R.A. Torrey Collection: Torrey, R.A. - Person and Work of Holy Spirit: 10 The Indwelling Spirit Fully Forever Satysfing

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R.A. Torrey Collection: Torrey, R.A. - Person and Work of Holy Spirit: 10 The Indwelling Spirit Fully Forever Satysfing



TOPIC: Torrey, R.A. - Person and Work of Holy Spirit (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: 10 The Indwelling Spirit Fully Forever Satysfing

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Ch 10 The Indwelling Spirit Fully and Forever Satisfying





THE Holy Spirit takes up His abode In the one  who is born of the Spirit. The Apostle Paul  says to the believers in Corinth in i Cor. iii.  16, R. V., " Know ye not that ye are a temple of God,  and that the Spirit of. God dwelleth in you ? " This  passage refers, not so much to the individual believer,  as to the whole body of believers, the Church. The  Church as a body is indwelt by the Spirit of God. But  in i Cor. vi. 19, R. V., we read, u Know ye not that  your body is a temple of the Holy Ghost which is in  you, which ye have from God ? " It is evident in this  passage that Paul is not speaking of the body of be-  lievers, of the Church as a whole, but of the individual  believer. In a similar way, the Lord Jesus said to His  disciples on the night before His crucifixion, "^And 1  will pray the Father, and He shall give you another  Comforter, that He may abide with you forever ; Even  the Sirit > j^!^ whom the world cannot receive,

because it seeth Him not, neither knoweth Him: but ye  know /Him ; for He dwelleth with you and .shall^kej^i  j^'TQohn xiv. 16, 17). The Holy Spirit dwells in  every one who is born again. "We read in Rom. viii. 9,  If any man have not the Spirit of Christ (the Spirit of  no



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Christ in this verse, as we have already seen, does not  mean merely a Christlike spirit, but is a name of the  Holy Spirit) he is none of His." One may be a very  Imperfect believer but if he really is a believer in Jesus  Christ, if he has really been born again, the Spirit of  God dwells in him. It is very evident from the First  Epistle to the Corinthians that the believers in Corinth  were very imperfect believers ; they were full of imper-  fection and there was gross sin among them. But  nevertheless Paul tells them that they are temples of  the Holy Spirit, even when dealing with them concern-  ing gross immoralities. ("See i Cor. vi. 15-19.) The  Holy Spirit dwells in every child of God. In some, how-  ever, He dwells way back of consciousness in the  hidden sanctuary of their spirit. He is not allowed to  take possession as He desires of the whole man, spirit,  soul and body. Some therefore are not distinctly  conscious of His indwelling, but He is there none the  less. What a solemn, and yet what a glorious thought,  that in me dwells this august Person, the Holy Spirit.  If we are children of God, we are not so much to pray  that the Spirit may come and dwell in us, for He does  that already, we are rather to recognize His presence,  His gracious and ^glorious indwelling, and give to Him  complete control of the house He already inhabits, and  strive to so live as not to grieve this holy One, this  Divine Guest. We shall see later, however, that it is  right to pray for the filling or baptism with the Spirit.  5/Vhat a thought it gives of the hallo wedness and  sacredness of the body, to think of the Holy Spirit  dwelling within us;) How considerately we ought to

 

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treat these bodies and how sensitively we ought to shun  everything that will defile them. How carefully we  ought to walk in all things so as not to grieve Him  who dwells within us.

This indwelling Spirit is a source of full and ever-  lasting satisfaction and life. Jesus says in John iv. 14,  R. V., u Whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall  give him shall never thirst ; but the water that I shall  give him shall become in him a well of water spring-  ing up unto (better " into " as in A. V.) eternal life."  Jesus was talking to the woman of Samaria by the well  at Sychar. She had said to Him, " Art Thou greater  than our father Jacob, who gave us the well and drank  thereof himself, and his children and his cattle ? "  Then Jesus answered and said unto her, " Whosoever  drinketh of this water shall thirst again." How true  that is of every earthly fountain. No matter how  deeply we drink we shall thirst again. No earthly  spring of satisfaction ever fully satisfies. We may  drink of the fountain of wealth as deeply as we may, it  will not satisfy long. We shall thirst again. We may  drink of the fountain of fame as deeply as any man  ever drank, the satisfaction is but for an hour. We  may drink of the fountain of worldly pleasure, of hu->  man science and philosophy and of earthly learning, we  may even drink of the fountain of human love, none  will satisfy long ; we shall thirst again. But then Jesus  went on to say, " But whosoever drinketh of the water  that I shall give him shall never thirst, but the water  that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water  springing up into everlasting life." The water that

 

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Jesus Christ gives is the Holy Spirit. T nis John tells  us in the most explicit language in John vii. 37-395  a In the last day, that great day of the feast, Jesus  stood and cried, saying. If any man thirst, let him  come unto Me and drink. He that believeth on Me,  as the Scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow  rivers of living water. (But this spake He of the Spirit^  which they that believe on Him should receive.) " The  Holy Spirit fully and forever satisfies the one who re-  ceives Him. He becomes within him a well of water  springing up, ever springing up, into everlasting life.  It is a great thing to have a well that you can carry  with you ; to have a well that is within you ;fto have  your source of satisfaction, not ; !i ;lie things outside  yourself, but in a well within and that is always within,  and that is always springing up in freshness and power i  to have oar well of satisfaction and joy within us., We  are then independent of our environment. It matters  little whether we have health or sickness, prosperity or  adversity, our source of joy is within and is ever spring-  ing up. It matters comparatively little even whether  we have our friends with us or are separated from them,  separated even by what men call death, this fountain  within is always gushing up and our souls are satisfied.  Sometimes this fountain within gushes up with greatest  power and fullness in the days of deepest bereavement.  At such a time all earthly satisfactions fail. What sat-  isfaction is there in money, or worldly pleasure, in the  theatre or the opera or the dance, in fame or power or  human learning, when some loved one is taken from  us ? But in the hours when those that we loved dear-

 

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est upon earth are taken from us, then it is that the  spring of joy of the indwelling Spirit of God bursts  forth with fullest flow, sorrow and sighing flee away  and our own spirits are filled with peace and ecstasy.  We have beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning,  the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness  (Isa. Ixi. 3). If the experience were not too sacred to  put in print, I could tell of a moment of sudden and  overwhelming bereavement and sorrow, when it seemed  as if I would be crushed, when I cried aloud in an  agony that seemed unendurable, when suddenly and in-  stantly this fountain of the Holy Spirit within burst  forth and I knew such a rest and joy as I had rarely  known before, and my whole being was suffused with  the oil of gladness.

Ijlie one who has the Spirit of God dwelling within  as a well springing up into everlasting life is indegeni  ent^of the world's pleasures^ He does not need to rur.  after Se^theat?r"and the opera and the dance and the  cards and the other pleasures without which life does  not seem worth living to those who have not received  the Holy Spirit. He gives these things up, not so  much because he thinks they are wrong, as because he  has something so much better. He loses all taste for  them.

A lady once came to Mr. Moody and said, " Mr.  Moody, I do not like you." He asked, Why not ? "  She said, u Because you are too narrow." " Narrow !  I did not know that I was narrow." " Yes, you are  too narrow. You don't believe in the theatre ; you  don't believe in cards ; you don't believe in dancing."

 

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How do you know I don't believe in the theatre ? "  he asked. Oh," she said, I know you don't." Mr.  Moody replied, " I go to the theatre whenever 1 want  to." "What," cried the woman, "you go to the  theatre whenever you want to ? " " Yes, I go to the  theatre whenever I want to." " Oh," she said, " Mr.  Moody, you are a much broader man than I thought  you were." I am so glad to hear you say it, that you  go to the theatre whenever you want to." " Yes, I go  to the theatre whenever I want to. I don't want to."  Any one who has really received the Holy Spirit, and  in whom the Holy Spirit dwells and is unhindered in  His working wilLMQt^waji^o. Why is it then that so  many professed Christians do go after these worldly  amusements ? For one of two reasons ; either because  they have never definitely received the Holy Spirit, or  else because the fountain is choked. It is quite pos-  sible for a fountain to become choked. The best well  in one of our inland cities was choked and dry for  many months because an old rag carpet had been thrust  into the opening from which the water flowed. When  the rag was pulled out, the water flowed again pure  and cool and invigorating. There are many in the  Church to-day who once knew the matchless joy of the  Holy Spirit, but some sin or worldly conformity, some  act of disobedience, more or less conscious disobedience,  to God has come in and the fountain is choked. Let  us pull out the old rags to-day that this wondrous foun-  tain may -burst forth again, springing up every day and  hour into everlasting life.