<SPAN name="chapter14"></SPAN>
<h1>XIV.</h1>
<h2>The Holy Spirit and Sound Doctrine</h2>
<p align="center">“Ye shall receive power after that the Holy
Ghost is come upon you.”</p>
<p>Is Jesus Christ divine? Is the Bible an inspired Book?
Is man a fallen creature who can be saved only through
the suffering and sacrifice of the Creator? Will there
be a resurrection of the dead, and a day in which
God will judge all the world by the Man Christ Jesus?
Is Satan a personal being, and is there a Hell in
which the wicked will be for ever punished?</p>
<p>These are great doctrines which have been held and
taught by His followers since the days of Jesus and
His Apostles, and yet they are ever being attacked
and denied.</p>
<p>Are they true? Or are they only fancies and falsehoods,
or figures of speech and distortions of truth? How
can we find truth and know it?</p>
<p>Jesus said, “When He, the Spirit of Truth, is
come, He will guide you into all truth” (John
xvi. 13).</p>
<p>What truth? Not the truth of the multiplication table,
or of physical science, or art, or secular history,
but spiritual truth—­the truth about God
and His will and character, and our relations to Him
in Christ—­that truth which is necessary
to salvation and holiness—­into all this
truth the Holy Spirit will guide us. “He shall
teach you all things,” said Jesus (John xiv.
26).</p>
<p>How, then, shall we escape error and be “sound
in doctrine”? Only by the help of the Holy Spirit.</p>
<p>How do we know Jesus Christ is divine? Because the
Bible tells us so? Infinitely precious and important
is this revelation in the Bible; but not by this do
we know it. Because the Church teaches it in her creed,
and we have heard it from the catechism? Nothing taught
in any creed or catechism is of more vital importance;
but neither by this do we know it.</p>
<p>How then? Listen to Paul: “No man can say that
Jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost” (I
Cor. xii. 3). “No man,” says Paul. Then
learning it from the Bible or catechism is not to know
it except as the parrot might know it; but every man
is to be taught this by the Holy Spirit, if he is
to really know it.</p>
<p>Then it is not a revelation made once for all, and
only to the men who walked and talked with Jesus,
but it is a spiritual revelation made anew to each
believing heart that in penitence seeks Him and so
meets the conditions of such a revelation.</p>
<p>Then the poor, degraded, ignorant outcast at The Army
penitent-form in the slums of London or Chicago,
who never heard of a creed, and the ebony African
and dusky Indian, who never saw the inside of a Bible,
may have Christ revealed in him, and know by the revelation
of the Holy Spirit that Jesus is Lord.</p>
<p>“It pleased God... to reveal His Son in me,”
wrote Paul (Gal. i. 15, 16); and again, “Christ
liveth in me” (Gal. ii. 20); and again, “My
little children, of whom I travail in birth again
until Christ be formed in you” (Gal. iv. 19);
as though Christ is to be spiritually formed in the
heart of each believer by the operation of the Holy
Spirit, as He was physically formed in the womb of
Mary by the same Spirit (Luke i. 35); and again, “The
mystery which hath been hid from ages and from generations,
but now is made manifest to His saints,... which is
Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Col. i. 26,
27); “That Christ may dwell in your hearts by
faith” (Eph. iii. 17); “Examine yourselves,
whether ye be in the faith; prove your own selves.
Know ye not your own selves, how that Jesus Christ
is in you, except ye be reprobates” (2 Cor.
xiii. 5)?</p>
<p>“At that day,” said Jesus, when making
His great promise of the Comforter to His disciples,
“At that day ye shall know that I am in My Father,
and ye in Me, and I in you” (John xiv. 20); and
again, in His great prayer, He said: “I have
declared unto them Thy name, and will declare it:
that the love wherewith Thou hast loved Me may be
in them, and I in them.”</p>
<p>It is this ever-recurring revelation to penitent,
believing hearts, by the agency of the ever-present
Holy Spirit, that makes faith in Jesus Christ living
and invincible. “I know He is Lord, for He saves
my soul from sin, and He saves me now,” is an
argument that rationalism and unbelief cannot answer
nor overthrow, and so long as there are men in the
world who can say this, faith in the divinity of Jesus
Christ is secure; and this experience and witness
come by the Holy Ghost.</p>
<p> “I worship Thee, O Holy Ghost,<br/>
I love to worship Thee;<br/>
My risen Lord for aye were lost<br/>
But for Thy company.”</p>
<p>And so it is by the guidance and teaching of the Holy
Spirit that all saving truth becomes vital to us.</p>
<p>It is He that makes the Bible a living Book; it is
He that convinces the world of judgment (John xvi.
8-11); it is He that makes men certain that there
is a Heaven of surpassing and enduring glory and joy,
and a Hell of endless sorrow and woe for those who
sin away their day of grace and die in impenitence.</p>
<p>Who have been the mightiest and most faithful preachers
of the gloom and terror and pain of a perpetual Hell?
those who have been the mightiest and most effective
preachers of God’s compassionate love.</p>
<p>In all periods of great revival, when men seemed to
live on the borderland, and in the vision of eternity,
Hell has been preached. The leaders in these revivals
have been men of prayer and faith and consuming love,
but they have been men who knew “the terrors
of the Lord,” and, therefore, they preached
the judgments of God, and they proved that the law
with its penalties is a schoolmaster to bring men
to Christ (Gal. iii. 24). Fox, the Quaker; Bunyan,
the Baptist; Baxter, the Puritan; Wesley and Fletcher,
and Whitefield and Caughey, the Methodists; Finney,
the Presbyterian; Edwards and Moody, the Congregationalists;
and General Booth, the Salvationist, have preached
it, not savagely, but tenderly and faithfully, as
a mother might warn her child against some great danger
that would surely follow careless and selfish wrong-doing.</p>
<p>What men have loved and laboured and sacrificed as
these men? Their hearts have been a flaming furnace
of love and devotion to God, and an over-flowing fountain
of love and compassion for men; but just in proportion
as they have discovered God’s love and pity
for the sinner, so have they discovered His wrath against
sin and all obstinate wrong-doing; and as they have
caught glimpses of Heaven and declared its joys and
everlasting glories to men, so they have seen Hell,
with its endless punishment, and with trembling voice
and overflowing eyes have they warned men to “flee
from the wrath to come.”</p>
<p>Were these men, throbbing with spiritual life and
consumed with devotion to the Kingdom of God and the
everlasting well-being of their fellowmen, led to
this belief by the Spirit of Truth, or were they misled?
Is it the prophet, weeping and praying and preaching
and fighting for God and men, to whom the Spirit has
always first spoken and revealed the things of God?
Or is it the philosopher, or dry-as-dust theologian,
or the popular preacher of smooth things, sitting
in his study and among his books, spinning out of
his own mind his conceits concerning God’s plan
and purpose in the universe?</p>
<p>Does Seneca or the Psalmist, Plato or Paul, Rousseau
or Wesley, the idolised, high-salaried, soft-raimented
preacher of a wide gate and broad way to life and
Heaven, or the veteran soul-winner, General Booth,
more clearly make known the mind of God in matters
that are spiritual?</p>
<p>“The things of the Spirit... are spiritually
discerned” (I Cor. ii. 14), says Paul. It is
not by searching and philosophising that these things
are found out, but by revelation. “Flesh and
blood hath not revealed it unto thee,” said Jesus
to Peter, “but My Father which is in Heaven”
(Matthew xvi. 17). The great teacher of truth is the
Spirit of Truth, and the only safe expounders and
guardians of sound doctrine are men filled with the
Holy Ghost.</p>
<p>Study and research have their place, and an important
place; but in spiritual things they will be no avail
unless prosecuted by spiritual men. As well might
men blind from birth attempt to study the starry heavens,
and men born deaf undertake to expound and criticise
the harmonies of Bach and Beethoven. Men must see
and hear to speak and write intelligently on such subjects.
And so men must be spiritually enlightened to understand
spiritual truth.</p>
<p>The greatest danger to any religious organisation
is that a body of men should arise in its ranks, and
hold its positions of trust, who have learned its
great fundamental doctrines by rote out of the catechism,
but have no experimental knowledge of their truth
inwrought by the mighty anointing of the Holy Ghost,
and who are destitute of “an unction from the
Holy One,” by which, says John, “ye know
all things” (1 John ii. 20, 27).</p>
<p>Why do men deny the divinity of Jesus Christ? Because
they have never placed themselves in that relation
to the Spirit, and met those unchanging conditions
that would enable Him to reveal Jesus to them as Saviour
and Lord.</p>
<p>Why do men dispute the inspiration of the Scriptures?
Because the Holy Ghost, who inspired “holy men
of God” to write the Book (2 Peter i. 21), hides
its spiritual sense from unspiritual and unholy men.</p>
<p>Why do men doubt a Day of Judgment, and a state of
everlasting doom? Because they have never been bowed
and broken and crushed beneath the weight of their
sin, and by a sense of guilt and separation from a
holy God that can only be removed by faith in His
dying Son.</p>
<p>A sportsman lost his way in a pitiless storm on a
black and starless night. Suddenly his horse drew
back and refused to take another step. He urged it
forward, but it only threw itself back upon its haunches.
Just then a vivid flash of lightning revealed a great
precipice upon the brink of which he stood. It was
but an instant, and then the pitchy blackness hid
it again from view. But he turned his horse and anxiously
rode away from the terrible danger.</p>
<p>A distinguished professor of religion said to me some
time ago, “I dislike, I abhor, the doctrine
of Hell”; and then after a while added, “But
three times in my life I have seen that there was
eternal separation from God and an everlasting Hell
for me, if I walked not in the way God was calling
me to go.”</p>
<p>Into the blackness of the sinner’s night the
Holy Spirit, who is patiently and compassionately
seeking the salvation of all men, flashes a light
that gives him a glimpse of eternal things which,
heeded, would lead to the sweet peace and security
of eternal day. For when the Holy Spirit is heeded
and honoured, the night passes, the shadows flee away,
the day dawns, “the Sun of Righteousness arises
with healing in His wings,” and, saved and sanctified,
men walk in His light in safety and joy. Doctrines
which before were repellent to the carnal mind, and
but foolishness, or a stumbling-block to the heart
of unbelief, now become precious and satisfying to
the soul; and truths which before were hid in impenetrable
darkness, or seen only as through dense gloom and
fog, are now seen clearly as in the light of broad
day.</p>
<p> “Hold thou the faith that Christ
is Lord,<br/>
God over all, who died and rose;<br/>
And everlasting life bestows<br/>
On all who hear the living word.<br/>
For thee His life-blood He out-poured,<br/>
His Spirit sets thy spirit free;<br/>
Hold thou the faith—­He
dwells in thee,<br/>
And thou in Him, and Christ is Lord!”</p>
<p class="smallcaps">“Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed?”</p>
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