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The
Holy Spirit
[September 1985]
Part
1
"God's Presence With and in Us"
By Arnold B. Come
There are five main emphases about the Holy Spirit in the Reformed
tradition, as found in Calvin, the Westminster Confession, Karl
Barth, and the Confession of 1967.
1. The Holy Spirit is God. That is to say, the Holy Spirit is understood
strictly in Trinitarian terms. The Trinity is a doctrinal way of
referring to the three ways God has of being God--all three simultaneously,
and each always in active relation with the other two. This means
that our experience of God as Holy Spirit always involves also our
relation to God as Creator (Father) and to God as Mediator-Savior
(Son).
God as Holy Spirit comes into our lives in and through and with
God's creation of Israel and its history, in and through and with
the coming of the Word of God in the "flesh" of Jesus
of Nazareth. No matter how profound is our sense of the immediate
spiritual presence of God in our lives, that awareness is always
initiated, given substance and definition, corrected, and sustained
in and through and with our being encountered by the eternal Word
of the Creator--finally and decisively by that Word incarnate in
the life-death-resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth.
The Holy Spirit moves within us, but there is no merging and loss
of identity in the union of Holy Spirit and human spirit.
2. The Holy Spirit is God's most intimate, powerful and mysterious
presence with and in us. God as Creator gives us our very existence
and life, and sets the context and course in which we are to live
it out. But this working of God is hidden, at a level not open to
our discovery or direct awareness.
God as Word speaks to us through the wonders of nature and the
discoveries of science, through the proclamations of prophets and
the great events of history, and ultimately reveals the very being
of God and God's will for our lives through Jesus the Christ. But
all this remains somehow external, outside of us. We may know the
way we should go, but lack the will to follow it. We need a deeper,
inward helping. So the God who created us, and who when we lost
our way took the step to come after us in Jesus Christ in order
to open the way to eternal life, now takes a further step. He invades
our inmost central being by the power of his love, enabling us to
see that all that he has done and is doing in Christ is for us,
out of love and compassion for us.
Even Barth finally said, "The being and activity of Jesus
Christ has essentially and necessarily the form . . . in which he
turns precisely to the single human being, to you and to me, . .
. in which he makes common cause with a particular one precisely
in that one's loneliness, in which his Holy Spirit speaks just to
that one's spirit." And only by the power of this divine love
are we enabled, freely, to respond in love, to accept the fact that
we are accepted.
3. How does such an experience come to each of us? In a blinding,
overwhelming, mystical sense of being caught up into oneness with
God? Not in the Reformed tradition. God's love does not obliterate
our own free struggle. God honors too much "the dignity, truth
and actuality which belong to the individual Christian subject as
such" (Barth).
Every major expression of the Reformed tradition agrees that the
shape or form that this experience of God as Holy Spirit takes is
faith, a relationship in which God takes the initiative to make
it possible and the person accepts and responds with the heart.
It is faith that saves us, not because of our response but because
it unites us with Jesus Christ, from whom new life flows into us.
As Calvin says, Christ remains an object of "cold speculation
. . . at a great distance from us" unless and until we are
united with him. And "it is only in the Spirit that he unites
himself with us. . . . Only through faith does he lead us into the
light of the gospel."
4. The Reformed tradition clearly asserts that this event of faith
is a profoundly mysterious, even mystical, one. But it also asserts
that it cannot be known or seen directly, consciously. It happens,
but it is invisible, unanalyzable, indescribable. The truth of this
event therefore comes to us in its effects.
The concrete shape of faith-union with Christ, of the coming of
God as Holy Spirit, is twofold. It is the experience of forgiveness,
the qualitative change in our relation with God (justification,
reconciliation). It is also the experience of the newness of life,
the gradual permeation of our entire life and being by the spirit
of Christ (sanctification, but not perfection).
5. The coming of God as Holy Spirit into our lives is always and
simultaneously both individual and corporate. There is no such thing
as a lone Christian, living in his or her own relation with God
in splendid isolation.
The Holy Spirit always comes to us and works within us through
and with the Scriptures, the sacraments, and the communal worship
and work of the Christian koinonia (church). And individual Christians
find the fulfillment of faith in that work as it carries them beyond
the church in order to shed the love of God abroad into the lives
of God's children who are lost and lonely, hungry and oppressed,
naked and in prison.
--Rev. Arnold B. Come, formerly president of San
Francisco Theological Seminary, now retired and living in Greenbrae,
Calif.
Part
2
"The Spirit Could Turn Us Around"
By Cecilio Arrastia
For many followers of John Calvin, the Trinity has been reduced
to two Persons. We have some definitions of the function and the
character of God as Father, we have some clarity when it comes to
the role of the Son, but we are very imprecise when we talk about
the reality of the Holy Spirit and his function in the Christian
equation.
The Book of Confessions provides some answers to the question,
What do--or should--Presbyterians believe about the Holy Spirit?
The work of the Spirit of God is characterized both in relation
to the individual Christian and to the church as a community:
The Scots Confession says, "We confess that the Holy Ghost
does sanctify and regenerate us, without respect to any merit proceeding
from us, be it before or be it after our regeneration" (3 :12).
The Westminster Confession of Faith is more detailed and specific.
First of all, it tells us what the Spirit deserves and expects from
believers: The Spirit is "to be believed in, loved, obeyed
and worshiped, throughout all ages." This means that the Spirit
is on the same level of dignity and majesty as that of the Father
and the Son.
The Westminster Confession goes on to enumerate those gifts that
the Spirit grants to the believer: "He is the Lord and Giver
of life, . . . the source of all good thoughts, pure desires, and
holy counsels." The connection between our ethics and the work
of the Spirit is clear and non-negotiable.
The writing of the Holy Scriptures and the proclamation of God's
message by the prophets are the results of the work of the Spirit.
"The dispensation of the gospel is especially committed to
him."
In the central matter of redemption, nothing happens without the
direct participation of God's Spirit. The Spirit is "the only
efficient agent in the application of redemption." His actions
are very well delineated: He is to regenerate men [and women] by
his grace, to convict them of sin, to move them to repentance, to
persuade and enable them to embrace Jesus Christ by faith, and to
unite the believers, dwell in them and give them the spirit of adoption
and prayer.
The Church is the outcome of the work of the Spirit, who unites
believers to Christ and to one another. The Spirit also deals with
the whole area of vocation: "He calls and anoints ministers
for their holy office. . . . By Him the Church will be preserved,
increased, purified, and at last made perfectly holy in the presence
of God."
This controversial doctrine has been abused and deformed, and has
been the cause of many divisions and heretical positions. The fact
that our church often functions like a secular corporation and not
like the mystical Body of Christ may be explained by the negation
of the real presence and work of the Spirit in the life of the Christian
community.
According to the Biblical narrative there were three moments in
which the Spirit was given to the apostolic community. The first
took place in Jerusalem in the days of Pentecost (Acts 2). This
experience enabled the apostles to present the gospel to the wide
community of dispersed Hebrews. It brought about unity in diversity,
community without any interference, and it was the total reverse
of Babel. On Pentecost there were many languages but a clear process
of communication.
The second incident, described in Acts 10, is also very revealing.
We read that "while Peter was still saying this, the Holy Spirit
fell on all who heard the word." The traditional, orthodox
Jewish believers were "amazed, because the gift of the Holy
Spirit had been poured out even on the Gentiles."
Here we have the breaking of frontiers, the widening of the horizon
of the Christian mission. Baptism becomes a privilege also of those
who are "Gentiles." The universality of the gospel is
dramatized. The Second Israel is according to God's grace, not according
to genes or history or culture or tradition. Again the Spirit unites
those God intends to bring together. It is a breaking down of classes
within the Christian family.
The third vignette comes from the very corrupt and paganized city
of Ephesus. Paul is explaining the difference between the baptism
of John, by water, and the baptism of Jesus, by the Spirit (Acts
19). "On hearing this, they were baptized in the name of the
Lord Jesus. And when Paul had laid his hands upon them, the Holy
Spirit came on them."
The Spirit is given to evangelize another family of Gentiles, the
Greeks. The entire city of Ephesus is impacted by the proclamation
of the gospel. Its economic, religious, cultural and emotional life
is touched in a dramatic way. There is turmoil--riot and revolution.
And there is the destruction of some old myths and the acceptance
of a new way of life--"the Way" of the Lord.
In each instance, the Spirit is given for the fulfillment of a
missionary task, to preach to the Diaspora community, to the Romans
and to the Greeks. The giving of the Spirit is positive, and he
is personal but social too. The Spirit consolidates the Christian
family, and then sends its members out to proclaim and share the
gospel, the good things that God has done in them, for them, with
them.
If the Presbyterian Church, with its decreasing membership and
number of overseas fraternal workers, could grasp this perception
of the Spirit and this experience of his transforming, sending power,
the Spirit could turn around our denomination ad majorem Dei gloriam
("for the greater glory of God"). Church growth would
be a reality as a sign of the coming of the Kingdom, evangelism
would not be a suspect word, and every day the Lord would add to
the church those who are being saved.
--Rev. Cecilio Arrastia, at the time of the original
printing of this artical, was associate for Hispanic church development
in the Congregational Development Program Office of the Program
Agency.
Part
3
"Giver of Light And Life"
By Melicent Huneycutt
"Oh, morning, at the brown brink eastward, springs / Because
the Holy Ghost over the bent / World broods with warm breast and
with ah! bright wings."
With these lines Gerard Manley Hopkins captures the fresh Genesis
images of the Holy Spirit as Creator, brooding over the waters and
nurturing them into light and life, and as the Breath of God, breathing
personhood into the potent human clay.
Most Biblical images vivifying the person and work of the Spirit
are images of life. The Spirit is life-giver, life-nurturer, the
life surging in the creation and growth of human personality. Paraclete,
the Greek name by which Jesus introduced the Holy Spirit, who was
to walk beside and dwell within believers, is translated to express
warm and growth-enhancing qualities: Comforter, Counselor, Advocate,
Helper, Partner.
As Comforter, the Spirit first comes into our lives to show us
that we were created to be like God; we were chosen before the foundation
of the world to "be holy and blameless before him" (Ephesians
1:4). The Spirit helps us understand that our self-dissatisfaction
grows out of awareness that we fall short of the glory God designed
us for, and then as Comforter the Spirit leads us to hope in Christ,
who yearns to be the Healer of our brokenness. Making us one with
Christ, the Spirit becomes one with us, filling us with newness
of life.
As "the One beside us," the Paraclete nurtures us while
we discover our new selves in Christ. The Counselor guides and encourages
us toward healthy attitudes and choices, the Advocate intercedes
for and stands up for us, the Helper pours into us strength to live
true to our new personhood, and the Partner shares in our struggles
and our victories.
The Holy Spirit is the life of Christ in us. Like an iris springing
from a dull, dry tuber, we are transformed by the Spirit's life
surging into us. Some of us blossom overnight, while others grow
slowly like a century plant--we each grow according to the God-seed
planted in us and our healthy response to the Spirit's nurture.
Slow growers may experience "being filled with the Spirit"
as a process; they may give to God level after level of themselves,
being filled always with increasing joy and power to serve. Others
may experience a sudden spurt of growth, a sense of God rushing
into their persons and their lives in such a dramatic way that they
try to find a special word for this event. Whatever the name we
give to this transforming power, whatever the description of the
process, we know that somehow we have been enabled to put ourselves
out of the way so that the Spirit has become free to urge us to
our full potential.
The evidence that we have been "filled with the Spirit"
is not often a supernatural gift such as speaking in tongues, which
some mistakenly see as the only "proof." Paul makes it
clear in 1 Corinthians 13 that the Spirit expresses life in us by
fruit rather than by gifts. Love, joy, peace, courtesy ripen in
those who yield themselves to the inflowing life of God through
the Spirit. As unconsciously as trees bear their fruit, stretching
their branches to the sunlight and drawing life into their abiding
roots, the people of God as they mature delightedly and unself-consciously
bring forth graces in their relationships. By these fruits, the
indwelling Spirit is made known--and the true joyous self of each
believer fulfilled.
The Spirit gives gifts even to the immature: the love to reach
out to others, helpful hands-on service, communication with power.
The purpose of gifts, however, is not so much to enhance the growing
individual but to be the life of God in the whole body of God's
people. Just as the Spirit brings to full personhood each one who
welcomes the life of God, so the Spirit brings us into oneness with
each other in Christ and surges in our common life to fulfill God's
dreams for us as the Body of Christ.
Because the gift each of us brings to the Body is a channel for
the flowing of God's love and healing power, believers have the
responsibility for discovering, developing and using their gifts.
Otherwise the life of the Spirit is stifled in one area or another.
Fruitful folk are often those whose gifts are also most prodigally
shared.
The greatest fruit, love, is also the greatest gift. Since our
life in the Spirit is a life in God, and God is love, all the gifts
we have are offered to the Body in the context of love and of delight
in the healthy growth of the whole Church.
The Creator Spirit who works in each one of us, often futile and
fragile people, to fill our lives with love and our beings with
joy, creates an even greater miracle. Somehow that same Spirit infills
thousands, millions of other equally frustrated folk and makes us
together one living, fruitful, giving organism: the Church of the
Living God, the Bride of Christ.
What beauty there is when we move in perfect harmony, responsive
to the Life of the Spirit that makes us one!
--Melicent Huneycutt, a former Christian educator
and PCUS missionary to Korea and associate pastor of First Presbyterian
Church in Evanston, 111.; at the time of the original printing of
this article she was active in the Covenant Fellowship of Presbyterians
and a member of the Joint Task Force to Write a New Directory for
the Service of God.
Four
Tasks Dealing With Our Beliefs
By James G. Kirk
Four specific endeavors that deal with what Presbyterians believe
are under way in the PCUSA:
1. The Task Force on the Confessional Nature of the Church. Confessions
are the church's witness to what it believes. They guide the church
in its proclamation, offer content for education and directions
for pastoral ministry and mission, and give opportunity in worship
to offer God praises and thanksgiving. They thereby shape the life
of the church.
It is not always clear what being a confessional church means in
practice. The Task Force is seeking answers to such questions as:
What were the issues that prompted the earlier confessions? What
issues are crucial today? How did writers in times past confess
their faith in response to the Holy Spirit's guidance, and what
lessons can we learn from their witness? How did Scripture inform
and reform the church's doctrine and teaching, and what faithful
response are we to make in our day?
2. The work of the Special Assembly Committee to Write a Brief
Statement of Reformed Faith will provide opportunities for Presbyterians
to look afresh at their own faith and practice as well as that of
the church catholic and ecumenical. The Committee will seek to learn
from the Word of God what Presbyterians are to think, say and do
in this particular time, situation and place in which God calls
them to confession. It will explore concretely and specifically
the theological, personal, economic and social issues the Word of
God is calling the PCUSA to address as it shapes its mission efforts.
3. The Directory for the Service of God will provide opportunities
to translate confessional heritage into the common work of praising
and worshiping God. The Directory will be guided by that heritage
that frees us to resist imposed forms but constrains us to obey
God's Word in matters of worship, to be informed by our Reformed
confessions, to be catholic rather than sectarian in scope and orientation,
to be open to the richness of traditional and cultural ways of responding
to God's grace, to assure an openness to the Holy Spirit's creativity,
which is spontaneous and yet orderly, and to recognize that as we
faithfully worship God, the Holy Spirit sends us to bear witness
to Jesus Christ in the world.
4. In relation to the design for a Reformed and Presbyterian educational
ministry familiar themes emerge: It will be reformed by the Word
of God, Biblically grounded, historically informed, ecumenically
involved, socially engaged, and communally nurtured.
To be reformed by the Word of God is to study both Scripture and
the contemporary world for the sake of authentic worship and responsible
mission. To be historically informed is to approach with appreciation
the historic faith as evident in the confessions, linking us with
the communion of saints through the ages. To be ecumenically involved
is to be led by the Holy Spirit into becoming more aware of the
oneness of the church, and to participating in mission with other
denominations and in other countries. To be socially engaged is
to follow obediently as God in Christ transforms the world, forms
the church, inaugurates the New Age, and calls the church to participate
in the liberating, reconciling work of the Spirit in the world.
To be communally nurtured is to grow in the knowledge of God and
obey Christ's call as we care for one another and serve those who
are "outside the camp."
--Rev. James G. Kirk, former director of the Advisory
Council on Discipleship and Worship, now co-pastor of First Presbyterian
Church in Kalamazoo, Mich.
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