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Octavius Winslow

John 16:7

John 16:7
Octavius Winslow November, 24 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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November, 24 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about the Holy Spirit as a Comforter?

The Bible describes the Holy Spirit as the Comforter sent to guide and console believers in their trials (John 16:7).

In John 16:7, Jesus emphasizes the necessity of His departure for the coming of the Holy Spirit, referred to as the Comforter. The Holy Spirit is not only aware of the sorrows of believers but actively engages with them in their afflictions. The presence of the Comforter brings profound solace and assurance, showing that God intimately understands the trials faced by His Church, which often traverses a path marked by suffering and challenges. The Holy Spirit applies God’s promises and comforts believers, ensuring that no sorrow is beyond His reach or care.

John 16:7

Why is the role of the Holy Spirit important for Christians?

The Holy Spirit is essential for Christians as He provides comfort, guidance, and the assurance of God's grace in times of suffering.

The importance of the Holy Spirit in the life of a believer cannot be overstated. He is the one who comforts, guides, and leads Christians through their trials, ensuring they do not walk this journey alone. The Holy Spirit applies the promises of Scripture to our hearts, directing us to Christ and helping us maintain submission to God’s will. His presence transforms our sorrows into opportunities for spiritual growth and deeper fellowship with Christ. Ultimately, the Holy Spirit matures believers for glory, preparing both the Church and each individual believer for their eternal home with God.

John 16:7

How do we know that the Holy Spirit comforts believers?

We know the Holy Spirit comforts believers because Scripture affirms His role in alleviating sorrow and guiding them toward Christ (John 16:7).

Scripture clearly communicates the comforting role of the Holy Spirit in the lives of believers. In John 16:7, Jesus declares that it is advantageous for Him to leave so the Comforter can come. The Holy Spirit addresses the individual sorrows of believers, applying promises of God and leading them toward a deeper relationship with Christ. His comfort is not merely theoretical; it is practical, meeting believers at their point of need, offering solace in sorrow, instructing the ignorant, and healing the wounded. This assurance is a foundational aspect of the believer's experience, showcasing God's love and care in the midst of suffering.

John 16:7

“Nevertheless I tell you the truth; It is expedient for you that I go away: for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you; but if I depart, I will send him unto you.”

— John 16:7

THERE is no sorrow of the believing heart of which the Holy Spirit is ignorant, to which He is indifferent, or which His sympathy does not embrace, and His power cannot alleviate. The Church in which He dwells, and whose journeyings he guides, is a tried Church. Chosen in the furnace of affliction, allied to a suffering Head, its course on earth is traced by tears, and often by blood. Deeply it needs a Comforter. And who can compute the individual sorrows which may crowd the path of a single traveler to his sorrowless home? What a world of trial, and how varied, may be comprised within the history of a single saint! But if sorrows abound, consolation much more abounds, since the Comforter of the Church is the Holy Spirit. What a mighty provision, how infinite the largess, the God of all consolation has made in the covenant of grace for the sorrows of His people, in the appointment of the Third Person of the blessed Trinity to this office! What an importance it attaches to, and with what dignity it invests, and with what sanctity it hallows, our every sorrow! If our heavenly Father sees proper in His unerring wisdom and goodness to send affliction, who would not welcome the message as a sacred and precious thing, thus to be soothed and sanctified? Yes, the Spirit leads the sorrowful to all comfort. He comforts by applying the promises—by leading to Christ—by bending the will in deep submission to God—and by unveiling to faith’s far-seeing eye the glories of a sorrowless, tearless, sinless world. And oh, who can portray His perfection as a Comforter? With what promptness and tenderness He applies Himself to the soothing of each grief—how patiently He instructs the ignorant—how gently He leads the burdened—how skillfully He heals the wounded—how timely He meets the necessitous—how effectually He speaks to the mourner! When our heart is overwhelmed within us, through the depth and foam of the angry waters, He leads us to the Rock that is higher than we.

He leads to glory. There He matures the kingdom, and perfects the building, and completes the temple He commenced and occupied on earth. No power shall oppose, no difficulty shall obstruct, no contingency shall thwart the consummation of this His glorious purpose and design. Every soul graced by His presence, every heart touched by His love, every body sanctified as His temple, He will lead to heaven. Of that heaven He is the pledge and the earnest. While Jesus is in heaven, preparing a place for His people, the Spirit is on earth, preparing His people for that place. The one is maturing glory for the Church, the other is maturing the Church for glory.

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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Devotionals

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