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- Plugging in the drill
Plugging in the drill
- By Dr. Jim Denison
- Published 03/26/2008
- 2008 , Holy Spirit
In 1981 Janet and I purchased our first house together. It needed much work, so my Granddad came down to help. He lost his farm in the Depression and became a carpenter, working until he died a few years ago at the age of 99. He built a tool shed, sheet-rocked the garage, redid the kitchen, and generally transformed the house for us.
I still remember his reaction his first day with us, when he looked at my tools. I had a socket wrench, a hammer, and a few screwdrivers to my name. So he immediately took me to Sears and bought me a drill. He had to show me how to use it, to change the bits and so on. I've used it ever since. But one thing he didn't have to explain was the fact that the drill must be plugged in to a power source. Unplugged, it's of little use. There's nothing wrong with it--it just needs power.
So with Christians today.
In these days before Pentecost, we are walking through the Book of Acts together. Yesterday we surveyed the blueprint for Jesus' church: God's people, working by his power, accomplish his purpose of witnessing to the world, beginning where they are. Without his power, none of this is possible.
So Acts tells us the story of the Spirit's fall on the church. It is a remarkable narrative. The first Christians are meeting in an upstairs room of a house in
Now comes the day of Pentecost, one of the three great Jewish holidays. Every male Jew living within twenty miles of
Suddenly, while the first Christians are in prayer in their upper room, the Holy Spirit moves in a way never before seen in human history. Previously the Spirit would come "upon" people for a particular purpose and time (cf. Judges
What happened next? What does this event matter today? Let's continue in the morning.
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