When the Day of Pentecost had fully come, they were all
with one accord in one place. And
suddenly there came a sound from heaven, as of a rushing mighty wind, and it
filled the whole house where they were sitting. Then there appeared to them divided tongues,
as of fire, and one sat upon each of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit
and began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance. (Acts 2:1-4 )
Pentecost marked the birth of the
church. Should it not also be seen as
establishing God’s blessing as the church’s birthright, as well? We might debate how many of the supernatural
signs of that original event are meant to be replicated today. There are those who insist on ecstatic utterance
as a valid gift still. Do we then demand
a rushing mighty wind and tongues of fire over our heads also? My purpose, however, is not to degenerate
into a debate on those matters, but to focus on where we all ought to
agree—that it is certain that there are elements of the first century Pentecost
that every pastor should seek for the church in the twenty first century. I am not a Pentecostal in terms of
denomination, but I ought to be in terms of dynamic!
The church’s birthright today, as
then, is one of PENTECOSTAL PRAYER (v.1).
This is where the blessing began.
They didn’t work something up with a program, but they called something
down in prayer. Until the church
recovers fervency and faithfulness in our prayer meetings, we will never see the
blessing God desires for us.
The church’s birthright also
includes PENTECOSTAL POWER (v.2-13). We
have come to a time Paul warned us about when churches have, “a form of godliness but denying its power” (2 Tim.3:5a ). Old evangelist Vance Havner used to say, “You
can be straight as a gun-barrel theologically, and empty as one
spiritually.” While we dare not abandon
doctrinal purity, we must insist on divine power to accompany it!
Furthermore, the church’s
birthright features PENTECOSTAL PREACHING (v.14-40). Peter set the pattern that Spurgeon would
later imitate, “Wherever I take a text, I make a beeline to the cross.” Preaching that God honors is that which is
founded on the Scripture and focused on the Savior. There is exposition, application and invitation.
Another aspect of the church’s
birthright is PENTECOSTAL PRODUCTIVITY (v.41-45, 47b). Sinners were evangelized and saints were
edified. The church grew outward in its
Gospel witness, grew upward in its glad worship, grew deeper in its grounding
in the Word and grew stronger in their unity and support of one another. Is that how it is at the church you and I
lead?
Finally, the church’s birthright
leads to PENTECOSTAL PRAISE (v.46-47a).
Joy was pervasive. Celebration
marked their gatherings. They were swept
away in love for Jesus and what He had done for them! Nobody dreaded going to a gloomy church
service, but were drawn to a glad worship expression.
I pray that our churches will experience a taste of
Pentecostal wine this Sunday!
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