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Acts 1:4-5
On one occasion, while he was eating with them, he gave them this command:
“Do
not leave Jerusalem, but wait for the gift my Father promised, which
you have heard me speak about. For John baptized with water, but in a
few days you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit.”
The
celebration of baptism is one of my favorite parts of being a pastor at
FBCG. Last week we had the great joy of watching 21 people take the
step of baptism at our annual FBCG “pig-nic” at the West Campus. I love
hearing all the faith stories because each one is unique in some way
because God is infinitely creative in how he calls people to himself.
But I also love hearing them because each is the same in that they are
all about Jesus and what he has done for each one of us! Each time we
baptize I explain that baptism is an “external symbol of an internal
spiritual event.” Just as my wedding ring is symbolic of my love for and
commitment to my wife, so baptism is symbolic of our faith in Jesus’
death and resurrection.
So what does Jesus mean by, “…you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit”?
Scholars and theologians have debated this question for centuries but
at the most basic level I think Jesus is saying something rather simple.
Here it is: Where baptism by water is a symbolic event; baptism by the
Holy Spirit is an actual event.
Jesus
had promised on several occasions that, after returning to his Father
in heaven, he would send the Holy Spirit to be with and live in his
followers. Later in the Book of Acts, on the day of Pentecost, we read…
“Suddenly
a sound like the blowing of a violent wind came from heaven and filled
the whole house where they were sitting…All of them were filled with the
Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages as the Spirit enabled
them.” Acts 2:2, 4
It
seems to me that the baptism of the Holy Spirit that Jesus was talking
about was the actual coming of the Spirit of Jesus to dwell in the
hearts of his followers through faith. The Bible teaches that when a
person puts his or her faith in Jesus as Lord and Savior the Holy Spirit
takes up residence in his or her heart as a guarantee of salvation.
“Having believed, you were marked in him by a seal, the promised Holy Spirit, who is a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance…” Ephesians 1:13-14
The
Holy Spirit is not symbolic or imaginary. The Holy Spirit is the very
real presence of Jesus in spiritual form who promised to dwell in us and
with us by faith. In other words, every single person who puts his or
her faith in Jesus is “baptized by the Holy Spirit” because that’s what
Jesus promised! Over my years in pastoral ministry I have learned that
some people experience the baptism of the Holy Spirit at the moment they
come to faith in Christ. For some it is a powerful emotional
experience. For others it is more like a decision – a contract being
signed. But still others experience the baptism of the Spirit over and
over again – during moments of crisis or spiritual insight when it seems
that God pours out more and more of himself and his love into their
lives. But the point is, the Holy Spirit is real and is promised by
Jesus himself to every believer.
Take
a moment to thank God for pouring out his Spirit into your heart by
faith and ask him to help you become more and more aware of Jesus’
presence and work in your life.
Pastor Brian Coffey
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