One of the Best Books on the Holy Spirit

Two of my favorite doctrines converge (Creation & the Holy Spirit) in Creator Spirit: The Holy Spirit and the Art of Becoming Human by Steven Guthrie. This book appropriates a theology of creation with a robust understanding of the Spirit and then applies it to Art. Guthrie wields constructive theology, integrating theology across disciplines, with ease. This is one of the best books I have read on the Holy Spirit.

While familiar with much of his helpful explanations of these doctrines, I found his application of these doctrines in the realm of Art, insightful and compelling. His prose moves the reader along in hopeful anticipation of yet, another intellectual and inspiring gem. The ease with which he floats between, for instance, John Coltrane, Plato, and Jurgen Moltmann win me over.

Appreciating More Than Art

Now, this is not stuffy theology, though some theological background is needed. The lofty touches down on the mundane, where we stand in Art Galleries gazing at something we know not how to interpret. Guthrie sweeps across Art criticism and history to provide us with handles for art appreciation (though his work is much more than that). Have you ever wondered whether Art should absorb your attention or redirect it beyond itself? Guthrie helps us here, citing primary sources. While expressionists want us to experience emotion, and Tolstoy wants us to experience the profound humanity in art, Guthrie insists that art is meant to point us, not ultimately to mystery or to its medium, but to God himself. This is the work of the Holy Spirit, who himself is remaking humanity into the form, not of mystery, but of the very image of God.

Knowing the Spirit

In all his constructive efforts, even the non-artist can benefit from this book. Guthrie provides a remarkably concise and stirring theology of the Spirit in chapter two, the same chapter which exegetes John Coltrane’s The Love Supreme (which I listened to with new ears today). His primary interlocutor, church father Athanasias, provides insight into the person and work of the Spirit as the re-humanizing Person of the Godhead. The goal of the Spirit is to re-humanize us after the image of the true human–Jesus Christ. I found Athanasias’ comment regarding the descent of the Spirit upon Jesus insightful: “This did not take place for the advancement of the Word but for our sanctification, so that we may share in his anointing…” In other words, the Spirit did not come upon Jesus because he was divinely insufficient, rather, it was so that Jesus, in his humanity, could become the prototypical new human who is indwelt with the Spirit of God, to become the true human. Of course, this was also an expression of the approbation of God as Jesus succeeded where Israel failed in passing through the watery judgment, to receive the favor and fellowship of God as the one, true Israelite who would lead the people of God out of the slavery of their sin into a new land of salvation. But he did this as the ultimate Man, possessing the power of the Spirit, just as his posterity, the Church does. Oh that we would commune with the Spirit in fellowship and in power to display the new humanity we have possessed by faith to the world, not in bold arrogance but in bold compassion and worship!

Chapters on the communal shape of singing, creativity, and vocation continue to push theology into practice with inspiring twists and turns that, themselves, embody the work of the creative Spirit radiating through Guthrie’s new humanity. This book is not for everyone, but it is about everyone. It is a theological, philosophical, artistic work that brings the reader along with insight and inspiration, grasping more deeply what God has accomplished and is accomplishing in Christ through his Spirit in every follower of Christ.

Free excerpt of Creator Spirit

Books I’m Reading

Summer is a great time for books, but anytime is a great time for books! For those interested, here’s what I recently finished or am currently reading:

Fiction

Nemesis

Sociology

HIP: the history

Modernist America: Art, Music, Movies and the Globalization of American Culture

American Grace: How Religion Divides & Unites Us

Theology

Did Adam & Eve Really Exist?

The Doctrine of the Christian Life

Faith & Culture

Should Christians Embrace Evolution?

The Call: Finding & Fulfilling Your Purpose in Life

Mission

Heart of the Gospel: The Theology Behind the Master Plan of Evangelism

When Marriage Messes Up

What is marriage for? Is marriage a social or cultural convention? Is it a silly obligation intended to “legalize” sex or short-circuit pleasure? Marriage actually has enduring purpose and and points away to deeper pleasure. God created marriage, male and female he created them, as a reflection of his relationship to us (Gen 1:27; 2:18-25; Eph 5). Marriage is by God and for God. Whenever we turn it around—marriage by us and for us—we mess it all up. It backfires. Inevitably, we all mess marriage up, which is why it’s so important that we know how to turn it around. We need a clear bearing on how we’re to exist as spouses. How does this marriage thing work?!

Marriage is by God and for God.

Marriage is a precious gift from God. When we respond to God about marriage, we bend it around his intention like a potter shapes a piece of wet clay, forming it into something stunning and useful. However, when we refuse to turn our marriages around, and reject what our marriages are made for, they devolve into competitive need-meeting, which eventually hardens, dries, and becomes brittle. When your need—not God—is in the middle of marriage it will crack. However, when our marriages are regularly splashed with the grace of God’s purpose, they can be shaped into something more beautiful and satisfying than any human can account for.

Beliefs About Marriage Matter

I have been married for eleven years. The second year was hell. Screaming matches, threats, curse words, tears, passive-agressive, pain, confusion, anger, withdraw. If we believed that marriage was about us, about getting our needs met, we would have walked away in year two. I’m so deeply grateful we didn’t. What moved us through a difficult year, and into thriving years, and later on through suffering years, and back into thriving years, was our common belief that marriage is not only a precious gift but also profound stewardship. To be more plain, we believed that marriage was penultimately about us and ultimately about God. We knew that we made a commitment to one another second and a commitment to God first.

Marriage is not only a precious gift but also profound stewardship.

Marriage is a profound stewardship before God. Sure, it is a wonderful gift but sometimes it doesn’t feel wonderful. And feelings do not get you through hell or suffering in marriage. What does and can get you through is truth. The truth about husbands and wives, when believed, so reshapes feelings that marriage becomes something molded, not around our expectations but around God’s expectations.

You Don’t Complete Me

God tells me that my marriage is a mysterious display of a greater relationship between Christ and the Church. That the husband sacrificially, humbly leads and the wife respectfully, lovingly follows. But my society tells me that my marriage exists for my happiness, that it is meant to “complete me” in some pipe-dream Jerry Mcguire sense. That we are two identical halves waiting to fit together. Nothing could be further from the truth. We are more like two puzzle pieces, very different, with egdes that need smoothing, but are meant to fit together with each playing its intended role in the overall picture of God’s wise and kind design. We are wonderfully equal but incredibly different.

My feelings tell me that marriage is relationship that should bring me substantial, if not inordinate satisfaction. God tells me that He alone can bring me inordinate satisfaction (Psalm 16:11). Our feelings often lie but God always tells the truth. When marriage messes up. When conflict, hell, or suffering come will God’s truth shape your feelings or will your feelings dictate a new “truth” (“I married the wrong person.” “This won’t work.” “We fell out of love.) These are need-centered, feeling-based cop-outs from God’s marital design.

Grace-shaped Marriage

Will marriage be about you and your needs or about God and his great purpose to shave off your edges and draw you closer into Him? Will marriage be by you and for you or will it be by God and for God? When marriage becomes less about us and more about God, we can settle into appropriate expectations and joy as husbands and wives. And when we return to God as our great Husband or Lover, we can love and respect, lead and follow in harmony. We will have a bearing on what God has made us for. What we believe about marriage matters, and when we believe what’s true we can experience joy in marriage. When we insist on what is false we harden. In God’s design, we can be so splashed by grace that marriage becomes not only a profound stewardship but also a precious gift, useful and stunning.

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Read to grow your marriage in grace:

HT: ACL Blog