
At different times throughout history a clamor has gone
up among believers for the Holy Spirit to come down. With great exercise
of heart, fervent prayer and confession of sin, individuals and groups
looked to God for a new fulfillment of 2 Chronicles 7:13-14 and Isaiah
64:1… and asked for a new Pentecost.
What happened in a run down building on Azusa Street, Los Angeles,
California, one century ago, seemed to be the answer to prayer – a new
outpouring of the Holy Spirit…
However, as in all things spiritual, it is imperative
that the Biblical perspectives and the Biblical context are not lost
from sight!
Who is He?
The Holy Spirit is, of course, part of the Trinity, the third person
– the Father being the first person and the Son being the second. In
the case of the Son most cults cast doubt on the fact that He is God,
whereas, in the case of the Holy Spirit, many like to deny or doubt the
fact that He is a person. He may be dubbed ‘the power of God’, or
the ‘divine influence’ or ‘God’s active force’, or something
to that effect. But the serious Bible reader will soon be completely
reassured about the Holy Spirit’s "personality",
finding that He ‘knows’, ‘hears’, ‘speaks’, teaches’, ‘testifies’,
‘reminds’, ‘helps’, etc.
In Genesis we are told that the Holy Spirit was involved in the work
of Creation; in the New Testament we find him involved in the work of
Redemption. Our Lord calls him the "Comforter" or
"Counselor". Chapters like John 16 and Romans 8 give us much
wonderful information about him. In a word, his mission is to manifest
and glorify the Lord Jesus. As He was "poured out" on the
believers in Jerusalem, on the Jewish feast day of Pentecost, and the
Lord Jesus was glorified, the "ekklesia", the church of the
redeemed, was ‘born’.
That is how the Lord himself had said it would be: "‘If
anyone thirsts, let him come to me and drink. He who believes in me, as
the Scripture has said, out of his heart will flow rivers of living
water.’ But this He spoke concerning the Spirit, whom those believing
in him would receive; for the Holy Spirit was not yet given, because
Jesus was not yet glorified" (Jn.
7:37-39).
Two comings
But did you realize that the New Testament describes another,
previous, coming of the Holy Spirit? This ‘first coming’ is found in
the Gospels - the second one, of course, is in Acts of the Apostles.
When He came on the Day of Pentecost there were wondrous signs of wind
and fire, but at the Holy Spirit’s ‘first coming’ nothing so
awesome happened.
It occurs when Jesus comes up out of the river, just having been
baptized by John the Baptist: "the Holy Spirit descended in
bodily form like a dove upon him" (Lk.
3:22). It was a truly unique moment, and all four
Gospels give the story right at the beginning of their accounts. All
three persons of the Trinity are in evidence - the Holy Spirit descends
on the Son, and from the open heavens sounds the voice of the Father: "You
are my beloved Son; in you I am well pleased."
Even at this early stage it is immediately evident that the Holy
Spirit does not call attention to himself. John the Baptist exclaims: "I
did not know him, but He who sent me to baptize with water said to me,
‘Upon whom you see the Spirit descending, and remaining on him, this
is He who baptizes with the Holy Spirit.’ And I have seen and
testified that this is the Son of God" (Jn.
1:33-34). His mission was, and is, to call
attention to Christ, to manifest him, to draw people to him (Jn.
16:13-15).
Even in John’s very words the three persons of the Trinity are
present. And the Holy Spirit is mentioned specifically as the One who
makes it possible to ‘recognize’ the Son. Furthermore as the One who
was going to be the ‘element’ with whom, or in whom,
the Son would be baptizing.
The Wind and the Fire
On the day of Pentecost there was ‘wind and fire’, but when the
Spirit came the first time, these phenomena were absent. He came as a
‘dove’ at the Lord’s baptism.
But, even if no one heard the ‘wind’, or saw the ‘fire’, they
were present in what John the Baptist prophesied: "I
indeed baptize you with water unto repentance, but He who is coming
after me is mightier than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry. He
will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire. His winnowing
fan is in his hand, and He will thoroughly clean out his threshing
floor, and gather his wheat into the barn; but He will burn up the chaff
with unquenchable fire" (Mt.
3:11-12).
Contrasting his own water baptism with the happenings at
Pentecost, John describes that new ‘baptism’ as a wind and fire
baptism. The word ‘wind’ is not mentioned in the English of
these verses, but it must be born in mind that the Greek for spirit (pneuma)
is also translated as ‘wind’, breath’, and ‘air’. His
listeners heard him speak about another baptism that would not be
in water but in ‘holy wind and fire’. A little later Jesus himself
spoke to Nicodemus about that ‘wind’ (Jn. 3:8).
From the above words we discover that John was a master of dramatic
illustration. Every Jew knew how a farmer, after the harvest when the
wheat had been threshed, would ‘throw it all to the wind’, and how
the wind would carry off the chaff, while the heavier grain would fall
to the ground in a heap. The ‘winnowing fan’ is what the farmer used
for this job. Neither was it a secret that later the chaff, piled up at
some distance, would be set on fire. John’s listeners could see it all
happening before their minds’ eyes. John was putting them on notice
about that special day of Pentecost.
A forgotten aspect?
Have you ever looked at Pentecost in that way, i.e. in the way in
which we are told to look at it? Heard any sermons about the ‘holy
wind’ (the Holy Spirit) that radically separates the ‘chaff’ from
the ‘wheat’; and about the ‘fire’ that burns up the ‘chaff’?
That ‘holy wind and fire’ were the burden of John’s solemn
prophecy. He spoke about the divine Baptizer and his sovereign work,
baptizing in those elements, when Pentecost would arrive. John may not
have realized how near or how far in the future this would be – but we
now know that it happened less than four years later.
In John 7 we have another prophecy about Pentecost, the one uttered
by Jesus about the ‘living water’ - the Holy Spirit being ‘poured
out’. That prophecy did not cancel out John’s earlier prophecy. Both
prophecies were wonderfully fulfilled! What was said about ‘the holy
wind and fire’ was just as true and valid as the Savior’s words
about the ‘living water’. It may be religiously correct or
convenient to omit the ‘wind and fire’ aspect of Pentecost in our
day and age. However, to attempt to do so would be to hinder and stunt
God’s work of Pentecost – both in individual lives and in
congregations.
John the Baptist teaches us that the Holy Spirit’s mission is to separate
the chaff from the wheat in the believers’ lives, and then to destroy
it! It is a remarkable prophecy in Matthew 3 and Luke 3 – one that is
still being fulfilled today, because Pentecost is still with us today.
Tongues of Fire
The "rushing mighty wind" and the "tongues
of fire" were, undoubtedly, given as a powerful reminder
to the 120 of the reality of John the Baptist’s prophecy. It all
happened just as John had said in regards to the ‘threshing
floor’: the separation of grain and chaff - achieved by the ‘holy
wind’ (into which they were now being baptized), and the burning up of
the useless chaff.
But what do the ‘tongues of fire’ tell us in particular?
As you observe a fire, where is it those ‘tongues’ appear?
Invariably you will see them at the top of the fire. In other words, the
Pentecost tongues of fire on the 120 were evidence of a fire that
was (invisibly) raging further down, in these men and women’s
hearts!
These were men and women who, in the Holy Spirit’s hands, were
going to be further prepared, thoroughly prepared, for the service of
their Lord and King, for the functioning as members of his body. As far
as we know, none of them retreated. None of them said that such radical
treatment and training was just a bit too much of a good thing..; that
things were getting out of hand..; that all they had bargained for was
to be honourable pew-warmers - the John 6:66 syndrome. Unless, of
course, Ananias and Sapphira of chapter 5 were already among them. This
married couple had drunk from the ‘living water’, but when it came
to it, they shrank from the fierce ‘wind and fire’.
And isn’t that what through the centuries, and very much in our own
day and age, has always cut across the Lord’s wonderful purposes with
our lives – that sad lack of commitment to HIM - come wind, come fire?
The Lamb
In John 1 when the Holy Spirit came for the first time, descending
upon Jesus as a dove, we find some important details. In verses 29 and
35 John speaks about the Lamb of God, and right there, sandwiched in
between, we find the story of the ‘dove’ which descended on the
Lamb.
The significance of the expression "the Lamb of God" was
clear enough to the Jews. They were fully familiar with the requirement
of sacrificing a lamb for atonement. They knew this had been done right
from the time that Abel sacrificed in Genesis 4; they remembered that
later Abraham had done so on Mount Moriah, and that, later still, on the
night of redemption from Egypt, the blood of a lamb was shed in every
Israelite family, providing instant salvation.
The announcement of the Lamb of God now walking among them, after
long centuries of waiting for him, should have rung, not a bell..,
rather a thousand bells, in many hearts and minds, even if the
full implications – their Messiah having to be "led as a lamb
to the slaughter" (Is. 53:7) -
might not be hitting home just yet.
The Dove
The question naturally arises, ‘If they were aware of the
significance of the lamb, what did they make of the
dove?’ Was that dove special to them for some
Scriptural reason? It is true that David, Solomon and others sang about
the ‘dove’ in their writings, but there was another more powerful
connection. When the dove descended and ‘remained’ on Jesus, minds
would instantly turn to Genesis 8, only four chapters after Abel’s
lamb. It is the first time a dove is mentioned – i.e. five times in
all. Even most Gentiles nowadays, without realizing it, honor Noah’s
dove as the most popular and worldwide symbol of peace.
The ark, with eight human beings on board and numerous animals, had,
after many months of drifting, come to rest near the top of the Ararat
mountain range. The unimaginable magnitude of the flood’s worldwide
upheaval was slowly coming to its conclusion. Some more time passed and
Noah could make out the tops of the mountains around the ark. Finally,
as the waters receded even more, Noah opened a window to let out both a
raven and a dove. It was an important test for him – he needed to know
what was going on in the outside world.
The raven, an omnivore, never came back, not even for its mate. It had
found plenty to eat, presumably stuff that was floating around. The dove
did come back and pretty soon. Why? It "found no resting
place for the sole of its foot"!
The Sole of its Foot
A week passed and Noah opened the window once more for the dove. That
evening it came back with a "freshly picked olive leaf"
in its beak. Noah thus realized that things were progressing. The dove
had been able to briefly land on an olive branch and pick that leaf for
him. Another week and the dove flew again. This third time it did not
return – in other words, it had at last found a resting place
for the sole of its foot.
How could John the Baptist and the other Jews present, who knew their
Scriptures, not remember the dove from the ark when they saw this
other ‘dove’ descending upon the Lord Jesus? John’s words seem to
clearly indicate that he realized what God was doing. He had been told: "Upon
whom you see the Spirit descending, and remaining on him, this is
He…!" A dove is very easily frightened away – it will not
easily remain. But this dove remained, i.e. on the Son of Man, on
the Father’s Beloved, it had found the permanent ‘resting place
for the sole of its foot’. John exclaimed: "I saw the
Spirit descending from heaven like a dove, and He remained upon him!"
The dove had landed!
Olive Leaves and Olives
The olive tree with its olives that are such a marvelous source of
oil for food, healing, light and even anointing, is a picture of
"new creation" (e.g. Ps. 52:8; 128:3).
After the universal devastation of the ‘first’ creation, Noah’s
dove was looking for a ‘new’ creation. It kept on going to and fro,
but there was nothing… - only stuff that is good enough for ravens.
Then during the second flight it found something – not much use
really, but it was a powerful sign of hope and new life: the "freshly
picked olive leaf"!
God’s ‘dove’ may be compared to God’s eyes – like his eyes,
the dove goes "to and fro throughout the whole earth"
to look for "those whose heart is loyal to him" (2
Chr. 16:9; Zech. 4:10).
As Genesis 9 deals with the immediate aftermath of the Flood, so
chapter 10 gives us a summary of all Noah’s descendants. Then, in
Genesis 11 the tower-of-Babel-obstinacy-and-rebellion occur and things
look bleak indeed - real ‘raven stuff’. But God’s ‘dove’ was
flying and hovering and searching. And right there where the remains of
the tower must still have been standing, in this same chapter 11, the
‘dove’ finds an ‘olive leaf’ – Abram and Sarai in Ur of the
Chaldeans!
From their Bible biography, and that of their descendants, we must
conclude, that at the most there were some ‘olive leaves’ gleaned by
the ‘dove’ - no remaining place was found for the dove’s feet, and
no remaining fruit. When later Jesus speaks of Israel, i.e. of all
Abraham’s descendants through Isaac and Jacob, He calls them frankly: "an
evil (and wicked, and faithless) and adulterous (and perverse, and
sinful) generation", as recorded by Matthew, Mark and Luke.
And, of course, that is what they were - neither better nor worse than
any other nation (Dt. 7:6-8).
Even so, in spite of all that, something was ‘sprouting’! Right
through the Old Testament, and into the Gospels, from Abraham to the
thief on the cross, we discover that the Holy Spirit did find some
real evidence of life – some lovely ‘fresh olive leaves’.
The Anointed One
It is no accident that ‘olive oil’ is forever associated with the
Messiah (i.e. the Christ) – the name means "Anointed One".
In the Old Testament prophets, priests and kings were anointed with
olive oil. Christ, our Prophet, Priest and King, is the Anointed
One of God. No wonder then that on him the ‘Dove’ should alight AND
"remain", as John was told He would, and as John
saw it happening before his eyes. He is the "olive tree" with
abundance of fruit, not just leaves.
A lot is made these days of all kinds of ‘anointings’, but the
New Testament is silent on the subject. What do we find? We find
that all those who belong to the Anointed One – Christians belonging
to the Christ – are ‘anointed in Christ’, and because of
Christ (2 Cor. 1:20-22; 1 Jn. 2:20, 27).
If I have truly believed in God’s Anointed One, then I have been
received into him. If I am in the Anointed One, then his
"anointing" is on me – continuously. There is no merit of
mine in this, of prayer and fasting, of laying-on of hands, or whatever.
It is the grace of God that has received me into the Anointed One - I
have become a Christ-one, a Christian. "If anyone is in Christ
(in the Anointed One), he is a new creation; old things have passed
away; behold, all things have become new" (2
Cor. 5:17).
Pentecost
Time to return to where we started. One hundred and twenty disciples
had a mighty experience – it had to do with living water, with holy
wind and with devouring fire. Foreign languages suddenly were the
vehicle through which all these followers of the Messiah testified of "the
wonderful works of God", "as the Spirit gave them
utterance".
Many centuries earlier, at the tower of Babel, in the great city of
mighty Nimrod, utter confusion had set in when suddenly the immense
multitude started to speak in different languages - when they found they
couldn’t understand each other anymore. It was God’s way of
dispersing them. On that day the different races were born. Wherever
they went, "over the face of all the earth", each group
took with them, not only a new and authentic language – each group
also had an account, a tradition, of recent happenings. There were those
who went on the ‘long march’ east, already speaking the ancient
Chinese as they left the plains of Shinar. They may have been the first
ones ever to start writing down their words. Even today that ancient
Chinese (not the modern variety), fragments of which have come down to
our days, testifies in its pictorially written language of the universal
flood, of the ark, of the eight people on board, and of much more.
Now, on the day of Pentecost, we get the other part of the story. In
some 17 different languages, perhaps many more, the thousands of folks
from all around the Mediterranean Sea, totally spellbound, receive the
wonderful Gospel of life in Christ, in hearts where death reigned
supreme; of hope and joy, where hopelessness and despair were
unavoidable; and of order where Babel’s confusion held sway.
Paul, going back to what God had said in Isaiah, gives the reason
behind the "foreign languages" (1 Cor.
14:21-22): they are "a sign, not to those
who believe but to (the) unbelievers (of Israel)". This, of
course, is very clear on the day of Pentecost, but in the same light we
find that it also holds true in Acts 10 (+11) and 19.
Mirror Image
‘Babel’ occurred because, unlike Noah’s dove,
God’s dove could not find a resting place for the sole of its feet.
Dispersion, a multitude of foreign languages, innumerable wars and
untold suffering all followed.
Pentecost occurred because the ‘dove’ had found its ‘resting
place’ – God’s Son, the Anointed One, had come to give his life
for the world and to rise from the grave victoriously as the "new
man".
At Pentecost, and from that moment onwards, every single true
believer in Christ finds in him his new identity and eternal
life, and, in contrast to the Babel dispersion, true and wonderful unity
in Christ. Races, cultures, social levels, languages, even gender, which
are obviously not dissolved in this present dispensation, are, nevertheless,
truly and totally superseded in Christ (Gal.
3:26-28). It is the wind and the fire of Pentecost
which blow away and burn up all the chaff of differences, inequalities,
divisions, etc., etc. - that is when the individual believer allows the
Holy Spirit to do so!
The tragedy of the Corinthian Christians, who made so much of
supernatural phenomena, is that they were reluctant, very
reluctant, to give their wholehearted "yes" to the
"wind and fire" of Pentecost… With their proverbial "envy,
strife, and divisions", don’t they, in reality, remind us
more of ‘Babel’ than of ‘Pentecost’..?
Fruit of the Spirit
The
Holy Spirit provides all the gifts necessary for the building of his
church on earth. The gifts are very important, but after Paul has made
that very clear, he goes on to show the Corinthians "a more
excellent way". He was talking of the fruit of the Spirit which
is: "love" (1 Cor. 13).
To the Galatian Christians, who were producing plenty of ‘leaves’,
but no ‘fruit’ to speak of, he says: "The fruit of the
Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness,
faithfulness, gentleness, self-control" (Gal.
5:22-26).
That is the perfect fruit – produced by the Holy Spirit and looked
for by the Holy Spirit. The ‘dove’ found it in the Son of Man. There
was no "chaff" in his life to be blown away and burned.
As we surrender to Christ, and allow the Holy Spirit to do his
radical work, the fruit will appear - in our daily lives! That is what
the Holy Spirit came for, not only to manifest Christ to us, but
to manifest Christ in us and through us!
Yes! The Spirit has come!! And He has been here for nearly 2000
years. The Dove has landed! And in Christ, we are
partakers of the Person and the Work and the Fruit of the Holy Spirit!
Pentecost is living experience today!
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