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The Way to Pentecost by Samuel Chadwick
Chapter 2 The Church Without the Spirit
The Church is the creation of the Holy Spirit. It is a community of believers who owe their
religious life from first to last to the Spirit. Apart from Him there can be neither Christian nor
Church. The Christian religion is not institutional but experimental. It is not an ordained class,
neither is it in ordinances and sacraments. It is not a fellowship of common interest in culture,
virtue, or service. Membership is by spiritual birth. The roll of membership is kept in heaven.
Christ is the Door. He knows them that are His, and they know Him.
The Church Roll and the
Lamb's Book of Life are not always identical. "No man can say Jesus is Lord, but in the Holy
Spirit," and confession of the lordship of Jesus Christ is the first condition of membership in His
Church. The command to tarry in the city until there came enduement of power from on high proves
that the one essential equipment of the Church is the gift of the Holy Ghost. Nothing else avails for
the real work of the Church. For much that is undertaken by the Church He is not necessary.
The
Holy Ghost is no more needed to run bazaars, social clubs, institutions, and picnics, than He is to
run a circus. These may be necessary adjuncts of the modern Church, but it is not for power to run
these things we need tarry. Religious services and organized institutions do not constitute a
Christian Church, and these may flourish without the gift of Pentecostal fire.
The Life of the Body
The work of the Spirit in the Church is set forth in the promises of Jesus on the eve of His
departure, and demonstrated in the Acts of the Apostles. The Gospels "tell of "all that Jesus began
to do and to teach, until the day in which He was received up," and the Acts of the Apostles tell of
all that He continued to do and to teach after the day in which He was received up. The Holy Spirit
is the active, administrative Agent of the glorified Son. He is the Paraclete, the Deputy, the acting
Representative of the Ascended Christ.
His mission is to glorify Christ by perpetuating His
character, establishing His Kingdom, and accomplishing His redeeming purpose in the world. The
Church is the Body of Christ, and the Spirit is the Spirit of Christ. He fills the Body, directs its
movements, controls its members, inspires its wisdom, supplies its strength. He guides into the
truth, sanctifies its agents, and empowers for witnessing. The work of the Church is to "minister the
Spirit," to speak His message, and transmit His power. He calls and distributes, controls and
guides, inspires and strengthens.
The Spirit has never abdicated His authority nor relegated His power. Neither Pope nor
Parliament, neither Conference nor Council is supreme in the Church of Christ. The Church that is
man-managed instead of God-governed is doomed to failure. A ministry that is College trained but
not Spirit-filled works no miracles. The Church that multiplies committees and neglects prayer
may be fussy, noisy, enterprising, but it labors in vain and spends its strength for naught. It is
possible to excel in mechanics and fail in dynamic. There is a superabundance of machinery; what
is wanting is power. To run an organization needs no God. Man can supply the energy, enterprise,
and enthusiasm for things human. The real Work of a Church depends upon the power of the Spirit.
The Presence of the Spirit is vital and central to the work of the Church. Nothing else
avails. Apart from Him wisdom becomes folly, and strength weakness. The Church is called to be
a "spiritual house" and a holy priesthood. Only spiritual people can be its "living stones," and only
the Spirit-filled its priests. Scholarship is blind to spiritual truth till He reveals. Worship is
idolatry till He inspires. Preaching is powerless if it be not a demonstration of His power. Prayer
is vain unless He energizes. Human resources of learning and organization, wealth and enthusiasm,
reform and philanthropy, are worse than useless if there be no Holy Ghost in them.
The Church
always fails at the point of self-confidence. When the Church is run on the same lines as a circus,
there may be crowds, but there is no Shekinah. That is why prayer is the test of faith and the secret
of power. The Spirit of God travails in the prayer-life of the soul. Miracles are the direct work of
His power, and without miracles the Church cannot live. The carnal can argue, but it is the Spirit
that convicts. Education can civilize, but it is being born of the Spirit that saves.
The energy of the
flesh can run bazaars, organize amusements, and raise millions; but it is the presence of the Holy
Spirit that makes a Temple of the Living God. The root-trouble of the present distress is that the
Church has more faith in the world and the flesh than in the Holy Ghost, and things will get no
better till we get back to His realized presence and power. The breath of the four winds would
turn death into life and dry bones into mighty armies, but it only comes by prayer.
Form and Spirit
The Acts of the Apostles gives us an account of a Church destitute of the Spirit. The picture
corresponds in many particulars with that of the Church in the Apocalypse that had lost its Christ.
The Church in Laodicea was rich and respectable, prosperous and influential, complacent and
confident, but was blind to the tragedy on the doorstep. Their worship was faultless in form and
passionless in spirit. There was no heresy in their creed, but there was no fire in their souls. The
Spirit of Christ was outside. Ephesus and Laodicea have much in common, for where Christ is
dishonored there can be no Pentecost.
The Church at Ephesus had the advantage of a distinguished and brilliant preacher. He was
a man of great scholarship, who had won distinction at a great University. No preacher can have
too much learning, and the Bible gives due recognition to the fact that Apollos was "a learned
man." In addition to the wisdom of the schools, "he was mighty in the Scriptures." Some preachers
have finished their ministerial training with the confession that they had learned less about their
Bibles than about any other subject; but this man had been taught the Scriptures and "instructed in
the way of the Lord." His teaching was Scriptural, orthodox, careful. To scholarship he added
passion.
This accomplished scholar, Scriptural in doctrine and careful in exegesis, literally
"boiled over in spirit." Enthusiasm does not often accompany scholarship. It is bad form among
cultured people. Religious fervor generally declines with the advance of education. Much learning
has a tendency to make cold, dry preachers. This was a rare type of College-made preacher. His
fervor survived success in study, and he came through his course intense and scholarly, fervent and
accurate, faithful and accomplished, courageous and cultured.
It seems hardly credible that such a minister should lack the very things essential for the
work of the Christian ministry. He had neither Gospel nor power. In his preaching there was no
Cross, no Resurrection, no Pentecost. He preached Jesus, but he did not know Christ crucified.
Peter the fisherman was worth a thousand of him. Eloquent, learned, Scriptural, impassioned,
faithful and courageous, Apollos had no Gospel. Carefully trained, well-instructed, a courageous
learner, and an effective teacher, he had no vision. Skilled in definition, powerful in debate,
earnest in advocacy, he had no power. The Colleges had given him of their best, but they left him
ignorant of things vital and destitute of the Holy Ghost.
Like priests, like people. Like minister, like members. Truth comes through personality;
and the level of a preacher's experience determines both the range and level of the sermon. It also
determines the level to which he can help others. John's Baptism in the pulpit resulted in a
corresponding religion in the pew. It was a cold-water Gospel and a cold-water piety. To Paul's
keen eye there was something wanting.
They were sternly devout, orderly, reverent; but it was not
Christian worship and experience. Their heads were bowed and their faces gave evidence of
discipline, but they were not radiant. Their lives were marked by strict integrity, for John's
cold-water religion was severely moral. They were as fervent as they were upright, and as
religious as they were conscientious. Their religion was marked by a spirit of deep penitence and
godly fear. They were upright in life, fervent in religion, devout in spirit, faithful in service; and
yet, without the Holy Ghost.
Their religion was a strict, external observance; not an Indwelling
Presence. They lived by rule, not by illumination. God. saves from within; they disciplined
themselves from without. Religion to them was a joyless burden, for they carried their God on
their backs instead of in their hearts.
The Difference Holy Ghost Fire Makes
Pentecost transforms the preacher. The commonest bush ablaze with the presence of God
becomes a miracle of glory. Under its influence the feeble become as David, and the choice mighty
"as the angel of the Lord." The ministry energized by the Holy Ghost is marked by aggressive
evangelism, social revolution, and persecution. Holy Ghost preaching led to the burning of the
books of the magic art, and it stirred up the opposition of those who trafficked in the ruin of the
people. Indifference to religion is impossible where the preacher is a flame of fire.
To the Church,
Pentecost brought light, power, joy. There came to each illumination of mind, assurance of heart,
intensity of love, fullness of power, exuberance of joy, No one needed to ask if they had received
the Holy Ghost. Fire is self-evident. So is power! Even demons know the difference between the
power of inspiration and the correctness of instruction. Second-hand gospels work no miracles.
Uninspired devices end in defeat and shame. The only power that is adequate for Christian life and
Christian work is the power of the Holy Ghost.
The work of God is not by might of man or by the power of men, but by His Spirit. It is by
Him the truth convicts and converts, sanctifies and saves. The philosophies of men fail, but the
Word of God in the demonstration of the Spirit prevails. Our wants are many and our faults
innumerable, but they are all comprehended in our lack of the Holy Ghost. We want nothing but the
fire.
The resources of the Church are in "the supply of the Spirit." The Spirit is more than the
Minister of Consolation. He is Christ without the limitations of the flesh and the material world.
He can reveal what Christ could not speak. He has resources of power greater than those Christ
could use, and He makes possible greater works than His.
He is the Spirit of God, the Spirit of
Truth, the Spirit of Witness, the Spirit of Conviction, the Spirit of Power, the Spirit of Holiness,
the Spirit of Life, the Spirit of Adoption, the Spirit of Help, the Spirit of Liberty, the Spirit of
Wisdom, the Spirit of Revelation, the Spirit of Promise, the Spirit of Love, the Spirit of Meekness,
the Spirit of Sound Mind, the Spirit of Grace, the Spirit of Glory, and the Spirit of Prophecy. It is
for the Church to explore the resources of the Spirit. The resources of the world are futile. The
resources of the Church within herself are inadequate.
In the fullness of the Spirit there is
abundance of wisdom, resources, and power; but a man-managed, world-annexing,
priest-pretending Church can never save the world or fulfill the mission of Christ.
Suppose we try Pentecost!
Chapter 3 >>
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