
By bvthomas
Scribed in the fire of revelation, November, 2025
There are verses in Scripture that strike like a sudden chord in the hush of eternity—notes that linger, unresolved, until the whole symphony of the Godhead swells in response. I was musing there, in the quiet chamber of 1 Corinthians 8:6, when it pierced me: “yet for us there is one God, the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we exist, and one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom are all things and through whom we exist.” Paul, that thorn-crowned apostle, distills the cosmos into this divine economy—the Father as the overflowing Source, the Son as the pulsing Channel—binding creation and redemption in a single, breathless stroke. No mention of the Spirit here, not a whisper. And yet, in that very omission, He reveals Himself more starkly than any proclamation could.
Turn the page in your spirit to 1 John 1:3: “that which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you too may have fellowship with us; and indeed our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ.” John, the beloved, doesn’t just report a truth; he draws us into its flame, insisting that our communion—yours, mine—is with the Father and His Son. Again, the Spirit is absent from the page, eliminated from the Triune equation as if He were a shadow fleeing the light. But oh, the chills that race through the soul when you see it: this is no accident of ink or oversight of prophets. It’s the Holy Ghost Himself, the eternal Breath, delighting in self-effacement. He who hovered over the waters at creation (Genesis 1:2), who overshadowed Mary in the Incarnation (Luke 1:35), now veils His own glory to ensure ours streams undivided toward the Father and the Son. It’s as if the Conductor of the ages steps off the podium, baton lowered, so the melody of Jesus might ring unchained.
This attribute—His hidden nature of joyful erasure—doesn’t shout from the rooftops of theology. It isn’t cataloged in systematic tomes or pulpit outlines. No, it whispered into my spirit unbidden, a private tremor from the Dove who rests on the Branch without claiming the nest. And in that revelation, my prayer erupted: Lord, let me know Him too—the Spirit—in His distinctness, as I’ve come to know the Father’s sovereign heart and the Son’s pierced hands. To glimpse the Three not as a flat diagram, but as Persons pulsing with other-centered love. For if the Spirit is the bond of that love, why does He so studiously absent Himself from our creeds and confessions? Because His delight is in our worship of Them—the Father who begets, the Son who redeems—and in that veiling, He unveils the wild generosity of God.
Layer this mystery upon perichoresis, that ancient word for the divine dance, the eternal circumincessio where Father, Son, and Spirit indwell one another in seamless, swirling unity. It’s no stately procession but a living waltz: the Father eternally begetting the Son in boundless affection, the Son spiraling back in flawless obedience, and the Spirit—the unclaimed bond—circling through Both, His every motion yielding the floor. Augustine glimpsed it, calling it the mutual indwelling where no one leads because all are leading, all following, all embracing. Yet even here, the Spirit’s steps curve humbly, not to spotlight His rhythm but to harmonize the Father’s voice with the Son’s song. Imagine it: the Three who are One, and the Spirit’s self-effacement isn’t diminishment but the very pulse that keeps the circle unbroken. He doesn’t hoard the stage; He ignites it for the Son, turning our gaze from the Wind to the Word made flesh.
But here’s where the conventional Christian air thickens with inversion, where pulpits and presses peddle a gospel upside-down. How often do we hear the Holy Spirit’s name thundered from stages—techniques to summon Him, encounters to chase Him, prophecies to claim Him—while the Name He craves echoes faintly, if at all? Modern books and “anointed” voices fixate on the Dove as the destination, dissecting His gifts as if they were treasures to hoard, preaching the Spirit solo as the source of power and presence. Yet Scripture flips the script with surgical precision: He delights not in being known on the platforms, but in Christ being proclaimed. He is glorified when Jesus is preached, when that Name alone—evoked in faith, lifted in surrender—stirs the heavens to move.
Recall John 16:13-15, where Jesus unmasks the Spirit’s heart: “When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth… He will glorify me, for he will take what is mine and declare it to you. All that the Father has is mine, and the Spirit will declare it.” See the choreography? The Spirit takes from the Son (and thus the Father) and broadcasts it to us—not a self-portrait, but a living icon of Jesus. Pentecost itself doesn’t blaze in self-adulation; it crashes down after Peter’s arrow strikes true: “Let all the house of Israel therefore know for certain that God has made him both Lord and Christ, this Jesus whom you crucified” (Acts 2:36). The Name of Jesus— that’s the spark. Demons scatter at it (Mark 16:17), revival ignites around it (Acts 4:12), and the Spirit falls like fire when it’s preached unadorned. Not the other way round. Chase the Wind, and you’ll grasp smoke; lift the Son, and the Wind will carry you home.
This truth didn’t dawn in abstraction for me—it carved itself through the flint of lived fire. I was radically saved, a soul snatched from the jaws of my own rebellion, filled to bursting with the Holy Spirit in those early, electric days. My mouth and heart sang one Name alone: Jesus. Power swelled in me like a river unbound—joy that mocked sorrow, authority that silenced storms, a fellowship so tangible it felt like walking with the Nazarene Himself. His wounds were my wonder; His resurrection, my rhythm. Then came the book, Good Morning, Holy Spirit, released like a fresh wind to a world parched for the supernatural. It fascinated, oh how it did—stories of intimate dialogues with the Third Person, encounters I’d never charted in my own wild baptism. I devoured it, hungry for more of the God who’d already flooded my tent.
But in that pursuit, the sly theft happened. I didn’t see it at first: the pivot from the Lord who’d birthed me in the Spirit to a new chase after the Spirit Himself, as if He were the prize rather than the path. My first love—for Jesus, the Pearl of great price—cooled to embers. Revelation 2:4 convicted me later: “But I have this against you, that you have abandoned the love you had at first.” Not a full apostasy, but a drift, a fascination that rerouted my river. I began “pleasing” the Spirit through disciplines gleaned from the page—morning greetings, prophetic activations, a fixation on His “personality” that sidelined the Son in whom all the fullness dwells bodily (Colossians 2:9). Power? It ebbed to a trickle. Joy? Swallowed by despondency’s slough, that Bunyan-esque bog where every step sinks deeper into self-doubt and defeat.
The fallout was a freight train: powerlessness that mocked my calling, sins that shouldn’t ensnare a saint, a near-shattering of life itself—relationships fractured, purpose frayed, the call on my life dangling by a thread. Years wandered in that wilderness, a prodigal chasing the wrong wind, until grace—the same Spirit I’d misplaced—tugged me back. He taught me, not through thunder but through the quiet ache of return: This isn’t pursuit of Me you crave, child; it’s the Son I introduced you to, the One in whom I rest. By God’s mercy, He mapped me home to that first, fierce love, restoring the song of Jesus as my unceasing pulse. I’ve told no one this fracture till now, but as we’ve unraveled it thread by thread, it fits like a missing bone: the Spirit never wanted my altars built to Him alone. He yearns for the smoke to rise to the Lamb.
And millions? They’re derailed on this very track—ensnared by the glamour of Spirit-centric seminars, books that bottle the Dove as a self-help elixir, prophets peddling His presence minus the cross. They taste sparks but miss the blaze, fragments but not the Fullness. True power, the swelling river of joy? It’s not in dissecting the Breath but abiding in the Branch where He alights (John 15:4-5). The Holy Spirit’s union with the body of Christ is inseparable— we are baptized into Him (1 Corinthians 12:13), sealed by Him (Ephesians 1:13-14)—yet He insists our fellowship is with the Father and the Son (1 John 1:3). He cries “Abba!” within us (Romans 8:15), intercedes wordlessly (Romans 8:26-27), seals every benediction (2 Corinthians 13:14). But always, always, He points: Look to Jesus.
This fights the grain of convention, I know— the tidy Trinitarian formulas that give the Spirit equal billing, the revival circuits that summon Him like a genie. It’s hard to hold such a flame within; it scorches the silence. But now? It’s time to let it flow, all of it, from the verse that started the spark to the scars that sealed the lesson. The Spirit’s veiled glory isn’t a footnote—it’s the gospel’s heartbeat, calling us back to preach one Name, to dance in perichoresis by yielding our steps to the Son. Let pulpits quake, bookshelves bow: the Holy Ghost is most glorified when Jesus is lifted high.
So rise, church—abandon the chase, reclaim the cross. Sing His Name till the winds howl in response. And in that symphony, may we glimpse the Spirit at last: not erased, but exalted in His exquisite surrender. To the Father, the Source; to the Son, the Savior; to the Spirit, the Silent Herald—glory, now and ever. Amen.
