R.A. Torrey Collection: Torrey, R.A. - Person and Work of Holy Spirit: 07- Holy Spirit Convicting Righteousness Judgment

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R.A. Torrey Collection: Torrey, R.A. - Person and Work of Holy Spirit: 07- Holy Spirit Convicting Righteousness Judgment



TOPIC: Torrey, R.A. - Person and Work of Holy Spirit (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: 07- Holy Spirit Convicting Righteousness Judgment

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Ch 07 The Holy Spirit Convicting the World of Sin f of Righteousness and of Judgment





UR salvation begins experimentally with our  being brought to a profound sense that we  need a Saviour. The Holy Spirit is the One  who brings us to this realization of our need. ~ We  read in John xvi. 8-u, R. V., "And He, when He is  come, will convict the world in respect of sin, and of  righteousness, and of judgment : of sin, because they  believe not on Me ; of righteousness, because I go to  the Father, and ye behold Me no more; of judgment,  because the prince of this world hath been judged."

I. We see in this passage that it is the work of the Holy  Spirit to convict men of sin. That Is, to so convince of  their error In respect to sin as to produce a deep sense  of personal guilt. We have the first recorded fulfill-  ment of this promise inyBcts ii. 36, 37, " Therefore let  all the house of Israel know assuredly, that God hath  made that same Jesus, whom ye have crucified, both  Lord and Christ. Now when they heard this, they  were pricked in their heart^ and said unto Peter and to  the rest of the apostles, Men and brethren, what shall  we do ? " The Holy Spirit had come just as Jesus had  promised that He would and when He came He con-  victed the world of sin : He pricked them to their  heart with a sense of their awful guilt in the rejection

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of their Lord and their Christ. If the Apostle Peter  had spoken the- same words the day before Pentecost,  no such results would have followed ; but now Peter  was filled with the Holy Spirit (v. 4) and the Holy  Spirit took Peter and his words and through the instru-  mentality of Peter and his words convicted his hearers.  The Holy Spirit is the only One who can convince  men of sin. The natural heart is " deceitful above all  things and desperately wicked," and there is nothing in  which the inbred deceitfulness of our hearts comes out  more clearly than in our estimations of ourselves. We  are all of us sharp-sighted enough to the faults of others  but we are all blind by nature to our own faults. Our  blindness to our own shortcomings is oftentimes little  short of ludicrous. We have a strange power of ex-  aggerating our imaginary virtues and losing sight utterly  of our defects. The longer and more thoroughly one  studies human nature, the more clearly will he see how  hopeless is the task of convincing other men of sin.  We cannot do it, nor has God left it for us to do. He  has put this work into the hands of One who is abun-  dantly able to do it, the Holy Spirit. One of the worst  mistakes that we can make in our efforts to bring men  to Christ is to try to convince them of sin in any power  of our own. Unfortunately, it is one of the com-  monest mistakes. Preachers will stand in the pulpit  and argue and reason with men to make them see and  realize that they are sinners. They make it as plain  as day ; it is a wonder that their hearers do not see it ;  but they do not. Personal workers sit down beside an  inquirer and reason with him, and bring forward pas-

 

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Convicting the World of Sin

sages of Scripture in a most skillful way, the very pas-  sages that are calculated to produce the effect desired  and yet there is no result. Why ? Because we are  trying to do the Holy Spirit's work, the work that He  alone can do, convince men of sin. If we would only  bear in mind our own utter inability to convince men  of sin, and cast ourselves upon Him in utter helpless-  ness to do the work, we would see results.

At the close of an inquiry meeting in our church in  Chicago, one of our best workers brought to me an en-  gineer on the Pan Handle Railway with the remark,  tc I wish that you would speak to this man. I have  been talking to him two hours with no result." I sat  down by his side with my open Bible and in less than  ten minutes that man, under deep conviction of sin,  was on his knees crying to God for mercy. The  worker who had brought him to me said when the man  had gone out, " That is very strange." " What is  strange ? " I asked". ct Do you know," the worker  said, " I used exactly the same passages in dealing with  that man that you did, and though I had worked with  him for two hours with no result, in ten minutes with  the same passages of Scripture, he was brought under  conviction of sin and accepted Christ." What was  the explanation? Simply this, for once that worker  had forgotten something that she seldom forgot,  namely, that the Holy Spirit must do the work. She  had been trying to convince the man of sin. She had  used the right passages ; she had reasoned wisely ; she  had made out a clear case, but she had not looked to  the only One who could do the work. When she

 

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brought the man to me and said, " I have worked with  him for two hours with no result," I thought to myself,  u If this expert worker has dealt with him for two  hours with no result, what is the use of my dealing  with him ? " and in a sense of utter helplessness I  cast myself upon the Holy Spirit to do the work and  He did it.

But while we cannot convince men of sin, there is  One who can, the Holy Spirit. He can convince the  most hardened and blinded man of sin. He can change  men and women from utter carelessness and indiffer-  ence to a place where they are overwhelmed with a  sense of their need of a Saviour. How often we have  seen this illustrated. Some years ago, the officers of  the Chicago Avenue Church were burdened over the  fact that there was so little profound conviction of sin  manifested in our meetings. There were conversions,  a good many were being added to the church, but very  few were coming with an apparently overwhelming  conviction of sin. One night one of the officers of  the church said, " Brethren, I am greatly troubled by  the fact that we have so little conviction of sin in our  meetings. While we are having conversions and many  accessions to the church, there is not that deep convic-  tion of sin that I like to see, and I propose that we,  the officers of the church, meet from night to night to  pray that there may be more conviction of sin in our  meetings." The suggestion was taken up by the en-  tire committee. We had not been praying many  nights when one Sunday evening I saw in the front seat  underneath the gallery a showily dressed man with a

 

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very hard face. A large diamond was blazing from his  shirt front. He was sitting beside one of the deacons.  As I looked at him as I preached, I thought to myself,  " That man is a sporting man, and Deacon Young has  been fishing to-day/ 5 It turned out that I was right.  The man was the son of a woman who kept a sporting  house in a Western city. I think he had never been in  a Protestant service before. Deacon Young had got  hold of him that day on the street and brought him to  the meeting. As I preached the man's eyes were  riveted upon me. When we went down-stairs to the  after meeting, Deacon Young took the man with him.  1 was late dealing with the anxious that night. As I  finished with the last one about eleven o'clock, and almost  everybody had gone home, Deacon Young came over  to me and said, " I have a man over here I wish you  would come and speak with." It was this big sporting  man. He was deeply agitated. " Oh," he groaned,  u I don't know what is the matter with me. I never  felt this way before in all my life," and he sobbed and  shook like a leaf. Then he told me this story : " I  started out this afternoon to go down to Cottage Grove  Avenue to meet some men and spend the afternoon  gambling. As I passed by the park over yonder, some  of your young men were holding an open air meeting  and I stopped to listen. I saw one man testifying  whom I had known in a life of sin, and I waited to  hear what he had to say. When he finished I went on  down the street. I had not gone far when some strange  power took hold of me and brought me back and I  stayed through the meeting. Then this gentleman

 

86 The Person and Work of the Holy Spirit

spoke to me and brought me over to your church, to  your Yoke Fellows' Meeting, I stayed to supper with  them and he brought me up to hear you preach, then  he brought me down to this meeting." Here he  stopped and sobbed, " Oh, I don't know what is the  matter with me. I feel awful. I never felt this way  before in all my life," and his great frame shook with  emotion. " I know what is the matter with you," I  said. " You are under conviction of sin ; the Holy  Spirit is dealing with you," and I pointed him to  Christ, and he knelt down and cried to God for  mercy, to forgive his sins for Christ's sake.

Not long after, one Sunday night I saw another man  sitting in the gallery almost exactly above where this  man had sat. A diamond flashed also from this man's  shirt front. I said to myself, "There is another  sporting man." He turned out to be a travelling man  who was also a sporting man. As I preached, he leaned  further and further forward in his seat. In the midst of  my sermon, without any intention of giving out the in-  vitation, simply wishing to drive a point home, I said,  " Who will accept Jesus Christ to-night ? " Quick as a  flash the man sprang to his feet and shouted, " I will."  It rang through the building like the crack of a revolver.  I dropped my sermon and instantly gave out the invita-  tion ; men and women and young people rose all over  the building to yield themselves to Christ. God was  answering prayer and the Holy Spirit was convincing  men of sin. The Holy Spirit can convince men of  sin. We need not despair of any one, no matter how  indifferent they may, appear, no matter how worldly,

 

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no matter how self-satisfied, no matter how irreligious,  the Holy Spirit can convince men of sin. A young  minister of very rare culture and ability once came to  me and said, a I have a great problem on my hands.  I am the pastor of the church in a university town.  My congregration is largely made up of university pro-  fessors and students. They are most delightful people.  They have very high moral ideals and are living most  exemplary lives. Now," he continued, " if I had a  congregation in which there were drunkards and outcasts  and thieves, I could convince them of sin, but my prob-  lem is how to make people like that, the most delight-  ful people in the world, believe that they are sinners,  how to convict them of sin/' I replied, " It is impos-  sible. You cannot do it, but the Holy Spirit can."  And so He can. Some of the deepest manifestations  of conviction of sin I have ever seen have been on the  part of men and women of most exemplary conduct and  attractive personality. But they were sinners and the  Holy Spirit opened their eyes to the fact.

While it is the Holy Spirit who convinces men of  sin, He does it through us. This comes out very clearly  in the context of the passage before us. Jesus says in  the seventh verse, R. V., of the chapter, u Neverthe-  less I tell you the truth ; It is expedient for you that  I go away : for if I go not away, the Comforter will  not come unto you ; but if I go, I will send Him unto  you" Then He goes on to say, u And when He is come  (un^jou\ He will convict the world of sin." That  is, our Lord Jesus sends the Holy Spirit unto us (unto  believers), and when He is come unto us believers,

 

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through us to whom He has come. He convinces the  world. On the Day of Pentecost, it was the Holy  Spirit who convinced the 3, 000 of sin, but the Holy  Spirit came to the group of believers and through them  convinced the outside world. As far as the Holy  Scriptures definitely tell us, the Holy Spirit has no Way  of getting at the unsaved world except through the  agency of those who are already saved* Every co.i ver-  sion recorded in the Acts of the Apostles was through  the agency of men or women already saved. Take,  for example, the conversion of Saul of Tarsus. If  there ever was a miraculous conversion, it was that.  The glorified Jesus appeared visibly to Saul on his way  to Damascus, but before Saul could come out clearly  into the light as a saved man, human instrumentality  must be brought in. Saul prostrate on the ground cried  to the risen Christ asking what he must do, and the  Lord told him to go into Damascus and there it would  be told him what he must do. And then Ananias, u a  certain disciple," was brought on the scene as the  human instrumentality through whom the Holy Spirit  should do His work (cf. Acts ix. 17; xxii. 16);  Take the case of Cornelius. Here again was a most  remarkable conversion through supernatural agency.  " An angel " appeared to Cornelius, but the angel did not  tell Cornelius what to do to be saved. The angel rather  said to Cornelius, " Send men to Joppa, and call for  Simon^ whose surname is Peter, who shall tell thee  words whereby thou and all thy bouse shall be saved "  (Acts xi. 13, 14). So we may go right through the  record of the 'conversions in the Acts of the Apostles

 

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and we will see they were all effected through human  instrumentality. How solemn, how almost over-  whelming, is the thought that the Holy Spirit has no  way of getting at the unsaved with His saving power  except through the instrumentality of us who are already  Christians. If we realized that, would we not be more  careful to offer to the Holy Spirit a more free and  unobstructed channel for His all-important work ?  The Holy Spirit needs human lips to speak through.  He needs yours, and He needs lives so clean and so  utterly surrendered to Him that He can work through  them.

Notice of which sin it is that the Holy Spirit con-  vinces men the sin of unbelief in Jesus Christ, " Of  sin because they believe not on Me," says Jesus. Not  the sin of stealing, not the sin of drunkenness, not the  sin of adultery, not the sin of murder, but the sin of  unbelief in Jesus Christ. The one thing that the  eternal God demands of men is that they believe on  Him whom He hath sent (John vi. 29). And the one  sin that reveals men's rebellion against God and daring  defiance of Him is the sin of not believing on Jesus  Christ, and this is the one sin that the Holy Spirit puts  to the front and emphasizes and of which He convicts  men. This was the sin of which He convicted the  3, 000 on the Day of Pentecost. Doubtless, there were  many other sins in their lives, but the one point that  the Holy Spirit brought to the front through the  Apostle Peter was that the One whom they had re r  jected was their Lord and Christ, attested so to be by  His resurrection from the dead (Acts il 22-36). a And

 

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when they heard this (namely, that He whom they had  rejected was Lord and Christ) they were pricked in  their hearts." This is the sin of which the Holy Spirit  convinces men to-day. In regard to the comparatively  minor moralities of life, there is a wide difference  among men, but the thief who rejects Christ and the  honest man who rejects Christ are alike condemned at  the great point of what they do with God's Son, and  this is the point that the Holy Spirit presses home.  The sin of unbelief Is the most difficult of all sins of  which to convince men. The average unbeliever does  not look upon unbelief as a sin. Many an unbeliever  looks upon his unbelief as a mark of intellectual su-  periority. Not unfrequently, he is all the more proud  of it because it is the only mark of intellectual supe-  riority that he possesses. He tosses his head and says,  " I am an agnostic j " " I am a skeptic ; " or, " I am  an infidel," and assumes an air of superiority on that  account. If he does not go so far as that, the unbe-  liever frequently looks upon his unbelief as, at the very  worst, a misfortune. He looks for pity rather than for  blame. He says, " Oh, I wish I could believe. I am  so sorry I cannot believe," and then appeals to us for  pity because he cannot believe, but when the Holy  Spirit touches a man's heart, he no longer looks upon  unbelief as a mark of intellectual superiority ; he does  not look upon it as a mere misfortune ;t(he sees it as  the most daring, decisive and damning of all sins and  is overwhelmed with a sense of his awful guilt in that  he had not believed on the name of the only begotten  Son of God,

 

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II. But the Holy Spirit not only convicts of sin,  He convicts in respect of righteousness*

He convicts the world in respect of righteousness  because Jesus Christ has gone to the Father, that is He  convicts (convinces with a convincing that is self-con-  demning) the world of Christ's righteousness attested  by His going to the Father. The coming of the Spirit  Is in itself a proof that Christ has gone to the Father  (cf. Acts ii. 33) and the Holy Spirit thus opens our  eyes to see that Jesus Christ, whom the world con-  demned as an evil-doer, was indeed the righteous One.  The Father sets the stamp of His approval upon His  character and claims by raising Him from the dead and  exalting Him to His own right hand and giving to Him  a name that is above every name* The world at large  to-day claims to believe In the righteousness of Christ  but it does not really believe In the righteousness of  Christ : it has no adequate conception of the righteous-  ness of Christ. The righteousness which the world  attributes to Christ is not the righteousness which God  attributes to Him, but a poor human righteousness, per-  haps a little better than our own. The world loves to  put the names of other men that it considers good  alongside the name of Jesus Christ. But when the  Spirit of God comes to a man, He convinces him of  the righteousness of Christ ; He opens his eyes to see  Jesus Christ standing absolutely alone, not only far  above all men but " far above all principality and  power and might and dominion, and every name that  is named, not only in this world but also in that which  is to come " (Eph. i. 21).

 

92 The Person and Work of the Holy Spirit

III. The Holy Spirit also convicts the ivorld of judg-  ment.

The ground upon which the Holy Spirit convinces  men of judgment is upon the ground of the fact that  " the Prince of this world hath been judged " (John  xvi. n). When Jesus Christ was nailed to the cross,  it seemed as if He were judged there, but in reality it  was the Prince of this world who was judged at the  cross, and, by raising Jesus Christ from the dead, the  Father made it plain to all coming ages that the cross  was not the judgment of Christ, but the judgment of  the Prince of darkness. The Holy Spirit opens our  eyes to see this fact and so convinces us of judgment.  There is a great need to-day that the world be con-  vinced of judgment. Judgment Is a doctrine that has  fallen into the background, that has indeed almost  sunken Out of sight. It is not popular to-day to speak  about judgment, or retribution, or hell. One who em-  phasizes judgment and future retribution is not thought  to be quite up to date ; he is considered " mediaeval '*  or even ct archaic," but when the Holy Spirit opens the  eyes of men, they believe in judgment. In the early  days of my Christian experience, I had great difficulties  with the Bible doctrine of future retribution. I came  again and again up to what it taught about the eternal  penalties of persistent sin. It seemed as if I could not  believe it: It must not be true. Time and again I  would back away from the stern teachings of Jesus  Christ and the Apostles concerning this matter. But  one night I was waiting upon God that I might know  the Holy Spirit in a fuller manifestation of His presence

 

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and His power. God gave me what I sought that  night and with this larger experience of the Holy  Spirit's presence and power, there came such a revela-  tion of the glory, the infinite glory of Jesus Christ,  that I had no longer any difficulties with what the  Book said about the stern and endless judgment that