Yield

Reflect:
Ephesians 5:10-20

“Don’t be drunk with wine, because that will ruin your life. Instead, let the Holy Spirit fill and control you.” (Ephesians 5:18, NLT)

If you are a believer, the Spirit-filled life is not an option, it’s a divine expectation. Spirit-filled, Spirit-formed, Spirit-led living is a Christian essential.

In the New International Version of the Bible, when Paul says, “Don’t get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery,” that is, meaningless, valueless, even self-destructive living, but “instead be filled with the Spirit,” he was speaking to believers who had come out of the pagan culture of Ephesus.

In their pagan worship and ritual, one of their idols was Baccus, the god of wine and drunken orgies. Their belief was that to commune with this god and to have his leading, they had to get drunk. In their drunken stupor, they believed they could discern his will and how best to serve him. And the sick by-product of their out-of-control intoxication was to engage in sexual immorality with temple prostitutes.

Just as depending on wine was a destructive counterfeit to Spirit-filled living in Paul’s day, so we need to be careful in our culture today where alcohol is the drink of choice to help people relax, feel confident, or take away the pain of whatever ails them and make them feel good, that we don’t buy into that deceptive line. This is not an anti drinking campaign, since Scripture doesn’t explicitly forbid the enjoyment of alcohol. However, there are an unfortunately large number of Christians today whose drinking habits are no different from unbelievers. The truth is, it is still God’s desire that we depend on being filled with his Spirit to make us confident, competent and joyful rather than a drink—or for that matter, a relationship or position or a possession.

In truth, nothing compares to the Spirit-filled life to satisfy every longing of your heart and enable you to experience the good life. The greatest and longest lasting “high” in this world comes from being filled with the Spirit-filled. Now Paul is not referring to that instantaneous infilling of the Spirit that we read about in Acts 2, but rather the ongoing submission of our will to God’s work through an active yielding of one’s life to the Spirit’s control.

Spirit filling in the book of Acts was an event, while the filling in Ephesians was an ongoing process. In Acts, it was evidenced by extraordinary, miraculous happenings, while in Ephesians, it was evidenced by ordinary, everyday choices that submitted the believers to the Spirit. In Acts, the Spirit was received by asking in faith, while in Ephesians the Spirit was pleased by the believer yielding in obedience. Both kinds of Spirit infilling are valid, and needed.

Being filled with the Spirit is not a matter of eliminating sinful or unproductive behavior in your life and passively waiting for God to supernaturally fill you, Paul is saying Spirit-filled living is about eliminating those things that grieve the Holy Spirit and replacing them with passions that please him. Living the Spirit-filled life is about the daily choices you make to yield control to him—choices to imitate God and eliminate immoral or questionable practices; choices to find out what pleases God; choices to find out what God’s will is—and ruthlessly pursue it.

Make a decision today to allow the Holy Spirit to have all of you! In every area of your life, yield control to him—that is what it means to be Spirit-filled. And there is no temporary high that compares to that.

“O Holy Spirit, descend plentifully into my heart. Enlighten the dark corners of this neglected dwelling and scatter there Thy cheerful beams.” ~Augustine

Reflect and Apply: Offer this prayer: “Holy Spirit, take control of all of me—mind, tongue, hands, eyes—all my thoughts, words and actions. Have more of me, I pray.”

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