by: Robert Letham November 23, 2019
1. The Holy Spirit inseparably continues the ministry of the Father and the Son.
He was sent in place of the physical presence of Jesus. The ministry of the apostles and the early church in the
power of the Spirit continued Jesus’s ministry (Acts 1:1–2; 2:47; cf. John 16:12–15). Again, Paul reflects on the
Father sending the Son in his incarnation and so also the Spirit at Pentecost; not only is the Spirit sent by the
Father, but he is also called “the Spirit of [the Father’s] Son” (Gal. 4:4–6). The Father also is said to send the
Spirit (John 14:26), while the Son also sends him, having received him from the Father (Acts 2:33). Much in the
New Testament supports the Orthodox point that the Spirit is sent by the Father and received by the Son, here
and at his baptism, with the Son then pouring him out on his church.
2. Pentecost thus marks a new era in the history of redemption.
It fulfills Old Testament prophecy. The Spirit is now present in a heightened way. He was present in the Old
Testament (he could hardly have been absent) but not in the foreground as in the New. How and in what ways
was the Spirit active in the Old Testament? Warfield, in considering the work of the Spirit in the cosmos, the
kingdom of God, and the individual, concluded that he was at work in all the ways in which he is at work in the
New Testament.1 However, there is something new: first, the miraculous endowments of the apostles,
together with the churches they founded; second, the worldwide mission of the Spirit, promised in the Old
Testament but only now realized; and, third and principally, the fact that the Old Testament was preparatory
for the New Testament, the Spirit then preserving the people of, whereas now he produces “the fruitage and
gathering of the harvest.”2
The distinction is not between his presence now compared with a putative absence in the Old Testament but
rather between the falling away of what was preparatory and temporary (the Old Testament) and the
emergence of what is final, binding and permanent (the New). Galatians 4:4–6 is again pertinent. Israel was
God’s son in the Old Testament, but it was so in a way little short of servant status. It was a child in its minority,
under the protection of a pedagogue, a slave entrusted with its care and upbringing (Gal. 3:24). With Christ’s
coming and the Spirit’s sending at Pentecost, God’s people have been adopted as mature sons. So significant
is the sending of the Spirit that Paul describes this transition in absolute terms, as elsewhere does John (John
1:17; 4:24). Hence, in the Old Testament the Spirit came intermittently on the prophets, whereas now he is
poured out on all flesh (Acts 2:16–21). Then his presence with his people was spasmodic (Ps. 51:11); now he is
given permanently (John 14:17, 23).
The Old Testament describes him as the giver of life (Gen. 1:2; Pss. 33:9; 104:29–30), the One who empowers
for various forms of service in God’s kingdom (Ex. 31:3; 35:31–34; Num. 27:18; Judg. 3:10; 1 Sam. 16:13), as the
protector of God’s people (1 Sam. 19:20, 23; Isa. 63:11–12; Hag. 2:5), indwelling them (Num. 27:18; Deut.
34:9; Ezek. 2:2; 3:24; Dan. 4:8–9, 18; 5:11; Mic. 3:8), and above all resting on and empowering the Messiah (Isa.
11:2–3; 42:1; 61:1).
In the New Testament the Spirit is presented as the One who purifies and sanctifies (Matt. 3:11; Rom. 8:13; Gal.
5:22–23; 1 Cor. 6:11; 2 Cor. 3:18; 1 Pet. 1:2); reveals truth to the apostles and prophets, teaches and illumines all
God’s people (Luke 12:12; John 14:26; 16:13; 1 Cor. 12:10ff.; 1 Tim. 4:1; 1 John 2:19–27); directs the apostles,
evangelists, prophets, and other church leaders (Acts 8:29; 10:19–20; 13:2; 15:28; 20:22–23); and grants
assurance (Rom. 8:16; 1 John 3:24; 4:13) and unity (1 Cor. 12:7–21; 2 Cor. 13:14; Eph. 2:18–22; 4:3–6; Phil. 2:1–2).
There is continuity but also a more lavish outpouring and a wider ministry in the New Testament.
The Spirit unites people to Christ by and through his Word.
3. The church of Jesus Christ is a Pentecostal church.
The church was sent to baptize, teach, and disciple in the power of the Holy Spirit. The Bible is the Word of the
Spirit and therefore the objective bearer of the Spirit’s power, and thus it is the Word of Christ. The Spirit unites
people to Christ by and through his Word.
The actions of Ananias and Sapphira in misleading the apostles are described as lying to the Holy Spirit, which
brought upon them swift and unmistakable discipline enforced not by the human leaders but by the Spirit himself
(Acts 5:1–11). The Spirit disciplines the church. Administrative and judicial discipline and the considered decisions of
the Council of Jerusalem are also the decisions of the Spirit (Acts 15:28).
There is a conjunction between the calling, ordaining, and sending of the church at Antioch and the actions of the
Spirit (Acts 13:1–7). The Spirit set Saul and Barnabas apart for missionary labors and made this known to the church
leaders, who in turn set the two apart by prayer and the imposition of hands and so sent them away, a sending
that was ultimately by the Holy Spirit. Church action and action by the Spirit were coordinate. Indeed, throughout
Acts the Spirit directs Paul’s missionary labors (Acts 16:6 ff.). Paul’s apostolic authority is the Spirit’s work.
Although he has no instructions from Jesus from his earthly ministry on a matter, yet Paul’s apostolic advice is of
equal weight, since he has the Spirit of God to direct him as an apostle (1 Cor. 7:10–12, 40).3
4. The Holy Spirit brings about our union with Christ in our life history, doing this by
grace through faith.
Our faith and all that flows from it in the Christian life is due to the Spirit, who renews us in the image of God and
transforms us into Christ (2 Cor. 3:18). Eventually, when Christ returns in glory, we will be like him (1 John 3:1–2).
This entire process occurs through faith. Faith is “the principal work of the Holy Spirit,” as Calvin said.4 The Spirit
unites us to Christ. As a house benefits from electricity when hooked up to the grid, so we benefit from the work
of Christ when it becomes ours as the Spirit unites us to him.5
(Notes:
1. B. B. Warfield, “The Spirit of God in the Old Testament,” in Biblical and Theological Studies, ed. Samuel G. Craig (Philadelphia:
Presbyterian and Reformed, 1952), 154.
2. Warfield, “Spirit of God,” 155–56.
3. H. B. Swete, The Holy Spirit in the Ancient Church: A Study of Christian Teaching in the Age of the Fathers (1912; repr., Eugene, OR:
Wipf & Stock), 80, cites Tertullian, who remarks on the power of the Holy Spirit in the discipline of the church and on the newness
of the New Testament.
4. Calvin, Institutes, 3.1.4
5. An image used in Anthony N. S. Lane, Justification by Faith in Catholic-Protestant Dialogue: An Evangelical Assessment (London:
T&T Clark, 2002), 23
Robert Letham (PhD, University of Aberdeen) is professor of systematic and historical theology at Union School of Theology. A
Presbyterian minister with twenty-five years of pastoral experience, he is the author of books such as The Work of Christ; The Holy
Trinity; and Union with Christ, and a range of articles published in encyclopedias and journals.)
Keep The Faith,
Pastor Tommy
Leave a Reply