Holy Spirit


The Holy Spirit is instilled in us on the day of our salvation, our rebirth, 
when we believe Jesus is the son of God, our Messiah, and He died for our sins. We ask for forgiveness of our sins and accept Jesus into our hearts. This is the justification by faith. 
This is different than being baptized with the Holy Spirit.


The Holy Bible is the greatest book ever, our reference, technical, instruction, and operators manual for life here on earth.®️

 

The Lord gave me many tasks to do, this website is one of them.


 

(I'm far from perfect and I don't lean on my own reasoning when I study the scriptures, I'm not attempting to prove anything to anyone. 
I pray to God and ask for wisdom and guidance from the Holy Spirit every time I study the Bible so I don’t lean on my own understanding which is about pride. I give God and the Holy Spirit credit on these writings).

 


Jesus is my number one priority in life, all else is secondary. I work full time for Jesus.

 

On the day of our salvation, our rebirth, when we confess our sins and ask for forgiveness, believing Jesus is the son of God, the Messiah and He died for our sins, accepting Jesus into our hearts the gift of Holy Spirit is instilled in us. Praise His Holy name. This is called justification by Faith.



John 14:26
But the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and will remind you of everything I have said to you.


Psalm 51:11
Do not cast me from your presence or take your Holy Spirit from me.


Matthew 1:18
Joseph Accepts Jesus as His Son
This is how the birth of Jesus the Messiah came about: His mother Mary was pledged to be married to Joseph, but before they came together, she was found to be pregnant through the 
Holy Spirit.


Matthew 3:11
“I baptize you with water for repentance. But after me comes one who is more powerful than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire.


Matthew 12:32
Anyone who speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven, but anyone who speaks against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven, either in this age or in the age to come.


Matthew 28:19
Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.


Mark 1:8
I baptize you with water, but he will baptize you with the HolySpirit.


Mark 3:29
but whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will never be forgiven; they are guilty of an eternal sin.”


Mark 13:11
Whenever you are arrested and brought to trial, do not worry beforehand about what to say. Just say whatever is given you at the time, for it is not you speaking, but the Holy Spirit.


Luke 1:15
for he will be great in the sight of the Lord. He is never to take wine or other fermented drink, and he will be filled with the Holy Spirit even before he is born.


Luke 1:35
The angel answered, “The Holy Spirit will come on you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God.


Luke 1:41
When Elizabeth heard Mary’s greeting, the baby leaped in her womb, and Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit.


Luke 4:1
Jesus Is Tested in the Wilderness
Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, left the Jordan and was led by the Spirit into the wilderness.


Luke 10:21
At that time Jesus, full of joy through the Holy Spirit, said, “I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little children. Yes, Father, for this is what you were pleased to do.


Luke 11:13
If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!”


Acts 2:4
All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit enabled them.



Acts 2:38
Peter replied, “Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.



Acts 7:51
“You stiff-necked people! Your hearts and ears are still uncircumcised. You are just like your ancestors: You always resist the Holy Spirit!

 

Timothy Skon, Chaplain, Prayer Minister,
dedicated to serving others, guided by Jesus

3/4/18 



Baptized with the Holy Spirit.


The doorway to a greater spiritual life.




AN INDIVIDUAL CANNOT RECEIVE THE BAPTISM OF THE HOLY SPIRIT UNTIL THEY HAVE ACCEPTED JESUS INTO THEIR HEART, THE DAY OF THEIR REBIRTH AND SALVATION AS A CHRISTIAN.


Spirit-filled believers SHOULD NOT help others to receive the baptism in the Holy Spirit by telling them to say certain things? It is very dangerous to try to manipulate the things of God. This practice is humanistically motivated. We must be willing to wait for Jesus to do His work. Seekers can be encouraged to worship, to focus on Jesus, and to fully surrender to Him.



The purpose of being baptized in the Holy Spirit with the confirmation of speaking in tongues is to be endued with power for God's service


Your life is dedicated to serving others in Jesus name.

This is a very serious indoctrination, it cannot be taken lightly. One must have the right motives and dedication.
A person must be sat down with certain questions asked why they want to be baptized with the Holy Spirit!

It is a wonderful fantastic feeling knowing your real purpose in life.



You must remember the enemy will do everything in his power to divert you from being baptized with the Holy Spirit.
The evil one hates that, he knows it's very hard to get to you once that happens. 


Evidence of being baptized with the Holy Spirit;


When you are baptized with the Holy Spirit you acquire this supernatural faith in God and His Son Jesus Christ. Doubt doesn't exist in your mind, you become extraordinarily bold for Jesus and you are proud of Him. Your life changes radically, Jesus is your number one priority in life, all else is secondary.Your life is dedicated to serving others in Jesus name, you want to follow in His footsteps.There are no false idols in your life.You crave and possess this great thirst to study the scriptures. You comprehend the scriptures better because you no longer are guided by your own reasoning and understanding. You are given wisdom and guidance from the Holy Spirit.

_____________________________________

"Baptism in the Spirit" describes being baptized with the Spirit. Being baptized in, into, unto and with, all refer to the same thing. Baptism in the Spirit is one of the cardinal doctrines of the Christian faith. There is so much clear teaching on it in scripture, yet there is no other aspect of biblical truth so misunderstood by Christians. That is why the Church is so devoid of spiritual power in a world where it is so much needed.  (CP Luke 24:49Jn 16:7-15Ac 1:4-8). We learn from these scriptures that the purpose of being baptized in the Spirit is to be endued with power for God's service. This cannot be impressed upon us enough. Warfare in God's service is spiritual, and the Church must be spiritually equipped to fight the war (CP 2Cor 10:3-5Eph 6:11-18). Being baptized in the Spirit means the difference between a life bearing much fruit or a fruitless life; a life of spiritual power or a life of carnal defeat. It means boldness and power to accomplish the work of God and to make the believer's witness and proclamation of the word effective (CP Ac 1:8 with Ac 4:29-33).

The disciples were already baptized in the Spirit, but were given an even greater empowering than they already had when they asked God for it. It is important to note here that they did not pray to the Holy Spirit for their empowering but to God Himself. The Bible nowhere teaches us that we are to direct our prayers to the Holy Spirit. We are to direct them to God and He will replenish our spiritual needs, as Ac 4:29-33 clearly teaches (CP Jn 14:13-1415:1616:23-24). This in no way denigrates the Holy Spirit, but admonishes us to always keep what we do in biblical perspective. We learned this also in Eph 6:11-18. There is much confusion surrounding the Holy Spirit in the contemporary Church. Some Christians place more importance on having a "spiritual experience" than on being empowered for service by the Spirit. Without the empowering of the Holy Spirit believers cannot effectively fulfil Christ's command to build His Church (CP Mt 28:18-20Mk 16:15-20).

The devil wants a weak Church. He does not want to have to contend with a powerful witnessing Church operating in the demonstration of the Spirit and of power today like he had to contend with the first century Church in the book of Acts, because it awakens unbelievers to a consciousness of the presence and the power of God which raises their faith in Jesus and they get saved. More than 5000 got saved as a result of one man being healed in the book of Acts (CP Ac 3:1-164:1-4). The first century Church understood perfectly the power of God resident in them through the baptism in the Spirit and they were fearless in their witness. To counter this today, Satan would have the majority of Christians believe that there is only one valid baptism - water baptism, and there are many Churches who teach this. They claim Eph 4:5 as their authority but Verse 5 must be kept in context with the rest of Paul's teaching here, and when it is, it soon becomes apparent that it does not even refer to water baptism (CP Eph 4:1-6). In V1-3 Paul exhorts the Church to be unified in the Spirit because, as he says in V4-6, there is only one Body in Christ and we were all baptized into that one body, which is the Church. Paul illustrates for us here the sevenfold spiritual unity of God and man; one Body, one Spirit, one hope of our calling, one Lord, one faith, one baptism and one God. It has nothing whatever to do with water baptism or baptism in the Spirit, but to the baptism of believers by the Holy Spirit into Christ and into His body. It is the element into which believers are baptized that determines what kind of baptism it is in scripture (CP Ro6:1-101Cor 12:12-14Ga 3:26-28Col 2:8-133:1-3). It needs to be restated here - none of those scriptures refer to water baptism or being baptized with the Spirit. These scriptures all refer to the baptism of believers by the Holy Spirit into Christ and into His body. This shows how the Church is constituted (CP 2Cor 4:1-1811:21-33).

These are two of the most inspiring testimonies of the Holy Spirit's empowering for believers in scripture. The earthen vessels of 2Cor 4:7 are weak and fragile, representative of human beings. By referring to himself and Timothy as earthen vessels, Paul expresses the paradox of how weak human beings can be the instruments of the power of God. This treasure in earthen vessels is the Holy Spirit in us. All the things Paul suffered in 2Cor 11:21-33 were the buffetings he received from his thorn in the flesh (CP 2Cor 12:1-10). Here we learn what Paul's thorn in the flesh really is - it was not sickness or disease, or bad eyesight, or severe bodily disfigurement, or any other related thing. It was a messenger from Satan - a demon instigated by God - sent to buffet him to stop him being puffed up with pride.

Baptism in the Spirit is the enabling power in believers to live crucified lives totally committed and consecrated to the service of God (CP Ro 6:5-8Ga 2:20). The Holy Spirit enhances the believer's sensitivity to sin and gives the believer a deeper awareness of God's judgement against all ungodliness (CP Jn 16:7-15). The Holy Spirit quickens - makes alive - the word of God to believers. He imparts revelation knowledge of the word to us, and gives us a deeper love and understanding of the word. He also does not only convict the unsaved of their sin but He convicts believers too (CP 2Cor 3:18). Believers change under the conviction of the Holy Spirit to increasingly correspond to the original pattern of God. That is what the phrase ".. are changed into the same image from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord" means. Image means moral and spiritual likeness here, not physical likeness. Believers, with ever-increasing glory reflect what they behold. Not least of all the baptism in the Spirit is also the doorway to the treasures God has laid up in store for His Church: the gifts of the Spirit (CP 1Cor 12:7-11). We will not be able to do an in-depth study of them here, but we will examine them briefly. The scriptures relating to the gifts here are not exhaustive and you may not agree with them - most commentators use different scriptures to identify different gifts - but being right or wrong is not fundamental to salvation so if there is any disagreement let us agree to disagree in love. The important thing is that we know what the gifts are:

1) The Word of Wisdom. This is an utterance applying the revelation of God's word or the Holy Spirit's wisdom to a specific future situation or problem (CP Ac 11:2815:13-2121:10-1127:27-44). This is not to be confused with the wisdom of God we are to seek for our daily living (CP Jas 1:5)

2) The Word of Knowledge. This is an utterance applied in the present tense revealing certain knowledge about people or circumstances which the speaker could not possibly know of himself (CP Ac 5:1-10).

3) Faith. This is special faith ? a supernatural ability to believe God implicitly, without human doubt, unbelief or reasonings for the extraordinary or miraculous to happen (CP Ac 14:8-1020:9-1227:20-2628:1-6).

4) Gifts of Healing. This is a supernatural empowering to heal all manner of sicknesses and diseases or any physical ailment without any human aids or medicine (CP Ac 9:32-3528:7-10). Opinions of Bible commentators vary on scriptural examples of these gifts, but suffice it to say that they are not to be confused with the authority of believers to lay hands on the sick, or to pray over them for their healing, or to believe God in agreement with others (CP Mt 18:19Mk 16:18Jas 5:14-15).

5) Working of Miracles. This is supernatural power to alter the normal course of nature and to counteract natural laws (CP Jn 2:1-116:1-14). This also includes raising up dead people (CP Ac 9:36-4220:7-12); causing death (CP Ac 5:1-10); causing blindness (CP Ac 13:6-12); restoring sight to the blind; walking on water; calming the storm; healings by Peter's shadow and Paul's apron, etc., all resulting in people believing in Jesus. The workings of miracles was also in operation many times in the Old Testament, for example, when Moses held out his rod over the Red Sea (CP Ex 14:15-29); with Elijah who performed 16 miracles (CP 1Ki 17:1-2 Ki 2:12), and with Elisha who performed 32 miracles (CP 2Ki 2:13-9:313:20-21).

6) Prophecy. This is the enabling of believers to speak out a revelation directly from God under the impulse of the Holy Spirit. The purpose of prophecy is to build up, motivate and encourage the local body (CP 1Cor 14:3).

7) Discerning of Spirits. This is a special ability to properly discern and judge prophesies and to distinguish whether or not an utterance is Holy Spirit inspired. It is also the ability to detect the spirits behind certain human activities (CP Mt 24:5Luke 9:51-56Ac 16:16-181Jn 4:1-6).

8) Divers Kinds of Tongues. These are supernatural utterances in other languages not known to the speaker. The speaker is communicating directly with God - it may be in prayer, praise, blessing or thanksgiving - under the influence of the Holy Spirit bypassing the speaker's mind (CP 1Cor 14:2-414).

9) Interpretation of Tongues. This is the supernatural ability to understand and make known the meaning of an utterance spoken in another language. This ability may be given to the one making the utterance or to someone else. Those who have the gift of tongues should pray also for this gift (CP 1Cor 14:12-14).

These are all visible and tangible manifestations of the Holy Spirit operating through individual believers for the common good of the Church. They are not the same though as the gifts of grace and the ministries given to the Church in Ro 12 and Eph 4, whereby a believer receives the power and the ability to minister in a more permanent manner in the Church (CP Ro 12:5-8Eph 4:7-14). These are entirely different outworkings of the Spirit. They are for permanency, whereas the gifts of the Spirit are for specific occasions. The manifestations or gifts of the Spirit are given according to the will of the Holy Spirit when need arises and according to the earnest desire of the believer (CP 1Cor 12:71131). It is unscriptural and unwise to assume that because someone exercises a spectacular gift that person is more spiritual than one with less spectacular gifts. Neither does possessing a gift mean that God approves of all the possessor does or teaches (CP Ac 10:34-351Cor 12:20-24). The gifts of the Spirit are not an end in themselves either, but like tongues, representative of the deeper life in the Spirit.

Now, notwithstanding that speaking in tongues is not an end in itself, it is nonetheless the sure evidence that one is baptized in the Spirit. Scriptures are quite clear on this point and we should be too. If believers do not talk in tongues it is because they have not yet been baptized in the Spirit, but there are many sincere Christians who truly believe that even though they do not speak in tongues they were baptized in the Spirit when they received Christ as their Saviour. They need to be shown what the scriptures teach (CP Joel 2:28-29). This is the most profound prophecy in the Old Testament about the future baptism in the Spirit for believers in Jesus. Peter quotes this prophecy on the day of Pentecost to explain that speaking in tongues was the sign that Joel's prophecy was being fulfilled in the disciples (CP Ac 2:14-18). The disciples had all been baptized in the Spirit and speaking in tongues was the evidence of it (CP Ac 2:4). This passage speaks for itself. As soon as the disciples were baptized in the Spirit they spoke in tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance (CP Ac 8:9-21). The word matter here is from the Greek word logos, which means something said, utterance, word, speech, divine expression. Simon wanted to buy the power of the Holy Spirit because he heard believers talking in tongues as the evidence of receiving the baptism in the Spirit when they had hands laid on them. It is interesting to note here that none of the converts in Samaria who Philip evangelized were baptized in the Spirit until the apostles laid hands on them (CP V14-17). It is pointless to speculate why - this still happens today - not everyone is baptized in the Spirit immediately they come to Christ, but it is not teaching that only apostles can baptize new Christians in the Spirit (CP Ac 10:44-46).

We learn here that believers can be baptized in the Spirit upon receiving Christ, but like Cornelius and the others did here, they must talk in tongues as the evidence of it. That was how the Jews with Peter knew that Cornelius and the other gentiles had been baptized in the Spirit "For they heard them speak with tongues..." (CP Ac 19:1-6). Once again the explicit evidence of these disciples being baptized in the Spirit was that they spoke in tongues. The point all these scriptures make is that speaking in tongues is the sure evidence of being baptized in the Spirit. If there are no tongues spoken it means that there has been no baptism in the Spirit. It is really as simple as that, otherwise the scriptures are meaningless. There are many who teach that tongues are not for today, that they were only valid for the first century Church, and some even go so far as to say that tongues are from the devil. That is tantamount to saying that baptism in the Spirit is of the devil too because tongues are the evidence of being baptized in the Spirit. That is blasphemy. Those teachers not only ignore the plain fact of scripture, they violate what Jesus Himself teaches (CP Luke 11:9-13). Jesus is referring to the baptism in the Spirit here because believers are already born again of the Spirit when they receive Jesus as Saviour (CP Jn 3:5-61:12Ro 8:14-16). We must be born again of the Spirit before we can be baptized in the Spirit, even though as we saw with Cornelius and the others in Ac 10:44-46, that one can be baptized in the Spirit immediately following upon being born again of the Spirit (CP Jn 7:37-39). "He that believeth" refers to every believer in Christ from the day of Pentecost onwards. Jesus promises them the baptism in the Holy Spirit. The analogy of "rivers of living water" teaches us that believers will have unlimited power to do the works of God (CP Jn 14:12). The promise is to all believers in Christ (CP Ac 2:38-39). These scriptures clearly refute the teaching that tongues were only for the first century Church - that they are not for today. This proves beyond any shadow of doubt that God's promise of the baptism in the Spirit extends far beyond the boundary of the first century Church. "All that are afar off" then includes us now, and all who will come to Christ in the future (CP Ac 5:32). The Holy Spirit in all His fullness is given to all believers when they are baptized in the Spirit and once more scriptures prove there is no time limit involved (CP Jn 14:16-17).

Here Jesus clearly distinguishes between being born again of the Spirit and being baptized in the Spirit. They are two separate and distinct operations of the Spirit. This teaches us that the Spirit abides with believers when they come to Christ - abide in V16 and dwelleth in V17 both mean to remain with - but He indwells them when they are baptized in the Spirit (CP 1Cor 3:16-176:19-20). Remember, the disciples were already born again of the Spirit when they were baptized in the Spirit in Ac 2:1-4. They were two separate and distinct operations of the Spirit then and they are two separate and distinct operations of the Spirit now. We need to be very clear on this point in order to be able to teach those who think they are, but are not, baptized in the Spirit.  Ac 8:9-21 also teaches this. The new Christians in Samaria were already born again of the Spirit when Peter and John prayed for them to be baptized in the Spirit. The Bible does not make any allowance for believers not being baptized in the Spirit and those who are not need to be shown from scripture how they need to be spiritually equipped to fulfil God's purpose in their lives, and His promise to the Church. This is not teaching that Christians cannot get to heaven if not baptized in the Spirit, but it should challenge them to want to avail themselves of God's promise to the Church and see His purpose fulfilled in their lives (CP Mt 18:18-20Mk 16:17-18Luke 11:9-13Jn 14:12-1415:26-2716:7-15Ac 1:7-8).

Spirit filled believers have the same empowering that Jesus had to heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out demons, tread on serpents and scorpions, and to take authority even over the elements. Every work Jesus did on earth, believers can do also and even greater things. This is not a special empowering for a select few in the Church but is given to every believer when they are baptized in the Spirit. All believers have to do is act it out in faith, otherwise the purpose of the baptism in the Spirit, which Jesus teaches us in Ac 1:4-8 is the enduement of power for service, is lost to the Church. Believers operating in the power of the Spirit are the evidence to a lost world that Jesus is alive and that He confirms their ministries with signs following (CP Mk 16:15-20). Signs include healings, miracles, demons being cast out, the blind regaining their sight, the dead being raised up to life, the lame walking, etc. Jesus placed great importance on the signs that followed His ministry. He said "If you do not believe me for who I say I am, then believe me because of the works I do." (CP Jn 10:36-38Ro 15:18-21). How inconsistent it is with scripture to teach that God only empowered the first century disciples for service, and that the empowering is not for today. If the Church is to fulfil Christ's command in Mt 28:19 to disciple all nations, it needs the same empowering the disciples had. The Church Christ is building is not yet complete, and until it is every believer needs to be baptized in the Spirit, for the Kingdom of God is not in word, but in power (CP 1Cor 2:1-54:20). So many believers lack this power because they have neglected to be baptized in the Spirit.

It is the Father's desire to give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him because He wants to seal them with His own personal stamp of approval (CP Ga 3:13-1426-29). We are God's heritage in Christ - He wants to preserve us for Himself - and He gives us the Holy Spirit as the divine pledge of our eternal inheritance (CP Eph 1:10-14). It is the birthright of every born again believer to seek, to expect, and to receive the baptism in the Spirit. The promise of the baptism in the Spirit is an integral part of God's redemptive plan: it is one of the salvation benefits of the cross, and part of our inheritance in Christ. We cannot afford to miss out on it.

Now, for those not yet baptized in the Spirit, you fulfilled the main conditions for baptism in the Spirit when you appropriated the promise of God for your salvation, and by faith received Jesus as your Saviour. Now you simply appropriate the promise of God for the baptism in the Holy Spirit, and receive it by faith the same way as you received your salvation. Do not be looking for some sort of "feeling" or emotional experience, or special anointing to come upon you. Just receive the baptism in the Spirit by faith, and as you do, the evidence of being baptized in the Spirit - speaking in tongues - will follow. Do not be concerned either with what to say, as the language you will speak will be spoken supernaturally. In faith, put your vocal cords, tongue, lips into operation and the Holy Spirit will give you the utterance, the words to speak. God fills you, but you must begin to speak - it is your voice He uses. Prepare to receive the baptism in the Spirit by praying this simple prayer:

"Heavenly Father, I come to you in Jesus' name believing with all my heart that I only have to ask, and you will give unto me as your word promises, the baptism in the Holy Spirit.

I ask you now dear Lord to baptize me and fill me with your Holy Spirit.

I believe that I have now received the baptism in the Spirit and I thank you for it Lord. I now expect to speak in tongues in accordance with your word as the Holy Spirit gives me the utterance."

You must now put your vocal cords into operation and mouth the words as the Holy Spirit gives you the utterance. Do it aloud, and do not be concerned with what you say or how it sounds. Just keep speaking the words out. You will soon become fluent in your new language. Now that you speak in tongues you need to know why they are important in God's redemptive plan. Firstly, when we speak in tongues we are communicating directly with God Himself, and without interpretation neither we nor anyone else can understand what is being spoken. We are speaking mysteries only God understands (CP 1Cor 14:2). When we pray in tongues we are praying from the Spirit, not from the mind which is the seat of our understanding or intellect. We are communicating with God direct, bypassing the mind, so we have no understanding of what we are praying (CP 1Cor 14:14). It is of the utmost importance to keep praying in tongues to build up our faith. It can be done either privately or in a prayer meeting (if it is done in Church though, without interpretation it only edifies the speaker, whereas prophecy edifies the whole congregation) (CP 1Cor 14:4Jude 20).

Finally, the Holy Spirit knows our weakness in regard to knowing what we ought to pray for at times, and when we pray in tongues He takes hold with us and helps us to pray as we should, and therefore makes our weak prayers effective. It is a joint effort on both our parts. He does not take over from us and pray in our stead as some teach (CP Ro 8:26-27). The word helpeth here means to take hold of together with. We learn from this study that through the empowering of the Holy Spirit circumstances in life no longer dictate to us - we dictate to them. God wants us to have ruling power in the Spirit so that we can be stabilised in life and participate in all of God's blessings and resources (CP Eph 3:16-19). In conclusion, only the spiritually alive can receive from the Holy Spirit spiritual wisdom and revelation knowledge of the things of God (CP 1Cor 2:12-16).


from Bible Truths org



_______________
__________ 

The General Council of the Assemblies of God

 The Constitution of the General Council of the Assemblies of God lists sixteen fundamental truths. The seventh Tenet of Faith gives the scriptural definition of the baptism in the Holy Spirit, and the eighth defines the scriptural evidence of this experience. It is stated: "The baptism of believers in the Holy Ghost is witnessed by the initial physical sign of speaking with other tongues as the Spirit of God gives them utterance (Acts 2:4). The speaking in tongues in this instance is the same in essence as the gift of tongues (1 Corinthians 12:4-10, 28), but different in purpose and use."
The doctrine of tongues as the initial, physical evidence of receiving the Holy Spirit has come under increasingly heavy attack in recent years, but it is fully substantiated in the Word of God. The doctrine can be nullified in two ways: (1) by simply denying it, or (2) by making tongues the primary focus, causing some to seek tongues rather than God.
The baptism in the Holy Spirit is the gracious gift of God, administered by our Lord Jesus Christ (Matt. 3:11; Acts 1:5). Its primary, though not only, purpose is to endue believers with supernatural power to be witnesses of our Lord to all the world (Acts 1:8).
To speak with other tongues is to speak languages never learned, by the miraculous enabling of the Holy Spirit. 'Initial physical evidence' is the term used to describe the first outward sign of the infilling of the Holy Spirit. The baptism in the Holy Spirit is manifested in a physical way as the Spirit-filled believer's physical voice is used. It is initial in that it comes immediately with the infilling. There is no single declarative sentence in the Bible that states that everyone who is baptized in the Holy Spirit will speak in other tongues. However, as with the doctrine of the Trinity, the Scripture gives us the equivalent of such a statement.
Even if we had only Acts 1 and 2, we could know the doctrine, for there we have the definition of the baptism in the Spirit. Jesus said, "Ye shall be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days hence" (Acts 1:5)  [emphasis mine]. The scriptural definition of that baptism is, "And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost and began to speak with other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance" (Acts 2:4) [emphasis mine]. Inspired by the Holy Spirit, Luke clearly intended to define what Jesus promised.
We see that the baptism in the Spirit and the first filling with the Spirit are identical.
No one who has not been baptized in the Spirit can claim, with scriptural backing, to be filled with the Spirit. Next we see that the sentence has a compound predicate. We cannot separate the "being filled" from the "speaking in tongues" without doing both grammatical and theological violence to the Word of God. All who were filled spoke. We dare not redefine what the Word has clearly defined.
We have further clear proof of the doctrine as we go on in Acts 2. As the crowd gathered, the believers continued speaking in other tongues, telling of God's wonderful works (v. 11). Some bystanders asked, "How hear we every man in our own tongue, wherein we were born . . . What meaneth this?" (Acts 2:8-12). The word this is crucial here. Verses 12 and 13 make clear that they were asking, "What does this [speaking in tongues] mean?" It amazed them.
Peter took their terminology and gave them God's answer: "This [speaking in tongues] is that which was spoken by the prophet Joel" (Acts 2:16) [emphasis mine]. Peter went on to tell them: "Jesus . . . hath shed forth this which you now see and hear" (Acts 2:32-33) [emphasis mine]. Thus, we have clear statements that speaking with tongues is God's sign of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit.
It is also clear that the outpouring evidenced by this speaking will continue throughout the last days (Acts 2:17). We next find clear doctrinal statements in Acts chapter 11. After the Holy Spirit fell on all the Gentiles at Cornelius's house (Acts 10:44-46), Peter had to convince the other Jewish leaders that what had happened was of God.
He made three doctrinal statements that caused the others to agree with him.
  1. First he said, "As I began to speak, the Holy Ghost fell on them, as on us at the beginning" (Acts 11:15) [emphasis mine]. This is theology within history. Peter and the other Jews with him could identify the Gentiles' experience because "they heard them speak with tongues" just as they, the Jewish believers, had spoken at Pentecost (v. 46). Nothing short of that would have convinced them.
  2. Second he said, "Then remembered I the Word of the Lord . . . ye shall be baptized in the Holy Ghost" (Acts 11:16) [emphasis mine]. Peter identified what was happening with being baptized in the Spirit when he saw and heard them speaking in tongues; immediately he connected it to the promise of Jesus which all four Gospels record.
  3. The third theological statement is in Acts 11:17: "God gave them the like gift as he did unto us." The term like means "the same; identical."
Some have erroneously said that Acts is merely history and that we cannot establish doctrine from it. However, these statements in the book interpret God's acts, and that gives us unchanging doctrine! Acts is a historical book, but it is also rich in theology, giving us sound doctrine. God has not told us why He chose to make speaking in other tongues the sign of the baptism in the Spirit for the Church Age.
We do know , however, that speaking with tongues has three main purposes:
  1. As the initial sign of the infilling;
  2. As a continuing help in one's daily devotional life, bringing edification to the believer and glory to God (1 Cor. 14: 2,4,14,18); and
  3. As a ministry gift of the Spirit to bring edification to the assembled church when accompanied by the gift of interpretation of tongues (1 Cor. 12:10; 14:5,27).
Doctrine must be formulated by the Word of God, never by human experience. Having seen that this particular doctrine is clearly taught in the Word, we find it verified in the experience of the New Testament Church.
In every New Testament instance where details are given, speaking with tongues is recorded as the accompaniment of the baptism in the Spirit. It is the only phenomenon that occurs each time. On three occasions it is explicitly stated that they all spoke with tongues: the Day of Pentecost (Acts 2); the outpouring at Cornelius's house (Acts 10); and the infilling of the believers in Ephesus (Acts 19). When a specific phenomenon occurs every time a biblical experience is described, we cannot deny the integral relationship of the phenomenon to that experience.
It is not necessary that the record of each occurrence of the baptism in the Holy Spirit include a mention of tongues, when the doctrine has been established elsewhere. We know that each time people believed on Jesus, they were baptized in water because Jesus so commanded and because several instances are recorded. However, there are many instances where water baptism is not recorded, including Acts 4:4; 5:14, and 9:35. Likewise, we can be sure that each time believers were baptized in the Spirit, they spoke in tongues.
In the two instances where details are not given, speaking with tongues is clearly implied. At Samaria, Simon, a former sorcerer, saw something that made him know the Holy Spirit had been given (Acts 8:17-19). If the experience of the Samaritans had been a subjective one of faith (or of feelings), without an outward physical manifestation, Simon probably would never have known they had received the Spirit. Speaking with tongues is the only sign Simon could have seen that is not ruled out by (biblically) logical consideration of all possibilities.
In Acts 9 we have the account of Saul's conversion and the Lord's statement that he would be filled with the Spirit (v. 17). No details are given. However, we know that Paul began to speak with tongues at some time (1 Cor. 14:18); it is scripturally logical to say that he began to speak with tongues when he was baptized in the Spirit. By the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, he expressed God's will when he wrote, "I want you all to continue to speak in tongues" (literal translation of 1 Cor. 14:5).
Though the scope of this article does not permit coverage, there is much well-documented proof that what we have noted as biblical precedent has been continued in practice throughout church history. The greatest church growth comes when this doctrine is preached and experienced.
Earnest believers do raise some valid questions on the subject:
1. Do Pentecostals place too much emphasis on tongues? Some have. If they give more emphasis to the act of speaking with tongues than to the empowerment by the Holy Spirit to be witnesses, they are unscriptural.

2. Is the tongues-speaking in Acts different from that in Corinthians? It is the same in essence, but it may be used for different purposes, as context reveals.

3. Is speaking with tongues always a "prayer language?" No. When speaking in tongues is a sign to the unbeliever (1 Cor. 14:22) as it was at Pentecost (Acts 2:4-12), it is not necessarily prayer.

4. Are the words of a believer speaking in tongues always addressed to God? No. Some have misinterpreted 1 Corinthians 14:2 apart from the context. The rest of the verse says, "for no man understands." In other words, when no one, either by knowing a language, as at Pentecost, or by the supernatural gift of interpretation, understands what is being spoken, then it is spoken to God, for He alone understands. Some utterances in tongues are addressed to God by the Spirit and will, if interpreted, be a prayer or an expression of thanks (1 Cor. 14:16). Some are addressed to men and will, if interpreted, be either a warning (14:21) or a message of edification for the church (14:5-6). Tongues plus interpretation are equivalent to prophecy in edifying the church.

5. Should Spirit-filled believers help others to receive the baptism in the Holy Spirit by telling them to say certain things? No. It is very dangerous to try to manipulate the things of God. This practice is humanistically motivated. We must be willing to wait for Jesus to do His work. Seekers can be encouraged to worship, to focus on Jesus, and to fully surrender to Him.

6. Are there not some who have accomplished great things for God who have never spoken in tongues? Indeed, yes. They are greatly blessed by God and are dedicated to Him. However, we cannot base doctrine on anyone's experience. There are also some good, moral people who are not born-again, but that does not negate the necessity of the new birth. We must build on the solid rock of God's Word.
All true Christians have the Holy Spirit (Rom. 8:9).
They have been born of the Spirit (John 3:5-8), but not all have been baptized in the Spirit. The disciples had received the Holy Spirit on the evening of the Resurrection (John 20:22), but Jesus told them the baptism in the Spirit was in the future (Luke 24:; Acts 1:5,8).
The Holy Spirit baptizes believers into Christ (1 Cor. 12:13; Gal. 3:17). Then Jesus baptizes them in the Holy Spirit (Matt. 3:11; Acts 1:5). These cannot refer to the same experience since the Divine Agent and the element into which the believer is baptized are distinctly different in each.
At Samaria, believers were saved and baptized in water, but had not yet been baptized in the Holy Spirit (Acts 8). At Ephesus, Paul asked believers, "Have you received the Holy Ghost since you believed" (Acts 19:2). A literal rendering of the Greek is "Having believed, did you receive the Holy Spirit?" This would be an absurd question if all believers are baptized in the Holy Spirit. After Paul explained God's will to them, they received the baptism in the Spirit with the evidence ordained by God (19:6).
In conclusion, the doctrine of speaking with tongues as the initial physical evidence of the baptism in the Holy Spirit is clearly taught in the Scriptures. It is verified both in New Testament experience and in subsequent church history. Jesus is the Baptizer, and He wants to give this wonderful gift to all.
In the last discussion of speaking in tongues in the Bible, we have both a warning and an admonition. The warning is, "Forbid not to speak with tongues" (1 Cor. 14:39). There are many ways to forbid besides a command not to speak. To fail to teach the doctrine is indirectly forbidding. Scornful remarks about tongues can amount to forbidding. Unscriptural restrictions during the church service can result in actual forbidding. It is dangerous to forbid what God the Holy Spirit desires to give.
The positive admonition is, "Let all things be done decently and in order" (1 Cor. 14:40). The "all things" includes speaking in tongues. If that is not being done, the church is out of order. We are on solid scriptural ground.
Let us preach and teach this important doctrine fervently.
(Originally published in the Sunday School Counselor, April 1989, by Gospel Publishing House, Springfield, Missouri. Republished by permission for Network 211, 2005.)

Now, notwithstanding that speaking in tongues is not an end in itself, it is nonetheless the sure evidence that one is baptized in the Spirit. Scriptures are quite clear on this point and we should be too. If believers do not talk in tongues it is because they have not yet been baptized in the Spirit, but there are many sincere Christians who truly believe that even though they do not speak in tongues they were baptized in the Spirit when they received Christ as their Saviour. They need to be shown what the scriptures teach (CP Joel 2:28-29). This is the most profound prophecy in the Old Testament about the future baptism in the Spirit for believers in Jesus. Peter quotes this prophecy on the day of Pentecost to explain that speaking in tongues was the sign that Joel's prophecy was being fulfilled in the disciples (CP Ac 2:14-18). The disciples had all been baptized in the Spirit and speaking in tongues was the evidence of it (CP Ac 2:4). This passage speaks for itself. As soon as the disciples were baptized in the Spirit they spoke in tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance (CP Ac 8:9-21). The word matter here is from the Greek word logos, which means something said, utterance, word, speech, divine expression. Simon wanted to buy the power of the Holy Spirit because he heard believers talking in tongues as the evidence of receiving the baptism in the Spirit when they had hands laid on them. It is interesting to note here that none of the converts in Samaria who Philip evangelized were baptized in the Spirit until the apostles laid hands on them (CP V14-17). It is pointless to speculate why - this still happens today - not everyone is baptized in the Spirit immediately they come to Christ, but it is not teaching that only apostles can baptize new Christians in the Spirit (CP Ac 10:44-46).
We learn here that believers can be baptized in the Spirit upon receiving Christ, but like Cornelius and the others did here, they must talk in tongues as the evidence of it. That was how the Jews with Peter knew that Cornelius and the other gentiles had been baptized in the Spirit "For they heard them speak with tongues..." (CP Ac 19:1-6). Once again the explicit evidence of these disciples being baptized in the Spirit was that they spoke in tongues. The point all these scriptures make is that speaking in tongues is the sure evidence of being baptized in the Spirit. If there are no tongues spoken it means that there has been no baptism in the Spirit. It is really as simple as that, otherwise the scriptures are meaningless. There are many who teach that tongues are not for today, that they were only valid for the first century Church, and some even go so far as to say that tongues are from the devil. That is tantamount to saying that baptism in the Spirit is of the devil too because tongues are the evidence of being baptized in the Spirit. That is blasphemy. Those teachers not only ignore the plain fact of scripture, they violate what Jesus Himself teaches (CP Luke 11:9-13). Jesus is referring to the baptism in the Spirit here because believers are already born again of the Spirit when they receive Jesus as Saviour (CP Jn 3:5-6; 1:12; Ro 8:14-16). We must be born again of the Spirit before we can be baptized in the Spirit, even though as we saw with Cornelius and the others in Ac 10:44-46, that one can be baptized in the Spirit immediately following upon being born again of the Spirit (CP Jn 7:37-39). "He that believeth" refers to every believer in Christ from the day of Pentecost onwards. Jesus promises them the baptism in the Holy Spirit. The analogy of "rivers of living water" teaches us that believers will have unlimited power to do the works of God (CP Jn 14:12). The promise is to all believers in Christ (CP Ac 2:38-39). These scriptures clearly refute the teaching that tongues were only for the first century Church - that they are not for today. This proves beyond any shadow of doubt that God's promise of the baptism in the Spirit extends far beyond the boundary of the first century Church. "All that are afar off" then includes us now, and all who will come to Christ in the future (CP Ac 5:32). The Holy Spirit in all His fullness is given to all believers when they are baptized in the Spirit and once more scriptures prove there is no time limit involved (CP Jn 14:16-


To Reterate; 

You have Supernatural faith when your Baptized with the Hot Spirit with the confirmation of speaking in tongues. 


There is no doubt or unbelief.
Being baptized with the Holy Spirit you believe God implicitly, without any human doubt, unbelief, or human reasoning. 

Being baptized with the Holy Spirit you have this greater understanding of the scriptures because the Holy Spirit is with you and gives you wisdom and guides you so you don't lean on your own understanding.

You become bold and love Jesus and your life here on earth is dedicated to Jesus by serving Him and others

You thrive on this great thirst to learn the Word, serve others, Jesus, witness, and teach.

Jesus is your number one priority, all else is secondary. 


Tin Skon, Chaplain, Prayer Minister
dedicated to serving others in Jesus name.
3/4/18