taught the hearts of thy faithful people, by
sending to them the light of thy Holy Spirit; grant us by the same Spirit to
have a right judgment in all things, and evermore to rejoice in his holy
comfort, through the merits of Jesus Christ our Saviour; who liveth and reigneth
with thee, in the unity of the same Spirit, one God, world without end.
Amen.”