by T. Austin-Sparks
Chapter 6 - The Advent Of The Holy Spirit
As we come to the sixth note in the octave, which is the
advent of the Holy Spirit, we approach the matter, as
before, with the question: Why the Holy Spirit? We know,
of course, that the advent of the Holy Spirit inaugurated
a new dispensation here on this earth. It is for us,
therefore, as Christians of this dispensation, to know
just what that implied, and what it is that particularly
and peculiarly obtains in the dispensation in which we
live.
Of course, when we use that word
‘dispensation’, we are using a word that means
more than just a time period, although that is the way in
which it is generally and commonly used. We think of a
dispensation as bounded by certain events and dates, and
running from one particular point in time to another. But
while the word means that, it means more than that. The
word itself means literally ‘the running of a
household’, or ‘the job of a steward’, and
hence ‘stewardship’; and thus it comes to mean
the order or nature of things obtaining at a certain
period—what we mean by the word ‘economy’.
It is, in fact, the same word in the original as
‘economy’: that is, how things are done, what
is done, what are the principles governing the things
that are done, in any given time.
I repeat therefore: it is most important that the
Christian should know what is peculiar to this period in
the history of the world, in the matter of what is done
and how it is done, and the principles governing the
‘what’ and the ‘how’. For you and
I—let us bring this very near home—are
people of this particular economy. Failure to recognize
that has led, and will lead, to much confusion and
weakness. We must know what are the particular features
of that dispensation, or economy, of God which was
inaugurated on the day which we call the Day of
Pentecost. Of course, Pentecost only means
‘fiftieth’—the feast of the two
wave-loaves being held on the fiftieth day after the
feast of first-fruits (Lev. 23:10, 15–17). The
‘day of Pentecost’ was one of very many such
‘fiftieth days’, but, being the most
outstanding and most wonderful of them all, it is marked
out and thought of by us as the only Pentecost. However,
something happened then which changed the whole economy
of God in the government of this world. What that was, it
is for you and me to understand, and to understand very
clearly.
It was not merely that on that day the Holy Spirit took
over the government of things. That was not so. The Holy
Spirit had always been in charge of things. He was in
charge at the creation: “The Spirit of God brooded
upon the face of the waters” (Gen. 1:2); and all the
way through the old dispensation the Holy Spirit was
active. He was there, not only in types and symbols and
figures, but oft-times in actual power and wisdom,
endowing men. He was there, superintending, all the way.
What we have to understand is not just that He took
over on the day of Pentecost, but that He took over on
an altogether new basis. A very big change in the
basis of operation by the Holy Spirit took place on that
day.
Perhaps the most helpful way of presenting this fact is
by drawing attention, first of all, to the sequence of
events in this octave of redemption. The advent of the
Holy Spirit is but a part of the whole, a part of
redemption, but it is a very important note in the
octave. As we follow through these stages, these phases,
of the octave, it will help us to understand each
successive movement in the scale if we can recognize the
follow-on, the sequence in it all.
(1) The Incarnation
Let us look over it. The first note, or phase, of the
octave, was the Incarnation of the Son of God: God’s
Son coming in human form into this world. You will
remember that we tried to explain that there was a
three-fold object in the Incarnation—it had three
quite definite meanings. Firstly, the redemption
of man: we saw something of the nature of man, from what
it was that man had to be redeemed; secondly, the
re-constituting of man according to God’s
original pattern; and, thirdly, the perfecting
of man. Those three things were taken up by the Son of
God, under the title of the ‘Son of Man’, and
in Himself personally they were made true. He was not
only the Redeemer, but He was Himself the Redemption.
Redemption became personal. It was not only what He did,
but what He was as the Pattern of redeemed man. Is it
necessary for me to safeguard what I am saying? Let me
repeat that. Jesus was not only the Redeemer, and
Redemption was not only what He did: He stood there as
the personal embodiment and representation of redemption;
He was the representation of redeemed man, of the kind of
man that would emerge when redeemed.
He, then, was a Man as re-constituted according to
God’s mind; Man, in representation, re-constituted
and different. And in Himself He was ‘made perfect
through sufferings’ (Heb. 2:10). He represented man
perfected through sufferings and trials: not, of course,
in the sense of being made good or sinless, but brought
to completion. We must always remember that the word
‘perfect’ in the Bible does not just mean a
state: it means a measure, a maturity, a completeness, an
‘all-round-ness’, a ‘finalization’ or
final realization of something. In Him the perfecting was
not making Him better—nothing could do that—but
it could, as Man, increase Him. And He did increase. We
noticed that it was said twice over about His early
years, first up to the age of twelve, and again
afterwards, that He ‘grew in wisdom and
stature’, that ‘the grace of God was upon
Him’, and that He was ‘in favour with God and
men’ (Luke 2:40,52). He was growing. And then, as
for the three-and-a-half years, what an enlargement of
patience, enlargement of faith, enlargement of love. He
was the Man perfected, made perfect through suffering;
that is, He was made complete. That is the Incarnation.
(2) The Earthly Life
Then we considered His earthly life. As we watched Him
through the thirty years, and then the three-and-a-half,
we summed it all up by saying: Here is the kind of man
that God is after. Under every test and trial, in all
circumstances of adversity, He is presented to us as the
kind of man that God intends to have—a true
humanity: not, as we said, a ‘theophany’, a
mere transient visitation of God in man-form, but living
from infancy through into maturity of life as a man,
and standing there as One approved of God, of Whom God
could say: ‘In Him I am well pleased’ (Matt.
3:17, 17:5): satisfying God as a Man. In the
earthly life there is presented to us, set before us, the
Man that God intends to have, the Man that God is after.
If only we had eyes to see, and understanding to grasp,
all that He was in Himself, and all those laws and
principles by which He was governed! How different He was
from every other man—utterly different, a mystery to
all. “In the midst of you standeth One Whom ye know
not” (John 1:26; A.S.V.). It was not only that He
was the Divine Son of God manifest in the flesh. It was
proved true again and again that even as Man they could
not fathom Him. The most intimate friends misunderstood,
or failed to understand. There is something about Him as
a Man that is different and inexplicable. But He is the
kind of man that God is going to have.
I should perhaps say here, in parenthesis, that, in a
measure—it may be a small measure, but a very real
measure—that is, or should be, true of every
Christian. The world knows us not because it knew Him not
(John 1:10, 16:3; 1 John 3:1b). There ought to be about a
true Christian something that the world cannot fathom,
something which it is no use trying to make the world
understand, for it never will. There is something
different. We have no need to try to be
different and singular and odd, for we shall certainly be
that, if we go on with the Lord!
(3) The Cross
Then we came to the Cross, and in the Cross we saw
three things. We saw, firstly, one man, one kind of man,
exposed. The Cross of the Lord Jesus was a terrible
exposure, uncovering, of man as he is. If ever man
divulged what he is like, showed what he is and can do,
he did it then. If ever it was made manifest that man is
really actuated and driven by the Devil himself, who has
a foothold in him and only needs occasion for it to be
revealed, it was done then. Don’t let us think:
‘Oh, they were very terrible people! We are quite
different from those people; we would never do
that.’ Wait until we are put to the test. There is
nothing—nothing—of which we are not
capable, if only the circumstances are such as to uncover
the depths of sin that exist in our natures, and draw us
out. Yes, man was exposed in the Cross.
Secondly, we saw man classified: man shown what he is and
where he belongs, put into his right category. Is it not
true in our own case, as Christians, that, as we come,
under the light of the Holy Spirit, really to understand
something of our own hearts, in some measure to know
ourselves—is it not true that we know where we
belong? But for the mercy and grace of God, we know where
we should be in the end—we should go to ‘our
own place’, where we belong. The Cross classified
man and showed where he belonged.
Thirdly, the Cross put all under judgment and death, for
“all have sinned”. One man exposed, one man
classified, one man judged and put away—that is the
Cross.
(4) The Resurrection
The Resurrection speaks of another Man brought in and attested. In the words of the Apostle Paul: “Jesus Christ... was declared”, or ‘marked out as’, “the Son of God with power, according to the spirit of holiness, by the resurrection of the dead” (Rom. 1:1,4). That sums it all up. The resurrection was God’s attestation of the Man Who—far from being put away—is brought in in the place of the man that has been rejected.
(5) The Ascension
The ascension and glorifying is all gathered up in this: the installation of the new Man, representatively, as the first of the sons being brought to glory; the new Man installed in Heaven.
The Spirit Came To Make These Things True In Believers
With this brief reminder of the first five steps in
the octave, we come to the advent of the Holy Spirit. You
notice that each step must follow on the preceding, each
is a part of the other. The advent of the Holy Spirit was
to take up all those things that had preceded, to bring
them down from the glorified Lord in Heaven, and to make
them good in you and in me. The Holy Spirit came to make
effectual in you and me the redemption for which Christ
came—“the redemption that is in Christ
Jesus” (Rom. 3:24)—the re-constitution of man
that is set forth in Christ. He came to take up that work
which was perfected in Him, and carry it to perfection in
us—to perfect us also, to make us complete with the
completeness of Christ.
So that the basis of the Holy Spirit’s operation is
nothing less than all the meaning of the Incarnation, in
those respects.
As to the earthly life, here is the Man, the
kind of man that God is after, and the Holy Spirit has
come to conform us to that kind of man, to the image of
God’s Son: in a word, to make us Christ-like. That
is the Holy Spirit’s work; that is the thing for
which He has come. That is a glorious hope for us.
As to the Cross—yes, it is equally true
that the Holy Spirit’s activity is constantly to
bear witness against that man that has been put away. If
you and I are really indwelt and governed by the Holy
Spirit, we shall know when we touch that man. We shall
know that that is prohibited ground; we shall know that
there is a notice up there: ‘No
Trespassing—Keep Off!’ . Any Christian who does
not know by a sting and a kick-back when he or she
touches the old man, is lacking in sensitiveness to the
Holy Spirit. But there is the other side. The Holy Spirit
is to keep us on the positive side by saying: ‘Now
this is the way, the way of life. Keep off that old
ground—keep on the ground of life!’ Dear
Christian, do take this to heart: do finish with
that old man! Do not be constantly digging him up and
looking at him, going over him and round him, trying to
find something good in him—that is, in yourself; for
you never will! The verdict of God is that in him there
is “no good thing” (Rom. 7:18); so keep off
that ground, and keep on the ground of the new man. The
old man has been exposed: surely you know by this time
how bad he is. Why have anything to do with him?
The Holy Spirit has come to make us know that there is
another ground upon which we must live our lives. He has
come to carry into effect the work of the Cross, the
putting aside of one, and the bringing in of another: in
other words, to make way for the resurrection. You and I
are now by the Holy Spirit called to live upon the ground
of His resurrection, by resurrection life. Resurrection
is the great feature of this dispensation. These are twin
truths—the putting aside of one in order to make way
for the other. And the Holy Spirit has come to work on
that ground.
Finally, all this is gathered up in the Man in the
glory. He is the embodiment of all these Divine
things. He is installed there beyond any earthly risks,
beyond any possibility of interference from down here. He
is out of reach of any kind of touch from this world that
would seek to alter things. He is right above it all. And
then the Spirit comes to take up all this that is
embodied in Him, and to work it out in us and in the
Church.
That, then, is the answer to the question: Why the Holy
Spirit? To make good the meaning of the Incarnation, so
far as that Incarnation relates to mankind; to make good
the meaning of the earthly life; to make good the meaning
of the Cross; to make good the meaning of the
Resurrection; to make good the meaning of the Ascension
and Glorification of the Lord Jesus. The Holy Spirit
takes up all these things, with the object of bringing
them to realization in believers.
The Holy Spirit Is Committed To The Lord Jesus
Thus the Holy Spirit is wholly committed to the Lord
Jesus. He has one all-inclusive, all-embracing concern:
He is focused with all His attention and all His
resources upon the Lord Jesus, to make Him glorious, and
that in believers. As we know, the Lord Jesus said:
“He shall glorify Me” (John 16:14). That is His
work. Perhaps it is too familiar a thing to create any
kind of stir, but I find a good deal of comfort to my
heart from every fresh contemplation of the fact that the
great advent of the Holy Spirit was centred upon and
summed up in this one thing: the making good in you and
in me—that is, in the Church—of all that the
Lord Jesus was and has done as Son of Man. That gives a
ground of confidence in prayer, a ground of assurance of
hope. That is how the Holy Spirit has taken over in this
dispensation.
This was the very burden of our Lord during those last
very full days with His disciples. He stopped His public
ministry, withdrew from the multitudes, and for many
hours before the end gave Himself with concentrated
attention to His disciples. And if you look at those
final days and hours, so tightly packed with this
instruction, this teaching, this unburdening of His
heart, you will find that His burden at that time all
related to the day that was coming. “In that
day...” , “In that day...”, He was saying;
and ‘that’ day was the day of the Holy Spirit.
‘When He is come...’ ; ‘In that day, when
He is come...’ He put the greatest importance and
value upon the coming of the Holy Spirit, because He knew
very well that all that He had come for, as in
Incarnation and earthly life and Cross, would be without
value unless the Holy Spirit reproduced it organically
and vitally in other people.
He gathered that up into one so familiar statement:
“Except a grain of wheat fall into the earth and
die, it abideth by itself alone; but if it die, it
beareth much fruit” (John 12:24). Now He said that
in response to certain people who had expressed a wish to
“see Jesus” (v. 21). It was a strange,
mysterious rejoinder. “The hour is come, that the
Son of Man should be glorified... Except a grain of wheat
fall into the earth and die, it abideth by itself
alone...”. Surely His meaning was: ‘Though you
ask, though you seek, ever so earnestly, you will never
see the Son of Man glorified, only in His being
reproduced in other people, like the corn reproducing
itself. There you will see Me, there you will see My
glory.’
For there is a sense in which there is no seeing of the
Son of Man, the glorious Son of Man, except in
the Church, in believers. Alas! what a poor, poor showing
we make of it! But that is His way. I say, He spent those
hours and those days concentrating upon this thing.
‘For all that I have come to be and to do, the
necessity is that the Holy Spirit shall come. It is far
more important that He should come than that I should
stay. If I stay, I am like the grain of wheat alone; if I
go, I make room for Him to reproduce.’ He taught,
therefore, that the only way to know Him, the only way to
see Him, was this way.
Death, The Obstacle To God’s Purpose, Has Been Removed
What effect ought that to have upon us? Surely, first
of all, it ought to give us real exercise about the
matter of the Holy Spirit having His rightful place in
us, having no obstruction, being free to do His work. Let
us remind ourselves that God, from His side, has moved to
remove the greatest obstruction of all. When, in the
Letter to the Hebrews, the Lord Jesus is presented as the
Man installed in Heaven—“We behold... Jesus...
crowned with glory and honour” (2:9)—it means
that it is possible now for God to get on with His work
in relation to mankind. God’s thought is always
concerning man. “What is man, that Thou art mindful
of him? or the Son of Man, that Thou visitest Him?”
(2:6). Here is the Man to whom men are to be conformed:
but there was a great obstruction, a great obstacle that
made that impossible, and that was death. Death was in
the way. Man can never come to that while the sentence of
death rests upon everything. For when man sinned in his
first father, death, the great enemy to all God’s
purpose, was passed as a sentence upon all men; and so it
stands in the way. That man, that race can never come
there and be like that.
But “we behold... Jesus, because of the
suffering of death crowned with glory and
honour”. He has taken the obstruction, the obstacle,
and destroyed it. ‘Through death He brought to
nought him that had the power of death’ (Heb. 2:14).
He has ‘tasted death in the behalf of every
man’ (v. 9). He has taken up the great obstacle and
put it out of the way. Now we can come to that likeness!
From God’s side, the greatest obstruction to the
fulfilment of this Divine purpose has been
removed—and if you deal with the greatest, you have
dealt with everything—and so the way is open.
The effect of this upon us, then, ought to be that we see
to it that we get off, and keep clear of, that ground of
death—the death that rests upon the old man. This
may sound mysterious, it may sound abstruse, but in fact
it is very real, very practical. If you and I begin to
have any truck with ourselves, as we are in
ourselves, we know that death begins to work. It is
always like that. And the enemy knows it too. If he can
set in motion this “wheel of nature” (Jas.
3:6), get it stirred up and get us involved, he knows
that he has us again under the power of death. The Holy
Spirit is the Spirit of life, and He works on, and only
on, the ground of life. You and I, therefore, should make
it our exercise to be always on the ground of life. We
need to remember that God’s thought for us is life,
not death. If we will lay hold on life, God will react:
the Holy Spirit will move. We accept death too easily.
The enemy is always offering us death in some form or
other and trying to get us to take it on. If we start
flirting with death in any way, we just provide a
playground for the Devil, and he will spoil everything.
It is contrary to the Holy Spirit. May the Lord teach us
what that means.
The Holy Spirit, then, is committed to the risen Christ,
to the realizing in us of all that His risen life means,
with the end in view of glorification.
Present Chastening Related To Future Government
There is in Christ a very full purpose concerning man,
a very full purpose indeed. We said something about that
from Hebrews in our last chapter. “Thou madest Him
to have dominion over the works of Thy hands” (Ps.
8:6); “Thou didst put all things in subjection under
His feet” (Heb. 2:8). ‘The inhabited earth of
which we are now speaking was subjected, not to angels,
but to man’ (Heb. 2:5). That is a tremendous
calling, a tremendous vocation: nothing less than
government of this world, in union with Christ, in the
ages to come. Do you say: ‘That is a wonderful idea,
a beautiful conception—but what is the practical
value of beautiful conceptions and ideas that are afar
off in the ages to come?’ After this wonderful
presentation that we have seen of Christ, and of man in
relation to Christ, and of their fellowship or
partnership in the government of the inhabited earth to
come, there are two things that come out of this letter
to the Hebrews.
One is that, in relation to that purpose, God is doing
something in believers now. Do you remember
Hebrews 12? ‘We have had fathers of our flesh, who
chastened us as it seemed good to them for a season, and
we gave them reverence: how much more to the Father of
our spirits?’ (vv. 9– 10). The whole letter
really heads up into this. With chapter 12 the writer is
nearing the end of his message; he is summing up. What is
it all about? “Holy brethren, partners in a heavenly
calling..." (3:1). Government of the inhabited earth
to come in union with Christ—that is our calling.
But we have got to be trained for it; and what is
happening to us now in our spiritual life is our training
for that, and it is very practical.
If there is one thing that you and I find that we need to
learn, it is how to get spiritual ascendancy. Why does
the Lord allow all these things—these adverse
things, these trying things? why does He not prevent
them? It is in order that we may learn ascendancy of
spirit: for this government is not official—it is
spiritual government. The real government of this world
is spiritual. Behind men and everything that is happening
there is a spiritual system at work. But it is an evil
thing. God is going to clear that out of His universe and
put a good thing in its place. It is going to be a
spiritual but heavenly government, and when
there is a heavenly background to this world, what a
different kind of world it will be. God is going to make
this world a wholesome place by placing a wholesome
spiritual government over it, and that government is
going to be put in the hands of the saints.
But with that in view we are going through an awful
gruelling, an awful schooling in the hands of the Father
of our spirits. It is all over this matter of getting
spiritual ascendancy. Every day we have something to get
on top of, spiritually; something that must be put in
subjection under our feet. Too often it gets on top and
puts its feet on us. In order to bring it under, we have
to co-operate with the Lord, and our training is so that
we may learn how to bring it under our feet. The Holy
Spirit is here for that. All those words about being
“strengthened with power through His Spirit in the
inward man” (Eph. 3:16), ‘strong in the
strength of the Lord’ (cf. Eph. 6:10; 1 Pet.
4:11)—all such words have to do with the matter of
gaining spiritual ascendancy, getting on top.
Need For Encouragement And Warning
The other thing that comes out of this letter to the
Hebrews is that so constantly struck note of exhortation,
of encouragement. “Let us go on....” There is
so much of warning and entreaty. Why? Because of this
high calling, because of this great vocation, because of
this very purpose in our new creation and union with
God’s Son. It is our inheritance—the inhabited
earth to come and the government of it. We need much
encouragement, we need much exhorting, we need constant
warning; it is so big a thing. I believe it is that to
which the writer refers when he says: “How shall we
escape, if we neglect so great salvation?”
(2:3). The “so great salvation” is not just
escaping hell and somehow scraping into Heaven—it is
all this that is in this very letter. “Partners in a
heavenly calling”.
The Holy Spirit has come for the very purpose of making
that good. Perhaps the names by which the Lord Jesus
called Him do not impress us very much: for instance,
when He calls Him, in our language, ‘the
Comforter’. Of course, that is very good: we need
comforting; but that is only a part of the meaning of His
Name. Its fuller meaning is: ‘the One called
alongside’, co-operating with us; ‘the
Encourager’, ‘the Advocate’. He has come
to be alongside—to be our Helper and Encourager in
this great work of conformity to God’s Son and
fulfilment of eternal vocation in the ages to come.
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