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What is "Walking in the Spirit"?

Aaron

Member
Site Supporter
You don't mean antinomianism, right?
That is correct. I don't mean antinomianism.

And how does one who is "living in the Spirit," which is to say, born-again spiritually by the Holy Spirit (Jn. 3:3-7; Ro. 8:9-14; Tit. 3:5), "seek justification by faith in Christ"?
By looking to Him, (Hebrews 12:2)

They've already done so, which is why they're "living in the Spirit," right?
Yes, just had the Galatians, but they still stood in need of instruction in righteousness. The temptation to establish our own is always there.
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
I'm not talking about generally-accepted views like the ones you've suggested here. Obviously, there is no reason or obligation to defend these sorts of beliefs/views. The view you've asserted about Galatians 5:25, however, is not of this sort, I think. In fact, your view appears to defy the language of the verse pretty directly. And so, in this instance where what has been put forward is...unusual, it does require justification.



I didn't think I'd have to explicitly stipulate that unfounded opinion was unwanted. This goes without saying, it seems to me...
The topic is like eschatology. Do I have an opinion? Yes. Will I defend my opinion? No. It is simply not that important to me.

You asked what I believed. I told you I believed that "walking in the Spirit" is the action to "living in the Spirit ". I believe it is conduct that suits our calling.

While "living in the Spirit" emphasizes faith, "walking in the Spirit" emphasis the fruit that faith produces.

I am not interested in defending my view because I believe it is self evident. Arguing about definitions would just be arguing about definitions.
 

Tenchi

Active Member
No. It is simply not that important to me.

"Walking in the Spirit" is not that important to you? Or defending your views on it is not that important?

I told you I believed that "walking in the Spirit" is the action to "living in the Spirit ". I believe it is conduct that suits our calling.

I understand your view, I think. From what Scripture tells me, though, "conduct that suits our calling" is the by-product of "walking in the Spirit" rather than the "walking" itself.

While "living in the Spirit" emphasizes faith, "walking in the Spirit" emphasis the fruit that faith produces.

Oh? How so?

I am not interested in defending my view because I believe it is self evident.

No, I don't think it is self-evident. Not at all. Though, your thinking is very common among boot-strap believers.
 

kyredneck

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
What do you mean by "looking to Him"?

Kinda like:

John Chapter 15

4​

Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine; so neither can ye, except ye abide in me.
 

Tenchi

Active Member
Galatians 5:22-25
22 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
23 gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law.
24 Now those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires.
25 If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit.


22 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
23 gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law.


This list is the fruit, not of the self-effort of the Christian, but of the Holy Spirit. I point this out because Christians have the strange habit of reading this verse (and many others) and filtering it through their preferences, prejudices, and preconceptions 'til it transforms into a command to them to produce from their own human resources the "fruit" of the Holy Spirit. But only from the in-filling of the Spirit of Truth, love, holiness and grace do these characteristics arise. He is our love, he is our peace, he is our patience, and so on. How often though, believers set out to produce their best version of these things, thinking God is pleased by their fleshly counterfeit of the fruit of the Spirit that leaves them exhausted, knowing only the extent of their own limits more thoroughly, and with corrupted "fruit" (Ga. 6:7-8).

24 Now those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires.

Perhaps Paul anticipated that some of his readers would attempt to form from their own fleshly powers (intellect, will, and physical strength) the "fruit of the Spirit" and so, he points out that those who belong to Christ have "crucified the flesh" - a necessary precursor to "walking in the Spirit." Why? Because "in my flesh dwells no good thing" (Ro. 7:18), because "the mind set on the flesh is at enmity with God" (Ro. 8:7-8), because the flesh is at war with the Spirit (Ga. 5:17). Any Christian, then, who is striving to produce the fruit of the Spirit from their own flesh-centered-and-empowered effort is doomed to failure. From such effort, they may form a rough facsimile of the supernatural life and work of the Spirit, but because that facsimile is fundamentally a thing of the flesh (intellect, will, physical strength), it is corrupt, weak and very displeasing to God. And so, Paul urges his readers in the verse above to remember that they've been crucified with Christ that "the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth they should not serve sin" (Ro. 6:6).

25 If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit.

The emphasis in this verse is entirely upon the Spirit, not the actions of the believer. The born-again person lives in/by the Spirit. They have no life spiritually apart from what they receive from the Spirit; they cannot work up his life from their own fleshly effort; they cannot please God in the attempt to do so. Only by the indwelling Spirit working into them his life, filling them with himself, can they then "work out their salvation with fear and trembling." (Phil. 2:12-13).

But the majority of believers, in my experience, think they're in a more-or-less equal partnership with the Spirit, that he's their "co-pilot," a divine Assistant, who shores up them up when they've exhausted their own reserves of fleshly power in "living the Christian life." In reality, just as they could only receive life from the Spirit, they can only receive from him the power to act out, or work out, their salvation in their daily living. And so, Paul wrote, "let us also walk BY (or in) the Spirit," not "let us walk by our own fleshly effort."

How many are the Christians, though, who live for years trying to be godly by self-effort, setting themselves to the laborious (and impossible) task of producing from their own human powers a God-pleasing life. "I'm a Christian, so I'd better act like it," is their reasoning. And so, in accord with the old Nike "Just Do It" tag-line, they begin to pull themselves up spiritually by their own boot straps. They can seem to succeed - briefly - too, but that "success" is entirely a work of their fleshly powers, God not at all involved. Since the result of this fleshly effort has a pious, "Christian" veneer, it is accepted by the Church, utterly apart from God though the effort has been.

This isn't "walking in the Spirit." Not even close. It's just a fleshly counterfeit of what walking in the Spirit is. Actual walking in the Spirit happens only under a specific, God-commanded circumstance: The Spirit only enables the child of God with his supernatural life and power to live "godly in Christ Jesus" when the child of God is persistently and consistently submitted to the will and way of God, yielding to Him repeatedly throughout each day (Ja. 4:7-10; Ro. 6:13-22; Ro. 12:1; 1 Pe. 5:6, etc.).

But every time a believer indulges an evil thought or attitude, or imagines some ungodly motive or conduct in another believer, or surrenders to an inordinate impulse of the flesh (i.e. any addiction), or runs ahead of God's leading, forging their own course, or satisfies some selfish desire in a sinful manner, they depart the Spirit's control. Until they consciously, explicitly submit to him once again (Lu. 22:42), they cannot "walk in the Spirit." They are rebels, actually, until such time as they repent of their waywardness and sin, confess it and yield once more to God's will and way (Ja. 4:8-10; 1 Jn. 1:9; Ro. 6:13). The Spirit does not empower and transform rebels against their will.

And so, there are many born-again believers who have been given spiritual life by the Spirit who are not walking in his power, transformed by him, his "fruit" truly evident in their lives. They're working very hard, though, to form their own corrupt, human version of his supernatural life and power, imagining - wrongly - that God is pleased with their effort. And so, these straining, striving believers are just as those ignorant Jews whom Paul described:

Romans 10:2-3
2 For I bear them record that they have a zeal of God, but not according to knowledge.
3 For they being ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God.
 

John of Japan

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I've my own well-formed views on what Galatians 5:16 and 25 mean by "walking in/by the Spirit," but I'm curious what those who frequent this website think this "walking" is, what it looks like and how one comes to be walking in/by the Spirit rather than merely living in/by the Spirit. Thanks in advance for your comments.
It is a metaphor for living by the Holy Spirit and His power and guidance. It means living in full surrender to the Lord and in obedience to His Word and will as lead and helped by the Holy Spirit.

Similar metaphors are: filled with the Spirit, baptized in the Spirit, endued (clothed) with power, having the Spirit come upon one, etc.
 

Tenchi

Active Member
Similar metaphors are: filled with the Spirit, baptized in the Spirit, endued (clothed) with power, having the Spirit come upon one, etc.

Thanks for your input.

I think being filled with the Spirit is the result of "walking in the Spirit," which is, at bottom, being in constant, conscious submission to the will and way of God. Such submission is a necessary predicate to being filled with the Spirit, this submission alternatively described by Paul as being "led of the Spirit" (Ga. 5:18; Ro. 8:14) which one cannot be, of course, if one is not submitted to his will and way.

Being "baptized by the Spirit" is how one is saved, by him being "baptized" into Christ (Tit. 3:5-7; Ro. 6:1-6; Acts 1:5; 2:1-4), and thus made alive spiritually which is, I think, what Paul means by "living in the Spirit" (Ro. 8:9-13; Eph. 2:1; Jn. 3:3-7). Paul, though, makes a distinction between this state-of-affairs and "walking in/by the Spirit," the former necessarily preceding the latter, but not identical to the latter.

If one is indwelt by the Spirit, one possesses in him all the divine power one can possess. And so, every born-again believer is "endued with power" at the moment they are saved. What their experience is of that power depends, however, upon their living in constant submission to the will and way of the Spirit. God only lifts up those of His children who go low before Him, resisting those who do not (Ja. 4:6-7; 1 Pe. 5:5-6).

It seems to me, too, that the Spirit "coming upon" a post-Calvary person is what happens when they are saved. Acts 2;1-4; 10:44-48; 19:1-7 demonstrate this well. The Spirit may afterward fill those in whom he has come to dwell as they live in constant, conscious submission to him, but his "coming upon them" has happened at their conversion and will never be repeated - quite unlike his coming and going upon people in the OT.
 

Aaron

Member
Site Supporter
Galatians 5:22-25
22 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
23 gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law.
24 Now those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires.
25 If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit.


22 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
23 gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law.


This list is the fruit, not of the self-effort of the Christian, but of the Holy Spirit. I point this out because Christians have the strange habit of reading this verse (and many others) and filtering it through their preferences, prejudices, and preconceptions 'til it transforms into a command to them to produce from their own human resources the "fruit" of the Holy Spirit. But only from the in-filling of the Spirit of Truth, love, holiness and grace do these characteristics arise. He is our love, he is our peace, he is our patience, and so on. How often though, believers set out to produce their best version of these things, thinking God is pleased by their fleshly counterfeit of the fruit of the Spirit that leaves them exhausted, knowing only the extent of their own limits more thoroughly, and with corrupted "fruit" (Ga. 6:7-8).

24 Now those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires.

Perhaps Paul anticipated that some of his readers would attempt to form from their own fleshly powers (intellect, will, and physical strength) the "fruit of the Spirit" and so, he points out that those who belong to Christ have "crucified the flesh" - a necessary precursor to "walking in the Spirit." Why? Because "in my flesh dwells no good thing" (Ro. 7:18), because "the mind set on the flesh is at enmity with God" (Ro. 8:7-8), because the flesh is at war with the Spirit (Ga. 5:17). Any Christian, then, who is striving to produce the fruit of the Spirit from their own flesh-centered-and-empowered effort is doomed to failure. From such effort, they may form a rough facsimile of the supernatural life and work of the Spirit, but because that facsimile is fundamentally a thing of the flesh (intellect, will, physical strength), it is corrupt, weak and very displeasing to God. And so, Paul urges his readers in the verse above to remember that they've been crucified with Christ that "the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth they should not serve sin" (Ro. 6:6).

25 If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit.

The emphasis in this verse is entirely upon the Spirit, not the actions of the believer. The born-again person lives in/by the Spirit. They have no life spiritually apart from what they receive from the Spirit; they cannot work up his life from their own fleshly effort; they cannot please God in the attempt to do so. Only by the indwelling Spirit working into them his life, filling them with himself, can they then "work out their salvation with fear and trembling." (Phil. 2:12-13).

But the majority of believers, in my experience, think they're in a more-or-less equal partnership with the Spirit, that he's their "co-pilot," a divine Assistant, who shores up them up when they've exhausted their own reserves of fleshly power in "living the Christian life." In reality, just as they could only receive life from the Spirit, they can only receive from him the power to act out, or work out, their salvation in their daily living. And so, Paul wrote, "let us also walk BY (or in) the Spirit," not "let us walk by our own fleshly effort."

How many are the Christians, though, who live for years trying to be godly by self-effort, setting themselves to the laborious (and impossible) task of producing from their own human powers a God-pleasing life. "I'm a Christian, so I'd better act like it," is their reasoning. And so, in accord with the old Nike "Just Do It" tag-line, they begin to pull themselves up spiritually by their own boot straps. They can seem to succeed - briefly - too, but that "success" is entirely a work of their fleshly powers, God not at all involved. Since the result of this fleshly effort has a pious, "Christian" veneer, it is accepted by the Church, utterly apart from God though the effort has been.

This isn't "walking in the Spirit." Not even close. It's just a fleshly counterfeit of what walking in the Spirit is. Actual walking in the Spirit happens only under a specific, God-commanded circumstance: The Spirit only enables the child of God with his supernatural life and power to live "godly in Christ Jesus" when the child of God is persistently and consistently submitted to the will and way of God, yielding to Him repeatedly throughout each day (Ja. 4:7-10; Ro. 6:13-22; Ro. 12:1; 1 Pe. 5:6, etc.).

But every time a believer indulges an evil thought or attitude, or imagines some ungodly motive or conduct in another believer, or surrenders to an inordinate impulse of the flesh (i.e. any addiction), or runs ahead of God's leading, forging their own course, or satisfies some selfish desire in a sinful manner, they depart the Spirit's control. Until they consciously, explicitly submit to him once again (Lu. 22:42), they cannot "walk in the Spirit." They are rebels, actually, until such time as they repent of their waywardness and sin, confess it and yield once more to God's will and way (Ja. 4:8-10; 1 Jn. 1:9; Ro. 6:13). The Spirit does not empower and transform rebels against their will.

And so, there are many born-again believers who have been given spiritual life by the Spirit who are not walking in his power, transformed by him, his "fruit" truly evident in their lives. They're working very hard, though, to form their own corrupt, human version of his supernatural life and power, imagining - wrongly - that God is pleased with their effort. And so, these straining, striving believers are just as those ignorant Jews whom Paul described:

Romans 10:2-3
2 For I bear them record that they have a zeal of God, but not according to knowledge.
3 For they being ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God.
What do you mean, they have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God?

What do you think one does to submit himself unto the righteousness of God?
 

Tenchi

Active Member
Kinda like:

John Chapter 15

4​

Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine; so neither can ye, except ye abide in me.

How are you connecting these verses to one another, exactly?
 

Aaron

Member
Site Supporter
??? This is an oddly coy reply. Why would I ask you what you mean only to answer the question myself? This rather defeats the purpose of asking the question.
LOL. "Coy." I have tired of your catechism. I'd like you to cut to the chase.
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
Do you think you can be saved and lost, then? To abide in Christ is to be saved, which is why I ask.
No. One cannot be saved from something and then suffer that something. Simply doesn't make sense. Either one is saved or they are not.
 

Tenchi

Active Member
No. One cannot be saved from something and then suffer that something. Simply doesn't make sense. Either one is saved or they are not.

I'm of the same view (though, maybe for other reasons).

So, what do you think "abiding in Christ" is?
 

John of Japan

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Thanks for your input.

I think being filled with the Spirit is the result of "walking in the Spirit," which is, at bottom, being in constant, conscious submission to the will and way of God. Such submission is a necessary predicate to being filled with the Spirit, this submission alternatively described by Paul as being "led of the Spirit" (Ga. 5:18; Ro. 8:14) which one cannot be, of course, if one is not submitted to his will and way.

Being "baptized by the Spirit" is how one is saved, by him being "baptized" into Christ (Tit. 3:5-7; Ro. 6:1-6; Acts 1:5; 2:1-4), and thus made alive spiritually which is, I think, what Paul means by "living in the Spirit" (Ro. 8:9-13; Eph. 2:1; Jn. 3:3-7). Paul, though, makes a distinction between this state-of-affairs and "walking in/by the Spirit," the former necessarily preceding the latter, but not identical to the latter.

If one is indwelt by the Spirit, one possesses in him all the divine power one can possess. And so, every born-again believer is "endued with power" at the moment they are saved. What their experience is of that power depends, however, upon their living in constant submission to the will and way of the Spirit. God only lifts up those of His children who go low before Him, resisting those who do not (Ja. 4:6-7; 1 Pe. 5:5-6).

It seems to me, too, that the Spirit "coming upon" a post-Calvary person is what happens when they are saved. Acts 2;1-4; 10:44-48; 19:1-7 demonstrate this well. The Spirit may afterward fill those in whom he has come to dwell as they live in constant, conscious submission to him, but his "coming upon them" has happened at their conversion and will never be repeated - quite unlike his coming and going upon people in the OT.
So you don't recognize that "walking" and "filled" etc. are metaphors?

Can we actually climb inside the Spirit of God and walk there? Can we actually have the Holy Spirit fill up our body? Does the Holy Spirit actually rest on the head or shoulder when He "comes upon" one?
 
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