| MARKS OF HAVING RECEIVED
THE HOLY GHOST |
|
"So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God."
Romans 10:17 |
by George Whitefield
“Have ye
received the Holy Ghost since ye believed?” Acts 19:2
Two different significations have been given of these
words. Some have supposed, that the question here put, is, Whether these
disciples, whom St. Paul found at Ephesus, had received the Holy Ghost by
imposition of hands at confirmation? Others think, these disciples had been
already baptized into John’s baptism; which not being attended with an immediate
effusion of the Holy Spirit, the Apostle here asks them, Whether they had
received the Holy Ghost by being baptized into Jesus Christ? And upon their
answering in the negative, he first baptized, and then confirmed them in the
name of the Lord Jesus.
Which of these interpretations is the most true, is
neither easy nor very necessary to determine. However, as the words contain a
most important inquiry, without any reference to the context, I shall from them,
FIRST,
Show who the Holy Ghost here spoken of, is; and that we must all receive him,
before we can be stilled true believers.
SECONDLY,
I shall lay down some scripture marks
whereby we may know, whether we have thus received the Holy Ghost or not. And
THIRDLY,
By way of conclusion, address myself to several distinct classes of professors,
concerning the doctrine that shall have been delivered.
FIRST,
I am to show who the Holy Ghost spoken
of in the text, is; and that we must all receive him before we can be stilled
true believers.
By the Holy Ghost is plainly signified the Holy Spirit,
the third Person in the ever-blessed Trinity, consubstantial and co-eternal with
the Father and the Son, proceeding from, yet equal to them both. He is
emphatically called Holy, because infinitely holy in himself, and the author and
finisher of all holiness in us.
This blessed Spirit, who once moved on the face of the
great deep; who over-shadowed the blessed Virgin before that holy child was born
of her; who descended in a bodily shape, like a dove, on our blessed Lord, when
he came up out of the water at his baptism; and afterwards came down in fiery
tongues on the heads of all his Apostles at the day of Pentecost: this is the
Holy Ghost, who must move on the faces of our souls; this power of the Most
High, must come upon us, and we must be baptized with his baptism and refining
fire, before we can be stilled true members of Christ’s mystical body.
Thus says the Apostle Paul,
“Know ye not that Jesus Christ is in you, (that is, by his Spirit)
unless you are reprobates?” And, “If
any man hath not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his,” And again, says
St. John, “We know that we are his, by the
Spirit that he hath given us.”
It is not, indeed, necessary that we should have the
Spirit now given in that miraculous manner, in which he was at first given to
our Lord’s Apostles, by signs and wonders, but it is absolutely necessary, that
we should receive the Holy Ghost in his sanctifying graces, as really as they
did: and so will it continue to be till the end of the world.
For this stands the case between God and man: God at
first made man upright, or as the sacred Penman expresses it,
“In the image of God made he man;” that is, his soul was the very
copy, the transcript of the divine nature. He, who before, by his almighty fiat,
spoke the world into being, breathed into man the breath of spiritual life, and
his soul was adorned with a resemblance of the perfections of Deity. This was
the finishing stroke of the creation: the perfection both of the moral and
material world. And so near did man resemble his divine Original, that God could
not but rejoice and take pleasure in his own likeness: And therefore we read,
that when God had finished the inanimate and brutish part of the creation, he
looked upon it, and beheld it was good; but when that lovely, God-like creature
man was made, behold it was very good.
Happy, unspeakably happy must man needs be, when thus a
partaker of the divine nature. And thus might he have still continued, had he
continued holy. But God placed him in a state of probation, with a free grant to
eat of every tree in the garden of Eden, except the tree of knowledge of good
and evil: the day he should eat thereof, he was surely to die; that is, not only
to be subject to temporal, but spiritual death; and consequently, to lose that
divine image, that spiritual life God had not long since breathed into him, and
which was as much his happiness as his glory.
These, one would imagine, were easy conditions for a
finite creature’s happiness to depend on. But man, unhappy man, being seduced by
the devil, and desiring, like him, to be equal with his Maker, did eat of the
forbidden fruit; and thereby became liable to that curse, which the eternal God,
who cannot lie, had denounced against his disobedience.
Accordingly we read, that soon after Adam had fallen,
he complained that he was naked; naked, not only as to his body, but naked and
destitute of those divine graces which, before decked and beautified his soul.
The unhappy mutiny, and disorder which the visible creation fell into, the
briars and thorns which not sprung up and overspread the earth, were but poor
emblems, lifeless representations of that confusion and rebellion, and those
divers lusts and passions which sprung up in, and quite overwhelmed the soul of
man immediately after the fall. Alas! he was now no longer the image of the
invisible God; but as he had imitated the devil’s sin, he became as it were a
partaker of the devil’s nature, and from an union with, sunk into a state of
direct enmity against God.
Now in this dreadful disordered condition, are all of
us brought into the world: for as the root is, such must the branches be.
Accordingly we are told, “That Adam beget
a son in his own likeness;” or, with the same corrupt nature which he
himself had, after he had eaten the forbidden fruit. And experience as well as
scripture proves, that we also are altogether born in sin and corruption; and
therefore incapable, whilst in such a state, to hold communion with God. For as
light cannot have communion with darkness, so God can have no communion with
such polluted sons of Belial.
Here then appears the end and design why Christ was
manifest in the flesh; to put an end to these disorders, and to restore us to
that primitive dignity in which we were at first created. Accordingly he shed
his precious blood to satisfy his Father’s justice for our sins; and thereby
also he procured for us the Holy Ghost, who should once more re-instamp the
divine image upon our hearts, and make us capable of living with and enjoying
the blessed God.
This was the great end of our Lord’s coming into the
world; nay, this is the only end why the world itself is now kept in being. For
as soon as a sufficient number are sanctified out of it, the heavens shall be
wrapped up like a scroll, the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth,
and all that therein is, shall be burnt up.
This sanctification of the Spirit, is that new birth
mentioned by our blessed Lord to Nicodemus,
“without which we cannot see the kingdom
of God.” This is what St. Paul calls being
“renewed in the spirit of our minds;”
and it is the spring of that holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord.
Thus then, it is undeniably certain, we must receive
the Holy Ghost ere we can be stilled true members of Christ’s mystical body. I
come in the SECOND place to lay down some scriptural marks, whereby we may
easily judge, whether we have thus received the Holy Ghost or not. And the
FIRST I
shall mention, is, our having received a spirit of prayer and supplication;
for that always accompanies the spirit of grace. No sooner was Paul converted,
but “behold he prayeth.” And this was
urged as an argument, to convince Ananias that he was converted. And God’s elect
are also said to “cry to him day and night.”
And since one great work of the Holy Spirit is to
convince us of sin, and to set us upon seeking pardon and renewing grace,
through the all-sufficient merits of a crucified Redeemer, whosoever has felt
the power of the world to come, awakening him from his spiritual lethargy,
cannot but be always crying out, “Lord,
what wouldst thou have me to do?” Or, in the language of the importunate
blind Bartimeus, “Jesus, thou Son of
David, have mercy upon me.”
The blessed Jesus, as he received the Holy Ghost
without measure, so he evidenced it by nothing more, than his frequent addresses
at the throne of grace. Accordingly we read, that he was often alone on the
mountain praying; that he rose a great while before day to pray: nay, that he
spent whole nights in prayer. And whosoever is made partaker of the same Spirit
which the holy Jesus, will be of the same mind, and delight in nothing so much,
as to “draw nigh unto God,” and lift
up holy hands and hearts in frequent and devout prayer.
It must be confessed, indeed, that this spirit of
supplication is often as it were sensibly lost, and decays, for some time, even
in those who have actually received the Holy Ghost. Through spiritual dryness
and barrenness of soul, they find in themselves a listlessness and backwardness
to this duty of prayer; but then they esteem it as their cross, and still
persevere in seeking Jesus, though it be sorrowing: and their hearts,
notwithstanding, are fixed upon God, though they cannot exert their affections
so strongly as usual, on account of that spiritual deadness, which God, for wise
reasons, has suffered to benumb their souls.
But as for the formal believer, it is not so with him:
no; he either prays not at all, or if he does enter into his closet, it is with
reluctance, out of custom, or to satisfy the checks of his conscience. Whereas,
the true believer can no more live without prayer, than without food day by day.
And he finds his soul as really and perceptibly fed by the one, as his body is
nourished and supported by the other.
A SECOND
scripture mark of our having received the Holy Ghost, is, Not committing sin.
“Whosoever is
born of God, (says St. John) sinneth not, neither can he sin, because his seed
remaineth in him.”
Neither can he sin. This expression does not imply the
impossibility of a Christian’s sinning: for we are told, that
“in many things we offend all:” It
only means thus much: that a man who is really born again of God, doth not
willfully commit sin, much less live in the habitual practice of it. For how
shall he that is dead to sin, as every converted person is, live any longer
therein?
It is true, a man that is born again of God, may,
through surprise, or the violence of a temptation, fall into an act of sin:
witness the adultery of David, and Peter’s denial of his Master. But then, like
them, he quickly rises again, goes out from the world, and weeps bitterly;
washes the guilt of sin away by the tears of sincere repentance, joined with
faith in the blood of Jesus Christ; takes double heed to his ways for the
future, and perfects holiness in the fear of God.
The meaning of this expression of the Apostle, that
“a man who is born of God, cannot commit
sin,” has been fitly illustrated, by the example of a covetous worldling, to
the general bent of whose inclinations, liberality and profuseness are directly
opposite: but if, upon some unexpected, sudden occasion, he does play the
prodigal, he immediately repents him of his fault, and returns with double care
to his niggardliness again. And so is every one that is born again: to commit
sin, is as contrary to the habitual frame and tendency of his mind, as
generosity is to the inclinations of a miser; but if at any time, he is drawn
into sin, he immediately, with double zeal, returns to his duty, and brings
forth fruits meet for repentance. Whereas, the unconverted sinner is quite dead
in trespasses and sins: or if he does abstain from gross acts of it, through
worldly selfish motives, yet, there is some right eye he will not pluck out;
some right-hand which he will not cut off; some specious Agag that he will not
sacrifice for God; and thereby he is convinced that he is but a mere Saul: and
consequently, whatever pretensions he may make to the contrary, he has not yet
received the Holy Ghost.
A THIRD
mark whereby we may know, whether or not we have received the Holy Ghost,
is, Our conquest over the world.
“For whosoever
is born of God, (says the Apostle) overcometh the world.”
By the world, we are to understand, as St. John
expressed it, “all that is in the world,
the lust of the eye, the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life:” And by
overcoming of it, is meant, our renouncing these, so as not to follow or be led
by them: for whosoever is born from above, has his affections set on things
above: he feels a divine attraction in his soul, which forcibly draws his mind
heavenwards; and as the hart panteth after the water-brooks, so doth it make his
soul so long after the enjoyment of his God.
Not that he is so taken up with the affairs of another
life, as to neglect the business of this: No; a truly spiritual man dares not
stand any day idle; but then he takes care, though he laboreth for the meat
which perisheth, first to secure that which endureth to everlasting life. Or, if
God has exalted him above his brethren, yet, like Moses, Joseph, and Daniel, he,
notwithstanding, looks upon himself as a stranger and pilgrim upon earth: having
received a principle of new life, he walks by faith and not by sight; and his
hopes being full of immortality, he can look on all things here below as vanity
and vexation of spirit: In short, though he is in, yet he is not of the world;
and as he was made for the enjoyment of God, so nothing but God can satisfy his
soul.
The ever-blessed Jesus was a perfect instance of
overcoming the world. For though he went about continually doing good, and
always lived as in a press and throng; yet, wherever he was, his conversation
tended heavenwards. In like manner, he that is joined to the Lord in one spirit,
will so order his thoughts, words, and actions, that he will evidence to all,
that his conversation is in heaven.
On the contrary, an unconverted man being of the earth,
is earthy; and having no spiritual eye to discern spiritual things, he is always
seeking for happiness in this life, where it never was, will, or can be found.
Being not born again from above, he is bowed down by a spirit of natural
infirmity: the serpent’s curse becomes his choice, and he eats of the dust of
the earth all the days of his life.
A FOURTH
scripture mark of our having received the Holy Ghost, is, Our loving one
another.
“We know (says
St. John) we are passed from death unto life, because we love the brethren.”
“And by this (says Christ himself) shall
all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one towards another.”
Love is the fulfilling of the gospel, as well as of the
law: for “God is love; and whosoever
dwelleth in love, dwelleth in God.”
But by this love we are not to understand a softness
and tenderness of mere nature, or a love founded on worldly motives (for this a
natural man may have); but a love of our brethren, proceeding from love towards
God: loving all men in general, because to their relation to God; and loving
good men in particular, for the grace we see in them, and because they love our
Lord Jesus in sincerity.
This is Christian charity, and that new commandment
which Chris gave to his disciples. NEW,
not in its object, but in the motive and example whereon it is founded, even
Jesus Christ. This is that love which the primitive Christians were so renowned
for, that it became a proverb, SEE HOW
THESE CHRISTIANS LOVE ONE ANOTHER. And without this love, though we should
give all our goods to feed the poor, and our bodies to be burnt, it would profit
us nothing.
Further, this love is not confined to any particular
set of men, but is impartial and catholic:
A love that embraces God’s image wherever it beholds it, and that delights
in nothing so much as to see Christ’s kingdom come.
This is the love wherewith Jesus Christ loved mankind:
He loved all, even the worst of men, as appears by his weeping over the
obstinately perverse; but wherever he saw the least appearance of the divine
likeness, that soul he loved in particular. Thus we read, that when he heard the
young man say, “All these things have I
kept from my youth,” that so far he loved him. And when he saw any noble
instance of faith, though in a Centurion and a Syro-phonecian, aliens to the
commonwealth of Israel, how is he said to marvel at, to rejoice in, speak of,
and commend it? So every spiritual disciple of Jesus Christ will cordially
embrace all who worship God in spirit and in truth, however they may differ as
to the appendages of religion, and in things not essentially necessary to
salvation.
I confess,
indeed, that the heart of a natural man is not thus enlarged all at once; and a
person may really have received the Holy Ghost, (as Peter, no doubt, had when he
was unwilling to go to Cornelius) though he be not arrived to this: but then,
where a person is truly in Christ, all narrowness of spirit decreases in him
daily; the partition wall of bigotry and party zeal is broken down more and
more; and the nearer he comes to heaven, the more his heart is enlarged with
that love, which there will make no difference between any people, nation, or
language, but we shall all, with one heart, and one voice, sing praises to him
that sitteth upon the throne for ever.
But I hasten
to a FIFTH scripture mark, Loving our
enemies.
“I say unto
you, (says Jesus Christ) Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good
to those that hate you, ad pray for them that despitefully use you and persecute
you.”
And this duty of loving your enemies is so necessary,
that without it, our righteousness does not exceed the righteousness of the
Scribes and Pharisees, or even of Publicans and sinners:
“For if you do good to them only, who do
good to you, what do you more than others?” What do you extraordinary?
“Do not even the Publicans the same?”
And these precepts our Lord confirmed by his own example; when he wept over the
bloody city; when he suffered himself to be led as a sheep to the slaughter;
when he made that mile reply to the traitor Judas,
“Judas, betrayest thou the Son of man with
a kiss?” and more especially, when in the agonies and pangs of death, he
prayed for his very murderers, “Father,
forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
This is a difficult duty to the natural man; but
whosoever is made partaker of the promise of the Spirit, will find it
practicable and easy: for if we are born again of God, we must be like him, and
consequently delight to be perfect in this duty of doing good to our worst
enemies in the same manner, though not in the same degree as he is perfect: He
sends his rain on the evil and the good; causeth his sun to shine on the just
and unjust; and more especially commended his love towards us, that whilst we
were his enemies, he sent forth his Son, born of a woman, made under the law,
that he might become a curse for us.
Many other marks are scattered up and down the
scriptures, whereby we may know whether or not we have received the Holy Ghost:
such as, “to be carnally minded, is death,
but to be spiritually minded is life and peace.”
“Now the fruits of the Spirit are joy,
peace, long-suffering, meekness,” with a multitude of texts to the same
purpose. But as most, if not all of them, are comprehended in the duties already
laid down, I dare affirm, whosoever upon an impartial examination, can find the
aforesaid marks on his soul, may be as certain, as though an angel was to tell
him, that his pardon is sealed in heaven.
As for my own part, I
had rather see these divine graces, and this heavenly temper stamped upon my
soul, than to hear an angel from heaven saying unto me, Son, be of good cheer,
thy sins are forgiven thee.
These are infallible witnesses; these are Emmanuel, God
with and in us; these make up that white stone, which none knoweth, saving he
who hath receiveth it; these are the earnests of the heavenly inheritance in our
hearts: In short, these are glory begun, and are that good thing, that better
part, and which if you continue to stir up this gift of God, neither men nor
devils shall ever be able to take from us.
I proceed, as
was proposed, in the THIRD place, to
make an application of the doctrine delivered, to several distinct classes of
professors. And
FIRST,
I shall address myself to those who
are dead in trespasses and sins. And, O
how could I weep over you, as our
Lord wept over Jerusalem? For, alas! how distant must you be from God? What a
prodigious work have you to finish, who, instead of praying day and night,
seldom or never pray at all? And, instead of being born again of God, so as not
to commit sin, are so deeply sunk into the nature of devils, as to make a mock
at it? Or, instead of overcoming the world, so as not to follow or be led by it,
are continually making provision for the flesh, to fulfill the lusts thereof.
And, instead of being endued with the god-like disposition of loving all men,
even your enemies, have your hearts full of hatred, malice, and revenge, and
deride those who are the sincere followers of the lowly Jesus. But think you,
O sinners, that God will admit such
polluted wretches into his sight? Or should he admit you, do you imagine you
could take any pleasure in him? No; heaven itself would be no heaven to you; the
devilish dispositions which are in your hearts, would render all the spiritual
enjoyments of those blessed mansions, ineffectual to make you happy. To qualify
you to be blissful partakers of that heavenly inheritance with the saints in
light, there is a meetness required: to attain which, ought to be the chief
business of your lives.
It is true, you, as well as the righteous, in one
sense, shall see God; (for we must all appear before the judgment-seat of
Christ) but you must see him once, never to see him more. For as you carry about
in you the devil’s image, with devils you must dwell: being of the same nature,
you must share the same doom. “Repent,
therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out.” See that
you receive the Holy Ghost, before you go hence: for otherwise, how can you
escape the damnation of hell?
SECONDLY,
Let me apply myself to those who deceive themselves with false hopes of
salvation. Some, through the influence of a good education, or other
providential restraints, have not run into the same excess of riot with other
men, and they think they have no need to receive the Holy Ghost, but flatter
themselves that they are really born again.
But do you show it by bringing forth the fruits of the
Spirit? Do you pray without ceasing? Do you not commit sin? Have you overcome
the world? And do you love your enemies, and all mankind, in the same manner, as
Jesus Christ loved them?
If these things, brethren, be in you and abound, then
may you have confidence towards God; but if not, although you may be civilized,
yet you are not converted: no, you are yet in your sins. The nature of the old
Adam still reigneth in your souls; and unless the nature of the second Adam be
grafted in its room, you can never see God.
Think not, therefore, to dress yourselves up in the
ornaments of a good nature, and civil education, and say with Agag,
“surely the bitterness of death is past;”
For God’s justice, notwithstanding that, like Samuel, shall hew you to pieces.
However you may be highly esteemed in the sight of men, yet, in the sight of
God, you are but like the apples of Sodom, dunghills covered over with snow,
mere whited sepulchers, appearing a little beautiful without, but inwardly full
of corruption and of all uncleanness: and consequently will be dismissed at the
last day with a “Verily, I know you not.”
But the word of God is profitable for comfort as well
as correction.
THIRDLY,
Therefore I address myself to those
who are under the drawings of the Father, and are exercised with the Spirit of
bondage, and not finding the marks before mentioned, are crying out, Who shall
deliver us from the body of this death?
But fear not, little flock; for notwithstanding your
present infant state of grace, it shall be your father’s good pleasure to give
you the kingdom. The grace of God, through Jesus Christ, shall deliver you, and
give you what you thirst after: He hath promised, he will also do it. Ye shall
receive the spirit of adoption, that promise of the Father, if you faint not:
only persevere in seeking it; and determine not to be at rest in you soul, till
you know and feel that you are thus born again from above, and God’s Spirit
witnesseth with your spirits that you are the children of God.
FOURTHLY AND
LASTLY, I address myself to
those who have received the Holy Ghost in all his sanctifying graces, and are
almost ripe for glory.
Hail, happy saints! For your heaven is begun on earth:
you have already received the first fruits of the Spirit, and are patiently
waiting till that blessed change come, when your harvest shall be complete. I
see and admire you, though, alas! at so great a distance from you: your
life, I know, is hid with Christ in
God. You have comforts, you have meat to eat, which a sinful, carnal, ridiculing
world knows nothing of. Christ’s yoke is become easy to you, and his burden
light. You have passed through the pangs of the new birth, and now rejoice that
Christ Jesus is spiritually formed in your hearts. You know what it is to dwell
in Christ, and Christ in you. Like Jacob’s ladder, although your bodies are on
earth, yet your souls and hearts are in heaven: and by your faith and constant
recollection, like the blessed angels, you do always behold the face of your
Father which is in heaven.
I need not
exhort you to press forward, for you know that in walking in the Spirit there is
a great reward. Rather will I exhort
you, in patience to possess your souls yet a little while, and Jesus Christ will
deliver you from the burden of the flesh, and an abundant entrance shall be
administered to you, into the eternal joy and uninterrupted felicity of his
heavenly kingdom.
Which God of his infinite mercy grant, through Jesus
Christ our Lord: To whom, with the Father, and the Holy Ghost, three Persons and
one God, be ascribed all honor, power, and glory, for ever and ever.