No. 2200-37:217. A Sermon Delivered On Lord’s Day Morning, April 10, 1891, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
And I will put my Spirit within you. {Eze 36:27}
For other sermons on this text:
{See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 251, “Necessity of the Spirit’s Work, The” 244}
{See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1046, “Covenant Blessings” 1037}
{See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 2200, “Covenant Promise of the Spirit, The” 2201}
{See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 3048, “Holy Spirit in the Covenant, The” 3049}
{See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 3519, “Gospel Promise, A” 3521}
Exposition on Eze 36:16-38 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 2743, “Mistaken Notions About Repentance” 2744 @@ "Exposition"}
Exposition on Eze 36:16-38 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 3338, “Witness of the Lord’s Supper, The” 3340 @@ "Exposition"}
Exposition on Jer 31:31-34 Eze 36:25-32 Heb 8:7-13 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 2762, “Taking Hold of God’s Covenant” 2763 @@ "Exposition"}
Exposition on Ps 50:14-23 Eze 36:21-38 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 3472, “Solemn Deprival, A” 3474 @@ "Exposition"}
1. No preface is needed; and the largeness of our subject forbids our wasting time in beating around the bush. I shall try to do two things this morning: first, I would commend the text; and, secondly, I would in some measure expound the text.
2. I. First, as for THE COMMENDATION OF THE TEXT, the tongues of men and of angels might fail. To call it a golden sentence would be much too commonplace: to compare it to a pearl of great price would be too poor a comparison. We cannot feel, much less speak, too much in praise of that great God who has put this clause into the covenant of his grace. In that covenant every sentence is more precious than heaven and earth; and this line is not the least among his choice words of promise: “I will put my Spirit within you.”
3. I would begin by saying that it is a gracious word. It was spoken to a graceless people, to a people who had followed “their own way,” and refused the way of God; a people who had already provoked something more than ordinary anger in the Judge of all the earth; for he himself said, “I poured out my fury on them.” {Eze 36:18} These people, even under chastisement, caused the holy name of God to be profaned among the heathen, wherever they went. They had been highly favoured, but they abused their privileges, and behaved worse than those who never knew the Lord. They sinned deliberately, wilfully, wickedly, proudly and presumptuously; and by this they greatly provoked the Lord. Yet to them he made such a promise as this — “I will put my Spirit within you.” Surely, where sin abounded grace much more abounded.
4. Clearly this is a word of grace, for the law says nothing of this kind. Turn to the law of Moses, and see if there is any word spoken in it concerning the putting of the Spirit within men to cause them to walk in God’s statutes. The law proclaims the statutes; but the gospel alone promises the Spirit by which the statutes will be obeyed. The law commands and makes us know what God requires of us; but the gospel goes further, and inclines us to obey the will of the Lord, and enables us practically to walk in his ways. Under the dominion of grace the Lord works in us to will and to do of his own good pleasure.
5. So great a blessing as this could never come to any man by merit. A man might so act as to deserve a reward of a certain kind, in measure suited to his commendable action; but the Holy Spirit can never be the wage of human service: the idea verges upon blasphemy. Can any man deserve that Christ should die for him? Who would dream of such a thing? Can any man deserve that the Holy Spirit should dwell in him, and work holiness in him? The greatness of the blessing lifts it high above the range of merit, and we see that if the Holy Spirit is bestowed, it must be by an act of divine grace — grace infinite in bounty, greatly more than all that we could have imagined. “Sovereign grace over sin abounding” is here seen in clearest light. “I will put my Spirit within you” is a promise which drops with graces as the honeycomb with honey. Listen to the divine music which pours from this word of love. I hear the soft melody of grace, grace, grace, and nothing else but grace. Glory be to God, who gives to sinners the indwelling of his Spirit.
6. Note, next, that it is a divine word: “I will put my Spirit within you.” Who but the Lord could speak in this way? Can one man put the Spirit of God within another? Could all the church combined breathe the Spirit of God into a single sinner’s heart? To put any good thing into the deceitful heart of man is a great achievement; but to put the Spirit of God into the heart, truly this is the finger of God. Indeed, here I may say, the Lord has made bare his arm, and displayed the fulness of his mighty power. To put the Spirit of God into our nature is a work unique to the Godhead, and to do this within the nature of a free agent, such as man, is marvellous. Who but Jehovah, the God of Israel, can speak in this royal style, and, beyond all dispute, declare, “I will put my Spirit within you?” Men must always surround their resolves with conditions and uncertainties; but since omnipotence is behind every promise of God, he speaks like a king; yes, in a style which is only fit for the eternal God. He purposes and promises, and he as surely performs. Sure, then, is this sacred saying, “I will put my Spirit within you.” Sure, because divine. Oh sinner, if we poor creatures had the saving of you, we should break down in the attempt; but, behold, the Lord himself comes on the scene, and the work is done! All difficulties are removed by this one sentence, “I will put my Spirit within you.” We have laboured with our spirit, we have wept over you, and we have entreated you; but we have failed. Lo, there comes One into the matter who will not fail, with whom nothing is impossible; and he begins his work by saying, “I will put my Spirit within you.” The word is of grace and of God; regard it, then as a pledge from the God of grace.
7. To me there is much charm in further thought that this is an individual and personal word. The Lord means, “I will put my Spirit within you”: that is to say, within you, as individuals. “I will put my Spirit within you” one by one. This must be so, since the context requires it. We read, “I will give you a new heart also.” {Eze 36:26} Now, a new heart can only be given to one person. Each man needs a heart of his own, and each man must have a new heart for himself. “And I will put a new Spirit within you.” Within each one this must be done. “And I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you a heart of flesh” — these are all personal, individual operations of grace. God deals with men one by one in solemn matters of eternity, sin, and salvation. We are born one by one, and we die one by one: even so we must be born again one by one, and each one for himself must receive the Spirit of God. Without this a man has nothing. He cannot be caused to walk in God’s statutes except by the infusion of grace into him as an individual. I think I see among my hearers a lone man, or woman, who feels himself, or herself, to be all alone in the world, and therefore hopeless. You can believe that God will do great things for a nation, but how shall the solitary be thought of? You are a unique person, one who could not be written down in any list; a particular sinner, with constitutional tendencies all your own. Thus says God, “I will put my Spirit within you”; within your heart — even yours. My dear hearers, you who have long been seeking for salvation, but have not known the power of the Spirit — this is what you need. You have been striving in the energy of the flesh, but you have not understood where your true strength lies. God says to you, “ ‘Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit,’ says Lord”; and again, “I will put my Spirit within you.” Oh, that this word might be spoken by the Lord to that young man who is ready to despair; to that sorrowful woman who has been looking into herself for power to pray and believe! You are without strength or hope in and of yourself; but this handles your case in all points. “I will put my Spirit within you” — within you as an individual. Enquire of the Lord for it. Lift up your heart in prayer to God, and ask him to pour upon you the Spirit of grace and of supplications. Plead with the Lord, saying, “Let your good Spirit lead me. Even me.” Cry, “Do not pass me by, my gracious Father; but in me fulfil this wondrous word of yours, ‘I will put my Spirit within you.’ ”
8. Note, next, that this is a separating word. I do not know whether you will see this readily; but it must be so: this word separates a man from his fellows. Men by nature are of another spirit from that of God, and are under subjection to that evil spirit, the Prince of power of air. When the Lord comes to gather out his own, fetching them out from among the heathen, he accomplishes this separation by doing according to this word, “I will put my Spirit within you.” This done, the individual becomes a new man. Those who have the Spirit are not of the world, nor like the world; and soon have to come out from among the ungodly, and to be separate; for the difference of nature creates conflict. God’s Spirit will not dwell with the evil spirit: you cannot have fellowship with Christ and with Belial; with the kingdom of heaven and with this world. I wish that the people of God would again wake up to the truth that to gather out a people from among men is the great purpose of this present age. It is still true, as James said at the Jerusalem Council, “Simeon has declared how God at first visited the Gentiles, to take out of them a people for his name.” We are not to remain clinging to the old wreck with the expectation that we shall pump water out of her and get her safe into port. No; the cry is very different — “Take to the life-boat! Take to the life-boat!” You are to abandon the wreck, and you are to carry away from the sinking mass what God will save. You must be separate from the old wreck, lest it sucks you down to certain destruction. Your only hope of doing good to the world is by yourselves being “not of the world,” even as Christ was not of the world. For you to go down to the world’s level will neither be good for it nor for you. What happened in the days of Noah will be repeated; for when the sons of God entered into alliance with the daughters of men, and there was a league between the two races, the Lord could not endure the evil mixture, but drew up the sluices of the lower deep and swept the earth with a destroying flood. Surely, in that last day of destruction, when the world is overwhelmed with fire, it will be because the church of God shall have degenerated, and the distinctions between the righteous and the wicked shall have been broken down. The Spirit of God, wherever he comes, speedily makes and reveals the difference between Israel and Egypt; and in proportion as his active energy is felt, there will be an ever-widening gulf between those who are led by the Spirit and those who are under the dominion of the flesh. The possession of the Spirit will make you, my hearer, quite another kind of man from what you now are, and then you will be stimulated by motives which the world will not appreciate; for the world does not know us, because it did not know him. Then you will act, and speak, and think, and feel in such a way, that this evil world will misunderstand and condemn you. Since the carnal mind does not know the things that are of God — for those things are spiritually discerned — it will not approve of your plans and intentions. Do not expect it to be your friend. The Spirit who makes you to be of the seed of the woman is not the spirit of the world. The seed of the serpent will hiss at you, and bruise your heel. Your Master said, “Because you are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world; therefore the world hates you.” This is a separating word. Has it separated you? Has the Holy Spirit called you alone and blessed you? Do you differ from your old companions? Do you have a life they do not understand? If not, may God in mercy put into you that most heavenly deposit, of which he speaks in our text: “I will put my Spirit within you!”
9. But now notice, that it is a very uniting word. It separates from the world, but it joins to God. Notice how it runs: “I will put my Spirit within you.” It is not merely a spirit, or the spirit, but my Spirit. Now when God’s own Spirit comes to reside within our mortal bodies, how near akin we are to the Most High! “Do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit?” Does this not make a man sublime? Have you never stood in awe of yourselves, oh you believers? Have you regarded enough even this poor body, as being sanctified and dedicated, and elevated into a sacred condition, by being set apart to be the temple of the Holy Spirit? So we are brought into the closest union with God that we can well conceive of. This is the Lord our light and our life; while our spirit is subordinated to the divine Spirit. “I will put my Spirit within you” — then God himself dwells in you. The Spirit of him who raised up Christ from the dead is in you. Your life is hidden with Christ in God, and the Spirit seals you, anoints you, and resides in you. By the Spirit we have access to the Father; by the Spirit we perceive our adoption, and learn to cry, “Abba, Father”; by the Spirit we are made partakers of the divine nature, and have communion with the thrice-holy Lord.
10. I cannot help adding here that it is a very condescending word — “I will put my Spirit within you.” Is it really so, that the Spirit of God who displays the power and energetic force of God, by whom God’s Word is carried into effect — that the Spirit who of old moved upon the face of the waters, and brought order and life from chaos and death — can it be so that he will condescend to sojourn in men? God in our nature is a very wonderful conception! God in the babe at Bethlehem, God in the carpenter of Nazareth, God in the “man of sorrows,” God in the Crucified, God in him who was buried in the tomb — this is all marvellous. The incarnation is an infinite mystery of love; but we believe it. Yet, if it were possible to compare one illimitable wonder with another, I should say that God’s dwelling in his people, and that repeated ten thousand times over, is more marvellous. That the Holy Spirit should dwell in millions of redeemed men and women, is a miracle not surpassed by that of our Lord’s espousal of human nature. For our Lord’s body was perfectly pure, and the Godhead, while it dwells with his holy manhood, does at least dwell with a perfect and sinless nature; but the Holy Spirit bows himself to dwell in sinful men; to dwell in men who, after their conversion, still find the flesh warring against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh; men who are not perfect, though they strive to be so, men who have to lament their shortcomings, and even to confess with shame a measure of unbelief. “I will put my Spirit within you” means the abiding of the Holy Spirit in our imperfect nature. Wonder of wonders! Yet it is as surely a fact as it is a wonder. Believers in the Lord Jesus Christ, you have the Spirit of God, for “if any man does not have the Spirit of Christ, he is not his.” You could not bear the suspicion that you are not his; and therefore, as surely as you are Christ’s, you have his Spirit residing in you. The Saviour has gone away on purpose so that the Comforter might be given to dwell in you, and he does dwell in you. Is it not so? If it is so, admire this condescending God, and worship and praise his name. Sweetly submit to his rule in all things. Do not grieve the Spirit of God. Watch carefully that nothing comes within you that may defile the temple of God. Let the faintest admonition of the Holy Spirit be law to you. It was a holy mystery that the presence of the Lord was especially within the veil of the Tabernacle, and that the Lord God spoke by Urim and Thummim to his people; it is an equally sacred marvel that now the Holy Spirit dwells in our spirits and resides within our nature and speaks to us whatever he hears from the Father. By divine impressions which the opened ear can apprehend, and the tender heart can receive, he still speaks. May God grant us to know his still small voice so as to listen to it with reverent humility and loving joy: then we shall know the meaning of these words, “I will put my Spirit within you.”
11. Nor am I yet finished with commending my text, for I must not fail to remind you that it is a very spiritual word. “I will put my Spirit within you” has nothing to do with our wearing a particular garb — that would be a matter of little worth. It has nothing to do with affectations of speech — those might readily become a deceptive peculiarity. Our text has nothing to do with outward rites and ceremonies; but goes much further and deeper. It is an instructive symbol when the Lord teaches us our death with Christ by burial in baptism: it is to our great profit that he ordains bread and wine to be signs of our communion in the body and blood of his dear Son; but these are only outward things, and if they are unattended with the Holy Spirit they fail in their intention. There is something infinitely greater in this promise — “I will put my Spirit within you.” I cannot give you the whole force of the Hebrew, concerning the words “within you,” unless I paraphrase them a little, and read “I will put my Spirit in the midst of you.” The sacred deposit is put deep down in our life’s secret place. God puts his Spirit not upon the surface of the man, but into the centre of his being. The promise means — “I will put my Spirit in your body, in your hearts, in the very soul of you.” This is an intensely spiritual matter, without a mixture of anything material and visible. It is spiritual, you see, because it is the Spirit who is given; and he is given internally within our spirit. It is true the Spirit operates upon the external life, but it is through the secret and internal life, and of that inward operation our text speaks. This is what we so greatly require. Do you know what it is to attend a service and hear God’s truth faithfully preached, and yet you are forced to say, “Somehow or other it did not enter into me; I did not feel the unction and taste the savour of it?” “I will put my Spirit within you,” is what you need. Do you not read your Bibles, and even pray, and do not both devotional exercises become too much external acts? “I will put my Spirit within you” counteracts this evil. The good Spirit fires your heart; he penetrates your mind; he saturates your soul; he touches the secret and vital springs of your existence. Blessed Word! I love my text. I love it better than I can speak about it.
12. Observe once more that this Word is a very effective one. “I will put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and you shall keep my judgments and do them.” The Spirit is operative — first upon the inner life, in causing you to love the law of the Lord; and then it moves you openly to keep his statutes concerning himself, and his judgments between you and your fellow men. Obedience, if a man should be flogged to it, would be of little worth; but obedience springing out of a life within, this is a priceless breastplate of jewels. If you have a lantern, you cannot make it shine by polishing the glass outside, you must put a candle within it: and this is what God does, he puts the light of the Spirit within us, and then our light shines. He puts his Spirit so deep down into the heart, that the whole nature feels it: it works upward, like a spring from the bottom of a well. It is, moreover, so deeply implanted that there is no removing it. If it were in the memory, you might forget it; if it were in the intellect, you might err in it; but “within you” it touches the whole man, and has dominion over you without fear of failure. When the very kernel of your nature is quickened into holiness, practical godliness is effectively secured. Blessed is he who knows by experience our Lord’s words — “The water that I shall give to him shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life.”
13. If I should fail in expounding the text, I hope I have so fully commended it to you, that you will turn it over and meditate upon it yourselves, and so get a home-born exposition of it. The key of the text is within itself; for if the Lord gives you the Spirit, you will then understand his words — “I will put my Spirit within you.”
14. II. But now I must work upon THE EXPOSITION OF THE TEXT. I trust the Holy Spirit will aid me in it. Let me show you how the good Spirit reveals the fact that he dwells in men. I have to be very brief on a theme that might require a great length of time; and can only mention a part of his ways and workings.
15. One of the first results of the Spirit of God being put within us is quickening. We are dead by nature to all heavenly and spiritual things; but when the Spirit of God comes, then we begin to live. The man visited by the Spirit begins to feel; the terrors of God make him tremble, the love of Christ makes him weep. He begins to fear, and he begins to hope: a great deal of the first and a very little of the second, it may be. He learns spiritually to sorrow: he is grieved that he has sinned, and that he cannot cease from sinning. He begins to desire what he once despised: he especially desires to find the way of pardon, and reconciliation with God. Ah, dear hearers! I cannot make you feel, I cannot make you sorrow for sin, I cannot make you desire eternal life; but it is all done as soon as this is fulfilled by the Lord, “I will put my Spirit within you.” The quickening Spirit brings life to the dead in trespasses and sins.
16. This life of the Spirit shows itself by causing the man to pray. The cry is the distinctive sign of the living child. He begins to cry in broken accents, “God be merciful to me.” At the same time that he pleads, he feels the soft relentings of repentance. He has a new mind towards sin, and he grieves that he should have grieved his God. With this comes faith; perhaps feeble and trembling, only a touch of the hem of the Saviour’s robe; but still Jesus is his only hope and his sole trust. To him he looks for pardon and salvation. He dares to believe that Christ can save even him. Then life has come into the soul when trust in Jesus springs up in the heart.
17. Remember, dear friends, that just as the Holy Spirit gives quickening at the first, so he must revive and strengthen it. Whenever you become dull and faint, cry for the Holy Spirit. Whenever you cannot feel in devotion as you wish to feel, and are unable to rise to any heights of communion with God, plead my text in faith, and beg the Lord to do as he has said, namely, “I will put my Spirit within you.” Go to God with this covenant clause, even if you have to confess, “Lord, I am like a log, I am a helpless lump of weakness. Unless you come and quicken me I cannot live for you.” Plead persistently the promise, “I will put my Spirit within you.” All the life of the flesh will engender corruption; all the energy that comes from mere excitement will die down into the black ashes of disappointment; only the Holy Spirit is the life of the regenerated heart. Do you have the Spirit? and if you have him within you, you have only a small measure of his life, and do you wish for more? Then still go where you went at first. There is only one river of the water of life: draw from its floods. You will be lively enough, and bright enough, and strong enough, and happy enough when the Holy Spirit is mighty within your soul.
18. When the Holy Spirit enters, after quickening he gives enlightening. We cannot make men see the truth, they are so blind; but when the Lord puts his Spirit within them their eyes are opened. At first they may see rather hazily; but still they do see. As the light increases, and the eye is strengthened, they see more and more clearly. What a mercy it is to see Christ, to look to him, and so to be enlightened! By the Spirit, souls see things in their reality: they see the actual truth of them, and perceive that they are facts. The Spirit of God illuminates every believer, so that he sees still more marvellous things out of God’s law; but this never happens unless the Spirit opens his eyes. The apostle speaks of being brought “out of darkness into his marvellous light”; and it is a marvellous light, indeed, to come to the blind and dead. Marvellous because it reveals truth with clarity. It reveals marvellous things in a marvellous way. If hills and mountains, if rocks and stones were suddenly to be full of eyes, it would be a strange thing in the earth, but not more marvellous than for you and for me by the illumination of the Holy Spirit to see spiritual things. When you cannot make people see the truth, do not grow angry with them, but cry, “Lord, put your Spirit within them.” When you get into a puzzle over the Word of the Lord, do not give up in despair, but believingly cry, “Lord, put your Spirit within me.” Here lies the only true light of the soul. Depend on it, all that you see by any light except the Spirit of God, you do not spiritually see. If you only see intellectually, or rationally, you do not see salvation. Unless intellect and reason have received heavenly light, you may see, and yet not see; even as Israel of old. Indeed, your boasted clear sight may aggravate your ruin, like that of the Pharisees, of whom our Lord said, “But now you say, ‘We see,’ therefore your sin remains.” Oh Lord, grant us the Spirit within, for our soul’s illumination!
19.
The Spirit also works conviction. Conviction is more forcible
than illumination: it is the setting of a truth before the eye of the
soul, so as to make it powerful upon the conscience. I speak to many
here who know what conviction means; still I will explain it from my
own experience. I knew what sin meant by my reading, and yet I never
knew sin in its heinousness and horror, until I found myself bitten
by it as by a fiery serpent, and felt its poison boiling in my veins.
When the Holy Spirit made sin to appear sin, then I was overwhelmed
with the sight, and I would gladly have fled from myself to escape
the intolerable vision. A naked sin stripped of all excuse, and set
in the light of truth, is a worse sight than to see the devil
himself. When I saw sin as an offence against a just and holy God,
committed by such a proud and yet insignificant creature as myself,
then I was alarmed. Sirs, did you ever see and feel yourselves to be
sinners? “Oh, yes,” you say, “we are sinners.” Oh sirs, do you mean
it? Do you know what it means? Many of you are no more sinners in
your own estimation than you are Hottentots. The beggar who exhibits
a sham sore does not know disease; if he did he would have enough of
it without pretences. To kneel down and say, “Lord, have mercy upon
us miserable sinners,” and then to get up and feel yourself a very
decent kind of person, worthy of commendation, is to mock Almighty
God. It is by no means a common thing to get hold of a real sinner,
one who is truly so in his own esteem; and it is as pleasant as it is
rare, for you can bring to the real sinner the real Saviour, and he
will welcome him. I do not wonder that Hart said:
A sinner is a sacred thing,
The Holy Ghost hath made him so.
The point of contact between a sinner and Christ is sin. The Lord Jesus gave himself for our sins he never gave himself for our righteousnesses. He comes to heal the sick, and what he looks for is our sickness. When a physician is called in he has no patience with things apart from his calling. “Tut, tut!” he cries, “I do not care about your furniture, nor the number of your cows, nor what income tax you pay, nor what politics you admire; I have come to see a sick man about his disease, and if you will not let me deal with it I will be gone.” When a sinner’s corruptions are loathsome to himself, when his guilt is foul in his own nostrils, when he fears the death that will come from it, it is then that he is really convicted by the Holy Spirit; and no one ever knows sin as his own personal ruin until the Holy Spirit shows it to him. Conviction concerning the Lord Jesus comes in the same way. We do not know Christ as our Saviour until the Holy Spirit is put within us. Our Lord says — “He shall receive of mine, and shall show it to you,” and you never see the things of the Lord Jesus until the Holy Spirit shows them to you. To know Jesus Christ as your Saviour, as one who died for you in particular, is a knowledge which only the Holy Spirit imparts. To apprehend present salvation, as your own personally, comes by your being convicted of it by the Spirit. Oh, to be convinced of righteousness, and convinced of acceptance in the Beloved! This conviction comes only by him who has called you, even by him of whom the Lord says, “I will put my Spirit within you.”
20. Furthermore, the Holy Spirit comes into us for purification. “I will put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and you shall keep my judgments, and do them.” When the Spirit comes, he infuses a new life, and that new life is a fountain of holiness. The new nature cannot sin, because it is born by God, and “it is a living and incorruptible seed.” This life produces good fruit, and good fruit only. The Holy Spirit is the life of holiness. At the same time, the coming of the Holy Spirit into the soul gives a mortal stab to the power of sin. The old man is not absolutely dead, but he is crucified with Christ. He is under sentence, and before the eye of the law he is dead; but just as a man nailed to a cross may linger long, but yet he cannot live, so the power of evil dies hard, but it must die. Sin is an executed criminal: those nails which firmly hold it to the cross will hold it firmly until no breath remains in it. God the Holy Spirit gives the power of sin its death-wound. The old nature struggles in its dying agonies, but it is doomed, and it must die. But you never will overcome sin by your own power, nor by any energy short of that of the Holy Spirit. Resolves may bind it, as Samson was bound with cords; but sin will snap the cords asunder. The Holy Spirit lays the axe at the root of sin, and it must fall. The Holy Spirit within a man is “the Spirit of judgment, the Spirit of burning.” Do you know him in that character? As the Spirit of judgment, the Holy Spirit pronounces sentence on sin, and it goes out with the brand of Cain on it. He does more: he delivers sin over to burning. He executes the death-penalty on what he has judged. How many of our sins have we had to burn alive! and it has cost us great pain to do it. Sin must be gotten out of us by fire, if no gentler means will work; and the Spirit of God is a consuming fire. Truly, “our God is a consuming fire.” They paraphrase it, “God outside of Christ is a consuming fire”; but that is not Scripture: it is, “our God,” our covenant God, who is a consuming fire to refine us from sin. Has not the Lord said, “I will purely purge away all your dross, and take away all your tin?” This is what the Spirit does, and it is by no means easy work for the flesh, which would spare many a flattering sin if it could.
21. The Holy Spirit bedews the soul with purity until he saturates it. Oh, to have a heart saturated with holy influences until it shall be as Gideon’s fleece, which held so much dew that Gideon could wring out a bowl full from it! Oh, that our whole nature were filled with the Spirit of God; that we were sanctified entirely, body, soul, and spirit! Sanctification is the result of the Holy Spirit being put within us.
22. Next, the Holy Spirit acts in the heart as the Spirit of preservation. Where he dwells men do not go back to perdition. He works in them a watchfulness against temptation day by day. He works in them to wrestle against sin. Rather than sin, a believer would die ten thousand deaths. He works in believers union to Christ, which is the source and guarantee of acceptable fruitfulness. He creates in the saints those holy things which glorify God, and bless the sons of men. All true fruit is the fruit of the Spirit. Every true prayer must be “praying in the Holy Spirit.” He helps our infirmities in prayer. Even the hearing of the Word of the Lord is of the Spirit, for John says, “I was in the Spirit on the Lord’s day, and heard behind me a great voice.” Everything that comes from the man, or is kept alive in the man, is first infused and then sustained and perfected by the Spirit. “It is the Spirit who quickens; the flesh profits nothing.” We never go an inch towards heaven in any other power than that of the Holy Spirit. We do not even stand firm and remain steadfast except as we are upheld by the Holy Spirit. The vineyard which the Lord has planted he also preserves; as it is written, “I the Lord keep it; I will water it every moment: lest anyone harms it, I will keep it night and day.” Did I hear that young man say, “I should like to become a Christian, but I fear I should not hold out? How am I to be preserved?” A very proper enquiry for “He who endures to the end, the same shall be saved.” Temporary Christians are not Christians: only the believer who continues to believe will enter heaven. How, then, can we hold on in such a world as this? Here is the answer. “I will put my Spirit within you.” When a city has been captured in war, those who formerly possessed it seek to win it back again; but the king who captured it sends a garrison to live within the walls, and he says to the captain, “Take care of this city that I have conquered, and do not let the enemy take it again.” So the Holy Spirit is the garrison of God within our redeemed humanity, and he will keep us to the end. “May the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.” For preservation, then, we look to the Holy Spirit.
23. Lest I weary you, I will be very brief on the next point: the Holy Spirit within us is for guidance. The Holy Spirit is given to lead us into all truth. Truth is like a vast grotto, and the Holy Spirit brings torches, and shows us all the splendour of the roof; and since the passages seem intricate, he knows the way, and he leads us into the deep things of God. He opens up to us one truth after another, by his light and by his guidance, and so we are “taught by the Lord.” He is also our practical guide to heaven, helping and directing us on the upward journey. I wish Christian people more often enquired from the Holy Spirit concerning guidance in their daily life. Do you not know that the Spirit of God dwells in you? You need not always be running to this friend and to that to get direction: wait upon the Lord in silence, sit still in quiet before the oracle of God. Use the judgment God has given to you; but when that does not suffice, resort to him whom Mr. Bunyan calls “the Lord High Secretary,” who lives within, who is infinitely wise, and who can guide you by making you to “hear a voice behind you saying, ‘This is the way, walk in it.’ ” The Holy Spirit will guide you in life; he will guide you in death; and he will guide you to glory. He will guard you from modern error, and from ancient error too. He will guide you in a way that you do not know; and through the darkness he will lead you in a way you have not seen: he will do these things for you, and not forsake you.
24. Oh, this precious text! I seem to have before me a great cabinet full of jewels rich and rare. May God the Holy Spirit himself come and hand these out to you, and may you be adorned with them all the days of your life!
25.
Last of all, “I will put my Spirit within you,” that is, by way of
consolation, for his choice name is “The Comforter.” Our God
would not have his children unhappy, and therefore he himself, in the
third Person of the blessed Trinity, has undertaken the office of
Comforter. Why does your face wear such mournful colours? God can
comfort you. You who are under the burden of sin; it is true no man
can help you into peace, but the Holy Spirit can. Oh God, to every
seeker here who has failed to find rest, grant your Holy Spirit! Put
your Spirit within him, and he will rest in Jesus. And you dear
people of God, who are worried, remember that worry and the Holy
Spirit are very contradictory to each other. “I will put my Spirit
within you” means that you shall become gentle, peaceful, resigned,
and acquiescent in the divine will. Then you will have faith in God
that all is well. That text with which I began my prayer this morning
was brought home to my heart this week. Our dearly beloved friend
Adolph Saphir passed away last Saturday, and his wife died three or
four days before him. When my dear brother, Dr. Sinclair Patteson,
went to see him, the beloved Saphir said to him, “God is light, and
in him is no darkness at all.” No one would have quoted that passage
except Saphir, the biblical student, the lover of the Word, the lover
of the God of Israel. “God is light, and in him is no darkness at
all.” His dear wife is gone, and he himself is ill; but “God is
light, and in him is no darkness at all.” This is a deep well of
overflowing comfort, if you understand it well. God’s providence is
light as well as his promise, and the Holy Spirit makes us know this.
God’s word and will and way are all light to his people, and in him
is no darkness at all for them. God himself is purely and only light.
What if there is darkness in me, there is no darkness in him; and his
Spirit causes me to flee to him! What if there is darkness in my
family, there is no darkness in my covenant God, and his Spirit makes
me rest in him. What if there is darkness in my body by reason of my
failing strength, there is no failing in him, and there is no
darkness in him: his Spirit assures me of this. David says — “God my
very great joy”; and he is such to us. “Yes, my own God is he!” Can
you say, “My God, my God?” Do you want anything more? Can you
conceive of anything beyond your God? Omnipotent to work all for
ever! Infinite to give! Faithful to remember! He is all that is good.
Light only: “in him is no darkness at all.” I have all light, yes,
all things, when I have my God. The Holy Spirit makes us apprehend
this when he is put within us. Holy Comforter, abide with us, for
then we enjoy the light of heaven. Then we are always peaceful and
even joyful; for we walk in unclouded light. In him our happiness
sometimes rises into great waves of delight, as if it leaped up to
glory. May the Lord make this text your own — “I will put my Spirit
within you.” Amen.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Eze 36:16-38]
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Lord’s Day — Going To Worship” 916}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Gospel, Invitations — Promises Of Grace” 489}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Holy Spirit — Divine Sealing And Witnessing Sought” 468}
Price Sixpence.
The Book Fund and its Work for 1890. By Mrs. C. H. Spurgeon.
Passmore & Alabaster, Paternoster Buildings; and all Booksellers.
Public Worship, The Lord’s Day
916 — Going To Worship <7s.>
1 To thy temple I repair;
Lord, I love to worship there;
When, within the veil, I meet
Christ upon the mercy-seat.
2 Thou, through him, art reconciled;
I, through him, become thy child;
Abba, Father! give me grace
In thy courts to seek thy face!
3 While thy glorious praise is sung,
Touch my lips, unloose my tongue,
That my joyful soul may bless
Christ the Lord, my righteousness.
4 While the prayers of saints ascend,
God of love! to mine attend;
Hear me, for thy Spirit pleads;
Hear, for Jesus intercedes!
5 While I hearken to thy law,
Fill my soul with humble awe;
Till thy gospel bring to me,
Life and immortality:
6 While thy minister proclaim
Peace and pardon in thy name,
Through their voice, by faith, may I
Hear thee speaking from on high.
7 From thy house when I return,
May my heart within me burn;
And at evening let me say,
“I have walk’d with God today.”
James Montgomery, 1821.
Gospel, Invitations
489 — Promises Of Grace
1 In vain we lavish out our lives
To gather empty wind,
The choicest blessings earth can yield
Will starve a hungry mind.
2 Come, and the Lord shall feed our souls,
With more substantial meat,
With such as saints in glory love,
With such as angels eat.
3 Come, and he’ll cleanse our spotted souls,
And wash away our stains,
In the dear fountain that his Son
Pour’d from his dying veins.
4 Our guilt shall vanish all away,
Though black as hell before,
Our sins shall sink beneath the sea,
And shall be found no more.
5 And lest pollution should o’erspread
Our inward powers again,
His Spirit shall bedew our souls,
Like purifying rain.
6 Our heart, that flinty, stubborn thing,
That terrors cannot move,
That fears no threatenings of his wrath,
Shall be dissolved by love:
7 Or he can take the flint away
That would not be refined;
And from the treasures of his grace
Bestow a softer mind.
8 There shall his sacred Spirit dwell,
And deep engrave his law;
And every motion of our souls
To swift obedience draw.
9 Thus will he pour salvation down,
And we shall render praise,
We the dear people of his love,
And he our God of grace.
Isaac Watts, 1709.
Holy Spirit
468 — Divine Sealing And Witnessing Sought
1 Why should the children of a King
Go mourning all their days?
Great Comforter, descend and bring
Some tokens of thy grace.
2 Dost thou not dwell in all the saints,
And seal the heirs of heaven?
When wilt thou banish my complaints,
And show my sins forgiven?
3 Assure my conscience of her part
In the Redeemer’s blood,
And bear thy witness with my heart,
That I am born of God.
4 Thou art the earnest of his love,
The pledge of joys to come,
And thy soft wings, celestial Dove,
Will safe convey me home.
Isaac Watts, 1709.
These sermons from Charles Spurgeon are a series that is for reference and not necessarily a position of Answers in Genesis. Spurgeon did not entirely agree with six days of creation and dives into subjects that are beyond the AiG focus (e.g., Calvinism vs. Arminianism, modes of baptism, and so on).
Modernized Edition of Spurgeon’s Sermons. Copyright © 2010, Larry and Marion Pierce, Winterbourne, Ontario, Canada. Used by Answers in Genesis by permission of the copyright owner. The modernized edition of the material published in these sermons may not be reproduced or distributed by any electronic means without express written permission of the copyright owner. A limited license is hereby granted for the non-commercial printing and distribution of the material in hard copy form, provided this is done without charge to the recipient and the copyright information remains intact. Any charge or cost for distribution of the material is expressly forbidden under the terms of this limited license and automatically voids such permission. You may not prepare, manufacture, copy, use, promote, distribute, or sell a derivative work of the copyrighted work without the express written permission of the copyright owner.
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