I grew up in a Pentecostal denomination. I was a minister for over 30 years in a Pentecostal denomination. I remain immensely thankful to God for the background I have been gifted and the rootedness I have in a faith that interacts with the Spirit and looks to what God can indeed do today in the lives of people.
One of the marks of my former denomination was “speaking in tongues.” A “second work” of the Spirit. When I was growing up, it was treated as an “end goal.” You prayed at the altar for the empowerment of the Holy Spirit. You knew you “got it” when you spoke in tongues. And then… well, you got it.
Got… what?
The Spirit.
Now what?
Come back to church on Sundays, read your Bible…
We didn’t know what to do AFTER the gift of tongues was given. We just knew the “power of the Spirit” meant something.
I do not wish to poke fun at my roots. I am grateful for a belief in prayer, missions, and the working of the Spirit that has impacted the world deeply. However, we looked at the Spirit and the Book of Acts in a very different way than much of the rest of the Church. Some of that was okay. Some of it left us lacking.
Acts 2 wasn’t about the “second work” of the Spirit so we could be empowered for missions. The story is deeper… and greater.
NT Wright points out in his book, The Challenge of Acts, that Luke is demonstrating the battle of God’s way vs. the world’s way. It would be played out in Acts through struggles involving temples. Jerusalem. Ephesus. Athens. When God’s Kingdom came, it was about a new temple era.
God has intended to come and live with us and Luke is demonstrating that action. This is about the homecoming of God.
Pentecost is the new turning point. Jesus and his people together constitute a new temple, a heaven and earth place. This is the launching of new creation. (p. 23)
Acts 2 isn’t about a “next level” of spiritual life for the believer. It is to show the continuation of Good Friday, Easter, and the Ascension. Pentecost is the fullness of the inauguration of the Kingdom become reality on earth. It is about the great turning point in the history of Israel and the world.
As Pentecostals, we were short-sighted in our view of Acts 2. I need the fullness of the picture in my own life… without denigrating my past. The fullness of the Body of Christ is needed in this day. I am grateful for this journey.

Leave a reply to Dan Cancel reply