The following message was delivered at Grace Community Church in Panorama 
City, California, By John MacArthur Jr.  It was transcribed from the tape,
GC 90-59, titled "Charismatic Chaos" Part 8.  A copy of the tape can be 
obtained by writing Word of Grace, P.O. Box 4000, Panorama City, CA 91412.

I have made every effort to ensure that an accurate transcription of the 
original tape was made.  Please note that at times sentence structure may 
appear to vary from accepted English conventions.  This is due primarily to 
the techniques involved in preaching and the obvious choices I had to make in 
placing the correct punctuation in the article.

It is my intent and prayer that the Holy Spirit will use this transcription 
of the sermon, "Charismatic Chaos" Part 8, to strengthen and encourage the 
true Church of Jesus Christ.



                         Charismatic Chaos - Part 8

                  "What was Happening in the Early Church?"
                                     by
                               John MacArthur



Tonight we are going to go back to our study of this matter of Charismatic 
Chaos.  The message tonight will be a bit more technical and deal more 
closely with the texts of Scripture than some of ours in the past, in which 
we have been assessing the movement from a somewhat theological point of 
view.  Tonight we want to look a little more tightly at the Book of Acts, 
because the Book of Acts is basically the location for most of the 
Charismatic defense of their doctrine.  Experience is the foundation upon 
which much of the Charismatic system is built, and it is very important to 
identify that.  Experience is the authority that Charismatics most frequently 
cite to validate their teachings.  They have an experience-centered approach 
to truth that even influences the way they approach the Bible.  In fact, the 
Book of Acts, which is a journal of the Apostle's experiences, is where 
Charismatics usually turn in search of Biblical support for what they 
believe.  

Now, I want you to look with me to the Book of Acts tonight; we are going to 
be looking at a couple of chapters, just giving you a feel for some very key 
ones, in light of the Charismatic theology.  The Book of Acts is a 
historical narrative, in contrast, for example, to the Epistles of the New 
Testament which are didactic, or doctrinal, or instructive to the Church.  
This is a chronicle.  It is a story, really of the early Church experiences.  
The Epistles on the other hand contain detail instructions for believers 
throughout all the Church Age.  So in the Epistles you have the rather 
permanent instruction and doctrine for the Church.  In the Book of Acts you 
have a chronicle of the history of the Early Church experiences.  
Historically, Christians committed to a Biblical perspective have recognized 
the difference.  And it is an important difference to recognize.  Evangelical 
theologians, through the years, have drawn the heart of their doctrine from 
Bible passages intended to teach the Church.  They have understood that Acts 
is an inspired, historical record of the Apostolic period, not necessarily 
viewing every event or every phenomena that occurs there, as normative for 
the entire Church Age.  

But, on the other hand, Charismatics who have an insatiable craving for 
experiences and particularly for the experiences described in the Book of 
Acts, have assembled a doctrinal system that views the extraordinary events 
of the early Apostolic Age as necessary and continuing hallmarks of the Holy 
Spirit's work.  They view the Book of Acts as normative, or what should be 
normative for all Christians in all ages.  They see the workings of the Holy 
Spirit in the Book of Acts as tokens of spiritual power that are to be 
routinely expected by all Christians living in all times.  Now, that is a 
rather serious interpretive error.  In fact, it undermines the Charismatic's 
comprehension of Scripture.  It muddies several key Biblical issues, crucial 
to a right understanding of Scriptural doctrine.  

Gordon Fee, a writer, who himself is a Charismatic, commented on the 
hermeneutical difficulties posed by the way Charismatics typically approach 
the Book of Acts, with these words, and I quote,

      If the primitive church is normative, which expression of it is 
      normative?  Jerusalem?  Antioch?  Philippi?  Corinth?  That is, 
      why do not all the churches sell their possessions and have all 
      things in common?  Or further, is it at all legitimate to take 
      any descriptive statements as normative?  If so, how does one 
      distinguish those which are from those which are not?  For 
      example, must we follow the pattern of Acts 1:26 and select 
      leaders by lot?  Just exactly what role does historical 
      precedent play in Christian doctrine or in the understanding of 
      Christian experience?

Now, he introduces a very important point.  If we are going to take the Book 
of Acts as normative, then we must take the Book of Acts in its total as 
normative, and we are going to have some immensely difficult issues to deal 
with.  The fact of the matter is, that Acts was never intended to be the 
primary basis for teaching doctrine to the Church.  The Book of Acts records 
only the earliest days of the Church Age and shows the Church in tradition, 
coming out of the old age into the new, coming out, as it were, of the Old 
Testament into the New Testament.  The apostolic healings, and miracles, and 
signs, and wonders evident in the Book of Acts were not even common to all 
believers even in those days, but were uniquely restricted to the Apostles 
and those who worked alongside of them.  They were exceptional events, each 
with specific purposes and always associated with the ministry of the 
Apostles; and their frequency can be seen decreasing dramatically even from 
the beginning of the Book of Acts to the end.  

It seems as though, at the opening of the Book of Acts, there is a flurry of 
the miraculous, and towards the end it's absent.  The Book of Acts was 
written by Luke, the physician, as you know.  Acts covers a crucial period 
that started with the Church at Pentecost and ended about 30 years later with 
Paul in prison, following his third missionary journey.  Transitions are seen 
from beginning to end in the Book of Acts.  Changes come in almost every 
chapter as the old covenant fades away and the New Covenant comes in all its 
fullness.  Even the Apostle Paul was caught in some of those changes, which 
can be witnessed as you look into chapter 18 of Acts and chapter 21, and see 
him, although he is fully under the New Covenant, still exhibiting ties to 
the old, as indicated by his taking certain Jewish vows which were prescribed 
in the Old Testament.  

In the Book of Acts we are in a transition which moved from the Synagogue to 
the Church.  We are in a transition which moves away from an order of law 
into an order of grace.  The Church is transformed from a group of Jewish 
believers to a body made up of Jews and Gentiles united in Christ.  Believers 
at the beginning of Acts were related to God under an old pattern.  By the 
end, all believers were in Christ, living under a new pattern, indwelt by the 
Holy Spirit, in a new and unique relationship.  

Acts, therefore, covers an extraordinary time in history.  A time of 
transition from the old to the new.  And the transition it records, listen 
carefully, is never to be repeated.  There is only one time frame in which 
you move from the old to the new, that history does not come again.  It never 
will come again, and those elements that are true of that transition are not 
repeatable, for the transition itself needs no repetition.  Therefore, we 
must say, the only teachings in the Book of Acts which can be called 
normative for the Church are those that are explicitly taught elsewhere in 
Scripture.  

Now, as you look at the Book of Acts from the Charismatic viewpoint, looking 
at it as it were through their eyes, the major theological distinction of 
that movement has to be supported in the Book of Acts, and they think they can 
do it.  It is what I would call the doctrine of Subsequence.  That's a term 
that others have used.  The doctrine of Subsequence.  What that basically 
means is, that you get saved and sometimes subsequent to that, some later 
date, hopefully, you get the Baptism of the Holy Spirit.  That is primarily 
the distinctive doctrine of Pentecostal Charismatic theology; that when 
you're saved you receive the Lord Jesus Christ, you are redeemed: at some 
later time you get the Baptism of the Holy Spirit--subsequent to that saving 
work.  

They will also say, secondly, that it is often, some of them will say, 
always, associated with speaking in tongues.  Old line traditional 
Pentecostalism for the most part said, "The Baptism of the Spirit is 
subsequent to salvation and is always identified by speaking in tongues,"  
some will say, "Often identified by speaking in tongues."  The third 
component is that the Baptism of the Holy Spirit often manifests, or always 
manifests by speaking in tongues, is something to be earnestly, zealously, 
and passionately sought for.  Now, that is really the essence of the 
distinctive kind of Charismatic doctrine that so many of us are familiar 
with.  

They go to the Book of Acts to endeavor to prove this Subsequence doctrine, 
this tongues as an attendant proof of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit, and for 
some strange reason to even verify the seeking after the gift or the Baptism.  
The doctrine of Subsequence [which says] that there is for Christians, a 
baptism in the Spirit, distinct from and subsequent to the experience of 
salvation, and that that is somehow associated with the matter of tongues, is 
at the very heart of their theology.  And so we must be able to deal with 
this and I want us to do that tonight because we are really cutting into 
the very core of what they historically have taught.  

In his rather thorough investigation of Pentecostal theology, Frederick Dale 
Bruner wrote, "Pentecostals believe that the Spirit has baptized every 
believer into Christ's conversion, but that Christ has not baptized every 
believer into the Spirit Pentecost."  Not only do most Charismatics believe 
that the Baptism of the Spirit happens at some point after salvation, but 
that it only happens to those who seek after it diligently, passionately, and 
zealously.  And then as I said, when it does come it is usually, if not 
always attended by speaking in tongues.  Now, they are very definitive, may I 
say, about this doctrine.  May I also say, they are very vague about most 
other doctrines.  In most other areas of theology they are vague, but in this 
one they usually speak a clear word regarding what they believe.  

Now, some of them attempt to support their doctrine of Subsequence from the 
Book of Acts because they really can't go anywhere else.  Some of them don't 
attempt to support it at all: they just say it's true.  But the ones who 
attempt to support it have to go to the Book of Acts because there is no 
where else to go.  Let me show you why.  Maybe you say, "They ought to go the 
First Corinthians, doesn't that talk about the Holy Spirit and Tongues?"  It 
does.  Open your Bibles for a moment to 1Corinthians, chapter 12, and let's 
see how well they would fare with that doctrine in 1Corinthians 12.  
1Corinthians 12, verse 13 says, "For by one Spirit we were all baptized into 
one body, whether Jews or Greeks, whether slaves or free, and we were all 
made to drink of one Spirit."  Now, there you have the Holy Spirit as an 
agent in baptism, there you have the Baptism with the Holy Spirit, but you 
have absolutely nothing about Subsequence.  You have absolutely nothing about 
tongues, and you have absolutely nothing about seeking.  It is a fact that is 
stated.  There is no indication that it is subsequent to salvation; in fact, 
the very statement that it has happened to all of us, indicates that it is 
concurrent with salvation.  It cannot take place at some point after 
salvation or Paul couldn't say it was true of all Christians--but he does!


You say, "Well, maybe they ought to go 1Corinthians, chapter 14, doesn't that 
talk about tongues?  And doesn't that talk about the Holy Spirit?"  Yes, but 
if you go to 1Corinthians 14, you are not going to find any Subsequence 
there.  You are not going to find any discussion of the Baptism of the 
Spirit.  You are not going to find any connection of tongues with the Baptism 
of the Holy Spirit, and you are not going to find any authorization to seek 
after tongues or to seek after the baptism.  So you can't find any of that in 
1Corinthians 12 or 14, and if you have exhausted that section there isn't 
anything else in the New Testament that mentions tongues, except Acts.  So 
they are stuck with Acts, even though the clear teaching of 1Corinthians 12 
is that every believer has been baptized by the agency of the Holy Spirit, 
Christ using the Spirit to place the believer into the Body, and that occurs 
at salvation and it is true of every Christian.  There is no connection to 
tongues and it isn't something you seek for, it's something that god does for 
you at your salvation.  

And so they are left with no where to go but Acts.  And so they violate the 
nature of the Book of Acts, which is a historical record of the Early Church 
and the unique transitional apostolic period, and make it normative for 
everybody, because that is the only place they can go to defend their unique 
theology.  Now, when you go into the Book of Acts, and I want you to go there 
with me, Acts, chapter 2 to start with, when you go to the Book of Acts, 
you go to four chapters, chapter 2, chapter 8, chapter 10, and chapter 19. 
Obviously, we can't cover all of that, that would be an absolute 
impossibility; but those are the places that they go to support their view, 
and I want to give you a little bit of a feeling for this because you need to 
be able to understand and grasp this.

The truth of the matter is, that even the Book of Acts fails to support this 
Charismatic theology of Subsequence, proof by Tongues and the need to seek.  
For example, they want to go to Acts 2, 8, 10, 19, because those record four 
different occasions in which the Holy Spirit came.  In some of those 
occasions there is Tongues.  In some of those occasions there is the coming 
of the Holy Spirit subsequent to salvation.  But those four occasions are not 
uniform.  The first one describes the coming of the Holy Spirit on the day of 
Pentecost, the second one the coming of the Holy Spirit to the new group of 
believers in Samaria, the third one, Acts 10, the coming of the Holy Spirit 
to the Gentile converts, Cornelius and his house.  The fourth one, chapter 
19, the coming of the Holy Spirit to some hangover disciples of John the 
Baptist, who were still living under an Old Testament economy, because they 
didn't know the gospel yet; somehow it had missed them.  

All four of these groups have unique experiences of receiving the Holy 
Spirit, but their experiences are different.  For example, in Acts, chapter 
2, and Acts, chapter 8, believers do receive the Holy Spirit after salvation.  
In Acts, chapter 10, and chapter 19, believers received the Holy Spirit at 
the moment of salvation, so they are not in agreement on that issue.  The 
doctrine of Subsequence then cannot be convincingly defended even from the 
Book of Acts, because it isn't consistent.  You say, "What about Tongues?"  
In chapter 2, chapter 10, and chapter 19, tongues are mentioned, but in 
chapter 8, they are not.  So you can't even find anything that is normative 
at that point, at least that is written in Scripture.  You say, "Well, what 
about seeking after it?"  The believers in Acts 2, they say, were in the 
Upper Room seeking the Baptism of the Holy Spirit.  There is no seeking in 
chapter 8, there is no seeking in chapter 10, and there is no seeking in 
chapter 19.  The truth of the matter is, there is no seeking in chapter 2 
either; they were in the Upper Room doing nothing but patiently waiting.  It 
doesn't tell us that they were seeking; no seeking is mentioned.  

Now the point is clear.  To say that the Book of Acts presents a normal 
pattern for receiving the Holy Spirit attended by Tongues and for seeking 
that, presents a major problem because these separate accounts of four 
different groups who received the Holy Spirit are all different.  So if you 
are going to make the Book of Acts normative, which group is the normative 
group?  It is true that Christians at Pentecost, in Acts 2, and that Gentiles 
in Cornelius' household, in chapter 10, and the Jews at Ephesus who had only 
the Baptism of John, did receive the Holy Spirit and Tongues or languages 
followed, but because those three events occurred doesn't mean that they are 
to be the standard for every other Christian.

In fact, none of these passages, 2, 8, 10, or 19, give any indication that 
they are to be the norm for all believers for all time.  In fact, there is 
plenty of indication that they are not.  If Tongues were to be the normal 
experience then why aren't they mentioned in chapter 8, when the Samaritans 
received the Holy Spirit?  And why does the text of Acts 2 not say that 
everyone who believed, following Peter's sermon, and received the Holy 
Spirit, spoke in Tongues?  Do you remember when Peter preached on the day of 
Pentecost?  Three thousand people believed; it says in Acts 2:38 that they 
received the Holy Spirit.  Remember that?  Why didn't they speak in tongues?  
In order for something to be normative, it has to be common to everybody.  
And if the Holy Spirit wanted to say that Tongues was a normative attendant 
to the coming of the Holy Spirit, the normative time for it to happen would 
have been among the 3,000 that were converted.  Right?

John Stott reasons, 

      The 3,000 do not seem to have experienced the same miraculous 
      phenomena, the rushing mighty wind, the tongues of flame, or the 
      speech in foreign languages; at least nothing is said about 
      these things.  Yet because of God's assurance through Peter, they 
      must have inherited the same promise and received the same gift, 
      that is, the Holy Spirit.  Nevertheless, there was this 
      difference between them: the 129 were regenerate already and 
      received the Baptism of the Spirit only after the waiting upon 
      God for 10 days; the 3,000 on the other hand were unbelievers, 
      received the forgiveness of sin and the gift of the Holy Spirit 
      simultaneously, and it happened immediately--they repented and 
      believed without any need to wait at all. 

      This distinction between the two companies, the 120 and the 
      3,000, is of great importance for the norm for today must 
      surely be the second group, the three thousand, and not as is 
      often supposed, the first group.  The fact that the experience 
      of the 120 was in two distinct stages was due simply to 
      historical circumstances; they could not have received the 
      Pentecostal gift before Pentecost.  But those historical 
      circumstances have long since ceased to exist.  We live after 
      the event of Pentecost, like the 3,000 did.  With us therefore, 
      as with them, the forgiveness of sins and the gift or Baptism of 
      the Spirit, are received together.

Without question, Acts 2 is a key passage from which Pentecostals and 
Charismatics develop their theology of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit, and it 
would be worth our while to just look briefly at it.  Look at the first four 
verses of Acts 2, 

      When the day of Pentecost had come, they were all together in 
      one place.  And suddenly there came from heaven a noise like a 
      violent, rushing wind, and it filled the whole house where they 
      were sitting.  And there appeared to them tongues as of fire 
      distributing themselves, and they rested on each one of them.  
      And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak 
      with other tongues (or languages) as the Spirit was giving them 
      utterance.

Now, that describes what happened on the day of Pentecost.  As noted before, 
the Pentecostals and Charismatics say that is the doctrine of Subsequence.  
They say, 

      Look, these people were already believers.  They had already 
      been saved.  And so they were saved first, at some earlier time, 
      and here they are sitting around waiting for the Holy Spirit.

But the obvious answer to that is, "Well, of course, because the Holy Spirit 
hasn't yet come at all, and doesn't come until the day of Pentecost."  
Certainly there is subsequence here, and certainly we would agree with the 
Pentecostal theology that they had experienced salvation.  I mean, you can go 
all the way back into Luke 10:20, where Jesus tells His apostles to, 
"Rejoice, that your names are recorded in heaven."  You can go back to John 
15:3, where Jesus says to the same apostles, "You are already clean because 
of the Word which I have spoken to you," so He affirms that they have a right 
relationship to God.  We could call them saved.  And so people say, "Well, 
they were saved way back then, and see, the Holy Spirit comes later!"  But, 
how much insight do you have to have to realize that, of course it's 
subsequent to their salvation because they were really saved prior to the 
arrival of the Holy Spirit!  Once the Holy Spirit came, there is no need for 
a waiting for Him to come again, because He already comes to indwell His 
Church on the day of Pentecost, and from then on continually indwells His 
Church from the moment of salvation forward.

Most Charismatics would even go a step further.  They would suggest that not 
only were the disciples saved before the day of Pentecost, but watch this, 
that the disciples also received the Holy Spirit before the day of Pentecost.  
But they just got a little bit of Him.  You need to remember this, if you 
confront a Charismatic sometime and you say, "You don't believe that when 
you're saved you received the Holy Spirit."  They will say, "Yes, we do.  Oh, 
yes we do."  And it's true they do.  They believe that you receive the Spirit 
in some small measure, but the Baptism of the Spirit is an explosion of the 
Spirit's power in fullness that comes into your life.  So you don't want to 
accuse Charismatics of denying that a Christian has the Holy Spirit.  They 
would say that you have the Holy Spirit in a limited way, but you don't have 
the fullness of the Spirit and the power of the Spirit.  They would go back, 
for example, to John, chapter 20.  And in John 20, verses 21 and 22, Jesus 
looks at His disciples, and the Scripture says "Jesus breathed on them, and 
said to them, 'Receive the Holy Spirit."  Wow!  That's interesting.  

Way back in John 20, He's saying that to them, "Receive the Holy Spirit," 
that's before the Holy Spirit is even sent on the day of Pentecost.  And 
according to standard Charismatic interpretation of that text, they say, 
"Jesus then, was giving them the Holy Spirit, in a limited way.  They had to 
wait for the higher level explosion of the Baptism of the Spirit that gave 
them their real power."  We have to ask the question, "Is that really 
correct?"  When in John 20:21-22, Jesus said, "Receive the Holy Spirit," was 
that a statement of fact?  If you look very carefully at that text, the 
Charismatic view doesn't really hold up under scrutiny.  The passage doesn't 
say the disciple actually received the Holy Spirit, it doesn't say that.  It 
simply said that Jesus blew on them, a graphic sort of an illustration, and 
said, "Receive the Holy Spirit."  We would have to conclude that it was a 
pledge, that it was a promise that wasn't fulfilled until the day of 
Pentecost.  In fact, all you have to do is look at them to know that they 
hadn't received the Holy Spirit.  Ensuing statements in John 20 seem to 
confirm the disciples didn't receive the Spirit in the Upper Room, because 
eight days later, [when] He came to where they were, they were hiding.  They 
were full of fear, they were in a locked room.  This is more than a week 
after He breathed on them, and more than a week after He promised them, and 
they hadn't gone any where or done anything that would manifest the Spirit's 
presence.  

The strongest arguments, however, appear in the early verses in the Book of 
Acts.  Verse 4, 

      Gathering them together, He commanded them not to leave 
      Jerusalem, but to wait for what the Father had promised, 
      "Which," He said, "you heard of from Me; for John baptized with 
      water, but you shall be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many 
      days from now."

Jesus said it hasn't happen yet, it's been promised, but it hasn't happened.  
It's yet to come.  That goes all the way back to John 14:16, where Jesus 
said, "I will ask the father, and He will give you another Helper, that he 
may be with you."  They are still waiting.  He gave them the promise when He 
breathed on them, but it hasn't yet been fulfilled.  Acts 1:8, "You shall 
receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you."  Which means, He 
hasn't come yet.  If the Spirit had come upon them in John 20, He wouldn't 
have said, "He hasn't come yet."  

Two other passages demonstrate very clearly that the Holy Spirit wasn't come 
until the day of Pentecost, John 7:39, listen to what Jesus said, "This He 
spoke of the Spirit," you know when He said, "out of you bellies shall flow 
rivers of living water."  "This He spoke of the Spirit," writes John, "whom 
those who believed in Him were to receive," but listen to this, "for the 
Spirit was not yet given, because Jesus was not yet," what? "glorified" (that 
means ascended).  That passage explicitly states that the Spirit would not 
come until Jesus had been glorified, and He wouldn't be glorified until He 
ascended into heaven.  So until Jesus ascended there in Acts 1, went into 
heaven and sent the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost, the Spirit had not 
[yet] come.

In John 16:7, Jesus told the disciples, "I tell you the truth, it is to your 
advantage that I go away; for if I do not go away, the Helper shall not come 
to you; but if I go, I will send Him."  The same thing, He's not coming until 
I get there.  So the Holy Spirit had not come, they did not receive a little 
bit of the Holy Spirit, only later to get an explosion.  They didn't receive 
any of the indwelling of the Spirit of God until the day of Pentecost.  At 
that point the Spirit of God took up residence in them and they were baptized 
by Christ through the agency of the Holy Spirit into the body.  So we are at 
a transition period, an obvious transition period between the old economy and 
the new.  And these apostles are caught right in that transition with the 
others who made up the 120.  

Now, what about the Charismatic idea that the Holy Spirit is to be sought,  
eagerly sought?  We have no indication in the Upper Room that anybody was 
seeking anything.  There is no evidence that they were pleading or seeking 
anything; they were just waiting.  Nor is there any indication throughout the 
entire Book of Acts that anybody was seeking after some baptizing work of 
the Holy Spirit.  There is not one incident, not one incident, even where the 
phenomena of the coming of the Spirit and tongues occurs that indicates that 
anybody in the Early Church ever sought such an experience.  Not one.  This 
must effect somehow the Pentecostal doctrine!  

When the Holy Spirit came at Pentecost a new order was established and 
since that time the Holy Spirit comes to every believer at the moment of 
faith and indwells that believer in a permanent, abiding relationship.  
That's why Romans 8:9 says, "If anyone doesn't have the Spirit of Christ, he 
does not belong to Him."  Conversely, if you belong to Christ, you have the 
Holy Spirit.  Paul even says to the Corinthians, who were so fouled up, 
"What?  Know you not that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit which you 
have of God, and you are not your own?  You have been bought with a price," 
chapter 6.  We have all been made to drink of the same Spirit--every 
Christian.  

So, what you have in Acts 2 then, is the initial reception of the Holy 
Spirit.  The disciples were baptized by the Spirit accompanied by a sound 
from heaven like a mighty rushing wind, cloven tongues as of fire, rested on 
each of them.  At that point, they being filled with the Spirit, began to 
speak in other languages.  The miraculous ability to speak the languages of 
the people who gathered for Pentecost, to declare to them the wonderful works 
of God, had a definite purpose: it was to be a sign of judgment on 
unbelieving Israel.  It was and unfolded to be, a sign of inclusion of the 
other groups into the one Church, and we will see that in a moment, and it 
confirmed the Apostles' spiritual authority.  It had a very distinct purpose.

First of all, as I said, it was a sign to unbelieving Israel.  Do you 
remember that the prophet Isaiah had said, "If you don't listen to God when 
He speaks a language you can understand, the day is going to come when he 
speaks a language that you can't understand."  That's a judgment.  And when 
they began to speak languages that were foreign to the dwellers of Jerusalem, 
God was saying that it has come; the time has come.  You have committed the 
ultimate atrocity in the crucifixion of the Messiah; you didn't listen when I 
spoke in your language; now, here's a language you won't understand.  And 
this was an indication of God's judgment about to fall on them as a nation, 
which judgment fell in no small way in 70 A.D.  Also, this unique gift of 
tongues acted as a verification sign of the legitimacy of each new group 
that was added to the one Body of Christ, as we shall see.  

And so it had some very specific and wonderful purpose.  It was a unique 
wonder associated with Pentecost.  Pentecost is not repeatable, and so 
neither is the necessity of such a sign, except on very rare and unique 
occasions also recorded in the Book of Acts.  By the way, an interesting 
footnote, in 1976, Pentecostals held a world conference in Jerusalem.  A 
world congress in Jerusalem, and I am quoting the program, "To celebrate the 
ongoing miracle of Pentecost."  Delegates came from all over the world and 
had to use interpreters and headphones!  Now, just think that one through:  
so they could understand in their own language!  That is not the ongoing 
miracle of Pentecost.  

Now, let's go to chapter 8, and see what happens in Acts, chapter 8, and why 
that's important.  They use this as a proof text.  It discusses the 
persecution of the Church in the early part of the chapter, and the 
scattering of the disciples out of Jerusalem throughout Judea and Samaria.  
Now, the result comes down in verse 14; they go into Samaria, receive the 
Word of God; they believe.  And you remember there was a choice preacher in 
Samaria.  Who was he?  Philip.  "And when the word came back to the Apostles 
in Jerusalem," verse 14, "that Samaria had received the Word of God, they 
sent them Peter and John."  They are going to send the Apostles to find out 
about this.  "They came down and prayed for them, that they might receive the 
Holy Spirit.  For He had not yet fallen upon any of them; they had simply 
been baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.  Then they began laying their 
hands on them, and they were receiving the Holy Spirit."

You say, "Now wait a minute, this proves their point, there is Subsequence 
here."  Yes, I didn't say there wasn't; there is Subsequence in chapter 2, 
there is Subsequence in chapter 8, there just isn't any in chapter 10 or 
chapter 19, so it's not normative; but here it has a very distinct purpose.  
The Charismatics would say, "See, here's Subsequence.  They had been 
baptized, they had been saved, and later on they get the Holy Spirit.  They 
were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus, but they hadn't received the 
Holy Spirit.  That proves the point."  It does not.  There is a reason for 
this, let me tell you what it is.  

The Jews hated the Samaritans.  Would you understand that to be true from you 
knowledge of New Testament times?  A Samaritan was a "half-breed."  A 
Samaritan was a Jew who thought so little of being Jewish that he 
intermarried with the Gentile, and polluted, from the Jewish viewpoint, his 
race, his racial identity.  Samaritans were hated.  It is said that Jews 
traveling from the south to the north would go clear around Samaria just so 
they wouldn't have to walk through it and pollute themselves by being there.  
That's what made it so unique when it says in Scripture that, "Jesus must 
needs to go through Samaria," Jews didn't do that.  They looked down on 
Samaritans.  And the reason for this little interval between the Samaritan 
salvation and the coming of the Spirit was in order that the Apostles might 
get there.  

Why?  So that the Apostles would see the Samaritans had been saved, and that 
they would see that the Spirit of God came upon them.  Now it is possible 
that they spoke in tongues and it is not recorded here.  It is possible that 
there were other phenomena that occurred which made it manifest to the 
Apostles that they were indeed receiving the Holy Spirit.  The point is, God 
didn't want those Samaritans receiving the Holy Spirit until two Jewish 
Apostles were there, because if the Samaritans had their own little private 
Pentecost, it would be very hard for the Jews to accept them as one in the 
same body and the same Church, the hatred of the Jews towards them being so 
great.  If the Samaritans had received the Holy Spirit at the moment of 
salvation without any supernatural sign or fanfare, without the visible 
presence of the Apostles to mark it and see it and note it and report it; 
if it had been purely a Samaritan event, the Church born at Pentecost of the 
Jews would never have accepted it as bonafide, or with great difficulty done 
that.  If the Samaritans would have started their own Christian group, the 
age old rivalry and hatred could have been perpetuated with the Jewish Church 
competing against a Samaritan Church.

And so God waited until the Jewish Apostles, the most significant ones, Peter 
and John showed up, and then he demonstrated that these had truly been 
converted, and they were being baptized by the Holy Spirit into the same body 
as the Jews were in; the same Body of Christ, the same Church.  It was also 
important that the Apostles be present so that the Samaritans would 
understand the power and authority of the Apostles, for they needed to be 
subject to the Apostles' doctrine.  

Now, because of all of these matters in the transition, there was 
Subsequence, and there was an interval between the time they received Christ 
under the ministry of Philip, and the time they received the Holy Spirit when 
the Apostles could be there, because the crucial transition going on in the 
Early Church was so essential to Church unity and Apostolic teaching and 
authority.  The amazing thing, first of all, was a revival among the 
Samaritans, and even more amazing, these outcast "half-breeds" received the 
same Holy Spirit we have and were placed into the same Body, and now we have 
to love them and accept them as brothers and sisters.  That's why the Holy 
Spirit delayed that.  It was an audio-visual lesson, if you will, that the 
middle wall of partition that Paul talks about in Ephesians 2 was broken 
down.  

I say there must have been some powerful demonstration, I don't know what it 
was; otherwise Simon wouldn't have come along and tried to buy the power.  So 
when the Holy Spirit came upon them there must have been some visible 
manifestation of that and it could well have been similar to what occurred on 
the day of Pentecost; that would make sense.  What was really crucial though, 
was that everybody understand that there weren't two churches, there was just 
one--both had received the same thing.  

Now go to chapter 10.  Chapter 10 takes us the next step in the unfolding of 
the Book of Acts.  It starts in Jerusalem and goes to Samaria, and then it 
begins to move out to the uttermost part of the world.  And now we meet the 
first Gentile convert in Acts chapter 10.  And you know the wonderful story 
about Cornelius.  God gives a vision to Peter.  Tells him that I am no 
respecter of persons.  And after the vision, three men came to the house 
where Peter was staying and explained that they had been sent by Cornelius, 
this Gentile, and that Peter was supposed to go and teach Cornelius about 
God.  Now, Peter had just had a vision, in which God had set him up for this.  
Peter swallowed his Jewish prejudice, which already had been dented severely 
by Samaritan conversions.  And now he agrees to accompany these Gentiles back 
to Caesarea, where Cornelius lived.  

Now, you've got to understand, that for a Jew to get near a Gentile is a 
serious thing.  They didn't ever want to eat a meal cooked by a Gentile; they 
didn't want to eat with a utensil touched by a Gentile; they didn't go into a 
Gentile house; they didn't even want Gentile dust on their feet: when they 
came back into Jerusalem they shook the dust off of their feet so they 
wouldn't carry Gentile dirt into the Holy Land.  They looked down on 
Gentiles.

Peter goes there.  It says, "The Holy Spirit," verse 44, "fell on all those 
who were listening to the message.  And all the circumcised believers who had 
come with peter were amazed."  They couldn't believe it!  What's happening?  
Gentiles are getting the Holy Spirit!  And they said, "The gift of the Holy 
Spirit is being poured out on Gentiles also."  You know, they are kind of 
like Jonah; they were looking for somewhere where they can cry.  "For they 
were hearing them speaking with tongues and exalting God.  And then Peter 
answered," I love this answer, "Well, surely no one can refuse the water for 
these to be baptized who have received the Holy Spirit just as we did, can 
he?"  It's almost like he said, "I wish there was some way out of this guys, 
but there isn't.  It has happened.  It's tough to swallow, but it has 
happened."  "And he ordered them to be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ."

Would you please notice here that there is no subsequence.  They were saved; 
the Spirit came; they were placed in the Body.  There is no Subsequence here, 
but again they received the Holy Spirit attendant with tongues.  Why?  So 
that Peter, and John, and all the circumcised (that's all the Jewish 
Christians) would know that the Gentiles got the same thing the Samaritans 
got, and the Samaritans got the same thing we got.  Guess what?  We are all 
what?  We are all one.  We are all one.  Gentiles are now a part of the Body 
of Christ.  

Peter, I love it, in chapter 11, Peter goes back to give his report.  It's 
almost comical.  He goes back to give his report.  Here's his report, verse 
15, he says, 

      Well, as I began to speak, the Holy Spirit fell upon them, just 
      as He did upon us at the beginning!  Can you believe that?  The 
      same thing.  And I remembered the word of the Lord, how He used 
      to say, "John baptized with water, but you shall be baptized 
      with the Holy Spirit."  If God therefore gave to them the same 
      gift as He gave to us also after believing in the Lord Jesus 
      Christ, who was I that I could stand in God's way?

And you can know why he said that, as soon as he said "they got the same 
thing we got," somebody on the council would have said, "Well, why didn't you 
stop them?  Peter, how could you let it happen?"  And Peter said, "I couldn't 
stop it, I couldn't stop it!  It just happened.  I'm sorry fellows, God was 
doing it, I couldn't stop it."  Shocked as they were they couldn't deny what 
happened.  They held their peace, they glorified God, they acknowledged that 
God had graciously granted life and salvation to the Gentiles.  Verse 18, 
"When they heard it, they quieted down," and you know it that there was noise 
going on in there, "and they glorified God, saying, 'Well then, God has 
granted to the Gentiles also the repentance that leads to life."

God made sure that the Apostles were there to see it, the Jewish Apostles.  
God made sure the Spirit came.  God made sure the tongues were there, so 
nobody would think it was any different than Pentecost, so that everybody 
would understand: "Jew, Gentile, Samaritan--one in Christ."  But these 
Gentiles received the Holy Spirit at the moment of conversion, they were 
baptized with the Spirit of God at that very moment.  Then they spoke with 
tongues to prove that there was no difference, they were part of the Church, 
and there is no Subsequence here at all.  None whatsoever.  The norm then, 
from here on out, is that at the time of salvation, the reception of the 
Spirit comes at the same time.  

Now, there is one final group in the Book of Acts, chapter 19, we can briefly 
look at this group.  This is a fascinating group.  These are just some loose 
people roaming around, who somehow missed the whole deal that was going on.  
This is another group in transition.  It is a fascinating group.  Verse one, 
"And it came about that while Apollos was at Corinth, Paul having passed 
through the upper country came to Ephesus, and he found some disciples."  
Here's some people around Ephesus.  "He said to them, 'Did you receive the 
Holy Spirit when you believed?'  And they said to him, 'No, we have not even 
heard whether there is a Holy Spirit.  What are you talking about?'  'Well, 
into what then were you baptized?'  And they said, 'Into John's baptism.'"  
Oh, we know who they are.  They were, when John the Baptist was preaching in 
the wilderness, baptized by him in preparation for the Messiah.  But they 
didn't have television, radio, newspapers--they hadn't heard that the Messiah 
came and went!  "We were baptized into John's baptism, and Paul said, 'Well, 
John baptized with the baptism of repentance, (you know, turning from your 
sins) telling the people to believe in Him who was coming after him, that is, 
in Jesus.'  And when they heard this, (and by the way, a lot more, they got 
the whole gospel) they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.  And when 
Paul laid hands upon them, the Holy Spirit came on them, and they began 
speaking with tongues and prophesying.  And there were in all about twelve 
men."  

Fascinating, fascinating; just a loose group of Old Testament Saints roaming 
around waiting for the Messiah to arrive, and He had come and gone and they 
didn't know about it.  Now they weren't seeking the Holy Spirit, they weren't 
seeking the Baptism of the Holy Spirit.  I will tell you something else--they 
weren't even saved, in New Testament terms.  "They said, 'We don't even know 
anything about a Holy Spirit.'"  They certainly knew there was a Holy Spirit, 
but what they were saying was, "We didn't know about His coming, we don't 
know what you're talking about."  They hadn't even heard about this, because 
they didn't even know about Jesus Christ.  And Paul began to probe and he 
realized they were disciples of John the Baptist, not Jesus Christ.  Old 
Testament people, Old Testament Saints in transition, still hanging on, 
looking for the Messiah, twenty years after John the Baptist had died.  He 
says, "You're to be commended," Paul does, "You know, I mean, you're to be 
commended.  You repented as John taught, but now you have got to go the next 
step, and that is, you have got to receive the One that John predicted was 
coming--Jesus Christ."  

He spoke about Christ.  By the way, he didn't speak about the Holy Spirit, He 
spoke about Christ.  They received Christ and God gave them the Holy Spirit.  
You don't seek the Holy Spirit, you seek Christ and He gives you the Holy 
Spirit.  Paul wasn't trying to teach them how to get to a second level.  
There is no Subsequence here.  What was missing from them was not information 
about the Baptism of the Holy Spirit, as some Charismatics would want us to 
believe.  What was missing was information about Jesus Christ.  When they 
believed they were immediately baptized.  Paul laid his hands on them, making 
an apostolic identification with them: they received tongues.  Why?  So they 
would also be included as sort of the last group.  You had Jews, you had 
Gentiles, Samaritans, and even had a group of Old Testament "Hangover 
Saints," and they were all in one Church.  

You might even say that the whole theme of the Book of Acts, is to show how 
Jesus' prayer in John 17 was answered.  Remember His prayer in John 17?  
Jesus prayed, "Father, that they may be one, even as Thou Father, art in Me, 
and I in Thee, that they may also be one in Us."  That was His prayer and I 
really believe that you see in the Book of Acts the answer to that prayer 
as the Lord puts the Church together, baptizing by the Spirit into the Body, 
Jews, Samaritans, Gentiles, and these wonderful Old Testament Saints.  That 
brought everybody together.  

Now these events, beloved, are not to be the Church's pattern as a whole.  As 
I said a long time ago, there is no specific pattern in any one case that is 
airtight.  They don't reflect to normal experience of Christians today.  Get 
this: they don't even reflect to normal experience of Christians in the Early 
Church.  After the few who had that experience on the day of Pentecost, and 
the few in Samaria, and the household of Cornelius, and this small group of 
twelve people, we don't know about any other believers who had that same 
experience, even during the Book of Acts!  And Paul goes many places.  And 
Peter and John went many places, and we don't see the pattern of this being 
repeated over and over and over again.  You can't make the tragic mistake of 
teaching the experience of the Apostles, but rather you must experience the 
teaching of the Apostles.  Acts reveals a new era, a new epoch, a new age, 
and not what is to be the constant pattern for every Christian throughout 
history.  

Are we supposed to seek the Baptism of the Holy Spirit?  No, Simon tried 
that.  He wanted the power; he wanted to buy it.  Still people do that, they 
want the power; they want to buy it.  We are not to seek it.  Charismatics 
seem always out for more, and Paul was always insisting that Christ was 
enough, wasn't he?  Any doctrine that adds something to Christ, as some 
Charismatics seem to desire, stands self-condemned.  Michael Green wrote, 

      The Charismatics were always out for power.  They were elated by 
      spiritual power and were always seeking shortcuts to power.  
      It's the same today.  Paul's reply is to boast, not of his power, 
      but of his weakness through which alone the power of Christ 
      could shine.  Paul knew all about the marks of an Apostle and 
      Signs and Wonders and mighty deeds, but he knew that the power 
      of an Apostle or of any other Christian came from the patient 
      endurance of suffering such as he had, with his thorn in the 
      flesh, or the patient endurance of reviling and hardship, such 
      as he was subjected to in the course of his missionary work.  
      
      The Charismatics had a theology of the resurrection and its 
      power; they needed to learn afresh the secret of the Cross and 
      its shame, which yet produced the power of God.  The 
      Charismatics were always out for evidence.  That's why tongues, 
      and healings, and miracles are so highly esteemed among them, 
      but Paul knows that we walk by faith while we are in this life, 
      not by sight.  There are many times when God calls upon us to 
      trust Him in the dark, without any supporting evidence.  

Charismatics today, of course, share those same shortcomings that Michael 
Green points out.  The thirst for something more, the quest for greater 
power, the desire to see evidences as familiar today as in the apostolic 
time.  They are more compatible, by the way, I think, with the spirit of 
Simon, than they are with the Spirit of God.  Instead of seeking for power 
and miraculous evidences and the repetition of the unique events of a 
transitional apostolic era, all Christians, Charismatics and non-Charismatics 
should seek to know Christ, the fellowship of His suffering, the conformity 
to His death, because that is what releases resurrection power that is 
already resident in the indwelling Holy Spirit.  

I just want to say this; I don't want to be misunderstood.  I don't for one 
moment disregard the fact that the Spirit of God can, while indwelling the 
believer, uniquely fill, empower, direct, lead, and touch the Christian.  I 
don't want to use my own experience as a basis for that, but I am very 
confident by reading the New Testament that the resident Spirit of God, who 
lives within you, longs to fill your life, Ephesians 5:18.  And what that 
tells me is though you have the Holy Spirit, you may not be experiencing the 
fullness of His power.  And there are those times in our Christian 
experience, when by our obedience and by the Word of Christ dwelling in us 
richly, and by our yieldingness to the way of God, the Spirit of God's power 
is released, and we feel the unique touch of His power in our ministry, in 
our witness, and in our lives.  And we seek those times.  They are not 
mystically apprehended.  They come as we yield ourselves to Him and He works 
His sovereign way with us.  

And so I don't want to be misunderstood, as if to say, that the Spirit places 
you into the Body of Christ, as it were, at the moment of your salvation and 
then just hangs around to watch what's going on.  He doesn't.  He's active in 
ministering in marvelous and thrilling ways, enabling and ennobling you to do 
those things which otherwise would be impossible: gain victory over your 
flesh and accomplish the purpose of God through ministry.  And so we seek the 
full expression of the Spirit of God in the life of every believer.  We are 
not seeking Him; we are seeking to know His fullness as we yield ourselves to 
Him.

Well, I hope that helps you to get a grip on a very important issue.  There 
is more that I could say--time is gone.  Let's bow in a word of prayer.  

Father, thank you for the clarity, with which the Word of God yields its 
truth; that if we simply read it and look openly and honestly at it, it will 
show us the truth.  Father, we do pray for dear brothers and sisters who get 
caught up in wrong theology.  And the great tragedy of it is twofold.  One, 
they therefore, cannot glorify you for what you are truly doing; and 
secondly, they cut themselves off from the genuine means of sanctification, 
and so they forfeit the true power.  

Father, how deceptive this process is, of operating under illusions about how 
you work, about your truth, and about the ministry of the Holy Spirit.  How 
dishonoring to you and debilitating to the believer, to so live and to try to 
order his Christian experience.  We pray Lord that you will give us clarity 
of mind, that you will help us to discern your truth and walk in it, for your 
glory, in the Savior's Name.  Amen.       


Transcribed by Tony Capoccia of

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