GIFT OF THE HOLY SPIRIT Rev. ALFRED ACTON 1935
NEW CHURCH LIFE
VOL. LV JANUARY, 1935 No. 1
"Then said Jesus to them again, Peace be unto you: as my Father hath sent me, even so send I you. And when He had said this, He breathed on them, and saith unto them, Receive ye the Holy Spirit." (John 20:21-22.)
In the Christian Church the idea of three Persons in the Godhead has led to many false notions concerning the Holy Spirit. Yet in the words of our text the true teaching of the New Testament is set forth in clear and simple language. For we read that Jesus breathed upon His disciples, and said, "Receive ye the Holy Spirit"-and that He did this after His resurrection. Plainly, then, the Holy Spirit is the Divine Proceeding from the Glorified Lord, which He communicated to His disciples, that in them and by means of them He might accomplish the purpose of His Love.
Divine Proceeding is inseparable from the idea of God. For God is Love, and the essence of love is to give to others, to go forth or proceed, and to communicate to others that which is its own. The Divine Proceeding is the Divine Love and Wisdom going forth for the accomplishment of its end. And, like as a man's love ultimates itself in words and deeds wherein the love lies as an ever-active force and conatus, so the Divine Proceeding produces itself in the creation and sustentation of the universe; and its Presence in the universe is manifested in that conatus to uses looking to man which is universally present in nature. This conatus is the Spirit of God animating the universe.
The Divine Proceeding is therefore called "the Word which was in the beginning with God, which was God, and without which was not anything made that was made." (John 1:1 seq.) By this Word the universe was created a theatre for the operation of the Divine Love and Wisdom. Breathing with the Spirit of God, its every conatus was to the formation and sustentation of man. And when man was finally created, "God breathed into his nostrils the spirit or breath of lives," whereby his understanding could be opened to see God, and to receive the Spirit of Holiness proceeding from God,-that spiritual conatus whose every operation looks to the formation of an angelic mind.
To the childhood of the human race, nature, as a theater displaying God's Love and Wisdom, was the Word of God, a representative Word wherein men saw God, and, being enlightened by His Spirit, were instructed concerning Him. Thus instructed, they also imparted to others. After death such men formed angelic societies by whose means further enlightenment could be given to men on earth. In this way the Spirit of God, the Spirit of Holiness, was communicated, not only from man to man, but also by means of angels.
But a time came when this representative presence of the Lord was no longer of avail. Then the Lord Himself assumed a Human, that He might take nature upon Himself, overcome the obstructions that had been caused by man, and Himself become the Teacher. He then became present with men, not by representatives, but immediately as Divine Truth set forth in a manner that could be comprehended by the natural mind. If men received this Truth as the teaching of God actually present with them, they received also the regenerating force and operation of the Holy Spirit. Therefore, when the Lord revealed Himself to His disciples after His resurrection, and they saw that He was indeed God, He breathed upon them, and said, "Receive ye the Holy Spirit."
The Lord taught the disciples prior to the passion of the cross, whereby He finally accomplished the work of glorification; but because He was then in combat against the hells, and so was in states of humiliation as well as of glorification, the twelve disciples did not see Him as the Divine Man, nor, consequently, did they receive His teachings as Divine teachings. It was only after His resurrection, when He manifested Himself as the Conqueror over hell and death, that their eyes were opened; and it was only then that the Lord could breathe on them and say, "Receive ye the Holy Spirit."
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Moreover, by this inspiration of the Holy Spirit, He Divinely commissioned them to go forth and preach the Gospel of the risen Christ. Prior to His resurrection, the Lord had taught the people from His own mouth; but after His resurrection He was to teach by means of angelic societies which He had ordered and enlightened, and also by means of men whom He Himself had instructed, and whom He now filled with His Spirit and sent forth. (A. C. 9818.) "As my Father hath sent me, even so send I you."
He appeared to the disciples in His Glorified Human; and however limited their sight, they yet perceived Him as the Lord of heaven, and this perception brought with it the operation of the Holy Spirit, which quickened the truths they had heard from the Lord's mouth, and inspired them to go forth and proclaim the Gospel of a heavenly kingdom. By this reception of the Holy Spirit, the disciples were not only commissioned to preach the Gospel, but they were also introduced into the light of heaven and the spheres of heavenly societies (T. C. R. 140); and the testimony of this introduction, and of the faithfulness of their work, is set forth in their teachings as these have come down to us, wherein they directed men to the Lord Jesus Christ, that they might be enlightened by Him, and be moved by the perception of His presence.
II.
The Lord had indeed sent forth the disciples on an earlier occasion, but it is clear that their work was then a work of preparation. They were indeed to preach that "the kingdom of heaven is at hand" (Matt. 10:7), but of the nature of that kingdom they themselves were ignorant. Nor was it possible that they could preach the kingdom itself, so long as they had an earthly idea concerning the King. This idea must first be put away. Prior to His resurrection, therefore, the Lord said to them: "It is expedient that I go away; for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come to you; but if I go, I will send Him to you." (John 16:7.) Therefore, also, it was only when the Lord appeared to them after His resurrection, and breathed upon them and said, "Receive ye the Holy Spirit"-it was only then that they preached the Gospel of a spiritual kingdom; it was only then that they baptized men into the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. (Matt. 28:19.)
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But though the disciples, inspired by the Holy Spirit, preached the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ, their work was still a work of preparation;-not a preparation that men might learn of the Lord as a heavenly King, for the proclaiming of this was their essential work, but a preparation for the reception of the Lord in His Second Coming, when He would be revealed in power and great glory.
When we consider the spiritual darkness into which the men of the Jewish Church had sunk, it becomes manifest that the Lord could not at once elevate men spiritually to see and acknowledge Him in His Glorified Human, save in a general way. For this, preparation must needs be made. Men must first be led to acknowledge the Lord as the heavenly King, before they could be instructed concerning His Glory and the nature of His Kingdom. This is plainly manifest from the whole of the New Testament, the burden of whose teaching is that the Kingdom is to come, that the Lord is again to appear, and that He will then teach heavenly things, which as yet men could not receive. It is also involved in the words which the Lord spoke to Mary immediately before He breathed upon His disciples, "Touch me not; for I am not yet ascended to my Father; but go to my brethren, and say unto them, I ascend unto my Father, and your Father; and to my God, and your God." (John 20:17.) It is likewise involved in the fact that, after the Lord had blessed His disciples, "He was parted from them, and carried up into heaven." (Luke 24:51.)
The work to which the disciples were commissioned by the gift of the Holy Spirit was the work of preparation. They were to preach the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ, that men might be prepared to receive Him when He came in glory. Moreover, by the laying on of hands, they transmitted this office to those who followed them. And although, as the years passed by, their successors in increasing number became blind to the presence of the Lord whom they proclaimed with their lips, and were not themselves actually inspired by the Holy Spirit, yet the work continued; for, despite all the falsifications and perversions which induced darkness upon the Christian Church, the Lord Jesus Christ was still proclaimed, and many there were who looked to Him in simple faith and obeyed His teachings.
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But the time came when spiritual darkness threatened to destroy all knowledge of the Lord, even with the simple. "Except those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved." (Matt. 24:22.) The danger was a real one, and its existence is borne witness to by the denial of the Lord's Divinity which today is openly prevalent in the whole of the so-called Christian world. The time of preparation was then at an end, and the kingdom itself was revealed.
III.
Despite the growing darkness in the Christian world, yet in the mind of Emanuel Swedenborg the preparatory work of the Christian Church was brought to its full fruition, that it might serve as the matrix in which the Lord could manifest Himself in His Glorified Human, and could again, and in greater measure, impart the gift of the Holy Spirit to those who receive Him. The Divine Love and Wisdom of the Glorified Lord became revealed as truly the "Word made flesh."
"This Second Coming of the Lord," says the inspired Revelator, "is effected by means of a man, before whom He manifested Himself in Person, and whom He filled with His Spirit to teach the Doctrines of the New Church by the Word from Him." (T. C. R. 779.)
"Whom He Filed with His Spirit." It is the Holy Spirit, the Divine Proceeding of the Lord in His Glorified Human;-it is this that inspired the Revelator, this that makes the Revelation now given to be the Lord Himself present on earth as the Divine Teacher. And when man acknowledges and perceives Him in that Revelation, and worships and obeys Him, then the Holy Spirit, the Comforter, the Spirit of Truth, operates upon that man, enlightening, reforming, regenerating.
As with former revelations, so now with this crowning revelation, the preaching of the Gospel that the Lord Jesus Christ indeed reigneth is to be done by means of men,-men set apart and ordained to this work. In the spiritual world, on the Nineteenth Day of June in the year 1770, this office of proclaiming the everlasting Gospel was given by the Lord to His twelve disciples who had followed Him in the world; and a year later we are told that they were executing their commission with all zeal and diligence. (T. C. R. 108.)
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By the work of these disciples, there was established in the spiritual world a New Heaven where the Lord is worshiped in His Divine Human; and from this heaven was to descend the New Church.
But what sign could be given on earth whereby men might know that they were chosen by the Lord and set apart for the preaching of the Heavenly Doctrine? In the first Christian Church, the sign was manifest and unmistakable. The Lord actually appeared before His disciples, and said, "As my Father hath sent me, even so send I you. And when He had said this, He breathed on them and said, Receive ye the Holy Spirit." But what of the New Church?
In the establishment of a church among simple men who were to be withdrawn from a merely ritualistic worship to a worship that was real, a quasi-external sign was necessary,-a sign whereby they might know of a certainty, and from their very senses, as it were, that it was truly the Lord who sent them forth. Their work was the preparation necessary to the establishment of an internal church, which should worship the Lord, not merely as the Son of God born of the virgin, and who was again to come, but as the Glorified Lord, the Founder of an internal church which shall endure for ages of ages. For the establishment of this church, it was necessary that a new priesthood be established, and that this priesthood should also be inaugurated by the breathing of the Holy Spirit. But in an internal church the sign of this inauguration is necessarily an internal sign. Nor was such a sign wanting in the New Church.
In the year 1784, fourteen years after the sending forth of the disciples into the spiritual world, certain men instituted public meetings in London for the propagation of the Writings of "the enlightened Baron Swedenborg," the men themselves meanwhile maintaining their connection with different religious denominations. But gradually in the minds of some of these men there was formed from the Writings the conviction that the Christian Church was a "fallen church," and that there could be no true worship of the Lord in the sphere of such a church. This conviction brought conflict, and the result was the separation of a few who then formed a society for the avowed purpose of instituting public worship of the Lord Jesus Christ as the One and Only God.
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Just as the disciples on earth had preached and baptized before the Lord ordained them by the breathing of the Holy Spirit, so in this new society the Writings of Emanuel Swedenborg were preached before the establishment of a New Church priesthood; and one of the society who was an ordained minister of the Christian Church performed the rites of Baptism and the Holy Supper. But with the growth of enlightenment from the reading of the Writings grew also the perception that the New Church was truly a New Church, a New Dispensation; that this Church was to be instituted solely by the Lord, teaching in the Revelation now given; thus that in this Church all things were to be made new.
With this perception of the Lord's actual presence as the Founder of the New Church came also the conviction that the authority to baptize into that Church, and to proclaim its Doctrine, could be derived only from the Lord in His Second Coming, and not from the ministry of a consummated church. Therefore, in the month of June, 1788, and in the City of London, sixteen receivers of the Writings assembled for the institution of a priesthood of the New Church. Two men had already been chosen as suitable for ordination, and the question that engaged the thoughts of the sixteen was the mode whereby these men were to be inaugurated,-the mode whereby the priesthood of the New Church was to be established. For the determination of this question, they turned to the Writings, believing that in those Writings it was the Lord who spoke. And following the indications there found, they then chose by lot twelve of their number who were to perform the rite of ordination by the laying on of hands. Of these twelve, one was appointed to read the ordination service, and it was subsequently found that it was he on whose drawn lot had been written the word "Ordain." This was taken to be a confirmation from heaven that this first ordination was conducted under the auspices of the Lord.
IV.
Mark well that the establishment of the priesthood of the New Church was inspired by an approach to the Writings, and by a perception that it is the Lord who there speaks. It was this perception, this conviction of the Lord's presence, that moved the hearts, enlightened the minds, and directed the deeds of the men who were the means of inaugurating the priesthood of the New Church.
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Can there be a doubt that these men, humbly approaching the Lord in His Word, received from Him the gift of the Holy Spirit? that their action was the action, not of human prudence, but of the Lord operating by His Word? that internally, but none the less truly, the priesthood of the New Church was inaugurated by the Lord Himself by the breathing of His Holy Spirit? This, moreover, is confirmed by the teaching of the Heavenly Doctrine that "the Lord operates out of Himself from the Father, and not the reverse." (T. C. R. 153); that is to say, that there is no secret and mysterious operation of an invisible God into the hearts of men, but that the operation of the Lord for the enlightenment of man, and for his guidance, is solely from that Revelation of Himself which He has made "by means of a man whom He filled with His Spirit to teach the Doctrines of the New Church by the Word from Him." This operation is the work of the Holy Spirit, and this it is that inaugurated the priesthood of that Church.
The inauguration thus commenced is to be continued by the laying on of hands, for by this act is represented the communication of power. By this act the priest is associated with those in the other world who are in that function which the Lord conferred upon His disciples on the Nineteenth Day of June in the year 1770. By this act, also, he is set apart and recognized by men as having the office of proclaiming the Heavenly Doctrine. Moreover, since the priest is to teach doctrine from the Word concerning the Lord's redemption, and concerning salvation by Him, it is of order that he be inaugurated by the promise of the Holy Spirit, and by the representation of its transfer; and this is done by the laying on of hands. (Canons IV: iv. 7.)
As to whether by this act the individual priest is actually inspired by the Holy Spirit,-of this no man can judge. This only we know of a certainty, that by the laying on of hands he is introduced into the performance of that office whereby the Lord provides for the operation of His Holy Spirit for the salvation of man. For in this work it is not the minister who operates upon man, but the Lord by His Holy Spirit. The minister is but the instrument and means; and while he may indeed preach the Word, it is the Lord alone who can touch the heart of the hearer and enlighten him.
He therefore is a faithful priest, and truly inspired by the Holy Spirit, who acknowledges this in heart and in life.
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Such a priest leads men to the good of life; for he leads them to the Lord, and not to himself. And he is an unfaithful priest who in his heart attributes the enlightenment of men to himself, who directs applause and admiration to himself, and not to the Lord, and who is filled with the spirit of anger when men do not follow him. Such a priest is a thief and a robber; interiorly he believes himself to be the Holy Spirit, and wishes to be worshiped as God. Even so, he may be the means whereby the Lord can establish the Church and Kingdom of God on earth, provided only that, by due preparation and orderly inauguration, he is fitted to proclaim the teachings of Divine Revelation; for it is these teachings that are the plane for the operation of the Holy Spirit.
To the natural man, truth appears to be nothing more than an oral statement. Yet truth is the form and determination of good, which is the life proceeding from God-Man. The truths of the Word are that in which and as which Divine Love and Wisdom proceeding from the Lord are actually present with men to teach and lead. Herein consists the assurance of man's freedom. For while man can see the truth, it requires the exercise of free choice to acknowledge the Lord as the Teacher of the truth, and still more to hearken to His voice and obey it. This no man can do, save as he removes those obstacles to the Lord's operation which the devil continually insinuates into his mind.
The truth,-the actual teachings of Divine Revelation,-can be taught by man to men, and especially by the clergy, since this is their office; yet it is not taught by them, but by the Lord through them. In the words of the Writings: "Preachers can indeed declare the truth, and bring it to the understanding of man, but not to the heart of anyone; and what is not in the heart perishes in the understanding." (D. P. 172.) It is the Lord alone, by His Holy Spirit, who can move the heart.
In the New Church the operation of the Holy Spirit is the operation of the Lord present in the Writings. There is no other operation; for the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Lord solely through His Word. (Canons V; T. C. R. 142.) The Writings are not merely books treating of theology and philosophy. They are the ultimate language used by the Revelator whom the Lord filled with His Spirit.
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They are the Lord present in our midst, with power to enlighten man, power to give him strength to fight against the evils that attack his spiritual life, power to open his mind to the influx of heaven and to the reception of genuine charity. But the Lord awaits the consent of each individual man, though His Divine Providence works in wondrous ways,-by preachers and teachers, by friends, by the divers happenings of life,-that the man may give this consent. But the consent itself is given when man goes to the Lord in His Word, resolves as of himself to obey Him in thought and in deed, and prays to Him for help. It is then that the Lord breathes His Holy Spirit upon that man,-the Spirit that enlightens, the Spirit that strengthens, the Spirit that reforms and regenerates.
The priests of the Church are to proclaim the Heavenly Doctrine and to perform the offices of worship; the laymen are to engage in the worship of the Church, to listen to the teaching of its priest, and, above all, to approach the Lord directly in His Word. But all these things are merely the means of the Lord's operation. It is He alone who builds the Church by the operation of His Holy Spirit. And if that Church is not built by Him, no power on earth can maintain it.
Pray, then, that we approach the Lord in His Word, that in our thoughts and actions we be not the instruments of the devil for the injury of the Church! Pray and work that the Lord may impart to us the gifts of His Holy Spirit, that so the Church may grow on earth, and the Kingdom of Heaven be established in our midst! Amen.
LESSONS: Isaiah 61. John 20:19-31. D. P. 1712.
MUSIC: Liturgy, pages 531, 624, 625.
PRAYERS: Liturgy, nos. 89, 99.