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- The following message was delivered at Grace Community Church in Panorama
- City, California, By John MacArthur Jr. It was transcribed from the tape,
- GC 90-59, titled "Charismatic Chaos" Part 8. A copy of the tape can be
- obtained by writing Word of Grace, P.O. Box 4000, Panorama City, CA 91412.
-
- I have made every effort to ensure that an accurate transcription of the
- original tape was made. Please note that at times sentence structure may
- appear to vary from accepted English conventions. This is due primarily to
- the techniques involved in preaching and the obvious choices I had to make in
- placing the correct punctuation in the article.
-
- It is my intent and prayer that the Holy Spirit will use this transcription
- of the sermon, "Charismatic Chaos" Part 8, to strengthen and encourage the
- true Church of Jesus Christ.
-
-
-
- Charismatic Chaos - Part 8
-
- "What was Happening in the Early Church?"
- by
- John MacArthur
-
-
-
- Tonight we are going to go back to our study of this matter of Charismatic
- Chaos. The message tonight will be a bit more technical and deal more
- closely with the texts of Scripture than some of ours in the past, in which
- we have been assessing the movement from a somewhat theological point of
- view. Tonight we want to look a little more tightly at the Book of Acts,
- because the Book of Acts is basically the location for most of the
- Charismatic defense of their doctrine. Experience is the foundation upon
- which much of the Charismatic system is built, and it is very important to
- identify that. Experience is the authority that Charismatics most frequently
- cite to validate their teachings. They have an experience-centered approach
- to truth that even influences the way they approach the Bible. In fact, the
- Book of Acts, which is a journal of the Apostle's experiences, is where
- Charismatics usually turn in search of Biblical support for what they
- believe.
-
- Now, I want you to look with me to the Book of Acts tonight; we are going to
- be looking at a couple of chapters, just giving you a feel for some very key
- ones, in light of the Charismatic theology. The Book of Acts is a
- historical narrative, in contrast, for example, to the Epistles of the New
- Testament which are didactic, or doctrinal, or instructive to the Church.
- This is a chronicle. It is a story, really of the early Church experiences.
- The Epistles on the other hand contain detail instructions for believers
- throughout all the Church Age. So in the Epistles you have the rather
- permanent instruction and doctrine for the Church. In the Book of Acts you
- have a chronicle of the history of the Early Church experiences.
- Historically, Christians committed to a Biblical perspective have recognized
- the difference. And it is an important difference to recognize. Evangelical
- theologians, through the years, have drawn the heart of their doctrine from
- Bible passages intended to teach the Church. They have understood that Acts
- is an inspired, historical record of the Apostolic period, not necessarily
- viewing every event or every phenomena that occurs there, as normative for
- the entire Church Age.
-
- But, on the other hand, Charismatics who have an insatiable craving for
- experiences and particularly for the experiences described in the Book of
- Acts, have assembled a doctrinal system that views the extraordinary events
- of the early Apostolic Age as necessary and continuing hallmarks of the Holy
- Spirit's work. They view the Book of Acts as normative, or what should be
- normative for all Christians in all ages. They see the workings of the Holy
- Spirit in the Book of Acts as tokens of spiritual power that are to be
- routinely expected by all Christians living in all times. Now, that is a
- rather serious interpretive error. In fact, it undermines the Charismatic's
- comprehension of Scripture. It muddies several key Biblical issues, crucial
- to a right understanding of Scriptural doctrine.
-
- Gordon Fee, a writer, who himself is a Charismatic, commented on the
- hermeneutical difficulties posed by the way Charismatics typically approach
- the Book of Acts, with these words, and I quote,
-
- If the primitive church is normative, which expression of it is
- normative? Jerusalem? Antioch? Philippi? Corinth? That is,
- why do not all the churches sell their possessions and have all
- things in common? Or further, is it at all legitimate to take
- any descriptive statements as normative? If so, how does one
- distinguish those which are from those which are not? For
- example, must we follow the pattern of Acts 1:26 and select
- leaders by lot? Just exactly what role does historical
- precedent play in Christian doctrine or in the understanding of
- Christian experience?
-
- Now, he introduces a very important point. If we are going to take the Book
- of Acts as normative, then we must take the Book of Acts in its total as
- normative, and we are going to have some immensely difficult issues to deal
- with. The fact of the matter is, that Acts was never intended to be the
- primary basis for teaching doctrine to the Church. The Book of Acts records
- only the earliest days of the Church Age and shows the Church in tradition,
- coming out of the old age into the new, coming out, as it were, of the Old
- Testament into the New Testament. The apostolic healings, and miracles, and
- signs, and wonders evident in the Book of Acts were not even common to all
- believers even in those days, but were uniquely restricted to the Apostles
- and those who worked alongside of them. They were exceptional events, each
- with specific purposes and always associated with the ministry of the
- Apostles; and their frequency can be seen decreasing dramatically even from
- the beginning of the Book of Acts to the end.
-
- It seems as though, at the opening of the Book of Acts, there is a flurry of
- the miraculous, and towards the end it's absent. The Book of Acts was
- written by Luke, the physician, as you know. Acts covers a crucial period
- that started with the Church at Pentecost and ended about 30 years later with
- Paul in prison, following his third missionary journey. Transitions are seen
- from beginning to end in the Book of Acts. Changes come in almost every
- chapter as the old covenant fades away and the New Covenant comes in all its
- fullness. Even the Apostle Paul was caught in some of those changes, which
- can be witnessed as you look into chapter 18 of Acts and chapter 21, and see
- him, although he is fully under the New Covenant, still exhibiting ties to
- the old, as indicated by his taking certain Jewish vows which were prescribed
- in the Old Testament.
-
- In the Book of Acts we are in a transition which moved from the Synagogue to
- the Church. We are in a transition which moves away from an order of law
- into an order of grace. The Church is transformed from a group of Jewish
- believers to a body made up of Jews and Gentiles united in Christ. Believers
- at the beginning of Acts were related to God under an old pattern. By the
- end, all believers were in Christ, living under a new pattern, indwelt by the
- Holy Spirit, in a new and unique relationship.
-
- Acts, therefore, covers an extraordinary time in history. A time of
- transition from the old to the new. And the transition it records, listen
- carefully, is never to be repeated. There is only one time frame in which
- you move from the old to the new, that history does not come again. It never
- will come again, and those elements that are true of that transition are not
- repeatable, for the transition itself needs no repetition. Therefore, we
- must say, the only teachings in the Book of Acts which can be called
- normative for the Church are those that are explicitly taught elsewhere in
- Scripture.
-
- Now, as you look at the Book of Acts from the Charismatic viewpoint, looking
- at it as it were through their eyes, the major theological distinction of
- that movement has to be supported in the Book of Acts, and they think they can
- do it. It is what I would call the doctrine of Subsequence. That's a term
- that others have used. The doctrine of Subsequence. What that basically
- means is, that you get saved and sometimes subsequent to that, some later
- date, hopefully, you get the Baptism of the Holy Spirit. That is primarily
- the distinctive doctrine of Pentecostal Charismatic theology; that when
- you're saved you receive the Lord Jesus Christ, you are redeemed: at some
- later time you get the Baptism of the Holy Spirit--subsequent to that saving
- work.
-
- They will also say, secondly, that it is often, some of them will say,
- always, associated with speaking in tongues. Old line traditional
- Pentecostalism for the most part said, "The Baptism of the Spirit is
- subsequent to salvation and is always identified by speaking in tongues,"
- some will say, "Often identified by speaking in tongues." The third
- component is that the Baptism of the Holy Spirit often manifests, or always
- manifests by speaking in tongues, is something to be earnestly, zealously,
- and passionately sought for. Now, that is really the essence of the
- distinctive kind of Charismatic doctrine that so many of us are familiar
- with.
-
- They go to the Book of Acts to endeavor to prove this Subsequence doctrine,
- this tongues as an attendant proof of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit, and for
- some strange reason to even verify the seeking after the gift or the Baptism.
- The doctrine of Subsequence [which says] that there is for Christians, a
- baptism in the Spirit, distinct from and subsequent to the experience of
- salvation, and that that is somehow associated with the matter of tongues, is
- at the very heart of their theology. And so we must be able to deal with
- this and I want us to do that tonight because we are really cutting into
- the very core of what they historically have taught.
-
- In his rather thorough investigation of Pentecostal theology, Frederick Dale
- Bruner wrote, "Pentecostals believe that the Spirit has baptized every
- believer into Christ's conversion, but that Christ has not baptized every
- believer into the Spirit Pentecost." Not only do most Charismatics believe
- that the Baptism of the Spirit happens at some point after salvation, but
- that it only happens to those who seek after it diligently, passionately, and
- zealously. And then as I said, when it does come it is usually, if not
- always attended by speaking in tongues. Now, they are very definitive, may I
- say, about this doctrine. May I also say, they are very vague about most
- other doctrines. In most other areas of theology they are vague, but in this
- one they usually speak a clear word regarding what they believe.
-
- Now, some of them attempt to support their doctrine of Subsequence from the
- Book of Acts because they really can't go anywhere else. Some of them don't
- attempt to support it at all: they just say it's true. But the ones who
- attempt to support it have to go to the Book of Acts because there is no
- where else to go. Let me show you why. Maybe you say, "They ought to go the
- First Corinthians, doesn't that talk about the Holy Spirit and Tongues?" It
- does. Open your Bibles for a moment to 1Corinthians, chapter 12, and let's
- see how well they would fare with that doctrine in 1Corinthians 12.
- 1Corinthians 12, verse 13 says, "For by one Spirit we were all baptized into
- one body, whether Jews or Greeks, whether slaves or free, and we were all
- made to drink of one Spirit." Now, there you have the Holy Spirit as an
- agent in baptism, there you have the Baptism with the Holy Spirit, but you
- have absolutely nothing about Subsequence. You have absolutely nothing about
- tongues, and you have absolutely nothing about seeking. It is a fact that is
- stated. There is no indication that it is subsequent to salvation; in fact,
- the very statement that it has happened to all of us, indicates that it is
- concurrent with salvation. It cannot take place at some point after
- salvation or Paul couldn't say it was true of all Christians--but he does!
-
-
- You say, "Well, maybe they ought to go 1Corinthians, chapter 14, doesn't that
- talk about tongues? And doesn't that talk about the Holy Spirit?" Yes, but
- if you go to 1Corinthians 14, you are not going to find any Subsequence
- there. You are not going to find any discussion of the Baptism of the
- Spirit. You are not going to find any connection of tongues with the Baptism
- of the Holy Spirit, and you are not going to find any authorization to seek
- after tongues or to seek after the baptism. So you can't find any of that in
- 1Corinthians 12 or 14, and if you have exhausted that section there isn't
- anything else in the New Testament that mentions tongues, except Acts. So
- they are stuck with Acts, even though the clear teaching of 1Corinthians 12
- is that every believer has been baptized by the agency of the Holy Spirit,
- Christ using the Spirit to place the believer into the Body, and that occurs
- at salvation and it is true of every Christian. There is no connection to
- tongues and it isn't something you seek for, it's something that god does for
- you at your salvation.
-
- And so they are left with no where to go but Acts. And so they violate the
- nature of the Book of Acts, which is a historical record of the Early Church
- and the unique transitional apostolic period, and make it normative for
- everybody, because that is the only place they can go to defend their unique
- theology. Now, when you go into the Book of Acts, and I want you to go there
- with me, Acts, chapter 2 to start with, when you go to the Book of Acts,
- you go to four chapters, chapter 2, chapter 8, chapter 10, and chapter 19.
- Obviously, we can't cover all of that, that would be an absolute
- impossibility; but those are the places that they go to support their view,
- and I want to give you a little bit of a feeling for this because you need to
- be able to understand and grasp this.
-
- The truth of the matter is, that even the Book of Acts fails to support this
- Charismatic theology of Subsequence, proof by Tongues and the need to seek.
- For example, they want to go to Acts 2, 8, 10, 19, because those record four
- different occasions in which the Holy Spirit came. In some of those
- occasions there is Tongues. In some of those occasions there is the coming
- of the Holy Spirit subsequent to salvation. But those four occasions are not
- uniform. The first one describes the coming of the Holy Spirit on the day of
- Pentecost, the second one the coming of the Holy Spirit to the new group of
- believers in Samaria, the third one, Acts 10, the coming of the Holy Spirit
- to the Gentile converts, Cornelius and his house. The fourth one, chapter
- 19, the coming of the Holy Spirit to some hangover disciples of John the
- Baptist, who were still living under an Old Testament economy, because they
- didn't know the gospel yet; somehow it had missed them.
-
- All four of these groups have unique experiences of receiving the Holy
- Spirit, but their experiences are different. For example, in Acts, chapter
- 2, and Acts, chapter 8, believers do receive the Holy Spirit after salvation.
- In Acts, chapter 10, and chapter 19, believers received the Holy Spirit at
- the moment of salvation, so they are not in agreement on that issue. The
- doctrine of Subsequence then cannot be convincingly defended even from the
- Book of Acts, because it isn't consistent. You say, "What about Tongues?"
- In chapter 2, chapter 10, and chapter 19, tongues are mentioned, but in
- chapter 8, they are not. So you can't even find anything that is normative
- at that point, at least that is written in Scripture. You say, "Well, what
- about seeking after it?" The believers in Acts 2, they say, were in the
- Upper Room seeking the Baptism of the Holy Spirit. There is no seeking in
- chapter 8, there is no seeking in chapter 10, and there is no seeking in
- chapter 19. The truth of the matter is, there is no seeking in chapter 2
- either; they were in the Upper Room doing nothing but patiently waiting. It
- doesn't tell us that they were seeking; no seeking is mentioned.
-
- Now the point is clear. To say that the Book of Acts presents a normal
- pattern for receiving the Holy Spirit attended by Tongues and for seeking
- that, presents a major problem because these separate accounts of four
- different groups who received the Holy Spirit are all different. So if you
- are going to make the Book of Acts normative, which group is the normative
- group? It is true that Christians at Pentecost, in Acts 2, and that Gentiles
- in Cornelius' household, in chapter 10, and the Jews at Ephesus who had only
- the Baptism of John, did receive the Holy Spirit and Tongues or languages
- followed, but because those three events occurred doesn't mean that they are
- to be the standard for every other Christian.
-
- In fact, none of these passages, 2, 8, 10, or 19, give any indication that
- they are to be the norm for all believers for all time. In fact, there is
- plenty of indication that they are not. If Tongues were to be the normal
- experience then why aren't they mentioned in chapter 8, when the Samaritans
- received the Holy Spirit? And why does the text of Acts 2 not say that
- everyone who believed, following Peter's sermon, and received the Holy
- Spirit, spoke in Tongues? Do you remember when Peter preached on the day of
- Pentecost? Three thousand people believed; it says in Acts 2:38 that they
- received the Holy Spirit. Remember that? Why didn't they speak in tongues?
- In order for something to be normative, it has to be common to everybody.
- And if the Holy Spirit wanted to say that Tongues was a normative attendant
- to the coming of the Holy Spirit, the normative time for it to happen would
- have been among the 3,000 that were converted. Right?
-
- John Stott reasons,
-
- The 3,000 do not seem to have experienced the same miraculous
- phenomena, the rushing mighty wind, the tongues of flame, or the
- speech in foreign languages; at least nothing is said about
- these things. Yet because of God's assurance through Peter, they
- must have inherited the same promise and received the same gift,
- that is, the Holy Spirit. Nevertheless, there was this
- difference between them: the 129 were regenerate already and
- received the Baptism of the Spirit only after the waiting upon
- God for 10 days; the 3,000 on the other hand were unbelievers,
- received the forgiveness of sin and the gift of the Holy Spirit
- simultaneously, and it happened immediately--they repented and
- believed without any need to wait at all.
-
- This distinction between the two companies, the 120 and the
- 3,000, is of great importance for the norm for today must
- surely be the second group, the three thousand, and not as is
- often supposed, the first group. The fact that the experience
- of the 120 was in two distinct stages was due simply to
- historical circumstances; they could not have received the
- Pentecostal gift before Pentecost. But those historical
- circumstances have long since ceased to exist. We live after
- the event of Pentecost, like the 3,000 did. With us therefore,
- as with them, the forgiveness of sins and the gift or Baptism of
- the Spirit, are received together.
-
- Without question, Acts 2 is a key passage from which Pentecostals and
- Charismatics develop their theology of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit, and it
- would be worth our while to just look briefly at it. Look at the first four
- verses of Acts 2,
-
- When the day of Pentecost had come, they were all together in
- one place. And suddenly there came from heaven a noise like a
- violent, rushing wind, and it filled the whole house where they
- were sitting. And there appeared to them tongues as of fire
- distributing themselves, and they rested on each one of them.
- And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak
- with other tongues (or languages) as the Spirit was giving them
- utterance.
-
- Now, that describes what happened on the day of Pentecost. As noted before,
- the Pentecostals and Charismatics say that is the doctrine of Subsequence.
- They say,
-
- Look, these people were already believers. They had already
- been saved. And so they were saved first, at some earlier time,
- and here they are sitting around waiting for the Holy Spirit.
-
- But the obvious answer to that is, "Well, of course, because the Holy Spirit
- hasn't yet come at all, and doesn't come until the day of Pentecost."
- Certainly there is subsequence here, and certainly we would agree with the
- Pentecostal theology that they had experienced salvation. I mean, you can go
- all the way back into Luke 10:20, where Jesus tells His apostles to,
- "Rejoice, that your names are recorded in heaven." You can go back to John
- 15:3, where Jesus says to the same apostles, "You are already clean because
- of the Word which I have spoken to you," so He affirms that they have a right
- relationship to God. We could call them saved. And so people say, "Well,
- they were saved way back then, and see, the Holy Spirit comes later!" But,
- how much insight do you have to have to realize that, of course it's
- subsequent to their salvation because they were really saved prior to the
- arrival of the Holy Spirit! Once the Holy Spirit came, there is no need for
- a waiting for Him to come again, because He already comes to indwell His
- Church on the day of Pentecost, and from then on continually indwells His
- Church from the moment of salvation forward.
-
- Most Charismatics would even go a step further. They would suggest that not
- only were the disciples saved before the day of Pentecost, but watch this,
- that the disciples also received the Holy Spirit before the day of Pentecost.
- But they just got a little bit of Him. You need to remember this, if you
- confront a Charismatic sometime and you say, "You don't believe that when
- you're saved you received the Holy Spirit." They will say, "Yes, we do. Oh,
- yes we do." And it's true they do. They believe that you receive the Spirit
- in some small measure, but the Baptism of the Spirit is an explosion of the
- Spirit's power in fullness that comes into your life. So you don't want to
- accuse Charismatics of denying that a Christian has the Holy Spirit. They
- would say that you have the Holy Spirit in a limited way, but you don't have
- the fullness of the Spirit and the power of the Spirit. They would go back,
- for example, to John, chapter 20. And in John 20, verses 21 and 22, Jesus
- looks at His disciples, and the Scripture says "Jesus breathed on them, and
- said to them, 'Receive the Holy Spirit." Wow! That's interesting.
-
- Way back in John 20, He's saying that to them, "Receive the Holy Spirit,"
- that's before the Holy Spirit is even sent on the day of Pentecost. And
- according to standard Charismatic interpretation of that text, they say,
- "Jesus then, was giving them the Holy Spirit, in a limited way. They had to
- wait for the higher level explosion of the Baptism of the Spirit that gave
- them their real power." We have to ask the question, "Is that really
- correct?" When in John 20:21-22, Jesus said, "Receive the Holy Spirit," was
- that a statement of fact? If you look very carefully at that text, the
- Charismatic view doesn't really hold up under scrutiny. The passage doesn't
- say the disciple actually received the Holy Spirit, it doesn't say that. It
- simply said that Jesus blew on them, a graphic sort of an illustration, and
- said, "Receive the Holy Spirit." We would have to conclude that it was a
- pledge, that it was a promise that wasn't fulfilled until the day of
- Pentecost. In fact, all you have to do is look at them to know that they
- hadn't received the Holy Spirit. Ensuing statements in John 20 seem to
- confirm the disciples didn't receive the Spirit in the Upper Room, because
- eight days later, [when] He came to where they were, they were hiding. They
- were full of fear, they were in a locked room. This is more than a week
- after He breathed on them, and more than a week after He promised them, and
- they hadn't gone any where or done anything that would manifest the Spirit's
- presence.
-
- The strongest arguments, however, appear in the early verses in the Book of
- Acts. Verse 4,
-
- Gathering them together, He commanded them not to leave
- Jerusalem, but to wait for what the Father had promised,
- "Which," He said, "you heard of from Me; for John baptized with
- water, but you shall be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many
- days from now."
-
- Jesus said it hasn't happen yet, it's been promised, but it hasn't happened.
- It's yet to come. That goes all the way back to John 14:16, where Jesus
- said, "I will ask the father, and He will give you another Helper, that he
- may be with you." They are still waiting. He gave them the promise when He
- breathed on them, but it hasn't yet been fulfilled. Acts 1:8, "You shall
- receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you." Which means, He
- hasn't come yet. If the Spirit had come upon them in John 20, He wouldn't
- have said, "He hasn't come yet."
-
- Two other passages demonstrate very clearly that the Holy Spirit wasn't come
- until the day of Pentecost, John 7:39, listen to what Jesus said, "This He
- spoke of the Spirit," you know when He said, "out of you bellies shall flow
- rivers of living water." "This He spoke of the Spirit," writes John, "whom
- those who believed in Him were to receive," but listen to this, "for the
- Spirit was not yet given, because Jesus was not yet," what? "glorified" (that
- means ascended). That passage explicitly states that the Spirit would not
- come until Jesus had been glorified, and He wouldn't be glorified until He
- ascended into heaven. So until Jesus ascended there in Acts 1, went into
- heaven and sent the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost, the Spirit had not
- [yet] come.
-
- In John 16:7, Jesus told the disciples, "I tell you the truth, it is to your
- advantage that I go away; for if I do not go away, the Helper shall not come
- to you; but if I go, I will send Him." The same thing, He's not coming until
- I get there. So the Holy Spirit had not come, they did not receive a little
- bit of the Holy Spirit, only later to get an explosion. They didn't receive
- any of the indwelling of the Spirit of God until the day of Pentecost. At
- that point the Spirit of God took up residence in them and they were baptized
- by Christ through the agency of the Holy Spirit into the body. So we are at
- a transition period, an obvious transition period between the old economy and
- the new. And these apostles are caught right in that transition with the
- others who made up the 120.
-
- Now, what about the Charismatic idea that the Holy Spirit is to be sought,
- eagerly sought? We have no indication in the Upper Room that anybody was
- seeking anything. There is no evidence that they were pleading or seeking
- anything; they were just waiting. Nor is there any indication throughout the
- entire Book of Acts that anybody was seeking after some baptizing work of
- the Holy Spirit. There is not one incident, not one incident, even where the
- phenomena of the coming of the Spirit and tongues occurs that indicates that
- anybody in the Early Church ever sought such an experience. Not one. This
- must effect somehow the Pentecostal doctrine!
-
- When the Holy Spirit came at Pentecost a new order was established and
- since that time the Holy Spirit comes to every believer at the moment of
- faith and indwells that believer in a permanent, abiding relationship.
- That's why Romans 8:9 says, "If anyone doesn't have the Spirit of Christ, he
- does not belong to Him." Conversely, if you belong to Christ, you have the
- Holy Spirit. Paul even says to the Corinthians, who were so fouled up,
- "What? Know you not that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit which you
- have of God, and you are not your own? You have been bought with a price,"
- chapter 6. We have all been made to drink of the same Spirit--every
- Christian.
-
- So, what you have in Acts 2 then, is the initial reception of the Holy
- Spirit. The disciples were baptized by the Spirit accompanied by a sound
- from heaven like a mighty rushing wind, cloven tongues as of fire, rested on
- each of them. At that point, they being filled with the Spirit, began to
- speak in other languages. The miraculous ability to speak the languages of
- the people who gathered for Pentecost, to declare to them the wonderful works
- of God, had a definite purpose: it was to be a sign of judgment on
- unbelieving Israel. It was and unfolded to be, a sign of inclusion of the
- other groups into the one Church, and we will see that in a moment, and it
- confirmed the Apostles' spiritual authority. It had a very distinct purpose.
-
- First of all, as I said, it was a sign to unbelieving Israel. Do you
- remember that the prophet Isaiah had said, "If you don't listen to God when
- He speaks a language you can understand, the day is going to come when he
- speaks a language that you can't understand." That's a judgment. And when
- they began to speak languages that were foreign to the dwellers of Jerusalem,
- God was saying that it has come; the time has come. You have committed the
- ultimate atrocity in the crucifixion of the Messiah; you didn't listen when I
- spoke in your language; now, here's a language you won't understand. And
- this was an indication of God's judgment about to fall on them as a nation,
- which judgment fell in no small way in 70 A.D. Also, this unique gift of
- tongues acted as a verification sign of the legitimacy of each new group
- that was added to the one Body of Christ, as we shall see.
-
- And so it had some very specific and wonderful purpose. It was a unique
- wonder associated with Pentecost. Pentecost is not repeatable, and so
- neither is the necessity of such a sign, except on very rare and unique
- occasions also recorded in the Book of Acts. By the way, an interesting
- footnote, in 1976, Pentecostals held a world conference in Jerusalem. A
- world congress in Jerusalem, and I am quoting the program, "To celebrate the
- ongoing miracle of Pentecost." Delegates came from all over the world and
- had to use interpreters and headphones! Now, just think that one through:
- so they could understand in their own language! That is not the ongoing
- miracle of Pentecost.
-
- Now, let's go to chapter 8, and see what happens in Acts, chapter 8, and why
- that's important. They use this as a proof text. It discusses the
- persecution of the Church in the early part of the chapter, and the
- scattering of the disciples out of Jerusalem throughout Judea and Samaria.
- Now, the result comes down in verse 14; they go into Samaria, receive the
- Word of God; they believe. And you remember there was a choice preacher in
- Samaria. Who was he? Philip. "And when the word came back to the Apostles
- in Jerusalem," verse 14, "that Samaria had received the Word of God, they
- sent them Peter and John." They are going to send the Apostles to find out
- about this. "They came down and prayed for them, that they might receive the
- Holy Spirit. For He had not yet fallen upon any of them; they had simply
- been baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus. Then they began laying their
- hands on them, and they were receiving the Holy Spirit."
-
- You say, "Now wait a minute, this proves their point, there is Subsequence
- here." Yes, I didn't say there wasn't; there is Subsequence in chapter 2,
- there is Subsequence in chapter 8, there just isn't any in chapter 10 or
- chapter 19, so it's not normative; but here it has a very distinct purpose.
- The Charismatics would say, "See, here's Subsequence. They had been
- baptized, they had been saved, and later on they get the Holy Spirit. They
- were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus, but they hadn't received the
- Holy Spirit. That proves the point." It does not. There is a reason for
- this, let me tell you what it is.
-
- The Jews hated the Samaritans. Would you understand that to be true from you
- knowledge of New Testament times? A Samaritan was a "half-breed." A
- Samaritan was a Jew who thought so little of being Jewish that he
- intermarried with the Gentile, and polluted, from the Jewish viewpoint, his
- race, his racial identity. Samaritans were hated. It is said that Jews
- traveling from the south to the north would go clear around Samaria just so
- they wouldn't have to walk through it and pollute themselves by being there.
- That's what made it so unique when it says in Scripture that, "Jesus must
- needs to go through Samaria," Jews didn't do that. They looked down on
- Samaritans. And the reason for this little interval between the Samaritan
- salvation and the coming of the Spirit was in order that the Apostles might
- get there.
-
- Why? So that the Apostles would see the Samaritans had been saved, and that
- they would see that the Spirit of God came upon them. Now it is possible
- that they spoke in tongues and it is not recorded here. It is possible that
- there were other phenomena that occurred which made it manifest to the
- Apostles that they were indeed receiving the Holy Spirit. The point is, God
- didn't want those Samaritans receiving the Holy Spirit until two Jewish
- Apostles were there, because if the Samaritans had their own little private
- Pentecost, it would be very hard for the Jews to accept them as one in the
- same body and the same Church, the hatred of the Jews towards them being so
- great. If the Samaritans had received the Holy Spirit at the moment of
- salvation without any supernatural sign or fanfare, without the visible
- presence of the Apostles to mark it and see it and note it and report it;
- if it had been purely a Samaritan event, the Church born at Pentecost of the
- Jews would never have accepted it as bonafide, or with great difficulty done
- that. If the Samaritans would have started their own Christian group, the
- age old rivalry and hatred could have been perpetuated with the Jewish Church
- competing against a Samaritan Church.
-
- And so God waited until the Jewish Apostles, the most significant ones, Peter
- and John showed up, and then he demonstrated that these had truly been
- converted, and they were being baptized by the Holy Spirit into the same body
- as the Jews were in; the same Body of Christ, the same Church. It was also
- important that the Apostles be present so that the Samaritans would
- understand the power and authority of the Apostles, for they needed to be
- subject to the Apostles' doctrine.
-
- Now, because of all of these matters in the transition, there was
- Subsequence, and there was an interval between the time they received Christ
- under the ministry of Philip, and the time they received the Holy Spirit when
- the Apostles could be there, because the crucial transition going on in the
- Early Church was so essential to Church unity and Apostolic teaching and
- authority. The amazing thing, first of all, was a revival among the
- Samaritans, and even more amazing, these outcast "half-breeds" received the
- same Holy Spirit we have and were placed into the same Body, and now we have
- to love them and accept them as brothers and sisters. That's why the Holy
- Spirit delayed that. It was an audio-visual lesson, if you will, that the
- middle wall of partition that Paul talks about in Ephesians 2 was broken
- down.
-
- I say there must have been some powerful demonstration, I don't know what it
- was; otherwise Simon wouldn't have come along and tried to buy the power. So
- when the Holy Spirit came upon them there must have been some visible
- manifestation of that and it could well have been similar to what occurred on
- the day of Pentecost; that would make sense. What was really crucial though,
- was that everybody understand that there weren't two churches, there was just
- one--both had received the same thing.
-
- Now go to chapter 10. Chapter 10 takes us the next step in the unfolding of
- the Book of Acts. It starts in Jerusalem and goes to Samaria, and then it
- begins to move out to the uttermost part of the world. And now we meet the
- first Gentile convert in Acts chapter 10. And you know the wonderful story
- about Cornelius. God gives a vision to Peter. Tells him that I am no
- respecter of persons. And after the vision, three men came to the house
- where Peter was staying and explained that they had been sent by Cornelius,
- this Gentile, and that Peter was supposed to go and teach Cornelius about
- God. Now, Peter had just had a vision, in which God had set him up for this.
- Peter swallowed his Jewish prejudice, which already had been dented severely
- by Samaritan conversions. And now he agrees to accompany these Gentiles back
- to Caesarea, where Cornelius lived.
-
- Now, you've got to understand, that for a Jew to get near a Gentile is a
- serious thing. They didn't ever want to eat a meal cooked by a Gentile; they
- didn't want to eat with a utensil touched by a Gentile; they didn't go into a
- Gentile house; they didn't even want Gentile dust on their feet: when they
- came back into Jerusalem they shook the dust off of their feet so they
- wouldn't carry Gentile dirt into the Holy Land. They looked down on
- Gentiles.
-
- Peter goes there. It says, "The Holy Spirit," verse 44, "fell on all those
- who were listening to the message. And all the circumcised believers who had
- come with peter were amazed." They couldn't believe it! What's happening?
- Gentiles are getting the Holy Spirit! And they said, "The gift of the Holy
- Spirit is being poured out on Gentiles also." You know, they are kind of
- like Jonah; they were looking for somewhere where they can cry. "For they
- were hearing them speaking with tongues and exalting God. And then Peter
- answered," I love this answer, "Well, surely no one can refuse the water for
- these to be baptized who have received the Holy Spirit just as we did, can
- he?" It's almost like he said, "I wish there was some way out of this guys,
- but there isn't. It has happened. It's tough to swallow, but it has
- happened." "And he ordered them to be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ."
-
- Would you please notice here that there is no subsequence. They were saved;
- the Spirit came; they were placed in the Body. There is no Subsequence here,
- but again they received the Holy Spirit attendant with tongues. Why? So
- that Peter, and John, and all the circumcised (that's all the Jewish
- Christians) would know that the Gentiles got the same thing the Samaritans
- got, and the Samaritans got the same thing we got. Guess what? We are all
- what? We are all one. We are all one. Gentiles are now a part of the Body
- of Christ.
-
- Peter, I love it, in chapter 11, Peter goes back to give his report. It's
- almost comical. He goes back to give his report. Here's his report, verse
- 15, he says,
-
- Well, as I began to speak, the Holy Spirit fell upon them, just
- as He did upon us at the beginning! Can you believe that? The
- same thing. And I remembered the word of the Lord, how He used
- to say, "John baptized with water, but you shall be baptized
- with the Holy Spirit." If God therefore gave to them the same
- gift as He gave to us also after believing in the Lord Jesus
- Christ, who was I that I could stand in God's way?
-
- And you can know why he said that, as soon as he said "they got the same
- thing we got," somebody on the council would have said, "Well, why didn't you
- stop them? Peter, how could you let it happen?" And Peter said, "I couldn't
- stop it, I couldn't stop it! It just happened. I'm sorry fellows, God was
- doing it, I couldn't stop it." Shocked as they were they couldn't deny what
- happened. They held their peace, they glorified God, they acknowledged that
- God had graciously granted life and salvation to the Gentiles. Verse 18,
- "When they heard it, they quieted down," and you know it that there was noise
- going on in there, "and they glorified God, saying, 'Well then, God has
- granted to the Gentiles also the repentance that leads to life."
-
- God made sure that the Apostles were there to see it, the Jewish Apostles.
- God made sure the Spirit came. God made sure the tongues were there, so
- nobody would think it was any different than Pentecost, so that everybody
- would understand: "Jew, Gentile, Samaritan--one in Christ." But these
- Gentiles received the Holy Spirit at the moment of conversion, they were
- baptized with the Spirit of God at that very moment. Then they spoke with
- tongues to prove that there was no difference, they were part of the Church,
- and there is no Subsequence here at all. None whatsoever. The norm then,
- from here on out, is that at the time of salvation, the reception of the
- Spirit comes at the same time.
-
- Now, there is one final group in the Book of Acts, chapter 19, we can briefly
- look at this group. This is a fascinating group. These are just some loose
- people roaming around, who somehow missed the whole deal that was going on.
- This is another group in transition. It is a fascinating group. Verse one,
- "And it came about that while Apollos was at Corinth, Paul having passed
- through the upper country came to Ephesus, and he found some disciples."
- Here's some people around Ephesus. "He said to them, 'Did you receive the
- Holy Spirit when you believed?' And they said to him, 'No, we have not even
- heard whether there is a Holy Spirit. What are you talking about?' 'Well,
- into what then were you baptized?' And they said, 'Into John's baptism.'"
- Oh, we know who they are. They were, when John the Baptist was preaching in
- the wilderness, baptized by him in preparation for the Messiah. But they
- didn't have television, radio, newspapers--they hadn't heard that the Messiah
- came and went! "We were baptized into John's baptism, and Paul said, 'Well,
- John baptized with the baptism of repentance, (you know, turning from your
- sins) telling the people to believe in Him who was coming after him, that is,
- in Jesus.' And when they heard this, (and by the way, a lot more, they got
- the whole gospel) they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus. And when
- Paul laid hands upon them, the Holy Spirit came on them, and they began
- speaking with tongues and prophesying. And there were in all about twelve
- men."
-
- Fascinating, fascinating; just a loose group of Old Testament Saints roaming
- around waiting for the Messiah to arrive, and He had come and gone and they
- didn't know about it. Now they weren't seeking the Holy Spirit, they weren't
- seeking the Baptism of the Holy Spirit. I will tell you something else--they
- weren't even saved, in New Testament terms. "They said, 'We don't even know
- anything about a Holy Spirit.'" They certainly knew there was a Holy Spirit,
- but what they were saying was, "We didn't know about His coming, we don't
- know what you're talking about." They hadn't even heard about this, because
- they didn't even know about Jesus Christ. And Paul began to probe and he
- realized they were disciples of John the Baptist, not Jesus Christ. Old
- Testament people, Old Testament Saints in transition, still hanging on,
- looking for the Messiah, twenty years after John the Baptist had died. He
- says, "You're to be commended," Paul does, "You know, I mean, you're to be
- commended. You repented as John taught, but now you have got to go the next
- step, and that is, you have got to receive the One that John predicted was
- coming--Jesus Christ."
-
- He spoke about Christ. By the way, he didn't speak about the Holy Spirit, He
- spoke about Christ. They received Christ and God gave them the Holy Spirit.
- You don't seek the Holy Spirit, you seek Christ and He gives you the Holy
- Spirit. Paul wasn't trying to teach them how to get to a second level.
- There is no Subsequence here. What was missing from them was not information
- about the Baptism of the Holy Spirit, as some Charismatics would want us to
- believe. What was missing was information about Jesus Christ. When they
- believed they were immediately baptized. Paul laid his hands on them, making
- an apostolic identification with them: they received tongues. Why? So they
- would also be included as sort of the last group. You had Jews, you had
- Gentiles, Samaritans, and even had a group of Old Testament "Hangover
- Saints," and they were all in one Church.
-
- You might even say that the whole theme of the Book of Acts, is to show how
- Jesus' prayer in John 17 was answered. Remember His prayer in John 17?
- Jesus prayed, "Father, that they may be one, even as Thou Father, art in Me,
- and I in Thee, that they may also be one in Us." That was His prayer and I
- really believe that you see in the Book of Acts the answer to that prayer
- as the Lord puts the Church together, baptizing by the Spirit into the Body,
- Jews, Samaritans, Gentiles, and these wonderful Old Testament Saints. That
- brought everybody together.
-
- Now these events, beloved, are not to be the Church's pattern as a whole. As
- I said a long time ago, there is no specific pattern in any one case that is
- airtight. They don't reflect to normal experience of Christians today. Get
- this: they don't even reflect to normal experience of Christians in the Early
- Church. After the few who had that experience on the day of Pentecost, and
- the few in Samaria, and the household of Cornelius, and this small group of
- twelve people, we don't know about any other believers who had that same
- experience, even during the Book of Acts! And Paul goes many places. And
- Peter and John went many places, and we don't see the pattern of this being
- repeated over and over and over again. You can't make the tragic mistake of
- teaching the experience of the Apostles, but rather you must experience the
- teaching of the Apostles. Acts reveals a new era, a new epoch, a new age,
- and not what is to be the constant pattern for every Christian throughout
- history.
-
- Are we supposed to seek the Baptism of the Holy Spirit? No, Simon tried
- that. He wanted the power; he wanted to buy it. Still people do that, they
- want the power; they want to buy it. We are not to seek it. Charismatics
- seem always out for more, and Paul was always insisting that Christ was
- enough, wasn't he? Any doctrine that adds something to Christ, as some
- Charismatics seem to desire, stands self-condemned. Michael Green wrote,
-
- The Charismatics were always out for power. They were elated by
- spiritual power and were always seeking shortcuts to power.
- It's the same today. Paul's reply is to boast, not of his power,
- but of his weakness through which alone the power of Christ
- could shine. Paul knew all about the marks of an Apostle and
- Signs and Wonders and mighty deeds, but he knew that the power
- of an Apostle or of any other Christian came from the patient
- endurance of suffering such as he had, with his thorn in the
- flesh, or the patient endurance of reviling and hardship, such
- as he was subjected to in the course of his missionary work.
-
- The Charismatics had a theology of the resurrection and its
- power; they needed to learn afresh the secret of the Cross and
- its shame, which yet produced the power of God. The
- Charismatics were always out for evidence. That's why tongues,
- and healings, and miracles are so highly esteemed among them,
- but Paul knows that we walk by faith while we are in this life,
- not by sight. There are many times when God calls upon us to
- trust Him in the dark, without any supporting evidence.
-
- Charismatics today, of course, share those same shortcomings that Michael
- Green points out. The thirst for something more, the quest for greater
- power, the desire to see evidences as familiar today as in the apostolic
- time. They are more compatible, by the way, I think, with the spirit of
- Simon, than they are with the Spirit of God. Instead of seeking for power
- and miraculous evidences and the repetition of the unique events of a
- transitional apostolic era, all Christians, Charismatics and non-Charismatics
- should seek to know Christ, the fellowship of His suffering, the conformity
- to His death, because that is what releases resurrection power that is
- already resident in the indwelling Holy Spirit.
-
- I just want to say this; I don't want to be misunderstood. I don't for one
- moment disregard the fact that the Spirit of God can, while indwelling the
- believer, uniquely fill, empower, direct, lead, and touch the Christian. I
- don't want to use my own experience as a basis for that, but I am very
- confident by reading the New Testament that the resident Spirit of God, who
- lives within you, longs to fill your life, Ephesians 5:18. And what that
- tells me is though you have the Holy Spirit, you may not be experiencing the
- fullness of His power. And there are those times in our Christian
- experience, when by our obedience and by the Word of Christ dwelling in us
- richly, and by our yieldingness to the way of God, the Spirit of God's power
- is released, and we feel the unique touch of His power in our ministry, in
- our witness, and in our lives. And we seek those times. They are not
- mystically apprehended. They come as we yield ourselves to Him and He works
- His sovereign way with us.
-
- And so I don't want to be misunderstood, as if to say, that the Spirit places
- you into the Body of Christ, as it were, at the moment of your salvation and
- then just hangs around to watch what's going on. He doesn't. He's active in
- ministering in marvelous and thrilling ways, enabling and ennobling you to do
- those things which otherwise would be impossible: gain victory over your
- flesh and accomplish the purpose of God through ministry. And so we seek the
- full expression of the Spirit of God in the life of every believer. We are
- not seeking Him; we are seeking to know His fullness as we yield ourselves to
- Him.
-
- Well, I hope that helps you to get a grip on a very important issue. There
- is more that I could say--time is gone. Let's bow in a word of prayer.
-
- Father, thank you for the clarity, with which the Word of God yields its
- truth; that if we simply read it and look openly and honestly at it, it will
- show us the truth. Father, we do pray for dear brothers and sisters who get
- caught up in wrong theology. And the great tragedy of it is twofold. One,
- they therefore, cannot glorify you for what you are truly doing; and
- secondly, they cut themselves off from the genuine means of sanctification,
- and so they forfeit the true power.
-
- Father, how deceptive this process is, of operating under illusions about how
- you work, about your truth, and about the ministry of the Holy Spirit. How
- dishonoring to you and debilitating to the believer, to so live and to try to
- order his Christian experience. We pray Lord that you will give us clarity
- of mind, that you will help us to discern your truth and walk in it, for your
- glory, in the Savior's Name. Amen.
-
-
- Transcribed by Tony Capoccia of
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