| Grieve Not the Spirit |
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| Monday, 02 November 2009 00:00 |
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“And grieve not the holy Spirit of God, Many Christians know little about the ministry of the Holy Spirit, and particularly about His ministry in their own lives. The Spirit of God is an important theme of scripture, all the way from Genesis 1 (verse 2) to Revelation 22 (verse 17), but the ignorance of even Bible-readers concerning Him is stunning. Of course, we are taught that He is the very Author of the Bible (II Peter 1:20-21), and yet Bible-believers often suffer from their lack of understanding concerning His person and His work. Perhaps it was the proliferation of false doctrine about the Spirit in the twentieth century that caused orthodox folks to shy away from the Third Person of the Trinity. Whatever the reason for it, the absence of right teaching and learning about Him has damaged the lives and ministries of many good people. However, a working knowledge of His ministry in and to believers in Christ is not hard to get. Certainly the book of Ephesians can give any saint such a working knowledge, and much can be drawn from the simple command in the fourth chapter that we not grieve Him. Ephesians 1 teaches us that we were “sealed” with the Holy Spirit when we “believed” (Read verses 12 through 14). This means that the moment the sinner trusts in Christ for his salvation, the Spirit that has been reproving him and drawing him to Christ comes to live in his body, and he is regenerated (See John 3:3-8, Romans 8:9-11, I Corinthians 6:19-20, and Titus 3:3-6). The logical order of the process as given in this passage is (1) hearing the Gospel, (2) trusting in Christ, and (3) being sealed with the Spirit. This is the logical order, although not strictly the chronological order, because all three may happen at once! Verse 14 says that the presence of the Spirit in our lives is “the earnest [pledge or security] of our inheritance,” our down-payment on Heaven! We have God’s Spirit in our lives from the moment we are saved until we go to glory. What do we know about the indwelling Spirit? THE HOLY SPIRIT IS A PERSON. When Jesus spoke of the Spirit in His discourse on the subject recorded in John 14 through 16, He spoke of Him as a person.
The Acts of the Apostles tells that the Spirit speaks (Look up Acts 1:16, 8:29, and 13:2). Romans 8:27 speaks of “the mind of the Spirit.” First Corinthians, chapter 2, says that “the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God” (verse 10) and that “the Holy Ghost teacheth” (verse 13). First Corinthians, chapter 12, speaks of the Spirit’s will (verse 11). Second Corinthians, chapter 13, speaks of “the communion of the Holy Ghost,” giving us the impression that one can commune with the Spirit, person-to-person. Hebrews 10:29 says that men can insult (the meaning of the Greek word translated “hath done despite”) the Spirit. First John 4:2 says that the Spirit of God “confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh.” And the last chapter of the Bible affirms that the Spirit invites sinners to come to Jesus (Revelation 22:17). Over and over again the Word of God describes the mind, the will, the emotions, and the activities of the Holy Spirit as it would speak of the nature and work of a person. The Holy Spirit is indeed a person, the Third Person of the Trinity of God, and He came to live inside you when you trusted in Christ! THE HOLY SPIRIT HAS EMOTIONS. WHEN OUR ACTIONS AND ATTITUDES CONFLICT WITH HIS, THE SPIRIT OF GOD IS GRIEVED.
Corrupt words, bitterness of heart, anger, loud arguing, critical speech, and wicked malice are examples of what will grieve the Spirit. These attitudes and the actions they generate contradict the feelings of the Holy Spirit, and in this way they grieve Him. He loves the people we hate, and desires to edify the ones we want to hurt. In a sense, it is hard for Him to live in us when we live and feel sinfully. Notice that although the Spirit is grieved, He isn’t going to leave! By Him we are sealed until the completion of our salvation (“the day of redemption”). His presence within them has sometimes caused believers to wish He would leave them, or at least leave them alone, when they are grieving Him. But He is not going away until Jesus comes. This means that when Christians are doing wrong, going wrong places, participating in wrong things, saying wrong things, thinking wrong things, and even feeling wrong feelings, the Holy Spirit of God has to endure it all. And He is grieved. Unfortunately, the only thing many Christians can tell you the Spirit does for them is rebuke them when they sin. This curious and interesting since nearly all the New Testament says about the ministry of the Spirit to believers is positive! Yet many only know Him in a negative, rebuking way. Can it be that great numbers of those in God’s family today are grieving the Spirit every day, and seldom know by experience His comforting, leading, empowering, and enlightening work? Their actions and attitudes are in conflict with Him most of the time, and He is grieved. So many think this is what the Christian life is like! But they are wrong. WHEN WE BEGIN COOPERATING WITH THE SPIRIT, HE HELPS US FEEL HIS FEELINGS!
This is the transformation we are to expect in the lives of those who start being filled with the Spirit instead of indulging in the excesses of drunkenness (Look at verse 18 again). Can Christian people just switch from malice to kindness (chapter 4), or from drunkenness to the fear of God (chapter 5)? Yes, they can, when they stop contradicting the Spirit and start cooperating with Him. It is the Holy Spirit in the Christian that will enable Him to do the right thing and even feel the right way! The Christian life is not really a saved person trying to imitate Christ. It is the life of Christ lived through the life of a Christian (Galatians 2:20). This is possible only because, through the indwelling of the Spirit, Jesus Christ actually lives in us! And when we quit grieving the Spirit by contradicting Him, and start cooperating with Him, relying on Him to give us His holiness and His feelings, we find out what it is to be filled with the Spirit! Do it just now. Apologize to the Spirit for grieving Him by harboring attitudes and feelings so contrary to His nature. Put such sinful things away by repenting of them. Then tell Him that you want to harmonize with His interests and that you are yielding your life to His control. If appropriate, confess that your nature is to be selfish while His is to be kind, yours is to harbor bitterness while His is to be tenderhearted, and yours is to speak evil of others while His is to forgive. Now you are going to start cooperating with Him instead of contradicting Him. Move from being simply sealed with the Spirit, through grieving the Spirit, to being filled with the Spirit this very day. Author Dr. Rick Flanders has an itinerant preaching ministry for revival. He can be contacted at
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, or visit his website at www.drrickflanders.com.
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Author Dr. Rick Flanders has an itinerant preaching ministry for revival. He can be contacted at 

















