| THEOLOGYThe Pentecostal Reality: Chapter 2By Dr. J. Rodman WilliamsTheology
 
 Preface | Chapter 
  1 | Chapter 2 | Chapter 
  3| Chapter 4 | Chapter 
  5  
  Chapter Two 
 The Event of the Holy Spirit  There are millions of people today who lay claim to "Pentecostal experience." 
  They belong not only to churches called Pentecostal, but also are found in many 
  of the traditional churches of Protestantism and in Roman Catholicism. A movement 
  that began in the early twentieth century has now become worldwide, and thus 
  a matter of high ecumenical significance. Herein I shall attempt to describe 
  the focal point of Pentecostal witness, namely, the event of the Holy Spirit, 
  and its relationship to the thought and life of the larger church.
 Much may be said about the Pentecostal witness in such terms as fullness of 
  prayer and praise, multiplication of charismatic activity, and bold witness 
  to the Gospel, but behind all of these is testimony to an event. There was a 
  time before; then occurred a certain event; afterward the world of the Spirit 
  opened up. It is this special event, the event of the Holy Spirit, that now 
  calls for careful consideration. The expression most frequently used for this event or happening is "baptism 
  with [or 'in'] the Holy Spirit." This refers to something that has occurred 
  in one's own life and experience, and is the door into the new fullness of life 
  in the Spirit. The word "baptism" is quite expressive because of its connotation 
  of totality. To be baptized can signify an experience of being inundated by, 
  submerged in, or pervaded with some reality. This is well illustrated in water 
  baptism where modes of practice vary from a pouring or sprinkling to immersion, 
  each in its own way conveying a picture of totality. "Baptism with the 
  Spirit" points to a whelming of the person- -an event wherein man in his 
  conscious and subconscious existence is penetrated by the Spirit of God. No 
  level of human existence is unaffected by this divine activity. This "baptism with the Holy Spirit," however, is not a happening 
  in which the person is so possessed by God that he loses his own identity. Nor 
  is the Spirit's movement an invasion wherein the self becomes subjugated and 
  coerced into a divine pattern of activity, so that the sole actor thereafter 
  is God. Much less is it a pantheistic absorption into deity, or a sudden transportation 
  out of this world into another realm. "Baptism" is not subjugation, 
  or absorption, or translation, but the actualization of a dynamic whereby the 
  whole person is energized to fulfill new possibilities. This fulfillment does 
  have aspects previously unknown and unrealized (for example, the charismata, 
  or "gifts of the Spirit"), since the divine Spirit is moving powerfully 
  through the free human spirit. But at no point is there the setting aside of 
  human activity. Indeed, quite the opposite, for it is only as the Spirit of 
  God blows upon the human spirit that there is the release of man for fuller 
  freedom and responsibility. Again, this "baptism with the Holy Spirit" is not a kind of "instant 
  sanctification." If the Spirit of God really possesses human existence, 
  one might wonder if this does not imply that man is thereby made perfectly holy. 
  If such were the implication, many questions would be in order: Do we see actual 
  evidences of this holiness among those who claim such an experience?; Is there 
  any biblical basis to support a view of immediate sanctification?; Does not 
  the whole idea overlook the empirical fact of all men's continuing sinfulness? 
  Thus it is important to recognize that "baptism with the Spirit" as 
  such has nothing to do with holiness of character, but with penetration of life. 
  The effect is not a certain quality of existence but a way of life in which 
  one is open to the Spirit's activity. Therefore rather than sudden holiness, 
  the actual situation is that as the Spirit of God lays complete claim upon a 
  person, he begins to see not his holiness but the depths of his sinful condition. 
  The event of the Spirit does give power for more adequate dealing with human 
  perversity; consequently, there should be progress in sanctification. But the 
  "baptism with the Spirit" is not in itself the accomplishment of that 
  end. Another expression frequently used, in addition to "baptism with the Holy 
  Spirit," is "filled with the Holy Spirit." This may refer likewise 
  to the event of entrance into Pentecostal life and experience. The word "filled"- 
  -or "full"- -has the advantage of expressing totality even more markedly 
  than the word "baptism." When a person, for example, is said to be 
  "filled with joy," everyone understands this as referring to the whole 
  self. Such a one is rejoicing with all of his being- -body, mind, spirit. Even 
  so, to be "filled with the Spirit" is to express the situation in 
  which the whole of human existence is activated by the divine reality. The word "filled" also expresses with particular force the background 
  for the operation of spiritual gifts. Because one is "filled with the Spirit," 
  charismatic manifestations may occur. They are obvious signs and indications 
  of Spirit-filled existence. The supernatural becomes, so to speak, natural and 
  normal in the context of a life open to the Spirit's activity. Other terms used for the event of the Spirit include such words as "effusion," 
  "outpouring," even the "falling" of the Holy Spirit. Or 
  this event may be referred to as simply the "coming" of the Spirit. 
  The impression given by this variety of terms, in addition to totality, is forcefulness. 
  The Spirit comes from without and with mighty impact. The event of the Spirit 
  is no gradual, passive thing, but a decisive endowment of power and energy. 
  When the Spirit is "poured out" or "falls," life can never 
  be quite the same again. Whatever the expression- -"baptism," "filling," "outpouring" 
  or otherwise- -reference is thereby made to a dynamic movement of the Holy Spirit 
  which results in a new sense of God's presence and power, various charismata 
  becoming manifest, and the emergence of a different style of life. These things 
  are possible only through the event of the Spirit.1 What now are some of the aspects of the situation in which this event of the 
  Holy Spirit happens? First, everything centers in Jesus Christ: He is the one 
  who "baptizes with the Holy Spirit." There is no Spirit baptism without 
  the direct activity of Jesus Christ. It is Christ the Crucified, Risen, and 
  Exalted Lord who pours forth the Holy Spirit. However much one may rightly stress 
  the activity of the Holy Spirit, this is not a "pneumacentric" but 
  a "Christocentric" event. It is not the Spirit who does the baptizing, 
  but Christ Himself. Accordingly, this understanding of the event of the Spirit 
  is quite different from any so-called Spirit movement that tends to disregard 
  the work of the historic Christ, or that seeks for spiritual reality in a direct, 
  unmediated relationship with God. God the Father is the ultimate source, but 
  it is through Jesus Christ the Lord that the Holy Spirit is given. Second, "Pentecost," while referring to a past event (narrated in 
  Acts 2), is likewise a present experience. The event was, and is, two-sided: 
  Christ the Lord on the one hand, and those who are "baptized" on the 
  other. Hence, Pentecost represents more than a once-for-all incident in the 
  life of the early church. The Spirit was not poured out upon the community of 
  faith on that first day to remain therein until the end of time. Such a view 
  fails to understand Pentecost as both past and present, and leaves little room 
  or expectation for the reality to occur among people now. If the event is to 
  take place today, there must be the recognition of its continuing possibility. Third, this event occurs within the arena of faith. Faith in Jesus Christ as 
  Savior and Lord is the essential precondition; only those who so believe may 
  share in the Pentecostal reality. However, the event itself is not always coincidental 
  with the inception of faith; it may occur then or at a later time. In fact many 
  would testify to "baptism with the Spirit" as happening somewhere 
  along the way of faith, not at the beginning. Others would attest that this 
  experience occurred at the first moment of faith. But the usual witness is the 
  former, namely, that there had been belief for some time before the Pentecostal 
  event took place. In either case faith remains the context for the outpouring 
  of the Holy Spirit. Fourth, the event of the Spirit cannot be simply patterned or programmed. The 
  original Pentecost came about suddenly, and there remains an element of surprise 
  in its occurrence. God the Holy Spirit acts in sovereign unpredictability and 
  His ways cannot be computerized. On the human side there is also a wide range 
  of spiritual susceptibility, so that not everyone is ready at the same time 
  for the operations of God to occur. There may be an unwillingness to surrender 
  oneself to the Spirit, an unreadiness to let the barriers drop, a holding in 
  reserve certain areas of the personality. But when something inside finally 
  gives way, the Pentecostal event may happen. Prayer, earnest and continuing, 
  is often the background for the occurrence of "baptism with the Spirit." 
  Commonly the matrix for the event of the Spirit is an attitude of openness and 
  expectancy, of acknowledged spiritual hunger and thirst. None of this, however, 
  is a way of achieving or earning the Spirit, for the Holy Spirit comes as an 
  act of God's grace. The element of spontaneity, unpredictability, surprise remains 
  throughout; for it is with God's gracious and free Spirit that man has to do. Fifth, the event of the Spirit is basically a community happening. It often 
  comes about when people are gathered for worship and fellowship; especially 
  at a time of praise there may be the breakthrough of a new dimension of God's 
  activity and power. Those present may not be seeking this "baptism," 
  as such, nor others directly ministering to them; but the atmosphere may become 
  so filled with the Spirit of God that miraculous things occur. Manifestations 
  of the gifts of the Spirit (cf. 1 Cor. 12-14) may become the occasion for the 
  event of the Spirit. At such a gathering there is often the personal ministry 
  of the community, either through a few persons or an individual, for those who 
  admit their need. Sometimes this ministry is accompanied by the laying on of 
  hands for the coming of the Holy Spirit. Whether the moving of the Spirit happens 
  when one is in the company of others or alone, there remains the sense of the 
  community participating in the event. A concluding word: In the event of the Holy Spirit there is both a giving and 
  a receiving. The expression, "the gift of the Holy Spirit," may be 
  used to speak of the divine side of the event; the "receiving of the Holy 
  Spirit," to express the human side of accepting the gift. The event of 
  the Spirit is altogether God's gracious doing; man earns nothing, adds nothing, 
  he merely receives. Consequently, there are no conditions or requirements to 
  be met, no stairs to climb or hoops to jump through, but simply the reception 
  of a freely offered gift. Still, without receiving, the gift remains afar. "Baptism 
  with the Holy Spirit" is an occasion of both giving and receiving; and 
  it has been so since the first Pentecost. Now it is time to focus on the radicalism of the Pentecostal witness. By "radicalism" 
  is first meant the root (radix) of a certain reality that has come to 
  be experienced. The person of Pentecostal experience does not begin with a theology 
  about the Holy Spirit, not even a biblical teaching as such, but with something 
  that has happened in his life. He doubtless has heard about the Holy Spirit, 
  possibly even theologized thereabout, and he may have had some or much biblical 
  acquaintance- -and all of this will surely feed into his experience- -but the 
  Pentecostal is essentially talking about something that is deeply existential.2 
  Hence the expressions used thus far- -"baptism," "filling," 
  "gift," "reception," and others- -though biblical, are not 
  primarily understood by exegeting certain texts. Rather, these terms are helpful 
  ways of defining what has occurred. Others may wonder why the Pentecostal witness 
  makes so much use of this kind of language (for example, the psychologist who 
  may look for more human explanations than "Holy Spirit baptism" or 
  the biblical scholar who may question if certain scriptural terminology is being 
  used properly). Nonetheless, the person of Pentecostal experience finds in such 
  language the biblical way of expressing what has taken place in his life. Until 
  some better way comes along of saying what has happened, he will doubtless continue 
  to talk about "baptism with the Holy Spirit," and the like. What else 
  conveys with such force a reality that has gripped his existence? But "radicalism" also means something drastic, a position or view 
  that is not held in the same way by others, and thus considered to be extreme. 
  In this sense there is something radical about the Pentecostal position, if 
  for no other reason than that most people talk little about such matters as 
  "the event of the Spirit" and "baptism with the Spirit." 
  They will speak, for example, of the Spirit's work in inspiring Scripture, in 
  convicting of sin, in enabling faith in Jesus Christ, and in sanctification; 
  but generally they do not recognize this event of the Spirit except as an incident 
  that happened at Pentecost long ago. Many presume to know at least about baptism, 
  but usually this is baptism in water with almost no thought about "baptism 
  with the Spirit." Who talks about "baptism in the Spirit," they 
  may inquire, except Pentecostals? Thus there seems to be something radical sounding, 
  possibly sectarian, in the Pentecostal testimony. From the perspective of much traditional Christianity there is a strangeness 
  about the whole area of the Holy Spirit. Talk about the Holy Spirit is not common, 
  especially in Western Christendom. Neither Protestants nor Roman Catholics generally 
  feel comfortable when they encounter the frequent use of Holy Spirit language 
  in Pentecostal witness; the first reaction is often one of defensiveness and 
  perhaps a repetition of traditional views. The strangeness, however, may not 
  be the fault of the Pentecostal, but of a deficiency and neglect on the part 
  of the church at large.3 Christendom has actually never dealt adequately with the doctrine of the Holy 
  Spirit. Trinitarian and Christological issues were at the forefront in the days 
  of the early ecumenical councils, but the pneumatological question was always 
  incidental. The Reformation, with its focus on the issue of salvation, particularly 
  justification, by no means satisfactorily treated pneumatology. On the left 
  of Roman Catholicism and classical Protestantism, spiritualist and enthusiastic 
  movements have at times arisen as an attempted corrective, but these have tended 
  to slip away from a Christological center. As a result Christendom has suffered 
  from lack of an adequate pneumatology that does not sacrifice the great gains 
  in Trinitarian, Christological, and soteriological understanding. There has 
  been a tendency to subsume the person and work of the Holy Spirit under that 
  of Christ with the result that the church has been able to find little place 
  for the special operation of the Holy Spirit.4 
  The Holy Spirit has been recognized as fully God, third person in the Trinity, 
  but His particular field of activity has not stood out with sufficient clarity. Most of Western Christendom, furthermore, speaks seldom of the Holy Spirit's 
  coming to the life of man. There is a mystical tradition, more in Catholicism 
  than in Protestantism, but it tends to stress the elevation of man to God rather 
  than the descent of God in the Spirit to man. Also there is generally strong 
  resistance to any idea of ordinary human beings participating in the activity 
  of God. Here the Eastern Church, with its sense of divine immanence and view 
  of the Incarnation as making man partaker of the divine nature, may be more 
  congenial than the Western tradition with the Pentecostal stress on the coming 
  and activity of the Spirit. The usual Protestant objection to the Pentecostal witness is that it does not 
  represent an improvement or corrective in the area of the Holy Spirit but a 
  distortion- -a shifting away from a soteriological ("salvation history") 
  to a pneumatic orientation. This stress on the Holy Spirit and His activity 
  is viewed as detracting from the centrality of Christ and His saving work. Such 
  emphasis seems to provide a different focus- -not salvation but "baptism 
  with the Holy Spirit"- -thereby subverting both Bible and Christian faith. Thus Protestant reading of the New Testament rarely makes room for a special 
  event of the Holy Spirit. Moreover there is largely silence in the confessions 
  of the churches, and among the theologians this subject is seldom treated. If 
  an interpretation of such an expression as "baptism with the Holy Spirit" 
  is attempted, it is usually identified with God's work of regeneration. It is 
  often viewed as the inner side of baptism with water, namely, that even as water 
  symbolizes outer cleansing, "baptism with the Spirit" refers to inward 
  purification. Thus the event of the Spirit becomes the cleansing of the old, 
  the birth of the new, the marvel of regeneration. Hence this activity of the 
  Spirit is understood as making efficacious the redemptive work of Christ by 
  applying it to the individual; it is the subjective side of salvation. Accordingly, 
  "baptism with the Spirit" is viewed as the beginning of Christian 
  initiation. It is assumed that the event of the Spirit is nothing other than 
  the coming to birth of the new man in Christ. There is little recognition of 
  "baptism with the Spirit" as referring to a further action of God 
  which is the particular work of the Holy Spirit. To reply: One may express agreement about the role of the Holy Spirit in the 
  origination of Christian life and about the activity of the Holy Spirit in sanctification, 
  but this is not the whole picture. First, as earlier noted, something has happened 
  in the lives of many people for which the Protestant explanation is not satisfactory. 
  They have known an experience of the Spirit's power and presence that cannot 
  be identified with initiation of new life in Christ but only with a movement 
  of the Holy Spirit whereby a further dimension opens up. Neither can this experience 
  be compared with sanctification, the life of growth in holiness, since it rather 
  has the character of empowering event. Second, this Pentecostal understanding 
  of a special event of the Spirit is actually more in line with the essential 
  biblical witness than is traditional Protestant interpretation. The general 
  Protestant viewpoint does justice neither to personal experience nor to all 
  the data in Scripture. Since this latter point is crucial for Protestants with a long emphasis on 
  sola Scriptura, it is important to set forth some biblical justification. 
  First of all, there was an event of the Spirit, according to Acts 2:1-4, which 
  was neither related to the beginning of Christian faith nor to some aspect of 
  sanctification. Those "baptized with the Holy Spirit," or "filled 
  with the Holy Spirit," on the Day of Pentecost were already believers, 
  and what happened to them was not a "making holy." Rather here was 
  a new dimension of the Spirit's activity in relation to persons within the community 
  of faith. The important thing was the new dimension- -not some result such as 
  regeneration or sanctification- -the dimension of spiritual fullness. Out of 
  this fullness came an overflow of praise in tongues (2:4-13), of witness to 
  the gospel (2:14-36), the salvation of thousands (2:37-41), and the life of 
  the first Christian community (2:42-47). The Pentecostal reality was therefore 
  none of these latter things, wonderful as they were, but the "baptizing," 
  the "filling," the empowering of those who believed in order that 
  these results might abundantly follow. If that is what the event of Spirit baptism 
  meant for Jesus' disciples on the Day of Pentecost, why should we view it otherwise 
  in our day? Second, despite linguistic and situational differences, several further accounts 
  in Acts provide evidence of an event of the Spirit not identified with the initiation 
  of faith and salvation. The narrative in Acts 8 tells of a group of people, 
  Samaritans, who came to faith in Jesus Christ and were baptized in His name 
  (8:4-13); however, it was not until some days later, following the laying on 
  of hands by Peter and John, that the Holy Spirit fell upon these new believers 
  (8:14-17). Acts 9, the first account of Paul's conversion, depicts an original 
  crisis moment when there was recognition of Jesus as Lord (9:1-8), but it was 
  three days before Ananias laid hands on Saul of Tarsus, and he was "filled 
  with the Holy Spirit" (9:9-19). According to Acts 19, Paul asked the question 
  of some dozen Ephesians, "Did you receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?" 
  (19:2), implying that faith or belief is not necessarily accompanied by the 
  reception of the Holy Spirit. Shortly thereafter, upon their profession of faith 
  in Christ and baptism in His name, and as a separate act, Paul laid hands upon 
  the Ephesians for them to receive the Holy Spirit (19:3-6). Though none of these 
  are "Pentecostal" occurrences in the sense of happening on the Day 
  of Pentecost, the pattern is essentially the same: the gift of the Holy Spirit 
  subsequent to the initiation of faith, thus something happening to believers. 
  The purpose would seem identical to that of the original Pentecostal event: 
  that the Samaritans, Paul, and the Ephesians might be empowered for the sake 
  of the gospel. So in the record of Acts there is a continuation of the first 
  Pentecost and, it might be added, further basis for what has happened in the 
  lives of many today.5 Finally, to the Protestant objection of another focus beyond Christ, and thus 
  a subverting of Scripture and faith, the Pentecostal answer has become clear. 
  There is no leaving Christ behind for a different centering in the Holy Spirit, 
  for it is precisely through Christ that the event of the Spirit occurs. The 
  real problem is not one of additional focus but that the typical Protestant 
  has difficulty recognizing the "baptizing" work of Christ with the 
  Holy Spirit, and thereby comes close to eliminating from Bible and experience 
  a vital dimension of God's activity.6 The traditional Roman Catholic orientation on the activity of the Holy Spirit 
  makes for a different set of problems than those of the Protestant. One difficulty 
  is that Catholic thought has tended to identify the original Pentecostal event 
  with a permanent gift of the Holy Spirit to the church wherein the Holy Spirit 
  becomes "the soul" of the church. Thus there is no need or possibility 
  of such an event as Pentecost occurring among people thereafter. A second difficulty 
  is that the Catholic tradition on the whole minimizes the importance of decisive 
  moments in faith, for example, the experience of conversion. Catholicism is 
  development- -rather than crisis-oriented; hence, the sense of a before and 
  after, as in the "baptism with the Spirit," is largely lacking. A 
  third difficulty is the strong emphasis on sacramental grace, namely, that the 
  Holy Spirit is objectively mediated through such sacraments as baptism and confirmation. 
  This would seem to bind any unique gift of the Holy Spirit to the sacramental 
  actions of the Church. Thus here there is a limitation which does not allow 
  for the free and unpredictable move of the Holy Spirit. Despite these difficulties the Roman Catholic tradition is compatible with 
  the Pentecostal viewpoint in at least three ways. First, the Catholic Church 
  has always held in high regard the supernatural, and therefore is by no means 
  averse to the idea of a miraculous intervention by God in human life. Second, 
  there has been a continued emphasis in the Catholic tradition on the life of 
  spirituality and the possibility of higher or deeper levels of faith and experience. 
  Third, throughout Catholic history there has been sensitivity to a special implementing 
  work of the Holy Spirit through the laying on of hands, a rite that in the fifth 
  century came to be known as confirmation. However differently understood through 
  the centuries, this rite has continued to bear witness to a special gift of 
  the Holy Spirit within the life of faith. This latter point is important for the Catholic orientation to the Pentecostal 
  witness. For the Pentecostal there are two distinct moments: conversion and 
  baptism with the Spirit. They may be separated from each other by years, although 
  both belong to the full life of the Christian. The Catholic picture traditionally 
  has been much the same, in that beyond regeneration is the further step of confirmation 
  wherein the Holy Spirit is given for strengthening the believer in his dedication 
  to Christ. Thus similar are the Catholic and Pentecostal perspectives, and quite 
  different from the Protestant position that minimizes an event of the Spirit 
  beyond the effecting of faith in Christ. However, there are differences within this common area. One may refer first 
  to the matter of personal experience. What the Catholic Church affirms to be 
  given in these sacraments, the Pentecostal claims to have experienced. In baptism, 
  according to Catholicism, regeneration is mediated, ex opere operato, 
  by the Church: all receive new birth in water by virtue of the ritual act. The 
  same is true of confirmation: through the laying on of hands by the bishop an 
  "indelible character" is made regardless of personal response. The 
  essential thing is the sacramental action. In contrast, for the Pentecostal, 
  what is decisive is not the action of the church but the experience.7 
  Another difference concerns the matter of ministry. The Pentecostal does not 
  view as essential either the ministry of an ordained clergyman or the laying 
  on of hands. In personal ministry, laymen, equally with clergymen, may serve- 
  -and sometimes this is done not by one person but by a group. Nevertheless, 
  either type of ministry is dispensable, since God through Jesus Christ may pour 
  out His Spirit without human mediation. Thus the laying on of hands, while often 
  used by the Spirit, is by no means necessary. God moves as He wills in His freedom. In conclusion: The Pentecostal witness represents a fresh way of thought and 
  practice within the prevailing patterns of Western Christendom. It clearly poses 
  the question of how to relate this witness to traditional Protestantism and 
  Roman Catholicism. However, the prior question for the whole church, I would 
  urge, is this: Is it possible that the Pentecostal is witnessing to something 
  that is needed by all? It could be that the fresh experience of the Pentecostal 
  reality by the church at large would signalize a new era of the presence and 
  power of the Holy Spirit.  
 Footnotes
 1. Fr. Kilian McDonnell writes that "the 
  issue in Pentecostalism is not tongues, but fullness of life in the Holy Spirit, 
  openness to the power of the Spirit, and the exercise of all the gifts of the 
  Spirit." Catholic Pentecostalism: Problems in Evaluation, " 
  p. 9. 2. Larry Christenson writes in his Speaking 
  in Tongues, "There is a sound theology for the baptism with the Holy 
  Spirit. But the baptism with the Holy Spirit is not a theology to be discussed 
  and analyzed. It is an experience one enters into" (p. 40). 3. The Faith and Order Commission of the 
  World Council of Churches at its meeting in August, 1971 (see Faith and Order: 
  Louvain 1971), approved a document on "Spirit, Order and Organization" 
  that includes the following pertinent statements: "The emergence and growth 
  of Independent Churches in Africa, of Pentecostal Churches and of Pentecostalism 
  within the established Churches could point to some deficiency of traditional 
  Roman Catholicism and Protestantism. Theology and practice of these Churches 
  has to a large extent neglected the Holy Spirit, except for some standard affirmations 
  about his continuing presence.... The doctrine of the Holy Spirit and even more 
  the sensitivity to his active presence in the Church and the world were and 
  still are underdeveloped in the western tradition of Christianity" (pp. 
  117, 131-132). Also an excerpt from the document adopted on "Baptism, Confirmation 
  and Eucharist" may be noted: "The development of Pentecostal movements 
  reminds the historic Churches how much they have neglected life in the Spirit" 
  (p. 41). 4. See my book, The Era of the Spirit, 
  p. 53, text and footnote, for brief delineation. 5. No attempt is made above to go beyond 
  the record in Acts. However, Acts is the only description in the New Testament 
  of the origination of Christian communities and of the complexities and variations 
  of the relationship between faith in Christ and the coming of the Spirit. The 
  Epistles are written to established situations in which these things have already 
  occurred. One may find, for example, in Ephesians 1:3-14 reference to a pattern 
  of events not unlike Acts, but they have already happened. Hence, the primary 
  use of Acts is necessary for perception into the dynamics of these interrelationships. 6. The water baptismal formula used generally 
  by Protestants (and of course Christendom at large) is baptism "in the 
  name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit" (according to 
  Matthew 28:19). Here there is recognition of a baptism also in connection with 
  the Holy Spirit and a practice that goes beyond baptism in the name of Christ 
  only (as in the Book of Acts). This is not unimportant, because the baptismal 
  act points to more than a liturgical formula; it signifies introduction into 
  ("into" may be preferable to "in" for the Greek word eis) 
  a living relationship with Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Thus it could properly 
  be held that everyone baptized in the Triune name has some experience of baptism 
  "in" or "with" the Holy Spirit; consequently, what has been 
  said thus far about "baptism with the Spirit" is not altogether foreign 
  to the life of any regularly baptized person. For there is a sense in which 
  the whole Pentecostal reality, or event of the Spirit, is anticipated in the 
  third part of the baptismal formula. From this perspective "baptism with 
  the Spirit" could be understood not as the wholly new but as the appropriation 
  of what was given in baptism. This, however, by no means lessens the importance 
  of an "event of the Spirit," whereby the potential is actualized or 
  the anticipated brought to fulfillment. (The same could be said about baptism 
  in the name of Father and Son; however, this is not the place to go into other 
  aspects of the baptismal reality). Whether one follows the line of "baptism 
  with the Spirit" as representing a totally new dimension of Christian living, 
  or an appropriation of what has already been given, the same result may follow. 
  See chapter 5, "The Holy Trinity," for further elaboration. 7. For some Catholic Pentecostals there 
  is a serious attempt to bring together a unity of sacramental action and inward 
  experience by speaking of "baptism with the Spirit" as "experiencing 
  the effect of confirmation." See Confirmation and the "Baptism 
  of the Holy Spirit" by Stephen B. Clark, especially p. 15.  
 Bibliography
 Christenson, Larry. Speaking in Tongues. Minneapolis: Bethany Fellowship, 
  1968. Clark, Stephen B. Confirmation and the "Baptism of the Holy Spirit." 
  Plainfield, New Jersey: Logos International, 1971. McDonnell, Kilian. Catholic Pentecostalism: Problems in Evaluation. 
  Plainfield, New Jersey: Logos International, 1971. Williams, J. Rodman. The Era of the Spirit. Plainfield, New Jersey: 
  Logos International, 1971. Faith and Order: Louvain, 1971. Geneva: World Council of Churches, 1971.   Preface | Chapter 
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