John 14.
J. N. Darby, Bible Treasury, Volume 3, 2nd Edition, May 1861.
(1st. Edition, May [03 1861 267])
Having spoken on other occasions, first, of the quickening of the Spirit, secondly, of the Spirit as a "well of water springing up to everlasting life," and, thirdly of the Spirit as rivers of living water flowing out from us, * I now desire to look at the further blessings connected with the Spirit of God dwelling in and with us, the personally-present Comforter, no less than the power of life, communion and communication.
{* Bible Treasury, Jan. [3 1861 202], Feb. [03 1861 219], Apr. [3 1861 254]}
We have seen how the quickening is connected closely with Christ; and not only so, but entirely and singly with Him — born anew of the Second Adam, in contrast with the first. Then we saw the Spirit of God become a spring or source of divine refreshment in us; and there are the blessings flowing from it. There are also blessings and relationships flowing from this — there is not only power given through the Spirit dwelling, but there are relationships resulting from the redemption accomplished. There are not desires only, but development and power of union and communion.
We have the Holy Spirit in virtue of the work of Christ, which gives perfect rest. In Christ we are set in the presence of God. The Spirit unfolds all the consequences of our being thus brought into God's presence by the work of Christ — the consequences in glory, the glory to come. And, more than that, the Spirit of God becomes the power for the exercise of those relationships. No man can learn the blessing of a relationship, except in the exercise of it. As in nature it is so, so with the divine relationship. All depends on the presence of the Holy Spirit down here. Two great truths are connected with this — first, the accepted man, the Second Adam, the Lord from heaven, (not only man in creation,) is in heaven. The One who came down is gone up, and is in the presence of God. Secondly, the Holy Ghost down here associates us with all that Christ is in heaven. All that the Church has here is founded on this.
Thus we have three important truths as the result. First, the Holy Ghost makes my person His temple; therefore it is said, "Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God," etc. I must use my body as a vessel, an instrument of the Holy Ghost. His presence is the measure of my condition: His dwelling in me is the measure of my conduct. It is joy to be filled with the Holy Ghost. Power also is the result of being anointed with oil. "We have an unction from the Holy One," etc. "Led of the Spirit." The fact of the Holy Ghost being here is the immense principle of the Christian's life. The next thing is, we are brought into fellowship with the Son; and the next is fellowship with the Father. When Christ ascended on high, by virtue of His having become man, He could say, "I ascend to my God and your God;" and in virtue of His being God, He could say, "to my Father and your Father." His having made us children by adoption, we have this special relationship with God: and so true, so deep, so real a thing is it, that it is said, "He that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God," etc.
Thus "being rooted and grounded in love," that we may "know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge," be filled with all the fulness of God. This is the amazing, infinite sphere and measure of blessing which we are brought into by the Holy Ghost, because the Holy Ghost dwells in us. He becomes the spring of affections and feelings suitable to the relationship. It cannot be otherwise. A man feels it in his prayers. He finds his heart going out after the Lord. He has desires he cannot help expressing about earthly circumstances and the Church, etc. (See Ananias, Acts 9:13.) There is that kind of intimacy between him and Christ that he can reason as it were with Him. "Lord, I have heard by many of this man." Again, if it is a question which concerns me as a child, I naturally ask my Father for certain things I want; but the soul cannot have freedom of intercourse with God in His majesty, unless our hearts are clear before Him as our Father. We want, in certain things, to go to God, as God, and in others as Father, and in both we have this blessed freedom of intercourse through the Spirit as well as that of the members of the body, with the Head, Christ. All are the free gift of God. When I fail, I fly off to my Father to get help, for I cannot have communion with God when I have failed; and as a member of the body I need the Holy Ghost to take of Christ's and make it mine, because His. This is not community. All is gift to us, but all that Christ has is in glory, as man is ours, for He has given it to us. The Father gives another Comforter that He may abide with you for ever. This is consequent upon Christ's going up to the Father. Christ goes up and receives the Holy Ghost, because of what He has done for others. As Head of the Church He receives it, that the members may share it with Him. Jesus received the Holy Ghost down here for service. God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power. (Acts 10.) But what is said in Acts 2:33? "Having received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost," etc. In the one case He was sealed by the Spirit at His baptism; in the other He received the Holy Ghost, to shed abroad in us at His ascension to the Father, "The Comforter whom I will send unto you from the Father."
He calls Him "another," because Christ Himself was their Comforter while He was with them. Christ was to go away; He could not abide here; He must ascend into heaven. "By his own blood he entered in once into the holy place." Christ being our Advocate there, the Spirit comes to advocate our cause here.
It is said "The Spirit of truth whom the world cannot receive." The world having broken with Christ, can have nothing whatever to do with this Spirit of truth.
John 14:17. They were not merely to have this Comforter as they had had Christ, who only abode as their companion, and then went away, but He was also to be in them, and not only with them.
In John 14:16, it is, "I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter." Here Christ is obtaining the Holy Ghost for them.
In John 15:26, it is, "the Comforter whom I will send unto you." As divine head of the Church, though a man, He had a title to dispose of everything, and He sends the Holy Ghost. See also John 16:7. Then, another thing is, the Father sends Him in Christ's name, because of His acceptance of His work.
John 14:26. The immense, the unchangeable resting place of all blessing is the name of Jesus.
As to its present condition, all connection between the world and God is closed. (I do not speak of providence.) The world then sees Him no more but Christ says, "Ye see me." What an immense difference between the church and the world! We see the blessed one — He is the object before us. The Son having been rejected from the world, all communion between the world and the Father is closed. They say, "This is the heir; come, let us kill him." Now is the judgement of this world. "Upon us the ends of the world are come." — "But ye see me." When the world sees nothing, we, in the power of faith, "behold him who is invisible." Our eyes thus always resting on One in whom the Father finds delight (not the natural eyes, of course,) I know that my affections are set upon the One in whom the Father is fully satisfied. There was an adequate motive for the Father to love Christ. It is undiscerned by us in our natural minds, but the Holy Ghost brings us into blessed communion with the Father's mind. "Because I live ye shall live also." Believing in Him makes me know what His estimate is of Christ, and it is also by virtue of believing in Him that I have life. Not only is the object the same as the Father Himself has, but the life is the same. "Because I live, ye shall live also." He unfolds this connection afterwards, ver. 20 — "At that day ye shall know that I am in my Father, and ye in me, and I in you."
This is not said at the beginning of the chapter. It could not be said, until there was union through the Holy Ghost being given. They ought to have known the Father by Christ's being with them, but they could not know this farther thing — "In that day ye shall know that I am in my Father," etc. When the Holy Ghost was sent down, the Church knew not only the union of the Father and the Son, but also their own union — "ye in me." The Holy Ghost then leads to Christ as the object of our souls — to Christ as our life, and to our knowledge of Christ in the Father, and we in Christ. This source of life is in us. "Because I live ye shall live also." This is more than the fact of the security of life, but that the very one in whom He lived was to be the source of life to them. We have then the Spirit of adoption crying, Abba Father, instead of bondage. Viewed in connection with the Father Himself, and with the Son it is "He that is joined to the Lord is one spirit."
All this is in virtue of accomplished redemption. The Son having taken His place at the right hand of God, my relationship then is founded on Christ, and in all the perfectness of Christ's standing before God for me. But the power to enjoy it is the Holy Ghost. Christ takes His place on high. Sin is all gone, for He has borne it away, perfectly atoned for it, in having been made sin. He has glorified God about this very thing — sin. The holiness and the love of God have been made known by the dealing with sin upon the cross in a way in which nothing else could have revealed them. Having done it all, Christ enters the presence of God, the new man; and where He is, we are. Therefore the place of the Church involves entire deliverance from all fear, because having "the Spirit of adoption." I am not before God now as my Judge, because I am His child. My very existence as a Christian flows from this. I am born of God — a child in the house. In virtue of being thus born, I have my existence before God as His child — the work of Christ, of course, being the foundation. He has borne the judgement: law, sin, etc., are all gone; and I am free from every charge before God.
The reasoning goes on, (Rom. 8:18,) If children then heirs, etc. All we have and are will be manifested in glory; but we are now speaking of the position, before the Father, with Christ, the model-man, "the first-born of many brethren." Have we lost anything of the majesty of God in all this? Certainly not. Christ has brought God to us in all His glorious attributes, instead of taking from them. The soul has all the holiness, majesty, as well as love, brought home to it. Reverence and adoration are wrought there by the Holy Ghost. A son does not the less admire the excellence of his father, because he is his father.
All true worship is the returning back to God from us of all that the Holy Ghost has revealed to us of God. (John 14:26.) "He shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance." It is said, "The Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my name." This is the full character of our relationship with Christ. "He shall bring to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you:" not only what He is, but this is the remembrance of all that Christ expressed on earth; and it is a delight to my heart. Every word that came from Christ's mouth was God speaking through a man. Comfort, wisdom, love, all came from Him in perfection. "Thou hast given me the tongue of the learned," etc. The Spirit does not, of course, reveal to me Christ as now on earth; but I have not lost Christ a bit, as to what He was down here. He brings all that He was to our remembrance now. The Holy Ghost gives me Christ as the manna that came down from heaven, as well as what He is now as the hidden manna; and that is giving me to feed on Christ. Mark the difference between Christ's commandments and those under the law. Christ was life, and all His commands were the expression of that life which He had in Himself. So with us; for we have the life in Him. Christ is our life, and His precepts are the guidance of the life which we have in Him. Did life result from what we are doing, all would be over with us. I see the ensnaring world all around me; but I have not only the word of Christ to direct me, but I have the power of divine life — Christ Himself — to help me. (1 John 1.) There is an object before me; but there is more — direction for my feet in what He is.
John 16:13. "I have many things to say to you," etc. It is not here the path, and teaching in general as we have had, but when He, the spirit of truth, is come, He shall guide you into all truth." This is a present thing; "He shall take of mine and shall show it unto you" — different from His being the remembrancer of what He had said while He was with them on earth. What He hears He speaks; these are the things in heaven brought down to earth, by the Spirit who is on earth. It is the revelation by the Spirit of all that Christ is. Having taken this place on earth as the servant, what He hears he makes known to us; and Christ is now in heaven for us.
The Spirit also shows us "things to come." He brings out all the glory before us, the future hope. I thus look forward to the time when God shall unite all in Christ as head — "in the dispensation of the fulness of times that he might gather together in one all things in Christ both which are in heaven and which are on earth." In the future all the glory is to be Christ's and we are heirs of it. It is to come, but the Holy Ghost makes it known as ours. Thus I look forward to the time when all is manifested, and I am to share it with Him. The glory belongs to one who has identified Himself with and suffered for me. It belongs to Him who "loved me and gave Himself for me," and all His glory is ours, and this is not all, for He says, "All things that the Father hath are mine: therefore, said I, he shall take of mine and shall show it unto you." Thus I am to know what that is — yes, my soul is to know all the glory which this humbled Christ is to have. "He will guide me into all truth." Every thing is set in its right place in the soul, Christ being the centre of all and all centred in Christ. All is our own as members of His body, etc. If God has set Him to be head over all, it is to His Church. The Holy Spirit leads us not only into the hope of the future glory, but also into the consequences of union with the Lord Jesus Christ now in the most intimate relationship possible. The Holy Ghost shows us in Christ all the affections of Christ in exercise towards us, by virtue of that union as the bride of Christ the Son, as Ephesians goes on to show; not only how the head is connected with the body, but the husband with the wife. "Husbands love your wives, even as Christ loved the Church." This is enjoined not only as a duty, but according to the example of Christ Himself. "No man ever yet hated his own flesh, but nourisheth and cherisheth it, even as the Lord the Church." There is this ministry of Christ towards us because of the relationship. Mark the double character of holiness and power there is in this. Take care you do not grieve the Holy Spirit who brings you into the enjoyment of all this. Whatever is of the world and of the flesh grieves the Holy Spirit of God, whereby we are sealed, etc. It is the measure of what becomes a Christian — a spiritual man.
Then, as to power, we are to be filled with the Spirit — so filled, that as to our place in heaven, we shall be all joy. In the fulness of communion the soul gets its place in the heavenly choir, singing, and making melody to the Lord. But, then, I am in this world of sorrow, and what am I to do? See God in it all, "giving thanks always for all things unto God and our Father," "rejoicing in tribulation." It naturally takes some time to work this thankfulness in us, but of Jesus it is said, when He was rejected by Chorazin and Bethsaida, "At that time Jesus answered and said, I thank thee." He saw God in it — and so, when we can see sorrow coming from God, that His hand is in it, we can say, Oh! then I will thank thee for it. It is not so directly with us sometimes, but it is wrought in the soul afterwards, when the risings of the flesh are subdued.
Being filled with the Spirit is having Christ the actual source of all that arises in us of thoughts and feelings. A man's spirituality is measured by this. When there is nothing else but Christ, we are filled with the Spirit. What liberty is this! What freedom from sin and all besides to serve God! The liberty of the saint must be a holy liberty. "The law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath set me free from the law of sin and death." We have the spirit of adoption, founded on redemption; thus we have liberty towards God and from Satan. What would have been taking Christ's liberty from Him if it had been possible, would have been hindering His doing the Father's will.
There are two things for us to think of from this subject — first, the amazing grace which has set us in such a place, even as the temple of the Holy Ghost; secondly, how we are called upon not to grieve the Holy Spirit who dwells in us, that we may not occupy Him with our faults and failings, instead of with those blessed things which are ours in Christ.
May He keep our affections fresh and happy in fellowship with the Father and His Son Jesus Christ.