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How to Walk in
the Spirit
By John David Hicks, Evangelist / Bible
Teacher
Summer 2002 · Volume 6 Number 3
I say then: Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not
fulfill the lust of the flesh” (Galatians 5:16 nkjv). "This is the message
we have heard from him and declare to you: God is light; in him there is no
darkness at all. If we claim to have fellowship with him yet walk in the
darkness, we lie and do not live by the truth. But if we walk in the light,
as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of
Jesus, his Son, purifies us from all sin" (1 John 1:5-7 niv). "Let this mind
be in you which was also in Christ Jesus (Philippians 2:5 nkjv).
By John David Hicks
My last newsletter article focused on being filled
with the Holy Spirit. ... To do this, you need to avoid two attitudes
that will dim your faith, and you need to cultivate the mind of Christ.
Focusing on Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith, instead of
yourself, other people, and circumstances will produce your walk in the
Spirit.
Grieving
the Holy Spirit
The apostle Paul warns us in Ephesians 4:30, "And do
not grieve the Holy Spirit of God." The first condition that can dim your
faith and hinder your walk is grieving the Spirit with known, unconfessed
sin. Sin wants to hide in the shadows of your heart. Our human tendency is
to hide sin, to cover it up, to put on a "good front." As long as you do
that, the sin is not cleansed and dealt with. Let the light of the Holy
Spirit expose what is in your heart so it can be cleansed.
Jesus says the Holy Spirit's job is to reconcile you
to God. "When he comes, he will convince the world of its sin, and of God's
righteousness, and of the coming judgment" (John 16:8 nlt). The key word is
convince (reprove in kjv). It is a legal word that means "to bring to light,
to expose, to refute, to convict and convince." The Holy Sprit will use
God's law to show you your sin and bring you to Christ. Without the law and
conviction, there can be no salvation.
Sin is rebellion in addition to unbelief and brings
God's wrath. God is holy and righteous and will not ignore your sin. There
is a day of reckoning when all sin will be judged. Thus, the "fear of God is
the beginning of wisdom." Without this fear, you won't obey God's
commandments. The early church walked "in the fear of the Lord" (Acts 9:31),
and so must you. "Knowing therefore the terror of the Lord, we persuade men"
(2 Corinthians 5:11 kjv). The "fear of the Lord" causes men to flee from sin
(Proverbs 16:6).
Don't break the Holy Sprit's heart. The Spirit is moving and
breathing in you, and is the most intimate part of your life, making you fit
for the Spirit. Don't take such a gift for granted. "Make a clean break with
all evil. Renounce cutting and backbiting gossip. Be gentle with one
another, sensitive to each other's needs. Forgive one another as quickly and
thoroughly as God in Christ forgave you" (Ephesians 4:30-32 The Message).
All sinful acts are committed twice: once in your
mind and once in your behavior. To win the victory, you must first win the
battle in your mind. The battle is won when your focus changes from the
temptation to the Lord. "Set your mind on the things above, not on the
things that are on earth" (Colossians 3:2 nasb). Walking in the Spirit
requires following, by keeping your focus on the Lord and setting your mind
on the things of the Spirit.
One day a distraught young man came into my office
and said, "My wife says I am just like my father. My father was a drunk. He
beat and verbally abused my mother and me. I hated him." After counseling
him, I saw that his thoughts focused so much on his despised father that he
had picked up the same attitudes. The solution was forgiveness. Then, "Get
your focus on Jesus," I said. "He is the author and perfecter of your faith.
By focusing on Him, your conduct will change..."
Quenching the Holy
Spirit
Fire is often used in the Scriptures as a symbol of
the Holy Spirit, and Paul again is the one who warns us not to quench the
Spirit (1 Thessalonians 5:19). Fire is a symbol of purity, power, light,
warmth, and, if necessary, destruction. The writer of the book of Hebrews
even says, "God is a consuming fire" (Hebrews 12:29). The fire of the Holy
Spirit warms your heart with love, acceptance, and affection. As fire gives
light, the Holy Spirit en-lightens your mind. The energy of the Spirit's fire
empowers your will. The Holy Spirit fuses Christians together as a church, so there is
unity of purpose and caring for one another. Then the Spirit purifies by consuming
sin in your life.
But what would quench the Holy Spirit? How could
this Fire be put out? Just as with a natural fire, you can put it out by
withdrawing fuel. In this case, the fuel is our relationship with Christ.
Don't withdraw the fuel of devotion to Jesus, lest you quench the Spirit.
Have a time and a place every day for prayer and the Word. Carnal lusts and
minding only earthly things can diminish or even snuff out the Holy Spirit's
fire. Develop an attitude of always being aware of what Jesus may whisper to
your heart. The risen Christ said to the church at Ephesus, "You have
forsaken your first love" (Revelation 2:4). Christians were so busy working
for God that they neglected the relationship.
If you would ask a random group of Christians when
they prayed, I suspect you would get a variety of replies. Some pray on
their morning walk or run. Some pray while driving to work. But many
Christians find it difficult to do even this. They just cannot seem to find
any time at all to pray. The world and its busyness press in on them.
Jesus, however, always took time to be with God in
prayer. It is not that He had nothing else to do-rather He understood that
prayer was the most vital aspect of His life. We often think of fasting as
giving up food, but in a larger sense, fasting is giving up something in
order to receive something from God. You can also fast by giving up some
television time, some recreation, even some sleep. You will never find the
time for prayer; you must make the time. If that means giving up something
good to do something better, then so be it-fast!
You can also put out a fire by pouring water on it
or by smothering it with dirt. One of the biggest resistances to the Holy
Spirit comes from religious people who oppose the work of God by pouring
water on what the Spirit is doing, quenching the Spirit. In the next verse
of the Thessalonians text, verse 20, Paul warns the church against this. It
appears that the church struggled with the gift of prophecy. Some may have
given a strange prophetic teaching of their own views on the Second Coming
of Christ, with the result that the church wrote off all prophets. That is
why in verse 21 Paul tells the believers to test what they heard. And don't
quench the Spirit with your preconceived ideas or prejudice, but be open to
the Holy Spirit's leadership.
Cultivating the Mind
of Christ
Most importantly, "Let this mind be in you which was
also in Christ Jesus" (Philippians 2:5 nkjv). The Greek word (phroneite)
means "to be minded." To be minded as God is, with the same attitude and way
of thinking. It is an attitude of humility, self-giving love, and concern
for others above yourself.
First of all, the mind of Christ realizes the truth,
"The Son can do nothing by himself; he can do only what he sees his Father
doing" (John 5:19). We are essentially in the same position. Jesus said,
"Apart from me you can do nothing" (John 15:5). Our culture values
self-reliance and independence. We admire the man who has made himself a
success and can take full credit for it. Nevertheless, depending on your natural abilities
means you are not depending on God. Moses was trained in all the wisdom of
Egypt and was a leader of men. But when he took it upon himself and his own
abilities to deliver the Israelites, he quickly made a complete mess of
things and became a man with a price on his head. He fled to the desert
where he lived as a shepherd for 40 years before God brought him to a
position of dependence on Him. At that point he saw that he could not do the
job. Not until then could God use him. On his return to Egypt, Moses became
the great leader we read about in the Old Testament.
In the same way, your natural abilities of the flesh
must give way to the Holy Spirit's abilities. In the Spirit, you are
completely dependent on God. Faith is an expression of your lack of
ability-your dependence on the Spirit of God..
Secondly, the person with the mind of Christ
recognizes what are the most important things in life. "Whoever has the
Spirit, however, is able to judge the value of everything" (1 Corinthians
2:15 gnt). In other words, "The spiritual man can put the right price tag on
anything!" One of the marks of the Holy Spirit in your life is
discernment. The ability to see below the surface of life and judge what
really matters. You can separate the important from the unimportant; the
trivial from the vital; the temporal from the eternal.
Your attitudes and values affect your lifestyle. But
the spiritual man has a new set of values that is different from the world's
values. Out of a focused relationship with Jesus, you see His values, feel
His heart, and hear His voice. The righteous man knows that one day
everything will have its true worth revealed. Only what has true worth will
last.
Finally, the mind of Christ focuses on
relationships. The great commandment, to love God and your neighbor, is a
priority in the kingdom of God. John asked how you can say you love God if
you don't love your brother. A Christian's focus should be on relationships,
not on status, position, possessions, reputation, or anything else. When you
have the mind of Christ, you will have the heart of Christ. The heart and
mind of Christ give rise to compassion, giving, and reconciliation.
From the Mind of
Christ
The mind of Christ gives you compassion for people
instead of a condemning, judgmental attitude. Jesus always showed God's
concern for individuals who are hurting. When Jesus saw the crowds, He
pictured them as sheep without a shepherd. Taking compassion on them, He
prayed for them, fed them, and healed them. Out of His compassion,
forgiveness came to Zacchaeus, the tax collector, to the outcast woman at
the well, and to headstrong Peter, to name a few.
When you have Jesus' heart of compassion, your
primary concern will be for others and their needs, more than your own.
Jesus illustrated compassion in the parable of the Good Samaritan. His
followers are to help anyone who needs their help, regardless of their
status, race, or nationality. This is not an easy command to follow and may
involve personal sacrifice of money, time, or reputation.
Bob Pierce, the founder of World Vision, prayed,
"Let my heart be broken with the things that break the heart of God." His
organization has ministered all over the world to people who are otherwise
forgotten. Compassion caused him to touch a hurting, needy world with the
love of God.
You do not need to start a mission organization to
show compassion. Lonely, hurting people are all around us. There are
children in your local elementary school who desperately need an adult
friend. There are shut-ins who need a visit. Think about the social service
organizations in the community who need volunteers. Learn to focus on the
needs around you and ask God for guidance in helping you show compassion. To
walk in compassion is to walk in the Spirit.
The mind of Christ also gives you a heart for
giving. The character of love is to give, not to receive. Jesus willingly
gave Himself on the cross for you. His death reflects the Father's attitude
of giving from a heart of love (John 3:16). When God gives, He gives
infinitely more than you could ask for or even imagine (Ephesians 3:20). You
are to receive the gift of salvation, but in all other ways you are called
to give.
The nature of love is to give, and giving is the
yardstick of godly character. Just ask anyone in love to give up something
for the one he or she loves. No cost is too great. We bring our gifts and
consecrate them to God. But God does not want our gifts; He wants us. It
follows that when God gets you, your gifts are consecrated as well.
Jesus taught us that the Christian is not to trust
in his possessions, nor to consider the things of this world as treasures
(Matthew 6:19-33). How you use your money affects your values and character.
"For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also" (Matthew 6:21).
Paul told Timothy,
Command those who are rich in this present world
not to be arrogant nor to put their hope in wealth, which is so uncertain,
but to put their hope in God, who richly provides us with everything for our
enjoyment. Command them to do good, to be rich in good deeds, and to be
generous and willing to share. In this way they will lay up treasure for
themselves as a firm foundation for the coming age (1 Timothy 6:17-19).
By putting God first and responding caringly for the
needs of others, you are laying up treasures in heaven. The New Testament
portrays financial giving as a priestly act, a form of worship, a response
to the grace of God. Your giving, just as your public worship, is to be
directed by the Spirit. Paul reminds the Corinthians that their giving must
not be "reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver" (2
Corinthians 9:7).
When you give out of love, you receive far more.
Remember the teaching of Jesus, "If you give, you will receive. Your gift
will return to you in full measure, pressed down, shaken together to make
room for more, and running over. Whatever measure you use in giving-large or
small-it will be used to measure what is given back to you" (Luke 6:38 nlt).
God will be no man's debtor. Whatever you do for
God, He will multiply back to you. This law of sowing and reaping is true in
every area of life, relationally and financially. Giving gives joy, faith,
and breaks the bondage of selfishness and stinginess.
You are a steward of all that God has entrusted to
you. Anointed giving does not come out of some whim, but from a driving
force to help another, doing what is best for that person.
"We never get credit spiritually for impulsive
giving," says Oswald Chambers in Biblical Psychology. "If suddenly we feel
we should give a shilling to a poor man, we get no credit from God for
giving it, there is no virtue in it whatever. As a rule, that sort of giving
is a relief to our feelings; it is not an indication of a generous
character, but rather an indication of a lack of generosity. God never
estimates what we give from impulse. We are given credit for what we
determine in our hearts to give; for the giving that is governed by a fixed
determination.
"The Spirit of God revolutionizes our charitable
instincts. Much of our benevolence is simply the impulse to save ourselves
an uncomfortable feeling. The Spirit of God alters all that. As saints our
attitude towards giving is that we give for Jesus Christ's sake, and from no
other motive. God holds us responsible for the way we use this power of
voluntary choice."
For the spiritual man, there is no other motive in
giving than to please God. This is using your resources correctly because it
reflects your devotion to God and your commitment to eternal values. Fix
your eyes on the goal beyond. To walk in "giving" is to walk in the Spirit.
In addition, the mind of Christ gives you a heart
for reconciling lost people to God. Jesus' mission was to reconcile hostile
sinners to God. This was Jesus' passion and vocation, to seek and save the
lost. He commissioned His disciples to do the same. The command to "Go!" is
an imperative from our Lord. This is an impossible task for faithless,
self-centered, stubborn men.
In the Bible, the Jews believed that God loved them,
but in their self-centeredness they did not believe that God loved the rest
of the world as much. They were the chosen people, and others were "Gentile
dogs." Their religion was centered on themselves.
Likewise, the Pharisees would not accept Jesus
because they expected a different kind of Messiah. Their smug,
self-satisfied religion developed a narrow-minded understanding of
redemption. Thus, they could not discern who Jesus was and missed the
greatest movement of God in all time.
In the Scriptures, unbelievers are not told to go to
church; we are told to go to them with the gospel. Indifference and
self-centered religion will prevent you, too, from obeying Jesus' command to
go. The fields are white and ready for reaping, but where are the laborers
who are willing to go into the fields?
We are called to take the light of the truth of
God's word to the poor, lonely, hurting, needy, and desperate. Whatever
their situation, they need the salvation that only God can give. That is forgiveness
of sin and the impartation of God's life and power.
In the seventh chapter of John, Jesus used a flowing
river to illustrate the movement of the Holy Spirit in a person's life:
"Whoever believes in me, as the Scripture has said, streams of living water
will flow from within him" (v. 38). Jesus was talking about the Spirit,
"whom those who believed in him were later to receive" (v. 39). As water
satisfies your thirst and produces fruitfulness, so the Holy Spirit will
satisfy your desires and enable you to bear the fruit of the Spirit.
Can you envision a Christian who does not strive for
his own self-interest? Who does not ask, "What's in it for me?" Who is not a
slave to appearances? Who does not think he deserves better? Who does not
answer the call of God with conditions? If you find a person like that,
without question that's the sort of person God would use and empower, and
through him would flow streams of living water.
In Philippians, Paul told of his experience:
Yes,
everything else is worthless when compared with the priceless gain of
knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. I have discarded everything else, counting it
all as garbage, so that I may have Christ and become one with him. I no
longer count on my own goodness or my ability to obey God's law, but I trust
Christ to save me. For God's way of making us right with himself depends on
faith. As a result, I can really know Christ and experience the mighty power
that raised him from the dead. I can learn what it means to suffer with him,
sharing in his death, so that, somehow, I can experience the resurrection
from the dead! (3:8-11 nlt).
Paul lost his religion and his reputation, but he
gained an inward river that flowed outward in resurrection power.
Perhaps the best picture of how the river of the
Holy Spirit flows is found in Matthew 11:28-30,
Come unto me, all ye labouring and burdened ones,
and I will give you rest, take up my yoke upon you, and learn from me,
because I am meek and humble in heart, and ye shall find rest to your souls,
for my yoke is easy, and my burden is light (Young's Literal Translation).
The life that Jesus brings is full of rest, easy
yokes, and light burdens. But the life that we so often live is exhausting,
difficult, and burdensome. We strive to make something happen, feeling as if
everything depends on us. We strive and strive, and fail and fail.
Note the two lessons you must learn if the "river of
life" will flow: meekness and humility. "God resists the proud, but gives
grace to the humble" (James 4:6). What is humility? Is it not being pushy?
Is it being a doormat, letting people walk all over you? NO! It's when you
come to the place that you see that God is everything and the creature is
nothing. The meek know who they are and have nothing to prove. There is no
pretence. When you are meek and humble, you know who you are and why you are
here and are totally dependent on God. You are personally secure in God and
have an inner joy and peace.
The meek and humble man is not deceived about
himself. He sees his own weakness, failure, and sin. But he also knows who
he is in Christ. He is loved, accepted, and forgiven. He has nothing to
prove. The Bible says "you are in Christ Jesus, who has become for us wisdom
from God-that is, our righteousness, holiness and redemption. Therefore, as
it is written: 'Let him who boasts boast in the Lord'" (1 Corinthians
1:30-31).
The spiritual man has a motto: "In himself, nothing.
In God, everything." The world may overlook the humble man and place others
ahead of him. But long ago he died to status, approval, and opinions. He no
longer worries about what people think, as long as God is satisfied.
Leanne Payne writes in Restoring the Christian Soul:
To walk in the Spirit is to cease striving in our
own strength and goodness, and to walk in His {the Holy Spirit's} . It is to
celebrate our smallness, our inadequacy apart from Him {the Holy Spirit}. It
is to admit that the Spirit alone is our righteousness... To walk in the
Spirit is to live in the present moment, always looking to Christ, always
practicing His Presence, always moving in tandem with Him.
The mind of Christ is a humble attitude, an obedient
servant's heart, and total dependence on God. "Without Him I can do nothing!"
Compassion, giving, and reconciliation flow out of the relationship with God
and man, and your new priorities cause you to think and act like Jesus. This
"mind of Christ" enables you to experience divine guidance, and empowers you
to do the will of God... You rest in Him as grace floods your soul and you learn to share His yoke.
This is what it means to walk in the Spirit.
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