PNEUMATOLOGY
The Study of
the Doctrine of the Holy Spirit
(Five Sessions)
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Session Eleven: JESUS, MANIFESTED BY THE
HOLY SPIRIT
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PURPOSE OF SESSION
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To come to know the power of experiencing Jesus living in the believer's
life by the Holy Spirit.
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EMPHASIS OF SESSION
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The book of Acts is the record of the manifestation of Jesus in the lives
of the early disciples through the power of the Holy Spirit.
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Introduction
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There is no better place to observe the
working of the Holy Spirit in the manifesting of Jesus than the first few
years of the history of the followers of Jesus.
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Before Jesus
departed from the physical presence of his disciples, He told them
that He would not leave them comfortless.
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He said, "I will
come again, and receive you unto myself; That where I am, there ye
may be also" (John 14:3).
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The book of Acts
is the story of His return to be manifested once again among them
by the Holy Spirit.
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The history recorded by Luke is the story of
the continuation of the manifestation of Jesus in the lives of the early
believers.
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It is the narrative of
the risen Christ working in his disciples.
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Through the quickening
power of the Spirit of God, Jesus Christ Himself was the force at
work in the dispersion of the gospel to the known world of the
first century.
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The book of Acts is the
story of the acts of Jesus, not in His earthly life, but through
the lives of His followers by the power of the Holy Spirit.
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Jesus being manifested in their lives by the
Holy Spirit greatly changed their lives.
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The prophet Joel
prophesied that God was going to do a special work among His
people.
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He would bestow His
Spirit upon man to become the essence of man’s life.
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Jesus Christ would
become their life not by a mental decision, a choice to dedication
or to commitment, but by a work of God Himself.
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Through the power of the Holy Spirit, the
people would not speak from their own understanding but from divine
inspiration.
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They would prophesy.
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As with Peter on the
feast of Pentecost, the words that would come forth from their
mouths would be the words of Jesus Christ Himself speaking through
the inspired speech of the Holy Spirit.
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Speaking with a new
tongue, a different language, a different way of saying things,
would come forth from their mouths. Jesus would be the expression
of their speech.
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hey would not only speak a new tongue but they
would also see things differently.
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Through the power of the
Holy Spirit, they would be able to discern the working of their
life clearly.
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They would come to
understand the ways of life because they would now see with a new
vision.
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Walking no longer in
darkness, perplexed by life, Jesus Christ would actually become
their sight.
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They would speak differently and see
differently because they would now think differently.
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Their thinking would not
come from the initiative of the individual.
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Their mind would be
under the divine influence of the Holy Spirit and would be
restored to what God intended from the beginning--the mind of
Christ.
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As the church spread from Jerusalem to Rome,
the recorded history leaves no question concerning the progress and
development of the church.
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It was not the product
of human achievement, not even the efforts of a Peter or a Paul,
but the manifestation of Jesus Christ in the lives of those early
believers.
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The Acts records the
supernatural manifestation of Jesus in many different ways:
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There are listed
thirty-six definitely divine interventions and the following are a
few: people are healed as the shadow of Peter passes over them;
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Phillip is transposed
from one location to another;
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A young girl is raised
from the dead;
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A man was made blind
because he was causing problems among the people.
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In thirty years, there
were over thirty-six recorded times where Jesus manifested Himself
in spectacular interventions by the power of the Holy Spirit.
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The Acts reveals six
definite visions and five other experiences that would be called
visions today.
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Eleven times the
manifestation of Jesus in the lives of his followers produced new
and vital inspiration for their day:
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The visions of
Cornelius, Peter, Ananias, Paul, and others.
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His followers
were being directed by Jesus Christ intervening by the
Holy Spirit.
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.Fourteen distinct times
the believers heard in an audible sound the voice of an angel of
the Lord.
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Seven times different
events occurred that could only be called signs and wonders.
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Thirty six times in a thirty year period Jesus
Christ was being manifested in a spectacular superhuman way.
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His Life was being
reproduced in the lives of the believers by the power of the Holy
Spirit.
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It was as Jesus said it
would be:
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Howbeit when he, the
Spirit of truth, is come, he will guide you into all truth: for he
shall not speak of himself; but whatsoever he shall hear, that
shall he speak: and he will shew you things to come. He shall
glorify me: for he shall receive of mine, and shall shew it unto
you. All things that the Father hath are mine: therefore said I,
that he shall take of mine, and shall shew it unto you. (John
16:13-15)
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Session Twelve: JESUS, REVEALED BY THE HOLY SPIRIT
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PURPOSE OF SESSION
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To
come to know that the Holy Spirit was sent by God, the Father, for the
sole purpose of manifesting Jesus in the lives of all believers.
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PURPOSE OF SESSION
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As
the third member of the Trinity, the Holy Spirit is a real person
possessing all the attributes and activities of personality.
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Introduction
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During
the earthly ministry of Jesus, He took Peter, James, and John up into a
mountain apart from the crowd.
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While they were there
suddenly the face of Jesus began to shine as the sun.
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His clothing became
white as the light.
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They were witnessing a
transfiguration of Jesus.
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Who He was in the true
essence of Himself, the Son of God, shining through his robe of
flesh in a moment of visible glory.
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It
is not a coincidence that Paul uses the same word in his admonition to
the Roman saints that is translated transfigured in the
experience of Peter, James, and John with Jesus.
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Paul stressed,
"And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed
by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that
good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God" (12:2).
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The good, acceptable,
and perfect will of God occurs in the believer’s life only
when the mind has been renewed.
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This restoring of the
mind to its original state of innocence is how the believer
experiences his transfiguration.
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Paul
uses the same word again in his Corinthian correspondence to tell how
this process actually occurs in those who are having their mind renewed.
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He wrote, "Now
the Lord is that Spirit: and where the Spirit of the Lord is,
there is liberty. But we all, with open face beholding as in a
glass the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same
image from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the
Lord" (2 Cor 3:17,18).
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It is the Holy Spirit
that transfigures, transforms, changes the believer.
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As one comes face to
face with Jesus as standing before a mirror, the glory of Jesus
is reflected in the believer by the Spirit of the Lord.
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The
Holy Spirit was sent by the heavenly Father for one reason, to reveal
His Son Jesus Christ in the lives of all men.
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It is the hope of
every man.
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As Paul stated
to those same Corinthians, "The first man [Adam] is of the
earth, earthy: the second man is the Lord from heaven. As is the
earthy, such are they also that are earthy: and as is the
heavenly, such are they also that are heavenly. And as we have
borne the image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of
the heavenly" (1 Cor. 15:47-49).
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We will be
"conformed to the image of his Son" (Rom. 8:29).
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The
Holy Spirit is the means by which the Thought and the Expression is
implemented into the created world.
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Because He proceeds
from the Father (the Spirit of God) and from the Son (the Spirit
of Christ) and speaks not of Himself, His personality is often
misunderstood.
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He is sometimes
considered merely as a substance, a blessing, a feeling, or an
influence.
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The Revelation of God,
however, reveals that He is a person just as the Father and the
Son.
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The
early followers of Jesus understood the personality traits of the Third
Person of the Trinity.
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They knew He also had
thoughts, emotions, and will.
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Paul wrote to the
Romans that ". . . he that searcheth the hearts knoweth
what is the mind of the Spirit . . ." (8:27).
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The Holy Spirit has
mind.
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To the Ephesians, he
admonished, "And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God"
(4:30).
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The Holy Spirit has
emotion.
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In the Corinthian
letter, Paul stressed, "But all these worked that one and
the selfsame Spirit, dividing to every man severally as he
will" (12:11).
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The Holy Spirit has a
will.
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He exhibits all the
attributes of a personality.
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Personal
activities are also ascribed to the Holy Spirit.
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The Old and New
Testaments experienced the Holy Spirit functioning as a person.
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They saw Him as
striving (Gen.6:3), teaching (John 14:26), testifying (John
15:26), and reproving (Acts 9:31).
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He also guides (Rom.
8:14), comforts (Acts 9:31), helps (Rom. 8:26), and sanctifies
(Rom. 15:16).
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The Holy Spirit
performs activities that are ascribed only to personalities.
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Jesus,
the Revelation of God, emphasized the personhood of the Holy Spirit when
He promised, "And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you
another Comforter, that he may abide with you for ever" (John
14:16).
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Just as Jesus was real
among his followers so that they heard Him with their ears, saw
Him with their eyes, and touched Him with their hands, so is the
Holy Spirit real among believers also.
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The Holy Spirit was to
be among the believers just as Jesus had been with them.
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He
would be a personal companion, friend, teacher, and guide as the visible
Jesus.
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As Jesus is a real
person, the Holy Spirit is a real person possessing all the
attributes and activities of personality.
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As the Third Person of
the Trinity, He brings to consummation the working of God in the
physical world.
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The Thought and the
Expression are applied by the Holy Spirit to all creation.
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The Holy Spirit
is the Great Consummation of all the ages.
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Listen
to CD 12
(Approximately Forty-Five Minutes of Exposition
on the Words of Jesus Found in John 15:1-27)
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Order
Basic Bible Beliefs Part One Now
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Return
to Basic Bible Beliefs Part One
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Session Thirteen: JESUS, INDWELLING BY THE HOLY SPIRIT
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PURPOSE OF
SESSION
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To come to know that the
physical body, created by God and declared to be good, is the means by
which Jesus is experienced by man.
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EMPHASIS OF
SESSION
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Although the physical body is
temporal and prone to decay, it nevertheless is the vehicle in which
creation experiences the Creator through the Holy Spirit.
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Introduction
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Perhaps,
the most influential person in the mystical thought of the Eastern
mind-set was a young man who witnessed the self-inflicted starvation of
his parents.
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They believed that the
spirit, the essence of life, was trapped within their
bodies.
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For them to experience
ultimate goodness, the spirit must be set free from the evilness
of the body.
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They were willing to
torture the body by depriving it of necessary nutrition to end
its restriction upon the spirit.
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The
child of these parents went on to impact greatly the thinking of much of
Eastern mysticism.
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It has also been
suggested that his thoughts on life greatly affected Plato in
the Western world.
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The writings of Plato,
in turn, influenced much of Christianity beginning in the middle
ages.
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The belief that the
physical body is in some way evil, serves only to entrap the
spirit, and eventually the spirit will be set free from the body
has its roots in the mind-set of the Eastern world.
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According
to the Revelation of God, the body is not evil.
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It was created by God
and declared to be good (Gen. 1:31).
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God constructed a
physical body for man in which the Spirit of God could be
experienced.
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He also prepared a
physical world in which man was to spend the days of his life.
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Without the physical
body and the physical world, flesh and blood beings do not
exist.
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Although
the body is temporal and prone to decay, it nevertheless is the vehicle
in which creation experiences the Creator.
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The uniqueness of this
arrangement is the mystery that ". . . though our outward
man perish, yet the inward man is renewed . . ." (2 Cor.
4:16).
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Ultimately, it is to
experience the mystery of mysteries--the resurrection of the
body.
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Every time a seed (an
external body in which the essence of life is enclosed) falls to
the ground and dies, the essence of life within brings forth a
new body.
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It
is not the elimination of the body, the spirit set free from the body,
that enables the essence of all that is life to be experienced.
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It is the continual
dying of the body to be raised in newness of life that is the
crowning moment of experiencing the glory of life.
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As one of the early
followers of Jesus said, "Always bearing about in the body
the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life also of Jesus might
be made manifest in our body. For we which live are always
delivered unto death for Jesus’ sake, that the life also of
Jesus might be made manifest in our mortal flesh" (2 Cor.
4:10,11).
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The Revelation of God,
the experiencing of Jesus, is always in death and resurrection
of the outward body.
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What
it means to be a human being is to have a flesh and blood body that has
been animated by the breath of God.
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After God had formed
the first man out of the dust of the earth, He then
"breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man
became a living soul" (Gen. 2:7).
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With living soul
literally meaning "breathing creature," man
experiences life because he experiences the breath of life--the
Spirit of God.
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It is the indwelling
of the Holy Spirit, the quickening breath of life, that enables
all men to live.
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The
writers of both the Old and New Testaments knew what was the quickening
essence of life for all men.
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In perhaps the oldest
book in the Bible, Job said, ". . . my breath is in me, and
the Spirit of God is in my nostrils . . ." (27:3) and
"The Spirit of God hath made me, and the breath of the
Almighty hath given me life" (33:4).
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Daniel proclaimed,
"God in whose hand thy breath is, and whose are all thy
ways. . ." (5:23).
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Isaiah penned,
"Thus saith God the LORD, he that created the heavens, and
stretched them out; he that spread forth the earth, and that
which cometh out of it; he that giveth breath unto the people
upon it, and spirit to them that walk therein" (42:5).
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John wrote, "In
Him [the Word of God] was life; and the life was the light of
men" (1:4) and "That was the true Light [the Word of
God], which lighteth every man that cometh into the world"
(1:9).
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Finally, Paul boldly
proclaimed that God "giveth to all life, and breath, and
all things" (Acts 17:25) and "For in him [all nations
of the earth] live, and move, and have [their] being . . ."
(Acts 17:28).
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The
indwelling Holy Spirit is the quickening essence of life within every
man.
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The Father thought,
the Son expressed, and the Holy Spirit consummated the completed
work of creation.
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Although to experience
God you will always bear ". . . about in the body the dying
of the Lord Jesus . . ." and you will always be
"delivered unto death for Jesus’ sake," the
mortality of your body will lose its sting.
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The grave will have no
ultimate victory because you will experience the life of Jesus
being manifested in your body.
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The indwelling Holy
Spirit, the Life within the seed, will produce for you a new
body.
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You will be
transfigured, transformed, changed to the image of the Lord of
glory.
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Listen
to CD 13
(Approximately Forty-Five Minutes of Exposition
on the Words of Jesus Found in John 16:1-33)
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Order
Basic Bible Beliefs Part One Now
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| Return
to Basic Bible Beliefs Part One |
Session Fourteen: JESUS, BAPTISM BY THE HOLY SPIRIT
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PURPOSE
OF SESSION
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To
come to know what it means to be baptized by the Holy Spirit.
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EMPHASIS
OF SESSION
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The
eternal hope of all men is that Jesus Himself through the process of
death and resurrection by the baptism of the Holy Spirit will produce
the ultimate reality of life.
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Introduction
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Among
the last words of Christ just before His ascension, the once dead and
buried but now living Jesus spoke the eternal hope for all men.
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In addressing Peter,
He said, ". . . When thou wast young, thou girdedst
thyself, and walkedst whither thou wouldest: but when thou shalt
be old, thou shalt stretch forth thy hands, and another shall
gird thee, and carry thee whither thou wouldest not"
(21:18).
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Then, John explained
the meaning of those words by stating, "This spake he,
signifying by what death [Peter] should glorify God . . ."
(21:19).
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Peter
had said he would give his life for Jesus.
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He even demonstrated
his bravery when he took his sword to defend Jesus from being
arrested.
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He was determined that
no one was going to kill the long anticipated Messiah.
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When
Jesus restored the injury from the sword of Peter and did not resist His
arrest, Peter’s view of the Christ began to crumble.
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Perhaps in dismay,
because of the willingness he saw in Jesus going with his
abductors, Peter would later disown that he even knew Jesus.
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Knowing that the
charges brought against Jesus could lead to death, the challenge
of a young lady evidently made Peter abandon any hope in Jesus.
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The man who once said
he would give his life for Jesus was now denying His
acquaintance.
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Yet,
Jesus is now telling this man that he would die a death that would bring
glory to God.
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Although he went
through his failures in humiliating shame and in bitter tears,
he was now being told by Jesus that his life would become one of
great grace and glorious honor.
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Peter would actually
become a rock of strength and stability.
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He would be
girded by God and taken to the place where he could not and
would not go himself.
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The
simple flower of the Morning Glory proclaims the beauty of being
baptized by the Holy Spirit.
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As the dawning rays of
the sun penetrate its surrounding, the petals of the flower open
ever expanding to the glow of the sunlight.
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The increasing warmth
and brightness of the sun causes the flower to raise its head,
spread its petals, and reach up to its source of life.
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Eventually, the flower
will stand as erect and as exposed as it can to take in the full
effect of the sun.
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Through the power of
the sun, the glory of the flower is perfected.
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It has responded
to its Creator through the implementing power of the Holy
Spirit.
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As
the sun comes forth to bring the full glory of the flower, the setting
of the sun causes the flower to respond in diminishing shades of glory.
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As the light of the
day begins to fade, the petals of the Morning Glory begin to
draw in unto itself.
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With the passing of
dusk and the approach of midnight, the flower bends its head,
gathers its petals, and prepares for the night.
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Eventually, the flower
will bow in perfect submission.
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This humble obedience
in the midnight to its Creator is also the achievement of the
Holy Spirit.
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The
Morning Glory, without the capability to observe and to make judgment on
what is occurring in its life, lives its entire existence in simplistic
harmony with its Creator.
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Throughout the day and
the night, the summer and the winter, the cold and the heat, and
the seedtime and the harvest, the simple flower lives the
duration of its life in perfect glory to God.
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It lives as God has
thought, decreed, and implemented its existence.
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Just
before Jesus left his disciples to be taken up by His Father into
heaven, He told them that "they should not depart from Jerusalem,
but wait for the promise of the Father, which, saith he, ye have heard
of me "(Acts 1:4).
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They responded with,
". . . wilt thou at this time restore again the kingdom to
Israel?" (1:6).
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Then, Jesus gave them
the secret of the Morning Glory--the secret of the power and the
glory of the kingdom of God.
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He said to them
"It is not for you to know the times or the seasons, which
the Father hath put in his own power. But ye shall receive
power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you: and ye shall
be witnesses unto me . . ." (1:7,8).
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The
world will see Jesus not by his physical presence but by the coming
forth of His life in the bloom of the Morning Glory--the manifestation
of the glory of God in the lives of His people.
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The power of the times
and the seasons is not only in the hands of the Father but the
enabling power for the believer to go through the times and the
seasons is also in the hands of the Father.
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Peter
would come to know what it meant to be taken through the times and the
seasons of life.
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They were hard lessons
for him to learn.
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When he was young, he
attempted to control his own life.
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He went where he
wanted to go, did what he wanted to do, and said what he wanted
to say.
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When he had become
old, however, his life was controlled by another.
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He gladly raised his
hands in submission and let the Holy Spirit take him where he
could not and would go himself.
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He had become
overwhelmed by the Holy Spirit and now would let his life be
taken for Jesus.
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He had come to
understand fully what it meant to be baptized in the Holy
Spirit.
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Listen to CD 14
(Approximately Forty-Five Minutes of Exposition
on the Words of Jesus Found in John 1:15-34; Luke 4:1-14)
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Order
Basic Bible Beliefs Part One Now
|
| Return
to Basic Bible Beliefs Part One |
Session Fifteen: JESUS, RETURNING BY THE HOLY SPIRIT
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PURPOSE OF SESSION
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To come to know the meaning of the second coming of Christ in the power of
the Holy Spirit.
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EMPHASIS OF SESSION
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The scared things of the heavenly temple which produce the coming of Jesus
into the lives of people are the spiritual sacrifices offered by one being
brought to his end by the tribulations and persecutions of another
person for the sake of that person.
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Introduction
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It is within the realm of a seed falling to
the ground to die in order that it may be raised to newness of life that
the challenges of life exist.
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When man is taken to
the end of a current moment of existence, he is at the
germinating point of life.
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The circumstances
which he is now facing bring his soul into the balance of heaven
or hell.
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What occurs in this
time of judgment for man determines what he experiences in his
life.
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It will either
be the coming forth of Jesus or the coming forth of the beast
within man.
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This point of germination, one’s current
realm of perceived existence being brought to an end usually by the
intrusion of another person, is the moment of judgment that all men must
face.
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Every man will find
himself continually at the crossroads of defending his current
existence from the encumbrance of others or willingly experience
the death of that existence through the control of his mind by
the Spirit of God.
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The dying of this old
existence by the turbulence of another will always bring newness
of life, the coming of the Jesus, between the two
participants.
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Refusing or resisting
that interference always brings greater agitation and separation
between the two.
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Every man stands
before the judgment seat of Christ in these challenging moments
of life and of death.
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Since created man has both the nature of the
beast and the nature of God within his make up, the challenge of life
becomes very simple.
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Either, we will live
life willing to die, if necessary, to protect our domain from
others, or we will live life not resisting God in his exposure
of our domain for others.
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To live for ourselves
(protecting our survival and our rights) is beastly, but to live
for others (not defending ourselves and open for rejection) is
divine.
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As Peter said, concerning people
experiencing the life of living for others, ". . . ye are a chosen
generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiar people; that
ye should shew forth the praises of him who hath called you out of
darkness into his marvelous light" (2:9).
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He had just told them
that ". . . as lively stones, [they were being] built up a
spiritual house, an holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual
sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ" (2:5).
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It is participating in
the priesthood of life.
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Being a priest is to offer sacrifices for
others and to be the vessel by which God reveals Himself to
others.
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Every man is a priest
by the simple fact of being created by God to experience His
life in relationships.
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The original formation
of man reveals the need of another person to experience the
fullness of life.
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Living for others is
not a conscious choice we make.
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It has been embedded
in our make up by the God who created us.
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This need for others
(be it pure or corrupt) is experienced by every human being.
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When the nature of the beast (the protection
of what we have created in an attempt to live life) rises to power, we
will attempt to serve our priesthood by safeguarding our own
survival.
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It means we will use
others in an attempt to experience the life we have created in
our minds.
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If so, it is a
priesthood (serving the need to connect to others) but it is not
a holy priesthood.
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It is corrupted
because we are using the object of our priesthood, other people,
for the survival of our created way of life.
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The true priesthood of God takes on the
nature of God.
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The nature of God
within man that propels him to not resist what God is doing in
his life, transforming him to the image of His Son Jesus
Christ.
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That transformation
process occurs in the mystery and secret of life, the
willingness to be taken down by God to be raised to newness of
life for others.
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It is how the heavenly
Jesus comes to be experienced in the physical world.
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The willingness to experience this
priesthood is not a conscious choice.
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It is the given fact
of everything created.
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The free will of man
is not that he has freedom to choose for this priesthood to
happen or not to happen.
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Being taken down for
the needs of others is and always will be that which is
happening because it is an established fact of creation.
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Our world will be put
down continually because it is the nature of everything
created--except the seed falls to the ground and dies, new life
cannot come.
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The free will of man enables man to resist
that process in his mind.
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Man cannot resist the
sovereign power of God; however, in the realm of imagination,
which is not real and has no validity, man creates his own world
in which he attempts to control his life.
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In that realm, the
fantasy world of make believe, man can resist God and prohibit
the process of being taken down.
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Thus, when he faces trouble on every side,
perplexities, persecutions, and being put down, he will resist.
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In his mind (which
will be expressed in words), he will fight for the survival of
his way of life and protect his rights with malice, guile,
deceit, jealousy, and defamation.
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He is still being put
down, but he satisfies himself that he has kept himself
standing.
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He has defended his
actions and change (new life) for him does not occur.
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The holy priest of God, however, does not
resist what God is doing and actually submits to the other by suffering
the affliction that is being put on him.
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Forasmuch as Christ
suffered for us in the flesh that we might be saved, we arm
ourselves with the same mind of Christ that those which are
causing us to suffer might be saved.
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It is how spiritual
sacrifices are made by the priests of God.
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The interaction
between people actually becomes the scared things of the
heavenly temple.
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It is how God dwells
among His people in the spiritual house of God.
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It is the continual coming of Jesus
into our lives by the Holy Spirit.
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Listen to CD 15
(Approximately Forty-Five Minutes of Exposition
on the Words of Jesus Found in John 14:16-29; Acts 1,2)
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Order
Basic Bible Beliefs Part One Now
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