Chapter 19
GRIEVING THE SPIRIT
"And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the
day of redemption."-- Eph. 4:30
The Holy Spirit is like a great, sensitive lover who has been sent forth to
woo and win our affection and love to Jesus. Therefore we grieve Him when
we fail to obey His gentle impressions and allow Him to accomplish in us and
for us the highest possibilities of faith and love. When we fail to let Him refine,
polish, enlarge, educate and carry out the great purpose of God in our lives,
we wound His love.
Even after we are sanctified and separated from sin, and the Comforter
comes to abide, the soul has just entered the school of the Holy Ghost. There
are lessons to be learned in the way of discipline and suffering; in shaping and
molding us in the heavenly image. Let us not disappoint His great love!
Dr. Daniel Steele says, "The Holy Spirit is grieved when ministers of the
Gospel and other Christian workers more earnestly desire His gifts than
Himself; when they are more eager to be clothed with His power than to be
filled with His presence; when they prefer popularity to purity; when they rely
more on polished rhetoric than on the power of the Holy Ghost; when they
are more concerned about preparing the sermon than themselves; when they
are more ambitious to please the church than the Head of the Church; when
they subordinate the ministry of the Lord Jesus to themselves and not to the
Lord Jesus; when they use the sacred office as a ladder to personal fame or
gain instead of a stairway up which they may lead repentant sinners to the
bosom of God."
The Spirit is grieved when we fail in mastery of the body, and give way
to the soft pleadings of the flesh and self-indulgence, and foster and pamper
the self-life, allowing the appetites and body passions to lord it over the
spiritual nature. The spirit does not leave one suddenly when He is quenched
or grieved; but when this is continually repeated, He gradually leaves the soul.
Let us notice some unmistakable signs of the loss of the Spirit:
I. A loss of tenderness. The heart in which the Comforter dwells will be
characterized by tenderness, gentleness and kindness. The sarcastic, sharp,
cutting words and unkind spirit, which some professors seem to be possessed
of, is utterly foreign to the Spirit of Jesus. We mean, by "tenderness of spirit," a
“supernatural work throughout the whole spiritual being. It is an exquisite
interior fountain of God's own sweetness and tenderness of nature opened up
in the inner spirit to such a degree that it completely inundates the soul,
overflowing all the mental faculties, and saturating with its sweet waters the
manners, expressions, words and tones of the voice; melting the will, softening
the judgment, melting the affections, refining the manners, and molding the
whole being after the image of Him who was infinitely meek and lowly in
heart. It cannot be borrowed or put on for special occasions; it is emphatically
supernatural, and must flow out incessantly from the inner fountain of life, and
resembles having every atom of our being soaked in sweet oil." (From "Pure
Gold.")
Without tenderness of spirit, which is the very soul and marrow of the
heart of Jesus, we shall be failures as to soul-winners. We may be straight,
orthodox, preach eloquently, be able to explain some wonderful truths, but
without tenderness of spirit our message will lack the melting quality,
heart-piercing pathos, summer-heat and burning flame of Divine love.
Oh, how many Christian workers started out with the spirit of Jesus,
their lives like the leaves from the tree of life, which brought healing to the
nations; their messages seemed to drip with unction and glory! But, finally,
they grew abusive, harsh, bitter, brow-beating those whose opinions differed
from their own. The Spirit was grieved and failed to use them as before. We
need to pray fervently over keeping our hearts tender and our spirit an open
channel through which the Holy Spirit's Divine life may flow.
II. A loss of spiritual illumination. One of the great attributes of the Holy
Ghost is light. It is His mission to so illuminate the mind and all the
soul-faculties that God, Christ and Heaven will become a living reality. As the
light gradually fades from the west, and darkness comes over the earth, so
with the soul that has begun grieving the Spirit; the first conscious loss is that
of light. The Bible, which was once an illuminated Book, and which budded
like Aaron's rod, with a delightful freshness, becomes a sealed Book. The
brightness leaves the countenance, the flash is gone from the eye and the
heavenly throb from the heart. We are only saved on the condition: "If we
walk in the light."
New light from the Spirit always calls for more sacrifice, self-denial and a
deeper conformity to Jesus. We wonder why those whom the Spirit. has used
for years have run aground and dried up in their experiences, when at one
time they made earth and hell tremble when they preached and prayed. If the
truth were known, they failed at some point to walk in the light, and refused to
take the narrow way. Some whom God has given clear light on Holiness and
called to preach it, have cooled off, toned down, and compromised God's
truth until they have lost the lightning force from their experience. Let us
remember that "light once, is light forever."
III. A loss of inward Divine guidance is an indication that the Spirit is
gradually leaving the soul. One of the promises concerning the Comforter is
that He will guide us into all truth. There is nothing that is taught any more
plainly in the word of God than that upon meeting certain conditions Divine
guidance is assured. "Trust in the Lord with all thine heart, and lean not to
thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct
thy paths." Here are the conditions upon which He promises to guide the
inward and outward life:
I. That we trust Him with all our heart – that is, without any fear or
doubting. We are to rest ourselves, with all of our burdens, finances, past and
future, in His hands, and without waiting for feeling or emotion; with a perfect
trust we are to step forth by faith and act out what God says.
II. "And lean not to thine own understanding" – neither to past
experience, our stored-up knowledge, nor are we to depend entirely upon our
"good, common sense." Thousands get out of Divine order by depending on
some past victories. There is no such thing as a stored-up experience. God
never reveals all of His plans for our lives at once. Therefore, we need the
daily Divine guidance of the Holy Ghost.
III. The third condition upon which Divine guidance is promised is
"acknowledging God in all our ways," which means putting God first in
everything. He must come before business, friends, or our own personal
comfort. To acknowledge God in all our ways means that we identify
ourselves with His cause, His name, and take His part on all occasions in the
presence of friend and foe. Upon these conditions we are promised inward
Divine guidance.
There are several ways in which the Lord may guide. He may guide us
by directing our minds to some special passage that exactly fits our case, or the
Spirit may speak to our inner ear.
The Holy Ghost also guides by making strong impressions upon the
mind, suggesting certain things to be done. On the other hand, He guides by
checking and holding back from doing certain things; or He may illuminate the
mind and gently lead to take a specific course, and in due time will cause the
outward providence to work in harmony with the inward leadings of the Spirit.
This brings a world of consolation and comfort, to know that our heavenly
Father is weaving a network of circumstances to throw around our lives, that
in every choice made, in every journey taken, we may have the assurance of
inward Divine guidance.
Volumes could be written of how God in all ages has delivered His
people from traps and snares laid for them. Who of us has not been suddenly
checked from opening our heart-secrets to those who seemed to be our
friends, and afterward it was proved why the spirit checked?
Some years ago, one of the holiest men we ever knew told how he was
saved from an awful death by obeying the inward voice of the Holy Ghost. He
had just closed a meeting, and was to leave at nine o'clock the next morning.
He slept until midnight, and was suddenly awakened by the Spirit, who
whispered to his inner ear, "Leave this city at once." He did so. The next
morning a man who had heard him preach and had become enraged over
some statement made, came prepared to shoot him. When told that the
preacher had gone, the infuriated man crossed the street and shot to death his
best friend, trying thus to satiate his revengeful spirit. Tragic indeed would it
have been if that preacher had lost the Divine whisper from his soul and failed
to obey the voice of the Holy Ghost. We should be left helpless before friends
and enemies.
Again, if we obey his checks and live where we can hear His voice, we
shall not only be delivered from men and devils, but all that may be brought to
bear against us will come to nought.
Still another sign that the Spirit is being grieved is when the sensibilities
become blunted. When the believer is filled with the Spirit, the conscience
becomes tender and is sensitive to the approach of sin. But when the Spirit is
quenched and grieved the conscience begins to lose its sweet sensitiveness.
According to the Bible and human experience, the conscience can be
lulled to sleep, stabbed and choked to death. It is a sad day in one's life when
conscience dies and its warning voice is heard no more. Such persons can,
with pen and tongue, stab a brother, and, like Joseph's brethren, after having
thrust their brother in a pit, sit down to eat with an ease as though nothing
had happened.
Thousands of professed Christians murder unborn offspring, and go
right on, seemingly without any pang of conscience. It is alarming to know the
things that are done in the name of a good conscience. There is no more sure
evidence that the Spirit has been grieved away than for one to have a seared
conscience.
IV. Another indication of losing the Spirit is a loss of spiritual
discernment.
When the inner man is quickened with all might and power, the spirit
knows the things of God by the power of intuition. Like a flash it can detect
false doctrine or an evil spirit in a meeting, where a dull, unquickened mind
would never suspect anything wrong. There is no limit to the strengthening
and developing of the inner senses to discern spiritual truths. An acuteness can
be attained that is even more marked than that of the outward senses.
Now, when the sensibilities become blunted and benumbed, the spirit of
discernment is lost.
When Israel of old were brought to Kadesh-barnea, and, instead of
going over into Canaan, believed the evil reports of the spies, and turned back
into the wilderness, there were seven distinct calamities that befell them. One
mentioned is the loss of discernment. They could not distinguish a false from a
true prophet; a brass censer from a gold one (gold, in the Bible, stands for
holiness), nor false fire from true, heavenly fire.
The land today is filled with thousands who once had light and a good
experience, but who have turned back and are running after every new fad
and doctrine which happens to come along, no matter whether orthodox or
not. They endorse almost everything, from unitarianism to come-outism. It has
been said of them: "With them everything is all right. They believe in
endorsing and rubbing down and patting and smoothing everything that is
taught in the name of religion, no matter how false the doctrine and
dangerous and misleading the error. Perfect love, with them, is to smile and
bubble and gush over every teacher and teaching."
What a calamity it is to lose spiritual discernment, to the extent that one
prefers brass to gold; to take up with a false, backslidden religion rather than
the true and genuine.
In a loss of old-time power, what can one do after the Spirit is grieved
away? It is a piteous sight to see one beating the air, trying to make up with
noise for the lack of power and unction. Like a shorn Samson, they shake
themselves, but no one else is shaken. There is something hard to describe
about the unction of the Holy Ghost. Let one who possesses it begin to speak.
At once, there is attention, and soon a heavenly atmosphere begins to
permeate the audience and almost unconsciously people are gripped and held
spellbound. It is not the power of an orator or of eloquence, nor the power of
learning. We have seen intellectual giants fail, and then some simple
messenger put up to speak, and soon the altar would be filled with weeping,
praying penitents.
Preaching without the unction and power of the Holy Ghost is like pale
moonlight shining on an ice-covered field. There is no light nor warmth in it.
Preaching without the power of the spirit may be orthodox, beautiful,
eloquent, logical and entertaining, but it is the mere letter that killeth. There is
no quickening or Divine life imparted. "When the Holy Ghost floods a person,
truth comes like lightning bolts, in short, epigrammatic, positive assertions,
with square edges and short points, without studied effort to interweave it with
the philosophies and theologies of men. But when spiritual fever begins to
cool, the lightning tones down to a tallow candle, the truth is rounded on the
edges and decorated with flowers."
Finally, the Spirit can be grieved away forever. Of all deplorable
conditions is the one in which the soul is forsaken by the Spirit. For
twenty-three years God left King Saul, the first king of Israel. He was forsaken
of Heaven during all that time that he reigned over a kingdom and led hosts to
battle. Yet he was given up of God and spent his last night on earth with the
witch of Endor, trying to get a message through to the spirit world.
Jesus wept over the doomed city of Jerusalem and told the Jews that
their house was left unto them desolate. We doubt not right then that the
smoke was ascending from their altars in the temple, and the priest was there
busy with its worship, having rejected the Lord God of the temple.
There is such a thing as saying "No" to the Holy Ghost one time too
many. It is possible to heat a piece of iron and then cool it, repeating this
process again and again until the metal scales off and all that is left is dross.
Even so, by repeated acts of disobedience one's love is chilled until the
heavenly dove leaves to return no more.
Let us go into an eternal covenant with God, to be true to His leading
and checks, that He may abide with us forever.
"There is a time, we know not when,
A point we know not where,
That marks the destiny of men
To glory or despair.
"There is a line by us unseen,
That crosses every path,
The hidden boundary between
God's patience and His wrath.
"To pass that limit is to die –
To die as if by stealth;
It does not quench the beaming eye,
Or pale the glow of health.
"The conscience may be still at ease,
The spirit light and gay;
That which is pleasing still may please,
And care be thrust away.
"Oh, where is this mysterious bourne
By which our path is crossed,
Beyond which God Himself hath sworn
That he who goes is lost?
"How far may we go on in sin?
How long will God forbear?
Where does hope end, and where begin
The confines of despair?
"An answer from the skies is sent:
'Ye that from God depart,
While it is called today, repent,
And harden not your heart.'"
THE END