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Living (By John MacArthur)

All people like to be happy — to be exhilarated with joy, to feel good, and to be on top of everything. There’s nothing wrong with that. God wants joyous, excited, happy, and uplifted people. The problem lies in how happiness is generated. Some people think they’ll find it in a liquor bottle or in a narcotic. But neither of those is the Christian’s source of joy.

Ephesians 5:18 says, “And do not get drunk with wine, for that is dissipation.” Paul doesn’t try to prove that drunkenness is incompatible with Christianity, he simply gives the command. Once a person becomes a Christian, he says goodbye to the life he once lived in drunken debauchery–the party life is to have no place in a believer’s life.

Now, I know what you’re thinking: “John, are you going to lecture me on the evils of alcohol? That’s preaching to the choir!” Is it? One study I found said nearly 14 million Americans last year were classified as alcohol abusers or alcoholics–that’s about 1 out of every 13 adults. Millions more regularly engage in binge drinking or heavy drinking and over 50 percent of Americans report that one or more of their close relatives have a drinking problem. With figures like that, do you think some of those people might now attend your church? Were you one of those people?

I won’t lecture you on the dangers of alcohol — you’re no doubt painfully aware of the problem. Drunkenness causes violence, accidents, abuse, and indebtedness, and we pay millions of dollars in tax money to clean up the wreckage. Insobriety exacts a tremendous toll on our society, both directly and indirectly.

The Spirit and the Bottle

So if Christians are not to be drunk with wine, where do they find joy and happiness? The answer is in the second half of Ephesians 5:18: “And do not get drunk with wine, for that is dissipation, but be filled with the Spirit” (emphasis added). Your thrills, your exhilaration, and your happiness should be the result of being filled with the Holy Spirit, not from being filled with wine.

You might be shocked by the language of that verse. It sounds like Paul is saying we should be drunk with the Holy Spirit. In fact, observers of the apostles exuberant behavior at Pentecost mistakenly concluded they had been dipping into the wineskins a little too early in the morning (see Acts 2:1-4, 13-18). But here’s the idea: Being filled with the Spirit results in behavior marked by joy, boldness, and a lack of inhibition. Even a mild person can become bold and unafraid when living under the influence of the Holy Spirit.

That sounds like what happens when a person gets drunk, doesn’t it? But Paul is actually making a contrast, not a comparison, between wine and the Holy Spirit. Wine controls a person completely and works evil in his heart and life. The Holy Spirit also controls completely, but He empowers you unto true righteousness. The Spirit’s influence provides divine fuel for a different, free, uninhibited life lived for God’s glory.

Be Filled

You’ll notice that Ephesians 5:18 has a positive command: “Be filled with the Spirit.” What does that mean? First, let me tell you what that doesn’t mean. Being filled with the Spirit doesn’t mean to be indwelt with, to be baptized in, or to be sealed by the Holy Spirit.

Paul never says, “Be indwelt by the Spirit.” If you’re a Christian, the Spirit already lives in you (1 Cor. 6:19).

Paul never says, “Be baptized in the Spirit.” If you’re a Christian, you were baptized in Him at your conversion (1 Cor. 12:13).

Paul never says, “Be sealed with the Spirit.” If you’re a Christian, you’ve already been sealed with the Spirit (Eph. 1:13).

All three events occurred the moment you were saved.

Instead, Paul’s command has our sanctification in view. Though it sounds a little odd in English, the Greek verb means “be continually filled” or “be kept filled.” He is actually saying, “Be continually letting the Spirit of God — who is already in you — control you.” It isn’t a second work of grace, a one-time experience, or a step up to a higher level. It is the continual, ongoing experience of the Christian life.

Surrender and Submit

To be filled with the Holy Spirit means you are continually surrendering your will, mind, body, time, talents, and treasures — every area of your life — to His control. The context shows that every realm of your life will be affected when you are filled with the Spirit. Notice how the Spirit-filled person submits to others (5:21–6:9). The Spirit-filled wife submits to her husband. The Spirit-filled husband loves his wife. Spirit-filled children obey their parents. A Spirit-filled father doesn’t provoke his children to anger. A Spirit-filled employee works diligently for his employer. A Spirit-filled employer is fair with his employees. All those are manifestations of the Spirit-filled life.

“So,” you ask, “is this a ‘Let go and let God’ kind of thing?” Hardly. Look at Colossians 3:16 for the answer to the question, “How do I surrender?” It says, “Let the word of Christ richly dwell within you.” The effect of the Word of Christ dwelling in you is an exact parallel to what happens when you are filled with the Spirit (see vv. 16-23). It’s all there–singing, submission, love, obedience, gentle parenting, diligence, and fairness. Therefore, being filled with the Spirit is exactly the same thing as letting the Word of Christ dwell in you richly. As you study God’s Word, as it dwells in you richly, your thoughts become saturated with Christ. You become Christ-centered, Christ-conscious at all times–that’s what it is to be Spirit-filled.

Attitude Adjustment

We’ve already looked at the behavior of a Spirit-filled person, but where is the joy I mentioned earlier? Tucked between the command and the change in behavior is a very important comment on the attitudes of a Spirit-filled Christian. Ephesians 5:19-20 says, “speaking to one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody with your heart to the Lord; always giving thanks for all things in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ to God.” In those two verses, Paul is looking at the fruit of two attitudes that demonstrate vitality of the Christian life — joy and gratitude.

Joy and gratitude will characterize you when you are under the Holy Spirit’s control. Whether public or private, inward or outward, Spirit-induced joy produces singing that comes from the heart. To whom do you sing? You sing “to one another” and “to the Lord.” Keep that in mind the next time you sing in church. Your songs should not be a performance — they aren’t entertainment. Rather, they should be the sincere testimony of your joy in the Lord. When you express your joy in the Holy Spirit through singing, you bring pleasure to the Lord Himself.

Hand in hand with joy is thanksgiving (cf. 1 Thess. 5:16-18). If ingratitude sours and darkens the soul, gratitude sweetens it and floods it with light. Thanksgiving is more than the act of saying thanks or sending a thank you note — it is an attitude of the heart. Without the attitude, the act is mere hypocrisy.

Spirit-produced joy and gratitude are indomitable. When Jesus said, “Your sorrow will be turned to joy,” He used the example of a woman giving birth to a child. Though the pain of childbirth is agonizing, when the child is born, the joy is both unequaled and unstoppable — nothing can drive it away. That’s the kind of change the Holy Spirit produces in everyone who lives under His control.

The Spirit-filled life is overflowing with gratitude, joy, right relationships, and good behavior — quite a contrast to those enslaved by alcohol. You may not be seeking your joy in drugs or alcohol, but are you seeking to be filled with the Spirit? His resources are immediately available and He desires to produce new life in you. What are you waiting for?

13 Responses to “Living “Under the Influence””

  1. on 22 Aug 2007 at 1:07 am Dale Thackrah

    Pastor John,

    Thank you for this post! Sadly, there are many, many, many people people in the church that try to rationalize drinking alcohol. Many state that the Bible does not preclude them from drinking. However, I believe your blog unpacks the Biblical command for every believer to find their joy from the Holy Spirit that indwells them – and not from other “spirits” that are found in bottles.

  2. on 22 Aug 2007 at 4:45 am Joel Cepeda

    Pastor MacArhtur,

    Thank you for this word, The Lord bless you forever.

    Att. Joel Cepeda

  3. on 22 Aug 2007 at 5:37 am mike

    Great Blog.
    I have always heard that Happeness comes from things. But joy comes from the Lord.

  4. on 22 Aug 2007 at 5:42 am Victoria Lynch

    What a timely article. Thanks
    I wonder Nate if we have permission to copy these articles? Many of them are worth passing on to people that I know. I am especially thinking about the articles on prayer.
    Thanks again for Pulpit magazine– it’s so helpful.

  5. on 22 Aug 2007 at 9:14 am John Heart

    If you would like to study further, this article was adapted by John’s book titled, “The Keys to Spiritual Growth”. It’s found at http://www.gty.org/product.php?productcode=451117

    Enjoy the Blog!

    John H.

  6. on 22 Aug 2007 at 10:15 am Ken

    Thanks for this article. Alcohol has been a huge issue among my christian friends…they would rather walk the like than stay as far away from as possible. They are missing out on “being filled with the Holy Spirit”…having the fruits of the spirit and having the boldness and courage to change this world in God’s Strength.

    Thank you again,
    Ken

  7. on 22 Aug 2007 at 11:58 am David McCrory

    The Psalmist tells us God gave wine to make men’s hearts glad. And like with all things that come to us from the hand of a benelovent God, our abuse of them quickly becomes sin. It was the wisdom and inspiration of the Holy Spirit that placed the warnings against the abuses of wine in Holy Writ, not the abstience of it altogether. And while this is often reluctantly recognized, we are tempted to add our own, “Yea but…” to the Words of the Spirit.

    So despite our personal preferences regarding the use of wine (the use of which in and of itself is adiaphorous) may we guard ourselves against the greater sin of going beyond what is written in the Word of God and binding our fellow Christians where the Lord has left them free. And may we judge them based not upon our own standards (as did the Pharisees) but rather on God’s Word alone.

  8. on 22 Aug 2007 at 1:01 pm Victoria Lynch

    I am interpreting the article to be about the ABUSE of alcohol— drunkenness. I believe that Dr. Macarthur would probably prefer that believers be teetotalers, but that doesn’t seem to be the focus of the article.
    I believe that David is right in his view. We have to be carful not to go beyond scripture.
    No spirit filled believer will be abusing alcohol!

  9. on 22 Aug 2007 at 11:56 pm Dale Thackrah

    David,

    I totally understand your point…thanks for the insight.I agree with Victoria that the assumption was on the ABUSE of alcohol.

  10. on 23 Aug 2007 at 12:15 pm Doris Anderson

    I wanted to share the fact that no one starts out with the desire to abuse the drinking of alcohol. Howwever, many are the persons that eventually become addicted to the the alcohol imbibing. This addiction starts out slowly with moderate drinking at first, but then now and again there is a time that there is over indulgence. Our society has accepted the idea that daily drinking is okay, even if you get a DUI. In that case you just pay a little fine and hope you won’t get caught again. I know, because some 30 years ago I was an alcoholic who got help, and have been kept from any influence that would cause me to take that 1st drink that leads to 1000,s more. Jesus is my sobriety and I benefit in so many ways that I didn’t before, because His Holy Spirit dwells in me.I can testify that my joy and gratitude are so much more uplifting than anything I tried to get out of alcohol. PTL

  11. on 26 Aug 2007 at 7:27 am Brian (UK)

    I think we need to be very careful about even a single drink – as Doris emphasised from her own experience no-one sets out with a desire to abuse achohol, but it will ultimately start with the first drink.

    We have a choice to make, do we want our decisions influenced by alcohol or the Spirit of God. In the UK it is illegal to drive a car under the influence of alcohol, or it would be a sackable offence to attend work under the influence of any amount of alcohol. Dare we as Christians, when our bodies are the temple of the Holy Spirit, live under the controlling influence of any amount of alcohol? Avoid it!

  12. on 05 Sep 2007 at 7:29 am gisela perez

    Question: I was trying to sign in in the shepherds’ felloship but it says that
    you are not taking any new members. I am very confused about the topic: under
    the influence. Do not get me wrong, I completely agree with waht it says about
    be fill with the holy spirit. But my question is this: is drinking with control
    a sin? if you have a cup of wine once in a while or a beer in social occasions,
    am I commmiting a sin?When jesus converted the water into wine in a wedding was
    he wrong? because I imagine that people there for sure got drunk. It was wine or
    it was like a fruit juice (like adventists affirm?)and when noa got drunk when
    he got out from the ark, was he sinning against God? I am not trying to argue, I
    am looking for the truth from the bible. I am a new born christian, and I am
    eager to know what is the truth the bible teach. If you drink but you dont get
    drunk, is it still a sin? thanks.

  13. on 07 Sep 2007 at 8:46 am Daniel

    Before we discuse any doctrine at all we need to affirm that we are desiring to please God and not ourselves. Anything that will take our focus off of God and increase the strength and authority of our body over our mind is sin. When Noah became drunk he did something that he obviously should not have done.

    All throughout scripture we can see a clear pattern concerning those who were going to be in a leadership position: they were not to drink wine. This is true of bishops(elders), priests, deacons, etc. Those who were set appart to do a work for God were not to drink wine.

    Why should we desire to please ourselves so much that we would limit our ministry capabilities by poluting the temple of the Holy Ghost(1Co.6:19) and creating a bad testimony. The scriptures tell us to abstain from all appearance of evil(1Th.5:22). I Submit to you that even the world knows that drinking is evil. Even those who do not profess to be christians know that they should not drink.

    Proverbs 20:1 tells us that wine is a mocker and he that is decived thereby is not wise. We should desire to keep a clear mind at all times so that we can be an example of the believers in word AND in conduct. We are called to be different from the world. If the world sees that there is no difference between us and the world then we have created a wrong picture of Christ-likeness. We are not our own, have been called out from the world, let us as christians show the world that our God is a righteous God.

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