Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Spiritual Illumination - Rev. R. L. Stanton, D.D. (Triumphs of Faith 12.2)

SPIRITUAL ILLUMINATION

BY REV. R. L. STANTON, D.D.


Taken in its true and full meaning, no subject is more important to the people of God than spiritual illumination. The Scriptures cannot be understood aright without light from the Holy Spirit. “No man,” says St. Paul, “can say that Jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost.” “The things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God.” The Apostle, therefore, depended on the Spirit even for his words, in preaching: “Which things we speak, not in the words which man’s wisdom teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost teacheth.”

It is encouraging that people and preachers alike have the promise of the Spirit to open to them the true meaning of the Scriptures. Christ said of the Comforter: “He shall guide you into all the truth.” “He shall teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I said unto you.”-(Revised Version.)
The aid of the Holy Spirit, in this office, has not always been sufficiently valued. Ponderous tomes, sometimes the product of infidel learning and scholarship, have been given to the world to elucidate God’s Word. The soil of the German Universities has been very fruitful of this noxious growth. The land of Luther is today the source of that “Higher Criticism” which is troubling the churches of England and Scotland, and which seriously threatens the churches in our own country. Much of this evil might have been avoided had these scholars laid their learning at the feet of Christ, and earnestly and prayerfully implored the Spirit to “guide them into all the truth.”

In the midst of this mournful exhibition, it is refreshing to listen to words which have the true ring, from the Rev. R. W. Dale, of Birmingham, England. He is a leader among the English Congregationalists. A few years ago he delivered, by special invitation, a course of “Lectures on Preaching,” before the faculty and students of Yale College.

In a recent course of lectures on the Epistle to the Ephesians, Mr. Dale refers to St. Paul’s prayer “That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give unto you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him.” -(Eph. i: 17.) Upon this he remarks: “In kind, the illuminator of the Apostles was the same as that, which Paul prayed might be grantee to the Christians at Ephesus, the same as that which we ourselves may hope to receive from God. It will be granted, if we seek it, in whatever measure the exigencies of our personal duties and of our work for others require.” Mr. Dale then portrays a widespread delinquency of the Church: “The authoritative teaching of the Christian Church has never recognized with sufficient clearness and fairness this glorious prerogative of the Christian life. Theologians and ecclesiastical rulers have dreaded the outbreak of fanaticism if all Christian people were encouraged or permitted to hope for the immediate illumination of the Holy Spirit. . Although it has been acknowledged that individual Christians are taught of God, the anxiety to defend the supremacy of the Holy Scriptures as the only authoritative source of religious knowledge, has led to the virtual suppression of the truth that the “Spirit of wisdom and revelation may come to be the commonalty of the Church.”
Mr. Dale then says that “the real danger “from apprehended fanaticism and superstitious “would have long ago disappeared bad the great churches frankly received the definite teaching of the New Testament concerning the illumination of the Spirit that is granted in varying measures to all Christians.” He then declares this to be “a great truth which the leaders of thought and faith of the Church quite too much refuse to acknowledge;” while he emphasizes the all-important fact, that, “apart from this illumination no true knowledge of God is possible to man.”

The special interest which attaches to Mr. Dale’s utterances is not that there is anything new in them,  but that he is so pointedly declares a truth which the Church at large most needs to hear and to heed. Spiritual illumination may almost be set down as the “lost art” for interpreting the Scriptures. Our day is surfeited with book, with papers, with “helps,” with expositions, with pictorial illustrations, with blackboard exercises and other object lessons-with everything which the wit of man and woman can invent-to aid our Sunday-schools, Bible-classes, and all people to understand the Word of God. These all have their place, it may be; but the Holy Spirit, as a “guide,” is in danger of being totally buried under them. One clear ray of His illumination power, upon any given passage, is worth more than all the stories of scholarship the world contains.

The chief point to bear in mind is, that Christ meant just what He said when He declares that “the Spirit of truth” should “guide” His people “into all the truth:” and He said this for each one of His people. The Spirit is our “Helper.” This is the meaning of the name given him in St. John’s Gospel (xvi: 13). What little need, then, have we to the “helps” which man can furnish! How often does the faithful pastor find some poor woman in his parish, “illiterate,” it may be, but who can instruct her official guide in “the things of the kingdom,” because she has been taught of the Spirit. “But the anointing which ye have received of Him abideth in you; and ye need not that any man teach you.”-(I John ii:27.)

Washington, D.C.