Not a Force, a Friend: Recovering the Personhood of the Spirit
John 16:13 uses a masculine pronoun, ἐκεῖνος, to refer back to τὸ πνεῦμα, a neuter noun. That grammatical choice is not an accidental quirk of Koine syntax. Jesus is correcting the grammar to preserve the theology: the Spirit is "he," not "it," even where Greek grammar would default otherwise. The same pattern surfaces across the Farewell Discourse. The Spirit teaches (John 14:26), bears witness (John 15:26), convicts the world of sin and righteousness and judgment (John 16:8), guides into truth, hears, speaks, and discloses what is to come (John 16:13-14). Forces don't do any of that. Forces don't get grieved either, and yet Paul tells the Ephesians not to grieve the Holy Spirit of God (Eph. 4:30), using a verb, λυπεῖτε, that presupposes an emotional subject capable of being wounded by the moral failure of those he indwells. Gravity doesn't grieve. Electromagnetism doesn't intercede with groanings too deep for words (Rom. 8:26). A person does both. ...