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The Spirit supports believers against the world

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The Spirit supports believers against the world (John 16:8, 11) The term ‘world’ ( kosmos ) is used by John more than any other NT writer (105 times, mainly in his Gospel) and with a variety of meanings, including the created planet (John 1:10), humanity (John 8:12) and, most often, humanity in its opposition to Jesus (John 7:7; 15:18; 16:20). In 16:8, 11, he uses the term to describe those who have rejected Jesus.  Despite their unbelief, Jesus reciprocates not by rejecting them but by dying for them (John 1:29; 3:16–17; 4:42). In 16:7–11, Jesus reveals that, when he leaves his followers, the Spirit will undertake the same function of helping people who reject the truth of the gospel to realise the remarkable fact that it is not only true, but that it is good news for them. In particular, the Spirit will convict and convince them of their sin and the fact that Jesus is their saviour. Consider the consternation of the disciples leading up to these statements by Jesus.  In the ...

The Spirit is on our side

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The Spirit is on our side (John 16:7–8) More significant for believers, who are beginning to experience the malevolent opposition prophesied by Jesus, is John informing them that the Spirit is on their side.  He will transform those who were once convinced that they were right to reject Jesus and the message offered by his followers. The Spirit, who is promised by Jesus as his replacement, will convince those who fought against the gospel that they were wrong to do so.  Where believers have only human intellect, with all its shortcomings, to combat voices of derision, the Spirit has the wisdom of heaven available to him (John 14:26). Where Jesus’ followers only have limited courage to speak confidently to those who dismiss them, the Spirit has divine authority available to him (John 15:26; 16:13).  Whereas Christians have limited knowledge, the Spirit has the ability to always see the truth (John 16:13). While they may be unaware of the innermost feelings and thoughts of ...

The Spirit guides you

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  T he Spirit guides believers into truth (John 16:13–15) Although ‘truth’ refers to the intellectual knowledge of truths and moral guidance, the concept also refers to the fact that the Spirit will guide believers in seeking to live in a context of integrity and authenticity.  Our lives are to be reliably supported and directed by the Spirit who is defined by covenant and faithfulness. The Spirit is not just determined to inform believers concerning that which they need to know for their benefit, but also that which best defines the context in which God exists; theirs is a life that is encapsulated by the realities that characterise God, one of the fundamental ones being ‘truth’ or integrity, reliability and honour.  Believers are safe in the knowledge that the one leading them embodies consistency and constancy, dependability and devotion to them, and fidelity and fondness for them. The Spirit is true as well as truth. He leads believers to know and express integrity, a...

Moab is my wash basin

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Moab is my washbasin.  (Psalm 60:8, NIV) T he Moabites were Israel’s troublesome next-door neighbours. When God’s people got “dirty,” He used the Moabites to clean them up. You say, “What does this have to do with me?” A lot! A pastor I know prayed earnestly for his son, who was on drugs. This man had a very successful church and was in high demand as a speaker all across the nation. But having an “addict” for a son was an embarrassment to him.  So every day he prayed for God to change his boy. One day in prayer, God told him He would not only change his boy, but through this situation He would radically change some things in him, too—things like pride, insecurity, and self-centeredness.  He was more concerned with how his son’s behaviour affected his career than in what it was doing to his son’s own life and future.  David cried, “How can I ever know what sins are lurking in my heart? Cleanse me from these hidden faults” (Psalm 19:12, TLB). Who is your washbasin?...

What does Jesus mean by “unless you eat my flesh and drink my blood” in John 6:53?

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  Jesus repeats the truth of v. 51c, but now puts it in a conditional form: unless you can eat the flesh of the Son of Man … you have no life in you. Verse 54 puts the same truth positively, Whoever eats my flesh … has eternal life ; and again, Jesus promises to raise such a person up at the last day. In addition to the repetition of a basic theme, several fresh points are added. (1) The one whose flesh is eaten bears the title the Son of Man (cf. notes on 1:51; in this discourse, vv. 27, 62). In one sense, he is simply a man, i.e. someone with flesh and blood; but he is also the one on whom God has set his seal of approval (v. 27), the bread from heaven, the one who descends and then ascends ‘to where he was before’ (v. 62). ‘Son of Man’ is thus a title that speaks of Jesus as the man where God is supremely revealed, and the flesh of this ‘Son of Man’, unlike the flesh of any other, must be eaten if one is to gain eternal life. (2) The words and drink his (my) blood are added ...

Dick Harfield misleading answer on Quora

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DICK HARFIELD'S RESPONSE TO THIS QUESTION Why couldn’t the conversation in John 21:17 have happened in Aramaic, and how does the Greek language change its meaning? Had Jesus asked in Aramaic whether Peter loved him, Peter’s answer that he loved Jesus, also spoken in Aramaic, would have satisfied Jesus each time, because the same verb ( ḥav ) would have been used, regardless of how strong Peter’s love was. Jesus could not have perceived from Peter’s answers that his love was not as strong as he might have desired. Koine Greek allows different nuances, so Jesus asked for sacred love ( agape ) but Peter responded by saying that his love ( philia ) towards Jesus was like the love of a good friend. The gospels were written in Greek for Greek-speaking readers, so the conversation would have seemed natural to people who probably did not even realise that Jesus and Peter could not meaningfully have had this conversation in the local language, Aramaic. When translated into Latin, the Greek ...

What is Blasphemy of the Spirit?

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Your wilderness and the Holy Spirit

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The Lost Language of the Spirit

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The Spirit and us developing sensitivity

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The Spirit and the silence

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It was fire that did not burn you

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Why do they go hand in hand?

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What do the Holy Spirit and our subconscious have in common?

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Evil it could be worse!

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Why did Jesus need the Holy Spirit?

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What is the Anointing?

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What is this Holy Spirit Power?

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Jesus and 10,000 demons plus pigs

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We grieve with Hope

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As Christians, we grieve. Oh, do we grieve. Being a Christian does not mean that our sorrows go away or are minimised, or that we pretend that the many sorrows of this life are no big deal. In fact, we Christians actually grieve more. God has taken out our old, dead hearts and put new hearts in us. In Christ, the insensitivities and imbalances of our old selves are being renewed day by day into the likeness of Jesus (Col. 3:10). With the help and healing of the Holy Spirit, we feel more, not less. More than joy alone, we feel, at new depths, the seemingly negative emotions of anger, fear, shame, guilt, and sorrow. With sin still indwelling us, we often err in the timing, focus, and intensity of our feelings. But in Christ, we really can, and really do, grow to feel holy anger, holy fear, holy shame, holy sorrow—a holy grief that is wholly different from worldly despair. All joy, no grief? In 1 Thessalonians 4:13, the Apostle Paul writes with the longing that Christians “not grieve as o...