Acts 7:51
Acts 7:51 ~ “You men who are stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears are always resisting the Holy Spirit; you are doing just as your fathers did.”
Acts 7:51 ~ “You men who are stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears are always resisting the Holy Spirit; you are doing just as your fathers did.”
It should be noted that the context of this passage
is with Stephen addressing the people of Israel. This is the climax of
Stephen’s speech and the words that cut the hearers to the heart and end up
getting him mercilessly stoned (Wiersbe-Vol. 1 432). It recounts a grocery list
of rebellion against God all through their history in the Old Testament. It
shows the Jews having exhausted the mercy of God. It is harsh and direct as
illustrated by Stephen’s pronouncement of “stiff-necked and uncircumcised in
heart”. Just as their ancestors did, so too the Jews did in Stephen’s time
having rejected God and His Son/Messiah Jesus Christ (Longenecker 143-144).
Stephen specifically says that they are,
“always resisting the Holy Spirit.” Stephen emphatically uses the pronoun you /
humeis in the plural. He is drawing from the Old Testament when Isaiah said
that regardless of God’s love and mercy, His people (plural, the Jews) rebelled
and grieved the Holy Spirit. Because of this God would not just withhold mercy,
He would actually become their enemy (Isaiah 63:10, Psalm 106:33). These people
actively and stubbornly were resisting the Holy Spirit and His work (Kistemaker
274). It follows that if they are rejected God through the prophets (by
ignoring and killing them) and Jesus, they by default are fighting or rejecting
the work of the Holy Spirit. If they reject or resist the Holy Spirit in the
face of the obvious truth of Jesus’ incarnation and earthly ministry. At this
point there pretty much is no hope for them. In their own Old Testament terms
Stephen tells his listeners (the Jews) that they’re outside the covenant they are
physically bound to through circumcision, inwardly they are uncircumcised and lack
a similar sign: That sign is the obedient regenerated heart that is the product
of the Holy Spirit working within them (Kistemaker 274).
In the modern church we can see a similar resisting
of the Spirit. We can see people that hear from the pulpit(s) week after week
the true Gospel as preached by the Apostles, yet these very same people will
prefer things that tickle their ears (2 Tim 4) and prefer to hear theology that
adapts more to their life, rather than their lives adapting to the Gospel. They
want their “best life now” instead of wanting what God wants for them and what
is in accordance with God’s will. God’s will, a will that is most often
revealed through the Bible…and the prompting of the Holy Spirit!
Ephesians 4:30
Ephesians 4:30 ~ "Do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, by whom you were sealed for the day of redemption."
Ephesians 4:30 ~ "Do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, by whom you were sealed for the day of redemption."
This passage is given in the context of behavior in
the Christian walk. Paul has listed behaviors that we (people of Asia Minor as
this was probably a circular letter) should either have left behind or should
be stomping them out in our/their lives In verse 26 we are told to be angry but
don’t let the sun go down on our anger. In the preceding verse 29, we are told
that we are to, “let no unwholesome word proceed from your mouth, but only such
a word as is good for edification...”. Verse 30 tells us to, “…not grieve the
Holy Spirit by whom you were sealed for the day of redemption.” The verse that
immediately follows (v.31) tells the hearer/reader to, “let all bitterness and
wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you, along with all
malice” and to, “be kind to one another, tender-hearted, forgiving each other,
just as God in Christ also has forgiven you.”
I call this sin: Shaking Your Puny Fist At the Sky
I call this sin: Shaking Your Puny Fist At the Sky
So the grieving of the Holy Spirit seems to be in
the context of bitterness / being bitter and being angry, being slanderous and
having malice. All of which are not becoming of reflective of a true Christian.
Bitterness poisons the inner man or taints the heart and can lead to the anger
mentioned in verse 26. Anger is nothing more than bitterness exploding outward
in a physical and sometimes violent manner (Wiersbe 42). Jesus knew this
perfectly well and it is why He said what He did in Matthew 5:21-22, “You have
heard that the ancients were told, ‘You shall not commit murder’ and ‘Whoever
commits murder shall be liable to the court.’ But I say to you that everyone
who is angry with his brother shall be guilty before the court…”
Quite simply, this bitterness that leads to anger
and inevitably to violence if not suppressed grieves the Holy Spirit. The
question is why? It is because the Holy Spirit lives within all believers. It
follows or stands to reason that when a Christian heart is filled with
bitterness, malice or ill-will the Spirit is pushed out of a believer’s heart
and it grieves Him or more specifically, the Greek says “creates sorrow”. It
literally makes God sad or distresses Him. Why? God is sad or grieved because
He loves His children and wants them to obey Him and inevitably conform to the
image of His Son (Romans 8:29).
The fruits of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23) do not
include bitterness and anger because these are the works of the flesh, not the
Spirit (Wiersbe 43). If these are what lies within a Christian, where is there
room for the Holy Spirit? The Holy Spirit is not forced out per se but it will
get awful cramped in our hearts and we will be in conflict with the Spirit.
This cannot possibly be a good thing. In addition, if it grieves the Holy
Spirit it follows that we grieve the Son and Father as they are One Being in
three Persons. It also stands to reason that if we are bitter, we have failed
to forgive others or emulate God. Our heart therefore becomes hardened. The
reality then is that we don’t so much hurt others as we hurt ourselves (Wiersbe
43).
We are to be a reflection of the One we serve which
is Jesus Christ. The last I checked, Jesus was not a bitter person…not even
while He was on the Cross. He realized He was fulfilling the will of God by
being there. Sadly, I see a lot of this in churches. A conniving, back-biting
bitterness infects certain people because things didn’t go the way they felt
they should go. Many times the way these people perceived things should’ve gone
were not in accordance with Scripture to begin with. When this takes up
residence in a person’s heart there is very little room for the Spirit to work.
Sin maintains a stranglehold on a person’s life. The Letter of 1 John, chapter
3 tells us something else altogether and it is in relation to habitual sin, “No
one who is born of God practices sin, because His seed abides in him; and he
cannot sin, because he is born of God. By this the children of God and the
children of the devil are obvious: anyone who does not practice righteousness
is not of God, nor the one who does not love his brother.
God’s seed that abides in a person in the Church
does not produce bitterness thereby grieving the Spirit. If bitterness and
anger is what habitually indwells a believer’s, what is really in their hearts
then? It couldn’t possibly be the Spirit of God…could it?
[Completed in Part III]
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