Who is the Holy Spirit?
Is the Holy Spirit a person?
Our Mission is rooted in the desire to support each person’s search for personal growth in the fulfillment of life’s purpose in harmony with natural law. We believe that by right personal endeavour and God’s grace, it is possible for everyone to have a conscious relationship with the Infinite. We acknowledge all enlightenment traditions and honour the divine nature of every person.
Who is the Holy Spirit?
Is the Holy Spirit a person?
What evidence is there of a spiritual realm?
The Bible teaches the existence of an immaterial, spiritual reality, unseen by human eyes. The physical reality is evident for all to see—although some doubt the existence of a material universe, too! The Bible says that the spiritual realm consists of both good—God and the holy angels—and evil—the devil and his demons. Demons are most likely fallen angels who rebelled against God and were thrown out of heaven (see Ezekiel 28:11–17; Isaiah 14:12–15; Revelation 12:7–9). The Bible also teaches that humans were created by God in His image, which means we have a spiritual component (Genesis 1:27). We are more than physical entities; we possess a soul/spirit destined for eternity. Even though the spiritual realm is invisible to the physical eye, we are connected to it, and what goes on in the spiritual realm directly affects our physical world.
It is common to refer to human beings as made up of body, soul,
and spirit. Although human beings are integrated wholes,
this division is a helpful way to refer to the three main components of human
existence. The distinction is helpful, even though there is some debate over
the separateness of the soul and spirit. Some theologians prefer to see humans
as simply material and immaterial beings without a strict distinction between
soul and spirit. It may be that the immaterial side simply has a “soulish”
aspect and a spiritual aspect rather than being two separate things—soul and
spirit.
The body, though by no means simple, is the easiest part of a human to
understand, and care of the body is also straightforward and easy to
understand.
The spirit may be defined as the immaterial part of a human being that has the
capacity to relate to God. A person, outside of Christ, is spiritually dead and
unable to respond to God in an appropriate way (see Ephesians 2:1–6 and Romans 8:5–8).
The soul is the immaterial part of a human being that can respond to other
people. In Greek the word for “soul” is psyche from which we get the
word psychology. The soul involves the mind and emotions. It gives us
the capacity to relate to others and to form bonds. It is our souls that
respond to beauty and high ideals. People with healthy souls are capable of
forming meaningful relationships, and people with unhealthy souls find it more
difficult. Soul care is the attention given to healing a wounded soul or
maintaining a healthy soul. In a Christian context, soul care is often linked
to finding help to overcome temptations, fight addictions, and have peace with
God.
At this point it is helpful once again to make a distinction between soul and
spirit. Sin and spiritual death affect the whole person. Our bodies feel the
effects of sin, and so do our souls. Some people have healthier souls than
others and are thus better able to have healthy relationships. If a person with
an unhealthy soul attends counseling or even enters into the treatment of a psychologist, he or she may be able to make
changes that will improve personal relationships and the level of functioning
in society. However, this improvement of the soul will not change a person’s
eternal destiny, nor will it give him or her spiritual life. Likewise, a person
who has become spiritually alive in Christ may still have a damaged soul and
may be in need of soul care. Some believers have to work long and hard to
overcome bad habits and destructive patterns. Such struggles often continue all
of their lives.
Many people who speak of “spiritual life” or “spirituality” are really speaking
of the wondrous capacities of the soul, apart from a relationship with God.
Sometimes this is referred to as the “inner life.” These people are often
speaking of an appreciation for beauty and wonder, as well as qualities like
honesty, openness, and kindness, which are conducive to forming authentic
relationships with other people. They speak of tranquility, inspiration, and
self-confidence. While these may be attained in some measure apart from a
relationship with God, the best medicine for an unhealthy soul is a healthy
spirit—one that has been animated by the Holy Spirit through faith in Christ.
Many in popular culture wrongly assume that the greatest need for mankind is
soul care and that the “spiritual” is simply a tool for attaining inner peace
and health in the realm of the soul.
Thomas Moore’s book Care of the Soul has been a bestseller for the past
25 years. From the back of the 25th anniversary edition: “Promising to deepen
and broaden the reader’s perspective on his or her own life experiences, Moore
draws on his own life as a therapist practicing ‘care of the soul,’ as well as
his studies of the world’s religions and his work in music and art, to create
this inspirational guide that examines the connections between spirituality and
the problems of individuals and society.” In this book the “spiritual” truth
that is offered is actually inspirational truth pulled from the world’s
religions. If a person follows the advice that Moore gives in his book, that
person’s soul may indeed become healthier, but his or her spirit
will still be dead apart from Christ, just as a good diet and exercise will
improve the body while doing nothing for the spirit (see 1 Timothy 4:8). Thus, Moore’s book is accurately
titled Care of the Soul, because, while it focuses on the soul, it will
do nothing help a person attain spiritual life.
Some ministries practice soul care from a biblical basis. One such ministry,
called Soul Care, is dedicated to helping Christians develop healthy souls. The
Seven Pillars that are promoted by this organization are Prayer, Use of
Scripture, Soul Searching, Simplicity, Solitude/Silence, Spiritual Friendship,
and Journaling. These pillars are similar to what others would call “spiritual disciplines.”
Practices for caring for the soul, as those caring for the body, can be either
biblical or unbiblical. Christians should avoid any practices of soul care that
are unbiblical. Likewise, some practices for caring for the soul (meditation,
listening to music, making restitution for wrongs done, decluttering one’s
life, and performing random acts of kindness) may be based on common grace and
therefore helpful without imparting spiritual life, just some practices are
helpful in caring for the body but do not yield a resurrection body.
God cares for the whole person, and soul care can be a valid ministry to
others. We serve “the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles,
so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves
receive from God” (2 Corinthians 1:3–4). The Lord wants to transform
us and renew our minds (Romans 12:2). John’s short
letter to Gaius expressed a godly concern for Gaius’s health: “Dear friend, I
pray that you may enjoy good health and that all may go well with you, even as
your soul is getting along well” (3 John 1:2). Though the term soul care is
never found in the Bible, John was certainly involved in form of soul care as
he ministered to the Body of Christ.
Genesis 1:26–27 indicates that God created mankind distinct from all the other creatures. Scripture clearly teaches that man is intended to experience intimate relationship with God, and, therefore, He created us as a unity of both material (physical) and immaterial (spiritual) aspects (Ecclesiastes 12:7, Matthew 10:28, 1 Corinthians 5:5, 2 Corinthians 4:16; 7:1, James 2:26). The material component of humans is obviously that which is tangible and temporal: the physical body. The immaterial aspects are intangible: soul, spirit, intellect, will, conscience, mind, emotions, etc. These exist unendingly beyond the lifespan of the physical body.
It has become popular in modern society to be “spiritual, but not religious.” “Spiritual” usually means that a person is in touch with his or her own spirit, the spirits of others, and some (personal or impersonal) Higher Power or Spirit that inhabits (and perhaps empowers) the universe. To do this, one does not need to be part of an organized religion or believe any specific doctrines about God, sin, salvation, heaven, hell, or Jesus. In fact, doctrine will probably only limit one’s spirituality since God (who- or whatever He, She, or It may be) is undoubtedly bigger than religious categories. Religion separates us, goes the common thinking; spirituality brings us together.
The Bible teaches that our most basic need is not first and foremost that of spiritual direction or of getting in touch with our “spiritual self” but that we are spiritually dead (Ephesians 2:1) and in need of spiritual life that can only come from God. The God who gives spiritual life is the God who created the world and entered the human race as Jesus Christ. Spiritual life is only available to those who are raised to new life in Christ through faith in Him (Ephesians 2:6–7). Those who are “raised with Christ” are born again into new spiritual life and are indwelled with the Holy Spirit. The Spirit is the Ultimate Spiritual Director (Romans 8:14). And He will always glorify Jesus (John 16:14) and direct us to become more like Christ (Ephesians 4:15).
Thoughts and emotions have a profound effect on one another. Thoughts can trigger emotions (worrying about an upcoming job interview may cause fear) and also serve as an appraisal of that emotion (“this isn't a realistic fear”). In addition, how we attend to and appraise our lives has an effect on how we feel.
Once we agree to give our attention to a thought, it becomes more and more real to us over time and has more and more power over out life.” It triggers an emotion, which then triggers a body reaction and drives us to act in a certain way. ... This is how your thoughts shape your reality. This is why you are what you think.
“The way we think about something affects the way we feel about it. Our thoughts and feelings influence our behaviors, choices, and ultimately, outcomes.” Behaviors are our actions or the ways in which we present ourselves to others.
Neuroscientists have discovered that repetitive thoughts form neural pathways as neurons that fire together get wired together. Thus, the more a particular thought or belief is activated and reinforced, the stronger these neural pathways become and the more automatically they become our "go to" pattern of perceiving.
The study found that a habit of prolonged negative thinking diminishes your brain's ability to think, reason, and form memories. Essentially draining your brain's resources. Another study reported in the journal American Academy of Neurology found that cynical thinking also produces a greater dementia risk
It has also been established that the mind is inexorably linked to matter. Brain scans indicate that thoughts are intimately related to brain activity. Brain neurons interact through synaptic connections to generate mental phenomena, and damage to a part of one's brain affects mental functions.
Scientists have discovered that our emotions are often caused by our thoughts [1]. This means two people could be in the same situation, but they might feel different emotions because they have different thoughts.
Our thoughts are very powerful instruments we use to either create happiness and wealth, or sickness and poverty. If your life doesn't look like what you're dreaming of, it means you have thoughts which go against you. Your thoughts create your life. If you want to change your life, change first your thoughts.
Negative attitudes and feelings of helplessness and hopelessness can create chronic stress, which upsets the body's hormone balance, depletes the brain chemicals required for happiness, and damages the immune system. Chronic stress can actually decrease our lifespan.
The only things we can control in life are our thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. ... If we know how our minds work, we can be intentional about influencing our thinking and feeling patterns. We can evaluate reality more clearly, make better decisions and improve our ability to achieve our goals.
Thoughts are Like Sound Waves
The Bible is not perfectly clear as to the nature of the human soul. But from studying the way the word soul is used in Scripture, we can come to some conclusions. Simply stated, the human soul is the part of a person that is not physical. It is the part of every human being that lasts eternally after the body experiences death. Genesis 35:18 describes the death of Rachel, Jacob’s wife, saying she named her son “as her soul was departing.” From this we know that the soul is different from the body and that it continues to live after physical death.
The Bible says death is irreversible without a divine miracle (Hebrews 9:27; 1 Corinthians 15:22). What it does not say, explicitly, is when death becomes “official.” Medical developments have provided means to resuscitate those previously beyond hope. That has led to the question of where, exactly, the line is drawn between being “alive” and being “dead.” It has even raised the debate of whether a person’s body can be medically alive, while the soul and spirit have permanently departed. Such circumstances are rare but puzzling. While Scripture provides guidance, we cannot find absolute, black-and-white identifiers for declaring a person “really” dead.
A near-death experience (NDE) is when a person is at the brink of death and, upon recovery, reports an unusual occurrence, generally an out-of-body experience or some sort of vision of heaven or hell. There is no specific scriptural support for near-death experiences. Many people use 2 Corinthians 12:2-5 as a biblical proof text of near-death experiences. However, this is taking great liberty with interpretation and makes the assumption that the man (presumed to be Paul) was either near death or actually dead when he found himself in heaven. The passage nowhere states that the man had died or come close to death. It was a vision that God gave the man of heaven, not a near-death experience.
The Bible tells us that, yes, there is life after death. This world is not all there is, and mankind was made for something more. At death, the body ceases to function and begins the process of returning to the earth, but the spiritual part of man lives on: “The dust returns to the ground it came from, and the spirit returns to God who gave it” (Ecclesiastes 12:7; cf. Psalm 146:4).
To those who are redeemed and have their sin forgiven, God gives eternal life, an existence so glorious that “no eye has seen, no ear has heard, and no mind has imagined what God has prepared for those who love him” (1 Corinthians 2:9, NLT). This eternal life is inextricably linked to the Person of Jesus Christ: “Now this is eternal life: that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom you have sent” (John 17:3). In Jesus’ prayer in this passage, He equates “eternal life” with a knowledge of God and of the Son. “Whoever has the Son has life” (1 John 5:12).
The indwelling of the Holy Spirit is the action by which God takes up permanent residence in the body of a believer in Jesus Christ. In the Old Testament, the Spirit would come and go from the saints, empowering them for service but not necessarily remaining with them (see Judges 15:14; 1 Chronicles 12:18; Psalm 51:11; Ezekiel 11:5). Jesus revealed to His disciples the new role the Spirit of Truth would play in their lives: “He lives with you and will be in you” (John 14:17). The apostle Paul wrote, “Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have from God, and that you are not your own? For you are bought with a price; therefore glorify God in your body” (1 Corinthians 6:19–20).
These verses are telling us that the believer in Jesus Christ has the third Person of the Trinity, the Holy Spirit, living in him. When an individual accepts Christ as personal Savior, the Holy Spirit gives the believer the life of God, eternal life, which is really His very nature (Titus 3:5; 2 Peter 1:4), and the Holy Spirit comes to live within him spiritually. The fact that the believer’s body is likened to a temple where the Holy Spirit lives helps us understand what the indwelling of the Holy Spirit is all about. The word temple is used to describe the Holy of Holies, the inner sanctum in the Old Testament tabernacle structure. There, God’s presence would appear in a cloud and meet the high priest, who came once a year into the Holy of Holies. On the Day of Atonement, the high priest brought the blood of a slain animal and sprinkled it on the mercy seat of the Ark of the Covenant. On this special day, God granted forgiveness to the priest and His people.
Today, there is no Jewish temple in Jerusalem, and the animal sacrifices have ceased. The believer in Christ has become the inner sanctum of God the Holy Spirit, as the believer has been sanctified and forgiven by the blood of Jesus Christ (Ephesians 1:7). The believer in Christ becomes the habitation of the Holy Spirit of God. In fact, Scripture also says that the believer is indwelt spiritually by Christ (Colossians 1:27) and by God the Father (1 John 4:15)—the Trinity is involved.
As the Holy Spirit lives in the believer, He brings about some life-changing results:
1) The indwelling Spirit comes to a soul dead in sin and creates new life (Titus 3:5). This is the new birth Jesus spoke of in John 3:1–8.
2) The indwelling Spirit confirms to the believer that he belongs to the Lord and is an heir of God and fellow-heir with Christ (Romans 8:15–17).
3) The indwelling Spirit installs the new believer as a member of Christ’s universal church. This is the baptism of the Spirit, according to 1 Corinthians 12:13.
4) The indwelling Spirit gives spiritual gifts (God-given abilities for service) to the believer to edify the church and serve the Lord effectively for His glory (1 Corinthians 12:11).
5) The indwelling Spirit helps the believer understand and apply the Scripture to his daily life (1 Corinthians 2:12).
6) The indwelling Spirit enriches the believer’s prayer life and intercedes for him in prayer (Romans 8:26–27).
7) The indwelling Holy Spirit empowers the yielded believer to live for Christ to do His will (Galatians 5:16). The Spirit leads the believer in paths of righteousness (Romans 8:14).
8) The indwelling Spirit gives evidence of new life by producing the fruit of the Spirit in the believer’s life (Galatians 5:22–23).
9) The indwelling Spirit is grieved when the believer sins (Ephesians 4:30), and He convicts the believer to confess his sin to the Lord so that fellowship is restored (1 John 1:9).
10) The indwelling Spirit seals the believer unto the day of redemption so that the believer’s arrival in the Lord’s presence is guaranteed after this life (Ephesians 1:13–14).
When you accept Christ as your Savior (Romans 10:9–13), the Holy Spirit takes up residence in your heart, bringing with Him an entirely new life of love, relationship, and service to the Lord.