Dr. John Owen (1616-1683)
What Things We Gain by Having
Communion With the Spirit of God
The
Things in Which we have Communion with the Holy Spirit
by Dr. John Owen
The first general work of the Holy Spirit
is to bring to mind the words and promises of Christ
The first thing in which we have
communion with the Holy Spirit is his work of bringing to mind the
things that Jesus said (John 14:26). There are two promises in this
verse. There is the promise of the Spirit’s teaching, which I will
deal with under his work of anointing believers, and there is the
promise of “bringing to remembrance all things that Jesus said.”
The work of bringing to remembrance
things that Jesus said is the first general promise concerning the
Spirit’s work as comforter.
This promise first concerned the
apostles. Christ promised his apostles that the Holy Spirit would bring
back to their minds, by a direct work of almighty power, the things that
he had said to them, so that by his inspiration they might be enabled to
write and preach them for the good and benefit of his church (2 Pet.
1:21). The apostles had forgotten much of what Christ had said to them,
or might possibly do so. And what they did remember by their natural
ability was not a sufficient foundation for them to write an infallible
rule of faith for the church. It would be by this work of the Spirit
that they would be enabled to write such an infallible rule of faith.
This promise of bringing to remembrance
all the things that Jesus had spoken is also for the comfort of
believers. Christ had been speaking to his disciples to comfort them by
giving them precious promises of his help and strength in this life. He
told them of the love of the Father, of the glory he was providing for
them, which was full of unspeakable joy. “But,” Christ says, “I
know how unable you are to make use of these things for your own
comfort. The Spirit, therefore, will bring them back to your minds in
their full strength, so that you will find that comfort in them which I
intended.” And this is one reason why it was necessary for believers
that Christ’s bodily absence should be more than made up for by the
presence of the Spirit. While he was with them, what little effect his
promises had on their hearts! But when the Spirit came, how full of joy
did he make all things to them. He brings the promises of Christ to our
minds and hearts to comfort us, to bring us the joy of them and that far
beyond the joy the disciples found in them when Christ spoke to them on
earth. The gracious influences of the promises were then restrained so
that the dispensation of the Spirit might be seen to be more glorious
than that of the giving of the law.
Christ told the disciples that the effect
of the Holy Spirit’s work in bringing things to their remembrance
would be peace (John 14:27). They would be freed from worried, anxious
minds and fearful hearts. It is stupid to rely on our natural abilities
to remember the promises of Christ. But when the Comforter undertakes
the work, then all is well. Our Saviour Christ, then, left to his Spirit
the powerful effect of his promises which he personally gave his
apostles in their great distress. We may therefore see where all the
spiritual comfort we have in this world comes from, and so we may have
fellowship with the Holy Spirit in this his work.
The Holy Spirit does his work
powerfully. A believer may be in the saddest and darkest condition
imaginable. Even so, the Holy Spirit is able to break through all this
and bring to mind the promises of Christ. By this work, the Holy Spirit
enables Christians to sit in dungeons, rejoice in flames and glory in
troubles. If he brings to mind the promises of Christ for our comfort,
neither Satan nor man, neither sin nor the world, nor even death itself
shall take away our comfort. Saints who have communion with the Holy
Spirit know this only too well. Sometimes the heavens are black over
them, and the earth trembles under them. Disasters and distresses appear
which are so full of horror and darkness that they are tempted to give
up in despair. So how greatly are their spirits revived when the Holy
Spirit brings the words of Christ to their minds for their comfort and
joy. Thus, believers are not dependent on outward circumstances for
their happiness, for they have the inward and powerfully effective work
of the Holy Spirit, to whom they give themselves up by faith.
The Holy Spirit does his work
sovereignly. The Holy Spirit distributes to everyone as he wills.
So the believer may at one time be full of joy and, at another, full of
distress. Every promise at one time brings great joy when troubles are
great and heavy; yet at another time, when only suffering a little, he
finds no joy in the promises, however much he seeks for it. The reason
is simple. The Holy Spirit distributes as he wills. So there are no
rules or course of procedure given to us to follow in order to get peace
and joy in the promises. In this way, faith learns to wait on the
sovereign will and pleasure of the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit works freely and
without payment. Because much of the comfort which comes by the
promises depends on the sovereign will of the Holy Spirit, so we find
that comfort comes unexpectedly when the heart has every reason in the
world to expect distress and sorrow. This is often the first means of
restoring a backsliding soul who might justly be expecting to be utterly
cast off.
The life and soul of all our comforts are
treasured up in the promises of Christ. They are the breasts from which
we suck the milk of godly comfort. Who does not know how powerless these
promises are in the bare letter, even though we may meditate long on
them, as well as how unexpectedly they burst in on the soul, bringing
great comfort and joy. Faith deals especially with the Holy Spirit.
Faith considers the promises themselves, looks up to the Spirit and
waits for the Spirit to bring life and comfort into them. No sooner does
the soul begin to feel the life of a promise warming his heart, freeing
him from fear, worries and troubles, than it may know, and it ought to
know, that the Holy Spirit is doing his work. This will add to the
believer’s joy and lead him into deeper fellowship with the Holy
Spirit.
The second general work of the Holy
Spirit is to glorify Christ (John 16:14)
If the work of the Spirit is to glorify
Christ, then we may see what sort of a spirit that is who sets himself
up in the place of Christ, calling himself “the vicar of Christ” or
“another Christ.” The work of the Comforter is to glorify Christ. So
any spirit that claims to be of Christ and does not seek to glorify that
Christ who spoke to his apostles is clearly a false spirit.
But how will the Comforter glorify
Christ? “He,” says Christ, “shall take of mine.” What these
things are is told us in the next verse. “All things that the Father
has are mine, therefore I said he shall take of mine.” Christ is not
speaking of the essence and essential properties of the Father and the
Son, but he is speaking of the grace which is brought to us by the
Father and the Son. This is what Christ calls “my things,” because
they are the “things” purchased by his mediation. They are also the
“things of the Father,” because in his eternal love, he has provided
them to be brought to us by the blood of his Son. They are the fruits of
his election. “These,” said Christ, “the Comforter shall receive.
They shall be committed to him so that he may bring them to you for your
good and for your comfort in trouble. So he shall show, declare and make
them known to you.” As Comforter, he reveals to the souls of sinners
the good things of the covenant of grace, which the Father has provided
and the Son has purchased. He shows to us mercy, grace, forgiveness,
righteousness and acceptance with God. It is vital to know that these
are the things of Christ which he has procured for us. They are shown to
us for our comfort and establishment. These things the Holy Spirit
effectively conveys to the souls of believers, and makes them known to
them for their own good; that they were originally from the Father,
prepared from eternity in his love and good will; that they were
purchased for them by Christ and laid up for them in the covenant of
grace for their use. In this way, Christ is magnified and glorified in
their hearts and they then fully realize what a glorious Saviour and
Redeemer he is. It is by the work of the Holy Spirit that a believer
glorifies and honours Christ for the eternal redemption he has purchased
for him. “No-one can say that Jesus is Lord, but by the Holy Spirit”
(1 Cor. 12:3).
The third general work of the Holy Spirit
is to “…pour the love of God into our hearts” (Rom 5:5)
That it is the love of God to us and not
our love to God which is here meant is clear from the context. The love
of God is either the love of his purpose to do us good or the love of
acceptance and approval by him. Both these are called the love of God in
Scripture. Now, how can these be poured into our hearts? This can be
done only by giving us a spiritual understanding of them. God pours the
Holy Spirit abundantly on us and he pours out the love of God into our
hearts. That is, the Holy Spirit so persuades us that God loves us that
our souls are filled with joy and comfort. This is his work and he does
it effectively. To persuade a poor, sinful soul that God in Jesus Christ
loves him, delights in him, is well pleased with him and only has
thoughts of kindness towards him is an inexpressible mercy.
This is the special work of the Holy
Spirit and by this special work we have communion with the Father in his
love, which is poured into our hearts. So not only do we rejoice in and
glorify the Holy Spirit who does this work, but in the Father also,
whose love it is. It is the same in respect of the Son, in taking the
things of Christ and showing them to us. What we have of heaven in this
world lies in this work of the Holy Spirit.
The fourth general work of the Holy
Spirit is to bear witness with our spirits that we are the children of
God (Rom 8:16)
Sometimes the soul wonders whether it is
a child of God or not, because so much of the old nature still remains.
So the soul brings out all the evidences to prove its claim to be a true
child of God. To support this claim, the Holy Spirit comes and bears
witness that the claim is true.
The picture is that of judicial
proceedings in a court of law. The judge being seated, the person
concerned lays his claim, produces his evidences and pleads his case.
Then a person of known and approved integrity comes into the court and
testifies on behalf of the claimant. This stops the mouth of all the
adversaries and fills the man that pleaded with joy and satisfaction. It
is the same with the believer. The soul, by the power of his own
conscience, is brought before the law of God. There the soul puts in his
plea that he is a true child of God, that he does indeed belong to
God’s family, and to prove this, he produces all his evidences,
everything by which faith gives him a right and title to God. Satan, in
the meantime, opposes with all his might. Sin and the law add their
opposition also. Many flaws are found in his evidences. The truth of
them all is questioned and the soul is left in doubt as to whether he is
a child of God or not. Then the Comforter comes and by a word of promise
or in some other way, overwhelms the heart with a sure persuasion,
putting down all objections, showing that his plea is good and that he
is indeed a child of God. And therefore the Holy Spirit is said to
“witness with our spirits that we are children of God.”
At the same time, he enables us to show
our love to the Father by acts of obedience to his will, which is called
“crying Abba, Father” (Gal. 4:6). But as the Holy Spirit works
sovereignly of his own will and pleasure, the believer may be kept in
doubt for a long time. The law sometimes seems to prevail, sin and Satan
to rejoice and the poor soul is filled with dread about his inheritance.
Perhaps by his own witness, from his faith, sanctification and previous
experience, he keeps up his claim with some life and comfort. But the
work is not done, the conquest is not fully won, until the Spirit, who
works freely and effectively, when and how he wills, comes in with his
testimony also. Clothing his power with his promise, he makes all
parties concerned listen to him and so puts an end to the whole dispute.
In this, he gives us holy fellowship with
himself. The soul knows his voice when he speaks. There is something too
great in that voice to be only the voice of some created power. When the
Lord Jesus Christ at one word stilled the storm, all who were with him
knew there was divine power at work (Matt. 8:25-27). And when the Holy
Spirit with one word stills the storms in the soul, bringing calm and
assurance, then the soul knows by experience that divine power is
present and so rejoices in that presence.
The fifth general work of the Holy Spirit
is His work in sealing us (Eph 1:13; 4:30)
To seal something is to impart the image
of the seal to the thing sealed. The character of the seal is stamped on
the things sealed. In this sense, the effective communication of the
image of God to us should be our sealing. The Spirit in believers,
really communicating the image of God in righteousness and true holiness
to the soul, seals us. To have the stamp of the Holy Spirit as an
evidence to the soul that he has been accepted by God is to be sealed by
the Spirit. In this sense, Christ is said to be sealed by God (John
6:27). He had impressed on him the power, wisdom and majesty of God.
“Sealing” confirms or ratifies any
grant or conveyance made in writing. In such cases, men set their seals
to make good and confirm their grants. When this is done, the grants are
irrevocable. Sealing also confirms the testimony that is given by anyone
of the truth of anything. This is what the Jews did. When anyone had
given true witness to any thing or matter and it was received by the
judges, they instantly set their seals to it, to confirm it in judgment.
So it is said that he who receives the testimony of Christ “sets to
his seal that God is true” (AV) or “has certified that God is
true” (John 3:33). The promise is the great grant and conveyance of
life and salvation in Christ to the souls of believers. That we may have
full assurance of the truth and the irrevocability of the promise, God
gives us the Spirit to satisfy our hearts of it. So the Spirit is said
to seal us by assuring our hearts of those promises and the faithfulness
of the God who promised. But though many expositors take this line, I do
not see how this accords with the true meaning of the word. It is not
said that the promise is sealed, but that we are sealed. And when we
seal a deed or grant to anyone, we do not say the man is sealed, but
that the deed or grant is sealed.
Sealing denotes possession and assurance
of being kept safe. The object sealed is separated out from unsealed
objects. Men set their seals on that which they possess and desire to
keep safe for themselves. So quite clearly, in this sense, the servants
of God are said to be sealed. They are marked with God’s mark as his
special ones (Ezek. 9:4). So believers are sealed when they are
marked for God to be the heirs of the purchased possession and to be
kept safe to the day of redemption. Now if this is what is meant, it
does not denote the giving of assurance in the heart, but of giving
security to the person. The Father gives the elect into the hands of
Christ to be redeemed. Christ having redeemed them, in due time they are
called by the Spirit and marked for God, and so they give themselves up
to the care of the Father.
We are sealed for the day of redemption
when, from the stamp, image and character of the Spirit upon our souls,
we have a fresh awareness of the love of God given to us, with an
assured persuasion of our being accepted by God.
So the Holy Spirit communicates to us his
own likeness, which is also the image of the Father and the Son (2 Cor.
3:18). In this work of his, the Holy Spirit brings us into fellowship
with himself. Our likeness to him gives us boldness with him. We look
for his works. We pray for his fruits, and when any effect of grace, any
awareness of the image of Christ implanted in us persuades and assures
us that we are separated and set apart for God, then we have communion
with the Holy Spirit in his work of sealing.
The sixth work of the Holy Spirit is His
being an “Earnest” of “deposit” or “guarantee” (1 Cor 1:22;
5:5; Eph 1:13,14)
From these verses, we learn that the
Spirit himself is the “earnest, deposit or guarantee.” Each of these
words denotes a pledge. A pledge is that property which anyone gives or
leaves in the safe keeping of another, to assure him that he will give
him, or pay him all that he has promised at some future date. But that
which is meant by “earnest, deposit or guarantee” here is a part of
that which is to come. An “earnest” is part of the price of
anything, or part of any grant given beforehand to assure the person to
whom it is given that at the appointed time he shall receive the
promised whole.
For a thing to be an “earnest, deposit
or guarantee,” it must be part of the whole. It must be of the same
kind and nature with the whole, just as if we have some money as an
“earnest, deposit or guarantee” that the whole amount will be paid
later.
It must be a guarantee of a promise.
First, the whole is promised, then the “earnest” is given as a
deposit or guarantee that the promise will be fulfilled. The Holy Spirit
is this “earnest.” God gives us the promise of eternal life. To
guarantee this to us, he gives us his Spirit. So the Spirit is the
“earnest, the deposit, the guarantee” of the full inheritance that
is promised and purchased.
The Holy Spirit is an “earnest, deposit
and guarantee” on God’s part, because God gives him as the best part
of the inheritance itself, and because the Holy Spirit is of the same
kind and nature as the whole inheritance, as an “earnest” ought to
be. The full inheritance promised is the fulness of the Spirit in the
enjoyment of God. When that Spirit which is given to us in this world
has perfectly taken away all sin and sorrow and has made us able to
enjoy the glory of God in his presence, that is the full inheritance
promised. So that the Spirit given to us to make us fit for the
enjoyment of God in some measure whilst we are here is the “earnest or
guarantee” of the whole.
God does this to assure us of the
inheritance and to guarantee it to us. Having given us his Word,
promises, covenant, oath, the revelation of his faithfulness and his
immutability as guarantees, all of which exist outside us, he also
graciously gives us his Spirit to dwell within us, so that we may have
all the security and guarantee of which we are capable (Isa. 59:21).
What more can be done? He has given us his Holy Spirit. In him we have
the first-fruits of glory, the utmost pledge of his love, the earnest or
guarantee of the whole.
The Holy Spirit is also the “earnest,
deposit or guarantee” on the part of believers because he gives them
an awareness of the love of God for them. The Holy Spirit makes known to
believers their acceptance with God, that he is their Father and will
deal with them as with children and so, consequently, the inheritance
will be theirs. He sends his Spirit into their hearts, “crying Abba,
Father” (Gal. 4:6). And what inference do believers draw from this?
“Now we are not servants, but sons, heirs of God and joint-heirs with
Christ” (Gal. 4:7; Rom. 8:17). So as children of God, we have a right
to the inheritance. Of this the Holy Spirit assures us.
The Holy Spirit acquaints believers with
their inheritance (1 Cor. 2:9, 10). As the “earnest” is the part of
the whole, so by the “earnest” we get a foretaste of the whole. By
the Holy Spirit, then, we get a foretaste of the fulness of that glory
which God has prepared for those that love him and the more communion we
have with the Holy Spirit as an “earnest,” the more we taste of that
heavenly glory that awaits us.
The seventh general work of the Holy
Spirit is to
anoint believers (2 Cor. 1:21; IJohn
2:20, 27)
Of the many endowments of Christ which he
had from the Spirit with which he was anointed, wisdom, counsel and
understanding are the chief things (Isa. 11:2, 3). On account of this,
all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are said to be in him (Col.
2:3). So the anointing of believers is associated with teaching (1 John.
2:20, 27). The work of the “anointing” is to teach us. The Spirit
who anoints us is therefore the Spirit of wisdom, of counsel, of
knowledge and understanding in the fear of the Lord. So the great
promise of the Comforter was that he should “teach us” (John 14:26).
Christ promised that the Comforter would “guide us into all truth”
(John 16:13). This teaching us the mind and will of God in the way in
which we are taught it by the Spirit our Comforter is the chief part of
our anointing by him.
The Spirit teaches by conviction and
illumination. So the Spirit teaches the world by the preaching of the
Word as promised (John 16:8).
The Spirit teaches by sanctification. He
opens blind eyes, gives new understanding, shines into our hearts to
give us the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ
and enables us to receive spiritual things in a spiritual light (1 Cor.
2:13). He gives a saving knowledge of the mystery of the gospel. All
this is common to believers.
The Spirit teaches by comforting. He
makes sweet, useful and joyful to the soul that which he, as the Spirit
of sanctification, reveals of the mind and will of God. Here the oil of
the Spirit is called the “oil of gladness,” because he brings joy
and gladness with his teaching. And the name of Christ is experienced as
sweet “ointment poured forth,” that causes souls to run after him
with joy and delight (Song 1:3). We see it in daily experience that very
many have little taste and relish in their souls for these truths which
they believe for salvation. But when we are taught by this
“anointing,” how sweet is everything we learn of God!
The Spirit teaches us of the love of God
in Christ. He makes every gospel truth like well-refined wine to our
souls and the good things of the gospel to be a rich feast of good
things. He gives us joy and gladness of heart with all that we know of
God, which is the great way of keeping the soul close to the truth. By
this anointing, the soul is kept from being seduced into error. Truth
will readily be exchanged for error when no more sweetness and joy is to
be found in it than is to be found in the error. When we find any of the
good truths of the gospel coming home to our souls with power, giving us
gladness of heart and transforming us into the image and likeness of it,
the Holy Spirit is then at his work. He is pouring out his oil.
The Spirit is also the “Spirit of
supplication” (Zech. 12:10). It is he who enables us to pray rightly
and effectively.
Our prayers may be considered as a
spiritual duty required by God. So they are wrought in us by the Spirit
of sanctification, who helps us to perform all our duties by exalting
all the faculties of the soul.
Our prayers may be considered as a means
of keeping up communion with God. The soul is never more lifted up with
the love of God than when by the Spirit it is taken into communion with
God in prayer. This is the work of the Spirit as comforter.
Here, then, is the wisdom of faith. Faith
looks for and meets with the Comforter in all these works of his. Let us
not, then, lose their sweetness by remaining in the dark about them, nor
fall short of the response required of us in gratitude.
The Holy Spirit and the Hearts of
Believers
The Holy Spirit comforts and strengthens
the hearts of believers (Acts 9:31)
This is the chief work of the Holy Spirit
in the hearts of believers. He brings the troubled soul to rest and
contentment by getting the believer to think of some spiritually good
thing or actually brings some spiritually good thing to him. This
spiritual good is such that it completely overcomes that trouble which
the soul has been wrestling with. Where comfort is mentioned, it is
always associated with trouble or suffering (2 Cor. 1:5, 6).
This comfort is everlasting (2 Thess.
2:16). It does not come and go. It abides for ever, because it comes
from everlasting things, such as everlasting love, eternal redemption
and an everlasting inheritance.
This comfort is strong (Heb. 6:18). As we
experience strong opposition and trouble, so our comfort or consolation
is strong and so unconquerable. It confirms and strengthens the heart
under any evil. It fortifies the soul and makes it able cheerfully to
undergo anything that it is called to undergo. This comfort is strong
because he who brings it is strong.
This comfort is precious. So Paul makes
it the great motive to obedience to which he exhorts the Philippians
(Phil. 2:1).
The fellowship we have with the Holy
Spirit lies, in no small part, in the comfort or consolation we receive
from him. This teaches us to value his love, to look to him in our
troubles, and to wait on him for his everlasting, strong, precious
comfort.
The Holy Spirit brings peace to the
hearts of believers (Rom. 15:13)
The power of the Holy Spirit not only
refers to “hope” but also to our peace in believing. When Christ
promised to give the Comforter to his disciples, he also promised to
give them his peace (John 14:26, 27). Christ gives his peace by giving
the Comforter. The peace of Christ lies in the soul’s assurance of
being accepted by God in personal friendship. So Christ is said to be
“our peace” (Eph. 2:14). He slays the enmity between God
and us, “having wiped out the handwriting of requirements that was
against us” (Col. 2:14). Being assured of our justification and
acceptance with God in Christ is the foundation of our peace (Rom.
5:1). To know that we are delivered from eternal wrath, from being
hated, cursed and condemned, fills the soul with joy and peace.
Nevertheless, this peace of heart is by
the sovereign will and pleasure of the Holy Spirit. A man may be chosen
in the eternal love of the Father, redeemed by the blood of the Son and
justified freely by the grace of God so that he has a right to all the
promises of the gospel. Yet this person can, by no reasonings or
persuasions of his own heart, by no considerations of the promises of
the gospel, nor of the love of God or grace of Christ in them, be
brought to that peace until it is produced in him by the Holy Spirit.
“Peace” is the fruit of the Spirit (Gal. 5:22).
The Holy Spirit brings joy to the hearts
of believers
The Spirit is called “the oil of
gladness” (Heb. 1:9). His anointing brings gladness with it (Isa.
61:3). “The kingdom of God is righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy
Spirit” (Rom. 14:17). The Thessalonians received the word with joy in
the Holy Spirit (1 Thess. 1:6; I Pet. 1:8). To give joy to the hearts of
believers is chiefly the work of the Holy Spirit. He enables believers
to “rejoice in hope of the glory of God” (Rom. 5:2). This joy is
produced by the Spirit pouring into our hearts the love of God and so
carrying them through every kind of tribulation (Rom. 5:5).
The Holy Spirit produces joy in the
hearts of believers directly by himself without using any other means.
As in sanctification he is a well of water springing up in the soul, so
in “comforting” he fills the souls and minds of men with spiritual
joy. When he pours out the love of God in our hearts, he fills them with
joy, just as he caused John to leap for joy in Elizabeth’s womb when
the mother of Jesus approached. This joy, the Holy Spirit works when and
how he wills. He secretly injects this joy into the soul, driving away
all fears and sorrows, filling it with gladness and causing it to exult,
sometimes with unspeakable raptures of the mind.
The Holy Spirit produces joy in the
hearts of believers by his other works with respect to us. He assures us
of the love of God and of our acceptance with God and our adoption into
his family. When we think about this, the Holy Spirit brings the truth
home to us with joy. If we consider all the things the Holy Spirit does
for us and in us, we will soon see what a strong foundation he lays in
our hearts for our continual joy and gladness. Nevertheless, the Holy
Spirit works joy in us as and when he pleases according to his sovereign
will and pleasure. This way of producing joy in the heart, David
describes as “having his head anointed with oil” (Psa. 23:5, 6). And
the result of this anointing, David says, is, “surely goodness and
mercy shall follow me all the days of my life.” In Isaiah we have a
wonderful description of the work of the Comforter. (See Isaiah 35.)
The Holy Spirit brings hope to the hearts
of believers (Rom. 15:13)
The great hope of the believer is to be
like Christ and to enjoy God in Christ for ever. “And,” says John,
“everyone who has this hope in him purifies himself, just as he is
pure” (1 John 3:3). By showing “the things of Christ” to us and by
“glorifying Christ” in our hearts, the Holy Spirit arouses our
desires to be like Christ and so we grow and increase in our hope, which
is one way by which the Holy Spirit sanctifies us.
These are the general works of the Holy
Spirit in the hearts of believers, which, if we consider them and all
that they produce, will bring joy, assurance, boldness, confidence,
expectation and glorying. We shall then see how much our whole communion
with God is enriched and influenced by them. |