Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Who is the Holy Spirit?



The Holy Spirit is referred to as the third person of the Trinity. The Holy Spirit bears witness that Jesus was born and died. He is the Spirit of truth. The Father, the Word and the Spirit are all one (1 John 5:6-7). The Spirit directed the pen of the authors of God’s Word (2 Peter 1:21). In the same way, the Holy Spirit helps us to know all things (1 John 2:20). This allows us to keep God’s commandments, so that we can dwell in Him and Jesus dwells in us by His Spirit (1 John 3:24, 4:13).

Everyone who confesses that Jesus Christ is God who came in the flesh as the sacrifice for our sins does so only by the anointing of the Holy Spirit of God (1 John 4:2). God dwells in the spirit of every Born Again Believer by His Spirit  (Luke 11:13; John 7:38-39; Acts 2:38). God gives us His Spirit as a down payment of all that He has in store for us (Ephesians 1:12-14). By the Spirit, we have access to God the Father. The Spirit is building us, the Saints, together as a dwelling place for God (Ephesians 2:18, 22).

The Spirit led Jesus into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil as soon as he was baptized (Matthew 4:1), but Jesus used the Word of God to resist the devil (Matthew 4:2-11). He calls us to follow His example when we are tempted. The Spirit also leads us to obey God, in order to prepare us for what lies ahead in our life (Acts 13:2,4). Jesus cast out demons by the Spirit of God and proved that the Kingdom of God was then present on the earth (Matthew 12:28).

God anointed certain individuals in the Old Testament to enjoy the depth of the Spirit that every Believer has access to today. David valued his relationship with God so much that when he sinned, he pleaded with God not to remove His presence or to take His Spirit from him. He requested that God restore to him the joy of his salvation and to lift him up by His Spirit (Psalms 51:11-12). David also spoke by the Holy Spirit (Mark 12:36). 

When Israel rebelled against God, they vexed God’s Holy Spirit so much that He turned into their enemy and actually fought against them. But then they remembered the days of old, and how God helped them to cross the Red Sea. Therefore, they asked God to put His Holy Spirit within them again (Isaiah 63:10-11). By the Holy Spirit, God conceived Jesus in Mary (Luke 1:35). When Joseph assumed that Mary had an affair, the Lord calmed him and confirmed the truth to him that Jesus came from the Holy Spirit (Matthew 1:18-20).

John the Baptist was filled with the Holy Spirit of God from his mother’s womb (Luke 1:1). His father Zacharias was filled with the Holy Ghost, and prophesied (Luke 1:67). The Holy Spirit was upon Simeon, a devout man of Jerusalem. The Spirit revealed to him that he would not see death before he saw the Lord’s Christ, and this came to pass when Mary and Joseph presented Jesus at the temple (Luke 2:25-27).

God baptizes us with water, the Spirit and with fire (Matthew 3:11; John 3:5-6; Acts 11:15-16). At salvation, we are baptized with the Spirit (Romans 8:9). Then we follow Jesus’ example with water baptism (Matthew 3:15-16). The baptism of fire often refers to trials, which God sees each Believer through. The Spirit of God is also represented as fire, because He enlightens and energizes our soul, penetrating our deepest recesses of spirit and soul and transforming us into the image of Christ (John 3:5).

When we come to God for salvation, His Spirit moves into our life (Romans 8:9). This happened to Jesus when John baptized Him (Matthew 3:16-17). From then on, Jesus did not speak His own words, but only that which the Spirit of God spoke through Him (Matthew 10:20). Jesus commissions every believer to go into all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit  (Matthew 28:19). Jesus teaches us that when we encounter persecution, the Spirit of God will speak through us also (Mark 13:11; Luke 12:12).

Jesus said, that if He did not go away, then the Holy Spirit could not come to Believers (John 16:7). He departed and sent the Holy Spirit to us. The Holy Spirit dwells in us, comforts us and abides with us forever. He is the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive; and He leads us into all truth. He shows us things that are to come, teaches us all things and brings them to our remembrance when we need them. He reveals sin, righteousness, and judgment. He glorifies Jesus and not Himself
(John 14:16-17, 15:26, 16:7-14). (More about the Spirit in tomorrow’s post on this blog).

Prayer:
Lord Jesus, the Holy Spirit came to the disciples in the upper room and filled them with Himself, and they spoke in other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance (Acts 2:2-4, 4:8, 31, 10:44-47). Then they went about praying for others to receive the Holy Spirit as well, and they spread the gospel into the regions all around them (Acts 8:15-19, 9:31, 11:24, 15:28, 16:6-7, 19:2-6). Your words were fulfilled when You gave commandments to Your chosen apostles through the Holy Spirit (Acts 1:2). Give us this same filling of Your Spirit and allow us to follow Your disciples’ example.

Thought for the Day:
The Holy Spirit gives power to Believers everywhere to bear witness about Christ in our family, city, state, nation and the world (Acts 1:8, 5:32).