Hey Everyone:
I have a Question:
Could Hebrews 6:4 Mean that Someone Experiences and Feels the Holy Spirit and the Greatness of the Holy Spirit But Ends Up Rejecting and Not Letting Jesus to come into their life.
Yes. Consider the language of the passage:
Hebrews 6:4-8
4 For it is impossible, in the case of those who have once been enlightened, who have tasted the heavenly gift, and have shared in the Holy Spirit,
"Enlightened," "tasted," "shared in."
Can one be partially enlightened? Are there degrees of enlightenment that one can have? Yes. For example, there's Cornelius in
chapter 10 of the
Book of Acts, who was a "devout man," one who "feared God," gave many alms and feared God always, though he knew nothing of the Gospel. He had some light concerning God, he was partially enlightened and responding positively to that light, but required a more perfect understanding of the Truth; and so, God sent to him the apostle Peter.
This partial enlightenment seems to be what is in view in
Hebrew 6:4 because of what is said in the rest of the passage. The "enlightened" have only "tasted" of the heavenly gift and the goodness of the word of God. "Tasted" seems to me to convey a sense of partialness. Typically, if I say I've tasted something, I'm not meaning to indicate I've consumed it entirely. Instead, I mean I've only had a bit of it - a sip, or nibble, of something.
I think this is the sense in which "tasted" is used in the passage, indicating only a partial experience of the "heavenly gift" and the word of God, perhaps a second-hand one of the sort an unsaved person would have who's attached themselves to a community of Christians and partakes superficially - "tastes" - of the life and work of the church.
Are there instances of such people in Scripture? Yes. The apostle Paul called them "false brethren." Jesus referred to them as "tares." Paul actually addressed the matter of the false convert directly (
2 Corinthians 13:5-6), as did the apostle John (
1 John).
Is it possible, though, for a false convert to share in the Holy Spirit? Yes. How? In the second-hand, superficial manner already mentioned. By participation in the community of the Church, a false convert can share in the work of the Holy Spirit in and through the Church, teaching a Sunday School class, singing in the choir, ushering for a Sunday morning worship service, etc.. Often, though, these false converts reveal their true spiritual condition when, exhausted by trying to live in a Christian way by mere human, fleshly power, they "throw in the towel" and depart the Church (
1 John 2:19).
5 and have tasted the goodness of the word of God and the powers of the age to come,
6 and then have fallen away, to restore them again to repentance, since they are crucifying once again the Son of God to their own harm and holding him up to contempt.
From what would the false convert I think is in view in this passage "fall away"? Well, chiefly from their association with, and experience of, the life and work of the Holy Spirit in and through the Church. In such association, the false convert would have encountered the Gospel (or a contorted or redacted version of it, at least) and perhaps believed they'd understood it, and accepted it, and are saved. But without the life of the Spirit enabling the person to live according to God's will and way, a "falling away" is inevitable, overtly or covertly.
7 For land that has drunk the rain that often falls on it, and produces a crop useful to those for whose sake it is cultivated, receives a blessing from God.
8 But if it bears thorns and thistles, it is worthless and near to being cursed, and its end is to be burned.
The life of a false convert, devoid of the indwelling life of the Holy Spirit, can only produce spiritual "thorns and thistles." Instead of true Christ-likeness (the "useful crop"), there is a fleshly version of him that the false convert attempts to fashion from themselves. Though concealed to the spiritually-immature by lots of religious noise (
Matthew 7:21-23), a false conversion always shows to those in whom the Spirit truly dwells and under who's constant control they live (
Titus 1:16).