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Octavius Winslow

John 15:26

John 15:26
Octavius Winslow December, 15 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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December, 15 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about comfort in the Holy Spirit?

The Bible reveals that the Holy Spirit, known as the Comforter, testifies of Jesus and provides true comfort to believers.

In John 15:26, the Bible states that the Holy Spirit, referred to as the Comforter, is sent from the Father and acts to testify of Jesus. This testimony is essential because it leads believers to the profound comfort found in the knowledge of their salvation and the forgiveness of sins. Amidst trials and sorrows, the Spirit directs the believer's attention to the truth that, in Christ, they have complete pardon and righteousness, which offers peace and assurance in the face of life’s challenges. The Holy Spirit comforts the troubled heart by affirming the full acceptance and justification of the believer before God through Christ’s sacrifice.

John 15:26

How do we know the doctrine of justification is true?

We know the doctrine of justification is true because it is affirmed in Scripture and through the work of the Holy Spirit in the believer’s heart.

The doctrine of justification is central to Reformed theology, grounded in the truth that believers are declared righteous through faith in Jesus Christ. Scripture, such as Romans 5:1, states that 'we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.' This justification is a divine act of God where He regards sinners as righteous based on their faith in Christ's redemptive work. The Holy Spirit plays a crucial role by confirming this truth in the believer's conscience, allowing them to rest in the promise that all their sins have been blotted out and that they stand complete in Him. This assurance is vital for a Christian’s spiritual well-being and growth.

Romans 5:1

Why is the assurance of salvation important for Christians?

Assurance of salvation is vital as it provides peace, strength, and motivation for believers to grow in holiness.

The assurance of salvation is profoundly important for Christians as it fosters a deep sense of peace and security in their relationship with God. This assurance springs from the recognition that, through faith in Christ, believers are justified and accepted, as highlighted by the declaration that there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus (Romans 8:1). The Holy Spirit not only confirms this truth but also empowers believers to overcome doubt and despair that may arise from sin or external trials. With assurance, believers are motivated to pursue holiness, drawing nearer to God, and responding to His grace with a life of obedience and love, rooted in gratitude for their salvation.

Romans 8:1

“But when the Comforter is come, whom I will send unto you from the Father, even the Spirit of truth, which proceeds from the Father, he shall testify of me.”

— John 15:26

WITH regard to the spiritual sorrows of a child of God—those peculiar only to a believer in Jesus—we believe that a revelation of Jesus is the great source of comfort to which the Spirit leads the soul. Here is the true source of comfort. What higher comfort need we? What more can we have? This is enough to heal every wound, to dry up every tear, to assuage every grief, to lighten every cross, to fringe with brightness every dark cloud, and to make the roughest place smooth—that a believing soul has Jesus. Having Jesus, what has a believer? He has the entire blotting out of all his sins. Is not this a comfort? Tell us, what can give comfort to a child of God apart from this? If this fail, where can he look? Will you tell him of the world—of its many schemes of enjoyment—of its plans for the accumulation of wealth—of its domestic happiness? Wretched sources of comfort to an awakened soul! Poor empty channels to a man made acquainted with the inward plague! That which he needs to know is the sure payment of the ten thousand talents—the entire cancelling of the bond held against him by stern justice—the complete blotting out, as a thick cloud, of all his iniquity. And, until this great fact is made sure and certain to his conscience, all other comfort is but as a dream of boyhood, a shadow that vanishes, a vapor that melts away. But the Holy Spirit comforts the believer by leading him to this blessed truth—the full pardon of sin. This is the great controversy which Satan has with the believer. To bring him to doubt the pardon of sin, to unhinge the mind from this great fact, is the constant effort of this arch-enemy. And, when unbelief is powerful, and inbred sin is strong, and outward trials are many and sore, and, in the midst of it all, the single eye is removed from Christ, then is the hour of Satan to charge home upon the conscience of the believer all the iniquity he ever committed. And how does the blessed Spirit comfort at that moment? By unfolding the greatness, perfection, and efficacy of the one offering by which Jesus has forever blotted out the sins of His people, and perfected those who are sanctified. Oh, what comfort does this truth speak to a fearful, troubled, anxious believer, when, the Spirit working faith in his heart, he can look up, and see all his sins laid upon Jesus in the solemn hour of atonement, and no condemnation remaining! Dear child of God! poor, worthless as you feel yourself to be, this truth is even for you. Oh, rise to it, welcome it, embrace it, think it not too costly for one so unworthy. It comes from the heart of Jesus, and cannot be more free. “Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered.” Having Jesus, what has the believer more?

He possesses a righteousness in which God views him complete and accepted, from the beginning of the year to the end of the year. Is not this a comfort? To stand “complete in Him”—in the midst of many and conscious imperfections, infirmities, flaws, and proneness to wander, yet for the sorrowing and trembling heart to turn and take up its rest in this truth, “that he that believes is justified from all things,” and stands accepted in the Beloved, to the praise of the glory of Divine grace, what a comfort! That God beholds him in Jesus without a spot, because He beholds His Son, in whom He is well pleased, and viewing the believing soul in Him can say, “You are all fair, my love; there is no spot in you”! The blessed Comforter conveys this truth to the troubled soul, brings it to take up its rest in it; and, as the believer realizes his full acceptance in the righteousness of Christ, and rejoices in the truth, he weeps as he never wept, and mourns as he never mourned, over the perpetual bias of his heart to wander from a God that has so loved him. The very comfort poured into his soul from this truth lays him in the dust, and draws out the heart in ardent breathings for holiness.

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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