| THEOLOGYA Theological Pilgrimage: Chapter 1By Dr. J. Rodman WilliamsTheology
 
 Chapters: 1 
        |  2 |  
        3 |  4 |  
        5 |  6 |  
        7 |  8 |  
        9 |  10 |  
        11 | 12 | 13 
        | 14 |  
        15 |  16 | ConclusionPreface 
        | Abbreviations | 
        Bibliography
 
 
 
  Chapter 
          One RENEWAL IN THE SPIRIT  It is indeed an exciting time to be alive in the church! For there is 
          taking place in our day a dynamic movement of the Holy Spirit for renewal. 
          This is happening here and there in many Protestant denominations and 
          in Roman Catholicism. What is occurring can only be described as the 
          resurgence within the forms and structures of Christendom of the vitality 
          of the early Christian community. It is an extraordinary renewal through 
          the presence and power of the Holy Spirit.
 
 When it happens we find ourselves almost overwhelmed at the marvel 
          of it all. It is hard still to believe that life can be so pervaded 
          by the reality of the Spirit! There is a kind of awesome delight, a 
          rejoicing in God, a sense of His vital presence as Father, Son, and 
          Spirit. Something has happened by His Spirit that has made it all stand 
          out with intense vividness. At the same time we find ourselves renewed 
          as a fellowship of the Spirit in ways wonderful to contemplate. What 
          a joy to discover afresh some of the profound depths of the praise of 
          God in the context of a deepened love and unity! How the ancient Scriptures 
          likewise have come to life as fellow witnesses to God's present action, 
          and the whole realm of understanding of the truth of God has opened 
          up! How strange and wonderful again to contemplate ways in which the 
          Spirit of God is moving upon the inner life of the expectant community, 
          and bringing forth powers that have long lain dormant or ceased to be! 
          What new opportunities for the church to minister to mankind under the 
          impact and direction of the Holy Spirit, and to be built up in its own 
          life and fellowship! It is truly a wonderful day to be alive when such 
          things are happening in the church of Jesus Christ.
  What follows is but a further reflection on some of these matters. 
          There may be repetition, backtracking, reflections of various kinds 
          here and there. But it is hoped that the reader will catch something 
          of the joy and excitement which many of us share.
 
  
          I 
  Let us speak first of this renewed sense of the reality of God. He 
          may have seemed absent, distant, even nonexistent to many of us before, 
          but now His presence is vividly manifest. Suddenly God is here, not 
          in the sense of a vague omnipresence but of a compelling presence. Still 
          more, it is as if one were now submerged in the flowing stream of God's 
          reality! Or, to change the figure, it is as if one knows for the first 
          time the wonder of an atmosphere so laden with the divine Reality that 
          everything around becomes glorious with the sense of God's ineffable 
          presence.
 But it is the marvel not only of God moving without but also within! 
          It were enough weight of glory perhaps to become alive to His compelling 
          presence, but there is also His movement through the whole of one's 
          existence wherein there is the indescribable knowledge of being somehow 
          filled with His divine Spirit. It is as if, after many years of now 
          and then sensing His presence (but always in a fleeting fashion), the 
          full reality has broken through! It is amazing- -as well as overwhelming- 
          -but at last something like the glory of God which filled the tabernacle 
          of old, comes now to fill the tabernacle of His human creature.
 At the same time we strongly affirm that this movement of the Spirit 
          centers in Jesus Christ. For we find it happening in the fellowship 
          of those who have heard the good news about Jesus Christ. He through 
          whom we have received forgiveness of sins is Himself the mediator of 
          this plenitude of the Spirit. Many of us were long-time disciples of 
          Christ- -though this was not always the case- -but, in any event, there 
          is conviction that only against the background of what God has done 
          through Jesus Christ is the Spirit now so abundantly poured out.
 Jesus Christ is Lord! Not only in the sense that we are committed to 
          Him and seek to serve Him, but because the Holy Spirit is also His Spirit, 
          and this Spirit is now freshly moving in our midst. Lives have been 
          strangely enriched by the abundance of His Spirit- -the Spirit that 
          worked in and through Him, the Spirit that both conceived Him and possessed 
          Him. The Lord is not only the distant one "at the right hand of 
          the Father"; He is not only the One who has brought us into a new 
          life orientation; He is also the One who has visited us with His promised 
          Spirit. The Lord is also the Spirit- -and the plenitude of the Spirit 
          is the fullness of His presence and grace!
 This means that Christ is alive indeed! Not only is this so because 
          of the resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth from the dead, but because 
          it is through His living reality that the Spirit has come. If the resurrection 
          had before been a doctrine to be believed- -on the testimony of Scripture 
          and the church- -it is now a certitude, confirmed by His presence in 
          the Holy Spirit. If there were doubt that the resurrection signified 
          anything other than the memory of a challenging life that death could 
          not overcome, then such doubt has been totally erased. For what has 
          happened is that Christ has come to possess His own- -and in that possession 
          through the Holy Spirit we can but cry forth the certitude of the reality 
          of the living Lord.
 But there is one further word of witness about Jesus Christ. It is 
          in the very knowledge of Christ's presence in the Spirit that we all 
          the more yearn for His advent in the body. Come, Lord Jesus! Not because 
          He is absent does this cry go forth- -but it is because He is present 
          in living experience that the yearning is all the more intense to behold 
          Him in His full glory. Further, this hope for the future is built on 
          more than a memory of the past or even a promise that He will come; 
          it is grounded in the full assurance of His presence even now and the 
          knowledge of being carried forward by Him into a yet moreglorious 
          future.
 But again what so surprises us is a new awakening to the fact that 
          God really is Spirit! The former attitude of many that God was a Being 
          somewhere far removed- -a kind of transcendent Other- -has been radically 
          altered. For there has been brought home to us the deep certainty that 
          He also has made Himself wholly immanent in the Spirit. Here truly is 
          mystery and wonder! It is more than having our being in God, it is God's 
          having His being- -through imparting His being- -in us. God has by no 
          means ceased to be other than man, but in His own grace He has invaded 
          His creation and pervaded it with His fullness.
 Here indeed is a miracle comparable to the Incarnation! To know God's 
          coming in the Spirit is not, by any means, to testify less to the mystery 
          of the Word made flesh. That God did become man for the sake of the 
          world's redemption is mystery beyond human comprehension. And this will 
          cause wonder and joy throughout the ages to come. But here is surely 
          no less a wonder: that this same God also in the Spirit comes to possess 
          His people. God is thereby- -beyond being wholly other than us (as Father) 
          and wholly one of us (as Son)- -wholly in us and through us (as Spirit). 
          Here by the presence and power of the Holy Spirit is the miracle that 
          carries creation into a new dimension of reality- -and the end is not 
          yet!
 To sum up: we have then the assurance that after whatever has been 
          known and experienced in regard to God as Father and Son (or Creator 
          and Redeemer) that something additional has become remarkably vivid. 
          For God is at work beyond creation and redemption to bring about a new 
          order in the Spirit.
 
  What we next attest is that the community of faith has taken on a 
          new and exciting meaning. Something has happened which has vastly deepened 
          and heightened this as a fellowship in the Spirit. Many of us had known 
          a fellowship of commitment and concern, but here was something that 
          suddenly opened up whatever we had experienced into a fellowship in 
          which the Spirit imbued all. 
 Now in the communion of the Spirit there is a continuing mood of praise 
          and thanksgiving to God. If there is any one expression that 
          breaks forth again and again, it is "Praise the Lord!" Many 
          of us to be sure had often in the past read this expression in the Psalter, 
          sung it from the hymnbook, and used it variously in worship. But now 
          it has become the deeply felt and joyously expressed verbalization of 
          a way of life in which the Lord is constantly being praised and glorified. 
          Or maybe the expression at times is simply "Thank you, Jesus," 
          because His presence is intimate and real, gracious and good. Constantly 
          those who know this rich fellowship in the Spirit are blessing the name 
          of the Lord, and discovering that the more the praise and the magnifying 
          of His name occurs, the more fully life expresses its reason for being.
 Again in this renewal which the Spirit is bringing we are beginning 
          to realize afresh something of a deeper love for one another 
          in the Lord. Here is fellowship in depth wherein through the praise 
          of the Lord there is all the more a love for the other person, and a 
          yearning to share in all things with him. Here is communion that becomes 
          a kind of union of one person with another through the Spirit where 
          ties of love transcend all human relationships. "Brother," 
          "Sister"- -terms that had before been foreign or formal to 
          us in the fellowship of faith (and seemed proper only in human, family 
          relationships)- -now become the natural expressions of a profoundly 
          felt communal love. Further, there is a deepened desire to make whatever 
          one has in time, abilities, possessions totally available to the other. 
          It is hard to count anything as really one's own when in the fellowship 
          of praise to the Lord we recognize His goodness in things both great 
          and small- -and that His Spirit is constantly multiplying gifts and 
          graces!
 And, once again, in the fellowship of the Spirit what great joy 
          is to be found! This is embedded most profoundly in that compelling 
          sense of the reality of God's presence. Here are faces lighted with 
          heavenly luster, hearts leaping up in newfound gladness, and through 
          it all there is known joy beyond measure. This joy is profoundly inward 
          joy- -that the earth cannot give or take away. It is (as in one of the 
          songs sometimes sung) "joy unspeakable and full of glory, and the 
          half has never yet been told!" Something has happened that has 
          transformed a community of faith from the stance of looking to God- 
          -and knowing some joy surely in acclaiming His wonderful deeds- -to 
          a community through whom God lives and moves and multiplies His own 
          joy and gladness! In this there is also abundant rejoicing in the presence 
          of the neighbor, for in him God is also encountered- -and the joy, even 
          the laughter, of eternity!
 Then, again, what is remarkable is the freedom that abounds. 
          In the fellowship of the Spirit there is no sense of coercion, for example, 
          even in terms of "I (you) ought to do this or that," but only 
          freely- -willed activity. No one is made to feel obligation or pressure 
          of any kind, for where the Spirit is there is freedom. People come and 
          go at pleasure, they participate only as they are led by the Spirit, 
          and there are no strategies for getting things done. And in the time 
          of prayer and praise all moves as the Spirit directs: each one in the 
          Spirit making his own contribution- -and the only leader of the meeting 
          is the Lord. What an amazing situation: whether it is testimony or Scripture, 
          prophecy or intercession, song or silence- -all occurs in complete freedom. 
          Each person is heard as seriously as another, not only because of respect 
          for the individual but also because the Lord as the Spirit is making 
          known through this person His will and way.
 Another aspect of the renewal of the Spirit within the fellowship is 
          the atmosphere of peace that prevails. This is something almost 
          indescribable in its heights and depths. The tensions and frictions 
          that are so often operative in human communities are both confessed 
          and transcended in the communion of the Spirit. Here is more than peace 
          through mutual respect, or even through a willingness to forgive the 
          faults that appear. It is the peace wherein the Spirit of God moves 
          into all the harsh and abrasive spots and communicates the divine calm. 
          When someone perhaps begins to sing, "I have the peace that passes 
          understanding down in my heart," and others pick up the refrain, 
          there is quiet but sure testimony to the wonder of the peace of God. 
          This is no pseudopeace where harsh reality is anesthetized by 
          pious sedatives. Instead, it is peace which, even in the midst of storm 
          and strife, makes for a kind of infinite calm. Sometimes, especially 
          after the praise of God has been sounded forth in the Spirit, and wave 
          upon wave of heavenly melody has echoed through the room, there is such 
          peace at the conclusion as truly to surpass imagination. It is the peace 
          of eternity.
 And this leads to one other thing: the deep and stirring spirit of 
          unity. In the renewal of the Spirit factionalism, division, party 
          spirit of all kinds are overcome under the impact of the Holy Spirit. 
          Here is not a monotonous uniformity wherein all do and say the same 
          thing, but a situation wherein the Spirit weaves together the various 
          strands, the shades and hues, the divergencies and differences into 
          a pattern of incomprehensible unity. The most scattered and seemingly 
          disorganized expressions either quietly pass away if they bear a divisive 
          stamp, or if they are of the Lord they are marvelously blended into 
          an unexpected wholeness. How glorious is the unity of the Spirit in 
          the bond of peace! 
 A further word or two might be added about the altogether remarkable 
          unity that the Spirit brings about among those who wear various denominational 
          labels. In the renewal of the Spirit it simply does not make any difference 
          what the church affiliation may be, for no tradition of the past is 
          able to subordinate the prevailing presence of the Spirit of unity. 
          Protestants of many stripes- -Presbyterians, Episcopalians, Methodists, 
          Baptists, Church of Christ, Lutherans, and on and on- -find in this 
          fellowship of the Spirit such an intense oneness that customary rationales 
          for separateness (theological, ecclesiastical, liturgical, social) collapse 
          under the impact of the Spirit.
 This fellowship in the Spirit, however, is by no means confined to 
          Protestants, for this higher unity transcends even ancient differences 
          between Protestants and Catholics, and we find ourselves coming together 
          in deep solidarity. How amazing is the discovery that the same thing 
          which has so recently happened to us has also been happening to them, 
          and as we come together in churches and homes we are one in the Spirit- 
          -one in the Lord! Yet Catholics and Protestants alike find themselves 
          inspired with fresh zeal for the sacraments, the worship, the practice 
          of their own denominations. How extraordinary it all is!
 Nor ought we to fail to mention at this juncture that all of this is 
          likewise bringing about a unity with the "third force" of 
          Christendom, the Pentecostal churches. In many ways the Pentecostals 
          have been the forerunners of us all in witnessing to this renewal of 
          the Spirit. So it is with joy that Protestants and Catholics reach out 
          united hands saying from the heart, "Thank you," and together 
          sit down with these long "separated brethren" (separated from 
          Protestants and Catholics alike) in the unity of the Spirit. Praise 
          the Lord!
 
  Now another matter to be mentioned is the way in which the Bible has 
          taken on vital meaning, becoming indeed a quite contemporary document. 
          What may have been thought of as a kind of external rule or norm of 
          Christian faith, or merely a historical witness to God's mighty deeds, 
          has become a coordinate testimony to God's amazing activity. There is 
          a newfound delight in reading here and there in Scripture and saying, 
          "Why, of course ... I don't know why it seemed so strange and distant 
          before." Some things that had been viewed as belonging to God's 
          past work (if not to pious legend) now stand out as compellingly vivid. 
          It is as if a door had been opened and, walking through the door, we 
          find spread out before us the extraordinary Biblical world- -a world 
          with dimensions of angelic heights and demonic depths, of Holy Spirit 
          and unclean spirits, yes, even of God and Satan. Nor is this a trip 
          into illusion or into things proved fanciful by our modern "enlightenment." 
          It is the opening of the eyes to dimensions of reality only vaguely 
          surmised before. 
 The Bible truly has become a fellow witness to God's present activity. 
          What happens today in the fellowship and in individual lives also happened 
          then, and there is the joy of knowing that our world was also 
          their world. If someone today perhaps has a vision of God or 
          of Christ, it is good to know that it has happened before; if one has 
          a revelation from God, to know that for the early Christians revelation 
          also occurred in the community; if one speaks a "Thus says the 
          Lord," and dares to address the fellowship in the first person- 
          -even going beyond the words of Scripture- -that this was happening 
          long ago. How strange and remarkable it is! If one speaks in the fellowship 
          of the Spirit the Word of truth, it is neither his own thoughts and 
          reflections (e.g., on some topic of the day) nor simply some exposition 
          of Scripture, for the Spirit transcends personal observations, however 
          interesting or profound they may be. The Spirit as the living God moves 
          through and beyond the records of past witness, however valuable such 
          records are as model for what happens today. For in the Spirit the present 
          fellowship is as much the arena of God's vital presence as anything 
          in the Biblical account. Indeed, in the light of what we may learn from 
          this past witness and take to heart, we may expect new things to occur 
          in our day and in days to come.
 This leads to a further exciting thing about this fellowship, namely, 
          that one is always looking forward from the biblical record. 
          We do not expect the days and years ahead to be but repetition of the 
          past or the present, for we live under the word that "greater works" 
          (John 14:12) than even our Lord did are to be expected. In an age fast 
          leaving the past behind and rushing toward a new millennium- -with almost 
          breathtaking discoveries in science, ventures in space, and so on- -the 
          community looks forward also to new spiritual breakthroughs carrying 
          us far beyond what can be dreamed of now. If there stands at the end 
          the final Advent of Jesus Christ and "a new heaven and a new earth" 
          (Rev. 21:1), what happens between now and then in preparation for such 
          is the ultimately important thing. Thus do we look every day for the 
          new in anticipation of the final consummation!
 
  Something was said earlier about the opening of our eyes to dimensions 
          of reality only vaguely surmised before. We may now add that one of 
          the great joys that comes to those in this renewal of the Spirit is 
          the way in which the Spirit so enlightens the understanding as to bring 
          assurance about many things. It may be a matter of depth apprehension 
          when in the Spirit there is a profound certitude in many areas of faith: 
          the indubitable conviction, for example, of belonging to Christ and 
          participating in His salvation. Here is not only a belief in Christ, 
          it is also a full conviction. This does not mean that faith has passed 
          into sight; but faith has become certainty. Or this enlightenment may 
          refer to the future whereby there is imparted through the Spirit the 
          full assurance that what is promised at the "end" is going 
          to take place. This is due to the fact that the Spirit, who is the inward 
          "earnest" or pledge of all Christians, now opens our eyes 
          to behold with awe and gratitude the riches of the inheritance which 
          is yet to come. All in all, it is not necessarily as if one sees what 
          he had not seen before, though this may be the case. Rather, it is as 
          if what was vague and fleeting, somewhat dim and unclear, now becomes 
          full of substance. In all humility and joy there breaks forth the simple 
          utterance: "Now, at last, I know."
 Nor is this a gnosis (higher knowledge) belonging to a presumed spiritual 
          elite. Here is nothing esoteric for which only certain ones, ushered 
          into celestial mysteries, are qualified. Indeed, there is nothing seen 
          or heard or known that was not there already, the common heritage of 
          all the children of God; but here is the marvel of it all breaking 
          through in vivid form. Nor can there be any claim to have achieved something 
          wherein there may be boasting, for nothing has been achieved- -it has 
          all come as a gift of the gracious Lord.
 In addition to this spiritual enlightenment in terms of understanding, 
          there is the realization of extraordinary power. Almost incredible 
          to relate, it is not other than the immeasurably great power that raised 
          Christ from the dead and enthroned Him at the right hand of God that 
          now becomes operative in human life. Here are resources of strength 
          hitherto unrecognized or untapped that suddenly begin to flow- -surely 
          not from our own potential (for who could possibly have such?), but 
          through the Spirit of the living God moving in and through the human 
          depths- -"the inner man." Here is power breaking in and out 
          of the conscious and subconscious depths of the human spirit that, while 
          making use of human channels, transcends every human possibility.
 But how can it really be described? It is as if one were passing from 
          a situation of relative impotence into a dynamic world wherein God's 
          own activity flows through the totality of existence. For when the Spirit 
          of God begins to move upon and within the spirit of man, it is like 
          a driving wind blowing through every fiber of the human personality, 
          like a blazing fire igniting the speech of man to proclaim God's deeds 
          abroad. It is Acts 1 and 2 all over again! It is, to be sure, a different 
          cast, a different scene, a different millennium- -and people obviously 
          not existing in the same proximity to the original event of Christ's 
          death and resurrection, nor called upon to be the original witnesses 
          to God's mighty deeds- -but visited by the same power that broke out 
          in the primitive Christian community.
 This leads in turn to an extraordinary manifestation of the Spirit 
          of God- -like wind and fire- -possessing the inmost being. It is the 
          breaking forth of the praise of God from the depths of the human spirit. 
          Suddenly we find to our own astonishment that this praise, carried by 
          the divine Spirit and welling up through the human spirit, transcends 
          all that human language can express. Here indeed is the Spirit Himself 
          speaking through the human spirit and the utterance coming forth is 
          not the language of man but the language of the Spirit! This is the 
          glorifying of God in "tongues"- -in speech not of human devising 
          but brought about by the Spirit of the living God. And in this spiritual 
          praise there is the overwhelming sense that no richer worship of God 
          could possibly be offered, for in it the Spirit is communicating directly 
          through the human spirit the profoundest adoration of Almighty God.
 What joy follows, as the praise of God, pouring forth from the human 
          spirit, is in turn offered up by the mind- -and heavenly language blends 
          with earthly in paeans of blessing and thanksgiving! Indeed, the whole 
          being- -spirit and mind, body and soul, feeling and will- -is so swept 
          by the high wind of the Spirit as to be carried up and out into new 
          dimensions of living for the praise of God's glory. How vast and marvelous 
          this power of the Spirit to break through long existing barriers!
 But there is not only power to praise God with the total being, there 
          is also power to speak forth His word so that it comes with full conviction. 
          Formerly many of us had sought to bear witness to Jesus Christ but had 
          found our words and actions of insufficient weight and consequence. 
          While there may have been sincerity of effort and some success in terms 
          of others hearing and responding, lives were not being changed. Transformation 
          brought about by Spirit and word, wherein the heart of the "righteous" 
          as well as the "unrighteous" is broken open and remade in 
          its center, simply had not been happening. But now, by God's grace, 
          the power of the Spirit has come- -and the word is going forth to change 
          lives. Not by any means that all to whom the word will henceforth be 
          spoken will be profoundly affected- -for there always remains the freedom 
          to resist- -but the possibility at last is here! Nor is there any guarantee 
          of invariably ministering in the Spirit, for the Spirit is never a human 
          possession (He may possess us but not we Him) and needs to be sought 
          continually. But now that the original barriers to His activity have 
          been breached, there are human channels newly open to His working. And 
          what a difference it does make to witness for Jesus Christ in the power 
          of the Holy Spirit!
  What is further amazing is the way in which God confirms this witness 
          by "signs and wonders." Now and again there is not only life- 
          -giving proclamation of the message but also accompanying it are extraordinary 
          occurrences including the deliverance of people from evil powers, the 
          healing of cases of hopeless illness, and (some say) even the raising 
          of the dead. This is a world of God's miraculous activity, surely represented 
          in the New Testament, but just beginning to become actual for some of 
          us today. These "signs and wonders" we now know to be confirmations 
          of the word; and if they are very rare or nonexistent, it would seem 
          questionable whether the witness is going forth fully in the power of 
          the Spirit. Are lives being radically transformed- -a miracle in itself- 
          -if there are not also such signs as deliverances from evil possession 
          and the healing of the helpless and hopeless? Now in the power of the 
          Spirit "signs and wonders" are reappearing, and the gospel 
          is being remarkably confirmed!
 Surely, however, there is more here than confirmation of the word proclaimed. 
          For these are not only confirming signs, they also in themselves represent 
          ministry to a vast area in which there is desperate need today. But 
          here, hitherto because of insufficient resources of power, we have by 
          no means fulfilled our responsibility and opportunity. This is not to 
          say that we have not generally supported and sought to further the work 
          of healing through physicians, hospitals, clinics of various kinds, 
          and stood behind efforts of psychiatrists, psychologists, agencies for 
          dealing with mental and emotional problems; however, there are many 
          situations beyond the competency of medicine and psychology. There are 
          profound human needs that only the power of the Spirit can reach and 
          resolve- -and now we know such power is available! For we are beginning 
          to see things happen whereby health and deliverance are coming in conditions 
          of hopeless plight. What then is opening up today is not only fresh 
          confirmation of the gospel through "signs and wonders" but 
          also more complete ministry in Christ's name.
  There remains another important aspect of this power of the Spirit. 
          Not only does the Holy Spirit bring forth a wholeness of divine praise, 
          a witness to the word in full conviction, and a more total ministry, 
          but there is also an enabling to stand firm against manifold forces 
          that threaten. The Holy Spirit is the power of boldness to proclaim 
          God's truth without hesitation and fear; it is also the courage to move 
          ahead regardless of opposition and even persecution. Here by the Spirit 
          is not a natural virtue of fortitude, but the strength of God that nothing 
          can daunt and overcome.
 
  Let us return now to the exciting renewal of the Christian community 
          as fellowship of the Spirit. We have spoken earlier about certain matters 
          such as the spirit of praise and thanksgiving, love, joy, freedom, peace, 
          and unity which prevails in the fellowship. Now let us comment further 
          on some of the ways in which the Spirit actually functions in the community. 
          Here I refer to the operation of the Spirit whereby, for the upbuilding 
          of all, there are various manifestations of the Spirit. Some 
          of this has been mentioned in passing; here we may note in more detail 
          what happens.
 One of the extraordinary ways the Spirit functions and manifests Himself 
          in the fellowship is through utterance of spiritual wisdom and/or 
          knowledge. Reference has been made before to the matter of spiritual 
          enlightenment (wherein there is discernment and assurance) which comes 
          about through the movement of the Holy Spirit and occurs to all. Here, 
          however, I am referring to special moments when a word may be spoken 
          by someone that provides deep spiritual understanding. This happens 
          not as the expression of natural prowess, but through the Spirit's own 
          activity. Accordingly, it may occur with the ignorant as well as the 
          learned, the "foolish" as well as the wise. In fact, such 
          spiritual utterance is altogether a gift of the Spirit, and operates 
          through those who are so gifted. 
 In this regard it may happen that those least qualified (according 
          to ordinary judgment) in terms of a word of wisdom and/or knowledge- 
          -and who accordingly have little to boast about- -are the very ones 
          through whom the Spirit brings forth truth. As they speak, perchance 
          in halting manner, sometimes improper English, even inaccurate quotation 
          from Scripture, the Spirit may be heard in the fellowship.1 
          Here is charisma unrelated to office or ability and, by its occurring 
          among the least, the fellowship is reminded that all of the glory belongs 
          to God.
 A further word should be added about the range of this spiritual utterance. 
          By no means does it apply only to "things spiritual," that 
          is, to deep matters of faith. Doubtless the Spirit operates most profoundly 
          there, for in the fellowship frequently those who are so gifted by the 
          Spirit do unfold mysteries about the ways of God, for example, in incarnation, 
          redemption, and sanctification. But as God Himself is not limited in 
          concern to mankind's salvation but is involved with the totality of 
          things, even so, utterance by the Spirit (better perhaps than "spiritual 
          utterance") may relate to many other matters. In the fellowship 
          it often happens that the word of wisdom and/or knowledge is spoken 
          in relation to some material need (a job, a house), perhaps desire for 
          direction, even in so small a matter as something lost that seems important 
          to locate. It may be a word of guidance in economic, social, or political 
          affairs- -not necessarily in broad detail but just that word which points 
          the way ahead. What is important is not the full picture (for which 
          natural wisdom and intelligence are the God- -given means) but simply 
          that "Spiritual" word which provides more than human light 
          and perspective.
  Now all of this is so new and different from ordinary ways that we 
          have a hard time adjusting to it. This is especially true if the word 
          comes with unexpected, even undesired, content. "This good brother 
          or sister really knows little about my situation; why should I listen?" 
          And of course not every utterance spoken as a word of wisdom or knowledge 
          will be that, for there is no guarantee in the fellowship that only 
          the Holy Spirit is at work. Thus there must be a weighing of 
          things said- -by the Spiritual community. But quite often the problem 
          is not that of the presence of a "foreign" spirit; it is, 
          rather, the difficulty we naturally have of hearing a word that may 
          not altogether please, especially if it comes from those who seem to 
          possess little or no talent for understanding the complexity of human 
          affairs. It is indeed a new world; but the opportunity for moving ahead 
          under the impact of divine direction is- -despite all danger and difficulty- 
          -truly a challenging one!2
 Let us pass on to two other manifestations of the Spirit in the fellowship, 
          namely, the effecting of healings of various kinds and the performance 
          of extraordinary deeds of deliverance. Since reference has already 
          been made to the confirmation of the proclamation of the gospel by "signs 
          and wonders," we will not need to add very much. Our concern in 
          this instance, however, is not with witness to the world but with what 
          happens in the fellowship for the upbuilding of the community.
 Again, what a strange, new world we have entered! In an amazing confirmation 
          that extraordinary healings of body, mind, and soul did not end with 
          the New Testament community, the fellowship of the Spirit is finding 
          today in its midst the Spirit at work performing mighty deeds. The same 
          Lord who cured the helpless and hopeless and wrought deliverance from 
          oppressive forces is at work through His Spirit accomplishing like deeds 
          of might and compassion. He has given His Spirit and through the movement 
          of that same Spirit in power He is at work to make His people whole.
 Here we are having to learn much (almost as neophytes) in matters of 
          the Spirit. We now know that the world of extraordinary healing, mighty 
          works of deliverance, and so on, ought never to have become alien to 
          us. It surely was not thus to primitive Christianity. We now realize 
          how much we have been blinded by a modern world view that intellectually 
          and empirically views all that happens- -or may happen- -as belonging 
          to the realm of natural forces. So, despite at times its being a slow 
          process (especially since we have so much rationalism and empiricism 
          in our blood), and our frequent falling back, we are beginning to move 
          ahead in this world reopening before our eyes. It was true after 
          all- -what we read in the New Testament! By the Spirit of God people 
          really were healed of all manner of diseases and ailments; they 
          actually were delivered from forces of evil beyond the reach 
          of natural means. For such is happening again in our midst.
 For example, in the fellowship manifold healings are taking place. 
          Numerous are the occasions when persons, simultaneously with their movement 
          into the dimension of the Spirit's power, have received instantaneous 
          healings of longsuffered ailments. This occurs quite often without 
          any specific ministering of healing- -or even an expressed desire for 
          this to happen. Rather the very power of the Spirit engaging the total 
          person- -psyche (soul) and soma (body)- -often brings 
          about "impossible" cures. The Spirit operative in the whole 
          person inevitably affects every dimension of existence, and the result 
          may be that of extraordinary healing taking place. From the viewpoint 
          of the Spirit there is nothing really incredible here because such occurrences 
          are signs of the dynamism of the Spirit. From the natural perspective, 
          however, these healings are occasion for wonder because there is no 
          way of accounting for them. Powers are at work through the dynamic movement 
          of the Holy Spirit. Thus miracles now and again are bound to happen.3
 In addition (to these initial healings) many today are being healed 
          of various diseases in the fellowship of the Spirit. One regular aspect 
          of the gathering is prayer for restoration to health of those ailing. 
          And, again and again, there is the joy of seeing the sick (including 
          the medically incurable) made well. Often those present with ailments 
          come forward for prayer. This may be offered by the laying on of hands 
          and some such declaration as, "In the name of Jesus of Nazareth, 
          be made whole!" On occasion there is also anointing with oil as 
          prayer for healing is offered. And God richly blesses as the Spirit 
          of Jesus Christ reaches out to the faith of those asking. Once again, 
          as of old, He makes them well.
 We find also in the fellowship that often certain persons are particularly 
          used by the Spirit as vehicles for healing and deliverance. They are 
          "gifted" by the Spirit for this purpose. Strangely enough 
          this gift seems to have little or no relationship to their natural talents, 
          interests, or training4- 
          -though it may come to them in the context of a strong desire to be 
          of help to the sick and ailing. Such gifted persons (humbly amazed that 
          God should so use them) often will minister for the whole group, and 
          frequently follow up by visitations to hospitals and homes. They live 
          in a world of miracles- -and never cease to be channels for new ones 
          to occur!
 The word "deliverance" has several times been used, so a 
          note of explanation should be added. Here there is a kinship to healing, 
          since the result is that of return to normalcy. However, "deliverance" 
          refers not so much to making well as to breaking free from dominating 
          forces. Now and again people will be present in the fellowship who are 
          bound by powers that have them under control. They simply cannot break 
          free- -whether it be from an addiction of some kind, a deeply ingrained 
          anxiety, or from irrational drives that frustrate their efforts to live 
          in freedom. In many cases this is something more profound than a psychological 
          problem, hence, although there may be some relief found in working through 
          the situation, bringing its complexity to awareness, and perhaps seeking 
          out a supportive group, they are still essentially in bondage. For the 
          problem is not basically on the level of psyche but of pneuma 
          (spirit). The human spirit is possessed by a "demonic" spirit; 
          and until this is dealt with, there can be no deliverance. The only 
          force capable of dealing with the demonic spirit is the Holy Spirit, 
          and by the Holy Spirit (we are finding afresh) such oppression can be 
          relieved. Now it is not an "In the name of Jesus, be made whole!" 
          but "In the name of Jesus, let him go!" It is a battle enjoined 
          against "principalities and powers"- -and we are seeing the 
          marvel today of many a deliverance by the power of the Holy Spirit.
  Again, as in the case of healing, some persons in the fellowship are 
          called particularly to "deliverance ministry." The group often 
          does function as a whole, and together will pray for someone's release; 
          but because of the nature of the situation- -involving sometimes a long 
          and arduous struggle- -individuals (or perhaps two or three) may act 
          in this capacity. This, of course, is not determined by the fellowship, 
          but, as with all other activities, some persons are gifted by the Spirit 
          and called for this weighty task. What a joy it is to know that today 
          the Spirit of the Lord is anointing people to do what He anciently did, 
          namely, set persons free from their torturous bondage! And though it 
          often seems a battle to the death (with no little agony and pain), we 
          are grateful for those upon whom the Lord lays this fearsome responsibility. 
          
 We could go on, but perhaps this is enough concerning healings and 
          deliverance. We have much, much to learn- -but none of us questions 
          that the "impossible" in these areas is happening. Praise 
          the Lord!
  Finally, we may consider the way in which the Spirit is manifest in 
          the fellowship through prophecy and tongues. Some reference, 
          in a different connection, has already been made to these matters; however, 
          there are some things that need to be elaborated further.
 If there is any area of surprise for all of us, it is surely here! 
          What has been said thus far about extraordinary operations of the Spirit 
          (words of wisdom and knowledge, healing and deliverance) is surely not 
          without the new and strange, but here we find things in many ways even 
          more startling. For now we come to manifestations of the Spirit that, 
          while using mind and speech, transcend both, and represent in startling 
          fashion direct communication between God and man.
 As far as the upbuilding of the fellowship is concerned, prophecy stands 
          out as the most significant of all the Spirit's operations.5 
          Certainly the fellowship as the body of Christ, if it is to fulfill 
          its function of praise to God and witness in the world, needs constantly 
          to be edified. This edification- -or upbuilding- -through prophecy consists 
          of consolation, encouragement, stimulation, exhortation, strengthening. 
          It may come in terms of judgment as well as blessing; however, in all 
          things it is not for breaking down but for building up, for it is God's 
          word to His people for the living of their lives before Him.
 Now let us speak further about the startling element in prophecy, namely, 
          that in it God's word is directly spoken! It is not that through prophecy 
          there is a key to the knowledge of future events, so that we may have 
          our curiosity satisfied. What is amazing here is not that we are given 
          to know certain happenings ahead of time, but that in human language 
          God's voice is heard! To be sure, the word of God may contain reference 
          to the future- -for it is a word that probes the whole human situation- 
          -but it is not esoteric knowledge. It is the illumination of life in 
          all of its dimensions by the light of God's own revealing.6
  In prophecy God speaks. It is as simple and profound and startling 
          as that! What happens in the fellowship is that the word may suddenly 
          be spoken by anyone present, and so, variously, a "Thus says the 
          Lord" breaks forth in the fellowship. It is usually in the first 
          person (though not always), such as "I am with you to bless you 
          . . . " and has the directness of an "I- -Thou" encounter. 
          It comes not in a heavenly language, but in the native tongue of the 
          person speaking and with his or her accustomed inflections, cadences, 
          and manners. Indeed, the speech may even be coarse and ungrammatical; 
          it may be a mixture of "King James" and modern; it may falter 
          as well as flow- -such really does not matter. For in prophecy God uses 
          what He finds, and through frail human instruments the Spirit speaks 
          the word of the Lord.
 What is distinctive in prophecy is that the words do not issue from 
          human reflection or premeditation. Indeed, there may have been much 
          time given to prayer, study of Scriptures, waiting upon God; but when 
          the word of God goes forth it is the operation of the Spirit upon and 
          within the human mind so that the message spoken, while in the language 
          of man, is the direct utterance of God. The prophet does not know what 
          he will say in advance of saying it, nor can he be sure just when the 
          moment will come- -or even if it will come- -but he speaks when 
          and as God wills. Thus in the fellowship there is no scheduling of prophecy: 
          it just happens!
  All of this- -to repeat- -is quite surprising and startling. Most 
          of us of course were familiar with prophetic utterance as recorded in 
          the Bible, and willing to accept it as the word of God. Isaiah's or 
          Jeremiah's "Thus says the Lord..." we were accustomed to, 
          but to hear a Tom or a Mary today, in the twentieth century, speak the 
          same way ...! Many of us also had convinced ourselves that prophecy 
          ended with the New Testament period (despite all the New Testament evidence 
          to the contrary),7 until 
          suddenly through the dynamic thrust of the Holy Spirit prophecy comes 
          alive again. Now we wonder how we could have misread the New Testament 
          for so long!
  Perhaps a further word is in order here. Preaching, we also recognize, 
          is not prophecy- -nor is teaching. In the past if we had not thought 
          of prophecy as ending with the Biblical canon, we often tended to identify 
          it with the office of preaching or teaching. Preaching, however, is 
          the proclamation (kerygma) of the good news; it is the heralding 
          of the faith to the world. Teaching is instruction (didache) 
          in sound doctrine, and is necessary for maturing in the faith. Both 
          therefore are quite important- -but they are not prophecy (propheteia). 
          Now it may well be that the preaching of today, which is often addressed 
          more to the community of faith than to the world, has in it prophetic 
          elements, and at times prophecy will break through. However, preaching 
          as ordinarily done, whether in terms basically of Scriptural exposition 
          or analysis of the human situation, does not as such represent God's 
          direct address to man. Teaching, even less direct than preaching, is 
          essential to the life of the community, but is at some remove from prophecy. 
          Surely what is needed today- -and we are seeing it happening- -is not 
          a displacement of preaching or teaching, but the return of that which 
          is still more basic: the prophetic function within the fellowship 
          of the Spirit.8
  It was earlier mentioned that prophecy is addressed to the community 
          of faith for its upbuilding. However, we have noted on many occasions 
          that, coincidental with this edification, prophecy often has a profound 
          effect on those present who are not truly believers. As the very word 
          of God, it so much conveys an impression of God's reality and presence 
          that persons now and again are brought under conviction, cry out for 
          help, and thereby enter into a new life in Christ.9 
          Thus prophecy indirectly becomes proclamation and evangelism. 
 Because of the high-powered nature of prophecy- -it is important to 
          add- -the fellowship finds it imperative to weigh judiciously what is 
          said. Prophecy can by no means be taken casually. Since it is verily 
          God's message to His people, there must be quite serious and careful 
          consideration given to each word spoken, and application made within 
          the life of the fellowship. Also because of the ever present danger 
          of prophecy being abused- -the pretense of having a word from God- -there 
          is need for spiritual discernment.10 
          Some in the fellowship may recognize through the Holy Spirit that a 
          given "Thus says the Lord" is not truly of the Lord, and therefore 
          stand against it. Here a delicate balance is needed between complete 
          openness to the word and sensitivity to its distortion. But even with 
          all possible dangers attendant, no one who has experienced prophecy 
          can question its tremendous value for the church of today. 
 Finally, though all may prophesy, we find that some persons especially 
          exhibit this manifestation of the Spirit. In the fellowship it is not 
          unusual in a given time of worship for two or three persons (sometimes 
          one after another, or at irregular intervals) to prophesy. These may 
          be men or women, young people or old- -as the Spirit enables.11 
          Again (as with the other manifestations of the Spirit described) there 
          are no prior qualifications, and those who may seem outwardly least 
          to exercise profundity of utterance are often the ones so gifted. Somehow 
          God's ways are just not our ways! 
  Now we come to tongues.12 
          Already reference has been made to the "language of the Spirit" 
          wherein the praise of God is uttered in words far beyond human capacity. 
          At that point, however, nothing was said about the place of this language 
          in the fellowship. 
  We may begin with the recognition that as background for the gathering 
          of the community they have incalculable value. First, as we prepare 
          ourselves spiritually ahead of time, prayer in tongues makes for personally 
          heightened edification. Here is speech addressed not to men but to God. 
          Here is worship in spirit through the Spirit. Here (and we will never 
          cease to be amazed at it) the tongue moves in customary manner, but 
          every sound, every syllable, every sentence is produced not by our own 
          devising but by the eternal Spirit Himself. Here is expressed in the 
          most intense, deepest, and highest possible way the unutterable yearnings 
          of the soul of the Christian to give praise and blessing to the God 
          who made him, who redeemed him in His Son, and who has poured forth 
          His own Spirit. What marvel, what joy! This is speech that can never 
          really become commonplace- -and, in reference to the fellowship, the 
          rich presence of God known in such prayer of the Spirit makes for immensely 
          valuable preparation.13 
          Second, even if there should be no outward expression of tongues in 
          the fellowship, we find that quiet praying in the Spirit14 
          during the meeting helps to maintain an openness to God's presence and 
          a readiness for His word and will to be carried out. There is also the 
          sense of much greater power and effectiveness when at last one begins 
          to utter a prayer with the mind that has been undergirded by prayer 
          with the Spirit. However, in addition to background, we find that tongues may also have 
          an important place in the meeting of the fellowship. For in the fellowship 
          there are those particularly gifted by the Spirit in this regard, namely, 
          for the upbuilding of the community. Since tongues declare variously 
          the wonders and mysteries of God, when they are understood, they vastly 
          enrich the community. As this is utterance by the Spirit, the truth 
          spoken is of signal importance.
 
 But how can this be, since tongues are not in the common language of 
          the community? How can any one understand? The answer- -again marvelous 
          to relate: they may be understood through interpretation given by the 
          Holy Spirit! Interpretation is another gift or manifestation of the 
          Spirit,15 and when there 
          are those present able to interpret,16 
          the meaning of what has been spoken can immediately follow. If there 
          is no one present having this gift, then obviously tongues cannot edify, 
          and it is far better to forego them altogether, looking instead to prophecy, 
          teaching, and the like. If, however, interpretation occurs, tongues 
          have no less value than prophecy, for once again there is direct utterance 
          of the Spirit of God. Indeed, this is no small thing- -and it has been 
          for many of us a source of continuing marvel to hear tongues interpreted 
          in the Spirit and to sense the overwhelming import and impact of divine 
          mystery being communicated to man!
  It should be added to what has been said about tongues in the fellowship- 
          -and their operation through certain gifted persons there- -that tongues 
          are primarily for devotional use. Since they basically build up the 
          believer in his faith, most persons pray in tongues privately (or with 
          a few others) and find great joy and strength in so doing. Praying with 
          the Spirit becomes the fruitful base for praying with the mind, and 
          it is in the alternation and interplay of these two dimensions of prayer 
          and praise that spiritual growth and maturation takes place.
  A final word might be said about something quite akin to speaking 
          and praying in tongues, namely, "singing in the Spirit." This 
          likewise may be done privately and represents also rich background for 
          singing with the mind. However, because our concern here is with the 
          life and upbuilding of the community, we shall make a brief comment 
          about singing in the Spirit in connection with worship. 
 Since every gathering of the fellowship is essentially for praise and 
          adoration, blessing and thanksgiving, music is, of course, one of the 
          most elevated of all expressions. Thus in worship, ancient hymns of 
          the church, psalms from the Old and verses from the New Testament, and 
          popular choruses that have become freighted with spiritual meaning are 
          sung by all assembled. Occasionally words will be sung out (perhaps 
          a bit of Scripture, maybe an ejaculation of praise) by some person in 
          the common language but in a free manner- -based on no fixed music from 
          the past- -and others soon join in the newly formed melody. Indeed, 
          there may be long periods of joyful, lilting music, quite unplanned, 
          moving back and forth through psalms, hymns, choruses, and the like- 
          -as the Spirit guides the meeting. But the climax is the moment when 
          not only is the melody given by the Spirit but also the language, 
          as words and music sung by the assembled worshipers blend into an unimaginable, 
          humanly impossible, chorus of praise. Here is "singing in the Spirit" 
          at its zenith- -the sublime utterance of the Holy Spirit through the 
          human spirit to the glory of Almighty God.17 
          
 
  Having discussed some of the operations of the Holy Spirit in the 
          fellowship, we ought to stress that all of this exists for one purpose 
          only, namely, the building up of the body of Christ. All the gifts and 
          manifestations mentioned are important, and none dare be discounted. 
          If there are some who declare that there is no need of healers and prophets, 
          or healers and prophets declare that they have no need of others, the 
          body is hurt thereby. If there are those who would seek to bypass, disregard, 
          or even check some or all of these manifestations, such persons surely 
          must give justification by the Spirit of God. It is rather in a readiness 
          for all of God's gifts that the body truly is blessed and built up for 
          a more total ministry. Accordingly, it would be hard to overemphasize 
          the importance of complete openness and receptivity to the Spirit's 
          activity.What is happening today among people in the fellowship of the
  Spirit is quite the opposite of being hesitant in the area of the 
          Spirit's manifestations. For there is a growing desire to be a channel 
          for the varied operations of the Holy Spirit. This is quite important 
          for, though these workings are gracious deeds (gifts) of the Holy Spirit, 
          they do not happen if the fellowship is basically closed to them. These 
          gifts are to be sought after and gladly received, not for pride's sake 
          or personal boasting, but because they are God's own offering to the 
          community of His people. So the fellowship earnestly desires the charismata 
          of the Spirit, that God may in all things be glorified.
  One more word about the fellowship of the Spirit- -and this in relation 
          to the world. All that has been said earlier about the fellowship in 
          terms of the praise of God, love and concern, abundance of joy, newfound 
          freedom, profound peace, deep and lasting unity, is too good to keep! 
          Indeed, it is surely not the will of Him who has made such blessings 
          possible to confine them to the few, but to make them available to all 
          mankind. Thus while at the same time the community is being built up 
          through the multiplication of the gifts of the Spirit, it is greatly 
          concerned to share what it has found with the whole world. What has 
          been said earlier about the Holy Spirit as the Spirit of power to witness 
          is therefore fundamental. The community can never exist satisfied in 
          itself to know the wonder of God and His ways, but in the power of the 
          Spirit proclaims the word of life to all who will hear, so that people 
          everywhere may share in the goodness and glory of God! 
 
  Now we turn to a consideration in this chapter of how this 
          renewal through the Holy Spirit has been coming about. Variously we 
          have sought to relate ways in which this movement of the Spirit has 
          brought a lively sense of the reality of God- -as Father, Son, and Holy 
          Spirit; the fellowship of faith has taken on new dimensions of praise 
          and thanksgiving, love of the brethren, freedom, peace, joy, and unity; 
          the Bible has unfolded with amazing contemporaneity; vistas of understanding 
          and power have opened up; likewise, the community has become the scene 
          of extraordinary manifestations of the Spirit. But, except indirectly, 
          nothing has been said about how all this has happened. Obviously, this 
          final matter is of no small importance.
  Here there are a wide variety of testimonies- -and in large part this 
          is due to the fact that we are talking about the Holy Spirit. To try 
          to track the Spirit is a little like tracking the wind; it is indeed 
          hard to accomplish! "The pneuma blows where it wills...."18 
          There is about the Spirit an unpredictability, a freedom that makes 
          suspect any claim that "this is exactly the way it always 
          happens," etc. The Spirit has a way of moving not according to 
          our plans and schemes but according to His own sovereign intention. 
          So the dynamic movement of the Spirit cannot be charted but occurs in 
          an unlimited number of ways and situations. Blueprints are out!
  Also, persons and groups who share in this renewal represent a broad 
          range of experience, variegated backgrounds, and many cultural differences. 
          And, as already noted, the religious spectrum of church affiliations 
          is by no means limited to a few traditions. Even people who may be closely 
          related in terms of background, tradition, and communal life may still 
          pass through exceedingly diverse religious experiences. So even if the 
          Spirit did not operate freely in many ways, there would continue to 
          be manifold expressions of the Spirit's movement in the lives of individuals 
          and communities. 
  But having said all this- -and without seeking to fix a pattern- -we 
          may now go on to affirm that the movement of the Spirit (about which 
          we speak) is wholly related to Jesus Christ and our faith in Him. It 
          is not some operation of the Spirit in the broad universe which may 
          have reached us in some mystical moment; rather it happens through the 
          Spirit mediated to us by Jesus Christ. In a variety of ways, but none 
          the less truly, we had at some time recognized Christ's claim upon us, 
          been convicted of our unworthiness, and entered into a life of witness 
          in His name. There may have been no "great light" from heaven, 
          no cataclysmic conversion, but we did come to a life-changing acknowledgment 
          of Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior and were sealed by His Spirit. That 
          very moment for some of us was the occasion in which we experienced 
          the dynamic movement of the Holy Spirit. For others this was not the 
          case; it happened later- -perhaps only a short time thereafter, maybe 
          days, months, even years. But whenever it took place, it was related 
          to Jesus Christ and His coming to us in our faith and repentance. 
  One thing is surely true, namely, that this dynamic movement of the 
          Spirit occurred in the context of openness and expectation. 
          For though the Spirit cannot be patterned or programmed, it is certain 
          that He will not force His way, but moves where there is a readiness 
          for His activity. He does not batter down closed doors, but flows freely 
          and mightily wherever the barriers are removed. Indeed, it was for many 
          of us the admission of our poverty and need, the realization of the 
          inadequacy of our witness, the surrender of the citadel of mind as well 
          as heart- -none of which was easy- -that finally made way for that climactic 
          moment when the Spirit of God moved like wind and fire. When at last 
          we could be empty before Him, He swept through our whole being.But also there was a kind of intense yearning for more of His 
          reality and presence. To be sure, there was much variety- -all the way 
          from an almost unconscious sigh to a "Come, Holy Spirit, come!" 
          In any event there was a hungering and thirsting after God beyond all 
          earthly desires, and often a profound yearning to praise and magnify 
          His name in a total kind of way. So there was much time devoted to persistent, 
          importunate prayer-asking, seeking, knocking- -that His power and presence 
          might be manifest and His name truly glorified. When the time had fully 
          come, He did not fail to answer.
 
  Another thing, significant for many of us, was the willingness- -after 
          a struggle- -to be ministered to by others. We came to realize 
          that, despite our commitment and dedication, we really needed help. 
          For it was borne in upon us that some people whom we encountered were 
          walking in a dimension of the Spirit, evidenced through their joy in 
          the Lord, abundant love, eagerness to witness (and much else), that 
          we knew little about. So, at the humbling of pride and vanity, we sought 
          to learn from them, even be instructed by them. Yes- -and for some of 
          us this was the hardest- -we finally became willing for them to pray 
          for us, even lay hands upon us, that we might be granted the renewing 
          of the Holy Spirit. This for many of us was a turning point- -even a 
          breakthrough- -as we submitted to their ministry.
  But we should not fail to add that this movement of the Holy Spirit 
          also occurred for some of us under the growing conviction of serious 
          need in the church. There was our own personal realization of the 
          lack of "fire" in our witness for Jesus Christ, and we saw 
          little more of it in the church around us. Outwardly the church was 
          carrying on its mission, but there was serious inner weakness evidenced 
          by sharp factionalism, confusion about purpose, and slight impact upon 
          the world. Further, it seemed not to matter whether one was on the side 
          of evangelism or social action, old confession or new, ancient liturgy 
          or experimental forms (or various combinations thereof), there was still 
          little deep and abiding fellowship among the brethren. Where was the 
          joy in worship (genuine- -not formalized or forced), the passionate 
          love of Jesus Christ, the intense yearning for "the Spirit of unity 
          in the bond of peace"? Where was the lively sense of God's presence 
          and power, so real that people would be overwhelmed with the weight 
          of His glory? One looked and looked: God might not be dead, but His 
          people were gasping for breath. If only the wind of the Spirit might 
          blow...surely His people could live again. 
 
  One final thing that drove some of us onward was the vision of 
          a world filled with the knowledge and glory of God. We sensed that 
          somehow the vague, even uncertain, yearnings of mankind for the reality 
          of God (however named), for participating in the ultimate mystery suffusing 
          the universe, for knowing the eternal in the midst of time, must find 
          an answer. And we had seen enough of the glory of God in Jesus Christ 
          to make us yearn that that glory might envelop all. We believed, to 
          be sure, that in the "age to come" it would all be fulfilled, 
          but should not the "powers" of that age be operative now? 
          Could there not be a conjoining of the natural and the supernatural, 
          the immediate communion of God with man in this world? Was this not 
          the way, the only way, to universal brotherhood among men- -where Christ 
          is enthroned as Lord and where men are ruled by the sway of His inner 
          Spirit? With some such vision before us of the knowledge and glory of 
          God we were driven to more earnest questing.And now we say with great rejoicing: this day is at hand! How good it 
          is to be in the fellowship of faith! For the church of Jesus Christ 
          is the arena in which the renewal in the Spirit is occurring. Therein 
          all people may know the wonder and greatness of God.
 
 
  
          II 
 
  Now I am eager to move on to some theological implications 
          of what has been written in the previous pages. And here the attempt 
          will be made to show that this dynamic movement of the Holy Spirit- 
          -with all its wonder and excitement- -makes for fresh ways of theological 
          reflection.
 Actually what has happened to those of us who are also called to particular 
          theological responsibility is that we have found ourselves having much 
          difficulty articulating it all. We have tried to make use of given theological 
          patterns, but have found them frequently wanting. But again- -and to 
          our surprise- -we have found old formulas taking on new meaning, and 
          this has truly been a delight! In the latter instance it is as if something 
          long dormant, in coming to life, has suffused energy through the whole. 
          In any event, we now find ourselves being challenged to renewed theological 
          endeavor.
 We may begin by noting the fact that the dynamic movement of the Spirit 
          does not fit very well into traditional theological categories. Our 
          inherited theology- -in both historical Protestantism and Roman Catholicism- 
          -has dealt in various ways with the work of the Holy Spirit, for example, 
          in creation (as "Lord and Giver of Life"), in the Incarnation 
          (as the divine power of conception), in regeneration (as bringer of 
          "new life"), in sanctification (as the Spirit of holiness), 
          in word and sacraments (as inspirer, sealer, and so on), and in the 
          final redemption (as perfecter). But none of these categories adequately 
          expresses this movement of the Spirit.
 Let us look more closely. Perhaps among the categories just mentioned 
          this movement of the Holy Spirit might seem to be closely identified 
          with regeneration. For Christian theology has traditionally held 
          that "new birth" is the work of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit 
          awakens faith in Christ, convicts of sin, and brings about repentance. 
          It is He, therefore, who unites the believer to Christ; this, accordingly, 
          is the beginning of a new life. Without the Spirit, Christ remains distant 
          and the effects of His redemptive work are not appropriated by us. By 
          the action of the Spirit, however, Christ is no longer afar but comes 
          to dwell within the heart. It is by this work of the Spirit that the 
          transition occurs from non-Christian to Christian existence. 
  Now this is all very important. We must return to it shortly since 
          it is essential to the dynamic movement of the Spirit. But our point, 
          for the moment, is that we have not been talking about regeneration 
          or becoming a Christian. It has been stressed that this movement of 
          the Spirit is something that has been happening to Christians, to believers. 
          To be sure, those involved may or may not have been exceptionally good 
          ones, but that is irrelevant. It has occurred to people believing in 
          Jesus Christ; thus, despite the felt poverty and need (as earlier described), 
          it is scarcely a matter of regeneration.
  What then about sanctification? Here we might seem to come 
          closer, for sanctification is often thought of as the particular work 
          of the Holy Spirit. Almost by definition the Holy Spirit- -the Spiritus 
          Sanctus- -sanctifies. It is He who, having mediated a new life in 
          Christ, now sets us apart for the service of God, and perfects in us 
          His own holiness. Thereafter, day by day, despite the struggles with 
          the flesh, the Spirit is able to overcome, and we grow in the likeness 
          of Jesus Christ.
 Now who could gainsay the importance of this? Every Christian is called 
          upon to a life of faithful commitment to the Lord and to wrestle daily 
          with the barriers that stand in the way of growth in holiness. But this 
          movement of the Spirit is by no means identical with sanctification 
          nor is it, as such, concerned with the area of Christian maturation.
  One further possibility might be to think of this new movement of 
          the Holy Spirit in terms of confirmation (one of the sacraments 
          in the Catholic tradition and a rite in many Protestant churches). Here 
          one is on rather difficult ground because confirmation itself has been 
          variously understood, and in many churches it has no place at all. In 
          general, however, it might be said that confirmation is viewed as the 
          strengthening of a person in his faith, the renewal of his baptismal 
          vows, and perhaps some increment of the Holy Spirit whereby he is better 
          able to live the Christian life.
  Here we might seem to be still closer, for there is the laying on 
          of hands (by the bishop or minister), the context of prayer, and often 
          reference to reception of the Holy Spirit. There seem to be two differences, 
          though, from what has been earlier described: first, there is more stress 
          in confirmation on "increase of grace" than on the movement 
          of the Spirit in a new dimension; second, there seldom seems to occur 
          experientially for those confirmed a vital renewal through the Spirit. 
          Confirmation (however it may have been understood originally19) 
          can scarcely qualify to comprehend the extraordinary reaches of this 
          present dynamism of the Spirit. 
 
  So traditional categories- -such as regeneration, sanctification, 
          confirmation- -do not suffice; hence, we must turn in another direction. 
          Here the question concerns the larger theological arena: the significance 
          of this movement of the Spirit and its implication for the whole of 
          theology. We may find ourselves exploring some new ground. 
 In order to get at a proper answer regarding this dynamic movement 
          it may be helpful to recall again that we are talking about something 
          happening to believers. Here it is quite important to stress that believers, 
          Christianly speaking, are more than those who give assent of the mind 
          to some kind of faith statement. They are also more than people who 
          seek to follow God's commands, or to pattern their lives after the example 
          and teaching of Jesus Christ. Believers are those who have heard the 
          call of God in Christ, have received forgiveness in His name, and have 
          become tabernacles for His Spirit. To be a believer is to enter into 
          a new way of life which centers wholly in Jesus Christ.
 The status of the Christian believer in relation to the Holy Spirit 
          is that he has been "born of the Spirit." He has passed out 
          of death into life through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, 
          and as a result the Spirit of God dwells within. This indwelling of 
          the Spirit is not to be understood as a natural fact of human existence. 
          God is surely everywhere present, and man may be said to have his being 
          in God, but only man in Christ is one in whom Christ's Spirit resides. 
          The hardness of a person's heart sets a barrier against the presence 
          of God's Spirit; so, until this is broken open and forgiveness received, 
          there can be no inwardness of the Holy Spirit. It is accordingly through 
          faith in Jesus Christ that the Spirit moves into the center of human 
          existence- -the human spirit- -and sets up a totally new situation. 
          
 It is quite important to stress at this juncture that there is no point 
          in talking about the dynamic movement of the Spirit except against the 
          background of this faith in Jesus Christ. There must be that kind of 
          faith- -to repeat- -which appropriates what God has done in Christ. 
          Such appropriation cannot be automatically assumed merely because someone 
          is a Christian by name or is attached to some Christian community or 
          organization. Only as a person hears the word of the gospel in faith- 
          -the word that smites the heart thereby bringing about conviction of 
          sin and guilt- -and repents of the evil in which he is bound, does he 
          become a new person in Christ. There is a narrow pass to go through 
          (which only the grace of God makes possible), but through it one must 
          go if he is to know salvation and have the Spirit of God dwelling within. 
          At the risk of too much emphasis here, let me repeat how important all 
          of this is: it is meaningless to reflect upon the movement of the Spirit 
          unless the Spirit is an inward actuality. To put it another way: only 
          the man of the Spirit- -"spiritual man"- -is able to begin 
          to comprehend what this is all about.20 
          The "natural" man, whether outside the church or in the church, 
          can only be completely baffled by the movement of the Spirit; and the 
          result quite possibly is that he turns away- -maybe even adopts a negative 
          attitude- -because he is not in a position to understand.21 
          Thus a word of rather blunt counsel: if a person does not have the Spirit 
          of Christ, let him not seek to judge that for which he has no capacity. 
          However, it is far better that he should become a man in whom the Spirit 
          dwells- -Christian man, "spiritual" man- -and have the spiritual 
          antenna by which he can receive the things of God.
  Theologically what has just been said may be expressed in language 
          earlier used, namely, that regeneration (new birth, conversion) is the 
          presupposition for the movement of the Spirit, and again, in reference 
          to sanctification, that the Spirit of sanctification has been given. 
          Thus regeneration and sanctification (in the sense of the presence of 
          the sanctifying Spirit) are the ground, the basis, the framework in 
          which and out of which the movement of the Spirit may come. Also, to 
          be sure, justification is to be presupposed, for it is through the declaration 
          of forgiveness that one is accepted as righteous ("justified") 
          and the Spirit of regeneration and sanctification is at work.
  This last statement leads to a further word about justification and 
          its relationship to the movement of the Spirit. I am quite convinced 
          that a major problem is the way in which justification is frequently 
          misunderstood, so that there can be no adequate comprehension of sanctification- 
          -and much less of the movement of the Spirit. The term "justification" 
          in this connection may not be employed; perhaps the language will be 
          that of "God's free grace," or "total forgiveness," 
          or "complete acceptance," and to be a Christian (from this 
          perspective) is to live as a "free man" unburdened by the 
          past, accepted in the present, and open to the future. Now all of this 
          is very good if it grows out of a faith in Jesus Christ wherein 
          there is true repentance- -a turning in deep contrition from the old 
          to the new- -so that the talk about justification, or acceptance, is 
          not simply a cover-up for staying the same, but represents the coming 
          to be of a new reality. "Justification" that "justifies" 
          the sinful status of man is not Christian justification: it knows nothing 
          of God's righteousness, and is ill-equipped to talk about sanctification 
          at all.22 A fortiori, 
          the movement of the Spirit cannot even come into sight.
  Justification- -properly understood- -is inseparable from regeneration 
          (and sanctification in the primary sense). For there is no genuine appropriation 
          of God's forgiveness in Jesus Christ that does not also signify the 
          emergence of a new man. This means that not only is he a forgiven sinner, 
          living by God's continuing grace, but he is also one in whom God has 
          begun a new work through the Spirit that comes to dwell within. To be 
          sure, this new man remains a sinner needing constantly to be sustained 
          by God's mercy in forgiveness, but he is also not the same person he 
          was before. Further, he now has the awesome responsibility of showing 
          forth God's holiness and righteousness in all of his life.
 
  Now- -with this excursus on justification done- -let us go back to 
          the earlier statement about what must be presupposed to talk about the 
          movement of the Spirit, namely, justification, regeneration, and sanctification 
          (in its beginning). Without the transition into a new condition, a new 
          being, a new reality which these terms signify, we are not operating 
          from a basis that makes either comprehensible or possible the talk about 
          a dynamic movement of the Spirit. Only when this transition has occurred 
          are we ready to proceed further with theological reflection.
 We are now ready to address ourselves theologically to the question 
          of Christian existence and this movement of the Spirit. Here we assume 
          that God's redemptive deed in Jesus Christ has been appropriated in 
          faith and repentance, that regeneration has taken place, that there 
          has been a transition from non-Christian into Christian existence. Against 
          this background, in this situation, the dynamic movement of the Spirit 
          occurs. How are we to understand this as Christians?
 Here we may encounter the difficulty of the unfamiliar and the strange. 
          This is a different kind of problem from the one already discussed, 
          namely, that talk about "spiritual" matters is incomprehensible 
          to the "natural" (or "unspiritual") man. It is no 
          longer a matter of something totally outside comprehension, for Christians 
          as "spiritual" persons are in the realm where the movement 
          of the Spirit occurs. They have spiritual antennae and therefore cannot 
          be altogether outside the range of perception, yet the Spirit's operation 
          may still be quite unclear, strange, and hard to grasp. It is as if 
          there were a whole world of the Spirit's activity stretching out ahead, 
          but one may not yet have made the trip. However truly the "spiritual" 
          man is at the right point of viewing, he may yet be quite uncertain 
          of it all.
 In this situation there is quite possibly one of two reactions. On 
          the one hand, a strong desire may be elicited to look further into what 
          all this means. Indeed, the pulse may beat faster at the realization 
          that there lies at hand something for which there has been deep, perhaps 
          hitherto unrecognized, yearning. Hence, despite unfamiliarity about 
          it- -and maybe hesitation- -there is a compelling urge to move ahead. 
          On the other hand, there may be, despite the sense that there is something 
          real, a turning away. This may occur for a number of reasons: 
          for example, fear of what is unusual, extraordinary, mysterious; long-time 
          Christian existence that has become rather routine and lethargic, and 
          is not sure exploration is worth the effort; anxiety at what such a 
          venture would mean in terms of status (what would other people 
          think?). So there may be an attempt to "tune out"- -and forget 
          it all. Indeed, the same person may for a time go through both of these 
          reactions- -attraction and repulsion- -for it is not easy to venture 
          into ways relatively unfrequented. But now and then there is a breakthrough, 
          and subsequent wonder that there could have ever been hesitation to 
          move ahead!
 
  Now we must return to the question of how as Christians we are to 
          understand this dynamic activity of the Holy Spirit. There is some difficulty 
          in finding the right language because we are talking about a movement 
          of the Holy Spirit and not a result or effect (such as incarnation or 
          regeneration). Further, since we are seeking to deal with that which 
          moves into the realm of the less well-known, even the extraordinary, 
          there is more than the usual difficulty in discovering adequate ways 
          of expression. 
  Perhaps the best way to begin is once more to say that this movement 
          of the Spirit happens only among those who believe in Jesus Christ. 
          The Spirit of Christ comes to those who believe, and thereby they are 
          "spiritual" persons. This is an aspect of the work of redemption 
          wherein God calls us in Christ, freely forgives us in Him and seals 
          us with His Spirit.23 
          In all of this the Spirit is active, applying the work of God in Christ 
          and making new life an actuality. That much we need to say by way of 
          review- -all pointing up the Spirit's activity in relation to the work 
          of redemption. 
 
  But (and now we come to the new) here is a movement of the 
          Spirit beyond redemption! And it is based on the fact that, by 
          virtue of the Spirit's activity in relation to the work of Christ, a 
          situation is present laden with dynamic possibilities. For the Spirit 
          who comes as token and seal of God's work in and through Jesus Christ 
          may act in such fashion as to possess human existence, and thereby 
          move upon, into, and through it in totality. This may be viewed on the 
          one hand as an inward action whereby the Holy Spirit indwelling the 
          human spirit moves from the depths to the heights of creaturely reality, 
          thereby fully claiming the human vessel. From another perspective it 
          may be seen as an external movement whereby the Spirit comes upon the 
          human creature and moves from the heights to the depths of the prepared 
          vessel, thereby penetrating it through and through. As a result of this 
          movement within and without24 
          all of life is bathed in the presence and power of the Spirit. Here 
          indeed is a renewal of the whole human situation!
 We may now proceed to speak of this external movement of the Spirit 
          as effusion, the inward as pervasion. Or we may make use 
          of such Biblical language as "outpouring" of the Spirit for 
          the former, "filling" with the Spirit for the latter,25 
          both markedly vivid pictures of the Spirit's unlimited operation externally 
          and internally. A deluge "from above," a flooding "from 
          within"- -such is the Spirit's dynamic operation! Or to change 
          the figure, "wind" and "fire," blowing and blazing- 
          -and who can tell whether without or within?26 
          Obviously no imagery27 
          really suffices because the movement of the Spirit cannot be adequately 
          described. But the exact wording is clearly not important as long as 
          it points to the magnitude and comprehensiveness of the divine possession!
 Let us push on- -theologically. It would seem evident that we are called 
          upon to recognize a major activity of the Holy Spirit beyond the sphere 
          of redemption. Indeed, this may well be underscored as the major 
          activity of the Spirit. For as significant as is the Spirit's role in 
          bringing about faith in Jesus Christ, convicting of sin, initiating 
          new life, such is all focused on Christ's redemptive work. Therein He 
          applies, makes subjective, what God has done in Christ. Now, though 
          we by no means leave Christ behind (for the Spirit is likewise the Spirit 
          of Christ), we are talking about the activity of the Spirit which, while 
          presupposing redemption, is no longer auxiliary thereto but moves freely 
          in another dimension. This, I would urge, is that climactic activity 
          of the Spirit which is most properly His own, whereby He moves in freedom, 
          pervading and filling human reality. As a result there is the initiation 
          of a new world of the Spirit wherein God and man are in such dynamic 
          interaction that new powers are released to praise God, to witness in 
          His name, to perform "signs and wonders"; there is a new sense 
          of His immediate presence whereby His joy, peace, and love become radiant; 
          also there is the commencement of the transformation of all things into 
          the likeness and image of God!
  Now I do not believe that the activity of the Spirit in pervading 
          and filling (with these accompanying results) has generally stood out 
          in theology with sufficient clarity. In our various doctrinal traditions 
          a number of things have been in the way. For example, we have so tended 
          to subordinate the activity of the Spirit to the work of Christ in redemption- 
          -whereby (as just noted) the Spirit is viewed largely in terms of His 
          applicative instrumentality- -that any further activity is less well 
          recognized.28 Again, 
          at the other extreme, we have (in some traditions) tended to lay such 
          strong emphasis upon the work of the Holy Spirit as making men "partakers 
          of the divine nature" (2 Peter 1:4) that His work is viewed largely 
          as that of the deification of man. In this case the work of Christ is 
          actually subordinated to that of the Spirit, so that the Incarnation 
          of the Word is the instrument of the Holy Spirit to transmute humanity 
          into divinity. Again, in certain traditions, the activity of the Holy 
          Spirit is viewed basically as that of the process of sanctification. 
          Here there is a much closer approximation to what is central; however 
          (as we have emphasized), sanctification as process is not the 
          "dynamic movement" itself but only an effect. Elsewhere the 
          Spirit is thought of largely as inspirer of Scripture, "soul" 
          of the church, or the anointer of offices.29 
          But whatever the element of truth in all these understandings- -and 
          to be sure there is much- -none of them focuses on the peculiar and 
          dynamic movement of the Spirit upon and within the community of faith.
  And the result- -a quite disturbing one- -is that the believing community 
          may still be existing without the actualization of its potential. This 
          is not to deny that such a community is the people of God, called into 
          being by His word and Spirit, and living by His grace; such is to be 
          vigorously affirmed. But the release may not yet have occurred 
          where the Spirit from "on high" and from within moves mightily 
          to actualize the vast potential. The Christian community (the community 
          of "saints"- -"spiritual" people), despite the fact 
          that the new has come, may not yet have entered upon the fullness of 
          what is available. Latently it is all there, but it has not yet come 
          to manifestation. The situation, thus, is one laden with vast possibility, 
          but the "happening" whereby it takes on dynamic actuality 
          may not have occurred. The explosive power has yet to break loose!
  What this chapter is really attempting to set forth is "a theology 
          of explosion"! It is based on the conviction that many of us have 
          lived long as Christians, have shared variously in many of the important 
          activities of the believing community, and have generally not been unmindful 
          of its life or worship, its service and sacraments, its responsibilities 
          and challenges, but the power has been bottled up, energies unreleased. 
          However, there is more than we ever deemed possible! "More" 
          is scarcely the word, for when the power of God begins to pour out of 
          the heights, emerge from the depths, flow through the whole, such forces 
          become operative as to go beyond quantitative measurement. To be "filled" 
          with the Spirit of God is not so much to have something "more" 
          as it is to be in the new, wonderful, and at times fearful situation 
          of having the Spirit of God break into the whole round of existence 
          and pervade it all. As a result of this- -yes, explosion- -what may 
          be violent at the beginning can become the steady and driving power 
          of a mighty dynamo- -the Spirit of the living God.
 
  Let me seek to summarize a bit at this point. What I have been attempting 
          to stress is that the theological implications of this dynamic movement 
          of the Spirit are of no little significance. At the critical center 
          there is the knowledge that something has happened for which one has 
          difficulty finding adequate theological language or ways of relating 
          it to various doctrines of Christian faith. I am quite convinced, however, 
          that something is being recovered, generally long hidden, that can make 
          for a vital renewal of the church.
  What is opening up in our day is a dimension of the Spirit's activity 
          that calls for fresh thinking about many matters and for a willingness 
          to be led into deeper understanding. The chief problem could be simply 
          the failure to recognize this dimension or- -what amounts practically 
          to the same thing- -to assume that it is already operative. Such an 
          assumption is found, for example, wherever it is held that the Spirit 
          is God's gift to the church and "Pentecost" (as symbol of 
          the effusion of the Spirit) is something that is related only to the 
          church's original coming to be. In that case, since Pentecost is viewed 
          as constitutive of the life of the church, it would be improper to suggest 
          that Pentecost may have yet to occur. Thus this dynamic dimension of 
          the Spirit's activity drops out of sight as completely as if it were 
          not recognized at all. Why be bothered about some effusion of the Spirit 
          when it has already taken place?30 
          Alongside this failure is another which, while recognizing the need 
          for an outpouring of the Spirit, still does not adequately comprehend 
          what it signifies. Sometimes it is said that the church needs a fresh 
          "baptism" of the Spirit, and by this is often meant a kind 
          of spiritual pickup, a move ahead with increased commitment, a rededication 
          to witness and service. But, however much the church may need these 
          things, this dynamic movement of the Spirit is far more radical, even 
          more revolutionary, than merely an increase of some kind in spiritual 
          vitality. Nor does it happen to the "church" as an institution, 
          but to people, in people, who (if and when it takes place) 
          are projected into a dynamic realm, scarcely beforehand imagined, of 
          spiritual reality.
  This is exactly what is seldom understood. As long as the movement 
          of the Spirit is thought of in terms only of something happening to 
          an institution, or to people, as a kind of tonic, nothing significant 
          is going to occur. Indeed, even the symbol of Pentecost can be misused 
          so as to suggest only an external addition to faith. But- -and it cannot 
          be emphasized too strongly- -the effusion of the Spirit is profoundly 
          existential and personal. It is no mere supplement, but the movement 
          through the whole being (community and/or individual) of a mighty power 
          that renews the total situation.
  It is a whole new world! So much is this the case that some who talk 
          about the desirability of an outpouring of the Spirit would be quite 
          shocked if it really happened! For this is a world in which the Spirit 
          is so profoundly and mightily present that people may communicate with 
          God in a new language of the Spirit, prophesy with authority in His 
          name, discern the counter-world of evil forces and dare to exorcise 
          them, have the faith to lay hands on the "incurably" ill and 
          declare their healing- -on and on. Do many people want their ideas that 
          such things belonged only to apostolic times exploded? Do others, who 
          are quite convinced that all of this represents a mythological world 
          view and primitive practices long ago superseded, want such rationales 
          swept away? Accordingly it may even be wise for such persons to investigate 
          a great deal before they talk (or pray) much about an outpouring of 
          the Spirit. Still, wherever there is willingness, sincerely and expectantly, 
          to move ahead, the new world of extraordinary and startling things may 
          again become an actuality.
  It is also a new world in the realm of what begins to happen in bearing 
          witness to Jesus Christ. For what is primary in this effusion of the 
          Spirit is the anointing of people so richly with the presence and power 
          of God that they are witnesses to Jesus Christ. Here are people 
          whose existence is so marked by His love, joy, and peace that they show 
          forth (not just talk about) what life can really be like. Others sense 
          it and know it- -and yearn for something of that same fullness of joy, 
          profound peace, surpassing love to become a reality in their own lives. 
          Thus it is that the embodiment of the reality confirms the testimony 
          to Christ and gives it the ring of living credibility. Accordingly, 
          witness to Jesus Christ goes forth in power- -as the One through whom 
          forgiveness comes and the gift of the Spirit. What then is new 
          is not simply that the word is spoken with more effectiveness, nor even 
          that the word is accompanied or surrounded by deeds of concern and compassion 
          (as important as both are), but that the word issues from the reality 
          of those who demonstrate the abundant life in the Spirit.31
  Perhaps the most exciting thing about this new world is that through 
          the effusion of the divine Spirit there is the realization of a new 
          immediacy between God and man. The "strange" signs- -such 
          as prophecy, healing, miracles, exorcism, speaking in tongues, discernment 
          of spirits- -are only strange so long as there has not yet been an interpenetration 
          of the divine and the human, the supernatural and the natural. When 
          this occurs- -bringing about a new immediacy between God and man- -then 
          what is alien to ordinary existence becomes (without losing its wonder) 
          a part of the regular ongoing life and activity of the community. It 
          is also this very interpenetration that brings together divine and human 
          joy, the peace of God and peace of man, the love of God and human love- 
          -and the result is that of an inexpressible participation in God's own 
          reality. This does not mean human deification, for we never cease to 
          be men. But it does point to the wonder of life in which the love, peace, 
          joy (on and on) of God so commingle with their human counterparts that 
          all of existence is thereby irradiated. 
  Again, this new world of the interpenetration of the spiritual and 
          the natural not only brings into play spiritual powers but also enhances 
          natural capacities and functions. By no means does the natural become 
          less important, but it is given fuller power and direction under the 
          impact of the Holy Spirit. The mind takes on keener awareness of the 
          true shape of reality; the feelings become more sensitive to the moods, 
          the concerns, the hopes of the world and of people; the will finds itself 
          strengthened to execute with more faithfulness and determination those 
          ethical actions to which it gives itself. Thus through the conjoining 
          of the spiritual and the natural, in which strange powers penetrate 
          and invigorate the natural realm (the vast area of the intellectual, 
          the aesthetic, the moral), there is a renewal and advancement of the 
          whole human situation.
  Finally, this is a new world wherein there is the dawning of a profound 
          and lasting unity among brethren. For in this movement of the Spirit 
          what is implicit in the Christian community becomes explicit: not only 
          the immediacy of God with man but also man with his neighbor. Here truly 
          is the transcendence of ancient walls of creed and tradition, race and 
          nationality, cultural, economic, and social differentiation by the overarching 
          Spirit of love. Thus does the moving Spirit, interfusing and pervading 
          all, bring about lasting unity in the bond of peace.
 Now we must treat another important matter not yet considered, namely, 
        the theological implications of the situation in which the dynamic 
        movement of the Holy Spirit comes about. It was mentioned earlier that 
        this happened with some persons many years after an earlier crisis experience 
        of lifechanging significance, with others after a relatively short 
        time of being Christian, and with some it occurred coincidentally with 
        the faith and repentance wherewith a new life began. Mention was also 
        made of prayer and- -in many instances- -the laying on of hands. It was 
        further stressed that this movement of the Spirit was by no means coerced, 
        but was God's own gracious doing. What, theologically, does all this have 
        to say?
 
  Answer in part has already been given by talking about the presupposition 
          of the redemptive work of God in Christ and its appropriation through 
          faith and repentance. Therein forgiveness of sins is mediated, and the 
          Holy Spirit, as seal of God's grace, comes to dwell within. Without 
          this occurring (God's redemptive work, faith, sealing of the Spirit) 
          there is no dynamic movement of the Spirit. The reason is evident: this 
          very movement is a continuation- -with or without delay- -of what has 
          already happened. The Spirit, given in faith, now moves to lay claim 
          to the whole of human reality.
  Now this movement of the Spirit, as noted, may occur simultaneously 
          with faith and repentance. The Spirit who comes to seal the divine redemption 
          and to dwell within may, in the same action, move mightily to possess 
          the whole of the human vessel. If this happens one would have to say, 
          theologically, that regeneration and the "effusion" of the 
          Spirit, though pointing to two different aspects of God's deed and human 
          experience, are chronologically one. Since, however, it is by no means 
          the case that the "filling" with the Spirit invariably occurs 
          at the moment of regeneration, it is apparent that, while affirming 
          continuity, one must also recognize the possibility of temporal separation. 
          Thus obviously there is diversity, but no contradiction between the 
          two ways.
  In the case of chronological separation (which is quite common) it 
          should be stressed that this does not mean that during the intervening 
          time (hours, days, years) there is a kind of substandard Christian existence. 
          Many of us can recall quite clearly a previous day when the grace of 
          God in Jesus Christ, His mercy and forgiveness, was appropriated in 
          true contrition, and we knew the joy of being alive again! Thereafter, 
          whatever the "ups" and "downs," the failures and 
          backslidings, times of emptiness and even despair, we continued to know 
          something of God's faithfulness and by His grace that we were Christians. 
          Thus during this time it was not a question of low-level faith (whatever 
          that might mean), semi-conversion (again, meaning what?), or nonspiritual 
          Christianity (an impossible contradiction). In fact, the whole emphasis 
          ought to be put the other way: it is because one is a Christian 
          (not semi- or anything else) that he or she is in a position to experience 
          the movement of the Holy Spirit.
  We are now ready to consider further the questions of difference in 
          timing. How, theologically, is one to deal with the fact that the Holy 
          Spirit is "poured out" on some at the beginning of their Christian 
          existence, upon others later? A partial answer surely lies in the freedom 
          of the Spirit to act when and how He will, and in the wide variation 
          among people in patterns of faith and life. However, we have also spoken 
          of such matters as openness, expectancy, prayer, and the laying on of 
          hands. Is it perhaps that the readiness of a person makes an important 
          difference? The answer, I believe, is Yes. But before elaborating this 
          further, we need to consider the relationship between God's free action 
          and human receptivity.
  Here the important theological point is that there exists a beautiful 
          harmony between God's free action in the Spirit and our openness to 
          it. The Spirit is a gift and therefore cannot be bought; consequently, 
          there is no earning the Spirit by any amount of prayers, vigils, and 
          the like. The Spirit also moves freely and cannot be compelled or coerced 
          by any human contrivance- -no matter how astutely performed. But for 
          the very reason that the Spirit acts graciously in freedom, He will 
          not grant a gift where it is not wanted or asked for, nor will He break 
          through barriers that resist His coming. Thus only the open and expectant, 
          the eager and hungry, the askers and seekers (not because of what they 
          do but because of their very readiness) receive God's blessing. Even 
          then no expertise in timing is possible (as if to say that it will occur 
          after "x" number of days of prayer, "y" number of 
          spiritual hunger pangs, "z" number of requests), for when 
          the Spirit moves there is a suddenness, a wholly unexpected character, 
          which sets at naught all schedules and plans.32 
          Also one can never know when those last barriers are down and the whole 
          person is prepared for the Spirit's movement. It is only by the event 
          itself occurring that there is evidence that the Spirit has now found 
          ready hearts.
  From what has just been said it is patent that the human readiness 
          side is important- -even if one can have no prior knowledge of the time 
          of fulfillment. Now I should like to add that this readiness factor 
          also represents a kind of total letting go. That is to say, combined 
          with openness, eagerness, and the like, there is the surrender of all 
          that one is and has to the movement of God's Spirit. There must be the 
          forfeiting of any claim upon one's life and reputation, future and success; 
          it is the offering of self as a total sacrifice.33 
          This includes more than the dedication of one's conscious existence 
          through an act of will; it also refers to the large, even hidden, area 
          of one's unconscious life. In the latter case especially, there is a 
          letting go wherein the Holy Spirit moves through the subconscious depths 
          and, even temporarily bypassing the conscious mind, gives expression 
          to the praise of God; or the Spirit may make use of the conscious mind 
          to declare God's truth.34 
          None of this occurs easily, even for the long-time Christian, because- 
          -whatever the testimony of the inward Spirit (maybe even His groans 
          at times!)- -it is extremely hard to let go. The fact is that a conscious 
          act of will cannot possibly release the unconscious energies of the 
          Spirit: thus there is no simple way. All (a very important "all") 
          that can be done is to offer the self- -body, mind, and even the tongue- 
          -so that the Spirit of God may have full possession. Wherever 
          the Spirit finds the way prepared, He will move in strange and wonderful 
          ways!
  The human readiness factor may also partially35 
          explain why it is that some persons at the moment of their faith in 
          Jesus Christ experience the dynamic movement of the Holy Spirit. If 
          they come to faith against the background of a long search for truth, 
          perhaps even years of prayer and devotion- -making for an openness of 
          the whole self- -it is quite possible that at that very time the Spirit 
          will be poured out.36 
          Or it may be the case that there has been no obvious search for God, 
          no particular evidence of prayer and devotion, but there is a kind of 
          childlike lack of pretension, a "whole-souledness." In either 
          event, beyond the Spirit's sealing of faith in Jesus Christ (which happens 
          to all who truly believe), He takes possession in a total kind of way. 
          Such persons are ready- -the barriers are down and God moves mightily 
          upon and through their whole being.
  Now a further word about the laying on of hands. It has been mentioned 
          in passing that, in some instances, the movement of the Holy Spirit 
          occurred in the context of prayer and the laying on of hands. This is 
          to say that it was not always just the preparation of persons themselves 
          (as individuals or as groups), but there was also the ministry of others 
          in praying for and placing hands upon those who have yet to experience 
          the effusion of the Spirit. For many of us this laying on of hands was 
          quite important as background and further preparation. It was our acknowledgment- 
          -by no means always easy- -of the need for willing submission to the 
          help of others and thereby of receiving God's blessing through them.
  Let me quickly add that wherever this laying on of hands occurs it 
          is not, as such, a sacramental action.37 
          It is rather, the simple ministry by one or more persons who themselves 
          are channels of the Holy Spirit38 
          to others not yet so blessed. The "ministers" may be clergy 
          or laity; it makes no difference. In fact, it has been the humbling 
          experience of some of us who are clergymen to have laymen place hands 
          on us to receive this fullness of the Spirit. Obviously God is doing 
          a mighty work today bound neither by office nor by rank.39
  Finally, it should be stressed that the laying on of hands is by no 
          means necessary for the outpouring of the Spirit. Many persons have 
          received this gift without any physical contact- -sometimes alone, sometimes 
          in a group. Prayer may or may not have been the immediate context, though 
          surely there was openness. They simply were ready (and who knows what 
          all was involved?), and God willed to renew them with His Spirit. So 
          it is that the Holy Spirit, acting with or without human means, remains 
          the free and sovereign Lord.
   Footnotes
  1This 
          does not discount the possible advantages of further training and schooling 
          to make such people more proficient, but the point here is that such 
          is not the fundamental thing. 
  2The 
          preceding several paragraphs on word of wisdom and word of knowledge 
          represent a broader understanding of those two manifestation gifts than 
          I later came to have (cf. with Renewal Theology, 2:348-58). 
  3The 
          word "miracles" is, I believe, important to use. The word 
          so translated in most English versions of the New Testament as "miracles" 
          is often dunameis, "powers." So we could simply speak 
          of "powers" at work, making for healing. However, since these 
          "powers" are never viewed as natural to, or inherent in, the 
          human situation, one would constantly have to bear in mind that they 
          are "Spiritually" based (that is in the Holy Spirit), and, 
          therefore, are other than ordinary powers of man such as intellect, 
          vitality, will (even at their maximal functioning). Only such a word 
          as "miracles" seems capable of expressing this difference-as 
          "signs" of the Spirit's functioning and "wonders" 
          to those who first behold them. It might be added that "miracles," 
          "signs," and "wonders" are often closely associated 
          in the New Testament. For example, Acts 2:22 (KJV): "Jesus of Nazareth, 
          a man approved of God among you by miracles and wonders and signs (dunameis 
          kai terasi kai semeiois)." 
  4Thus 
          a parallel to what was written earlier about the utterance of Spiritual 
          wisdom and knowledge being, at base, unrelated to natural capacities 
          and training. 
  5Tongues 
          may also occupy this high position, if interpretation follows 
          (see 1 Cor. 14:5). 
  6One 
          hardly need comment that what passes for prophecy in the popular mind 
          is far removed from prophecy as it occurs in the fellowship. The tremendous 
          boom of interest in astrology, fortune-telling, seances, etc.-all having 
          to do with presumed knowledge of things to come or things hidden-is 
          actually a modern-day gnosticism, even a counterfeit knowledge. It has 
          nothing to do with the living God, His presence among His people, His 
          grace and judgments-but leads into snare and delusion. Indeed, we find 
          in the fellowship that one of the most urgent things that has to be 
          done by those who wander into such paths is to abjure them utterly in 
          the name of Jesus Christ. Incidentally, both Old and New Testaments 
          totally condemn the whole perverted realm of spurious prophecy, visitation 
          upon "mediums," soothsaying, practice of magic, and the like 
          (see, e.g., Lev. 19:31; 20:6-8; Deut. 18:9-22; 2 Kings 21:1-9; Jer. 
          23:9-40; 27:9-10; Isa. 8:16-22; Mic. 5:12; Acts 16:16-18). 
  7It 
          is unmistakable that prophets and prophetesses functioned in the early 
          Christian community (e.g., see Acts 11:27: "Now in those days prophets 
          came down from Jerusalem to Antioch"; 13:l: "...in the church 
          at Antioch there were prophets and teachers"; 21:8-9: "Philip 
          the evangelist... had four unmarried daughters, who prophesied"; 
          21:10-11: "...a prophet named Agabus came down...and said, 'Thus 
          says the Holy Spirit'"), and that the apostle Paul strongly encourages 
          prophecy (". . . earnestly desire the spiritual gifts, especially 
          that you may prophesy" 1 Cor. 14:1) and warns against its disregard 
          ("... do not despise prophesying" 1 Thess. 5:20). There is 
          no suggestion anywhere of prophecy ceasing (1 Cor. 13:8: "as for 
          prophecies, they will pass away" refers of course only to the end 
          when we see God "face to face"). 
  8In 
          the Ephesians letter the order of "gifts" has prophets before 
          evangelists, pastors, and teachers (see Eph. 4:11), and in both Romans 
          and 1 Corinthians the "gifts" or "appointments" 
          list prophecy prior to teaching (Rom. 12:6-7; 1 Cor. 12:28). 
  9How 
          meaningful now are the words of Paul in 1 Corinthians! "...if all 
          prophesy, and an unbeliever or outsider enters, he is convicted by all, 
          he is called to account by all, the secrets of his heart are disclosed; 
          and so, falling on his face, he will worship God and declare that God 
          is really among you" (14:24-25). 
  10On 
          the matter of pretense in prophecy recall the scathing indictment of 
          the false prophets about whom the Lord says (through Jeremiah): "I 
          did not send the prophets, yet they ran; I did not speak to them, yet 
          they prophesied." They "prophesy the deceit of their own heart," 
          they "use their tongues and say, 'Says the LORD,'" etc. (Jeremiah 
          23 passim.) Our problem is not quite the same as Jeremiah's since only 
          certain ones were called to be prophets then, and people were at the 
          mercy of a few who might abuse the office. With the Christian community, 
          however, all people may prophesy (see preceding note from 1 Cor. 14), 
          and thus we are in the new situation of the community having to exercise 
          spiritual judgment among its own members. Paul speaks of one of the 
          gifts of the Spirit as "the ability to distinguish between spirits" 
          (1 Cor. 12:10), and this coming just after a reference to the gift of 
          prophecy (same verse) may well refer to the Spirit's operation wherein 
          some-for the edification of the whole-are gifted particularly to distinguish 
          true from false utterance. 
  11In 
          the experience of many of us, women and young people quite often exercise 
          this particular gift. I am not sure why this is the case, unless the 
          Lord likes to use those less often viewed as the authorities 
          to speak His word! There is New Testament precedent here, to be sure, 
          for example, Acts 2:17: "your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, 
          and your young men shall see visions," and 21:9 (noted earlier) 
          where reference is made to "four unmarried daughters, who prophesied." 
          Paul also gives instruction, in 1 Corinthians 11:5, to "any woman 
          who prays or prophesies." 
  12In 
          what follows we shall be using interchangeably for "tongues" 
          such expressions as "speaking in tongues," "praying in 
          tongues," "praying in the Spirit," "praying with 
          the Spirit," and "language of the Spirit." This, I believe, 
          is proper in that tongues are speech addressed to God, therefore prayer; 
          they are spoken in (or by) the Holy Spirit and with the spirit (not 
          the mind); they are language (even if unknown) and not nonsensical utterances. 
          It might be of interest for the reader to note how Paul, in 1 Corinthians 
          14:13-15, shifts rapidly from the terminology of "speaks in a tongue" 
          to "pray in a tongue" to "pray with the spirit." 
          Also that it is a "language" is suggested in preceding verses. 
          
  13I 
          am referring here not only to individual preparation. Often it is the 
          case that married couples, two or three friends gathered together, or 
          a small group will spend time ahead praying in the Spirit. In so doing 
          there is greatly multiplied the sense of God's presence and power that 
          carries over into the gathering of the fellowship. 
  14After 
          one has become accustomed to praying in tongues aloud, which is as the 
          breath of the Spirit articulating itself, it soon becomes a possibility 
          for one's own breath, moving across vocal chords and tongue, to manifest 
          the Spirit's breathing, and thereby for prayer to go on quietly, yet 
          profoundly, within. 
  15Interpretation 
          lies on the boundary between prophecy and tongues. It is solely for 
          the purpose of expressing what is said in tongues, but since it is in 
          the common language of the community and is spoken in one's own manner 
          without premeditation, it is akin to prophecy. Interpretation is not 
          translation, and so the interpretation following a tongue may vary from 
          it considerably in length. The only important thing is that the meaning 
          comes through. 
  16The 
          speaker in tongues may himself also have the gift of interpretation, 
          and, if so, there is no problem: he can immediately (by the Spirit) 
          interpret what he has said. If he does not have the gift, he holds in 
          check his utterance until an interpreter is present; otherwise, there 
          can be no edification. Paul suggests (in 1 Cor. 14:13) that "he 
          who speaks in a tongue should pray for the power to interpret." 
          
  17In 
          the letters to the Colossians and Ephesians Paul writes of "psalms 
          and hymns and spiritual songs." "Let the word of Christ dwell 
          in you richly...and as you sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs 
          with thankfulness in your hearts to God" (Col. 3:16); "... 
          be filled with the Spirit, addressing one another in psalms and hymns 
          and spiritual songs, singing and making melody to the Lord with all 
          your heart..." (Eph. 5:18-19). These "spiritual singers, songs 
          inspired by the Spirit. According to the Expositor's Greek Testament, 
          "the adjective pneumatikais is attached to the odais 
          not merely to differentiate these odai as religious and not secular, 
          but to describe them as inspired by the Holy Ghost" (Eph. 5:19). 
          The Jerusalem Bible interestingly comments that these "spiritual 
          songs" (translated in Col. 3:16 as "inspired songs to God") 
          "could be charismatic improvisations suggested by the Spirit during 
          liturgical assembly," hence obviously of a quite different order 
          from the usual hymns and anthems in worship. This is exactly what we 
          have found about singing in the Spirit, namely, that it is singing "inspired 
          by the Holy Ghost," "charismatic improvisations," and 
          therefore a marvelous climax to the psalms and hymns (choruses, melodies, 
          etc.) in which we all share. 
  18"Pneuma" 
          may be translated "wind" or "Spirit" in this quotation 
          from John 3:8. 
  19We 
          do not here go into the origins of the practice of confirmation. That 
          the sacrament points to a historic concern of the church for something 
          beyond baptism (with its relationship to regeneration) is not unimportant, 
          and that formally it is connected with a forward step in Christian life 
          is also significant. The only point made here is that what we have been 
          variously describing for many people as renewal through the presence 
          and power of the Holy Spirit seems to have little or no relation to 
          their confirmation-or lack of it. 
  20So 
          Paul writes: "...we impart this in words not taught by human wisdom 
          but taught by the Spirit, interpreting spiritual truths to those who 
          possess the Spirit" (1 Cor. 2:13). One who possesses the Spirit 
          is called a "spiritual man [pneumatikos]" (v. 15). 
          
  21Paul 
          continues: "The unspiritual ["psychical" or "natural"] 
          man does not receive the gifts of the Spirit of God, for they are folly 
          to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually 
          discerned" (1 Cor. 2:14). 
  22If 
          there is talk about sanctification, it quite often becomes little more 
          than the old terminology used (with some obvious difficulty) for talking 
          about obedience, service, life in the world, etc. 
  23Here 
          the previously used language of justification, regeneration, and sanctification 
          in its beginning is appropriate. 
  24Of 
          course spatial language is inadequate to deal with the Spirit. Words 
          such as "external" and "internal" may, however, 
          convey something of the uncircumscribable nature of the Spirit's movement. 
          
  25For 
          "outpouring" of the Spirit, see, for example, Acts 2:17-18, 
          33; 10:45 (cf. also Titus 3:6 and Rom. 5:5); for "filling" 
          with the Spirit see, for example, Acts 2:4; 4:8, 31; 9:17; 13:9, 52 
          (cf. also Eph. 5:18). 
  26Compare 
          Acts 2:1-4. 
  27In 
          what follows any one of these terms or images may be employed to represent 
          the wholeness of the Spirit's activity. Hence if "effusion" 
          or "filling" or "outpouring" or "pervasion" 
          (or other similar terms) is used, there is no intention of speaking 
          only of what happens "from above" or "from within." 
          Such a limitation is impossible anyhow. Every such activity of the Spirit, 
          however named, includes the other, for there is no external movement 
          that is not internal and vice versa.
 
  28Indeed, 
          in the main tradition of theology, especially in the West, this has 
          actually meant if not an essential subordinationism (in terms of Trinitarian 
          theology) a practical one. The Holy Spirit, by dogmatic definition, 
          is "consubstantial" with Father and Son, and proceeds from 
          Father and Son. But this very procession (which makes possible the "dynamic 
          movement" of the Spirit), in its singularity and end, has been 
          dealt with less than the work of Christ and the place of the Spirit 
          in connection therewith. On the matter of viewing the Holy Spirit as 
          applicative and instrumental I would especially call attention to Professor 
          Hendrikus Berkhof's The Doctrine of the Holy Spirit where he 
          writes: "This is the main pneumatological trend in ecclesiastical 
          theology. The Spirit is customarily treated in noetical, applicative, 
          subjective terms. He is that power which directs our attention to Christ 
          and opens our eyes to his work. The main result of his work is the awakening 
          of faith in Christ. His work is merely instrumental....So the Spirit 
          is a second reality beside Christ, but entirely subordinate to him, 
          serving in the application of His atoning work..." (23). Berkhof 
          expresses dissatisfaction with this long tradition and urges that "the 
          Spirit is far more than an instrumental entity, the subjective reverse 
          of Christ's work." I gladly confess to having received helpful 
          insight from what Berkhof has said in this connection. 
  29In 
          this connection see the next chapter on "A New Era in History." 
          
  30 
          In the Book of Acts the effusion of the Spirit-whether worded as "baptism," 
          "outpouring," "falling upon," "filling," 
          "coming upon," etc.-occurs a number of times and to different 
          people. See, for example, Acts 1:5, 8; 2:4, 17-18, 33; 8:16-17; 9:17; 
          10:44-45; 11:15-16; 19:6. It seems evident that one of the very things 
          the writer of Acts wants to avoid is any easy assumption that the Holy 
          Spirit has already come and been received. See especially Acts 19:2-"Did 
          you receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?" 
  31 
          It hardly needs to be said that no community demonstrates this in every 
          word and deed. Love, joy, peace are not invariably evidenced-and so 
          there is need of God's continuing forgiveness and renewal. But this 
          does not justify an attitude that would say it does not really 
          matter, that Christ is what we are not, etc. It is we who, in 
          the language of Paul, are "known and read by all men" (2 Cor. 
          3:2). 
  32 
          It might be helpful to recall that the effusion of the Spirit at 
          Pentecost was not forecast for Pentecost! According to Acts 1, 
          the disciples were not told that if they would pray ten days, on the 
          tenth day (Pentecost) the Spirit would come. They were simply told that 
          "before many days" (v. 5) it would happen. When the event 
          occurred, it came about "suddenly" (Acts 2:2). 
  33 
          I know of no word in the New Testament that more beautifully expresses 
          this than the entreaty of Paul: "I appeal to you therefore, brethren, 
          by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice..." 
          (Rom. 12:1). 
  34 
          Tongues represents the first of these, prophecy the second. When one 
          speaks or prays in tongues the mind is not functioning. Concerning the 
          former Paul says (1 Cor. 14:13), "If I pray in a tongue...my mind 
          is unfruitful" (akarpos)-"inactive" [Phillips], 
          "lies fallow" [NEB], "barren" [JB]. Thus prayer 
          in tongues is other than rational or mental prayer. (Incidentally, Paul 
          does not for that reason discount the value of such prayer; for he adds 
          [v. 15]: "What am I to do? I will pray with the spirit and I will 
          pray with the mind also." It is true that Paul does want to discourage 
          those who would put all their emphasis on speaking or praying in a tongue, 
          and says that "in church I would rather speak five words with my 
          mind, in order to instruct others, than ten thousand words in a tongue" 
          [v. 19]. However this statement, referring to a situation in church 
          where an "outsider" [v. 16] could not understand [hence it 
          is better in that case to forego incomprehensible utterance], does not 
          intend to discount the importance of tongues. How could it when Paul 
          has earlier [v. 5] said, "I want you all to speak in tongues"?) 
          The very unfruitfulness or inactivity of the mind at the moment of tongues 
          is sign that the Holy Spirit is speaking through the human spirit utterances 
          too profound for conceptualization, and signifies the vast movement 
          in a person's subconscious depths into a new key of divine praise and 
          thanksgiving. 
  35We 
          do need to repeat here other factors such as the freedom of the Spirit, 
          individual differences in personality, religious tradition, culture, 
          etc. 
  36The 
          classic case of this in the New Testament is surely that of Cornelius 
          the Roman centurion (Acts 10-11). He is described as "a devout 
          man who feared God with all his household, gave alms liberally to the 
          people, and prayed constantly to God" (10:2). It was upon such 
          a Godfearing man (with a Godfearing household) of singular 
          devoutness and constant prayer that, at the same moment of his coming 
          to faith in Christ, God "poured out" His Spirit (see especially 
          vv. 43-45). 
  37See 
          earlier discussion of "confirmation" (pp. 75-76). 
  38This 
          is the basic consideration, not the matter of "apostolic succession." 
          Whatever the merits of "apostolic succession" for the validation 
          and order of ministry, this is not our concern here. The important thing 
          is that those who minister (whether in or out of such a "succession") 
          have themselves experienced the movement of the Holy Spirit. 
  39 
          One thinks of Ananias, an unknown layman in Damascus, ministering to 
          erstwhile "Pharisee of the Pharisees," Saul of Tarsus: "And 
          laying his hands on him he [Ananias] said, 'Brother Saul, the Lord Jesus 
          who appeared to you on the road by which you came, has sent me that 
          you may regain your sight and be filled with the Holy Spirit'"(Acts 
          9:17).
 
 
  
           Chapters: 1 |  
            2 |  3 |  
            4 |  5 |  
            6 |  7 |  
            8 |  9 |  
            10 |  11 | 12 
            | 13 | 
            14 |  15 |  
            16 | Conclusion
 Preface 
            | Abbreviations 
            | Bibliography
 
  
    
 Content Copyright 2003 by J. Rodman Williams, 
  Ph.D. 
 
 
 
 
 
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