Cover Image: Open to the Spirit

Open to the Spirit

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Member Reviews

The book begins:

“This book will encourage you to be open to the Holy Spirit every moment of every day.”

“In the chapters that follow, we will explore more than a dozen biblical themes about the Holy Spirit. Each theme examines a dimension of what the Spirit can accomplish in our lives if we remain open to the Spirit’s work.”

Let me share nine key takeaways that I pulled from this wonderful book.

God Is Within

“The most passionate, the most intimate, and the most significant element of the Christian faith is that God—the creator of all and the world’s redeemer—has chosen not only to communicate with us but also has chosen to indwell us.”

“I sometimes marvel that the vastness and immensity of God could become an infant, then a child and a youth, and then a young man who would die and be raised for us. That same God takes up residence in you and me, not just once but permanently.”

God is within. Let me say that again. God is within. My gut tells me many people think of God as above or over there. While that is also true, God is within and that is a game changer. God loves us so much that the Spirit has taken residence in you and I. We get to tap into this wonderful, powerful and loving source. I find that very exciting!

God Transforms Us

“Let’s turn this around: we cannot find rest until we rest in God’s own resting in our hearts.”

“I hope you will pause with me to consider the immensity of the privilege we share, in that God indwells us in the Holy Spirit.”

“But don’t lose contact with the book’s seminal idea: God is alive and well and indwells us. And God wants to transform us into persons who demonstrate the grace, love, peace, and justice of God.”

We cannot take this divine indwelling lightly. We are indwelled by God to take action in this world. If we open to this inner spirit, we can let it lead us and prompt us to take the actions that we need and must take in our local communities and world. Be open to the inner transformation and let it also transform the world. Inner transformation and outer transformation need each other. They must work together.

Are You Open

“A sticking point when it comes to our understanding of the Holy Spirit is that humans are not open to the invasive, transcending, and transforming presence of the Holy Spirit.”

“We are built to be a home for the Spirit.”

“Here is an image to live by: if we leave the doors and windows of our lives open to the Spirit, we may find surprising flowers in our lives.”

“Each of us is designed by God to be receptive to the Spirit. We are Spirit-ual beings.”

Are you open? There are many ways to open to the inner spirit. We each must choose our own path. I have discovered that centering prayer opens me to the inner spirit. That is why I practice it twice per day. It is silent prayer: wordless prayer. I open to the presence and actions of God within. God prays in me the actions I need to take in the world.

Jesus’s Humanity

“Jesus was human and because Jesus was a human, he needed to be empowered from day one with and by the Holy Spirit.

“Jesus, as a human, did all that he did—living, eating, praying, conversing, healing, teaching, doing good, rebuking, defending—by the power of the Spirit.”

“Jesus was a Spirit-drenched man. Jesus did what he did because he was wide open to the Spirit, more open to the Spirit than any human in history.”

“To be a follower of Jesus is to be open to the same Spirit to whom Jesus was wide open.”

Jesus is the model for how we are to behave and operate in the world. Jesus was able to do what he did because he was wide open to the Spirit. Jesus often went off alone to pray. I would like to think he also practiced some form of silent, wordless prayer. These times in solitude prepared him for the actions he needed to take. Jesus drenched himself in the Spirit. We can drench ourselves in the Spirit too!

Silence

“Have you wondered if your total silence is the Spirit’s pure prayer on your behalf?”

“Are you open to the Spirit’s intercessions in your silence?”

I believe during silent prayer God prays in me the actions I am to take in this world. I also believe that during silent prayer the spirit within intercedes for me. I do not always know what to say and the spirit prays for me. I find this very comforting.

Gifts Of The Spirit

“Those who ignore or suppress the Spirit deprive themselves and others of God’s great gift.”

“The Spirit takes us beyond ourselves, taking what we have and making it better and taking what we don’t have and making it something.”

“If you are genuinely open to the Spirit, you will learn that you are open to a power unlike anything you’ve ever known.”

We have wonderful gifts within. Together there is nothing we cannot accomplish. I like to think I sit with God during my centering prayer practice and walk with God during my non silent times. We are never apart. It reminds me of a Matthew Fox quote from his book, Naming the Unnameable, “God is the unstoppable energy of all beings, a boundless source that cannot be slowed down or ultimately overcome.” We get to tap into this boundless energy!

The Body Of Christ

“When we become open to the Spirit, we receive an entirely new orientation in life. We switch from the old Ego to the New Ego. We become contributing members of the Body of Christ. We become other-oriented.”

“Paul wrote that God assigns a gift to each person “so that there should be no division in the body” and so that all the members “should have equal concern for each other.””

We are all the body of Christ. We each have a unique part to play. We are not alone in this world. We need each other. When we listen to the inner promptings of the spirit our actions naturally become other-oriented.

Divine Wildness

“Those who are open to the Spirit find freedom and discover a divine wildness.”

“The Spirit gives me the freedom to be the me God wants me to be, and the Spirit gives you the freedom to be the you that God wants you to be.”

‘Are you open to the wild freedom of the Spirit?”

This is why I practice centering prayer. Centering prayer opens me to the inner spirit. Centering prayer teaches me who I am. Centering prayer teaches me how to live. Centering prayer is a place I come from. The silence of centering prayer gives me the freedom to become my true self: who God wants me to be.

Next Steps

“I appeal to you: Is it not time for you to become more open, even wide open, to the Spirit? Is it not time for you to stand, sit, walk, march, and live in a perpetual state of openness to the Spirit? Is it not time to create a mind-set of asking yourself if you are open to the Sprit before and during everything you think, say, and do? Am I wide open to whatever the Spirit wants in this thought, this statement, and this action?”

Wonderful marching orders. They are fairly straight forward and do not need any explanation by me.

I encourage you to check out Open To The Spirit!

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McKnight's books are not lengthy and are highly readable. In this one, he shows readers who the Spirit is in Scripture. Through various stories from today, he makes the argument that the church could learn a lot more about the Spirit's power.

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As a person who grew up in a more conservative church, I had an interesting relationship with the Trinity. We knew Jesus, he's our best pal. We know God the Father, he's the Creator. But the Holy Spirit... we really hoped that guy didn't show up. He's like our wacky uncle who everyone tells crazy stories about, but nobody really understood.

What Scot McKnight has accomplished in this book is making the Spirit more accessible, more understandable. To people from backgrounds like mine, this is a deep relief. Understanding more of God is critical to following Jesus, and the Spirit was the presence promised by Jesus before the Ascension.

MnKnight is scholarly, but does come across as a lofty theologian. He's passionate, but he doesn't come across as a teary-eyed preacher. The line this book walks is one of loving the Spirit for who the Spirit is, understanding who the Spirit has always been, and being open to learning more about that often-ignored third person of the Trinity; open to allowing yourself to be led by that spirit. It's deeply refreshing and highly accessible. I'm sure this work will also be cited in future books about the Holy Spirit, as it also offers a rich depth of study. At the same time, it is a fantastic devotional. The best of both worlds, and that's hard to pull off.

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Scot McKnight’s “Open to the Spirit,” is a refreshing and much-needed book for the Christian community. For those who ever wondered who the Holy Spirit is? How we should engage the Spirit? How we should commune with the Spirit? How we should be led and empowered by the Spirit, this book is for you! While it is not a dense theological treatise on the Spirit, which there are many books out there like that, Scot’s book is down-to-earth, provocative, well-written, and inspiring. I highly recommend!

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Open To The SPIRIT Is a wonderful book. In the beginning before the book even starts there is an incredible prayer to set you on the right foot and to keep you locked in in your heart. This book, like it says "Scot opens up the Scriptures and introduces us to the greatest of GOD's SPIRIT" which is as you know is the HOLY SPIRIT. Each chapter gives more and more information or, intense and closer and closer to GOD; Which is where I want to be. I love GOD so much more after this. I never ever thought of the HOLY SPIRIT the way HE is until this book came around please don't miss your chance to see HIM too.

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I was able to request the book from Waterbrook press in order to write an unbiased review of it. First, if you know me, you know that I REALLY like reading Scot's work! I've enjoyed each of his three books on 'religious experience' (The Heaven Promise, The Hum of Angels, and Open to the Spirit), but this one was certainly my favorite of the three. In fact, this might be my favorite book that I've read by him since 'Jesus Creed' (I still have such books as "Fellowship of Differents" and "The Blue Parakeet" to read).

In this book, Scot does a beautiful job of calling us to a position of being 'open' to who the Holy Spirit is, and what He's doing around us and in us. There are probably parts of this book that would make some feel uncomfortable, simply because it's a subject matter that some of our circles in Christianity steer clear of and won't touch even with a 10ft pole. Regardless, this is a wonderful addition to the books available and is VERY easy to read. I highly recommend this book to anyone who has never really explored this mysterious figure of the Godhead, and is interested in exploring more about who the Holy Spirit is and what He does. Hands down, my 2 favorite chapters were chapter 9 (dealing with the subject of baptism in Scripture and how the Holy Spirit is connected with that) and chapter 15 (dealing with opening up to living a life of love infused and driven by the Spirit). There were other really good chapters (and a few that were just okay), but those two, I thought, were worth the time to read!

Reading this book ignites a desire to want to live life with more purpose, and helps you discover (or remember) truth that enables you to do just that. I would encourage you to read this book with an open mind, and then prayerfully and purposefully seek out what God may be leading you to do through the directing guidance of His very own Spirit!

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