|
The Indwelling of the Holy
Spirit
by Hank Hanegraaff
Do you not know that your body
is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have
received from God? (1 Cor. 6:19) -------------------------------------------
One of the most frequently asked questions on
the Bible Answer Man broadcast this past December was, "What is
meant when we affirm that the Holy Spirit is in us? Does it mean the
Holy Spirit is physically located inside of our physical bodies?"
One caller believed this is precisely what
Scripture teaches. "First Corinthians 6:19 says the Holy Spirit
is in me. That means He is inside my physical body. In means in."
She then added, "The Holy Spirit is
everywhere. Surely you must know about the omnipresence of the Holy
Spirit. Everywhere means everywhere."
"Does everywhere include unbelievers?"
I asked.
"No!" she replied emphatically.
"He's everywhere except in unbelievers."
I explained to her that to ask where the Holy
Spirit is is to confuse categories. When we speak of the Holy Spirit,
we speak of who and what, not where in the physical sense. To ask
spatial questions concerning a Being who is Spirit and does not have
location in space is analogous to asking what the color blue tastes
like.
First, it should be pointed out that Scripture
teaches that the Holy Spirit is not a material or physical being. In
the Gospel of John, Jesus clearly communicates that "God is
spirit, and his worshipers must worship in spirit and in truth"
(John 4:24). Contrary to the assertions of contemporary teachers such
as Benny Hinn, the Holy Spirit does not have arms and legs. To ascribe
physical qualities to a purely spiritual being is illogical and
contradictory.
Furthermore, when Scripture speaks of the Holy
Spirit being omnipresent or present everywhere (Ps. 139:1-10), it is
not communicating that the Holy Spirit is physically distributed
throughout the universe, but that the Holy Spirit is present (with all
His fullness) in every part of creation; that is, the Holy Spirit
exerts direct causal influence everywhere in space and time. Thus
Scripture teaches God's creative and sustaining relationship to the
cosmos rather than His physical location in the cosmos.
To speak of God's "whereness" in terms
of His physical location in the world rather than His relationship to
the world has more in common with the panentheism of heretical process
theology (currently popular in liberal circles) than with classical
Christian theism. Panentheism holds that God is intrinsically
"in" the world while classical theism holds that God
properly exists outside of time and space, as One who "inhabiteth
eternity" (Isa. 57:15, KJV). Nonetheless, nothing in time and
space exists apart from God's nonspatial and nontemporal presence, for
"in him we live and move and have our being" (Acts 17:28).
The danger of ascribing physical location to the
Person of the Holy Spirit is that it logically implies that the Holy
Spirit is by nature a material being. When 1 Corinthians 6:19 says the
Holy Spirit is in you, it is describing a personal relationship rather
than a physical location. Thus to say that the Holy Spirit is in you
is not to point out where the Holy Spirit is physically located, but
rather to point out that we have come into a special, intimate,
personal relationship with Him through repentance. Similarly, when
Jesus says, "the Father is in me, and I in the Father" (John
10:38), He is not speaking of physical location but intimacy of
relationship.
In addition, it should be noted that the
preposition in has a variety of meanings. When I say that I am
"in hot water," I am using a figure of speech to describe my
relationship to trouble, not to my daily shower. Likewise, when I say
that my loved ones will always be "in my heart," I am using
a figure of speech to describe a relationship of love. While having a
loved one in your heart pales by comparison to having the Holy Spirit
in you, in both cases a personal relationship rather than a physical
location is being described.
To deny that the Holy Spirit is spatially
locatable within us is not to deny that He is actively locatable
within us, working redemptively within the deepest part of our beings
to conform us into the image of Christ. Far from detracting from our
nearness to the Holy Spirit, the classical Christian view intensifies
the intimacy of our special relationship to the Creator as well as the
benefits of our redemption.
Finally, the great dedicatory prayer of King
Solomon (1 Kings 8) reveals the futility of believing that the
infinite Holy Spirit can be physically contained in any finite space,
let alone the human body. Indeed, Solomon exclaimed, "But will
God really dwell on earth? The heavens, even the highest heaven,
cannot contain you. How much less this temple I have built!" (v.
27). Like Solomon, the apostle Paul affirmed that God "does not
live in temples built by hands" (Acts 17:24).
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
This article originally appeared in the
Practical Apologetics column of the July-August 1997 CHRISTIAN
RESEARCH JOURNAL. To subscribe to the Journal, call toll-free (888)
7000-CRI.
|