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Ephesians 5:6-20
The Incarnation is the most distinctive event in history.
“And the Word became flesh and
dwelt among us, full of grace and truth; we have beheld his glory, glory as of
the only Son from the Father” (John 1:14).
In this momentous occurrence divine and human natures appeared in
oneness in the person of Jesus Christ, God’s eternal Son.
Another resplendent manifestation of the divine-human dynamic is the
baptism of Christ’s believers with the Holy Spirit.
Incarnation and Sanctification stand out as parallel expressions of
conformation between man and God, whose relationship was shattered in the Garden
of Eden at the fall. There God
pronounced the Protevangelium which
was to span the irreparable chasm.
The divine incidents enfolded by the Crucifixion constitute the core of the
Christian faith: Incarnation, Crucifixion, Sanctification.
In Leviticus God emphasizes
seven times to his people the command to be holy as he is holy
(cf. 11:44, 45; 19:2; 20:7, 26; 21:8;
22:32). The Apostle Peter recapitulates this vital command in one verse:
“Since it is written, ‘You shall be holy
for I am holy’” (I Peter The Holy Spirit descended
in order to propel the inexhaustible actualities of the ascended Christ.
I.
Pentecost is God’s seal on Christ’s redemption. On Pentecost Sunday at the
descent of the Holy Spirit, Peter stood with the other disciples and boldly
declared, “…this is what was spoken by
the prophet Joel…” (Acts The events on that
Firstfruits celebration demonstrate to people in all generations that the
foreordained act of redemption in all its stages is supernatural.
After the descent of the Holy Spirit, his universal ministry is clearly
shown in recorded sacred history. It unfolded with the coming of the Holy Spirit
following the Lord’s baptism, Jesus’ praying at that hour and the Father’s voice
heard from heaven (cf. Luke This foretelling was to
culminate in complete realization on that significant day when multitudes
witnessed the Holy Spirit’s descent.
They exclaimed their amazement in unison:
“Brethren, what shall we do?”
(Acts In our severely troubled
times, the need of the Pulpit universally is to lead sinners to repentance and
restoration to God through the mediation of the Holy Spirit.
Referring to the persecution of his followers, Christ said,
“…for it is not you who speak, but the Spirit of your Father speaking through
you” (Matthew The sailboat on life’s
rough voyage must always be filled with the Holy Spirit and driven by his
unfaltering power. Academic
degrees, prominent personality or fat pastoral salary in a hungry world – both
physically and spiritually, will not propel anybody’s boat.
When we consider that Jesus himself was full of the Holy Spirit and was
led by the Spirit (cf. Luke 4:1) at
the start of his earthly ministry, can the messenger of this Redeemer afford to
carry on his service without the identical sustenance?
In too many places the clear message of redemption with Holy Spirit
unction is not a reality. Seeking
to tell God’s plan of redemption, but at the same time making compromises in the
realm of the Holy Spirit relegates the boat to languid sailing.
All the while the boat may seem to be moving, but the sad reality is that
it is not under the control of God’s wind.
The sailboat is trying to make headway through
ersatz measures, especially in our
time. This cannot be done!
The boat of the Spirit-filled person forging through turbulent waters can
sail confidently without resorting to alternative provisions.
Sadly, in too many situations a particular boat has become dependent on human provisions or innovations. Just two examples ― throw money at problems; adjust the message to the liking of the sinner. Sometimes the sphere of the Holy Spirit is conciliated or accommodated. The Captain of our salvation cannot be pleased with makeshift proclamation. No ground can be compromised to make convenient adjustments in the message. The pleasure of the Holy Spirit is to do God’s work in God’s own way and not through shortcuts. Some people think that living in the twentieth or twenty-first century gives them the license to jettison the apostolic principle “…so that he may establish your hearts unblamable in holiness before our God and Father…” (I Thessalonians 3:13a). The Holy Spirit alone is capable of laying before us the clarity and incumbency of His divine plan. On the day of Pentecost,
the Holy Spirit brought the disciples face to face with a fresh sight of the
risen Christ. They had seen Christ
in the flesh for three years. They
walked, sat and ate with him, but they were all in need of having a vital
encounter with the Person who had become their master.
Now they were ready to offer themselves unreservedly to Him, through
whose resurrection life they had been redeemed and justified.
II. Pentecost is God’s
sanction on the lives of the redeemed. When Christ rose from the
dead the disciples were still in trepidation
(cf. John For example, the Apostle
Peter who was governed by timidity at the questioning of a powerless maiden
(cf. Luke Saul, following his
phenomenal conversion experience was visited in Damascus by Ananias who laid his
hands on him and with unreserved confidence said,
“Brother Saul, the Lord Jesus who
appeared to you on the road by which you came, has sent me that you may regain
your sight and be filled with the Holy Spirit” (Acts 9:17b).
These are only two of the mighty apostolic band who could turn the
world upside down because they were filled with the Holy Spirit.
Their brilliant apostolic tenure discloses two obvious facts: their
conversion and sanctification. The
two men would have been relegated to unrecorded history had they not had the
double encounter, first with Christ and then with the Holy Spirit.
In the history of evangelism all mighty evangelists yielded their lives
unreservedly to Christ and to the control of the Holy Spirit.
Looking at recent times, we can see the experiences of D. L. Moody,
Hudson Taylor, and R. A. Torrey, to mention only three.
The Apostle Paul wrote, “Be not
drunk with wine, wherein is excess, but be filled with the Spirit” (Ephesians There was a time when the theme of ‘the Spirit-filled life’ was widely discussed and preached. Eventually the vital encounter with the Holy Spirit was no longer awakening hearts. This crucial lack left hollow messages in many circles. It seems that this indispensable topic has been relegated to the Charismatic movement. The passivity toward the Holy Spirit has short-changed many earnest believers in churches of being taught about this God-honoring lifestyle. People are being deprived of the Holy Spirit-led pilgrimage. Some who should be instructing their flock regarding the Spirit-endowed life have their hands and minds in matters of lesser importance. At the close of his tenure, King David addressed the entire assembly, informing them that he had commissioned his son to build the temple. There is a striking Hebrew term here to define ‘consecration’: ‘filling of hands’. David had provided all the needed material for the building of God’s house. The king posed a solemn question to those who would be involved in the work: “Who then will offer willingly, consecrating himself today to the Lord?” (I Chronicles 29:5). He was asking them to fill their empty hands with what he had prepared in order to offer these to the Lord. Hands have to be empty so that they can be filled with the divine provision.
There is an old story that a little boy saw a coin in the bottom of a
narrow-necked jar. He put his hand into the jar to retrieve it.
But then he couldn’t pull his hand out.
He panicked. All efforts to help him failed.
His little hand remained inside, his fist firmly clenching the coin.
Finally, his mother cried, “Open your hand!” which he did, and suddenly,
the coin fell to the bottom of the jar and his hand was free.
As long as a person holds onto anything which he/she considers important
but in actuality has no lasting value, he/she will not be fully available to
Christ for the infilling of God’s Spirit.
Two essentials will help each person realize what is needed.
We have to understand that the highest and most valued attribute of God
is his holiness. Secondly, he
wishes to endow this property on his followers
―
faulty, finite, flickering mortals, though we be.
Holiness comes to us as a supreme divine provision.
This he supplies through his Holy Spirit.
God’s Spirit cannot dwell in the same body with anything at variance to
his authority.
III. Pentecost is God’s
scope to herald Christ’s Good News. The desire to spread the
Good News is general, but by what means?
We cannot rely on anyone but the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is Teacher (John
14:26b; I John While the message of Christ has met with enraged onslaught at every stage of its proclamation, the extreme animosity evidenced in our century cannot escape the alert observer’s attention. What is seen at present is not a mere rejection by Islamic forces, fanatic adherents of Hinduism and Buddhism, acolytes of the de-Christianized west, hi-tech achievers, devotees of cults and those who jettison moral-ethical norms, etc. It is basically a spiritual conflagration augmented with politics and violent confrontation. Seeds of wild weeds are constantly being sown everywhere producing a systematic opposition to the Good News throughout the world. In the ardent warfare of retrieving people of all ages from destruction, Satan is the constant aggressor and decisive attacker. We stand in need of the Holy Spirit’s sufficiency and authority to resist the onslaughts of the enemy. This century is characterized as the age of ‘clash of civilizations’. In this merciless battle the utmost insight and perception are needed. These can only be taught by the Holy Spirit. The comfort of the Holy Spirit will uplift the often down-hearted followers of Christ to ultimate triumph. We ought to be aware of the malevolence which surrounds us. In the Apostolic church the
ministry of those involved in establishing and strengthening the church is
clearly stated. “…strengthening the souls
of the disciples, exhorting them to continue in the faith, and saying that
through many tribulations we must enter the The Lord Jesus Christ prior
to his triumphant ascension instructed his disciples:
“You are witnesses of these things.
And behold, I send the promise of my Father upon you; but stay in the
city, until you are clothed with power from on high” (Luke 24:48, 49).
Christ’s obvious admonition in this passage was,
“…but stay in the city,” in other
words, ‘wait’.
We are in an age of fast foods, fast achievements, fast degrees, fast
sexual activity and all sorts of other fast pursuances.
Sadly, the church has not been able to keep herself immune from hastily
achievable goals. The intention
seems to be the seeking of fast achievements without keeping in step with the
purpose of the Holy Spirit. The
company of disciples was instructed to wait and pray for the outpouring of God’s
Spirit. The ten-day wait from Ascent to Descent was a most beneficial time of
tarrying. Then the quickening Spirit came upon these expectant followers of
Christ like the rush of a mighty wind, and they were all filled with the Holy
Spirit. The admonition of the risen
and ascended Christ is upon us: Reject all dictates of the fast-moving age in
which you are engulfed. Cast aside
all rush and hurry, organize your life in accordance with my time schedule, says
the Lord. Believe in the Holy Spirit and the mighty uplift he can administer in
your complacent life. Then you will
be blessed, enriched and rendered fully productive in your inner world, just as
my faithful disciples were, in the upper room.
They received the Holy Spirit, the consequence of which was the
ingathering of thousands into my kingdom.
Thomas Cosmades – 2008 cosmades@gmx.net
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