God Is Not Nervous!
I wasn't used to church services where everyone would pray all together at one time, and this
bothered me at first. I started to say something about it a time or two to straighten these Full
Gospel folks out. In fact, I once heard someone else tell them, "Now God's not hard of hearing,
you know."
But the Full Gospel folks just replied, "He's not nervous either!"
When these Full Gospel folks invited Christians
to come and pray at the altar, I would go forward to pray with them. But I would get as far away
from them as I could because they bothered me all praying at the same time like that. I would
get off in the corner somewhere and pray quietly.
However, after a while the thought occurred to me, These folks knew about divine healing and
my church didn't. They might know something more here in this area of praying than I do too.
So I decided I would read through the Book of Acts and see how the Early Church prayed.
As I read, I couldn't find one place where they called on "Deacon Brown" or "Sister Jones" to
lead in prayer while everyone else remained silent. Instead, I found to my utter amazement
that the Early Church all prayed at the same time!
ACTS 4:23,24
23 And being let go, they went to their own company, and reported all that the chief
priests and elders had said unto them.
24 And when they heard that, they lifted up their voice to God WITH ONE ACCORD....
The thing that cinched it with me was when I got down to Acts chapter 16 where it says that
Paul and Silas were in jail. Their backs were bleeding; their feet were in stocks. Yet at midnight
they prayed and sang praises to God. And the Bible says, ". . . and the prisoners heard them"
(Acts 16:25). Until that time, I had believed in praying to God, but I believed in being quiet
about it. But then I saw that Paul and Silas didn't pray quietly, not even in jail.
The next time I went to the Full Gospel service and they called us to the altar to pray, I got right
in the middle of them and lifted my voice just like they did. When I did, I felt a release in my
spirit. The Word of God will set you free. Jesus said, ". . . ye shall know the truth, and the truth
shall make you free" (John 8:32). God's Word is truth, and it will set you free.
The Baptism in the Holy Spirit
These Full Gospel folks preached something else I couldn't quite accept — the baptism of the
Holy Ghost with the evidence of speaking in other tongues. I believed in the Holy Ghost and in
the baptism of the Holy Ghost. I knew I hadn't received the baptism in the Holy Ghost, but I
believed in it. But that "tongues" business — that was a bitter pill for me to swallow.
I had been warned against speaking with tongues.
But fellowshipping with Full Gospel people
who did speak in tongues was kind of like one fellow down in East Texas said: "It's like a
slippery creek bank. You keep fooling around it long enough and you'll slip in."
As a young boy preacher and pastor of a community church, I meditated and thought on the
scriptures concerning the Holy Spirit, and I came to the conclusion that these Full Gospel folks
were wrong about tongues. I concluded that tongues weren't necessary; they weren't for us
today.
I decided that believers could receive this enduement of power — the baptism in the Holy
Ghost — without speaking in tongues. That was my own opinion, of course. It certainly wasn't
Scripture.
I said to the Lord in my heart, "Lord, I know these folks are good people. They are thoroughly
saved — born again — and they knew about divine healing when my church didn't. I certainly
do believe in the Holy Ghost. And I believe in the infilling of the Holy Ghost, the enduement of
power from on High.
Then I said to the Lord, "I sense a lack of power in my own life, and I know I need the infilling
of the Holy Ghost. And I expect to receive, all right. But I am of the opinion that tongues don't
go along with the baptism in the Holy Ghost, and that they are not for us today."
Immediately the Lord spoke to my heart. I knew it was the Holy Spirit speaking through the
Word of God. That same still small voice that had brought me off a bed of sickness and into
divine healing asked me, "What does Acts 2:39 say?"
I quoted the scripture, "For THE PROMISE is unto you, and to your children, and to all that are
afar off, even as many as the Lord our God shall call" (Acts 2:39).
Then the still small voice said, "What promise is that?"
I said, "The last part of Acts 2:38 says,'. . . and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.' So
the reference here is to the promise of the gift of the Holy Ghost."
Then I hastened to add,
"But, Lord, I believe in the Holy Ghost. It's tongues I am not sure about." (I had changed it a
little bit this time to "I'm not sure.")
The Holy Spirit always leads us in line with the Word of God. The Word and the Spirit agree (1
John 5:7,8). I am not in favor of just following voices, because you can go wrong following
voices; you can follow the wrong voice (1 Cor. 14:10). But you can never go wrong following
the voice or the leading of the Holy Spirit because He will always lead you in line with the Word
of God (John 16:13; 1 John 5:6-8).
Jesus said, ". . . he [the Holy Spirit] shall receive of mine, and shall shew it unto you" (John
16:14). And ". . . he shall not speak of himself [But, thank God, He does speak!]; but
whatsoever he shall hear, that shall he speak . . ." (John 16:13).
Every born-again believer has the Holy Ghost in a measure through the new birth (John 3:5-8;
John 4:14). But this is not the same as the baptism in the Holy Spirit — the enduement of
power from on High that Jesus talked about in Luke 24:49, Acts 1:8, and John 7:38. Just
because someone is born again doesn't mean he is filled with the Holy Spirit.
FFT: The promised power is for you!
ACTION POINT: Believe & Receive!
INTERACTIVE SESSION: Have you been baptized in the Holy Spirit since you believe?
No comments:
Post a Comment