The Holy Spirit

The Holy Spirit

The Holy Spirit

The Holy Spirit

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Overview

Do you realize what baptism really means?
Through the Holy Spirit we become part of the Body of Christ! The work
of the Spirit is often thought of as “inspirational,” but it’s more than
a personal experience and this book challenges some of those
individualistic and subjectivist accounts. You’ll come to understand
that the Holy Spirit is who God is and what God does as the Trinity. And
you’ll learn how to prayerfully embrace this gift that created the
church and become empowered to live out holy love and friendship in the
world.
“Hauerwas and Willimon
are among the most reliable teachers of the church. Ours is a time when
faithful teaching is urgent in the church that is compromised,
bewildered and domesticated. This study by these trustworthy teachers on
the Holy Spirit is a robust affirmation of the way in which core claims
made concerning God’s Spirit matter concretely in the life of the
church. This book is an invitation to fresh learning, to repentance, and
to the recovery of missional nerve.”
-Walter Brueggemann, Columbia Theological Seminary

"For
too long many Christians have neglected the Holy Spirit; some even fear
the Holy Spirit. Hauerwas and Willimon challenge them to rediscover the
Comforter, the Advocate, for the renewal of the Christian church and
the world. This is a welcome and much needed corrective to common
Christian forgetfulness of the Spirit.”
-Roger E. Olson, Foy
Valentine Professor of Christian Theology and Ethics, George W. Truett
Theological Seminary, Baylor University

"The Holy Spirit is too
often considered the junior partner of the Trinity. Therefore, this book
by two eminent churchmen is a cause for celebration, reminding us of
the importance and vitality of an orthodox view of God's Spirit."
-Tony
Jones, author of Did God Kill Jesus? andtheologian-in-residence at
Solomon’s Porch in Minneapolis. He teaches theology at Fuller
Theological Seminary and United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities.

"When
these two long-time theologian-friends and disciples of Jesus, gather
in a room to write, you can be sure that you will hear a sound of a
rushing mighty wind, feel the heat of holy fire, and be ignited by
dynamite on the page as you read. Whether it be theTrinity, Pentecost,
holiness, or the last things, this is not just another book, this is
literary bread from heaven fed to you by anointed servants of the Holy
Spirit. Take, eat and be filled with the Spirit of Christ!"
-Luke A. Powery, Dean of the Chapel and Associate Professor of Homiletics, Duke University

This
engaging and accessible pneumatological overview,written by two leading
voices of theological wisdom and church renewal, is a rich
collaborative discussion, which weaves together poignant and
wide-ranging doctrinal insight (from the historic creeds, to the
Wesleyan heritage, to contemporary Pentecostalism), punctuated by
perceptive liturgical applications, fresh biblical expositions,
memorable testimonial observations, and passionate pastoral appeals –
all driving toward the earnest prayer of its authors, "Come, Holy
Spirit!"
-Rickie D. Moore, Associate Dean of the School of Religion, Professor of Old Testament, Lee University


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501805165
Publisher: Abingdon Press
Publication date: 10/06/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 112
File size: 609 KB

About the Author

Stanley Hauerwas (Author)
Stanley Hauerwas is the Gilbert T. Rowe Professor Emeritus of Divinity and Law at the Divinity School at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. He has written a voluminous number of articles, authored and edited many books, and has been the subject of other theologians' writing and interest. He has been a board member of the Society of Christian Ethics, Associate Editor of a number of Christian journals and periodicals, and a frequent lecturer at campuses across the country.

William H. Willimon (Author)
Feeling most at home behind a pulpit, Will Willimon’s deepest calling is to be a preacher and truth-teller of Jesus Christ. He is Professor of the Practice of Christian Ministry at Duke University Divinity School and retired Bishop of the North Alabama Conference of The United Methodist Church, after serving for 20 years as faculty member and Dean of the Chapel at Duke University. He lives in Durham, North Carolina.

Will Willimon has published many books, including his preaching subscription service on MinistryMatters.com, Pulpit Resource, and Fear of the Other: No Fear in Love, both published by Abingdon Press.



Will Willimon is a preacher and teacher of preachers. He is a United Methodist bishop (retired) and serves as Professor of the Practice of Christian Ministry and Director of the Doctor of Ministry program at Duke Divinity School, Durham, North Carolina. For twenty years he was Dean of the Chapel at Duke University. A 1996 Baylor University study named him among the Twelve Most Effective Preachers in the English speaking world. The Pew Research Center found that Will was one of the most widely read authors among Protestant clergy in 2005. His quarterly Pulpit Resource is used by thousands of pastors throughout North America, Canada, and Australia. In 2021 he gave the prestigious Lyman Beecher Lectures on Preaching at Yale Divinity School. Those lectures became the book, Preachers Dare: Speaking for God which is the inspiration for his ninetieth book, Listeners Dare: Hearing God in the Sermon.

Read an Excerpt

The Holy Spirit


By Stanley Hauerwas, William H. Willimon

Abingdon Press

Copyright © 2015 Abingdon Press
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-5018-0516-5



CHAPTER 1

Trinity


When we talk about the Holy Spirit, we are talking about God. You may find this an odd remark with which to begin a book meant to introduce the doctrine of the Holy Spirit. After all, this is a book written by Christians for Christians. However, throughout Christian history, and particularly in our own day, Christians have had difficulty remembering that when they say Holy Spirit, they're saying God.


God as Father, Son, and ...

Surveys show that nine out of ten Americans say they believe in God. But we're not sure that the God in whom so many Americans believe is the God designated by "Holy Spirit." Actually, when Christians say Holy Spirit, they are not merely saying God; they are saying Trinity: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, who are the one God. The Holy Spirit is the third person of the Trinity. Often when you are third in a list, for instance, a list like the Apostles' Creed, it can seem that third is an afterthought.

Thus the general presumption is that the Father creates, the Son redeems, and the Spirit — well, what does the Spirit do? Too often the Spirit is associated with our feeling that we have had some sort of "experience" that is somehow associated with God or at least a vague feeling that seems to be "spiritual." Human experience is a questionable place from which to begin thinking about God. Scripture, tradition, reason, and experience are often cited by United Methodists as constituting authority in theological argument. Some even claim that John Wesley was big on experience as a source for theological reflection. Subjective experience is no place to begin thinking about the Holy Spirit. Such thinking can result in a dismissal of what the Bible says about the Holy Spirit and an unfortunate degradation of Christian doctrine. So we say again: To believe in the Holy Spirit is to believe in God. To have had an experience of the Holy Spirit is to have had an experience of something other than yourself.


The question of the status of the Son and the Holy Spirit was the subject of the Council of Nicaea (325 CE). In order to achieve unity of the empire, Constantine ordered the bishops of the church to agree on how best to understand God. The bishops would then become the agents of the empire, ensuring all worshipped the same God. How was the emperor to hold the empire together if there was disagreement about what was real, that is, who was God?

Nicaea faced a big problem: A number of Christians, generally known as followers of Arius, emphasized the uniqueness and transcendence of the Father. Arians taught that nothing could be as special as God, so the Son and the Holy Spirit were not of the same "substance" as the Father. There must have been a time when the Son and the Holy Spirit did not exist. In other words they believed that the Son and the Spirit were subordinate, later creations of the creator. They did not believe that all the members of Trinity were equal; Son and Holy Spirit were God, but not quite.

Their views on God meant that Arians were hard-pressed to explain why Christians had from the first worshipped and prayed to Jesus. The first martyr, Stephen, as he was dying, prayed to Jesus, rather remarkable for a faithful Jew who believed that there was one and only one God who ought to be worshipped (Acts 7). If Christians prayed to Jesus, his identity as God could not be denied. So the early debates surrounding the Trinity were arguments about the status of Jesus. If Jesus was fully God and fully human, then some account had to be given of Jesus's relationship to the Father. Nicaea was the church's response to that fundamental challenge. At Nicaea Arius's position (that Jesus was somehow God, but in a derivative, subordinate way) was rejected. Jesus was affirmed as being of "the same substance" as the Father and, therefore, rightly prayed to as the second person of the Trinity.

Nicaea kept the Christian view of Christ as complicated as it needed to be to do justice to the New Testament witness. Christ is fully human and fully divine, fully divine and fully human. When we say the Apostles' Creed, one might think that after we have said, "I believe in God the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth," we might have said all we need to say about God. After all, something like nine out of ten Americans seem to believe that God designates the one who is creator. But in the creed we continue, "and I believe in Jesus Christ," "and I believe in the Holy Spirit." Most heresies are attempts to simplify belief about God. Orthodox Christian theology keeps our thought about God as complex as it needs to be in order to be faithful to the one God who is triune.

Nicaea affirmed not only Jesus as the second person of the Trinity but also the Spirit as the third person of the Trinity. But, as H. E. W. Turner observes, once the Nicene faith had provided some scaffolding to respond to the problem of how the Christian God could be both one and three, "the elaboration of the doctrine of the Holy Spirit followed as a doctrinal 'rider.'" Turner's judgment is confirmed by developments after Nicaea that were primarily concerned with Christology. That is, the challenge was to understand how Jesus could at once be fully God yet fully human. The later Council of Chalcedon (451), which confirmed that Jesus was at once fully God and fully man, was mostly a debate about Christ.

That Christology was so central for Christian theology has led some to charge that because of Nicaea the Holy Spirit has been given short shrift in the theology of the Christian West. Augustine is often regarded as the origin of the Western tradition. Augustine allegedly emphasized the unity of the three persons of the Trinity in a manner that made it difficult to know the distinct role of each person of the Trinity. Though the Western theologians did not deny that the Holy Spirit has a role in the Christian life, the emphasis has been more on the work of the Son in obedience to the Father and less about the Holy Spirit as one in being and action with the Father and the Son.

Recent theological developments, particularly the theology of Karl Barth, have helped recover for the Western church the significance of the Trinity. The trouble with this renewed reclaiming of the significance of the Trinity is much like what happened at Nicaea. The recovery has been so centered on Christ some theologians have asked, "Is there nothing the Spirit can do that the Son can't do better?" For example, Gene Rogers observes in the second article of the Nicene Creed that we are given a story about the Son that attracts our attention much more than what almost appears to be the random list that follows our affirmation of the Holy Spirit.

In the second article we list some of the extraordinary events associated with Jesus's person and work. We affirm that Jesus is the only Son of God, begotten not made; through him all things were made. He came down from heaven, became incarnate in the virgin Mary, was crucified under Pontius Pilate, suffered death only to be raised on the third day, and ascended to heaven to sit at the right hand of the Father. Moreover he is said to come again to judge the living and the dead.

The Spirit, who was mentioned as having a role in Mary's conception of Jesus, does not enjoy such a dramatic narrative in the Apostles' or Nicene Creeds. Why does our belief in "the holy catholic church" come right after our belief in the Holy Spirit? The Apostles' and Nicene Creeds give the impression that Jesus has a more interesting history than the Holy Spirit. Yet isolation of the Spirit from the Son is a mistake. One of the fundamental tasks of the Holy Spirit is to rest on the Son. Pneumatology, the name of the theological specialization dealing with the Holy Spirit, and Christology, the theology of the person and work of Christ, are interrelated, making any attempt to treat one without the other a breeding ground for heresies that say too much or too little for the Holy Spirit.


Pentecostal Embarrassment

The Holy Spirit's lack of prominence in contemporary theology is odd given that the movement generally known as Pentecostalism is the fastest-growing form of Christianity. Charismatic Christianity has grown exponentially over the last century. The movement that many think began in 1906 in modest circumstances on Azusa Street in Los Angeles has exploded into a worldwide phenomenon, producing some of the liveliest churches in South America and Africa.

Of particular note is the Holy Spirit's special relation with the poor and the dispossessed. The sermon that Jesus preached in Luke 4, claiming that the Spirit was upon him to preach good news to the oppressed and deliverance to prisoners, is taking form in worldwide Pentecostalism today.

The charismatic, Holy Spirit — induced movement has not been restricted to Protestants. In 1967 during a retreat at Duquesne University, a number of the participants were "reborn" in the Spirit. It was not long before the movement spread to the University of Notre Dame, spawning summer meetings that attracted thousands. This Catholic charismatic movement has generally had the support of the popes and bishops.

Charismatic forms of Protestantism have often received a different response from the churches. In fact, the "enthusiasm" of the charismatics may be one of the reasons the Holy Spirit does not have, at least among mainstream Protestants, the same status as Father and Son. Enthusiasm (infused with God) was a frequent charge against John Wesley and his Methodists.

Some fundamentalist churches ostracize members who claim to have received charismatic gifts, seeing such claims as dangerous, undercutting the authority of scripture, and disrupting congregational order. As mainstream Protestantism loses the social and political status it once enjoyed and is unable to attract new members, it becomes fearful about the future. Mainline Protestants sense that just identifying themselves as Christian is enough of a threat to secular culture; they are anxious not to be counted with Christians who speak in tongues, perform signs and wonders, believe in miracles, and are possessed by the Spirit. Progressive Christians know that many of their secular friends think that Christianity can no longer be rationally defended. That some Christians in the name of the Holy Spirit claim to be possessed by God in a way that seems irrational to modern, Western people only reinforces the secularist suspicion of the absurdity of Christianity.

In a field education seminar, Will had a student present a case study in which a parishioner asked her pastor, "What does The United Methodist Church believe about speaking in tongues?"

The pastor was rather pleased with himself to respond, "Oh my God, don't tell me you've gotten into that!"

She reported that she had experienced glossolalia, ecstatic speech, during a session of her Bible study group.

"Perhaps you are still dealing with grief over the death of your daughter," said the pastor.

"I am. Is that what causes this?" she asked.

"Perhaps you ought to seek professional help," persisted the pastor.

"That's why I came to you," she concluded.

We find this a rather brutal policing of the Holy Spirit to assume that a report of unusual spiritual gifts should be responded to with "You are insane."

Another reason why the Holy Spirit has not been prominent in contemporary theology is that some have used the Spirit to bolster their claim that they have a relationship with God that is peculiar to them alone. Appeals to the Holy Spirit are thus sometimes used to give authority to the individual consciousness that implies that the person making the appeal to "the Spirit" assumes he or she has license to make Christianity up, acting as if his or her experience with God is not dependent on the church. Some even claim to have a special relationship with God through the Holy Spirit but do not think the god to whom they are related is the Trinity. There are charismatic Christians who have conveyed the attitude of "I have the gift of the Holy Spirit. You don't; therefore I'm superior in my faith."

Most churches need some Pentecostal, charismatic Christians present to keep the body supple, moving, and lively; most Pentecostal, charismatic Christians need to be in the body of Christ, the church, to keep themselves in a spirit of embodied love.

That's why we must begin by thinking about the Trinity if we are to think rightly about and (more important) pray to the Holy Spirit. Most doctrines of the church, like the doctrine of the Trinity, are the result of controversy. Christians usually only know what they believe when someone has gotten it wrong. That is why those who come to be called heretics (like the Arians) are among the blessed. Christians achieved greater clarity about how the God we worship is one being but three persons because some Christians thought the Son and the Spirit were not fully God.

While trinitarian reflections on the Holy Spirit do not say everything that needs to be said about the Holy Spirit, everything that needs to be said about the Holy Spirit must be disciplined by trinitarian convictions. All the Holy Spirit's work is done as the third person of the Trinity: God the Holy Spirit working in concert with God the Father and God the Son.

The doctrine of the Trinity helps us see how all the clauses of the creeds are interrelated. The creeds are what we believe as Christians inspired by the Holy Spirit. That the Apostles' Creed is a baptismal creed is a reminder that belief in the Holy Spirit is not only confessed by the baptized, but it is also the Spirit into which Christians are baptized. The Spirit confirms what is confessed by those being baptized. Frequently, in the Acts of the Apostles (which some have said should have been called the Acts of the Holy Spirit), bold moves by the church in mission are usually prodded by and confirmed by the descent of the Holy Spirit.

The interrelation of the persons of the Trinity means that everything said about the Holy Spirit also ought to be said about the Father and the Son. Everything is related to everything in Christian theology, so repetition is not only inevitable but necessary. Christian belief is like an elegant web that is at once delicate but also strong. Leave out one part and the whole web collapses. Theology is the ongoing attempt to see the connections in the diverse narratives that make us Christian. A doctrine like the doctrine of the Trinity is a discovery that the church has made to keep us from leaving out any part of the story of God's care of creation through the calling into existence a people called church.

Will asked a distinguished church consultant, "Why do we have such uninteresting preaching and so many static, sedate congregations?" He expected the consultant to cite some organizational, institutional problem. Instead he was surprised to hear the consultant respond, "Neglect of the third person of the Trinity."

Come, Holy Spirit!


The Holy Spirit in Scripture

Though the doctrine of the Trinity is not explicitly named in scripture, we must start with scripture to understand why we even need a doctrine of the Trinity. That an elaborated "doctrine" of the Holy Spirit is not in scripture is not because the Holy Spirit is an unimportant character but because there are no "doctrines" or "dogmas" in scripture. Yet early on the church found it crucial to make explicit certain doctrines or dogmas to help us rightly read scripture.

Dogmas are, in the words of Robert Jenson, "irreversible rules of faith." They set the boundaries for the arguments Christians must have to understand adequately what we believe. The dogmas of the church are often responses to the (mis)-interpretation of scripture, but they also are attempts to make sense of how Christians pray, worship, and live. For instance, we have a doctrine of the incarnation because we want to think boldly and carefully about the wonder of God being both fully human and fully divine in Jesus Christ. So to scripture we now turn, for it is there that we find why, after much controversy, Christians came to the judgment that the Holy Spirit must be understood as the third person of the Trinity.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from The Holy Spirit by Stanley Hauerwas, William H. Willimon. Copyright © 2015 Abingdon Press. Excerpted by permission of Abingdon Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

"Introduction",
"Chapter One" Trinity,
"Chapter Two" Pentecost: The Birth of the Church,
"Chapter Three" Holiness: Life in the Spirit,
"Chapter Four" Last Things,
"The Creeds",

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