Our Urgent Need Of The Holy Spirit by C. H. Spurgeon

A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, January 7, 1877, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.  

Through the power of the Holy Spirit. [Ro 15:13]

By the power of the Spirit of God. [Ro 15:19]

1. I desire to draw your attention at this time to the great necessity which exists for the continual display of the power of the Holy Spirit in the church of God if by the means of the church the multitudes are to be gathered to the Lord Jesus. I did not know how I could much better do so than by first showing that the Spirit of God is necessary to the church of God for its own internal growth in grace. Hence my text in the thirteenth verse, “Now the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that you may abound in hope, through the power of the Holy Spirit,” — where it is evident that the apostle attributes the power to be filled with joy and peace in believing, and the power to abound in hope, to the Holy Spirit. But, then, I wanted also to show you that the power of the church outside, that with which she is to be aggressive and work upon the world for the gathering out of God’s elect from among men, is also this same energy of the Holy Spirit. Hence I have taken the nineteenth verse, for the apostle says there that God had through him made “the Gentiles obedient by word and deed, through mighty signs and wonders, by the power of the Spirit of God.” So you see, dear friends, that first of all to keep the church happy and holy within herself there must be a display of the power of the Holy Spirit, and secondly, that the church may invade the territories of the enemy and may conquer the world for Christ she must be clothed with the very same sacred energy. We may then go further and say that the power of the church for external work will be proportionate to the power which resides within herself. Gauge the energy of the Holy Spirit in the hearts of believers and you may fairly calculate their influence upon unbelievers. Only let the church be illuminated by the Holy Spirit and she will reflect the light and become to onlookers “fair as the moon, clear as the sun, and terrible as an army with banners.”

2. Let us by two or three illustrations show that the outward work must always depend upon the inward force. On a cold winter’s day when the snow has fallen and lies deep upon the ground you go through a village. There is a row of cottages, and you will notice that from one of the roofs the snow has nearly disappeared, while another cottage still bears a coating of snow. You do not stop to make enquiries concerning the reason of the difference, for you know very well what the reason is. There is a fire burning inside the one cottage and the warmth radiates through its roof, and so the snow speedily melts: in the other there is no tenant; it is a house for rent, no fire burns on its hearth and no warm smoke ascends the chimney, and therefore there lies the snow. Just as the warmth is within so the melting will be without. I look at a number of churches, and where I see worldliness and formalism lying thick upon them, I am absolutely certain that there is not the warmth of Christian life within; but where the hearts of believers are warm with divine love through the Spirit of God, we are sure to see evils vanish, and beneficial consequences following from it. We do not need to look within; in such a case the exterior is a sufficient indicator.

3. Take an illustration from political life. Here is a trouble arising between different nations; there are angry spirits stirring, and it seems very likely that the Gordian knot of difficulty will never be untied by diplomacy, but will need to be cut with the sword. Everyone knows that one of the hopes of peace lies in the bankrupt condition of the nation which is likely to go to war; for if it is short of supplies, if it cannot pay its debts, if it cannot furnish the material for war, then it will not be likely to court a conflict. A country must be strong in internal resources before it can wisely venture upon foreign wars. Thus it is in the great battle for truth a poor starveling church cannot combat the devil and his armies. Unless the church is herself rich in the things of God, and strong with divine energy, she will generally cease to be aggressive, and will satisfy herself with going on with the regular routine of Christian work, crying, “Peace! peace!” where peace should not be. She will not dare to defy the world, or to send out her legions to conquer its provinces for Christ, when her own condition is pitifully weak. The strength or weakness of a nation’s treasury affects its army in its every march, and in the same manner its measure of grace influences the church of God in all its actions.

4. Permit yet another illustration. If you lived in Egypt, you would notice, once in the year, the Nile rising; and you would watch its increase with anxiety, because the extent of the overflow of the Nile is very much the measure of the fertility of Egypt. Now the rising of the Nile must depend upon those far-off lakes in the centre of Africa — whether they shall be well-filled with the melting of the snows or not. If there is a scanty supply in the higher reservoirs, there cannot be much overflow in the Nile in its subsequent course through Egypt. Let us interpret the illustration, and say that, if the upper lakes of fellowship with God in the Christian Church are not well-filled — if the soul’s spiritual strength is not sustained by private prayer and communion with God — the Nile of practical Christian service will never rise to the flood.

5. The one thing I want to say is this: you cannot get out of the Church what is not in it. The reservoir itself must be filled before it can pour out a stream. We must ourselves drink from the living water until we are full, and then out of the midst of us shall flow rivers of living water; but not until then. Out of an empty basket you cannot distribute loaves and fishes, however hungry the crowd may be. Out of an empty heart you cannot speak full things, nor from a lean soul bring out rich things full of marrow, which shall feed the people of God. Out of the fulness of the heart the mouth speaks, when it speaks to edification at all. So that the first thing is to look well to home affairs, and pray that God would bless us and cause his face to shine upon us, so that his way may be known upon earth, and his salvation among all people.

   To bless thy chosen race,
      In mercy, Lord, incline,
   And cause the brightness of thy face
      On all thy saints to shine.
   That so thy wondrous way
      May through the world be known;
   Whilst distant lands their tribute pay,
      And thy salvation own.

6. This morning, in trying to speak of the great necessity of the Church, namely, her being moved vigorously by the power of the Holy Spirit, I earnestly pray that we may enter upon this subject with the deepest conceivable reverence. Let us adore while we are meditating; let us feel the condescension of this blessed Person of the Godhead in deigning to dwell in his people and to work in the human heart. Let us remember that this divine person is very sensitive. He is a jealous God. We read about his being grieved and vexed, and therefore let us ask his forgiveness of the many provocations which he must have received from our hands. With lowliest awe let us bow before him, remembering that, if there is a sin which is unpardonable, it has a reference to himself — the sin against the Holy Spirit, which shall never be forgiven, neither in this world nor in what is to come. In reference to the Holy Spirit we stand on very tender ground indeed; and if ever we should veil our faces and rejoice with trembling, it is while we speak of the Spirit, and of those mysterious works with which he blesses us. In that lowly spirit, and under the divine overshadowing follow me while I set before you seven works of the Holy Spirit which are most necessary for the Church for its own good, and equally necessary for her in her office of a missionary from Christ to the outside world.

7. I. To begin, then, the power of the Holy Spirit is revealed in the QUICKENING of souls to spiritual life.

8. All the spiritual life which exists in this world is the creation of the Holy Spirit, by whom the Lord Jesus quickens whomever he wishes. You and I did not have enough life to know our death until he visited us, we did not have enough light to perceive that we were in darkness, nor sense enough to feel our misery: we were so utterly abandoned to our own folly that, though we were naked, and poor, and miserable, we dreamed that we were rich, and increased in goods. We were under sentence of death as condemned criminals, and yet we talked about merit and reward; yes, we were dead, and yet we boasted that we were alive — considering our very death to be our life. The Spirit of God in infinite mercy came to us with his mysterious power, and made us live. The first sign of life was a consciousness of our being in the realm of death, and an agony to escape from it; we began to perceive our insensitivity, and, if I may be pardoned for such an expression, we saw our blindness. Every growth of spiritual life, from the first tender shoot until now, has also been the work of the Holy Spirit. Just as the green blade was his production, so is the ripening grain. The increase of life, as much as life at the beginning, must still come by the operation of the Spirit of God, who raised up Christ from the dead. You will never have more life, brother, except as the Holy Spirit bestows it upon you; yes, you will not even know that you need more, nor groan after more, unless as he works in you to desire and to agonize, according to his own good pleasure. See, then, our absolute dependence upon the Holy Spirit; for if he were gone we should relapse into spiritual death, and the Church would become a mortuary.

9. The Holy Spirit is absolutely necessary to make everything that we do to be alive. We are sowers, brethren, but if we take dead seed in our seed basket there will never be a harvest. The preacher must preach living truth in a living manner if he expects to obtain a hundredfold harvest. How much there is of church work which is nothing better than the movement of a galvanized corpse. How much of religion is done as if it were performed by an automaton, or ground off by machinery. Nowadays men care little about heart and soul, they only look at outward performances. Why, I hear they have now invented a machine which talks, though surely there was talk enough without this Parisian addition to the band of prattlers. We can preach as machines, we can pray as machines, and we can teach Sunday School as machines. Men can give mechanically, and come to the communion table mechanically: yes, and we ourselves shall do so unless the Spirit of God is with us. Most hearers know what it is to hear a live sermon which quivers all over with fulness of energy; you also know what it is to sing a hymn in a lively manner, and you know what it is to unite in a live prayer meeting; but, ah, if the Spirit of God is absent, all that the church does will be lifeless, the rustle of leaves above a tomb, the gliding of spectres, the congregation of the dead turning over in their graves.

10. Just as the Spirit of God is a quickener to make us alive and our work alive, so must he specially be with us to make those alive with whom we have to deal for Jesus. Imagine a dead preacher preaching a dead sermon to dead sinners: what can possibly come of it? Here is a beautiful essay which has been admirably elaborated, and it is coldly read to the cold-hearted sinner. It smells of the midnight oil, but it has no heavenly unction, no divine power resting upon it, nor, perhaps, is that power even looked for. What good can come of such a production? You may as well try to calm the tempest with poetry or stop the hurricane with rhetoric as to bless a soul by mere learning and eloquence. It is only as the Spirit of God shall come upon God’s servant and shall make the word which he preaches to drop as a living seed into the heart that any result can follow his ministry; and it is only as the Spirit of God shall then follow that seed and keep it alive in the soul of the listener that we can expect those who profess to be converted to take root and grow to maturity of grace, and become our sheaves at the last.

11. We are utterly dependent here, and for my part I rejoice in this absolute dependence. If I could have a supply of power to save souls which would be all my own apart from the Spirit of God, I cannot suppose greater temptation to pride and to living at a distance from God. It is well to be weak in self, and better still to be nothing: to be simply the pen in the hand of the Spirit of God, unable to write a single letter upon the tablets of the human heart except as the hand of the Holy Spirit shall use us for that propose. That is really our position, and we ought practically to take it up; and doing so we shall continually cry to the Spirit of God to quicken us in all things, and quicken all that we do, and quicken the word as it drops into the sinner’s ear. I am quite certain that a church which is devoid of life cannot be the means of giving life to the dead sinners around it. No. Everything acts after its kind, and we must have a living church for living work. Oh that God would quicken every member of this church! “What,” you say, “do you think some of us are not alive to God?” Brethren, there are some of you concerning whom I am certain, as far as one can judge another, that you have life, for we can see it in all that you do; but there are some others of you concerning whose spiritual life one has to exercise a good deal of faith and a great deal more charity, for we do not perceive in you much activity in God’s cause, nor care for the souls of others, nor zeal for the divine glory. If we do not see any fruits, what can we do except earnestly pray that you may not turn out to be barren trees?

12. That is the first point, and we think it is as clear as possible that we must have the quickening power of the Spirit for ourselves if we are to be the means in the hand of God of awakening dead souls.

13. II. Next it is one of the particular offices of the Holy Spirit to ENLIGHTEN his people.

14. He has done so by giving us his Word, which he has inspired; but the Book, inspired though it is, is never spiritually understood by any man apart from the personal teaching of its great Author. You may read it as much as you wish, and never discover the inner and vital sense unless your soul shall be led into it by the Holy Spirit himself! “What,” one says, “I have learned the shorter catechism and I have memorised the creed by heart, and yet do I know nothing?” I answer, you have done well to learn the letter of truth, but you still need the Spirit of God to make it the light and power of God for your soul. The letter you may know, and know it better than some who also know its spirit, and I do not for a moment depreciate a knowledge of the letter, unless you suppose that there is something saving in mere head knowledge; but the Spirit of God must come, and make the letter alive for you, transfer it to your heart, set it on fire and make it burn within you, or else its divine force and majesty will be hidden from your eyes. No man knows the things of God except he to whom the Spirit of God has revealed them. No carnal mind can understand spiritual things. We may use language as plain as a walking staff, but the man who has no spiritual understanding is a blind man, and the clearest light will not enable him to see. You must be taught by the Lord, or you will die in ignorance. Now, my brethren, suppose that in a church there should be many who have never been thus instructed, can you not see that evil must and will come of it? Error is sure to arise where truth is not known practically. If professors are not taught by the Spirit their ignorance will breed conceit, pride, unbelief, and a thousand other evils. Oh, had you known more of truth, my brother, you would not have boasted so! Oh, had you seen that truth which as yet has not been revealed to you because of your prejudice, you would not have so fiercely condemned those who are better than yourself! With much zeal to do good, men have done a world of mischief through lack of instruction in divine things. Sorrow too comes from ignorance. Oh, my brother, had you known the doctrines of grace you would not have been so long a time in bondage! Half of the heresy in the church of God is not wilful error, but error which springs from not knowing the truth, not searching the Scriptures with a teachable heart, not submitting the mind to the light of the Holy Spirit. We should, as a rule, treat heresy rather as ignorance to be enlightened than as crime to be condemned; except, alas, that sometimes it becomes wilful perversity, when the mind is greedy after novelty, or puffed up with self-confidence: then other treatment may become painfully necessary. Beloved, if the Spirit of God will only enlighten the church thoroughly there will be an end of divisions. Schisms are generally caused by ignorance, and the proud spirit which will not tolerate correction. On the other hand, real, lasting, practical unity will exist in proportion to the unity of men’s minds in the truth of God. Hence the necessity for the Spirit of God to conduct us into the whole truth. My dear brother, if you think you know a doctrine, ask the Lord to make you sure that you know it, for much that we think we know turns out to be unknown when times of trial put us to the test. We really do not know anything unless it is burned into our souls as with a hot iron by an experience which only the Spirit of God can give.

15. I think you will now see that, the Spirit of God being thus necessary for our instruction, we preeminently find in this gracious operation our strength for the instruction of others; for how shall those teach who have never been taught? How shall men declare a message which they have never learned? “Son of man, eat this roll”; for until you have eaten it yourself your lips can never explain it to others. “The farmer who labours must first be a partaker of the fruits.” It is the law of Christ’s vineyard that no one shall work in it until first of all they know the flavour of the fruits which grow in the sacred enclosure. You must know Christ, and grace, and love, and truth yourself before you can even be an instructor of babes for Christ.

16. When we come to deal with others, earnestly longing to instruct them for Jesus, we perceive even more clearly our need for the Spirit of God. Ah, my brother, you think you will explain the gospel so clearly that they must see it; but their blind eyes overcome you. Ah! you think you will express it so zealously that they must feel it; but their clay-cold hearts defeat you. Old Adam is too strong for young Melancthon, depend upon that. You may think you are going to win souls by your pleadings, but you might as well stand on the top of a mountain and whistle to the wind, unless the Holy Spirit is with you. After all your talking, your hearers will, perhaps, have caught your idea, but the mind of the Spirit, the real soul of the gospel, you cannot impart to them; this remains, like creation itself, a work which only God can accomplish. Daily, then, let us pray for the power of the Spirit as the Illuminator. Come, oh blessed light of God! You alone can illuminate our personal darkness, and only when you have enlightened us can we lead others into your light. An ignorant Christian is disqualified for great usefulness; but he who is taught by God will teach transgressors God’s ways, and sinners shall be converted to Christ. Both to burn within and shine without you must have the illuminating Spirit.

17. III. One work of the Spirit of God is to create in believers the spirit of ADOPTION. “Because you are sons, God has sent out the Spirit of his Son into your hearts, by which you cry, ‘Abba, Father!’ ” “For you have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear, but you have received the Spirit of adoption, by which we cry, ‘Abba, Father!’ ”

18. We are regenerated, by the Holy Spirit, and so receive the nature of children; and that nature, which is given by him, he continually prompts, and stimulates, and develops, and matures; so that we receive day by day more and more of the childlike spirit. Now, beloved, this may not seem to you to be of very great importance at first sight; but it is so; for the church is never happy unless all her members walk as dear children towards God. Sometimes the spirit of slaves creeps over us: we begin to talk about the service of God as though it were heavy and burdensome, and are discontented if we do not receive present wages and visible success, just as servants do when they are discontent; but the spirit of adoption works for love, without any hope of reward, and it is satisfied with the sweet fact of being in the Father’s house, and doing the Father’s will. This spirit gives peace, rest, joy, boldness, and holy familiarity with God. A man who never received the spirit of a child towards God does not know the bliss of the Christian life; he misses its flower, its savour, its excellence, and I should not wonder if the service of Christ should be a weariness to him because he has never yet arrived at the sweet things, and does not enjoy the green pastures, where the Good Shepherd makes his sheep to feed and to lie down. But when the Spirit of God makes us feel that we are sons, and we live in the house of God to go no more out for ever, then the service of God is sweet and easy, and we accept the delay of apparent success as a part of the trial we are called to bear.

19. Now, notice that this will have a great effect upon the outside world. A body of professors performing religion as a task, groaning along the ways of godliness with faces full of misery, like slaves who dread the lash, can have very little effect upon the sinners around them. They say, “These people serve, no doubt, a hard master, and they are denying themselves this and that; why should we be like them?” But bring me a church made up of children of God, a company of men and women whose faces shine with their heavenly Father’s smile, who are accustomed to take their cares and cast them on their Father as children should, who know they are accepted and beloved, and are perfectly content with the great Father’s will; put them down in the midst of a company of ungodly ones, and I will warrant you they will begin to envy them for their peace and joy. Thus happy saints become most efficient operators upon the minds of the unsaved. Oh blessed Spirit of God! let us all now feel that we are the children of the great Father, and let our childlike love be warm this morning; so we shall be fit to go out and proclaim the Lord’s love to the prodigals who are in the far-off land among the swine.

20. These three points are self-evident, I think. Now we pass to a fourth.

21. IV. The Holy Spirit is especially called the Spirit of HOLINESS.

22. He never suggested sin nor approved of it, nor has he ever done otherwise than grieve over it: but holiness is the Spirit’s delight. The church of God wears upon her brow the words, “Holiness to the Lord.” Only in proportion as she is holy may she claim to be the church of God at all. An unholy church! Surely this cannot be her of whom we read, “Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it; so that he might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word, that he might present it to himself a glorious church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing.” Holiness is not mere morality, not the outward keeping of divine precepts out of a hard sense of duty, while those commandments in themselves are not delightful to us. Holiness is the entirety of our manhood fully consecrated to the Lord and moulded to his will. This is the thing which the church of God must have, but it can never have it apart from the Sanctifier, for there is not a grain of holiness beneath the sky except what is the result of the operation of the Holy Spirit. And, brethren, if a church is destitute of holiness what effect can it have upon the world? Scoffers utterly condemn and despise professors whose inconsistent lives contradict their verbal testimonies. An unholy church may pant and struggle after dominion, and make what noise she can in pretence of work for Christ, but the kingdom does not come to the unholy, neither have they themselves entered it. The testimony of unholy men is no more acceptable to Christ than was the homage which the evil spirit gave to him in the days of his flesh, to which he answered, “Hold your peace.” “To the wicked God says, ‘What have you to do to declare my statutes?’ ” The dew is withheld, and the rain does not come in its season to the tillage of those who profess to be the servants of God and yet sow iniquity. After all, the acts of the church preach more to the world than the words of the church. Put an anointed man to preach the gospel in the midst of a really godly people and his testimony will be marvellously supported by the church with which he labours; but place the most faithful minister over an ungodly church, and he has such a weight upon him that he must first clear himself of it, or he cannot succeed. He may preach his heart out, he may pray until his knees are weary, but conversions will be severely hindered, if indeed they occur at all. There is no likelihood of victory for Israel while Achan’s curse is on the camp. An unholy church makes Christ to say that he cannot do many mighty works there because of its iniquity.

23. Brethren, do you not see in this point our need of the Spirit of God? And when you get to grappling terms with sinners, and have to talk to them about the necessity of holiness, and a renewed heart, and a godly life coming out of that renewed heart, do you expect ungodly men to be charmed with what you say? What does the unregenerate mind care about righteousness? Was a carnal man ever eager after holiness? Such a thing was never seen. You may as well expect the devil to be in love with God as an unredeemed heart to be in love with holiness. But yet the sinner must love what is pure and right, or he cannot enter heaven. You cannot make him do so. Who can do it except that Holy Spirit who has made you to love what once you despised? Do not go out, therefore, to battle with sin until you have taken weapons out of the armoury of the Eternal Spirit. Mountains of sin will not turn to plains at your bidding unless the Holy Spirit is pleased to make the word effective. So then we see that as the Spirit of holiness we need the Holy Spirit.

24. V. Fifthly, the church needs much PRAYER, and the Holy Spirit is the Spirit of grace and of supplications.

25. The strength of a church may pretty accurately be gauged by her prayerfulness. We cannot expect God to exert his power unless we entreat him to do so. But all acceptable supplication is performed in the soul by the Holy Spirit. The first desire which God accepts must have begun in the heart by the secret operations of the Holy One of Israel, and every subsequent pleading of every kind which contains in it a grain of living faith, and therefore comes up as a memorial before the Lord, must have been effectively performed in the soul by him who makes intercession in the saints according to the will of God. Our great High Priest will put into his censer no incense except what the Spirit has compounded. Prayer is the creation of the Holy Spirit. We cannot do without prayer, and we cannot pray without the Holy Spirit; and hence our dependence on him.

26. Furthermore, when we come to deal with sinners, we know that they must pray. “Behold he prays” is one of the earliest signs of the new birth. But can we make the sinner pray? Can any persuasion of ours lead him to his knees to breathe the penitential sigh and look to Christ for mercy? If you have attempted the conversion of a soul in your own strength you know you have failed; and so you would have failed if you had attempted the creation of one single acceptable prayer in the heart of even a little child. Oh then, dear brethren, let us cry to our heavenly Father to give the Holy Spirit to us; let us ask him to be in us more and more mightily as the spirit of prayer, making intercession in us with groanings that cannot be uttered, so that the church may not miss the divine blessing for lack of asking for it. I do truly believe this to be her present weakness, and one great reason why the kingdom of Christ does not more mightily spread: prayer is too much restrained, and hence the blessing is kept back; and it will always be restrained unless the Holy Spirit shall stimulate the desires of his people. Oh blessed Spirit, we pray you to make us pray, for Jesus’ sake.

27. VI. Sixthly, the Spirit of God is in a very remarkable manner the giver of FELLOWSHIP.

28. So often as we pronounce the apostolic benediction we pray that we may receive the communion of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit enables us to have communion with spiritual things. He alone can take the key and open up the secret mystery, so that we may know the things which are from God. He gives us fellowship with God himself: through Jesus Christ by the Spirit we have access to the Father. Our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ, but it is the Spirit of God who brings us into communion with the Most High. So, too, my dear brethren, our fellowship with each other, as far as it is Christian fellowship, is always produced by the Spirit of God. If we have continued together in peace and love these many years, I cannot attribute it to our constitutional good tempers, nor to wise management, nor to any natural causes, but to the love into which the Spirit has baptized us, so that our rebellious nature has been stilled. If a dozen Christian people live together for twelve months in true spiritual union and unbroken affection, trace it to the love of the Spirit; and if a dozen hundred, or four times that number shall be able to persevere in united service, and find themselves loving each other better after many years than they did at the first, let it be regarded as a blessing from the Comforter, for which he is to be devoutly adored. Fellowship can only come to us by the Spirit, but a church without fellowship would be a disorderly mob, a kingdom divided against itself, and consequently it could not prosper. You need fellowship for mutual strength, guidance, help and encouragement, and without it your church is a mere human society.

29. If you are to influence the world you must be united as one living body. A divided church has long been the scorn of Antichrist. No sneer which comes from the Vatican has a greater sting in it than what taunts Protestants with their divisions; and as it is with the great outward church so it is with any one particular church of Christ. Divisions are our disgrace, our weakness, our hindrance, and since the gentle Spirit alone can prevent or heal these divisions by giving us real loving fellowship with God and with each other, how dependent we are upon him for it. Let us daily cry to him to work in us brotherly love, and all the sweet graces which make us one with Christ, that we all may be one even as the Father is one with the Son, that the world may know that God has indeed sent Jesus, and that we are his people.

30. VII. Seventhly, we need the Holy Spirit in that renowned office which is described by our Lord as THE PARACLETE, or Comforter. The word bears another rendering, which our translators have given to it in that passage where we read, “If any man sins we have an Advocate (or Paraclete) with the Father.” The Holy Spirit is both Comforter and Advocate.

31. The Holy Spirit at this present moment is our friend and Comforter, sustaining the sinking spirits of believers, applying the precious promises, revealing the love of Jesus Christ to the heart. Many a heart would break if the Spirit of God had not comforted it. Many of God’s dear children would have utterly died by the way if he had not bestowed upon them his divine consolations to cheer their pilgrimage. That is his work, and a very necessary work, for if believers become unhappy they became weak for many points of service. I am certain that the joy of the Lord is our strength, for I have proved it so, and proved also the opposite truth. There are on earth certain Christians who inculcate gloom as a Christian’s proper state, I will not judge them, but this I will say, that in evangelistic work they do nothing, and I do not wonder. Until snow in harvest ripens wheat, until darkness makes flowers blossom, until the salt sea yields clusters bursting with new wine, you will never find an unhappy religion promotive of the growth of the kingdom of Christ. You must have joy in the Lord, brethren, if you are to be strong in the Lord, and strong for the Lord. Now, since the Comforter alone can bear you up amid the floods of tribulation which you are sure to encounter, you see your great need of his consoling presence.

32. We have said that the Spirit of God is the Advocate of the church, — not with God, for there Christ is our sole Advocate, — but with man. What is the grandest plea that the church has against the world? I answer, the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, the standing miracle of the church. External evidences are very excellent. You young men who are worried by sceptics will do well to study those valuable works which learned and devout men have with much labour produced for us, but, notice that all the evidences of the truth of Christianity which can be gathered from analogy, from history, and from external facts, are nothing whatever compared with the operations of the Spirit of God. These are the arguments which convince. A man says to me, “I do not believe in sin, in righteousness, or in judgment.” Well, brethren, the Holy Spirit can soon convince him. If he asks me for signs and evidences of the truth of the gospel, I reply, “Do you see this woman; she was a great sinner in the very worst sense, and led others into sin, but now you cannot find more sweetness and light anywhere than in her. Hear this profane swearer, persecutor, and blasphemer? He is speaking with purity, truth, and humbleness of mind. Observe that man, who was previously a miser, and see how he consecrates his substance. Notice that envious, malicious spirit, and see how it becomes gentle, forgiving, and amiable through conversion. How do you account for these great changes? They are happening here every day, but why? Is that a lie which produces truth, honesty, and love? Does not every tree bear fruit after its kind? What then must that grace be which produces such blessed transformations?” The wonderful phenomena of ravens turned to doves, and lions into lambs, the marvellous transformations of moral character which the minister of Christ rejoices to see accomplished by the Gospel, these are our witnesses, and they are unanswerable. Peter and John have gone up to the temple, and they have healed a lame man, they are soon seized and brought before the Sanhedrin. This is the charge against them — “You have been preaching in the name of Jesus, and this Jesus is an impostor.” What do Peter and John say? They do not need to say anything, for there stands the man who was healed; he has brought his crutch with him, and he waves it in triumph, and he runs and leaps! He was their volume of evidences, their apology, and proof. “When they saw the man who was healed standing with Peter and John, they could say nothing against them.”

33. If we have the Spirit of God among us, and conversions are constantly being performed, the Holy Spirit is thus fulfilling his advocacy, and refuting all accusers. If the Spirit works in your own mind, it will always be to you the best evidence of the gospel. I encounter sometimes one piece of infidelity, and then another for there are new doubts and fresh infidelities spawned every hour, and unstable men expect us to read all the books they choose to produce. But the effect produced on our mind is less and less. This is our answer. It is of no use your trying to stagger us, for we are already familiar with everything you suggest; our own native unbelief has outstripped you. We have had doubts of a kind which even you would not dare to utter if you knew them; for there is enough infidelity and devilry in our own nature to make us no strangers to Satan’s devices. We have fought most of your suggested battles over and over again in the secret chamber of our meditation, and have conquered. For we have been in personal contact with God. You sneer, but there is no argument in sneering. We are as honest as you are, and our witness is as good as yours in any court of law; and we solemnly declare that we have felt the power of the Holy Spirit over our soul as much as ever old ocean has felt the force of the north wind: we have been stirred to agony under a sense of sin, and we have been lifted to ecstasy of delight by faith in the righteousness of Christ. We find that in the little world within our soul the Lord Jesus reveals himself so that we know him. There is a potency about the doctrines we have learned which could not belong to lies, for the truths which we believe we have tested by actual experience. Tell us there is no food? Why, we have just been feasting. Tell us there is no water in the fountain? We have been quenching our thirst. Tell us there is no such thing as light? We do not know how we can prove its existence to you, for you are probably blind, but we can see. That is enough argument for us, and our witness is true. Tell us there is no spiritual life! We feel it in our innermost souls. These are the answers with which the Spirit of God furnishes us, and they are a part of his advocacy.

34. See, again, how entirely dependent we are on the Spirit of God for meeting all the various forms of unbelief which arise around us; you may have your societies for collecting evidence, and you may enlist all your bishops and doctors of divinity and professors of apologetics, and they may write rolls of evidence long enough to girdle the globe, but the only person who can savingly convince the world is the Advocate whom the Father has sent in the name of Jesus. When he reveals a man’s sin, and the certain result of it, the unbeliever takes to his knees. When he takes away the scales and presents the crucified Redeemer, and the merit of the precious blood, all carnal reasonings are nailed to the cross. One blow of real conviction of sin will stagger the most obstinate unbeliever, and afterwards, if his unbelief returns, the Holy Spirit’s consolations will soon comfort it out of him. Therefore, as at the first so say I at the last, all this depends upon the Holy Spirit, and upon him let us wait in the name of Jesus, beseeching him to reveal his power among us. Amen.

[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Ro 15]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Lord’s Day — The Eternal Sabbath Anticipated” 912]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Holy Spirit — The Comforter” 446]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Holy Spirit — The Promised Comforter” 445]
 


Public Worship, The Lord’s Day
912 — The Eternal Sabbath Anticipated
1 Lord of the Sabbath, hear our vows,
   On this thy day, in this thy house;
   And own, as grateful sacrifice,
   The songs which from the desert rise.
2 Thine earthly Sabbaths, Lord, we love,
   But there’s a nobler rest above;
   To that our labouring souls aspire,
   With ardent pangs of strong desire.
3 No more fatigue, no more distress,
   Nor sin nor hell shall reach the pace;
   No groans to mingle with the songs
   Which warble from immortal tongues.
4 No rude alarms of raging foes;
   No cares to break the long repose;
   No midnight shade, no clouded sun;
   But sacred, high, eternal noon.
5 Oh long-expected day, begin;
   Dawn on these realms of woe and sin:
   Fain would we leave this weary road,
   And sleep in death, to rest with God.
                     Philip Doddridge, 1755.
 


Holy Spirit
446 — The Comforter <7S. />
1 Jesus is gone up on high;
   But his promise still is here,
   “I will all your wants supply;
   I will send the Comforter.”
2 Let us now his promise plead,
   Let us to his throne draw nigh;
   Jesus knows his people’s need,
   Jesus hears his people’s cry.
3 Send us, Lord, the Comforter,
   Pledge and witness of thy love;
   Dwelling with thy people here,
   Leading them to joys above.
4 Till we reach the promised rest,
   Till thy face unveil’d we see,
   Of this blessed hope possess’d.
   Teach us, Lord, to live to thee.
                     Thomas Kelly, 1806.
 


Holy Spirit
445 — The Promised Comforter
1 Our blest Redeemer, ere he breathed
      His tender, last farewell,
   Our Guide, a Comforter, bequeath’d
      With us on earth to dwell.
2 He come, the mystic heavenly Dove,
      With sheltering wings outspread,
   The holy balm of peace and love
      On chosen hearts to shed.
3 He comes, sweet influence to impart,
      A gracious, willing guest,
   Where he can find one humble heart
      Wherein to make his rest.
4 And his that gentle voice we hear,
      Soft as the breath of eve,
   That checks each fault, that calms each fear,
      And bids us cease to grieve.
5 And every virtue we possess,
      And every victory won,
   And every thought of holiness.
      Are his, and his alone.
6 Spirit of purity and grace,
      Our weakness, pitying, see:
   Oh make our hearts thy dwelling place,
      Yea, make them meet for thee.
                     Harriet Auber, 1829, a.

http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2013/12/06/our-urgent-need-of-the-holy-spirit