GOD SPEAKS
THROUGH THE HOLY SPIRIT

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In the church many
sincere, born-again believers have divided themselves into two camps. There are
the “Spirit” people and the “Word” people. The “Spirit” people put their
emphasis on the experiential aspects of Christianity: power, anointing,
supernatural manifestations, and so on. The “Word” people prefer a more
cerebral approach. They think of themselves as serious students of the Word and
shy away from anything that seems to be emotionally driven. To me these
distinctions are nonsense.
If any form of emotional
and experiential Christianity is not based on Scripture, it is nothing more
than New Age mysticism. And if any form of Christianity is entirely cerebral
and has no impact on real Word experience, it is nothing more than an empty
shell. People of the Word must also be people of the Spirit, and people of the
Spirit must also be people of the Word. There is no need to separate the two.
In fact, to do so is dangerous!
In Ephesians 6 Paul
talks about the "Armour of God,” which includes the belt of truth, the
breastplate of righteousness, the shoes of the gospel of peace, the shield of
faith, the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word
of God (vv. 1417). I want you to notice that we have no offensive weapon in
this list. Now you will invariably disagree and point to the sword, the Word of
God, but look carefully. The Word of God is not called “the sword of the
Christian.” It is called the sword of the Spirit. In other words, it belongs to
the Spirit.
He alone can wield it
properly. Without the illumination that the Holy Spirit brings, the Bible is
just black ink on white paper. This is why some of the most disciplined
students of Scripture, even professors and scholars, can be atheists and
agnostics. These are people who are studying the Scriptures from a purely
intellectual and cognitive perspective. These people have used the Bible to
commit the sin of idolatry. All they see are objections, and all they gain is
doubt. “The letter kills,” Paul says, “but the Spirit gives life” (2 Cor. 3:6,
NKJV).
At the end of Jesus’s
earthly ministry as He was preparing to die on the cross, He told His
disciples, “But the Helper, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in My
name, He will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all things
that I said to you” (John 14:26, NKJV). The Holy Spirit is not a doctrine or
denomination or optional experience reserved for only a few Christians.
The importance of this
truth cannot be overstated. He is the third person of the Trinity given by the
Father in response to the prayer of Jesus to be and to do everything Jesus
would do in our lives were He still here physically. Hearing the voice of God
is actually hearing the voice of the Holy Spirit in our hearts. Without His
active participation in our lives the heavens would be silent, for He is the
one who reveals the voice of God in our hearts.
The more we give the
Holy Spirit’s presence a place of honour in our lives, the more sensitive we
become to His voice. It’s this fellowship and communion with the Holy Spirit
that sharpens our spiritual sensitivity and makes our hearts better able to
hear the voice of the Lord when He speaks to us.
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