GRIEVE NOT THE HOLY SPIRIT
Dr. W.A. Criswell
Ephesians 4:30
2/10/57 7:30 p.m.
Now
let's read the pastor's text together, in the fourth chapter of the Book of
Ephesians, Ephesians, the fourth chapter. And we begin at the twentieth verse
and read to the end of the chapter. Ephesians, the fourth chapter, the
twentieth verse, and reading to the end of the chapter. Now we have it? Now,
let's read it all together. Ephesians 4, beginning at the twentieth verse,
together,
But
ye have not so learned Christ,
If
so be that ye have heard Him and have been taught by Him as the truth is in
Jesus,
That
ye put off concerning the former conversation, the old man, which is corrupt
according to the deceitful lusts;
And
be renewed in the spirit of your mind;
And
that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and
true holiness.
Wherefore
putting away lying, speak every man truth with his neighbor: for we are
members one of another.
Be
ye angry, and sin not: let not the sun go down upon your wrath:
Neither
give place to the devil.
Let
him that stole steal no more: but rather let him labor, working with his hands
the thing which is good, that he may have to give to him that needeth.
Let
no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good to
the use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers.
And
grieve not the holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of
redemption.
Let
all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamor, and evil speaking, be put
away from you, with all malice:
And
be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God
for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you,
[Ephesians
4:20-32]
Amen!
I repeat, there is no sound I have ever heard comparable to the sound of God's
sainted people reading God's immutable Word. Now, the text is the thirtieth
verse, “Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day
of redemption.” And if I could add to it, that other verse in the fifth
chapter and in the eighteenth verse, “And be not drunk with wine wherein is
excess, but be filled with the Spirit.”
There
is a revelation of the Spirit of God in the Spirit’s inspired choice of a word
that characterizes Him that most of us overlook. “Grieve not the Holy Spirit
of God.” You could not grieve a principle or an impersonal law or emotion.
The word "grieve" implies personality, love, quickening, response:
somebody. “Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God.” Evidently the Holy Spirit is
not just a principle that motivates our lives, nor is it just an effulgence of
God, but it must be, that in the Holy Spirit of God we have God Himself,
someone, somebody, who can be grieved.
That
word "grieve" has a tenderness with it, a feeling with it, an
affection with it, just the use of it. For example, it does not say, “Anger
not the Holy Spirit.” Anger begets anger. Retribution begets retribution.
But the word "grieve" has in it a connotation of a loving heart that
is hurt. You could grieve somebody that loves you. You couldn't grieve
anybody that hates you. You couldn't grieve anybody that was your enemy. You
could grieve somebody who loved you. “Grieve not the Holy Spirit.” It's a
mixture of heaven. It's a compound more precious than that of an apothecary.
Grieve not. It has in it the bitterness of myrrh, but it has in it also the
sweetness of frankincense. “Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God.”
So
on that premise, could I point out, things that we already know but things that
we need to realize anew? There are personality characteristics in the Holy
Spirit Himself that lays Himself open to grief. If I do not love you, you
couldn't hurt me. As an enemy, you might make me angry, but you couldn't hurt
me; that is, hurt my heart. It's only if I lay myself open to loving you that
you could ever grieve me, or ever touch my soul, or ever break my heart.
Now
I say that in that faith, there are traits open that characterize the Holy Spirit
that lay Him open to grief, and the first one is the one I've mentioned, that
He loves us. The love of the Father and the love of the Son is no more certain,
or beautiful, or factual, or real than the love of the Holy Spirit. And I can
see that in my ministry as a pastor with increasing clarity. For example,
almost every week—and sometimes several times in a week there will be brought
to me by a loving parent, there will be brought to me a child. Now, the little
fellow will sit down there by my side and almost always he is just so full of
feeling, he can hardly talk to me. So I talk to the little fellow about how old
he is and does he have any brothers and sisters, and, you know, try to get the
little fellow to open his heart to me to tell me what he wants to say, because
he's come there for a very definite purpose, and I know what it is. But I let
him tell me.
So
as I sit there and listen to the little boy, finally we come around and he will
tell me. He will say something like this, "I feel Jesus has called me in
my heart." Now, that is the Holy Spirit of God, the Spirit of Jesus.
"Jesus has called me," that is, his heart is made sensitive; it is
quickened. It is the Holy Spirit that opens our eyes to behold a dying Savior,
and to quicken our souls to make our consciences sensitive that we need a
Redeemer, a Savior. We need God. And the Holy Spirit points to Him. The Lord
said before He left, “He will not speak of Himself, but He will take the things
of Me and show them unto you.” And that's what the Spirit of God is doing in
the life of a child, He is showing the little fellow the Lord Jesus.
You
could talk to that little child forever and a day about George Washington or
about Abraham Lincoln or about any other, of the great heroes of us past, and his
heart wouldn't be quickened, it would be a matter of factual knowledge. “You
know, he was President of the United States or he was a great scientist or he
was a leader,” but you could speak to the child and teach the child forever and
ever about the great heroes of the past, and the child would never break into
tears and say, "I feel that he calls me, and that he wants me to be a
Christian." That's the office work of the Holy Spirit of God. I say, I
see that more clearly as I continue in this pastoral ministry. The Spirit
loves us and quickens us, just as God the Father and God the Son. Now, the Holy
Spirit, as He works with us, leads us, guides us, likewise, the Spirit also
helpeth our infirmities, He’s our consolation. Here in the beautiful fourteenth
chapter of John, “If I go, I will pray the Father and He shall give you another
Paraclete" [John
14:16]. And
you could, no matter—I tried. I've tried in the whole dictionary to find a
word that would translate that thing, and I don't succeed and I have in my
library, I have a shelf of translations of the Bible that is at least that
long, from there to there. I don't know how many they are. Maybe there's more
than one shelf. There's a large, large group of them. I have looked at every
one of them, trying to see if there's not somewhere a word that would translate
that word "Paraclete." I haven't found it yet.
In
the King James Version it is translated, "Comforter." What it is, is
a description which you can't put in language, a description of what the Holy
Spirit does for us. If you are sick, He comforts us. If we are in trouble, He
encourages us. If we are perplexed and in despair, He helps us. He's a light
to our feet. He opens the door for us. In our tribulations and trials and in
our sicknesses the Holy Spirit of God helps us. God with us is the Spirit of
Jesus. Jesus is in heaven and He looks down upon His people, but the Spirit of
Jesus is in our hearts.
He
helps us in our praying, “for we know not what we should pray for as we ought” [Romans
8:26]. How
does a man talk to God? How would you approach God? What would you say to
God? We don't know how we should pray as we ought, but the Spirit maketh
intercession for the saints with groanings which cannot be uttered. [Romans
8:26] You
can't put it in language. If you are a Christian, you know exactly what Paul
is talking about. You couldn't say it. You couldn't frame it in a sentence.
You couldn't make syllables of what you feel in your heart. It's unspeakable.
Sometimes you can cry it better than you can say it. “With groanings which
cannot be uttered” [Romans
8:26]. “And He
that searcheth the heart knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit” [Romans
8:27]; God
communing with the Spirit of God that dwells in your soul, “Because He makes
intercession for us” [Romans
8:27]. He
prays in our stead according to the will of God.
Another
thing in that same chapter out of which I'm reading here in the eighth of Romans,
“The Spirit of Jesus shall dwell in you. He that raised up Christ from the
dead, quickening your own mortal bodies by the Spirit that dwelleth in you” [Romans
8:11]. Did
you ever think of that? The Bible says the heaven of heavens cannot contain the
great Almighty God, yet He dwells in your heart. When the world and the
universe can't contain Him, yet He dwells in you.
Now,
my text, “Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day
of redemption, Ye are sealed unto the day of redemption” [Ephesians
4:30]. What
does that mean, pastor, “Sealed by the Holy Spirit of God unto the day of
redemption?” This is what that means; that God has an inheritance for His
people in heaven, in glory, and the Holy Spirit has put your name and sealed it
with the omnipotent power of God that this belongs to you. I have a title deed
to glory; is it any good? Who authenticates it? The Holy Spirit of God
authenticates it. How do you know if title deed is good? How do you know you
possess it? Here it is again in the eighth chapter of the Book of Romans, “For
the Spirit himself bear witness with our spirit that we are the children of
God, And if children, then heirs, heirs of God and joint-heirs with Christ” [Romans
8:17]. The
Holy Spirit attests our inheritance up there. His seal is on it. The title
deed is good. God says so. It's the seal of attestation. It's the seal of
appropriation. It's the seal of possession.
When
you go downtown and buy in the store, there will be the brand name on it. This
is the company that makes that. It is their product. It belongs to them till
you buy. Or like these great ranchmen in the West putting their brand on their
cattle. It belongs to them. That's the seal of the Holy Spirit of God, "This
child is Mine. This soul is Mine. This life and man is Mine." It's a
seal of possession and it's a seal of ultimate and final perseverance whereby
ye are sealed unto the day of redemption. That is all the way.
Not
only does God save our souls, but God saves our bodies. And if we die and the
worm and the canker makes food of them and our bodies return to the dust of the
ground, the Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead shall redeem our bodies, the
whole possession. The Spirit of God shall raise us too, from the dead. The
Book says so. It's the promise of the Spirit of God, sealed unto the day of redemption,
to that final hour of that great climactic, consummating day all the way
through.
Now,
we have an interdiction and an admonition. The interdiction is, “grieve not
the Holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption.” How
do you grieve the Holy Spirit? Well, this is the grief of the Spirit. A
backslidden Christian is a grief to the Spirit of God. He forsakes his prayers,
and he forsakes the reading of the Word, and forsakes the house of God, and
he's not filled with gratitude, and he doesn't remember, and he doesn't give
thanks to the Lord, and he doesn't look to heaven. But he's out in the world.
He loves the world. He is outside the fold and the pale of the people of the
Lord. And it grieves the Holy Spirit. How do we grieve the Holy Spirit? We
grieve the Holy Spirit with a dead church, a church where nobody’s saved, where
nobody is converted, nobody’s baptized. And the prayer meeting hour dwindles
away, and the evening service is closed and the house is dark at night. That's
a grief to the Holy Spirit. And the marvel to me is that the church would have
it so and delight in it and vote to do it. It's a grief to the Spirit of God.
How
do you grieve the Spirit of God? You grieve the Spirit of God by resisting the
appeal that He makes to your heart. Quench not the Spirit. There's no soul,
no one of us, made in the image of God but that it has felt and knows the wooing
of the Holy Spirit. "Come, come, come." That's the reason that I
have a tremendous assurance when I preach because when I'm standing here
preaching the Word, I'm not by myself out there. The Spirit of God works
saying, “The Book's right. That preacher's right. He's telling you the truth.
You ought to give your heart to God. You ought to come down that aisle. You
ought to be a Christian. You ought to give your home and your life to Jesus.” He
works. He woos. He speaks. He's always here. Sometimes for the lack of
prayer and for the lack of dedication, we don't have Him in the measure that we
cut, but such as our hearts are open, He is always here and He always makes
that appeal.
I
could not tell you the number of times that in these very services in which I
am the preacher, if I could, I'd like to stay out there, I'd like to sit out
there where you are, and when this glorious choir sings the invitation hymn,
I'd like to come down the aisle for you. I wish I could. I feel that way in
my soul. I'd just like to do it. I'd like to get into that aisle and come
down and take the preacher by the hand and say just once again, "I'd just
like to give my life to the Lord Jesus.” Feel that way in my heart. Now, I’ve
never seen the great Spirit of revival among the people where the people didn't
feel that way. "Preacher, you know, I felt this morning," or,
"I felt tonight that I'd just like to go that aisle again and take the
Lord Jesus as my Savior." That's the Spirit of God, always wooing, always
pleading. And we grieve Him when we push Him aside. Quench Him, no, no, no.
Now,
the admonition, “And be not drunk with wine, but be filled with the Spirit” [Ephesians
5:18], I have
always thought, what a strange conjunction, what a mixture here. “Be not drunk
with wine, but be filled with the Spirit.” Why put in juxtaposition those two,
drunkenness and the filling of the Spirit? Well, as you think about it, it has
a tremendous appropriateness for what Paul is talking about, refers to the
intensity of both of them. Now, I've never been drunk. I do not drink. I do
not share in it. But just looking at it, I can see why people drink. When
they are dead in their souls and dead in their lives, in order to give them
some kind of lift, life, feeling, intensity, they drink to lift themselves up.
They have to. They are bored with the ennui of their lives. If you're a great
Christian, you don't need it. It would never occur to me to have to get
drunk. It just wouldn't enter my mind. I have such a good time down here at
the church. I have such a good time with you. I have such a good time as a
yokefellow in this ministry. It would never occur to me to get drunk. But if
I were out there in the world living on the husks of nothing, I guess I'd get
drunk like they do. I'd like the cocktail party to pick me up, to give me a
lift, anything to get out of the dead humdrum of life; the intensity of living,
to feel, to be quickened, to be alive. And all of us seek it. All of us seek
it.
Did
you know when I went to Monte Carlo—wait a minute. I went there as a visitor.
You know, I just went around walking, looking. When I went there to look at it
and stood there by those roulette tables and gambling tables, my idea of Monte
Carlo was—oh, it will be filled with young people, you know, and, oh, just a zest
of wild life and living up. I just had that in my mind. I don't know why. Do
you know what? There are two exceptions to it, I suppose. But what I saw,
practically everybody there at the gaming tables were old men and especially
old women.
I
wonder what that meant as I looked at those old hags there sitting around those
tables there, playing those roulette wheels. I just thought, "I wonder
what in the world, what in the world?" Well, as I think of it and look at
it, it's the same thing again. The reason people drink, the reason people
gamble, is some search for life, to live, to be quickened, to feel. And I
could see how they’d do that, too. I can see how a fellow would drink. I can see
how a fellow would gamble; the intensity of the feeling of it. Even though you
lose all the time and, brother, you don't beat the house, and that fellow rakes
in those chips, once in a while somebody will bite off just a little lucky
number and he'll get a few in return, but the house never loses. They always
win. That is, they were when I was there. My, I thought, my, that would be a
poor way to try to make money. Just see the house rake it in all the time, but
I could see how they were in it and every minute of it was for a feeling.
That's what they were looking for, something to live by.
And
the tragedy of it! Ah, doesn't it break your heart when you see it? Here's a
party and they're drunk or there's the gambling joint and it's filled. Don't
you feel in your heart, "Say, fellow, I know what you're looking for? I
know what you seek. But that's not it. “Be not drunk with wine and excess.”
What you're looking for is the exhilaration of living in the presence of God.
That's what you're looking for." That's life. That's quickening. That's
feeling. That's intensity. That's life. That's heaven. That's the glory of
God filled with the Spirit. Why, there's no life in this world comparable to
the glory and the light and the lift of the Spirit of God in your soul and in
your heart.
Oh,
friend of mine, that you'd open your heart and say, "Lord, this is a
dwelling place for Thee." Would you, would you? While we sing this
appeal, into that aisle and down here to the front and by the side of the
pastor, would you say that? “My heart shall be open to the presence of the
Spirit of God.” Would you? Some of you on a confession of faith, and I come,
and some of you into the fellowship of the church. A family you or one
somebody you, would you come and stand by me? While all of us stand and sing.