John A. Studebaker

The Lord Is the Spirit


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one that could serve to provide a response to contemporary misconceptions of ‘Spirit?’”10 My Thesis Statement is, “In order to meet the challenge posed by contemporary misconceptions of ‘Spirit,’ a biblical conception of the Holy Spirit’s authority to establish and govern the Church must be recovered in systematic theology.” I will demonstrate this recovery both theoretically (by discerning the nature of the Spirit’s authority within the overall pattern of divine authority), and “practically” (by showing how the Spirit’s authority is brought to bear with respect to hermeneutics, the structure and guidance of the church, and Christian spirituality).11

      A Framework for Understanding and Defining “The Authority of the Holy Spirit”

      Defining the General Concept of Authority and the Christian Principle of Authority

      A good secular definition of “authority,” according to Ramm, is as follows:

      Only in Christianity do we encounter a divine principle of authority (one that incorporates the notion of a “final” imperial authority) along with an extensive pattern of authority through which the principle is graciously expressed and executed in practical ways. According to Ramm,

      “Divine authority” is distinguished from other authorities by its intimate association with several of God’s “absolute” or “supreme” characteristics. Most significant characteristics would include God’s absolute metaphysical primacy, eternality, and necessity (see Exod 3:14; Deut 33:27). Such characteristics in themselves do not constitute divine authority, but instead substantiate God’s transcendence, which is a relational term identifying God as uniquely other than creation and above all creation.

      Our study of “divine authority” in Christianity (and with respect to the Holy Spirit) will therefore proceed along two lines: the Christian principle of authority (defining the nature of divine authority) and the associated pattern of authority (the execution of the principle). First, what is this principle of authority in Christianity? Ramm states,