LIFE IN THE SPIRIT Part 3: Baptized With The Spiritin+the+Spirit/Part+3...3 Jesus Christ. The second...
Transcript of LIFE IN THE SPIRIT Part 3: Baptized With The Spiritin+the+Spirit/Part+3...3 Jesus Christ. The second...
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LIFE IN THE SPIRIT
Part 3: Baptized With The Spirit
Over the next few weeks we are going to lay the theological
foundation for our personal experience of the power of the Holy
Spirit.
Foundation = a body or ground on which other parts rest or
are overlaid:
Our personal experience must always stand on the grounds of
Biblical truth. In other words, “What does it look like to operate in
the power of the Spirit, be filled with the Spirit, anointed by the
Spirit, and led by the Spirit ?”
This morning’s study is the centerpiece of that foundation. We’re
going study about being baptized with the Holy Spirit.
Some use the term baptized in the Holy Spirit, others refer to it
as the baptism of the Spirit.
It’s my great desire, my great prayer, that this morning’s study will
clearly address questions like: What is it? Do I need it? Do I have it?
Should I even care about it? How do I get it?
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One of the shortest sermons I’ve ever preached is on John 3:16
titled: The Greatest! It’s safe to say that that without a doubt John
3:16 is the greatest statement, the greatest promise, ever made to
the world: “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only
begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but
have eternal life.” (John 3:16)
I believe that we can say with the same degree of certainty that
the greatest promise ever made to the church is found in Acts 1:8
- “You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon
you.”
The greatest statement, the greatest promise, made to the world
was about Jesus. The greatest statement, the greatest promise,
made to the church was made by Jesus.
The promise to the world has to do with regeneration — being
made alive to God, becoming a new creation in Christ (2 Cor 5:17).
The promise made to the church has to do with unction —
enabled and empowered to live for Jesus in the world.
There is no Christian life without those promises! The first promise
is the means by which we become Christians. The second promise
is the means by which we live on mission as faithful and fruitful
witnesses for Jesus. The first has to do with us putting our faith in
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Jesus Christ. The second has to do with us being baptized in the
Holy Spirit.
Let’s begin with what the Bible says about our need to be
baptized with the Holy Spirit.
Our need to be baptized with the Holy Spirit sits like bookends in
the ministry of Jesus. Our need to be baptized with the Holy Spirit
is declared at the very beginning of the public ministry of Jesus.
Our need to be baptized with the Holy Spirit is so essential to the
Christian life, so necessary for living on mission, that John “the
baptizer” refers to it when introducing Jesus to the nation of Israel.
Luke 3:15-16 As the people were in expectation, and all were
questioning in their hearts concerning John, whether he might
be the Christ, 16John answered them all, saying, “I baptize you
with water, but he who is mightier than I is coming, the strap of
whose sandals I am not worthy to untie. He will baptize you
with the Holy Spirit….
John was talking about Jesus. This experience of being baptized
with the Holy Spirit is something that Jesus does to us! Jesus is the
baptizer — the Holy Spirit is the “element,” if-you-would, that He
baptizes us with. That truth is so crucial for us. It should alleviate
any and all fears concerning this experience because it is the lover
of our souls who is immersing us into the person and power of
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the Holy Spirit. Jesus will never do to us that we should be afraid
of!
Here’s the other bookend! We find it again at the close of Christ’s
earthly ministry. Our need to be baptized with the Holy Spirit is so
essential to the Christian life, so necessary for living on mission;
that Jesus refers to it at the close of His earthly ministry in His
parting words to his disciples
Luke 24:49 And behold, I am sending the promise of my
Father upon you. But stay in the city until you are clothed with
power from on high.”
When Jesus spoke those words to the disciples, they were already
converted. The Holy Spirit had already come to live in them.
John 20:22 And when he had said this, he breathed on them
and said to them, “Receive the Holy Spirit.
Remember, last week we learned that Jesus described the
relationship of the Holy Spirit to the believer by way of three
prepositions: with, in and upon. At that moment in John 20:22 the
Holy Spirit is in them. As we learned last week, it is the work of
the Holy Spirit in us that causes us to be regenerated, born again,
become new creations. That is the work of the Holy Spirit in us.
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You cannot be a Christian unless the Holy Spirit is in you through
repentance and faith in Jesus! Romans 8:8-9; 16
Through repentance (turning away from our sin, turn away from
our idols) and faith in Jesus (trusting in His the finished work of
the cross to save us), the Holy Spirit comes to live in us and we
are regenerated by the Holy Spirit.
You can't be a Christian without the Holy Spirit in you! But there is
a second work of the Holy Spirit, a second experience of the
Holy Spirit for Christians. That second experience is wrapped up in
the preposition upon. He is in every born again child of God. But
Jesus said that there is an experience of the Holy Spirit in which
He comes upon the child of God. We refer to that experience as
being baptized with the Spirit, baptism in the Spirit, baptism of the
Spirit, being filled with the Holy Spirit.
That is what John was talking about as was preparing the nation
for the ministry of Jesus, and that is what Jesus was talking about
at the end of Luke’s Gospel when he said to his disciples — who
already had the Spirit in them — "Behold I'm sending forth the
promise of my Father upon you. You will be clothed in power
from on high."
Acts 1:8 "You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come
upon you."
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Remember — the Holy Spirit had come to live in them back in
John 20:22. Now Jesus speaks of a second work of the Holy Spirit
in the life of the believer. It's not the “in” experience. It's
separate and distinct from. We can’t over state this — the
experience of the Holy Spirit living in us has to do with salvation,
regeneration, conversion. The Holy Spirit living in us makes us
Christians, sons and daughters of God. The “upon” experience of
the Holy Spirit is not about becoming a Christian. It is all about
the power, enabling, and filling we need for faithful and fruitful
witness.
THIS IS HUGE — What you call this experience: filled with the
Holy Spirit, baptized with the Holy Spirit, baptized in the Holy
Spirit, Spirit baptism, is not paramount. What’s is paramount is
that we have the experience.
Here’s how Jesus clearly framed it —
Acts 1:8 But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has
come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and
in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end (the remotest parts) of
the earth.”
Being baptized with the Holy Spirit is absolutely essential,
absolutely vital for us to be faithful in our witness and mission.
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How essential is it? Jesus forbade his disciples from even
beginning the work of the Great Commission until they had
received power from on high, until they were baptized in the Holy
Spirit. Look at Acts 1:4-5 —
4And while staying with them he ordered them not to depart
from Jerusalem, but to wait for the promise of the Father, which,
he said, “you heard from me; 5for John baptized with water, but
you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days from
now.”
There's the term: baptized with the Holy Spirit.
DON’T MISS THIS — The issue here is being witnesses for Christ!
Jesus says (and it’s quite mind blowing), Don't even attempt to be
a witness for me until you have the power from on high, the Holy
Spirit has come upon you. Yes, the Holy Spirit is in you, but He
must come upon you. Don't do anything until you have that.
Our need for the Holy Spirit to come upon us is wrapped up in
what it means to be a “witness” for Jesus. There are three
essential elements to being a faithful witness to Jesus:
1. To exalt Christ
2. To live a holy life — a life separated from sin and separated
to God,
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3. To be on mission with Jesus for His glory.
Those thee things should strike a familiar chord — loud and clear!
When we were getting to know who the Holy Spirit is we learned
that He is passionate about three things. The Holy Spirit is
passionate about Jesus, passionate about holiness and passionate
about mission.
When we were looking at the what of the Holy Spirit, what it is
that He does, we learned that He is always going to be
manifesting Himself and moving in our lives individually and within
the church corporately toward his passions — Jesus, holiness and
mission. We need to get this printed deep in our hearts. That
needs to be in the DNA of our identity; who we are and what
we’re about as believers and as a church. The Holy Spirit is always
seeking to work in and through our lives for the exaltation of
Christ, the living out of holiness and the mission of Christ. That is
the definition of faithful witness!
THIS IS SO HUGE. It certainly has been hitting me like a freight
train, and I believe it’s been big on the hearts of so many here at
Metro. I want you to think about this in regards to those three
elements: When the Holy Spirit came upon the disciples
everything changed forever.
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We have the record of this happening to them in Acts 2. As we
look at the account we will see how radically things changed.
By the way — it’s at this very point that so many of us halt and
hesitate in regards to being baptized with the Holy Spirit.
CHANGE! EVERYTHING changes! We’re not quite sure that we
want anything to change — let alone want everything to change.
DON’T MISS THIS — We are gathered today as redeemed rebels
on our way to heaven because the first Christians waited for,
looked for and longed for the Holy Spirit to come upon them. The
Gospel reached all the way out to us because they were radically
changed!
Acts 2:1-3 When the day of Pentecost arrived, they were all
together in one place. 2And suddenly there came from heaven
a sound like a mighty rushing wind, and it filled the entire
house where they were sitting. 3And divided tongues as of fire
appeared to them and rested on each one of them. 4And they
were all filled with the Holy Spirit
Jesus said, “You'll be baptized with the Spirit.” The description of it
is that were “filled with the Holy Spirit.” We can use both
terminologies; but I believe there is some nuance in the term
“filled with the Spirit” that we'll look at next week.
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One thing is obvious to us in this scene — There is nothing
normal about this scene! There’s a sound like a might rushing
wind! There’s fire! And they are filled with the Holy Spirit. NOT
NORMAL doesn't stop there.
and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit gave them
utterance. 5Now there were dwelling in Jerusalem Jews, devout
men from every nation under heaven. 6And at this sound the
multitude came together, and they were bewildered, because
each one was hearing them speak in his own language. 7And
they were amazed and astonished, saying, “Are not all these
who are speaking Galileans? 8And how is it that we hear, each
of us in his own native language? 9Parthians and Medes and
Elamites and residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia,
Pontus and Asia, 10Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts
of Libya belonging to Cyrene, and visitors from Rome, 11both
Jews and proselytes, Cretans and Arabians—we hear them
telling in our own tongues the mighty works of God.”
The Disciples are speaking in tongues because the Holy Spirit has
come upon them — and all of these people are hearing what
these men are saying, not only in their own language, but in
specific dialects of their ethnic languages! NOT NORMAL!
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12And all were amazed and perplexed, saying to one another,
“What does this mean?” 13But others mocking said, “They are
filled with new wine.”
This was so NOT NORMAL that everyone thought they were
wasted!
14But Peter,
We are going to see that this is a radically different Peter than the
Peter we see in the Gospels at the time of the trial and crucifixion
of Jesus! This is Peter filled with the Holy Spirit!
14But Peter, standing with the eleven, lifted up his voice and
addressed them, “Men of Judea and all who dwell in Jerusalem,
let this be known to you, and give ear to my words. 15For these
men are not drunk, as you suppose, since it is only the third
hour of the day. 16But this is what was uttered through the
prophet Joel:
Peter quotes from the “minor prophet” Joel (Joel 2).
17 “‘And in the last days it shall be, God declares,
This is big stuff! Under the empowering of the Spirit Peter gives a
fresh definition of the “Last Days”. If anyone says, “How do we
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know we are living in the “Last Days” simply point them to Acts 2
where Peter defines the last days for us. The “Last Days” are from
Pentecost until the Second Coming of Jesus Christ. The “Last Days”
prophecy of Joel is being fulfilled on the day of Pentecost in 32AD.
The close of the “Last Days” is at the Second Coming of Jesus
Christ.
Pentecost has already happened. The Second Coming has not
happened. METRO — by Biblical definition, we are living in the
“Last Days.”
All the way down to verse 21 is just the introduction to the first
sermon preached in Church history.
This is a different Peter! Britt Merrick called him “Pentecost Pete.”
Peter goes on to preach this incredible sermon that begins in
verse 22 and ends at verse 36. Jump down to what happened at
the close of his preaching.
36Let all the house of Israel therefore know for certain that God
has made him both Lord and Christ, this Jesus whom you
crucified.” 37Now when they heard this they were cut to the
heart, and said to Peter and the rest of the apostles, “Brothers,
what shall we do?” 38And Peter said to them, “Repent and be
baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the
forgiveness of your sins, and you will receive the gift of the
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Holy Spirit. 39For the promise is for you and for your children
and for all who are far off, everyone whom the Lord our God
calls to himself.” 40And with many other words he bore witness
and continued to exhort them, saying, “Save yourselves from
this crooked generation.” 41So those who received his word
were baptized, and there were added that day about three
thousand souls.
EVERYTHING changed when the Holy Spirit came upon the
church. Peter went from denying Christ to proclaiming Christ. The
night before Jesus was crucified Peter was at the house of the high
priest where Jesus was being interrogated and beaten. One of the
servant girls said to him, “Aren't you one of those guys who were
with Jesus. He denied with a curse that he even knew Jesus. In
other words, Peter said “May God kill me and damn me if I'm
lying…. I don't know Jesus!” Peter went from cowardly denial to
boldly proclaiming Jesus as the crucified and risen Lord! He went
from being afraid of a servant girl to standing before all of
Jerusalem proclaiming Jesus! THAT is power from on high!
The same is true of the other disciples. Where were the disciples
when Christ was crucified? All but John fled fearing for themselves
in light of the cross. But after the Spirit came upon the church
every single one of them (with the exception of John) died violent
deaths for preaching the cross of Jesus Christ.
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EVERYTHING changed when the Holy Spirit came upon the
church. They operated in the power of the Holy Spirit — Power
from on high. As a result of the church being baptized with the
Holy Spirit the world was never the same!
Jesus modeled this very life. Jesus stepped into our humanity. At
the Incarnation nothing was subtracted from Jesus’ divinity. His
deity was not diminished in anyway. Instead, in His incarnation
Jesus added humanity to His deity. Theologians refer to this as the
Hypostatic Union. Hypostasis means that Jesus is one person with
two natures: divinity and humanity joined together in the person
of Jesus — fully God and fully man.
THIS IS HUGE — For us to understand the DYNAMICS of our
mission we need to understand the relationship of Jesus to God
the Holy Spirit. In His humanity Jesus showed us that the disciple
is to live a life that begins with the Holy Spirit, and is empowered
and directed by the Holy Spirit. Follow me.
We are told in both Matthew’s and Luke’s Gospels that Mary
conceived Jesus by the power of God the Holy Spirit (Matthew
1:20; Luke 1:34-35). In Luke 2:11 Jesus is called “Christ,” which
means anointed.
Isaiah 61:1 The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me, because the
Lord has anointed me
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We will talk about the idea of anointing in a couple of weeks.
Jesus was “anointed” or “empowered” by the Holy Spirit to
undertake His mission. At the beginning of His public ministry,
Jesus was baptized in the Jordan River by John the baptizer. As
Jesus came out of the water Luke tells us that
Luke 3:21b-22 …..the heavens were opened, 22and the Holy
Spirit descended on him in bodily form, like a dove;
So the Holy Spirit came upon Jesus, as Jesus was about to begin
His three years of ministry leading up to His death on the cross for
our sins. Luke then tells us that Jesus was led by the Holy Spirit
into the wilderness for 40 days where Jesus was tempted by Satan
and resisted, refuted and defeated Satan in each temptation. Then
Luke writes
Luke 4:14 And Jesus returned in the power of the Spirit to
Galilee,
Luke 4:16-21 16And he came to Nazareth, where he had been
brought up. And as was his custom, he went to the synagogue
on the Sabbath day, and he stood up to read. 17And the scroll
of the prophet Isaiah was given to him. He unrolled the scroll
and found the place where it was written, 18 “The Spirit of the
Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to proclaim
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good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to
the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at
liberty those who are oppressed, 19to proclaim the year of the
Lord’s favor.” 20And he rolled up the scroll and gave it back to
the attendant and sat down. And the eyes of all in the
synagogue were fixed on him. 21And he began to say to them,
“Today this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.”
NO SMALL SIDE NOTE — People misunderstand and misrepresent
the “Spirit-Led” and “Spirit-filled” life. Jesus is the perfect example
of what the “Spirit-filled” life looks like. If you want to know what
“Spirit-filled” and “Spirit-led” looks like, forget the bizarre stuff you
see on TV or in a lot of churches and simply look at Jesus.
WE LOOK AT JESUS and we see that His mission was begun by,
empowered and directed by the Holy Spirit. All of the ministry
Jesus did, as powerful as it was, was done by the power of the
Holy Spirit. He said, if I cast out demons I do it by the Spirit of
God — that same power is given to the church.
There is no genuine Christian life, there is no fruitful life and
ministry apart from the person and power of the Holy Spirit. WE
need to be born again by the power of the Holy Spirit, and we
need the Holy Spirit to empower us in our mission. LISTEN — If
the sinless Son of God was in need of the power of the Holy Spirit
how much more do we, whose sins are so many (and the day isn't
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even half finished) need the power of the Holy Spirit?
METRO — I want you to listen very carefully please. I'm going to
repeat myself. There is the Holy Spirit in us, converting us; then
there is the Holy Spirit coming upon us — filling us. These are
two separate and distinct experiences for the Christian.
You're not a Christian without the Spirit living in you. But not
every Christian has yet had the Holy Spirit come upon them for
empowering them, filling them, enabling them to live faithful,
fruitful lives on mission with Jesus and for Jesus.
That experience is available for every single Christian, but not
every Christian has had it. We can see this proven in scripture.
We’ve already seen in Acts 1 and 2 that the Holy Spirit was
poured out upon men and women who we know we already
indwelled by the Holy Spirit (John 20:22). There's a separation
between those two events. We see this happening again in Acts 8
where there are men and women who were converted under the
ministry of Philip.
Acts 8:14-17 14Now when the apostles at Jerusalem heard that
Samaria had received the word of God, they sent to them Peter
and John, 15who came down and prayed for them that they
might receive the Holy Spirit, 16for he had not yet fallen on any
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of them, but they had only been baptized in the name of the
Lord Jesus. 17Then they laid their hands on them and they
received the Holy Spirit.
These people were beyond question believers — saved and
regenerate. As such they had to be indwelled by the Holy Spirit.
But though they had experienced the work of the Holy Spirit in
regeneration, they had not yet experienced the work of Jesus
baptizing them with the Holy Spirit; they had not yet had the
upon experience of the Holy Spirit.
We see the same thing in the life of Paul the Apostle.
Acts 9:4-6 And falling to the ground he heard a voice saying to
him, “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?” 5And he said,
“Who are you, Lord?” And he said, “I am Jesus, whom you are
persecuting. 6But rise and enter the city, and you will be told
what you are to do.”
Acts 9:10-12; 15-17 Now there was a disciple at Damascus
named Ananias. The Lord said to him in a vision, “Ananias.” And
he said, “Here I am, Lord.” 11And the Lord said to him, “Rise and
go to the street called Straight, and at the house of Judas look
for a man of Tarsus named Saul, for behold, he is praying, 12and
he has seen in a vision a man named Ananias come in and lay
his hands on him so that he might regain his sight”…. 15But the
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Lord said to him, “Go, for he is a chosen instrument of mine to
carry my name before the Gentiles and kings and the children
of Israel. 16For I will show him how much he must suffer for the
sake of my name.” 17So Ananias departed and entered the
house. And laying his hands on him he said, “Brother Saul, the
Lord Jesus who appeared to you on the road by which you
came has sent me so that you may regain your sight and be
filled with the Holy Spirit.”
After his dramatic conversion Paul received the UPON experience
of the Spirit.
We see the same thing in Acts 19 (which by the way is some 20
years after Acts 2).
Acts 19:1-6 And it happened that while Apollos was at Corinth,
Paul passed through the inland country and came to Ephesus.
There he found some disciples.
That word disciple is only and always used in Acts to reference
Christians.
2And he said to them, “Did you receive the Holy Spirit when
you believed?” And they said, “No, we have not even heard
that there is a Holy Spirit.”…… 6And when Paul had laid his
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hands on them, the Holy Spirit came on them, and they began
speaking in tongues and prophesying.
We can’t escape this! Sometimes people are born again, converted,
regenerated, saved, the Spirit dwelling in them, but they don't
experience the Holy Spirit coming upon them until a later time.
By the way — we do see in Acts 10 an example of how you can
have the “in” and the “upon” experience of the Holy Spirit at the
same time.
THAT’S A LOT OF GROUND WORK; ALL TO MAKE THIS POINT
What if the disciples hadn't obeyed Jesus and waited in Jerusalem
until they received power from on high? What if Peter and John
hadn't gone to Samaria to pray for those new converts? What if
Ananias had refused to go to Paul? What if Paul hadn't gone to
the church in Ephesus? What would have happened?
Well they would have still all been Christians but there would have
been a weakness to their Christianity. It would have been a frail,
humanly powered Christianity — nothing close to the fullness of
what the Father had for them through the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
It would have been a “naked” Christianity! Remember what Jesus
said at the end of Luke’s Gospel
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Luke 24:49 And behold, I am sending the promise of my
Father upon you. But stay in the city until you are clothed with
power from on high.”
That’s radical to think about in light of the words of Jesus to the
church in Laodicea
Revelation 3:17 For you say, I am rich, I have prospered, and I
need nothing, not realizing that you are wretched, pitiable, poor,
blind, and naked.
They would have collapsed under the weight of the mission and
crumbled under the heat of persecution that raged against them.
Weak, frail, humanly powered, mission challenged, timid,
intimidated and less than ideal Christianity — naked, stripped of
power! I say this with love and I say it knowing that this
description has been staring me right in my face over the weeks
leading up to this series and up to this very moment: This is a
description of many Christians today. They — and let’s be real
with ourselves — WE wonder why our Christianity feels that way.
And so many think that the remedy is simply a function of trying
harder. It's not a matter of trying harder! It's about receiving more!
It's about receiving power from on high — power that changes
everything — power that changes the world!
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How do I know if I've been baptized in the Holy Spirit? The
issue is power from God.
Many here would confess that they have experienced a genuine
work of the work of the Holy Spirit in their life. After all, He didn't
take up residence in you to sit and do nothing! He's in you,
working in you to will and do of the Father’s pleasure! But it is
possible to have the work of the Spirit in your life — yet come
short of the fullness of His work of enabling and empowering by
way of the Holy Spirit coming upon you.
Take for example the story of D. L. Moody, that great, famous
American evangelist from Chicago. He died in 1899. Moody had a
great ministry. He had planted churches in Chicago. Out of his
ministry came the Moody Bible Institute and Moody Publishing.
He was already doing an incredible work for God. The Spirit was at
work in him. But when he would preach at meetings there were
two little ladies that always sat in the front row. Their names were
Mrs. Snow and Auntie Cook. Whenever Moody finished preaching
they would come up Moody with a smile on their face and say
we're praying for you. Moody would reply with a “thank you.” But
after a while it really bugged him until finally, one day, he replied
— "Well you're praying for me why don't you pray for the people,
for the lost, that they get saved, pray for them, not me." And their
reply was — We're praying for you to have the power. That
totally derailed Moody! But he took it to heart and began to
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bring it before the Lord in prayer. Not long after that exchange
Moody was in New York en route to London — walking down Wall
Street. And as he was praying he was suddenly filled with the
Holy Spirit. He was overwhelmed with the presence of Christ like
he'd never been before; so much so that he ran to a friend's house,
knocked on the door and begged him to give him a private spot
in his house. There in that room he laid in the presence of Christ
for hours.
Moody continued on to London where he preached and saw
thousands of people saved. Two little ladies who said — We’re
praying that you get the power. There was something of the work
of the Spirit before, but he discovered there was something more
to be had. He was so convinced of this that later in his life he said
this.
Quote: D.L. Moody — "I've lived long enough to know that if I
cannot have the power of the Spirit of God on me to help me
work for him I would rather die than to just live for living's
sake."
QUESTION — What are some of the barriers then to the
baptism of the Holy Spirit? Why is it that not every Christian has
experienced this yet?
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THE FIRST is tied to God's sovereignty. Sometimes God's timing
is a mysterious thing. Why was Cornelius and his household
baptized in the Spirit at the same time they believed — but the
believers in Samaria weren’t — the believers in Ephesus weren't —
and Paul wasn't? I don't know. I don't have an answer for that
one. That sits with the sovereignty of God who does what He
wants — when He wants!
2. Sometimes there’s an element of ignorance — like in Acts 19,
the believers in Ephesus.
3. This is a big one — if not the biggest! I alluded to it earlier on.
Often times the barrier to us being filled in the Holy Spirit is
because we have a deep refusal to yield our will to His. We're
committed to our own agenda and our own will. The Holy Spirit
will never fill you and then say, Now you have power from on high
— go do what ever it is that you want to do! The Holy Spirit is
going to come upon you, fill you, and say, Here’s what Jesus wants!
There must be a desire for the empowering of the Spirit. But it
must be married to a willingness to surrender your own will to the
will of Christ.
4. There can be a refusal to repent of sin. Remember — the
empowering of the Holy Spirit will always move us toward holiness.
A refusal to repent of certain sins is essentially saying to Holy
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Spirit, I don't want holiness. That’s a barrier because the Holy
Spirit is the Spirit of holiness.
5. This might be one of the biggest — if not the biggest barrier: A
lack of deep conviction of need. You just might be satisfied in
your weak Christian experience. That's a barrier. If you don't
desire to live a holy life on mission that exalts Jesus — you don't
need to be filled with the Holy Spirit.
6. Wrong motive. Some people are seeking the filling of the Holy
Spirit — not because they're actually desiring to exalt Christ, live a
holy life and live on mission with Jesus for His glory. They're just
after some sort of “experience.” They want to be exalted and
personally gratified with some display of power.
So then what must be done? I’m praying that the Lord is using
this series — this morning — to flood your heart and your mind
with an overwhelming sense of your deep and real need to be
baptized in the Holy Spirit. It is absolutely essential for faithful
and fruitful Christian living.
I’m praying that the Holy Spirit is working in your heart to forsake
the sin that is holding you back from a life of holiness.
I’m praying that the Lord is working in all of our hearts this
morning a desire to surrender our will to God's will. If we are not
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willing to surrender — in varying degrees at various times — our
will to God's will, there's no need for us to ask for the filling of the
Holy Spirit because the Holy Spirit will always lead us in the will of
God.
HERE’S THE DEAL — At the end of the day we have to ASK!
Simply ASK! Here's what Jesus said
Luke 11:9-13 And I tell you, ask, and it will be given to you;
seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you.
10For everyone who asks receives, and the one who seeks finds,
and to the one who knocks it will be opened. 11What father
among you, if his son asks for a fish, will instead of a fish give
him a serpent; 12or if he asks for an egg, will give him a
scorpion? 13If you then, who are evil, know how to give good
gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father
give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!”
God is not your heavenly Father unless the Holy Spirit is living in
you! Jesus is talking about the promise of the Father to pour out
the Holy Spirit on our lives so that Jesus would be exalted, we
would be holy and we would live on mission with Him for His
glory!
Our heavenly Father wants us to ask because He desires to give
this to us. Jesus said that we need to ask. It is God's will that
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every one of his children are filled with the Holy Spirit. Therefore
we have a tremendous confidence when we come in faith asking
for that which He desires.
What will happen when the Holy Spirit comes upon us? How
will we know that we've received Spirit baptism?
FIRST — We that ask in faith and receive by faith. The entire
Christian life is a life of faith. We receive Jesus by faith, we walk
by faith, and we receive the Spirit by faith.
Having dealt with our motives, having surrendered our will to His,
having dealt with our sin issues, having confessed our deep need
for and dependence upon the power of the Holy Spirit — we
come and we ask. We ask in faith. Asking in faith means that
we’re not demanding a certain sort of sign — we’re not judging
our experience on the basis of a certain sort of sign. We receive it
by faith.
Having said that — there just may be some signs. At Pentecost
there was tongues — elsewhere in Acts there was tongues and the
gift of prophecy. We're going to speak about those things in a few
weeks. For the believers in Samaria there was no documented,
immediate, accompanying sign. So there may be, there may not
be accompanying signs. That was the case in my life. When I was
baptized in the Holy Spirit there was no immediate sign. There
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might be an overwhelming, indescribable experience of the love of
the Father — that was my experience in a little single-wide trailer
that served as the school library at a Catholic elementary school. I
can’t describe it in a way that would do it justice — but there was
this warm and beautiful and all encompassing sense that God was
pouring His love out upon me. John Wesley talks about what he
called the strange warming of his heart on one evening at
Aldersgate Street in England.
I didn't even know it was a baptism in the Holy Spirit until years
later. But I do know this — Though there was not an
accompanying sign at the time like tongues or prophesy, there
was profound change in my life — a radical missional shift — a
profound hunger for the Word of God and a desire to serve Jesus
and His people.
THIS IS IMPORTANT — Not everybody is the same. We receive
this “upon” experience of the Holy Spirit by faith — whether we
feel, hear or see something or not. That is the Christian life. It is
one of faith. We take God at his word.
Regardless of what we feel or don't feel, see or don't see, if we
are baptized with the Holy Spirit there will be power — power
for faithful and fruitful living — boldness to speak for Jesus. You
cannot be baptized with the Holy Spirit and not receive power.
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CLOSE —
1. This upon experience of the Holy Spirit is not optional. We are
commanded to ask for and to seek to be baptized with the Spirit.
It's not a matter of preference. It's not like you can be sitting here
today and say, I hear you but nah, I don't want it. It's not optional.
It's God's will for everyone of his sons and daughters to be
baptized in the Holy Spirit.
2. Secondly, baptism in the Holy Spirit is not a reward. It is the
gift of the promise of the Father. It if is a gift then it is free and it
cannot be worked for or merited or deserved in any manner. It's
not received as a reward for hours of prayer or sacrifices you’ve
made for Jesus.
Those things are fine but the Holy Spirit is given to us as a free
gift of God's grace provided in the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Jesus
has already made the sacrifice for us to be filled with the Spirit.
It’s a promise of a loving Father, the loving Father.
We don't have to — and neither can we — coerce, beg or cajole
God into giving to us that which we need and that whom he
promised. Waiting on the Spirit, praying more, surrendering more
— those things aren't going to merit the baptism of the Spirit.
Those things ought to be a reflection and expression of our heart
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towards the Holy Spirit — but they done earn the empowering of
the Spirit.
3. The baptism of the Holy Spirit is not exclusive. It’s not reserved
for ordained ministers. Nor is it the mark of the super spiritual. All
believers are told to expect it.
So now what’s left for us is to actually do this! We're not just
going to listen to a sermon. We're actually going to do what the
Bible says. We’re going to seek the promise of the Father, the
baptism of the Holy Spirit.