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Chapter 6
The Holy Spirit
The Holy Spirit is not a person distinct from the Father and the Son. The
Holy Spirit is impersonal. It is not part of a trinity. It is the divine energy
through which God performs His works.
1. The Spirit Is the Power of God. The Spirit is not a person distinct
from the Father and the Son because it is the power of God. The Holy Spirit is
the impersonal power of God. Every work that God does is performed through His
power or Spirit.
Spirit is translated from the Hebrew words ruach and neshamah
and from the Greek word pneuma. Pneuma is in Greek scriptures
what ruach
is in Hebrew. Spirit means air, breath, wind, power, animation, and the
manifestation of one's power.
The Holy Spirit is the power of God. The terms power and spirit
can be used interchangeably. God performs His mighty works through His power.
Through His Spirit, God created the universe (Job 26:13) and gave life to
mankind (Job 33:4). Through His Spirit, God gave strength to Samson (Judges
14:6; 15:14), wisdom to Solomon, and inspiration to writers of Scripture (2 Pet.
1:21). God's Spirit gave life to Jesus (Luke 1:35; Matt. 1:20) and enabled Him
to perform miracles (Matt. 12:28; John 3:34). Through that power, God raised
Jesus from the dead to immortality (Rom. 1:4; Eph. 1:19, 20). These divine works
were different in purpose, but the one Spirit of God was the unchanging medium
for performing these works.
2. The Word "Spirit" Is Neuter. The Spirit is not a personality
because the Greek word pneuma, translated Spirit, is neuter in gender.
Articles and pronouns referring to it also are neuter.
3. Impersonal Symbols. God's impersonal power, the Holy Spirit, is
designated in the Bible by impersonal symbols. Some of these are wind (John 3:8;
Acts 2:2), fire (Matt. 3:11), water (John 7:37-39), oil (Psalm 45:7; Isa. 61:1),
seal (Eph. 1:13), dove (Matt. 3:16), lamps (Rev. 4:5), and breath.
4. Impersonal Characteristics. The impersonal characteristics of the
Spirit reveal it as the power of God and not as a personality. The Spirit is
mentioned as poured out (Isa. 32:15; 44:3; Joel 2:28; Acts 2:17; 10:45), shed
(Titus 3:5, 6), breathed (John 20:22), and filling people (Acts 2:2, 4; Eph.
5:18). Jesus was anointed with this power (Acts 10:38). Men were baptized in it
(Matt. 3:11; Acts 1:5; 1 Cor. 12:13) and drank of it (1 Cor. 12:13). It is
compared to the blowing wind (John 3:8). The Holy Spirit is impersonal.
5. No Personal Name. The Spirit is shown to be impersonal in that it has
no personal name. God is a person; His name is Jehovah. Our Saviour is a person;
His name is Jesus. The Spirit is not a person; it has no personal name. If the
Spirit is a person, why does it have no personal name? The word "name"
in Matthew 28:19 does not refer to a personal name. The word "name" in
this verse means authority or as a representative of. The Holy
Spirit is not a personality.
6. Never Addressed in Prayer. "The Holy Spirit is not a person,
because in all the Bible there is not one prayer or song or exclamation
addressed to it; nor is there one precept in all the Bible authorizing such
prayer or song." (Gifford. Op. cit., p. 172.) Miles Grant wrote:
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Another important fact is worthy of notice, that nowhere in the Bible are
we taught to love, honor, or worship the Holy Spirit, or to pray to it for
assistance. Why not, if it is a person, like the Father and His Son?
(Grant, Miles. Positive Theology. Boston: Advent Christian
Publication Society, p. 287.)
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The Spirit is not mentioned in the hymns of adoration in Revelation. (Rev. 5:13;
7:10.) If the Spirit is a third person of a trinity, why is reference to it
omitted?
7. Not Included in Apostolic Salutations. The power of God, the Spirit,
is not usually mentioned together with God and Jesus in the greetings and
salutations in New Testament letters.
The Spirit is not mentioned in any of the salutations in Paul's
epistles. (Rom. 1:7; I Cor. 1:3; 2 Cor. 1:2; Gal. 1:3; Eph. 1:2; Phil. 1:2; Col.
1:2; 1 Thess. 1:1; 2 Thess. 1:2; 1 Tim. 1:2; 2 Tim. 1:2; Titus 1:4; Philemon 3.)
God and Jesus are mentioned together repeatedly, but the Spirit is seldom
mentioned with them.
Notice also the opening words of letters written by the other apostles. (James
1:1; 2 Peter 1:2; 1 John 1:3; 2 John 3; Jude 1.) These all mentioned God and
Jesus but not the Spirit. The Spirit is mentioned in 1 Peter 1:2 but not as a
person.
8. Not Mentioned As Enthroned or Reigning. The Bible pictures God the
Father sitting upon His throne and Jesus sitting or standing at His right hand.
The Father and the Son are associated together in judgment and redemption. The
coming kingdom is the kingdom of God and His Christ. There is no mention of the
Spirit's being a person or as one sitting upon a throne.
9. Not Related to Father as One Person to Another. The Spirit's relation
to the Father is not that of one person to another person. The Spirit's relation
to the Father is that of a power to a person. The Spirit is God's power. God's
power is no more a person distinct from Himself any more than is His wisdom or
love. The Father and the Son are persons but the Spirit is not a person.
The Father says "Thou" to the Son and the Son says "Thou" to
the Father, but neither ever says "Thou" to the Spirit. The Father
loves the Son and the Son loves the Father, but neither is mentioned as loving
the Spirit.
The Spirit is never denominated "the third" or "the third
person" in any way. Moreover, the Father is never called "the first
person" and the Son is never called "the second person."
10. Objections Considered. Trinitarians claim, on the basis of Acts 5:3,
4 and 2 Corinthians 3:17, that the Spirit is God. They insist that since the
Spirit is directly identified with God, the Spirit must be God and a separate
personality. There is nothing in these two verses to warrant such a claim.
Merely because the Bible states "God is love" (1 John 4:8, 16) one is
not authorized to say that love is a separate personality distinct from the
Father and a member of a trinity.
The Spirit is God's power. The working of the Spirit is the working of God and
His Son. When one is filled with the Spirit, he is filled with the invisible
power of God and Christ. The fruit of the Spirit is the result of Christ's
working in the believer's life through His power.
When the Bible describes the Spirit as speaking (Rev. 2:7), it refers to the
work of God speaking through His power. When the Spirit is described as making
intercession (Rom. 8:26, 27), it refers to the intercession that Christ our High
Priest makes for us through His power (Rom. 8:34; Heb. 7:25). Jesus is our only
intercessor; He is our one mediator. When Ananias lied to the Holy Ghost, he
lied to God who worked through that holy power. When men "grieve"
(Eph. 4:30) the Holy Spirit of God, they grieve God Himself who works through
His Holy Spirit.
The Spirit is described as eternal and holy because God is eternal and holy.
When the Spirit, God's power, is pictured as having certain characteristics and
performing certain works, reference is made to the one eternal God who has those
characteristics and performs those works.
11.Masculine Pronouns in Greek no Proof of Personality. Our Lord promised
His disciples that after He ascended to heaven He would send them God's power,
the Holy Spirit. Through this power, Jesus would continue His work with and
within His disciples.
This power was called the Comforter, Paraclete, Advocate, or Helper, because
Jesus intended to work through that power in behalf of believers. Jesus is the
one who would be the Paraclete or Advocate Himself. (1 John 2:1.) He is the one
who promised to be with them always (Matt. 28:20) and be their source of comfort
and help. Jesus said, "I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to
you" (John 14:18). The work of Christ's Spirit as Comforter, Advocate, and
Helper was nothing other than the work of Christ Himself as Comforter, Advocate,
and Helper through that divine power.
The Greek word for Comforter Parakletos is masculine in gender. (John
14:16, 17, 26; 15:26; 16:7, 8, 13-15.) Therefore, translators used masculine
pronouns to refer to the power of God in this portion of John even though that
power itself was neuter and impersonal. The impersonal power of God was
indicated by a masculine word "Comforter" because it was going to be
used by the person, Jesus Christ. Jesus is a person, but the power, the Holy
Spirit, through which He worked as Comforter was impersonal. The use of
masculine pronouns in the verses cited is no indication of personality.
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Spirit in the Greek is a neuter noun and is always represented by neuter
pronouns in that language. The Comforter in Greek is a masculine noun and
it is therefore represented by masculine pronouns. But this proves nothing
as to personality; for the use of masculine pronouns in Greek is no proof
of personality. The Greek, unlike the English, uses masculine and feminine
pronouns with reference to things and qualities as well as to persons.
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Wisdom in Proverbs is personified and referred to as she and her.
This, however, does not indicate that wisdom is a woman or a person. It does not
mean that she is part of a triune God. The fact that the Comforter is called he
and him is no indication that it is a personality.
The Bible correctly teaches that there is but one God, the Father, who is one in
essence and person. There is only one person who is God. It teaches that Jesus
is not God but the Son of God. He is divine but not deity. Jesus is the most
highly exalted person in the universe next to God. Christ eternally will be
subject to His Father, the one supreme God. The Holy Spirit is the impersonal
power of God through which He performs His works.
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