Third semester Greek is a challenging place to be for our seminary students. Many of these folks are doing well just to hang on to what they learned back in Greek 1-2. Learning intermediate grammar finds our students negotiating a sharp turn deep in the tunnel of language acquisition. The proverbial light at the end of this tunnelāwhere knowledge of Greek pays significant exegetical dividendsāgets almost snuffed out for a season by .
So I regularly remind my students that it is all worthwhile, that after another semester or two theyāll possess the kind of top-rate exegetical skills that will bear great fruit in the study and in the pulpit. They occasionally even get a taste of that fruit along the way!
Consider the NIV translation of Romans 8:16: The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are Godās children (NIV). The NIV translation (the NRSV is virtually the same) raises several questions:
(1) Just how are Godās Spirit and the human spirit related here? More specifically, in what way does my spirit testify that I am a child of God?
(2) To whom do Godās Spirit and my spirit testify? To me? Iām telling myself? To others? The person/entity that receives the testimony is strangely unspecified.
The alternative interpretation that Wallace proposes during his discussion of the ādative of associationā clears all this up in an instant: The Spirit himself testifies to our spirit that we are Godās children. You Greek geeks can read the pros and cons. In short, Wallace interprets spirit as a dative of indirect object, rather than as a dative of association (Wallace, 160-61). I find the arguments quite convincing. The implications? Wallace puts it like this:
In sum, Rom 8:16 seems to be secure as a text in which the believerās assurance of salvation is based on the inner witness of the Spirit. The implications for oneās soteriology are profound: The objective data, as helpful as they are, cannot by themselves provide assurance of salvation; the believer also needs (and receives) an existential, ongoing encounter with Godās Spirit in order to gain that familial comfort (161).
Whoa! ā±š³ę¾±²õ³Ł±š²Ō³Ł¾±²¹±ōā¦e²Ō³¦“dzܲԳٱš°łā? A Dallas guy said that?!
Just what are those āobjective dataā to which Wallace refers? He doesnāt say. But I suspect he has in mind something like this:
1. It says in John 1:12, āAs many as received him, to them he gave authority to become children of God.ā
2. Joe Hellerman prayed to receive Christ on December 8, 1975, on the beach in Hermosa Beach, CA.
3. Therefore, Joe can be assured that he is a child of God!
When I became a Christian this āobjective dataā was all the rage. We were actually cautioned against relying on subjective data of any kind for assurance of salvation. (I canāt quite recall why, but I suspect it had something to do with the resurgence of Pentecostalism in the form of the Charismatic movement during this period. Debates between Charismatics and non-Charismatics were raging throughout evangelicalism, and this, in turn, generated a suspicion of any kind of subjective experience of the Spirit in cessationist circles like mine.)
So just how does the Spirit bear witness to my spirit that I am one of Godās kids? Well, Paul talks in the immediate context about being āled by the Spiritā (v. 14). I think it is probably as simple as this: If Iām truly a child of God, the Holy Spirit says to my spirit, āThatās good!ā when I obey, and āThatās bad!ā when I sin. Surely youāve sensed the affirmation of the Holy Spirit when youāve done something pleasing to God. Conversely, we all experience the conviction of the Spirit when we sin.
The implications of all of this for pastoral ministry are profound. Just one example: here is the first thing I say to a person who comes to me struggling with some area of ongoing disobedience, and who is deeply remorseful about it: Thatās proof youāre a child of God. The Spirit would not be bearing (that painful!) witness to your spirit, if you were not.
Itās important to start here, I think, because the Spirit who bears witness to our spirit against our disobedience is the very same Spirit who longs to liberate us and give us victory over sin in our lives. When Iām in the trenches and have just lost several battles, itās good to know that I have at my disposal the artillery necessary to win the war. The convicting witness of the Spirit during those times of sin and defeat should give us the confidence that God is also present in our lives ultimately to lead us to victory.
Moral of this post? Learn those Wallace categories, Greek student! They really do make a difference.