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A.B. Simpson

(Walking in the Spirit) 13. COOPERATING WITH THE HOLY GHOST

A.B. Simpson teaches that believers must actively cooperate with the Holy Spirit by receiving, yielding, and obeying Him to fully experience the power and blessings of the Spirit in their lives.
In this teaching sermon, A.B. Simpson explores the vital role of cooperating with the Holy Spirit in the Christian life. He emphasizes the active participation required of believers to receive and yield to the Spirit's power. Using biblical illustrations, Simpson highlights the balance between God's sovereignty and human responsibility in spiritual growth. This message encourages believers to open their hearts fully to the Spirit's work for a fruitful Christian walk.

Text

"Receive ye the Holy Ghost." John 20: 22. "Be filled with the Spirit." Eph. 5: 18. While we recognize the sovereign power of the Holy Ghost, visiting the heart at His pleasure, and working according to His will upon the objects of His grace, yet God has ordained certain laws of operation and cooperation in connection with the application of redemption; and He Himself most delicately recognizes His own laws, and respects the freedom of the human will; not forcing His blessings upon unwilling hearts, but knocking at the door of our heart, waiting to be recognized and claimed, and then working in the soul as we heartily cooperate, hearken, and obey. There is, therefore, a very solemn and responsible part for every man in cooperating with, or resisting and hindering the Holy Spirit. "The manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal," that is to say, it rests with the man who receives the first movement of the Holy Spirit to determine how far he will embrace his opportunity, cooperate with his heavenly Friend, and enter into all the fullness of the good and perfect will of God. Perhaps the pound, represented in the parable as given to every one of the servants, was meant to express that gift of the Spirit which every Christian receives, and the various uses which the servants made of this common enduement may represent the degrees with which the children of God double and use their spiritual advantages. One improved his pound until it had become ten; another until it had increased five-fold, and another neglected it and hid it in the earth. So, three men receiving in the beginning of their experience an equal measure of spiritual things, may show in the end just as great a diversity in the use that they have made of the precious trust. By a diligent and vigilant obedience the one has grown to be a Paul, crowned with ransomed souls, and clothed with all the fullness of heavenly power. The other has become, perhaps, a proud Diotrephes, seeking chiefly his personal ambition and using the divine grace for his own advantage. The Holy Spirit is especially sensitive to the reception He finds in the human heart; never intruding as an unwelcome guest, but gladly entering every open door, and following up every invitation with His faithful love and power. How are we to cooperate with Him, and how may we grieve and hinder Him? 1. We are commanded to receive the Holy Ghost. This denotes an active and positive taking of His life and power into our hearts and lives. It is not a mere acquiescence in His coming, or passive assent unto His will, but an active appropriating and absorbing of His blessed person and influences into our whole person. It is one thing to have our dinner brought to us, and it is another thing to eat it, drink it, assimilate it, and be nourished by it. It is thus that we are to receive the Holy Ghost, with an open, yielding, hungering, thirsting, believing, accepting and absorbing heart, even as the dry sand receives the rain, as the empty sponge receives the moisture, as the negative cloud receives the current from the positive, as the vacuum receives the air, and the babe drinks in the mother\

Sermon Outline

  1. I. The Command to Receive the Holy Ghost
    • Active and positive reception required
    • Not passive assent but full appropriation
    • Illustrated by natural examples of receiving
  2. II. The Sovereignty and Laws of the Holy Spirit
    • Spirit works according to God's will and pleasure
    • Respects human freedom and will
    • Knocks and waits for invitation
  3. III. Cooperation or Resistance
    • Man's responsibility to cooperate or resist
    • Different outcomes based on cooperation
    • Parable of the pounds illustrating spiritual growth
  4. IV. The Sensitivity of the Holy Spirit
    • Spirit never intrudes unwelcome
    • Enters every open door gladly
    • Follows invitation with love and power

Key Quotes

“God has ordained certain laws of operation and cooperation in connection with the application of redemption; and He Himself most delicately recognizes His own laws, and respects the freedom of the human will.” — A.B. Simpson
“The Holy Spirit is especially sensitive to the reception He finds in the human heart; never intruding as an unwelcome guest, but gladly entering every open door.” — A.B. Simpson
“It is not a mere acquiescence in His coming, or passive assent unto His will, but an active appropriating and absorbing of His blessed person and influences into our whole person.” — A.B. Simpson

Application Points

  • Open your heart actively to receive the Holy Spirit rather than passively waiting.
  • Recognize your responsibility to cooperate with the Spirit’s work daily.
  • Avoid resisting the Spirit by responding promptly to His promptings with obedience.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean to receive the Holy Ghost?
It means actively and positively taking the Spirit's life and power into our hearts, not just passively accepting but fully absorbing and yielding to Him.
How does the Holy Spirit work with human will?
The Holy Spirit respects human freedom, knocking and waiting for an invitation rather than forcing His presence.
What is the significance of the parable of the pounds in this sermon?
It illustrates how believers receive equal spiritual gifts but differ greatly in how they use and grow these gifts through cooperation with the Spirit.
Can the Holy Spirit be resisted?
Yes, the sermon emphasizes that man has a solemn responsibility to either cooperate with or resist the Holy Spirit, affecting spiritual growth.
How does one cooperate with the Holy Spirit?
By actively receiving, hearkening to, and obeying the Spirit's promptings with a willing and open heart.

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