The Spirit and the Word eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 90 pages of information about The Spirit and the Word.

The Spirit and the Word eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 90 pages of information about The Spirit and the Word.
testimony to your own salvation as you have for the salvation of the thief on the cross, and it would be impossible for you to have any more.  Suppose the Lord were to come down and take you up bodily and set you down before his throne in heaven, and, in the presence of all the angels and archangels, say to you:  “My child, your sins are all forgiven.”  “Now,” says one, “that would be testimony indeed.”  Yes, it would be testimony, but no more testimony than you have in the word of God now; you would then have only the testimony of the “mere word” of God that you were forgiven.  All such criticisms arise out of infidelity as to the truthfulness of God’s word.

3. The Spirit maketh intercession for us.  This is not a work done in us nor upon us, but is something done for us before the throne of God.  We can not dogmatize as to how the Spirit maketh intercession, but Paul says he does it “according to the will of God.”  This is a fact that appeals to our faith and not to our Christian experience.  It “can not be uttered.”  We can rest upon it and draw comfort from it as a child draws strength from its mother’s breast.  We can also draw comfort from the fact that Christ “ever liveth to make intercession for us,” though we have no knowledge as to how he does it.

4.  Another work of the Spirit is to “change us from glory to glory.”  “But we all, with unveiled face, reflecting as a mirror the glory of the Lord, are transformed into the same image from glory to glory, even as from the Lord the Spirit” (2 Cor. 3:18).  The figure used here by the apostle is taken from the process of mirror-making among the ancients.  They hadn’t the glass mirrors of our day, but a mirror of highly polished metal.  A piece of coarse metal would be placed upon a stone and the workmen would begin to polish it; at first it made no reflection at all, but when polished for awhile would give a distorted and perverted reflection; but in the process of polishing, that reflection would grow clearer and clearer, when finally a man could behold his face in it perfectly reflected.  And so with us.  When taken into the great spiritual laboratory of Christianity we are blocks in the rough, but in the polishing process of the church and spiritual surroundings we begin to reflect the image of our Master, and when we have completed the work, we reflect him as perfectly as a human being can.  Take, for illustration, the brothers Peter and John.  At first they were called Boanerges, sons of thunder; they wanted to call down fire from heaven to destroy men who differed from them; but in the great laboratory of the Christian life they grew more and more Christlike, transformed by the Spirit of God, until at last we see the old apostle John at Ephesus, beautified and ennobled, sitting in his chair and lifting up trembling hands, and saying to the young disciples:  “Little children, love one another, for love is of God.”  We see the transforming power of the spiritual atmosphere

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Project Gutenberg
The Spirit and the Word from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.