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The Sevenfold Spirit And The One Lord Series
Contributed by Dean Courtier on Jan 29, 2026 (message contributor)
Summary: There are moments in Scripture where heaven is pulled back like a curtain and we are allowed to see reality as it truly is. Revelation chapter 4 is one of those moments. John is not speculating; he is worshipping. He is not explaining God away; he is beholding God in His fullness.
The Sevenfold Spirit and the One Lord
Introduction: One God, Undivided Glory
There are moments in Scripture where heaven is pulled back like a curtain and we are allowed to see reality as it truly is. Revelation chapter 4 is one of those moments. John is not speculating; he is worshipping. He is not explaining God away; he is beholding God in His fullness.
In an age obsessed with categories, labels, and systems, the Church must be careful not to reduce mystery into mechanics. We confess the Trinity—one God in three persons—not because it is simple, but because it is true. And when Scripture speaks of the sevenfold Spirit, it is not adding to God, but magnifying His completeness.
Today’s message answers a crucial discipleship question: Who is the Holy Spirit we follow, depend on, and receive power from?
Revelation 4:5 (NLT): “From the throne came flashes of lightning and the rumble of thunder. And in front of the throne were seven torches with burning flames. This is the sevenfold Spirit of God.”
Sermon Big Idea
The Trinity reveals who God is; the sevenfold Spirit reveals how fully God works.
POINT 1: The Sevenfold Spirit Is One Spirit in Perfect Fullness
The Book of Revelation is apocalyptic literature—rich in symbolism, rooted in Old Testament imagery. The phrase “sevenfold Spirit” does not describe seven divine persons, but one Holy Spirit expressed in perfect completeness.
The Greek phrase ta hepta pneumata tou Theou (t? ?pt? p?e?µata t?? Te??) uses seven (hepta) symbolically. Throughout Scripture, seven signifies divine completeness—nothing lacking, nothing broken.
Isaiah 11:2 (NLT): “And the Spirit of the LORD will rest on him—the Spirit of wisdom and understanding, the Spirit of counsel and might, the Spirit of knowledge and the fear of the LORD.”
Ruach (?????) – breath, wind, Spirit; dynamic life-giving presence
Here is one Spirit, described in seven expressions. The Spirit resting on the Messiah is not divided but fully endowed.
Disciple of Jesus, you do not receive a portion of the Spirit—you receive the Person of the Spirit. God does not ration Himself.
Max Lucado: “God loves you just the way you are, but He refuses to leave you that way.”
The sevenfold Spirit is God refusing to leave us incomplete. He works wisdom where we are confused, strength where we are weak, and holiness where we are compromised.
POINT 2: The Sevenfold Spirit Always Leads Us to the One Throne
Revelation 4:2–3, 5 (NLT): “Suddenly I was in the Spirit, and I saw a throne in heaven and someone sitting on it… From the throne came flashes of lightning… This is the sevenfold Spirit of God.”
The Spirit is never the centre of worship—the throne is. The Holy Spirit does not draw attention to Himself but illuminates the glory of God and the reign of Christ.
John 16:13–14 (NLT): “When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all truth… He will bring me glory by telling you whatever he receives from me.”
Greek Hodegesei (?d???se?) – to guide along a path
The Spirit leads disciples toward Christ, not into abstraction.
Like floodlights at a cathedral, the Spirit does not draw your eyes to the lamps but to the beauty they illuminate—Jesus Christ, enthroned and exalted.
John Piper: “The Holy Spirit is given not to replace Christ, but to reveal Christ.”
Any spirituality that minimises Jesus is not Spirit-filled—it is self-filled.
POINT 3: The Sevenfold Spirit Empowers the Mission of the Lamb
Revelation 5:6 (NLT): “I saw a Lamb that looked as if it had been slaughtered… He had seven horns and seven eyes, which represent the sevenfold Spirit of God that is sent out into every part of the earth.”
Christological Focus
The Spirit proceeds from the throne through the Lamb. The mission of the Spirit is inseparable from the victory of the Cross.
Acts 1:8 (NLT): “But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you. And you will be my witnesses…”
Greek Dynamis (d??aµ??) – explosive, effective power
The Spirit empowers ordinary disciples to live extraordinary Christ-centred lives.
A seven-cylinder engine still runs on one power source. The difference is not more engines, but more effectiveness. So it is with the Spirit’s work.
R.T. Kendall: “The Holy Spirit will never comfort us in our disobedience.”
The fullness of the Spirit is not for comfort alone, but for consecration.
POINT 4: The Sevenfold Spirit Produces a Seven-Day Faith
Zechariah 4:6 (NLT): “It is not by force nor by strength, but by my Spirit, says the LORD of Heaven’s Armies.”
Hebrew Koach (?????) – human ability & Ruach – divine enabling presence
21st-Century Application
In a culture of burnout, anxiety, and self-help spirituality, disciples must learn Spirit-dependence. The sevenfold Spirit is not for Sunday services only, but Monday pressures, Wednesday decisions, and Friday temptations.
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