The Holy Spirit is a Person (#2 in the Holy Spirit series)
Have you ever met your hero? When I
was fourteen years old, one of my heroes was American football star, Jim
McMahon. In January he had led his team, the Chicago Bears, to the
championship, and in March, he came to my hometown to sign autographs. I stood
in a long line with thousands of other fans, and bought an overpriced poster. Finally
my brother and I were face-to-face with our hero.
I had watched many of the Chicago
Bears’ games that year, including the championship. I knew all about Jim McMahon
and the disciplinary trouble he’d gotten in. I even knew what kind of treatment
he had gotten for his injuries. So how do you expect he greeted me when I
walked up the steps to the table where he sat autographing pictures? After all,
I knew all about him. If you’re wondering, he didn’t greet me at all. He didn’t
even look at me. He just scrawled his name on my poster.
I could tell you that I met Jim
McMahon that day, but I really didn’t. And there are a lot of people in our
world who have had a similar experience with God. They know all about Him, and
they have even been around people who seem to know him, but they themselves
don’t.
There is a difference between knowing
about someone and knowing someone. We
often put great stress on knowing about
God – in our Bible studies and sermons, but there is no guarantee that we’ll
actually get to know Him through our various activities. Unfortunately it seems
like we don’t even get the chance to know that much about the Holy Spirit.
The first thing we need to know about
the Holy Spirit is that the Holy Spirit is a Person. Not a person, as in a human
being, but a Person, as in a Personal Being, not just an impersonal force.
In John chapters 14, 15, and 16, we
see some clues to confirm that the Holy Spirit is a Person and not just a
force. In John 14:16 Jesus says: “And I
will ask the Father, and he will give you another Counselor to be with you
forever – the Spirit of truth.
Now skip down to 14:26, where Jesus
says, “But the Counselor, the Holy
Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and
will remind you of everything I have said to you.”
In the next chapter, 15:26, Jesus
says, “When the Counselor comes, whom I
will send to you from the Father, the Spirit of Truth whom goes out from the
Father, he will testify about me.”
And in chapter 16, verse 7, “But I tell you the truth: It is for your
good that I am going away. Unless I go away, the Counselor will not come to
you: but if I go, I will send him to you.”
There is a world of difference
between being indwelt by an impersonal force or a Person. Waves on the ocean
are an impersonal force. I tried surfing once and really enjoyed riding the
waves, but you have to be careful because the water can slam you down and even
pull you out to sea. But waves do not have a mind of their own; they are simply
waves. Waves do act, but they are impersonal. They don’t have a goal or
opinions. They do not care about you. They cannot counsel, guide, or lead you.
They simply crash on the shore and sweep out to sea.
But the Holy Spirit is not an it, but
a Person. And this is the One who Jesus promised would live within the
believer. When you take this truth into consideration, the next one will be so
much more powerful. Not only is the Holy Spirit a Person, but the Holy Spirit is God.
The One who lives within us, who
leads us, who purifies us, is God Himself. Do you want to know God’s will? The Holy
Spirit knows God’s will, and lives within us! Listen to 1 Corinthians 2:9-12- As it is written, no eye has seen, no ear
has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love him –
but God has revealed it to us by his Spirit. The Spirit searches all things,
even the deep things of God. For who among men knows the thoughts of a man
except the man’s spirit within him? In the same way no one knows the thoughts
of God except the Spirit of God. We have not received the spirit of the world
but the Spirit who is from God, that we may understand what God has freely
taught us. Paul sums up his thought in 2:16 where he quotes Isaiah, saying,
“For who has known the mind of the Lord
that he may instruct him?” But we have the mind of Christ.
So, if the Holy Spirit is a Person, a
Person who indwells us, why is it that we often do not experience His Presence?
We often limit the work of the Holy Spirit to our emotional response. When I
ask Christians how they knew the Holy Spirit was present in a church service, the
answers include “when we sang the right songs, I felt the Spirit’s presence.”
Or “I got that goose bump tingling sensation or felt my heart strangely warmed.”
So you’re saying that if the songs
aren’t right, the Spirit isn’t there? Or, more like, if we don’t sing your favorite
songs, then Satan has blocked the Holy Spirit? And I get goose bumps when I’m
cold. And I feel a warm sensation when I’m embarrassed. So why don’t I always
feel the Holy Spirit, especially since Jesus promised that He would be with us
always?
There are many reasons why we don’t
experience the Holy Spirit, and I want to highlight three:
1.
There
is often too much noise in our lives. We have televisions bringing
programming from all over the world. We have the ability to surf the internet,
play games, listen to music, check the weather, watch videos, comparison shop,
pretty much anything you can imagine, and we can do it all on our phones wherever
and whenever we want. Oh, and we can use
them to talk or text as well.
We’re
busier than ever, always doing something, always going somewhere. A friend of
mine wondered after he retired, “When did I ever find the time to have a job?!”
Life is busy, and often we’re busy with really good things. But then we’re
falling into the devil’s schemes. If he can’t convert us, he can make us so
busy that we don’t notice the Holy Spirit.
Because God
usually doesn’t speak to us really loudly. Sure, there is the “holy 2x4” that
God sometimes uses to get our attention, but God usually speaks quietly. In 1
Kings 19, Elijah is on the run from King Ahab, who is trying to kill him. This
is right after one of my favorite Bible stories, the showdown between Elijah
and the 450 prophets of Baal, where God
sent Holy Fire down on Elijah’s sacrifice. But immediately after this King Ahab
and his evil wife Jezebel are trying to hunt Elijah down and kill him. Elijah
is hiding in a cave, and God meets him there.
The Lord said, “Go out and stand on
the mountain in the presence of the
Lord, for the Lord is about to pass by.” Then a great and powerful wind
tore the mountains apart, but the Lord was not in the wind. After the wind
there was an earthquake, but the Lord was not in the earthquake. After the
earthquake came a fire, but the Lord was not in the fire. And after the fire
came a gentle whisper… (1 Kings 19:11-12) And this was God’s voice. Are we quiet enough to hear
the gentle whisper?
2.
A
second reason we don’t experience the Holy Spirit’s presence is that maybe you
have built a wall of sin. God is a holy God, and sin cannot remain in His
presence. Listen to Isaiah 59:1-2 Surely
the arm of the Lord is not too short to save, nor his ear too dull to hear. But
your iniquities have separated you from God; your sins have hidden his face
from you, so that he will not hear. There’s a problem: God can hear you
when you call, but your sins have cut you off from Him.
I want to be clear here, because
there can be some misunderstanding here: if you are a Christian and you sin,
you are still a Christian. When I was in driver training, I had a classmate who
drove through a stoplight when the light was red. The driving instructor right
there said, “There goes your waver,” meaning, “Because you missed that
stoplight, you aren’t getting your license.” God doesn’t do that. We are
covered by Jesus’ blood. His sacrifice is sufficient to cover our past sins,
our present sins, and our future sins. But if we continue living with unrepentant
sin, meaning you keep on sinning and you don’t care about your sin, this is
going to negatively affect your relationship with God.
Think about
it in relationship terms – because the Holy Spirit is a Person. If I lie to my wife, what does it do to our
relationship? How about if I continue to lie? When I tell that first lie, there
goes a brick. Another lie, another brick. Soon, I’ve walled myself off from my
wife. Are we still married? Yes. But is there a problem? Yes! And likewise,
when we continue in sin, we wall ourselves off from the Holy Spirit.
We can
often become hard-hearted or calloused toward the Spirit; we ignore Him for so
long until we forget what His voice even sounds like. When Jesus’ disciples
asked why He was teaching in parables, he told them that Isaiah’s prophecy was
being fulfilled: “You will be ever
hearing but never understanding, you will be ever seeing but never perceiving.
For this people’s heart has become calloused, they hardly hear with their ears,
and they have closed their eyes. Otherwise they might see with their eyes, hear
with their ears, understand with their hearts, and in turn I would heal them.”
(Matthew 13:15) This people’s heart has become calloused. We have every
opportunity to see the Holy Spirit at work, to hear His voice, and to
understand Him, but our eyes are wide open and staring at nothing. Our ears are
attuned only to the buzz of static around us, and we never hear. At times we
have taken God for granted and have become calloused to the point where we
don’t even realize that we’re not spending time with Him anymore. That has to
stop!
3.
Finally, some people don’t experience the Holy Spirit because they’re not
Christians. I don’t like to mention this, and I’m not picking on anyone in
particular, but we have to realize that even Jesus said,“Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of
heaven, but only he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven.” (Matthew
7:21)
Here in Zambia, this often takes the
form of someone claiming to be a Christian but holding on to other
non-Christian beliefs, as if the Holy Spirit were just the stronger hex, so
maybe they will hold out and try to hold on to both at the same time. God is a
jealous God. He forbids holding on to other gods. He requires that we make a
choice.
Maybe this describes you. Maybe you
have gone through all the motions, but you’ve never surrendered your life.
Realize that you’re not promised tomorrow. Make the choice to accept the Personal Holy
Spirit today.
Comments