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Recent Issues regarding the Holy Spirit

An episode of the Reformed Thinking podcast, hosted by Edison Wu, titled "Recent Issues regarding the Holy Spirit" was published on July 29, 2025 and runs 32 minutes.

July 29, 2025 ·32m · Reformed Thinking

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Deep Dive into Christian Theology by Millard J. Erickson - Recent Issues regarding the Holy SpiritRecent theological discussions on the Holy Spirit have seen a resurgence of interest, often influenced by postmodernism's emphasis on subjective experience. This has led to diverse interpretations regarding prophecy, science, other world religions, and other spiritual entities.One area is the continuation of prophecy today. Advocates distinguish modern prophecy from Old Testament prophecy, stating it is not equal in authority to Scripture and is imperfect, requiring testing. Wayne Grudem describes it as God laying something on one's heart, while Jack Deere emphasizes dreams, visions, and direct experience. Critics point to a lack of clear biblical evidence for its continuation, the problem of error in prophecies, and the movement's neglect of psychological insights or the Spirit's role in illuminating existing Scripture rather than providing new truth.Wolfhart Pannenberg offers a unique conception of the Holy Spirit as a "force field", drawing from modern physics to develop a rational theology. He views the Spirit as the life-giving principle and the force field of God's presence that unites the Trinity and mediates God's relationship to creation. A key criticism is the ambiguity of whether "force field" is used literally or analogically, risking the materialization of God or raising questions about how the spiritual interacts with the material.Amos Yong, an Asian-American Pentecostal scholar, proposes a pneumatological approach to other world religions, asserting the Holy Spirit's universal activity beyond Christianity. Based on Acts 2:17, he argues the Spirit redeems linguistic, cultural, and even religious diversity. Yong sees religions as dynamic "verbs" ("traditioning") where praxis is as important as doctrine, facilitating interreligious dialogue. Critics note exegetical gaps and ambiguity concerning Christianity's uniqueness.Finally, there's increased interest in "other spirits." The spiritual warfare movement views Christian life as a struggle against evil spirits, emphasizing cosmic combat and territorial spirits. While acknowledged for re-emphasizing the reality of spiritual struggle, critics argue it undermines Christ's decisive victory, neglects natural causes for illness, and uses practices with little biblical precedent, risking an unhealthy interest in evil. In contrast, ecofeminist Chung Hyun Kyung takes a positive view of various spirits, invoking victims of injustice and controversially associating the Holy Spirit with a Buddhist goddess, a framework deemed too far removed from biblical teaching for evangelicals.Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologianhttps://buymeacoffee.com/edi2730

Deep Dive into Christian Theology by Millard J. Erickson - Recent Issues regarding the Holy Spirit


Recent theological discussions on the Holy Spirit have seen a resurgence of interest, often influenced by postmodernism's emphasis on subjective experience. This has led to diverse interpretations regarding prophecy, science, other world religions, and other spiritual entities.

One area is the continuation of prophecy today. Advocates distinguish modern prophecy from Old Testament prophecy, stating it is not equal in authority to Scripture and is imperfect, requiring testing. Wayne Grudem describes it as God laying something on one's heart, while Jack Deere emphasizes dreams, visions, and direct experience. Critics point to a lack of clear biblical evidence for its continuation, the problem of error in prophecies, and the movement's neglect of psychological insights or the Spirit's role in illuminating existing Scripture rather than providing new truth.

Wolfhart Pannenberg offers a unique conception of the Holy Spirit as a "force field", drawing from modern physics to develop a rational theology. He views the Spirit as the life-giving principle and the force field of God's presence that unites the Trinity and mediates God's relationship to creation. A key criticism is the ambiguity of whether "force field" is used literally or analogically, risking the materialization of God or raising questions about how the spiritual interacts with the material.

Amos Yong, an Asian-American Pentecostal scholar, proposes a pneumatological approach to other world religions, asserting the Holy Spirit's universal activity beyond Christianity. Based on Acts 2:17, he argues the Spirit redeems linguistic, cultural, and even religious diversity. Yong sees religions as dynamic "verbs" ("traditioning") where praxis is as important as doctrine, facilitating interreligious dialogue. Critics note exegetical gaps and ambiguity concerning Christianity's uniqueness.

Finally, there's increased interest in "other spirits." The spiritual warfare movement views Christian life as a struggle against evil spirits, emphasizing cosmic combat and territorial spirits. While acknowledged for re-emphasizing the reality of spiritual struggle, critics argue it undermines Christ's decisive victory, neglects natural causes for illness, and uses practices with little biblical precedent, risking an unhealthy interest in evil. In contrast, ecofeminist Chung Hyun Kyung takes a positive view of various spirits, invoking victims of injustice and controversially associating the Holy Spirit with a Buddhist goddess, a framework deemed too far removed from biblical teaching for evangelicals.

Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologian

https://buymeacoffee.com/edi2730

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