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Here in Spirit
Knowing the Spirit Who Creates, Sustains, and Transforms Everything
Jonathan K. Dodson
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eBook - ePub
Here in Spirit
Knowing the Spirit Who Creates, Sustains, and Transforms Everything
Jonathan K. Dodson
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About This Book
"I'll be there in spirit." We say this knowing it isn't really possible. Yet we often find ourselves dislocated from the present, inattentive to things in front of us: people, work, culture, ministry opportunities, prayer, and even the Spirit himself. The Holy Spirit, however, relocates us in the present, motivating us to fully engage whatever God puts before us. Instead of relating narrowly to the Spirit based on just a few of his gifts, this book broadens our engagement with him, touring aspects of his vast character that often go unexplored. It turns out, living here in the Spirit is the source of the most meaningful, creative, satisfying life possible.
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Theology & ReligionSubtopic
Christian TheologyThe Greatest Gift
WHEN I STEPPED onto the premises of the East Austin projects, I sensed a heaviness in the air. We were serving the community alongside another Christian group. Their group made the initial connection with project residents. Our group provided food and drinks and joined them in ministry. We were eager to lighten the atmosphere there with the hope of Christ. As time passed, the residents began to look forward to our visits. The youth loved connecting with the Christian hip-hop artists who came with us. I had several significant conversations with some of the residents and got to pray for them on the spot. The weight seemed to be lifting.
One afternoon I heard shouting and decided to follow the noise. The ruckus led me to a few residents surrounded by several Christians from the other group, who were praying loudly asking God to baptize them in the Spirit and to give them financial prosperity. I hung back, observed, and prayed. Afterward, one of the people from this group asked me if I was âSpirit filled.â I thought to myself, It depends on the dayâor the moment. But I knew that wasnât what she meant.
So I replied, âWhat do you mean by Spirit filled?â They responded by describing a person who has had a very specific experience, marked by speaking in tongues. I had in mind the passage in Ephesians where the filling of the Spirit results in singing, thanksgiving, and submitting to one another (Eph 5:18-21). We clearly had two different perspectives of âSpirit filled.â Although we both affirmed the miraculous work of the Holy Spirit, our differences became so great we had to part ways. Sadly, our differing doctrines of the Holy Spirit divided us, not just in theory but in ministry among marginalized people. The parting was done in humility and love on both sides, but I left brokenhearted. Does it have to be this way?
Perhaps youâve had a similar experience. Or maybe youâve been on one side of the divide staring skeptically across the aisle. Or possibly youâre in the middle scratching your head. Whatâs so divisive about the âSpirit of unityâ (Eph 4:3)?
SPIRIT OF DIVISION OR UNITY?
The Holy Spirit. Three words couldnât divide the church more. I suppose âI hate youâ is up there, but thatâs more of a division between people rather than churches. Entire swaths of Christianity have divided over the third person of the Trinity. This division, over the place of the Spirit in the Trinity, left the Eastern Church (Orthodox) on one side and the Western Church (Roman) on the other, which, among other factors, eventually led to what was called the Great Schism.
Doctrine does divide. Attempting to forge unity, Iâve heard some people say, âDoctrine doesnât matter.â Typically, they mean if we would all lay down our doctrines and just focus on Jesus, we would all get along. But that assertion is also doctrinal. Itâs saying to everyone else, if you lay down what you hold dear, and believe in the Jesus-only doctrine I consider precious, then we can all get along. This approach is well meaning but exclusivist, privileging its own view. It also leaves out the Father and the Spirit. We need to dig deeper. Why does doctrine over the Holy Spirit divide?
The fault line of division over the Spirit today is quite different from that of the early Church. The âgreat schismâ affecting most of the modern church is over the gifts rather than the person of the Spirit. The division falls rather neatly along just a few of the Spiritâs more effusive gifts, things like speaking in tongues, prophecy, healings, and miracles. To simplify it for the moment, there are charismatics who treasure and practice these gifts, and cessationists who adamantly insist most of these gifts are no longer in effect. The groups shore up, take sides, and accuse one another of wary extremes. Some remain in the middle, self-described âopen-but-cautious.â Entire denominations, seminaries, and churches divide over their views of these gifts of the Spirit.
Wherever you fall in this debate, I think thereâs a deeper issue at stake. Itâs interesting that we donât divide over spiritual gifts like service and mercy. We donât part company over whether mercy is still in effect or if service is still valid. And there arenât too many divisions over faith, hope, and love, what Paul called âthe higher giftsâ (1 Cor 12:31). Everyone believes in those. Maybe, just maybe, weâre fighting over the wrong gifts. Certainly, there are things worth debating. Paul opposed Peter for his gospel-compromising racism. But what is the greater issue at stake here? Quibbling over a few of the Spiritâs choice gifts, weâve missed the most important gift of allâthe Holy Spirit himself.
Pigeonholing the Spirit based on a few of his gifts is like sizing someone up after a single conversation. Iâm not a big Quentin Tarantino fan. His films are too violent for me. Iâve seen clips here and there, and at the behest of several friends I did watch Inglorious Basterds. Iâll admit the initial interrogation scene is riveting, but I still find the flippant ultraviolence deplorable. So my initial impression of Tarantino was not positive, but that was before I met him in person.
Quibbling over a few of the Spiritâs choice gifts, weâve missed the most important gift of allâ the Holy Spirit himself.
One afternoon as my wife and I were waiting to be seated in a hole-in-the-wall Mexican restaurant, I glanced over the hostessâs shoulder. Recognizing a guy sitting by himself in the bar, my wife turned to me and said, âHoney, I think we were in college ministry with that guy.â I smirked and said, âHoney, thatâs Quentin Tarantino.â Lunch was dominated by debate over whether we would introduce ourselves to Tarantino after we were done. My wife won the debate, so we walked over to say hi.
To my surprise, Tarantino was quite affable. He asked our names. My wife made a quip about having a guyâs name, and when Tarantino heard her name is Robie, he leaned in. He asked how she got the name. As Robie told the story, Tarantino tracked the plot, asked questions, and laughed along the way with two complete strangers. After a bit more chit-chat, he invited us to stay for a drink. We gratefully declined, but I walked away shocked by how kind and inviting he was. Based on his filmography, I figured heâd be a total jerk. If Iâd stuck with my initial impression of Tarantino, I would have been wildly wrong.
Sizing the Holy Spirit up based on a few of his gifts is a big mistake. If we relate to the Spirit primarily regarding miraculous gifts, and whether they are operative today, we distort and limit our understanding of the third person of the Trinity. He should be known for much more. Who is the Spirit? Is he a person or a spiritual force? How are we meant to relate to him? Can we pray to the Spirit? Can we worship the Spirit? What is his role in creation? Is he present in culture? What will he do in the future? And what does being filled with the Spirit look like after all? These are some of the questions Iâd like to explore. Instead of relating narrowly to the Holy Spirit, Iâd like to broaden our engagement with him by touring aspects of his vast character that are often unexplored. In focusing more on who the Spirit is, we may find ourselves less divided.
HERE IN SPIRIT
I donât want you to read this book simply to avoid division or handle it more winsomely, although that would be great. Motivation for knowing the Spirit should be much grander. And here it isâthe most meaningful, creative, satisfying life possible is one lived here in Spirit. The key values of meaning, creativity, and satisfaction correspond to a primary aspect of our humanityâmind, body, and spirit. The Spirit enables us to thrive as whole persons.
The Spirit enables us to thrive as whole persons.
The mind longs for meaning, coherence, and understanding. When we look up at the stars, we wonder who made them and where we came from. Do we have a purpose in life? Logically, when we balance the checkbook, we expect the math to add up. Philosophically, we ponder what it means to live well. We want to make sense of the world. At some level, we want whatâs true. We value meaning, but weâre also not just brains on sticks. We like to make stuff.
Early in life we feel the impulse to create. All three of my children loved to color when they were young. When finished with their thirty-second masterpiece, they would hand it to me and insist I hang it on the wall. As my daughter Ellie grew older, she took to adult coloring books. With precision, and a flair for unique color combinations, she creates brilliant versions of these stock images.
Once when Ellie had finished coloring a wolf, her sister Rosamund blurted out, âOoh, itâs half wolf, half creation wolf.â What did she mean by âhalf creation wolfâ? That half of the wolf was marked by a sequence of alternating yet wild and brilliant colorsâyellows, reds, and turquoise. The other half of the wolf was filled in with more predictable colors and looked more realistic. Rosamund identified Ellieâs creative impulse to expand on the realistic wolf as an act of creation.
Rosamund was on to what J. R. R. Tolkien describes as âsubcreation.â He writes:
Man, sub-creator, the refracted Light
through whom is splintered from a single White. . . .
The right has not decayed.
We make still by the law in which weâre made.
As subcreators, our impulse to create is a refraction of the great light of God. Every human being is imbued with a desire to fashion because we are fashioned by a Creator who creates with his own two hands, the Spirit and the Son. We desire beauty. But creative expression and intellectual exploration alone do not bring ultimate satisfaction.
Deep down we long for something that transcends our own thoughts and cultural expression. We want to be satisfied. Iâve had nearly flawless days touring ancient ruins on the Wild Atlantic Way of the Irish coast or taking in some of the finest of the art in the world in Paris, accompanied by my favorite person in the world. Yet I still felt dissatisfied at the end of the day. What is that thing thatâs so difficult to find? Transcendence.
We want to be connected to something greater than ourselves. Itâs why we adore beauty, climb mountains, and explore religion. In fact, our search for satisfaction can be so intense it dislocates us from the present. Socializing with others, we may half listen to them while scrolling our device for fans, friends, followers, anyone who will pay attention to us. Alternatively, we may eject from the present to be connected with world events, up to date with the cultural or global moment. Twitter highlights these for us in a column called âMoments.â But alas, our digital search for transcendence often leaves us disembodied in the present, unable to value the person in front of us or enjoy the moment fully.
Iâve invited several secular friends, along with some Christian friends, to join us for dinner once a week to explore some of lifeâs deepest questions. In advance I encouraged my Christian friends to see this as an opportunity to learn from secular people and value them. One evening we were in the kitchen huddled around the potluck spread on our granite island. I looked up to see one of the Christians Iâd invited entranced by his screen, while one of our secular friends stood idly beside him, for quite a while.
In our search for transcendence, we may be âhereâ but not in Spirit. Cadavers of disembodied yearning, we are âthere,â seeking satisfaction somewhere in the digital landscape.
Think of the last time you were âcaught up in the momentââsinging along in a concert, playing with your kids, laughing with friends, making love. A real, embodied joy. Sociologist Peter Berger describes this experience as a âsignal of transcendence.â Joy, he says, signals the existence of a transcendent, all-satisfying reality.
The psalmist directs our search to the love of God, âSatisfy us in the morning with your steadfast love, that we may rejoice and be glad all our daysâ (Ps 90:14). He knows that true joy and satisfaction are found in God. The TrinityâFather, Son, and Holy Spiritâare uniquely positioned to satiate that longing for all our days. Unlike any other deity, they experience ongoing self-sati...