GRIEVING THE HOLY SPIRIT
2/14/71
Ephesians 4:30
The title of the sermon is GRIEVING
THE HOLY SPIRIT. In our preaching
through the Book of Ephesians, we have come to the thirtieth verse of the
fourth chapter, and the sermon is a textual sermon.
It is an expounding of just the one
text. This is the reading of that text,
And grieve not the holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of
redemption.
Every word in the sentence is
fraught with deepest and poignant meaning for us, Grieve not the holy Spirit of
God whereby we are sealed unto the day of redemption. The word "grieve," itself, -- to make sorrowful. Just the use of the word itself places the appeal
into an altogether different category.
Had the apostle said, Anger not the
Spirit, don't make Him furiously mad, you're in a different world using
language like that. Anger begets
anger. There's always the spirit of
retaliation in anger.
Any time anger appears in any of
God's children, it is a weakness. It is
a cutting down on the part of Satan.
Anger is in another world. But grief and sorrow speak of different
things and the word here: Grieve not.
Grieve. The Greek word for sorrow
is lupē. And to make
sorrowful, lupeō.
In the life of our Lord as He spoke
to His disciples about His coming passion, His suffering in death, the Lord
said to them, Because I have told you these things, lupeō, sorrow,
has filled your heart.
When He was in Gethsemane, after His
agonizing prayer, He came and the Scriptures say He found the disciples
sleeping for sorrow. Now the verbal
form of that substantive, lupē -- to be grieved; to make
sorrowful.
When the rich young ruler came to
Jesus and asked what that he might inherit eternal life, when the Lord told him
what to do, that his riches stood between him and God -- he loved money more
than he loved the Lord -- the Lord asked him to give it up and to follow after
Him.
The young man went away lupeō
-- grieved, hurt. He lost the
battle. But he felt it when he lost
it. He sorrowed over it. No wonder Jesus looking upon the young man
loved him. He was a fine, sensitive,
moral, upstanding, young man.
Or take just once again when the
Lord asked Simon Peter, Do you love me, really?
Simon Peter said, Yes, Lord, you
know I love you.
And when He asked him the third
time, Simon, do you love me, really? then the Scriptures say, And Simon Peter elupēthē.
There's that word again -- he was
grieved because the Lord said the third time, Do you love me?
Now, that is the word that is used
here, Grieve not the Holy Spirit. So it
speaks first of the personality of the Holy Spirit. He is not a law or a force or a motion. The very word that is used speaks of someone who can be
hurt.
You couldn't hurt a law or grieve a
force. They're impersonal. So the text speaks of the Holy Spirit as
someone Who can be touched and moved, Who can feel, Who can be made sorrowful,
aggrieved.
One
of the translations in the Holy Scriptures sometimes gives us the idea that the
Holy Spirit is an it. For example, in
the King James Version, from which I always preach, in the eighth chapter of
Romans,
The Spirit itself beareth witness
with our spirit that we're the children of God.
And then again in that same chapter,
For the Spirit itself maketh intercession for us.
So reading that, it sort of confirms
our inward reaction studying the Spirit that we're studying an it, a force, a
law, a motion. Well, the reason for
that in the Bible is very, very plain.
In the English language all of our
genders are natural. This is a he and
this is a she and this is a neuter gender.
It is an it. Now that's
English. But other languages are not
built like that. There are languages
that have grammatical gender.
German is an instance. For example, das Maedchen. The word for girl in German is neuter. That's the beatenest thing you ever saw in
your life. Not a she. She's an it in German.
It's not die Maedchen,
feminine, or der Maedchen. It's das,
neuter. Well, that's because the
language has grammatical gender. It
doesn't go according to natural gender.
Now, Greek is that way. Greek has grammatical gender and not natural
gender. So, when a word is used it can
be any gender in the Greek language grammatically.
Now, in the Greek language pneuma,
spirit, is neuter. Pneuma, to
pneuma, not hē pneuma, feminine; or ho pneuma,
masculine, but to pneuma, neuter.
And the Bible happened to translate
in that one passage according to that grammatical gender, but that is an
unimaginable error.
The Holy Spirit himself maketh
intercession for us. The Holy Spirit
himself witnesses with us that we are the children of God. The Holy Spirit is a person, as God is a
person. And being a person He feels and
can be grieved.
This speaks of the Spirit of God, of
the presence of the Lord, in a way that is precious. Grieving Him.
The symbolism back of the use of
the word speaks of a compound made by an apothecary in heaven. It has in it the myrrh of bitterness; but,
it also has in it the sweetness of frankincense.
It's only somebody that loves you,
that you can grieve, that you can make sorrowful, such as your mother or your
father or your wife or your husband or your children or your sweet and precious
friend. It's only somebody like that
that you can grieve.
Now, that leads us to speak of the
attributes of the Holy Spirit, of the person of God, that would make Him
subject to grief from us, to be made sorrowful by us.
What are those attributes of the
Holy Spirit that make Him liable to grief or sorrow just as you? Whenever you open your heart to somebody, to
love him, or to love her, that minute you open your heart to indescribable and
abysmal fears and sorrow and grief, they are concomitants. They are accompaniments. They are the other side of that coin. They are together.
Now, the Holy Spirit is that
way. That is, He loves us. When you speak of the love of the Father and
when you speak of the love of the Son, you also speak of the love of the
Spirit.
That's why He opens Himself to
being grieved, to being hurt, to being made sorrowful. He loves us, and He is sensitive to us.
Oh, if we had time, we could just
devote the whole day to speak of how the Holy Spirit broods over us and loves
us, encourages us, moves us Godward.
When you were a little child you
were made sensitive to the presence of God. That's the work of the Holy Spirit. When you were conscious stricken you became conscious of
sin.
That's the work of the Holy
Spirit. When the atoning grace of Jesus
was laid before you and you were pointed to the Lord, dying for your sins on
the cross, that was the work of the Holy Spirit.
He opens our blind eyes to see the
Lord. He opens our deaf ears to hear
the voice of the Lord. And he opens our
closed and frozen and palsied hands and hearts to receive the blessedness of
Jesus.
All through our lives this is the
precious ministry of love and care of the Holy Spirit. I love that song. It is a prayer to the Holy Spirit,
Open my eyes that I may see
Glimpses of truth Thou hast for me.
Place in my hands the wonderful key
That shall unclasp and set me free.
Silently now I wait for Thee,
Ready, my God, Thy will to see.
Open my eyes, illumine me,
Spirit Divine.
And
so the chorus of those stanzas,
Open my ears that I may hear
Voices of truth thou sendest clear.
And while the wave notes fall on my ear,
Everything false will disappear.
Silently now I wait for Thee,
Ready, my God, Thy will to see.
Open my ears, illumine me,
Spirit Divine.
The attributes of the Spirit: loving
us, and guiding us, to the blessed Jesus.
The attributes of the Holy Spirit: helping us, encouraging us,
comforting us.
Paul writes of it, Likewise the
Spirit also helpeth our infirmities. He
reaches down from heaven to bind up our broken hearts. He stands by us in trial, and He gives us
strength for our weaknesses. And He comforts
us in our sicknesses and our sorrows.
The Spirit helpeth our infirmities.
That's why the Lord, when He went
away, called the Spirit the parakaleō, the Paraclete -- the one
called alongside. The Paraclete. He's the Comforter. He stands with us. He encourages us. The
Spirit helpeth our infirmities.
Not only that, in the same verse the
apostle says, We don't know what we should pray for as we ought, but the Spirit
himself maketh intercession for us,
And he that searcheth the hearts
knows the mind of the Spirit, because he pleads for us according to the will of
God.
Have you ever been to the place in
your life when you didn't know how to frame the word, to say it, or put the
sentence together to offer it before the throne of grace?
Sometimes agonies too deep for
words and sorrows, too deep for tears, that you just stood before the
Lord. The Spirit himself maketh
intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered.
Just can't place in syllable or
sentence or nomenclature or language or words the deep longing and aspirations
of the heart.
But the Spirit prays for us. He takes our feelings and our desires and
our supplications and our intercessions and He lays them before the throne of
grace. He speaks heaven's
language.
He knows the word and we don't. Not only that, but the apostle says that,
The Spirit himself bears witness with our spirit that we're the children of
God. And, The Spirit of him that raised
up Jesus from the dead dwells in you and shall quicken your mortal bodies by
the Spirit that dwelleth in you.
Well, that's almost unbelievable as
I think of it. He Whom the whole
heavens cannot contain dwells fully in this house of clay. And wherever you are, all of God is there in
your heart. And if you were on the
other side of the world, wherever you are, there all of God is in your
heart.
It's just one of the most
astonishing, phenomenal revelations that one could imagine. How is it that all of God can be here, and
all of God can be yonder, and all of God can be there? I do not know. But the Spirit of God dwells fully and brings all of God into our
hearts. And there He lives in us.
Then the apostle says when we die it
is the Spirit of God that quickens us from the dead, that raises us from the
dead. That's what the Spirit of God did
for Jesus.
When the Lord died and was buried He
was raised by the Holy Spirit. I don't
suppose you could bury God, could you?
Even putting a seal and a guard upon Him would not keep God dead.
I suppose it's the same kind of a thing with us. The Spirit of the Lord dwells in this house,
in this temple. And when this house
decays the Spirit of the Lord recreates it and raises it up from the dead. That's what the apostle says, The Spirit of
the Lord that dwells in you shall quicken your mortal bodies.
This is God's house, and God
intends to perfect it. Not only that,
but the Scripture says in this text that the Holy Spirit seals us unto the day
of redemption.
That’s sphragis, the signet
ring. And on the ring -- the king had
it on his hand -- was the seal. And the
sign of a real message from the king was the stamp of that seal, the signet
ring, the sphragis. Well, that’s
sphragizō -- to seal.
When Jeremiah bought from Hanameel
the inheritance there at Anathoth where the priests lived, he made two
documents. One was open where everybody
could see it, that this he had bought.
It belonged to Jeremiah.
And the other document was sealed
and placed in the archives for all future generations. Now that sealing is also done by the Holy
Spirit in us.
He is the guardian and the custodian
of our eternal salvation and our heavenly destiny. And it is two ways He seals us.
It is an open sealing. It is an open stamp. Here is the document, and here is the
seal. This is the sign that this so
belongs to the Lord. It is an open
thing that everybody can read.
And can't you see that out here in
the world? These who are saved, they're
born again. You can tell it. The seal of the Holy Spirit is upon
them.
And can't you tell it also when they
have not the seal of the Holy Spirit?
They're worldly. They live out
there in the world. They're not
regenerated. They're not saved. They're not born again. But no matter where that child of God is, he
has that seal upon him and it is apparent.
Then the other part is up there in
the archives of heaven. God has our
names written. And it's put away up
there in glory against the day of redemption.
That is the final consummation, when these bodies are raised from the
dead, full purchased possessions, soul and body.
We are sealed. Oh, what a comfort that is. That God has me, and has saved me, and has
regenerated me, and has written my name in the archives of heaven. And it is sealed by His Holy Spirit.
How do I know that the document is
not a fraud? How do I know but that
master of deceit -- that scribe and penman from hell called master presumption
and carnal security. How do I know the
documents are not from him?
Because I have the seal of the
Spirit. And part of it is open and you
can see it and I can see it. And part
of it is up there in glory.
The seal of possession. Why, men do that here in this life. They put their trademark on what they
make. They put their brand on the
cattle that belongs to them.
This is God's property and the Holy
Spirit seals us. Openly and secretly we
belong to the Lord. Against the day of
redemption. That is until Jesus comes
again. That day of redemption refers to
the redemption of our bodies.
We're not complete. God's Word and promise and the atoning grace
of Christ is not fully efficacious, it does not reach its consummation, before
the body is raised from the dead, and in a new and glorified body our
regenerated spirits have their eternal home.
That's why Paul refers to the house
not made with hands in heaven. He's not
talking about a mansion in the sky.
He's talking about the house we live in, this house, this body.
And that is the work of the Holy
Spirit. We're not going to fail of
it. It is our assurance of
perseverance. It's the doctrine of predestination,
if you'd like to call it. It's the
doctrine of election, if you'd like to say it.
The elect of God will not fail of
heaven. And those who have gone to
Jesus in true faith and trust shall enter the gates of glory someday, because
the Holy Spirit has sealed them unto that day of redemption.
Now in the moment that remains, who
grieves the Holy Spirit? Grieve not the
Holy Spirit of God. Who grieves the
Holy Spirit? The backsliding Christian
grieves the Holy Spirit.
Backsliding. We don't pray anymore. We don't read the Bible anymore. The leaves are stuck together. We don't thank God anymore.
And we live out there in the
world. And the things of the world
consume us. So when we pray there's not
any answer. And when we read the Bible
there's not any light. And when we go
to church it's a bore. Backslidden.
Grieving the Holy Spirit. Loving something else more than we love
God. Giving our lives to other things
than the Lord. A backslidden Christian. A worldly Christian grieving the Holy
Spirit.
Who grieves the Holy Spirit? A dead church grieves the Holy Spirit. The Spirit flees from it. He leaves it. There's no room for Him.
The church is worldly. Its visions and its aims are all down here,
just like a club. Just like any other
aggregate of men and women. A worldly
church. A dead church. There are few converts.
There has to be a warm matrix
bathed in blood for children to be born.
You don't bear children out there in refrigerators. And children are born in a womb, bathed in
blood and nurtured by life itself.
It is no different about spiritual
rebirth. It has to come to pass. Spiritual life must be born. It must come into existence in a church that
is warm, that is bathed in tears. And a
dead church can't give birth to converts.
And it grieves the Holy Spirit when
the church is dead. The prayer meetings
dwindle off. People not interested in
praying, not interested in witnessing, not interested in outreach.
"Why, my soul, Pastor! Look at all these people you got out
there. Why in the world are you
interested in anything else? Why would
you want to expand and extend the outreach of the church? Don't you have enough people?"
Why, my brother, as long as there's
somebody lost here in the reach of this appeal, we ought to try to win
them. Pray for them. Love them.
Teach them the Word of God. And
as long as there is a soul in the world outside of Jesus we ought to be
missionary.
There is no circumference.
There is no circle to be drawn and say, “We're going to pray for these,
and that's all. And we're going to try
to reach these, and that's all.” No, a
church that is quicken and alive would have the same spirit in it that the Lord
had. He loved the whole world and the
whole world is in our loving prayerful embrace.
You don't ever get to where you
say, “Well, we're not interested anymore.
We're not going to pray for them anymore. We're not going to visit them anymore.” Oh, that grieves the Spirit of God.
Who grieves the Spirit of God? Not only the backslidden Christian and not
only the dead church, but the soul that is invited to the Lord and rejects
Jesus. Here I wish I had time to preach
on the unpardonable sin.
Isn't it a strange thing? You can reject God the Father, curse Him to
His face. You can reject God the Son,
and blaspheme His name. But you reject
and reject and reject the Holy Spirit, and there's forgiveness neither in this
world nor in the world to come. I just
can't quite enter into that. I just
read it in the Book.
As those Antediluvians, God said, My
Spirit shall not always strive with men.
And He gave them a hundred and twenty years and then destroyed them from
the face of the earth.
As Esau, who sought repentance with
tears was refused. Oh, dear. That such a thing could be frightens and terrifies
my soul.
There is a time, I know not when,
A place, I 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 mercy and God's wrath.
That's in the Bible.
There comes a time when a man is
not going to be saved. He's just
not. Oh, it's an awesome prospect. That's why the Spirit always pleads,
“Today,” always pleads, “Now.“
Today, if you hear his voice,
harden not your heart.
Behold, now is the accepted time;
behold, now is the day of salvation.
Always the Spirit pleads, “Come
now. Trust now. Believe now. Accept now. Respond
now. Do it now.”
And that's our appeal to your heart. Does God call you? Does He? Does the Lord
speak to you? Does He? Does the Lord bid you come? Does He?
If God speaks and if the Spirit invites, answer with your life.
"Oh,
but, Pastor, I have such innumerable problems.
And I have such indescribable trials.
Pastor, you just don't know."
But God knows. And the Spirit of God is strong to
help. He sees us through. Trust Him for it. Do it. Make this hour an
hour of commitment or salvation or response.
In a moment, we shall stand to
sing. And as we sing, you in the
balcony round, on this lower floor, a couple, a family, or just you, while we
sing this hymn of appeal, come. Make it
now. Do it now. Come now, while we stand and while we
sing.