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"It is evident that the present dispensation under which we are is the
dispensation of the Spirit, or of the Third Person of the Holy Trinity. To
Him in the Divine economy has been committed the office of applying the
redemption of the Son to the souls of men and women by the vocation,
justification, and salvation of the elect. We are, therefore, under the
personal guidance of the Third Person as truly as the apostles were under
the guidance of the Second." (Edward Manning)

"Therefore, the Holy Ghost on this dayPentecost—descended into the
temple of His apostles, which He had prepared for himself, as a shower of
sanctification, appearing no more as a transient visitor, but as a perpetual
Comforter and as an eternal inhabitant. He came, therefore, on this day to
His disciples, no longer by the grace of visitation and operation, but by
the presence of His majesty." (Augustine)

"The name Paraclete is applied to Christ as well as to the
Spirit; and properly. For it is the common office of each to console and
encourage us and to preserve us by their defense. Christ was their [the
disciples'] patron so long as He lived in the world. He then committed them
to the guidance and protection of the Spirit. If anyone asks us whether we
are not under the guidance of Christ, the answer is easy: Christ is the
perpetual guardian, but not visibly. As long as He walked on the earth He
appeared openly as their guardian. Now He preserves us by His Spirit. He
calls the Spirit 'Another Comforter,' in view of the distinction which we
observe in the blessings proceeding from each." (John Calvin)

"But now the Holy Ghost is given more perfectly,
for He is no longer present by His operation as of old, but is present with
us so to speak, and converses with us in a substantial manner. For it was
fitting that, as the Son had conversed with us in the body, the Spirit
should also come among us in a bodily manner." (Gregory Nazianzen)

"To the disciples, the baptism of the Spirit
was very distinctly not His first bestowal for regeneration, but the
definite communication of His presence in power of their glorified Lord.
Just as there was a twofold operation of the one Spirit in the Old and New
Testaments, of which the state of the disciples before and after Pentecost
was the striking illustration, so there may be, and in the great majority of
Christians is, a corresponding difference of experience. . . .
"When once the distinct recognition of what
the indwelling of the Spirit was meant to bring is brought home to the soul,
and it is ready to give up all to be made partaker of it, the believer may
ask and expect what may be termed a baptism of the Spirit. Praying to the
Father in accordance to the two prayers in Ephesians, and coming to Jesus in
the renewed surrender of faith and obedience, he may receive such an inflow
of the Holy Spirit as shall consciously lift him to a different level from
the one on which he has hitherto lived." (Andrew Murray)

"In His intimate union with His Son, the Holy
Spirit is the unique organ by which God wills to communicate to man His own
life, the supernatural life, the divine life—that is to say, His holiness,
His power, His love, His felicity. To this end the Son works outwardly, the
Holy Spirit inwardly." (Pastor G. F. Tophel)

The Holy Ghost from the day of
Pentecost has occupied an entirely new position. The whole administration of
the affairs of the Church of Christ has since that day devolved upon Him. .
. . That day was the installation of the Holy Spirit as the Administrator of
the Church in all things, which office He is to exercise according to
circumstances at His discretion. It is as vested with such authority that He
gives Him name to this dispensation. . . . There is but one other great
event to which Scripture directs us to look, and that is the second coming
of the Lord. Till then, we live in the Pentecostal age and under the rule of
the Holy Ghost." (James Elder Cumming)

"Have you visited the Cathedral
of Freyburg, and listened to that wonderful organist, who with such
enchantment draws the tears from the traveler's eyes while he touches one
after another, his wonderful keys, and makes you hear by turns the march of
armies upon the beach, of the chanted prayer upon the lake during the
tempest, or the voices of praise after it is calm? Well, thus the Eternal
God, embracing at a glance the keyboard of sixty centuries , touches by
turns, with the fingers of His Spirit, the keys which he had chose for the
unity of His celestial hymn. He lays His left hand upon Enoch, the seventh
from Adam, and His right hand on John, the humble and sublime prisoner of
Patmos. From the the one the strain is heard: 'Behold the Lord cometh with
ten thousand of His saints': from the other: 'Behold He cometh with clouds.'
And between the notes of this hymn of three thousand years there is eternal
harmony, and the angels stoop to listen, the elect of God are moved, and
eternal life descends into men's souls." (Gaussen's Gheopneustia)

"The Comforter in every part of
His threefold work glorifies Christ. In convincing of sin, He convinces us
of the sin of not believing on Christ. In convincing us of righteousness, He
convinces us of the righteousness of Christ, of that righteousness that was
made manifest in Christ going to the Father, and which He received to bestow
on all such as should believe in Him. And lastly, in convincing of judgment,
He convinces us that the prince of the world was judged in the life and by
the death of Christ. Thus throughout, Christ is glorified. And that which
the Comforter shows to us relates in all its parts to the life and work of
the incarnate Son of God." (Julius Charles Hare)

"The Apostle Paul evidently saw
the redemption of the bodies of the saints and their manifestation as the
sons of God and with them the redemption of the whole creation from its
present bondage to be the complete harvest of the Spirit, whereof the Church
doth now possess only the first-fruits; that is, the first ripe grains which
could be formed into a sheaf and presented in the temple as a wave-offering
unto the Lord. 'The Holy Spirit of promise which is the earnest of our
inheritance,' saith the same apostle—the earnest, like the first-fruit,
being only a part of that which is to be earned . . . yet a sufficient
surety that the whole shall in the fullness of the times, be likewise ours."
(Edward Irving)
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