Does the Holy Spirit have a physical form in the same manner that the Father and the Son have?
Be prepared to back up your answer using either the Bible or the writings of Ellen G. White.
I think you meant "defined form", and the answer is yes.
In the beginning, Genesis 1 says "... and the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters." That very Spirit of God created all things, then this: "So God created man in His own image; in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them." Do all men look exactly alike? No, but they do have the clearly defined form of a human being.
The Holy Spirit is therefore not diffused, but like the long arm of the law, is everywhere at all times through angelic agencies. Jesus said, "Take heed that you do not despise one of these little ones, for I say to you that in heaven their angels always see the face of My Father who is in heaven." Mat. 18:27
Jesus Christ is the Spirit of Truth/The Way/Life (Comforter) with us. Being in heaven doesn't mean sitting on a Throne for 2000 years but being endowed with all power and authority over all and administering the affairs of the universe from that station. Even so, Jesus is free to go anywhere He wishes; but more than that, He has His ministers (*** holy angels aka spirit) among us. He hasn't left us. He is still with us, as it is written, "the Lord God of the holy prophets sent His angel to show His servants the things which must shortly take place. Behold, I am coming quickly! Blessed is he who keeps the words of the prophecy of this book." Rev. 22:6-7
1/ This is not a question about the authority Jesus has, or of His abilities to "go anywhere."
Unless we wish to say scripture contradicts itself, we have to go with Heb 7:25 telling us how & why Jesus is in heaven; else why would He need to "come again?"
There would also be no point in His second coming IF He were already here. Jesus Christ our Advocate pleads His shed blood to The Father, on our behalf. The Holy Spirit, is "ANOTHER COMFORTER" (totally opposite to the SAME Comforter - see John 14:6) "And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may abide with you for ever;" "Wherefore he is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him, seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them..." (Heb 7:25) According to Heb 7:24, Jesus has "an unchangable Priesthood," meaning that He does not suddenly interrupt His work of being our Advocate; and in pleading His blood for us, just to suddenly do a mysterious switch-back and suddenly change into God The Holy Spirit.
Jesus Himself prayed to The Father, for ANOTHER, (not the same) "Comforter." (John 14:6). There is no way to avoid that word "ANOTHER." Another does not mean "the same." The Holy Spirit, being called "Another Comforter," advocates to us, for and about Jesus. While Jesus advocates for us to The Father; The Spirit confines His ministry to telling us only about Jesus:"the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my name, he shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you." (John 14:26) Jesus also said in John 16:7 "if I don't GO AWAY the Holy Spirit will not come to you..." Jesus was not ever referring to Himself or The Spirit's coming by way of generation, creation, or procession of any kind. The fact that there are three Personalities in the One Divine Being is so clearly revealed in the Word of God that it cannot be contradicted. It is evident in both the Old and New Testaments.
2/ Modalism, distorts "the image of God" by trying to say there are two Gods. Jesus and The Father. Modalism then tries to say that Jesus is sometimes "the Holy Spirit, that Jesus just magically changes into a Spirit when it suits Him, so that makes three Gods anyway!!
But the Bible talks about "one God," and this One God is the whole point of The Three Angel's Message. "And I saw another cherub flying in mid-heaven, and with blood having the everlasting good news to proclaim to those dwelling on the earth, even to every nation and tribe and tongue and people," (Rev 14:6, HRB) Now, whose blood would THAT be? Inspired counsel tells us that "There is one great central truth to be kept ever before the mind in the searching of the Scriptures--Christ and Him crucified. Every other truth is invested with influence and power corresponding to its relation to this theme. . ." (FLB 50.2)
The One Divine Being subsists in three Persons, not collaterally, or side-by-side, but rather this One Person exists by virtue of each of the others. There is but one, and only ONE God. ?Hear, O Israel: the Lord our God is one Lord? (Deu 6:4); ?For though there be that are called gods ... to us there is but one God? (1 Cor 8:5-6); ?But God is one? (Gal 3:20); ?For there is one God? (1 Tim 2:5). IF we are going to call God anything else other than "the Father," such as God The Father & God The Son, and/or God The Spirit; then it has to be conceded that this "one" is in a collective, plural context. (see elohim of Deut 6:4). But it is not the human theories that try to define the Substance from our very limited and short-sighted human knowledge and perception alone that is the point of scripture; the Bible deals with only the sense (context) that describes said ROLES in the plan of salvation. The Substance, as in physical make-up of Deity is never made a point needed for salvation; but when we misunderstand or misrepresent the scripture-stated roles of EACH ONE of The Three, we cannot understand how God wants to deal with us in His plan of salvation.
This one and only God is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. The Divine Being has a threefold manner of existence, which expressed in intelligible language -- lest objectors find here a pretext -- is fully denominated in Scripture by the use of the word ?person.? In Heb 1:3 reference is made to ?the express image of His person,? or as it is stated in Greek, T?s hypostas?s autou. Since the word hypostasis refers to an intelligent, independent being, the reference is consequently to a person. From scripture; we can only understand this to refer to a living, intelligent, incommunicable being who is fully independent, sharing no part with any other being.
Biblical and spirit of prophecy application of this concept of any one of The Three divine entities are plainly called Persons, or Personalities, so that, in perceiving the suggested (by scripture) divine dimension of the anthropomorphism, we should be able to comprehend at least, some small thing about that which is, in effect, incomprehensible.
For example; we can consider one of the divine Persons in an abstract sense, that is, outside of the context of the Divine Being, as is expressed for instance in Heb 1:3, where it is stated that Christ is the express image of His Father's Person. We can also consider the Person in a concrete sense, that is, as viewed in union with the divine Being, such as is expressed in Phil 2:6, where it is said ?Who being in the form of God.? According to His divine nature Christ is said to be en morph? Theou, in the form, that is, having the being and nature of God so that He is equal to God. As the form of a servant includes Personhood, essential being, and characteristics, the Word of God similarly includes personhood, essential being, and attributes as constituting the form of God, as in any one of The Three. The manner in which attributes are ascribed to God cannot be based on "must be" or "might be." It has to be explicitly stated in Scripture.
3/ Further, none of the texts in your post are talking about the Substance, that you appear to be alluding to, as in physical Substance of any Deity. Scripture doesnt go there when talking about any of the Three Members of The Godhead. Neither do any of those texts tell us that, as in the teachings of Modalism, Jesus suddenly morphs into The Holy Spirit. Confusing the multivariate ROLES of The Three with some imagined Substance that we suppose to be Deity is to go where no scripture has gone before. The scripture pre-condition for "Knowing God and Whom he has sent, is talking about both Jesus and The Holy Spirit, for both were "sent" and both are God. In fact, scripture teaches that we cannot know God by just the mere presence of the Spirit; for He must be indwelling and baptizing Christ-followers, secured by this the fullness of blessing, victory, and power, The state of being filled with the Spirit. Eph 5:18, is a distinct command to "be filled with the Spirit." It has nothing to do with the physical make up or Substance of Deity. Scripture does not dwell on that point for a reason
4/ When Gabriel spoke of His incarnation, he (Gabriel) told Mary (speaking of Jesus Christ pre-incarnate), "The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Highest will overshadow you; therefore, also, that Holy One who is to be born will be called the Son of God." Luke 1:35 He was THAT Holy Spirit, i.e. the power of the Highest.
The context of this scripture immediately suggests that your proposition here is very wrong: Luke 1:35 cannot possibly be talking about Jesus somehow also being The Spirit. Modalism always leads to trying to mix this up. It simply states that the angel Gabriel brought a message to Mary that she would give birth to Jesus, and that "The Holy Spirit" was NOT "that Holy One to be born" because The Holy Spirit, as always in His role and ministry would visit Mary with "The Power of The Highest," (meaning The Father), and that The ETERNAL Godhead, working together, would bring about the Incarnation. There are THREE separate and distinctive Persons mentioned in Luke 1:35
1) "The Most High " (the Father)
2) "The Holy Spirit" (Holy Spirit) and (Its impossible to mix these three up and morph them into one or two version of our favorite God)
3) "that Holy One," (meaning Jesus). Jesus came that He might plead for us as our Advocate to The Father; and "ANOTHER Comforter, not Jesus, was sent to plead to us, as Jesus' Advocate, to lead us to Christ. The Holy Spirit clearly tells us throughout Scripture that He has NO interest in talking about Himself; only about Jesus. It was Jesus who"assumed the liabilities of human nature, to be proved and tried. NOT The Holy Spirit! In His humanity Jesus was a partaker of the divine nature. The Holy Spirit did not, does not have a "human nature." In His incarnation Jesus was still, (not became) the Son of God. Said the angel to Mary, "The power of the Highest shall overshadow thee: therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God." While the Son of a human being, He was still the Son of God. Thus He stood in our world--as "God's only Son," the Son of God, yet allied by birth to the human race. "From all eternity Christ was united with the Father, and when He took upon Himself human nature, He was still one with God. He is the link that unites God with humanity [Heb 2:14 quoted] (ST Aug. 2, 1905). {5BC 1115.1} Ellen White knew what she was talking about here: scripture backs her up all the way on this point. "Inasmuch then as the children have partaken of flesh and blood, He Himself likewise shared in the same, that through death He might destroy him who had the power of death, that is, the devil," According to Heb 2:14, it was not The Holy Spirit who died; it was Jesus! Using your ideas on Luke 1:35 would have to mean it was The Spirit who died! This very point is the red line between truth and error. "Christ and Him crucified." All other truths are invested with power & influence, according to their relation to this theme. (see Gal 6:14, etc). What you are saying here is that Jesus did not die; because He was "really" The Holy Spirit.
5/ And at the end, Paul says, "... concerning [God's] Son Jesus Christ our Lord, who was born of the seed of David according to the flesh, and declared to be the Son of God with power according to the Spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead." Rom. 1:3-4.
6/ In other words, THE Holy Spirit became Jesus of Nazareth who upon resurrection became THE Holy Spirit. He was always THE Holy Spirit, as it is written, "... how much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered Himself without spot to God, cleanse your conscience from dead works to serve the living God?" Heb. 9:4 In other words, the Eternal Spirit offered the body of Jesus of Nazareth, His humanity as it were.
Again; this is a complete distortion of scripture, and its intended context. The first mistake, once again being that you are trying to make these texts out to define the very Substance, or physical make up of Deity. None of these two scriptures are anywhere talking about this. It looks like you have just cut and pasted this from an antitrinity website and not thought it through very well. What you have posted is quite familiar but it proves nothing against The Holy Spirit. God, The Holy Spirit is our Leader into all truth. Of Him, Jesus says, "He will guide you into all truth" (John 16:13). Jesus calls The Spirit "He." God The Spirit guided the minds of the apostles of Christ to write and speak all that Jesus did and uttered; so that in the apostolic writings we have the whole of Christ fully set before us. And the Holy Spirit leads by the Word the minds of the people into a knowledge of all saving and necessary truth. God The Spirit directs the heart into the love of God, and guides the believer into personal and a distinctive fellowship with Christ. God The Holy Spirit is or becomes a witness for Jesus in the soul, and a glorifier for Jesus in the understanding, heart, and conscience. God The Holy Spirit is the Sanctifier of all the elect people of God, who abides with them for ever, as the advocate, as ANOTHER Comforter, the taker of the things of Christ, who makes them clear and plain to the mind renewed and enlightened by Him. God The Holy Spirit opens and gives a view of the unsearchable riches of Christ. And, as the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, He leads us into the knowledge and enjoyment of the Father's love in personal communion with Him. (1 John 5:11-12) Here are just a few of some of the titles, names, and characters of the Holy Spirit given Him in the Scripture, which evidently belong unto him, as in how they are so descriptive of his covenant office/role in the plan of salvation:
God The Holy Spirit is called
"The Spirit of the living God" (2 Cor. 3:3),
"The Spirit of life from God" (Rev. 11: 11),
"The breath or Spirit of God" (Ezek. 37:9),
"Lord and God" (I Cor. 12:3, 4, 5, 6),
"Holy Spirit" (Isa. 63:11; Epb. 4:30),
"A sanctifier" "Rom. 15:16),
"A witness for Jesus" (Heb. 10: 15),
"A leader into all truth" (John 16:13), see also Neh 9:20 OT & NT are united on this! (compare Isaiah 48:16, Isaiah 63:10, Hag 2:4-5) God The Holy Spirit does this through God's Word, The Holy Bible: "All Scripture is written by inspiration of the Holy Spirit and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness," (2 Tim 3:16)
"ANOTHER comforter" (John 14:16), (not the same Comforter, but ANOTHER Comforter)Scripture is very clear and distinctly calls God The Holy Spirit our Advocate as well: (John 15:26), Jesus pleads to The Father for us, with His shed blood; and The Holy soirit advocates with us for Jesus, to help us gain informed consent and divine comfort from God The Holy Spirit; our OTHER Comforter.
"The taker of the things of Christ (for so might the word be rendered), who makes them clear and plain" (John 16:15), even in the Old Testament, Nehemiah says the same thing how that God The Holy Spirit educated God's people on things they needed to know: "You also gave Your good Spirit to teach them, and did not withhold Your manna from their mouth, and gave them water for their thirst." (Neh 9:20)
God the Spirit is "The glorifier of Jesus" (John 16:14), and "the Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of him" (Eph. 1: 17).
Paul styles him as the Spirit of God's Son. "And because ye are Sons, God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts" (Gal. 4:6).
He is called the Spirit of Christ, the Spirit of adoption (Rom. 8:9,15), and the Spirit of God and of glory (I Pet. 4:14).
He is called, "The earnest of our inheritance" (Eph. 1: 14), and the sealer by whom we "are sealed unto the day of redemption" (Eph. 4:30).
The Works of John Wesley, Volume VI, page 200, subject, On the Trinity:
I dare not insist upon any one?s using the word Trinity, or Person. I use them myself without any scruple, because I know of none better. But if any man has any scruple concerning them, who shall constrain him to use them? I cannot . . . I would insist only on the direct words, unexplained, just as they lie in the text: ?There are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost: And these three are one.?
The Spirit of God, as a witness for/about Jesus, bears testimony to the everlasting perfection, work, and efficacy of Christ's life and death. His witness is in the scriptures of truth, where be fully declares that the Father is everlastingly well pleased with every sinner who comes before him trusting thereon for his present and eternal discharge from all sin. To such be says, I will be merciful to your unrighteousness, and your sins and your iniquities will I remember no more." The Holy Ghost bears his witness to this in the believer's mind, and enables the renewed person to rest satisfied with his divine proof of it, which he gives from the immutable word. "As a leader into all truth," he gives the renewed soul to see the value of truth, and to pray to be led into it.
So did the prophet, "Thy Spirit is good, lead me" (Psalm 143: 10). As "a Comforter," be applies the consolations of Christ to the wounded heart, broken spirit, and distressed mind, as the case requires. As an advocate, he pleads in the court of conscience the cause of Christ, and this he does so effectually, that the awakened sinner is brought to see the work of Jesus to be a finished salvation, and that the divine record of the Father is a sufficient warrant for his believing. And the Holy Spirit so pleads the blood and righteousness of Christ under these views of it, that the sinner is brought to believe the righteousness of Jesus everlastingly sufficient to present him righteous at God's bar; and the blood of the Lamb everlastingly efficacious to cleanse him from all sins.
And be comes before Jesus in the belief of it, and pleads it before the throne. The Holy Spirit as "the taker of things of Christ," gives the believer blessed views of the person, love, righteousness, blood, fulness, mercy, and compassion of Christ, such as draw the whole heart, and knit it to Jesus. In so doing he is the glorifier of Jesus, and gives such views, and creates such apprehensions of him in the renewed mind, as exceed all expression. As "the Spirit of wisdom and revelation," he goes on to make the Father's everlasting love more known, and gives the believer repeated discoveries of it by giving him more free, full, and open communion with the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. As "the Spirit of the Father and the Son," he is sent by the Father, in the name of the Son, into the hearts of believers, as "the Spirit of adoption," whereby they know God to be their Father. As "the Spirit of Christ," he leads to him, and reveals him to the called, as the hope of glory. As "the Spirit of glory," be gives a foretaste of it, becomes the earnest of it, seals to the day of redemption, and at seasons, fills the soul with "joys unspeakable and full of glory."
In the book of Genesis we find an equality between the divine Persons of the Godhead. Gen 1:26-27 : ?And God said, Let us make man in OUR image, after OUR likeness . . . So God created man in HIS own image, in the image of God . . . created HE them.? This is similar to the language found at Gen 11:7-8 concerning the time of the Tower of Babel: ?Go to, let us go down, and there confound their language, that they may not understand one another's speech. So THE LORD scattered them abroad . . .?
At Isa 9:6 a prophecy is found referring to Messiah as ?the mighty God.? Quoting The Holy Scriptures According to the Masoretic Text, this verse is number five in chapter nine: ?And his name is called Wonderful, Councellor; The Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace.?
Jehovah?s Witnesses, Arians, and the like will be quick to point out that he is called mighty, not ALMIGHTY. SO we will be quick to point out in return that so is Jehovah! Where? At Isa 10:21 and Jer 32:18! In all three verses you find the SAME HEBREW EXPRESSION, namely, EL GIBBOR. SO here Messiah has the same title as Jehovah God.
Coming to Isa 40:3 we read a prophecy concerning the coming Messiah: ?The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the LORD, make straight in the desert a highway for our God.? We find this fulfilled at Joh 1:23 : ?He [John] said, I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, Make straight the way of the Lord, as said the prophet Esaias.? If the New Testament English were true to the Hebrew text to which it refers, it would read ?the way of Jehovah,? for this is the prophecy referred to which was being fulfilled. Of course it refers to Jesus Christ! So here the prophecy concerning ?Jehovah . . . our God? was fulfilled by Jesus!
The way was to be prepared for JEHOVAH (Isaiah 40:3); it was fulfilled by the one in Whom was "the way, the truth; and the Life)." (John 14:6)
A Brief Comment On "GODHEAD"god'-hed:
The word "Godhead" is a simple doublet of the less frequently occurring "Godhood." Both forms stand side by side in the Ancren Riwle (about 1225 AD), and both have survived until today, though not in equally common use. They are representatives of a large class of abstract substantives, formed with the suffix "-head" or "-hood", most of which formerly occurred in both forms almost indifferently, though the majority of them survive only, or very preponderatingly (except in Scottish speech), in the form -hood. The two suffixes appear in Middle English as "-hede" and "-hod", and presuppose in the Anglo-Saxon which lies behind them a feminine "haeda" (which is not actually known) by the side of the masculine had. The Anglo-Saxon word "was originally a distinct substantive, meaning `person, personality, sex, condition, quality, rank' " (Bradley, in A New English Dict. on a Historical Basis, under the word "-hood"), but its use as a suffix early superseded its separate employment. At first "-hede" appears to have been appropriated to adjectives, "-hod" to substantives; but, this distinction breaking down and the forms coming into indiscriminate use, "-hede" grew obsolete, and remains in common use only in one or two special forms, such as "Godhead," "maidenhead" (Bradley, as cited, under the word "-head").
The general elimination of the forms in -head has been followed by a fading consciousness, in the case of the few surviving instances in this form, of the qualitative sense inherent in the suffix. The words accordingly show a tendency to become simple denotatives. Thus, "the Godhead" is frequently employed merely as a somewhat strong synonym of "God" although usually with more or less emphasis upon that in God which makes Him God. One of its established usages is to denote the Divine essence as such, in distinction from the three "hypostases" or "persons" which share its common possession in the doctrine of the Trinity. This usage is old:
One scholar I have seen is able to adduce instances from the 13th century. In this usage the word has long held the rank of a technical term, e.g. the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England, 1571, Art. I: "And in the unity of this Godhead, there be three persons" (compare the Irish Articles of 1615, and the Westminster Confession, II, 3); Westminster Shorter Catechism, Q. 6: "There are three persons in the Godhead." Pursuant to the fading of the qualitative sense of the word, there has arisen a tendency, when the qualitative consciousness is vivid, to revive the obsolescent "Godhood," to take its place; and this tendency naturally shows itself especially when the contrast with humanity is expressed. Carlyle, for example (French Revolution, III, Book vi, chapter iv, section 1), speaking of the posthumous reaction against Marat, writes: "Shorter godhood had no divine man"; and Phillips Brooks (Sermons, XIII, 237) speaks of Christ bridging the gulf "between the Godhood and the manhood." "Godhood" seems, indeed, always to have had a tendency to appear in such contrasts, as if the qualitative consciousness were more active in it than in "Godhead." Thus, it seems formerly to have suggested itself almost as inevitably to designate the Divine nature of Christ, as "Godhead" did to designate the common Divine essence of the Trinity. Bradley cites instances from 1563 down.
The fundamental meaning of "Godhead" is, nevertheless, no less than that of "Godhood," the state, dignity, condition, quality, of a god, or, as monotheists would say, of God. As manhood is that which makes a man a man, and childhood that which makes a child a child, so Godhead is that which makes God, God. When we ascribe Godhead to a being, therefore, we affirm that all that enters into the idea of God belongs to Him. "Godhead" is thus the Saxon equivalent of the Latin "Divinity," or, as it is now becoming more usual to say, "Deity." Like these terms it is rendered concrete by prefixing the article to it. As "the Divinity," "the Deity," so also "the Godhead" is only another way of saying "God," except that when we say "the Divinity," "the Deity," "the Godhead," we are saying "God" more abstractly and more qualitatively, that is with more emphasis, or at least with a more lively consciousness, of the constitutive qualities which make God the kind of being we call "God."
The word "Godhead" occurs in the King James Version only 3 times (Acts 17:29; Romans 1:20; Colossians 2:9), and oddly enough it translates in these 3 passages, 3 different, though closely related, Greek words, to theion theiotes, theotes.
To theion means "that which is Divine," concretely, or, shortly, "the Deity." Among the Greeks it was in constant use in the sense of "the Divine Being," and particularly as a general term to designate the Deity apart from reference to a particular god. It is used by Paul (Acts 17:29) in an address made to a heathen audience, and is inserted into a context in which it is flanked by the simple term "God" (ho Theos) on both sides. It is obviously deliberately chosen in order to throw up into emphasis the qualitative idea of God; and this emphasis is still further heightened by the direct contrast into which it is brought with the term "man." "Being, then, the offspring of God, we ought not to think that it is to gold or silver or stone graven by art and device of man that the Godhead is like." In an effort to bring out this qualitative emphasis, the Revised Version, margin suggests that we might substitute for "the Godhead" here the periphrastic rendering, "that which is Divine." But this seems both clumsy and ineffective for its purpose. From the philological standpoint, "the Godhead" is very fair equivalent for to theion, differing as it does from the simple "God" precisely by its qualitative emphasis. It may be doubted, however, whether in the partial loss by "Godhead" of its qualitative force in its current usage, one of its synonyms, "the Divinity" (which is the rendering here of the Rhemish version) or "the Deity," would not better convey Paul's emphasis to modern readers.
Neither of these terms, "Divinity," "Deity," occurs anywhere in the King James Version, and "Deity" does not occur in the Revised Version (British and American) either; but the Revised Version (British and American) (following the Rhemish version) substitutes "Dignity" for "Godhead" in Romans 1:20. Of the two, "Dignity" was originally of the broader connotation; in the days of heathendom it was applicable to all grades of Divine beings. "Deity" was introduced by the Christian Fathers for the express purpose of providing a stronger word by means of which the uniqueness of the Christians' God should be emphasized. Perhaps "Divinity" retains even in its English usage something of its traditional weaker connotation, although, of course, in a monotheistic consciousness the two terms coalesce in meaning. There exists a tendency to insist, therefore, on the "Deity" of Christ, rather than his mere "Divinity," in the feeling that "Divinity" might lend itself to the notion that Christ possessed but a secondary or reduced grade of Divine quality. In Acts 17:29 Paul is not discriminating between grades of Divinity, but is preaching monotheism. In this context, then, to theion does not lump together "all that is called God or is worshipped," and declare that all that is in any sense Divine should be esteemed beyond the power of material things worthily to represent. Paul has the idea of God at its height before his mind, and having quickened his hearers' sense of God's exaltation by his elevated description of Him, he demands of them whether this Deity can be fitly represented by any art of man working in dead stuff. He uses the term to theion, rather than ho theos, not merely in courteous adoption of his hearers' own language, but because of its qualitative emphasis. On the whole, the best English translation of it would probably be "the Deity." "The Godhead" has ceased to be sufficiently qualitative: neither is "the Godhead" sufficiently current: "the Divine" is not sufficiently personal: "the Divinity" is perhaps not sufficiently strong: "Deity" without the article loses too much of its personal reference to compensate for the gain in qualitativeness: "the Deity" alone seems fairly to reproduce the apostle's thought.
The Greek term in Romans 1:20 is theiotes, which again, as a term of quality, is not unfairly rendered by "Godhead." What Paul says here is that "the everlasting power and Godhead" of God "are clearly perceived by means of His works." By "Godhead" he clearly means the whole of that by which God is constituted what we mean by "God." By coupling the word with "power," Paul no doubt intimates that his mind is resting especially upon those qualities which enter most intimately into and constitute the exaltation of God; but we must beware of limiting the connotation of the term--all of God's attributes are glorious. The context shows that the thought of the apostle was moving on much the same lines as in Acts 17:29; here, too, the contrast which determines the emphasis is with "corruptible man," and along with him, with the lower creatures in general (Romans 1:23). How could man think of the Godhead under such similitudes--the Godhead, so clearly manifested in its glory by its works! The substitution for "Godhead" here of its synonym "Divinity" by the Revised Version (British and American) is doubtless due in part to a desire to give distinctive renderings to distinct terms, and in part to a wish to emphasize, more strongly than "Godhead" in its modern usage emphasizes, the qualitative implication which is so strong in theiotes. Perhaps, however, the substitution is not altogether felicitous. "Divinity," in its contrast with "Deity," may have a certain weakness of connotation clinging to it, which would unsuit it to represent theiotes here. It is quite true that the two terms, "Divinity" and "Deity," are the representatives in Latin Patristic writers respectively of the Greek theiotes and theotes. Augustine (The City of God, VII, 1; compare X, 1) tells us that "Deity" was coined by Christian writers as a more accurate rendering of the Greek theotes than the current "Divinity." But it does not follow that because "Deity" more accurately renders theotes, therefore "Divinity" is always the best rendering of theiotes. The stress laid by the Greek Fathers on the employment of theotes to express the "Deity" of the Persons of the Trinity was in sequence to attempts which were being made to ascribe to the Son and the Spirit a reduced "Divinity"; and it was the need the Latin Fathers felt in the same interests which led them to coin "Deity" as a more accurate rendering, as they say, of theotes. Meanwhile theiotes and "Divinity" had done service in the two languages, the former as practically, and the latter as absolutely, the only term in use to express the idea of "Deity." Theotes is very rare in classical Greek, "Deity" non- existent in classical Latin. To represent theiotes uniformly by "Divinity," if any reduced connotation at all clings to "Divinity," would therefore be to represent it often very inadequately. And that is the case in the present passage. What Paul says is clearly made known by God's works, is His everlasting power and all the other everlasting attributes which form His Godhead and constitute His glory.
It is theotes which occurs in Colossians 2:9. Here Paul declares that "all the fullness of the Godhead" dwells in Christ "bodily." The phrase "fullness of the Godhead" is an especially emphatic one. It means everything without exception which goes to make up the Godhead, the totality of all that enters into the conception of Godhood. All this, says Paul, dwells in Christ "bodily," that is after such a fashion as to be manifested in connection with a bodily organism. This is the distinction of Christ:
"in the Father" and "in the Spirit" the whole FULNESS of the Godhead dwells also, but not "bodily"; in them it is not manifested in connection with a bodily life. It is ALSO the Incarnation which Paul has in mind; and he tells us that in the incarnate Son, the fullness of the Godhead dwells. The term chosen to express the Godhead here is the strongest and the most unambiguously decisive which the language affords. Theiotes may mean all that theotes can mean; on monotheistic lips it does mean just what theotes means; but theotes must mean the utmost that either term can mean. The distinction is, not that theotes refers to the essence and theiotes to the attributes; we cannot separate the essence and the attributes. Where the essence is, there the attributes are; they are merely the determinants of the essence. And where the attributes are, there the essence is; it is merely the thing, of the kind of which they are the determinants. The distinction is that theotes emphasizes that it is the highest stretch of Divinity which is in question, while theiotes might possibly be taken as referring to Deity at a lower level. It it not merely such divinity as is shared by all the gods many and lords many of the heathen world, to which "heroes" might aspire, and "demons" attain, all the plenitude of which dwells in Christ as incarnate; but that Deity which is peculiar to the high gods; or, since Paul is writing out of a monotheistic consciousness, that Deity which is the Supreme God alone. All the fullness of supreme Deity dwells in Christ bodily. There is nothing in the God who is over all which is not in Christ. Probably no better rendering of this idea is afforded by our modern English than the term "Godhead," in which the qualitative notion still lurks, though somewhat obscured behind the individualizing implication, and which in any event emphasizes precisely what Paul wishes here to assert--that all that enters into the conception of God, and makes God what we mean by the term "God," dwells in Christ, and is manifested in Him in connection with a bodily organism.
Third Person of the GodheadThe grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Ghost, be with you all. Amen. 2 Corinthians 13:14. {FLB 52.1}
We need to realize that the Holy Spirit . . . is as much a person as God is a person. . . . {FLB 52.2}
The Holy Spirit has a personality, else He could not bear witness to our spirits and with our spirits that we are the children of God. He must also be a divine person, else He could not search out the secrets which lie hidden in the mind of God. {FLB 52.3}
The Holy Spirit is a free, working, independent agency. The God of heaven uses His Spirit as it pleases Him; and human minds, human judgment, and human methods can no more set boundaries to its working, or prescribe the channel through which it shall operate, than they can say to the wind, "I bid you to blow in a certain direction, and to conduct yourself in such and such a manner." {FLB 52.4}
From the beginning God has been working by His Holy Spirit through human instrumentalities for the accomplishment of His purpose in behalf of the fallen race. . . . The same power that sustained the patriarchs, that gave Caleb and Joshua faith and courage, and that made the work of the apostolic church effective, has upheld God's faithful children in every succeeding age. {FLB 52.5}
The Holy Spirit was the highest of all gifts that He [Jesus] could solicit from His Father for the exaltation of His people. The Spirit was to be given as a regenerating agent, and without this the sacrifice of Christ would have been of no avail. The power of evil had been strengthening for centuries, and the submission of men to this satanic captivity was amazing. Sin could be resisted and overcome only through the mighty agency of the third person of the Godhead, who would come with no modified energy, but in the fullness of divine power. {FLB 52.6}
The Holy Spirit is an effective helper in restoring the image of God in the human soul. {FLB 52.7}
The Gift of God to YouThen Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. Acts 2:38. {FLB 53.1}
Christ has promised the gift of the Holy Spirit to His church, and the promise belongs to us as much as to the first disciples. {FLB 53.2} We should pray as earnestly for the descent of the Holy Spirit as the disciples prayed on the day of Pentecost. If they needed it at that time, we need it more today. {FLB 53.3} The measure of the Holy Spirit we receive will be proportioned to the measure of our desire and the faith exercised for it, and the use we shall make of the light and knowledge that shall be given to us. {FLB 53.4}
There are many who believe and profess to claim the Lord's promise; they talk about Christ and about the Holy Spirit, yet receive no benefit. They do not surrender the soul to be guided and controlled by the divine agencies. We cannot use the Holy Spirit. The Spirit is to use us. Through the Spirit God works in His people "to will and to do of his good pleasure." Philippians 2:13. But many will not submit to this. They want to manage themselves. This is why they do not receive the heavenly gift. Only to those who wait humbly upon God, who watch for His guidance and grace, is the Spirit given. The power of God awaits their demand and reception. This promised blessing, claimed by faith, brings all other blessings in its train. It is given according to the riches of the grace of Christ, and He is ready to supply every soul according to the capacity to receive. {FLB 53.5}
When the Holy Spirit is abiding in the heart, it will lead the human agent to see his own defects of character, to pity the weakness of others, to forgive as he wishes to be forgiven. He will be pitiful, courteous, Christlike. {FLB 53.6} The Holy Spirit imparts love, joy, peace, strength, and consolation; it is as a well of water springing up unto everlasting life. The blessing is free to all. {FLB 53.7}