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Introduction
A tremendous upheaval has occurred in the twentieth century in regard to morality.
In previous generations it was taken almost for granted that man could solve his problems.
The advance of science and health, the development of educational programs, the spread of democracy, and the proclamation of the Christian gospel were considered sufficient-to bring in ultimately a utopia for man.
It was thought that it would only take time and application of these principles to solve the basic problems of man.
In the period following World War II, however, it has become increasingly evident that moral deterioration instead of improvement seems to mark our generation.
The rapid advance of crime, youth delinquency, increase in divorce, exploitation of sex, and extensive use of illegal drugs has spread like a cancer through modern society.
Today there is widespread skepticism as to whether the situation can be improved.
Youth is in revolt against the civilization which was inherited from their parents, and parents despair in attempting to solve the problem of wayward children.
Increased international tensions caused by the struggle between communism and the non-communistic world, racial tensions all over the world, and increasing rebellion against poverty and malnutrition seem to mark our present generation.
It is becoming evident that man is not able to solve his own problems, and that only a divine or theological solution provides the answers.
Society is desperately sick because the individuals who compose it are more and more manifesting depravity.
Few facts of contemporary experience are more evident that the fact of man’s sinfulness and depravity.
Even in non-Christian points of view the prevailing opinion now recognizes that man is far from what he ought to be and needs renewal if he is going to find the utmost in human experience and realization of his role in life.
In Christian thought, especially in orthodox circles, the sinfulness of man is taken as evident in life as well as in Scriptures.
One of the main purposes of Christianity is to bring renewal to man who is enslaved by sin and separated from God by both his nature and his acts.
Christianity in large measure can be defined as the application of a divine remedy for man in his depravity.
The process of salvation originates in God, is proclaimed by man, and is mediated by the Holy Spirit.
Although there is little question within orthodox Christianity of the basic tenets of man’s fall into sin and God’s provision of salvation, the precise details of God’s program still are often blurred in modern religious literature, and it is necessary to gain perspective in the understanding of God’s program of salvation and renewal for man.
The broad program of God for renewal of man in salvation may be divided into three areas:
new life in the Spirit;
a new divine program-the new society in Christ; and
a new divine power-the presence of the Spirit which provides enablement for life and service.
2. New Life in the Spirit
The Scriptures clearly testify to the fact that man is spiritually dead and is lacking in any spiritual life apart from salvation in Christ.
The state of spiritual death is spelled out in detail in , and the dictum is given, “Death passed upon all men, for all have sinned” ().
According to , “In Adam all die.”
The Ephesian Christians are declared to have been “dead in trespasses and sins” prior to their experience of salvation ().
It is because of this universal lack of eternal life that Nicodemus, the religious Jew, was informed by Christ, “Ye must be born again” ().
Man is spiritually dead and does not originate in himself a movement toward God and spiritual life.
Spiritual renewal accordingly is a divine miracle in which that which was dead is now alive.
c.
A third figure used to describe the spiritual renewal and bestowal of eternal life is
embraced in the idea of creation.
According to , “We are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them.”
The central passage on this approach is found in where the statement is made, “Therefore, if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature; old things are passed away; behold all things are become new.”
The contrast is between the old creation-what man is in his fallen state in Adam-and what he now is with eternal life in Christ.
Just as the inanimate dust of the earth was formed by God and became alive when God breathed into it the breath of life, so man dead in trespasses and sins becomes alive by an act of divine creation which establishes the renewed man in a new order of being.
As a part of the work of God in creating man anew, man is now appointed unto good works which man in his fallen estate would not be able to accomplish.
The work of God by the Spirit in spiritual renewal fulfills all three of these descriptive concepts:
man is indeed born as from above, receiving life from God as his Father;
man is spiritually resurrected and no longer dead in sin;
man is a new creation instead of a member of a fallen creation.
The dramatic moral depravity of contemporary civilization illustrates graphically the need for just such a spiritual renewal as is provided by the Spirit in regeneration.
Man, sinful by nature, needs to have the reviving and transforming new life in Christ.
The moral crises of our day confirm what the Scripture has long taught-that man cannot be good apart from a supernatural work of God in his heart.
The results of the new life in Christ stem from the basic concept of spiritual renewal by bestowal of life.
As is true of man who is born naturally and receives a human nature from his parents, so man born anew receives a new nature, a new capacity for service and devotion to God.
The new life in Christ provides new experiences such as spiritual sight instead of spiritual blindness, spiritual gifts which are added to the natural gifts, and the capacity for spiritual enjoyment of fellowship with God.
Because the new life which is bestowed is eternal, it also provides a new security for the new life by its eternal nature.
Paul writes the Philippians of “being confident of this very thing, that he who hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ” ().
Man is not simply restored to what he was before the human race fell into sin, but is now exalted to a new plane of eternal life and security in Christ Jesus.
All the spiritual renewal which is possible for man is founded upon this concept of a new life, a new creation, and a new security in Christ.
3. A New Divine Program: The New Society in Christ
Spiritual renewal for man is not limited to inner transformation and bestowal of life as an individual possession.
In dispensations prior to the present age of grace, it is clear that man could be born again and could enter into new relationships with fellow believers.
It may be assumed that some Gentiles in the Old Testament by faith were rightly related to God, and that many godly Jews realized the peculiar blessings of a godly Israelite related to the nation racially and yet also related to God’s purposes spiritually through new life from God.In the present age, however, a peculiar work is revealed which did not exist in the Old Testament and apparently will not be realized after the present age.
This is the work of God by the Holy Spirit which places a believer in Christ and relates him to all fellow believers in the figure of a human body.
In the present age, however, a peculiar work is revealed which did not exist in the Old Testament and apparently will not be realized after the present age.
This is the work of God by the Holy Spirit which places a believer in Christ and relates him to all fellow believers in the figure of a human body.
The work of salvation in man also gives man a new relationship to God and to all others who in like manner have received eternal life from God.
In all of the four gospels, John the Baptist is quoted as predicting the future baptism of the Holy Spirit (; ; ; ).
This prophecy was never realized prior to the death, resurrection, and ascension of Christ, but in keeping with the prediction of Christ in it was fulfilled for the first time on the day of Pentecost.
Christ had told His disciples prior to His ascension, “John truly baptized with water; but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days hence” ().
Ten days later the promise of the power of the Spirit was fulfilled and with it the baptism of the Spirit.
This new relationship in this present dispensation which forms a new society in Christ is embodied in the concept of the baptism of the Spirit.
A careful study of Pentecost will reveal that a number of important ministries of the Spirit were fulfilled in the experience of the apostles on that important day.
No doubt they were indwelt by the Spirit as well as filled by the Spirit, but neither of these ministries of the Spirit should be confused with the baptism of the Spirit.
In dispensations prior to the present age of grace, it is clear that man could be born again and could enter into new relationships with fellow believers.
It may be assumed that some Gentiles in the Old Testament by faith were rightly related to God, and that many godly Jews realized the peculiar blessings of a godly Israelite related to the nation racially and yet also related to God’s purposes spiritually through new life from God.
In the present age, however, a peculiar work is revealed which did not exist in the Old Testament and apparently will not be realized after the present age.
This is the work of God by the Holy Spirit which places a believer in Christ and relates him to all fellow believers in the figure of a human body.
In all of the four gospels, John the Baptist is quoted as predicting the future baptism of the Holy Spirit (; ; ; ).
This prophecy was never realized prior to the death, resurrection, and ascension of Christ, but in keeping with the prediction of Christ in it was fulfilled for the first time on the day of Pentecost.
Christ had told His disciples prior to His ascension, “John truly baptized with water; but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days hence” ().
Ten days later the promise of the power of the Spirit was fulfilled and with it the baptism of the Spirit.
A careful study of Pentecost will reveal that a number of important ministries of the Spirit were fulfilled in the experience of the apostles on that important day.
No doubt they were indwelt by the Spirit as well as filled by the Spirit, but neither of these ministries of the Spirit should be confused with the baptism of the Spirit.
b.
Although the account in does not expressly state that the baptism of the Spirit was inaugurated on that date, it becomes clear from and from later passages such as that the baptism of the Spirit occurred for the first time on the day of Pentecost and subsequently was realized when individuals received Christ as Savior.
Although there has been considerable confusion in evangelical literature between the baptism of the Spirit with other works of the Spirit which occur at the moment of salvation, according to the baptism of the Spirit should be properly defined as establishing a new position and relationship for all new believers.
According to , all believers are baptized into one body by the Spirit of God; hence, the baptism of the Spirit is that which establishes both the place and the relationship of the believer in Christ and in the body of Christ which is composed of all true believers.
Baptism is, therefore, positional in that all believers have this position of being in Christ and in the body of Christ, and relational in that being in this situation a new relationship is established both to Christ and to all others who are in Christ.
c.
It carries with it many important spiritual truths vital to a true comprehension of spiritual renewal in the Holy Spirit.
Among the new relationships and concepts which belong to the doctrine of the baptism of the Holy Spirit is that which was announced by Christ in where Christ said, “At that day ye shall know that I am in my Father, and ye in me, and I in you.”
The relationship of a believer in Jesus Christ is likened to the relationship of Christ to God the Father and is the ground for the further work of God indwelling the believer embraced in the expression, “I in you.”
In the exposition of the doctrine of the baptism of the Spirit in the New Testament, important passages can be cited.
The baptism of is related to the baptism of the Spirit; and even if the interpretation be followed that this relates to water baptism, it is obvious that the reality that is figured here is that of the baptism of the Spirit.
Accordingly the conclusion may be drawn that because a believer is baptized into Christ and seen by God in this relationship, he is related to what Christ did on the cross and he is, therefore, baptized into His death, into His burial, and raised with Christ from the dead.
Paul alludes to being “baptized into Christ” in , leading to the conclusion that all Christians are “one in Christ Jesus” (), and through Christ inherit the spiritual promises given to Abraham’s spiritual seed,.
that is, the blessing promised all nations through Abraham ().
Christians are said to have “one baptism,” just as they have “one Lord, one faith” ().
According to , the believer is in Christ, is buried with Christ, and is risen with Him.
d.
In summary it may be concluded that the baptism of the Spirit results in a new union with God and with fellow believers, a new position of being in Christ and in the body of Christ, and a new association which is the result of this relationship.
The baptism of the Spirit with all of its important results is accordingly an important aspect of the work of the Holy Spirit in spiritual renewal.
3. A New Divine Power: The Presence of the Spirit
Simultaneous with the bestowal of new life in the believer and the new relationships established by the baptism of the Spirit is the supreme fact that the believer becomes the temple of God.
God the Holy Spirit, as well as God the Father and God the Son, makes the body of the believer His temple on earth.
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