|
The Deity of the Holy
Spirit
Christianity has traditionally taught that
the Holy Spirit is the third Person or Hypostasis of the Godhead. Some, however,
have taught that the Holy Spirit is an impersonal force used by God. Is the Holy
Spirit God, or simply a power of God? Let's examine the biblical teachings.
I. The Deity of the Holy Spirit
Scripture speaks repeatedly of the Holy
Spirit, known also as the Spirit of God and the Spirit of Jesus Christ.
Scripture indicates that the Holy Spirit is of the same essence as the Father
and the Son. The Holy Spirit is ascribed with the attributes of God, is equated
with God and does work that only God does.
A. Attributes of God
1. Holiness: In more than 90 places, the
Bible calls the Spirit of God "the Holy Spirit." Holiness is a basic
characteristic of the Spirit. The Spirit is so holy that blasphemy against the
Spirit cannot be forgiven, although blasphemy against Jesus could be (Matt.
12:32). Insulting the Spirit is just as sinful as trampling the Son of God under
foot (Heb. 10:29). This indicates that the Spirit is inherently holy, holy in
essence, rather than having an assigned or secondary holiness such as the temple
had.
The Spirit also has the infinite
attributes of God: unlimited in time, space, power and knowledge.
2. Eternality: The Holy Spirit, the
Counselor, will be with us "forever" (John 14:16). The Spirit is
"eternal" (Heb. 9:14).
3. Omnipresence: David, praising God's
greatness, asked, "Where can I go from your Spirit? Where can I flee from
your presence? If I go up to the heavens, you are there; if I make my bed in the
depths, you are there" (Ps. 139:7-8). God's Spirit, which David uses as a
synonym for the presence of God himself, is in heaven and in sheol (v. 8), in
the east and in the west (v. 9).
God's Spirit can be said to be poured out
on someone, to fill a person, or to descend — yet without implying that the
Spirit has moved away from or vacated some other place. Thomas Oden observes
that "such statements are grounded in the premises of omnipresence and
eternality — attributes ascribed properly only to God" (Life in the
Spirit, p. 18).
4. Omnipotence: The works that God does,
such as creation, are also ascribed to the Holy Spirit (Job 33:4; Ps. 104:30).
Miracles of Jesus Christ were done "by the Spirit" (Matt. 12:28). In
Paul's ministry, the work that "Christ has accomplished" was done
"through the power of the Spirit" (Rom. 15:18-19).
5. Omniscience: "The Spirit searches
all things, even the deep things of God," Paul said (1 Cor. 2:10). The
Spirit of God "knows the thoughts of God" (v. 11). The Spirit
therefore knows all things, and is able to teach all things (John 14:26).
Holiness, eternality, omnipresence,
omnipotence and omniscience are attributes of God's essence, that is,
characteristic of the nature of divine existence. The Holy Spirit has the basic
attributes of God.
B. Equated with God
1. Triadic formulas: Several passages
discuss the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit as equals. In a discussion of spiritual
gifts, Paul puts the Spirit, the Lord, and God in grammatically parallel
constructions (1 Cor. 12:4-6). Paul closes a letter with a three-part prayer:
"May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the
fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all" (2 Cor. 13:14). Peter begins
a letter with this three-part formula: "who have been chosen according to
the foreknowledge of God the Father, through the sanctifying work of the Spirit,
for obedience to Jesus Christ and sprinkling by his blood" (1 Peter 1:2).
Of course, the triadic formulas used in
these and other scriptures do not prove equality (for example, Eph. 4:5 puts
unequal elements in parallel construction), but they do suggest it. The
baptismal formula has an even stronger implication of unity — "in the name
[singular] of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit" (Matt.
28:19). The Father, Son, and Spirit share a common name, indicating common
essence and equality. This verse indicates both plurality and unity. Three names
are given, but all three share one name.
2. Word interchanges. Acts 5:3 says that
Ananias lied to the Holy Spirit; verse 4 says that Ananias lied to God. This
indicates that "the Holy Spirit" and "God" are
interchangeable and thus that the Holy Spirit is God. Some people try to explain
this by saying that Ananias lied to God only indirectly, simply because the Holy
Spirit represented God. This interpretation might be grammatically possible, but
it would imply the personality of the Holy Spirit as a divine representative,
for one does not lie to an impersonal power. Moreover, Peter told Ananias that
he lied not to humans, but to God. The force of the passage is that Ananias has
lied not merely to God's representatives, but to God himself, and the Holy
Spirit is God to whom Ananias lied.
Another word interchange can be seen in 1
Cor. 3:16 and 6:19. Christians are not only temples of God, they are also
temples of the Holy Spirit; the two expressions mean the same thing. A temple,
of course, is a habitation for a deity, not a habitation for an impersonal
power. When Paul writes "temple of the Holy Spirit," he implies that
the Holy Spirit is God.
Another type of verbal equation between
God and the Holy Spirit is seen in Acts 13:2: "The Holy Spirit said, `Set
apart for me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have called them."
Here, the Holy Spirit speaks on behalf of God, as God. In the same way, Heb.
3:7-11 tells us that the Holy Spirit says the Israelites "tested and tried
me"; the Holy Spirit says that "I was angry.... They shall
never enter my rest." The Holy Spirit is equated with the God of the
Israelites. Heb. 10:15-17 also equates the Spirit and the Lord who makes the new
covenant. The Spirit who inspired the prophets is God. This is the work of God
the Holy Spirit, which leads us to our next section.
C. Divine work
1. Creating: The Holy Spirit does work
that only God can do, such as creating (Gen. 1:2; Job 33:4; Ps. 104:30) and
expelling demons (Matt. 12:28).
2. Begetting: The Spirit begot the Son of
God (Matt. 1:20; Luke 1:35), and the full divinity of the Son (Col. 1:19)
implies the full divinity of the Begetter.
The Spirit begets believers, too — they
are born of God (John 1:12) and equally born of the Spirit (John 3:5). "The
Spirit gives [eternal] life" (John 6:63). The Spirit is the power by which
we will be resurrected (Rom. 8:11).
3. Indwelling: The Holy Spirit is the way
in which God lives in his children (Eph. 2:22; 1 John 3:24; 4:13). The Holy
Spirit "lives" in us (Rom. 8:11; 1 Cor. 3:16) — and because the
Spirit lives in us, we are able to say that God lives in us. We can say that God
lives in us only because the Holy Spirit is in some way God. The Spirit is not a
representative or a power that lives in us — God himself lives in us. Geoffrey
Bromiley gives a concise conclusion: "to have dealings with the Spirit, no
less than with the Father and the Son, is to have dealings with God"
("The New Holy Spirit," in The New Life, edited by Millard
Erickson, p. 23).
4. Sanctifying: The Holy Spirit makes
people holy (Rom. 15:16; 1 Pet. 1:2). The Spirit enables people to enter
the kingdom of God (John 3:5). We are saved "through the sanctifying work
of the Spirit" (2 Thess. 2:13).
In all these things, the works of the
Spirit are the works of God. Whatever the Spirit says or does, God is saying or
doing; the Spirit is fully representative of God.
II. Personality of the Holy Spirit
Scripture describes the Holy Spirit as
having personal characteristics: The Spirit has mind and will, speaks and can be
spoken to, and acts and intercedes for us. All these indicate personality in the
theological sense: The Holy Spirit is a Person or Hypostasis in the same sense
that the Father and Son are. Our relationship with God, which is accomplished by
the Holy Spirit, is a personal relationship.
A. Life and intelligence
1. Life: The Holy Spirit "lives"
(Rom. 8:11; 1 Cor. 3:16).
2. Intelligence: The Spirit
"knows" (1 Cor. 2:11). Rom. 8:27 refers to "the mind of the
Spirit." This mind is able to make judgments — a decision "seemed
good" to the Holy Spirit (Acts 15:28). These verses imply a distinct
intelligence.
3. Will: 1 Cor. 12:11 says that the Spirit
"determines" decisions, showing that the Spirit has a will. The Greek
word means "he or it determines." Although the Greek word does not
specify the subject of the verb, the most likely subject in the context is the
Spirit. To find a different subject, one would have to backtrack through five
verses and six mentions of the Spirit. But this grammatical leapfrogging is not
necessary. Since we know from other verses that the Spirit has mind and
knowledge and judgment, there is no reason to reject the conclusion in 1 Cor.
12:11 that the Spirit also has will.
B. Communication
1. Speaking: Numerous verses say that the
Holy Spirit spoke (Acts 8:29; 10:19; 11:12; 21:11; 1 Tim. 4:1; Heb. 3:7; etc.).
Oden observes that "the Spirit speaks in the first person as `I'; `It was I
who sent them' (Acts 10:20).... `I have called them' (Acts 13:2). None but
a person can say `I' " (The Living God, p. 200).
2. Interaction: The Spirit may be lied to
(Acts 5:3), which indicates that the Spirit may be spoken to. The Spirit may be
tested (Acts 5:9), insulted (Heb. 10:29) or blasphemed (Matt. 12:31), which
implies personal status. Oden gathers additional evidence: "The apostolic
testimony applied intensely personal analogies: guiding (Rom. 8:14), convicting
(John 16:8), interceding (Rom. 8:26), calling (Acts 13:2), commissioning (Acts
20:28).... Only a person can be vexed (Isa. 63:10) or grieved (Eph.
4:30)" (Life in the Spirit, p. 19).
3. Paraclete: Jesus called the Holy Spirit
the parakletos — the Comforter, Advocate or Counselor. The Paraclete is active,
teaching (John 14:26), testifying (15:26), convicting (16:8), guiding (16:13)
and making truth known (16:14).
Jesus used the masculine form of
parakletos; he did not consider it necessary to make the word neuter or to use
neuter pronouns. In John 16:14, masculine pronouns are used even after the
neuter pneuma is mentioned. It would have been easy to switch to neuter
pronouns, but John did not. In other places, neuter pronouns are used for the
Spirit, in accordance with grammatical convention. Scripture is not finicky
about the grammatical gender of the Spirit, and we need not be either.
C. Action
1. New life: The Holy Spirit regenerates
us, giving us new life (John 3:5). The Spirit sanctifies us (1 Pet. 1:2) and
leads us in that new life (Rom. 8:14). The Spirit gives various gifts to build
the Church up (1 Cor. 12:7-11), and throughout the book of Acts, we see that the
Spirit guides the Church.
2. Intercession: The most
"personal" activity of the Holy Spirit is intercession: "We do
not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for
us.... The Spirit intercedes for the saints in accordance with God's
will" (Rom. 8:26-27). Intercession implies not only receiving
communication, but also communicating further on. It implies an intelligence, a
concern, and a formal role. The Holy Spirit is not an impersonal power, but an
intelligent and divine Helper who lives within us. God lives within us, and the
Holy Spirit is God.
III. Worship
There are no scriptural examples of
worshipping the Holy Spirit. Scripture talks about praying in the Spirit (Eph.
6:18), the fellowship of the Spirit (2 Cor. 13:14), and baptism in the name of
the Spirit (Matt. 28:19). Although baptism, prayer and fellowship are involved
in worship, none of these verses is a valid proof-text for worship of the
Spirit.
As an opposite of worship, however, we
note that the Spirit can be blasphemed (Matt. 12:31).
There are no scriptural examples of
praying to the Holy Spirit. However, Scripture indicates that a human can talk
to the Spirit (Acts 5:3). If this is done in reverence or request, it is, in
effect, praying to the Spirit. If Christians are unable to articulate their
desires and they want the Spirit to intercede for them (Rom. 8:26-27), they are
praying, directly or indirectly, to the Holy Spirit. When we understand that the
Holy Spirit has intelligence and fully represents God, we may ask the Spirit for
help — never thinking that the Spirit is a separate being from God, but
recognizing that the Spirit is the Hypostasis of God interceding for us.
Why then does Scripture say nothing about
praying to the Spirit? Michael Green explains: "The Holy Spirit does not
draw attention to himself. He is sent by the Father to glorify Jesus, to show
Jesus' attractiveness, and not to take the centre of the stage" (I
Believe in the Holy Spirit, p. 60). Or, as Geoffrey Bromiley puts it,
"The Spirit is self-effacing" (p. 21).
Prayer or worship directed specifically to
the Holy Spirit is not the scriptural norm, but we nonetheless worship the
Spirit. When we worship God, we worship all aspects of God, including the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. A fourth-century theologian explained it
this way: "The Spirit is jointly worshipped in God, when God is worshipped
in the Spirit" (Ambrose, Of the Holy Spirit III.X.82, quoted in Oden,
Life in the Spirit, p. 16). Whatever we say to the Spirit we are saying
to God, and whatever we say to God we are saying to the Spirit.
IV. Summary
Scripture indicates that the Holy Spirit
has divine attributes and works, and is spoken of in the same way that the
Father and Son are. The Holy Spirit is intelligent, and speaks and acts like a
Person. This is part of the scriptural evidence that led early Christians to
formulate the doctrine of the Trinity. Bromiley gives a summary:
Three points that emerge from this survey
of the New Testament data are: (1) The Holy Spirit is everywhere regarded as
God; (2) He is God in distinction from the Father and the Son; (3) His deity
does not infringe upon the divine unity. In other words, the Holy Spirit is the
third person of the triune Godhead....
The divine unity cannot be subjected to
mathematical ideas of unity. The fourth century learned to speak of three
hypostases or persons within the deity, not in the tritheistic sense of three
centers of consciousness, but also not in the weaker sense of three economic
manifestations. From Nicaea and Constantinople on, the creeds sought to do
justice to the essential biblical data along these lines. (pp. 24-25)
Although Scripture does not directly say
that "the Holy Spirit is God," or that God is triune, these
conclusions are based on scriptural evidence. Based on biblical evidence, we teach that the Holy Spirit is God in the same way that
the Father is God and the Son is God.
Michael Morrison
Copyright 1996

|