Living in the Spirit
by A. B. Simpson,
"If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit." Gal.
5: 25.
What is it to Live in the Spirit?
It is to be born of the Spirit. It is to have received a
new spiritual life from above. "That which is born of the flesh
is flesh, that which is born of the Spirit is Spirit. "Except a
man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the
Kingdom of God." "If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature;
old things have passed away; behold, all things have become
new." We may have the brightest intellectual life, the most
unblemished moral character, and the most amiable qualities of
disposition, and yet without the new life of the Holy Spirit in
our heart, we can no more enter Heaven than the lovely canary
that sings in our window can become a member of our family, or
the gentle lamb that our children play with can sit down at our
table, and share our domestic fellowship and enjoyment. It
belongs to a different world, and nothing but a new nature and
human heart could bring it into fellowship with our human life.
The most exalted intellect, and the most attractive, natural
disposition, reach no higher than the earthly. The Kingdom of
Heaven consists of the family of God, those who have risen to an
entirely different sphere, and received a nature as much above
the intellectual and the moral as God is above an angel.
A modern writer has finely wrought out this wonderful thought of
the difference between the various orders of life, even in the
natural world. The little tuft of moss that grows upon the
granite rock can look down from immeasurable heights upon the
mass of stone on which it rests and say, "I am transcendently
above you, for I have life, vegetable life, and you are an
inorganic mass!" And yet, as we ascend one step, the smallest
insect that crawls upon the majestic palm tree can look down
upon the most beautiful production of the vegetable world and
say, "I am transcendently above you, for I have animal life, and
you have not even the consciousness of your own loveliness, or
of the little creature that feeds upon your blossom!" Still
higher we ascend, until we reach the world of mind; and the
youngest child of the most illiterate peasant can say to the
mightiest creations of the animal world, to the majestic lion,
king of the forest; the soaring eagle of the skies; the
many-tinted bird of Paradise, or the noble steed that bears his
master, like the whirlwind, over the desert, "I am your lord,
for I possess intellectual life, and you have neither soul nor
reason, and must perish with your expiring breath, and become
like the clods beneath your feet, but I shall live forever. But
there is still another step beyond all this. There is a
spiritual world which is as much higher than the intellectual as
that is above the physical; and the humblest and most uncultured
Christian, who has just learned to pray, and say, "Our Father,
who art in Heaven" from the depths of a regenerate heart, is as
much above the loftiest genius of the world of mind as he is
above the material creation at his feet.
This is the meaning of Christianity; it is the breath of a new
nature; it is the translation of the soul into a higher universe
and a loftier scale of being, even introducing it into the
family of God Himself and making it a part of the Divine nature.
This is indeed a stupendous mystery, and a bestowment whose
glory may well fill our hearts with everlasting wonder, as we
cry with the adoring apostle, "Behold what manner of love the
Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called the sons
of God!"
Not by adoption merely are we thus admitted to the Father's
house, but by actual birth; from the very bosom of the Holy
Ghost, as from a heavenly mother, has our new spirit been born;
just as literally as Jesus Christ Himself was born of the
eternal Spirit in the bosom of Mary. So it might be said of
every newborn soul: "The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and
the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee; therefore, that
holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son
of God." Beloved, do we thus live in the Spirit? This is
everlasting life.
2. To live in the Spirit is also to be baptized of the Holy
Ghost, and have the Spirit as a Divine person living in us.
There is something higher than the new birth, namely, the
entering in of the Comforter, in His personal fullness and
glory, to dwell in the consecrated heart and abide there for
ever. Jesus was born of the Spirit in Bethlehem, but He was
baptized of the Spirit thirty years later on the banks of the
Jordan; and this made all the difference which we trace between
His quiet years at Nazareth and His public ministry in Galilee
and Judea. From that time there were two persons united in the
ministry of Jesus of Nazareth. The Holy Ghost, as a Divine
person, was united with the person of Jesus Christ, and was the
source of His power and the inspiration of His teaching; and He
constantly represented Himself as speaking the words and doing
the works which the Spirit in Him prompted.
And so there is in the believer's life a similar experience,
when the soul truly converted to God yields itself wholly to His
control and becomes the living temple of the Almighty Spirit,
who henceforth dwells in us, and walks in us, giving us not only
a new nature, which we receive in regeneration, but a Divine
Guest, a Presence to dwell in that new nature as its controlling
guide and Almighty strength.
Then is fulfilled the double promise of Ezekiel: "A new heart
will I give unto you and a new spirit will I put within you, and
I will put my Spirit within you and will cause you to walk in my
statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments and do them."
Henceforth, we live in the Spirit in a higher sense than even
before our conversion. Our life is not only spiritual but
divine. Henceforth, it is not we who live, but Christ who liveth
in us, and we draw from Him, through the Holy Ghost, every
moment, life, and health, and joy, and peace. It is not living
through the Spirit, but living in the Spirit. He is the very
element of our new existence; before us, behind us, above us,
beneath us, within us, beyond us, we are buried in Him, lost in
Him, encompassed by Him as by the air we breathe. This is the
yet higher mystery of the new life, greater than the new birth.
This is the secret which Paul declares was hid for ages and
generations, but now made manifest to His saints. "Christ in you
the hope of glory."
It is, indeed, an epoch in the soul's existence as wonderful in
its measure as when the Son of God became incarnate on earth,
when the Holy One crosses the threshold of the heart, and makes
the spirit his personal residence, sits down upon the throne of
the human will and assumes the government and control of all our
being and destiny. Henceforth, we may indeed walk with holy
veneration and exalted hope, exultant in joy and triumph as
wondering angels declare, "Behold the tabernacle of God is with
men, He will dwell with them and they shall be His people; God
Himself shall be with them and shall be their God."
Beloved, have you claimed this high privilege, and received this
heavenly Guest into the golden casket of your regenerated souls?
Have you received the invaluable jewel of the Living One
Himself, as the treasure in the earthen vessel and the glory in
the midst?
3. To live in the Spirit is to be sanctified by the Spirit;
to receive the Spirit of holiness and thus be delivered from the
power of sin. They, who thus receive the Holy Ghost can say,
"The spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the
law of sin and death." This is divine holiness; it is the
entrance into a sinful heart of a new life which excludes the
old and takes its place. It is not the cleansing of the flesh or
the improving of the life of self; but it is the imparting to us
of a new life which is in itself essentially pure and cannot
sin, even the holy life of God.
In our childhood many of us have roamed through the native woods
and seen some old fallen forest tree rotting where it lay.
Through the decaying wood the earthworms and insects burrow, and
perhaps the adder has built its nest and raised its poisonous
brood, so that we have feared to sit down on the old, putrefying
mass, and have thought of it as a type of corruption and decay.
That mass of putrefaction may well represent the ruin of our
sinful nature. But have we not sometimes seen a little shoot of
unsullied whiteness in the early spring growing up through the
rotten wood, and rising out of the mass of corruption as
undefiled as the sunny wing of a dove, or the gentle hand of a
babe, beautiful and pure, and unstained even by the touch of the
corrupting element around it, until it has grown into a tree and
covered itself with luxurious green, and our hands have often
plucked from its branches the luscious berries of the summer
woods? It was life in the midst of death, purity amid
corruption, having no connection whatever with the soil in which
it grew and incapable of mixture with its defilement.
Precisely so is the life of holiness in the soul. Like that
stainless shoot, it grew from a Divine root, and has nothing in
common with our own sinful nature. It is of heavenly origin, and
it grows up within us in its own Divine purity and fruitfulness,
until it ripens into all the rich fruition of a consecrated and
heavenly life, and yet at every stage we feel that it is in no
sense our own life, but the indwelling presence and purity of
God Himself.
Beloved, have we received this sanctifying Spirit and learned
this heavenly secret of holy living? And in all the exquisite
rest and conscious purity and overcoming power of His presence,
have we learned to live in the Spirit?
4. To live in the Spirit is to receive the quickening life of
the Holy Ghost in our physical being, and to find in Him the
source of constant stimulus and strength for all the faculties
of our mind, and all the functions of our body; "For if the
Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in us, He
that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken our
mortal bodies by His Spirit, that dwelleth in us." The subtle
principle of life itself came originally, no doubt, from His
inbreathing at man's creation, and why should it be thought
anything incredible that He should still breathe upon our flesh
the quickening life of the ascended Son of God? Are we not
members of His body, and His flesh, and His bones, and does He
not speak of a distinct sense in which our body is the temple of
the Holy Ghost? Indeed it was the Holy Ghost, who, during
Christ's ministry, always gave efficiency to His healing word,
and who, through the apostles, continued to perform the same
works of supernatural power. He is still the same infinite and
inexhaustible life, and the bodies of His consecrated people are
the subjects of His Divine influence, and His sustaining love
and care.
Have we learned, beloved, the secret of His strength, and like
Samson of old, do we know what it is to be moved by the Spirit
until the earthen vessel becomes mighty through God to do and
endure where earthly strength must fail? They, who thus "wait
upon the Lord, shall renew their strength; mount up with wings
as eagles; run, and not be weary, walk, and not faint."