I wish that it wasn’t necessary for us to stretch our imaginations, but I fear that we must. When you entered the Family of God, through the grace of God and the sacrifice of Christ, you instantly began a new relationship with God, the Holy Spirit. And the Spirit, is in some ways very much like that fictitious uncle that I just described. He is far more important than most Christians realize.
I’m calling this message “Paul’s Doctrine of Pneumatology.” but it’s not his entire doctrine on the Third Person of the Trinity. Trying to restrict our thoughts to this chapter alone, let’s consider what Paul says about the Holy Spirit. We could extend our borders to all his epistles, but the subject would then become too large to handle in a single message. The biography of this Uncle reaches into several volumes, and only eternal history will be able to fully reveal how important He really is to us at this very moment. If you think that this message is dry and unimportant, it is because I am a poor preacher, and you do not already appreciate how important the Spirit is to your eternal being.
And along with those angels there is a much greater and more important Being – the Holy Spirit of God. He is as much a separate Being, a separate Entity, a separate “Person” as you are from your neighbor. Hundreds of verses throughout the scriptures indicate that the Holy Spirit has a will, has intellect, and carries out specific actions; He is a very real Person. Never, never, never think of the Holy Spirit as merely the power of God. Even though He is divine and omnipotent, like any being, He can be offended and He can be grieved. And in some ways He can become your best friend.
Verse 9 reminds us of what I reminded you several times already – The Holy Spirit is equally the Spirit of Christ and the Spirit of God. Just because the Father and the Son are different persons, they have an indescribable relationship which cannot be adequately illustrated by anything that we know upon this earth. They are separate, but they are one – John 10:30. And just as the Bible speaks about the “Christ of God” (Luke 9:20) and the “Son of God,” the Bible also speaks about the “Spirit of Christ’ and the “Spirit of God.” They are one God, but separate persons within the God-head. And the bottom line is that the Holy Spirit is divine; He is as much God as the Father or the Son.
And there is no one related to us by birth or marriage, who is more important to us than the Holy Spirit.
Then verses 9 and 11 remind us that the Holy Spirit actually comes to indwell those who are brought into God’s family. “Ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his.” “If the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you.” Despite the fact that the Holy Spirit is as omnipresent as the other Members of the God-head, these verses are talking about a special relationship between Himself and the believer. And focusing on verse 11, we are told that because the Spirit abides in the saint, we shall some day arise from the grave, just as the Lord Jesus did. Borrowing a pair of verses from Paul’s letter to the Ephesians – When we repented and put our trust in Christ, “after that ye heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation: in whom also after that ye believed, ye were SEALED with that holy Spirit of promise, Which is the EARNEST of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession, unto the praise of his glory.” The indwelling Holy Spirit is the seal, earnest and guarantee that what God has promised and started He will perform and complete. “He that raised up Christ from dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you.” But it’s more than just the life of a future resurrection which the Spirit guarantees to us. Going back to verse one – the Holy Spirt is the Spirit of Life, even the spiritual life that we enjoy right now. The Spirit is the cause and completion of regeneration – the recreation of spiritual life, where there was formerly spiritual death because of sin.
Verse 10 then adds another dimension to this subject by bringing up “righteousness” once again. “And if Christ be in you, the body is dead because of sin; but the Spirit is life because of righteousness.” The Holy Spirit is the purveyor of life because of righteousness. Doesn’t this take us back to the idea of justification – that God has declared us righteous? What God the Father decrees and declares is, in fact, a reality. And once again, the Holy Spirit is at the heart of the subject.
Verse 15 brings up the matter of our new relationship to God the Father. “For ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear; but ye have received the Spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father.” I began this morning by using an illustration of a marriage, but it is more Biblical to talk about a birth. We are not married into God’s family, which suggests our worthiness; we are born again into it. And not only are we born into the divine family, we are fully adopted into it as well. There is a spiritual birth, and there is a spiritual legal adoption. And once again, the Holy Spirit is at the center of that adoption as well as the birth. And because the Spirit abides in the child of God, we can with comfort and confidence, cry out to Jehovah, “My Father” – “Abba.”
There is much, much more that we could say about the Holy Spirit and our salvation, but we must move on.
Verse five goes another step forward and suggests that not only do we walk in the Spirit, but we think in Him. “For they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh; but they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit.” The Christian is someone who “minds” the things of the Spirit of God. The word translated “mind” is “phroneo” (fron-eh’-o). It is translated “to think,” “to regard,” “to mind,” and “to savor.” James Strong says that it means “to have understanding, be wise; to feel, and to think.” In other words, “to mind” the Holy Spirit is to think as He thinks, and to feel as He feels. The Third Person of the Trinity, doesn’t just mechanically bring us into the family of God, He brings the very heart of the God-head into our hearts.
And verse 13 teaches us that it is through the Spirit that we are enabled to mortify the deeds of the body. Let’s say that we were born with a nervous disorder that makes one of our eyes twitch. Our darling fiancé is aware of this and out of love overlooks it during the courtship. But it bothers us, and it bothers others who aren’t so kind and loving. In fact it is so disconcerting and degenerative that it jeopardizes our future – it’s growing worse. And then we are brought into the home of our new spouse’s great, great uncle. It just so happens that among his many talents and skills he is an excellent neurosurgeon. When we finally come to our senses we willingly lay down on the soft carpet in front of the big fireplace and let our new uncle take out his little medical bag. He sprays a little topical Novocain and makes a tiny incision just below our temple and that nasty twitch is gone forever. We had no idea that it could be so easy, and we certainly couldn’t have effected that cure ourselves. “For if ye live after the flesh, ye shall die: but if ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live.” There is not a person in this room who is capable or sufficient to satisfactorily living the Christian life. There are no 12 step programs which can rid us of wicked deeds indelibly planted into our wicked bodies. But there is the ministry of the Holy Spirit, if we are willing for Him to have His way. “Yes, Lord, pull out your scalpel. I will hold still, for you will help me.”
Verse 14 is a wonderful, wonderful statement. “For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God.” Some people might use this verse to try to get away with murder, but the sons of God know better. As the author of the Word of God, the Holy Spirit leads in perfect accord with that Word. Yes, he does put impressions, ideas and thoughts into the hearts of the children of God. But not every thought that we have comes from the throne of God. Not every idea is a divine idea. And the Holy Spirit is as much a part of providential, circumstantial leadership as the Father or the Son. Do you remember when Peter was at Joppa on the coast of Israel in Acts 10? He was staying at the house of another Simon, who was a part of local tanning industry. While in prayer one day the Holy Spirit gave him a vision of some kind about a sheet full of animals. After seeing the same vision three times, Peter was in turmoil as to its meeting. Then “while Peter thought on the vision, the Spirit said unto him, Behold, three men seek thee. Arise therefore, and get thee down, and go with them, doubting nothing: for I have sent them.” Later on, Peter described those events to some of the brethren back in Jerusalem. He said, “The Spirit bade me go with them” to the house of Cornelius. There was no way to verify what the Spirit said to the heart of the Apostle, but since “as many as are let by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God,” the men to whom Peter was talking had no doubts that what he told them was the truth. Christians experience the mysterious internal leadership of the Spirit. Do you experience the leadership of the Holy Spirit?
And do you experience the witness of the Spirit? Verse 16 – “The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God.” There are tens of thousands of people who think that they are Christians, going through the motions of the Christian religion today. But the vast majority of those people have doubts down in the depths of their hearts, because they don’t have the testimony of God to match the testimony of their imaginations and mouths. And that isn’t to say that there aren’t genuine Christians who sometimes wonder about their salvation. But, when the professing Christian walks not after the flesh but after the Spirit…. When he minds the things of the Spirit rather than the things of the flesh…. If he is more spiritually minded than carnally minded…. Then the witness that the Spirit gives him will accurately reflect the true condition of his soul.
Another blessing of the indwelling and omnipresent Holy Spirit is His help to us in our devotional lives. “Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities: for we know not what we should pray for as we ought: but the Spirit itself maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered. And he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit, because he maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of God.” Back in John 9, a common Israelite, upon whom the Lord was working, made a astute comment. “Now we know that God heareth not sinners: but if any man be a worshipper of God, and doeth his will, him he heareth.” It was not necessary for this man to explain that God does in fact hear every word – including those of sinners. But what he meant was that God is under no obligation to acknowledge or answer any sinner’s prayer. In a sense, the Lord hears, but He doesn’t listen to the sinner. He could have gone on to say that the Lord is not obligated to answer the saint’s prayer either, but he wasn’t referring to saints but to the Son of God.
Returning to his doctrine of Pneumatology, Paul declares that every Christian has the absolutely fantastic blessing of the Holy Spirit carrying our words before the throne of grace. We can know that when we pray for a sick relative or friend, our words are being heard in Heaven. We can know that as we plead for the salvation of our loved ones, the Holy Spirit is hearing and sharing our requests with the rest of the God-head. And when we are so full of fear that we can’t speak, or when circumstances don’t permit it, we have the assurance that there is a divine intercessor to speak on our behalf.
What a fabulous family it is into which we have been brought. We sing, “What a Friend we have in Jesus,” and every sentiment of the hymn is true. Now, someone needs to write a song which bears the same kind of sentiments about the Holy Spirit.
Will His blessings never end? No they never will, not through ten thousand millennia. What a Friend we have in the Holy Spirit.
But, can you say for sure that these blessings which Paul describes have been prescribed for you? If we altered the direction of this message just a little bit, this morning, we could use much of these ideas as a means of testing your spiritual condition. If these blessings are not yours, then you are lost and doomed to eternal destruction. Are you absolutely sure that the blessings of salvation have been bestowed upon you? Repent of your sin and believe on the Lord Jesus Christ.