Chapter III.-On the
Holy Spirit.
1. The next
point is to
investigate as
briefly as
possible the
subject of the
Holy Spirit. All who
perceive, in whatever
manner, the
existence of
Providence,
confess that
God, who
created and
disposed all
things, is
unbegotten, and
recognise Him as the
parent of the
universe. Now, that to Him
belongs a
Son, is a
statement not made by us only; although it
may seem a
sufficiently marvellous and
incredible assertion to those who have a
reputation as
philosophers among
Greeks and
Barbarians, by some of whom, however, an
idea of His
existence seems to have been
entertained, in their
acknowledging that all
things were
created by the
word or
reason of
God. We, however, in
conformity with our
belief in that
doctrine, which we
assuredly hold to be
divinely inspired,
believe that it is
possible in no other
way to
explain and
bring within the
reach of
human knowledge this
higher and
diviner reason as the
Son of
God, than by
means of those
Scriptures alone which were
inspired by the
Holy Spirit,
i.e., the
Gospels and
Epistles, and the
law and the
prophets, according to the
declaration of
Christ Himself. Of the
existence of the
Holy Spirit no one indeed could
entertain any
suspicion,
save those who were
familiar with the
law and the
prophets, or those who
profess a
belief in
Christ. For although no one is
able to
speak with
certainty of
God the
Father, it is nevertheless
possible for some
knowledge of Him to be
gained by
means of the
visible creation and the
natural feelings of the
human mind; and it is
possible, moreover, for such
knowledge to be
confined from the
sacred Scriptures. But with
respect to the
Son of
God, although no one
knoweth the
Son save the
Father, yet it is from
sacred Scripture also that the
human mind is
taught how to
think of the
Son; and that not only from the
New, but also from the
Old Testament, by
means of those
things which, although done by the
saints, are
figuratively referred to
Christ, and from which both His
divine nature, and that
human nature which was
assumed by Him,
may be
discovered.
2. Now, what the
Holy Spirit is, we are
taught in many
passages of
Scripture, as by
David in the
Psalms 51, when he
says, "And
take not Thy
Holy Spirit from me; " and by
Daniel, where it is
Said, "The
Holy Spirit which is in thee." And in the
New Testament we have
abundant testimonies, as when the
Holy Spirit is
described as
having descended upon
Christ, and when the
Lord breathed upon His
apostles after His
resurrection,
saying, "
Receive the
Holy Spirit; " and the
saying of the
angel to
Mary, "The
Holy Spirit will
come upon thee; " the
declaration by
Paul, that no one can
call Jesus Lord,
save by the
Holy Spirit. In the
Acts of the
Apostles, the
Holy Spirit was
given by the
imposition of the
apostles'
hands in
baptism. From all which we
learn that the
person of the
Holy Spirit was of such
authority and
dignity, that
saving baptism was not
complete except by the
authority of the most
excellent Trinity of them all,
i.e., by the
naming of
Father,
Son, and
Holy Spirit, and by
joining to the
unbegotten God the
Father, and to His
only-begotten Son, the
name also of the
Holy Spirit. Who, then, is not
amazed at the
exceeding majesty of the
Holy Spirit, when he
hears that he who
speaks a
word against the
Son of
man may hope for
forgiveness; but that he who is
guilty of
blasphemy against the
Holy Spirit has not
forgiveness, either in the
present world or in that which is to
come!
3. That all
things were
created by
God, and that there is no
creature which
exists but has
derived from Him its
being, is
established from many
declarations of
Scripture; those
assertions being refuted and
rejected which are
falsely alleged by some
respecting the
existence either of a
matter co-eternal with
God, or of
unbegotten souls, in which they would have it that
God implanted not so much the
power of
existence, as
equality and
order. For even in that
little treatise called The
Pastor or
Angel of
Repentance,
composed by
Hennas, we have the
following: "First of all,
believe that there is one
God who
created and
arranged all
things; who, when nothing formerly
existed,
caused all
things to be; who Himself
contains all
things, but Himself is
contained by none." And in the
book of
Enoch also we have
similar descriptions. But up to the
present time we have been
able to
find no
statement in
holy Scripture in which the
Holy Spirit could be
said to be made or
created, not even in the
way in which we have
shown above that the
divine wisdom is
spoken of by
Solomon, or in which those
expressions which we have
discussed are to be
understood of the
life, or the
word, or the other
appellations of the
Son of
God. The
Spirit of
God, therefore, which was
borne upon the
waters, as is
written in the beginning of the
creation of the
world, is, I am of
opinion, no other than the
Holy Spirit, so
far as I can
understand; as indeed we have
shown in our
exposition of the
passages themselves, not according to the
historical, but according to the
spiritual method of
interpretation.
4. Some indeed of our
predecessors have
observed, that in the
New Testament, whenever the
Spirit is
named without that
adjunct which
denotes quality, the
Holy Spirit is to be
understood; as
e.g., in the
expression, "Now the
fruit of the
Spirit is
love,
joy, and
peace; " and, "
Seeing ye
began in the
Spirit, are ye now made
perfect in the
flesh? " We are of
opinion that this
distinction may be
observed in the
Old Testament also, as when it is
said, "He that
giveth His
Spirit to the
people who are upon the
earth, and
Spirit to them who
walk thereon." For, · without
doubt, every one who
walks upon the
earth (
i.e.,
earthly and
corporeal beings) is a
partaker also of the
Holy Spirit,
receiving it from
God. My
Hebrew master also used to
say that those
two seraphim in
Isaiah, which are
described as
having each
six wings, and
calling to one another, and
saying, "
Holy,
holy,
holy, is the
Loan God of
hosts," were to be
understood of the
only-begotten Son of
God and of the
Holy Spirit. And we
think that that
expression also which
occurs in the
hymn of
Habakkuk, "In the
midst either of the
two living things, or of the
two lives, Thou
wilt be
known,"
ought to be
understood of
Christ and of the
Holy Spirit. For all
knowledge of the
Father is
obtained by
revelation of the
Son through the
Holy Spirit, so that both of these
beings which, according to the
prophet, are
called either "
living things" or "
lives,"
exist as the
ground of the
knowledge of
God the
Father. For as it is
said of the
Son, that "no one
knoweth the
Father but the
Son, and he to whom the
Son will
reveal Him," the same also is
said by the
apostle of the
Holy Spirit, when He
declares, "
God hath
revealed them to us by His
Holy Spirit; for the
Spirit searcheth all
things, even the
deep things of
God; " and again in the
Gospel, when the
Saviour,
speaking of the
divine and
profounder parts of His
teaching, which His
disciples were not yet
able to
receive, thus
addresses them: "I have yet many
things to
say unto you, but ye cannot
bear them now; but when the
Holy Spirit, the
Comforter, is
come, He will
teach you all
things, and will
bring all
things to your
remembrance,
whatsoever I have
said unto you." We must
understand, therefore, that as the
Son, who alone
knows the
Father,
reveals Him to whom He will, so the
Holy Spirit, who alone
searches the
deep things of
God,
reveals God to whom He will: "For the
Spirit bloweth where He
listeth." We are not, however, to
suppose that the
Spirit derives His
knowledge through
revelation from the
Son. For if the
Holy Spirit knows the
Father through the
Son's
revelation, He
passes from a
state of
ignorance into one of
knowledge; but it is
alike impious and
foolish to
confess the
Holy Spirit, and yet to
ascribe to Him
ignorance. For even although something else
existed before the
Holy Spirit, it was not by
progressive advancement that He
came to be the
Holy Spirit; as if any one should
venture to
say, that at the
time when He was not yet the
Holy Spirit He was
ignorant of the
Father, but that after He had
received knowledge He was made the
Holy Spirit. For if this were the
case, the
Holy Spirit would never be
reckoned in the
Unity of the
Trinity,
i.e., along with the
unchangeable Father and His
Son, unless He had always been the
Holy Spirit. When we
use, indeed, such
terms as "always" or "was," or any other
designation of
time, they are not to be
taken absolutely, but with
due allowance; for while the
significations of these
words relate to
time, and those
subjects of which we
speak are
spoken of by a
stretch of
language as
existing in
time, they nevertheless
surpass in their
real nature all
conception of the
finite understanding.
5. Nevertheless it seems
proper to
inquire what is the
reason why he who is
regenerated by
God unto
salvation has to do both with
Father and
Son and
Holy Spirit, and does not
obtain salvation unless with the
co-operation of the
entire Trinity; and why it is
impossible to become
partaker of the
Father or the
Son without the
Holy Spirit. And in
discussing these
subjects, it will
undoubtedly be
necessary to
describe the
special working of the
Holy Spirit, and of the
Father and the
Son. I am of
opinion, then, that the
working of the
Father and of the
Son takes place as well in
saints as in
sinners, in
rational beings and in
dumb animals;
nay, even in those
things which are without
life, and in all
things universally which
exist; but that the
operation of the
Holy Spirit does not
take place at all in those
things which are without
life, or in those which, although
living, are yet
dumb;
nay, is not found even in those who are
endued indeed with
reason, but are
engaged in
evil courses, and not at all
converted to a
better life. In those
persons alone do I
think that the
operation of the
Holy Spirit takes place, who are already
turning to a
better life, and
walking along the
way which
leads to
Jesus Christ,
i.e., who are
engaged in the
performance of
good actions, and who
abide in
God.
6. That the
working of the
Father and the
Son operates both in
saints and in
sinners, is
manifest from this, that all who are
rational beings are
partakers of the
word,
i.e., of
reason, and by this
means bear certain seeds,
implanted within them, of
wisdom and
justice, which is
Christ. Now, in Him who
truly exists, and who
said by
Moses, "I Am Who I Am," all
things, whatever they are,
participate; which
participation in
God the
Father is
shared both by
just men and
sinners, by
rational and
irrational beings, and by all
things universally which
exist. The
Apostle Paul also
shows truly that all have a
share in
Christ, when he
says, "
Say not in thine
heart, Who shall
ascend into
heaven? (
i.e., to
bring Christ down from above;) or who shall
descend into the
deep? (that is, to
bring up
Christ again from the
dead.) But what
saith the
Scripture? The
word is
nigh thee, even in thy
mouth, and in thy
heart." By which he
means that
Christ is in the
heart of all, in
respect of His
being the
word or
reason, by
participating in which they are
rational beings. That
declaration also in the
Gospel, "If I had not
come and
spoken unto them, they had not had
sin; but now they have no
excuse for their
sin,"
renders it
manifest and
patent to all who have a
rational knowledge of how
long a
time man is without
sin, and from what
period he is
liable to it, how, by
participating in the
word or
reason,
men are
said to have
sinned,
viz., from the
time they are made
capable of
understanding and
knowledge, when the
reason implanted within has
suggested to them the
difference between
good and
evil; and after they have already
begun to
know what
evil is, they are made
liable to
sin, if they
commit it. And this is the
meaning of the
expression, that "
men have no
excuse for their
sin,"
viz., that, from the
time the
divine word or
reason has
begun to
show them
internally the
difference between
good and
evil, they
ought to
avoid and
guard against that which is
wicked: "For to him who
knoweth to do
good, and
doeth it not, to him it is
sin." Moreover, that all
men are not without
communion with
God, is
taught in the
Gospel thus, by the
Saviour's
words: "The
kingdom of
God cometh not with
observation; neither shall they
say,
Lo here! or,
lo there! but the
kingdom of
God is within you." But here we must
see whether this does not
bear the same
meaning with the
expression in
Genesis: "And He
breathed into his
face the
breath of
life, and
man became a
living soul." For if this be
understood as
applying generally to all
men, then all
men have a
share in
God.
7. But if this is to be
understood as
spoken of the
Spirit of
God, since
Adam also is found to have
prophesied of some
things, it
may be
taken not as of
general application, but as
confined to those who are
saints.
Finally, also, at the
time of the
flood, when all
flesh had
corrupter their
way before
God, it is
recorded that
God spoke thus, as of
undeserving men and
sinners: "My
Spirit shall not
abide with those
men for ever, because they are
flesh." By which, it is
clearly shown that the
Spirit of
God is
taken away from all who are
unworthy. In the
Psalms also it is
written: "Thou
wilt take away their
spirit, and they will
die, and
return to their
earth. Thou
wilt send forth Thy
Spirit, and they shall be
created, and Thou
wilt renew the
face of the
earth; " which is
manifestly intended of the
Holy Spirit, who, after
sinners and
unworthy persons have been
taken away and
destroyed,
creates for Himself a
new people, and
renews the
face of the
earth, when,
laying aside, through the
grace of the
Spirit, the
old map with his
deeds, they begin to
walk in
newness of
life. And therefore the
expression is
competently applied to the
Holy Spirit, because He will
take up His
dwelling, not in all
men, nor in those who are
flesh, but in those whose
land has been
renewed.
Lastly, for this
reason was the
grace and
revelation of the
Holy Spirit bestowed by the
imposition of the
apostles'
hands after
baptism. Our
Saviour also, after the
resurrection, when
old things had already
passed away, and all
things had become
new, Himself a
new man, and the
first-born from the
dead, His
apostles also
being renewed by
faith in His
resurrection,
says, "
Receive the
Holy Spirit; " This is
doubtless what the
Lord the
Saviour meant to
convey in the
Gospel, when He
said that
new wine cannot be
put into
old bottles, but
commanded that the
bottles should be made
new,
i.e., that
men should
walk in
newness of
life, that they might
receive the
new wine,
i.e., the
newness of
grace of the
Holy Spirit. In this
manner, then, is the
working of the
power of
God the
Father and of the
Son extended without
distinction to every
creature; but a
share in the
Holy Spirit we
find possessed only by the
saints. And therefore it is
said, "No
man can
say that
Jesus is
Lord, but by the
Holy Ghost." And on one
occasion,
scarcely even the
apostles themselves are
deemed worthy to
hear the
words, "Ye shall
receive the
power of the
Holy Ghost coming upon you." For this
reason, also, I
think it
follows that he who has
committed a
sin against the
Son of
man is
deserving of
forgiveness; because if he who is a
participator of the
word or
reason of
God cease to
live agreeably to
reason, he seems to have
fallen into a
state of
ignorance or
folly, and therefore to
deserve forgiveness; whereas he who has been
deemed worthy to have a
portion of the
Holy Spirit, and who has
relapsed, is, by this very
act and
work,
said to be
guilty of
blasphemy against the
Holy Spirit. Let no one indeed
suppose that we, from
having said that the
Holy Spirit is
conferred upon the
saints alone, but that the
benefits or
operations of the
Father and of the
Son extend to
good and
bad, to
just and
unjust, by so
doing give a
preference to the
Holy Spirit over the
Father and the
Son, or
assert that His
dignity is
greater, which
certainly would be a very
illogical conclusion. For it is the
peculiarity of His
grace and
operations that we have been
describing. Moreover, nothing in the
Trinity can be
called greater or less, since the
fountain of
divinity alone
contains all
things by His
word and
reason, and by the
Spirit of His
mouth sanctifies all
things which are
worthy of
sanctification, as it is
written in the
Psalm: "By the
word of the
Lord were the
heavens strengthened, and all their
power by the
Spirit of His
mouth." There is also a
special working of
God the
Father, besides that by which He
bestowed upon all
things the
gift of
natural life. There is also a
special ministry of the
Lord Jesus Christ to those upon whom he
confers by
nature the
gift of
reason, by
means of which they are
enabled to be
rightly what they are. There is also another
grace of the
Holy Spirit, which is
bestowed upon the
deserving, through the
ministry of
Christ and the
working of the
Father, in
proportion to the
merits of those who are
rendered capable of
receiving it. This is most
clearly pointed out by the
Apostle Paul, when
demonstrating that the
power of the
Trinity is one and the same, in the
words, "There are
diversities of
gifts, but the same
Spirit; there are
diversities of
administrations, but the same
Lord; and there are
diversities of
operations, but it is the same
God who
worketh all in all. But the
manifestation of the
Spirit is
given to every
man to
profit:
withal." From which it most
clearly follows that there is no
difference in the
Trinity, but that which is
called the
gift of the
Spirit is made
known through the
Son, and
operated by
God the
Father. "But all these
worketh that one and the
self-same Spirit,
dividing to every one
severally as He will."
8.
Having made these
declarations regarding the
Unity of the
Father, and of the
Son, and of the
Holy Spirit, let us
return to the
order in which we
began the
discussion.
God the
Father bestows upon all,
existence; and
participation in
Christ, in
respect of His
being the
word of
reason,
renders them
rational beings. From which it
follows that they are
deserving either of
praise or
blame, because
capable of
virtue and
vice. On this
account, therefore, is the
grace of the
Holy Ghost present, that those
beings which are not
holy in their
essence may be
rendered holy by
participating in it.
Seeing, then, that
firstly, they
derive their
existence from
God the
Father;
secondly, their
rational nature from the
Word;
thirdly, their
holiness from the
Holy Spirit,-those who have been
previously sanctified by the
Holy Spirit are again made
capable of
receiving Christ, in
respect that He is the
righteousness of
God; and those who have
earned advancement to this
grade by the
sanctification of the
Holy Spirit, will nevertheless
obtain the
gift of
wisdom according to the
power and
working of the
Spirit of
God. And this I
consider is
Paul's
meaning, when he
says that to "some is
given the
word of
wisdom, to others the
word of
knowledge, according to the same
Spirit." And while
pointing out the
individual distinction of
gifts, he
refers the whole of them to the
source of all
things. in the
words, "There are
diversities of
operations, but one
God who
worketh all in all." Whence also the
working of the
Father, which
confers existence upon all
things, is found to be more
glorious and
magnificent, while each one, by
participation in
Christ, as
being wisdom, and
knowledge, and
sanctification, makes
progress, and
advances to
higher degrees of
perfection; and
seeing it is by
partaking of the
Holy Spirit that any one is made
purer and
holier, he
obtains, when he is made
worthy, the
grace of
wisdom and
knowledge, in
order that, after all
stains of
pollution and
ignorance are
cleansed and
taken away, he
may make so
great an
advance in
holiness and
purity, that the
nature which he
received from
God may become such as is
worthy of Him who
gave it to be
pure and
perfect, so that the
being which
exists may be as
worthy as He who
called it into
existence. For, in this
way, he who is such as his
Creator wished him to be, will
receive from
God power always to
exist, and to
abide for ever. That this
may be the
case, and that those whom He has
created may be
unceasingly and
inseparably present with Him, Who is, it is the
business of
wisdom to
instruct and
train them, and to
bring them to
perfection by
confirmation of His
Holy Spirit and
unceasing sanctification, by which alone are they
capable of
receiving God. In this
way, then, by the
renewal of the
ceaseless working of
Father,
Son, and
Holy Spirit in us, in its
various stages of
progress, shall we be
able at some
future time perhaps, although with
difficulty, to
behold the
holy and the
blessed life, in which (as it is only after many
struggles that we are
able to
reach it) we
ought so to
continue, that no
satiety of that
blessedness should ever
seize us; but the more we
perceive its
blessedness, the more should be
increased and
intensified within us the
longing for the same, while we ever more
eagerly and
freely receive and
hold fast the
Father, and the
Son, and the
Holy Spirit. But if
satiety should ever
take hold of any one of those who
stand on the
highest and
perfect summit of
attainment, I do not
think that such an one would
suddenly be
deposed from his
position and
fall away, but that he must
decline gradually and
little by
little, so that it
may sometimes
happen that if a
brief lapsus take place, and the
individual quickly repent and
return to himself, he
may not
utterly fall away, but
may retrace his
steps, and
return to his former
place, and again make
good that which had been
lost by his
negligence.