Sunday
Morning Bible Study
March
14, 2010
7:37-39 Living
Water
Do people see Jesus? Is the gospel
preached? Does it speak to the broken hearted? Does it build up the church? Milk
– Meat – Manna Preach for a decision
We are with Jesus in the seventh month of the year on the Jewish calendar,
sometime around October and November.
The “seventh month” was a busy one for Israel – It started with the Feast of Trumpets, then the
Day of Atonement,
and in the middle of the month was a celebration that lasted a week, the Feast of Tabernacles (or,
“Sukkoth”).
We saw how Jesus’ brothers wanted Him to go to Jerusalem with them and make
a big splash, to get a lot of attention.
Jesus preferred to follow His brothers quietly and He didn’t raise a lot of
attention for the first part of the week.
There have been a lot of questions that people had about Jesus, and He’s
stirred up a little bit of controversy as people began to believe in Him as the
Messiah.
We pick it up
at the end of the Feast of Tabernacles.
(Jn 7:37–39 NKJV) —37 On the last day, that great day of the feast,
Jesus stood and cried out, saying, “If anyone thirsts, let him come to Me and
drink. 38 He who believes in Me, as the Scripture has said, out of his heart
will flow rivers of living water.” 39 But this He spoke concerning the Spirit,
whom those believing in Him would receive; for the Holy Spirit was not yet
given, because Jesus was not yet glorified.
The Feast of
Tabernacles was intended to celebrate a couple of things.
1. Remember the forty years in the
wilderness
It was to remind the people of how the Israelites wandered in the wilderness for forty
years, living in tents (“Tabernacles” or “Sukkoth”)
To celebrate this, the people would set up booths made of branches and live
outside with their families, kind of like camping out.
2. Celebrate
the harvest
The farmers’ growing
season was over, the crops have all been harvested and the farmers had a chance
to rest.
The Feast of Tabernacles was one of
the three times during the year that all the people were to come to Jerusalem
to worship.
There would be a lot of people in
town.
Every seven years, there was a
public reading of the Law (Deut. 31:10-13) during this festival.
The requirements of the Feast in the Mosaic Law had to do with sacrifices.
On the first day of the feast,
(Nu 29:13 NKJV) You shall present a burnt offering, an offering made by fire
as a sweet aroma to the Lord: thirteen young bulls, two
rams, and fourteen lambs in their first year. They shall be without blemish.
These animal
sacrifices were accompanied with grain offerings and drink offerings (wine was
poured out).
There would be sacrifices every day for seven days.
The only difference was that each day there would be one less bull
offered as a burnt offering.
In total, there would be 70
bulls sacrificed over a period of seven days (that’s a lot of bull), and
according to Jewish tradition, they saw this as a bull being sacrificed for every nation of the world.
(In Gen.10, seventy families of the
world, from the sons of Noah).
By the end of the celebration, 199
animals would have been sacrificed, along with lots of grain and wine.
The first seven days of the feast were to symbolize the forty years in the
wilderness.
But as you know, there came a day when they actually made it into the
Promised Land, and apparently that was what the eighth day represented, when
they left the wilderness and entered the Land.
On the eighth
day there was only one bull sacrificed, and to the Jews, this was a bull
sacrificed for them, the nation of Israel.
(Nu 29:35–38 NKJV) —35 ‘On the eighth day
you shall have a sacred assembly. You shall do no customary work. 36 You shall
present a burnt offering, an offering made by fire as a sweet aroma to the Lord: one bull, one ram, seven lambs in
their first year without blemish, 37 and their grain offering and their drink
offerings for the bull, for the ram, and for the lambs, by their number,
according to the ordinance; 38 also one goat as a sin offering, besides the
regular burnt offering, its grain offering, and its drink offering.
The eighth day was different. In
fact the Jews considered this a separate feast.
There is a little bit of disagreement among scholars as to which day Jesus
stood up during. But it seems to me that
the best understanding was that it wasn’t on this eighth day, but on the
seventh day.
Through time, there became a couple more additions to Sukkoth.
On the evening
of the first night, a golden candlestick was lit in the Court of the Women at
the temple. This was a picture of the pillar of fire by night
that led Israel in the wilderness.
Before Jesus’
time, a ceremony was added to Sukkoth that had to do with water.
Some have suggested that the people in the city were getting a little
anxious about their water supplies in the fall.
This added ceremony was seen partly as a cry to God for rain.
Some have suggested that it was because of the Pharisees. The Pharisees were primarily city dwellers,
and by the fall their cisterns were beginning to run a little low on
water. They were getting a little
anxious in waiting for the winter rains.
Every day of
Sukkoth, at daybreak, a priest would lead a procession of people from the
Temple to the go to the pool of Siloam. (Show
map video “Temple to Siloam”)
The choir would sing a song from:
(Is 12:3 NKJV) Therefore with joy you will draw water From the wells of
salvation.
At the pool of Siloam,
the priest would fill a golden pitcher with water. The pitcher held about 2 ½ pints of
water. He would then lead the procession
back to the Temple. When he arrived at the Temple, there would be
three blasts from a
shofar. The water would be taken to the
west side of the altar
where it would be poured out. This was
all accompanied with songs, shouts, and trumpets.
The people would shout and sing from the Psalms like:
(Ps 118:1 NKJV) Oh, give thanks to the Lord, for He is good! For His mercy
endures forever.
(Ps 118:25 NKJV) Save now, I pray, O Lord; O Lord, I pray, send now prosperity.
They would shake their myrtle, willow, and palm branches toward the altar
as if to remind God of His promises.
On the seventh
day, the priest would circle the altar seven times before pouring out the
water, similar to the Israelites walking around Jericho seven times.
On the sixth time around the altar, the priest with the water was joined by a priest with
the wine which was to be poured out.
After the seventh trip around the altar, the priest would hold up the water
and the people would shout for him to raise it higher and higher and higher.
The people would beat their tree branches until all the leaves fell off and would go crazy
with praise songs.
It was a time of great joy and celebration.
It was said that “Whoever
had not witnessed it had never seen rejoicing at all” [Lightfoot]. This seventh day was known to the Jews as “the Day of the Great
Hosanna”.
After the praises, there would have been a brief pause as the priests
prepared to offer the sacrifices for that day.
It has been suggested that at this point, during this pause, that Jesus
stands up to make His proclamation.
It is thought that the water
ceremony represented three things:
1. The water provided in the wilderness
When the people in the wilderness first ran out of water,
God showed Moses a “rock”
and told him to “strike it” and water would come out (Ex. 17:6)
(Ex 17:6
NKJV) Behold, I will stand before you there on the rock in Horeb; and you shall
strike the rock, and water will come out of it, that the people may drink.” And
Moses did so in the sight of the elders of Israel.
Later, at the end of the forty years, they faced a similar
situation, but this time God’s
instructions to Moses changed:
(Nu 20:8 NKJV) “Take the rod; you
and your brother Aaron gather the congregation together. Speak
to the rock before their eyes, and it will yield its water…
But Moses was upset with the people at the time. Instead of speaking to the rock, Moses
expressed his anger by once again striking the rock. (Num. 20:11)
(Nu
20:11 NKJV) —11 Then Moses lifted his hand and struck the rock twice with his
rod; and water came out abundantly, and the congregation and their animals
drank.
After this event, God took Moses aside and told him that
he had blown it and as a result, Moses was not going to go into the Promised
Land. Why was Moses punished for simply
striking the Rock?
Paul tells us that
(1 Co 10:4 NKJV) …For they drank of that
spiritual Rock that followed them, and that Rock was Christ.
God was trying to paint a picture, and Moses had ruined it. The Rock was a picture of Christ. Christ was struck once for our sins, just as
Moses struck the rock the first time.
Now we no longer need to strike the rock to receive, we simply need to
speak to it, to believe in Christ.
Pay attention to the One who speaks at this ritual.
2. A cry for rain.
Rain in Israel comes during two seasons of the year, the former rain
(Sept.-Oct.), and the latter rain (March-April).
3. The Messiah and the Holy Spirit
(Joe
3:18 NKJV) And it will come to pass in that day That the mountains shall drip
with new wine, The hills shall flow with milk, And all the brooks of Judah
shall be flooded with water; A fountain shall flow from the house of the Lord And water the Valley of Acacias.
(Eze
47:1 NKJV) Then he brought me back to the door of the temple; and there was
water, flowing from under the threshold of the temple toward the east, for the
front of the temple faced east; the water was flowing from under the right side
of the temple, south of the altar.
Even the Jews had this sense that this sense that this was
bigger than just water. They saw it
connected to salvation. They saw it
connected to the Holy Spirit.
Remember the song they sang as they went to get the water?
(Is 12:3 NKJV) Therefore with joy you
will draw water From the wells
of salvation.
Listen
to what one of the rabbis taught:
R. Joshua ben Levi:
“Why is its name called the place of drawing water? Because, from thence
“they draw the Holy Ghost”, as it is said, “and ye shall draw water with joy
out of the wells of salvation””
Alfred Edersheim, The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah
It was ‘the last, the great day of the Feast,’ and Jesus was once more
in the Temple. We can scarcely doubt that it was the concluding day of the
Feast, and not, as most modern writers suppose, its Octave, which, in Rabbinic
language, was regarded as ‘a festival by itself.’a On the Octave of
the Feast probably Ps. 12. was chanted (see Sopher. 19. beg.).1 But
such solemn interest attaches to the Feast, and this occurrence on its last
day, that we must try to realise the scene. We have here the only Old Testament
type yet unfulfilled; the only Jewish festival which has no counterpart in the
cycle of the Christian year,2 just because it points forward to that
great, yet unfulfilled hope of the Church: the ingathering of Earth’s nations
to the Christ.
The celebration of the Feast corresponded to its great meaning. Not
only did all the priestly families minister during that week, but it has been
calculated that not fewer than 446 Priests, with, of course, a corresponding
number of Levites, were required for its sacrificial worship. In general, the
services were the same every day, except that the number of bullocks offered
decreased daily from thirteen on the first, to seven on the seventh day. Only
during the first two, and on the last festive day (as also on the Octave of the
Feast), was strict Sabbatic rest enjoined. On the intervening half-holydays (Chol haMoed), although no new labour was
to be undertaken, unless in the public service, the ordinary and necessary
avocations of the home and of life were carried on, and especially all done
that was required for the festive season. But ‘the last, the Great Day of the
Feast,’ was marked by special observances.
Let us suppose ourselves in the number of worshippers, who on ‘the
last, the Great Day of the Feast,’ are leaving their ‘booths’ at daybreak to
take part in the service. The pilgrims are all in festive array. In his right
hand each carries what is called the Lulabh,1
which, although properly meaning ‘a branch,’ or ‘palm-branch,’ consisted of a
myrtle and willow-branch tied together with a palm-branch between them. This
was supposed to be in fulfilment of the command, Lev. 23:40. ‘The fruit (A.V.
‘boughs’) of the goodly trees,’ mentioned in the same verse of Scripture, was
supposed to be the Ethrog, the
so-called Paradise-apple (according to Ber. R. 15, the fruit of the forbidden
tree), a species of citron.a This Ethrog each worshipper carries in his left hand. It is scarcely
necessary to add, that this interpretation of Lev. 23:40 was given by the
Rabbis;b perhaps more interesting to know, that this was one of the
points in controversy between the Pharisees and Sadducees.
Thus armed with Lulabh in
their right, and Ethrog in their left
hands, the festive multitude would divide into three bands. Some would remain
in the Temple to attend the preparation of the Morning Sacrifice. Another band
would go in procession ‘below Jerusalem’c to a place called Moza,
the ‘Kolonia’ of the Jerusalem Talmud,d which some have sought to
identify with the Emmaus of the Resurrection-Evening.2 At Moza they
cut down willow-branches, with which, amidst the blasts of the Priests’
trumpets, they adorned the altar, forming a leafy canopy about it. Yet a third
company were taking part in a still more interesting service. To the sound of
music a procession started from the Temple. It followed a Priest who bore a
golden pitcher, capable of holding three log.3
Onwards it passed, probably, through Ophel, which recent investigations have
shown to have been covered with buildings to the very verge of Siloam, down the
edge of the Tyropœon Valley, where it merges into that of the Kedron. To this
day terraces mark where the gardens, watered by the living spring, extended
from the King’s Gardens by the spring Rogel down to the entrance into the
Tyropœon. Here was the so-called ‘Fountain-Gate,’ and still within the
City-wall ‘the Pool of Siloam,’ the overflow of which fed a lower pool. As
already stated, it was at the merging of the Tyropœon into the Kedron Valley,
in the south-eastern angle of Jerusalem. The Pool of Siloam was fed by the
living spring farther up in the narrowest part of the Kedron Valley, which
presently bears the name of ‘the Virgin’s Fountain,’ but represents the ancient
En-Rogel and Gihon. Indeed, the very canal which led from the one to the other,
with the inscription of the workmen upon it, has lately been excavated.1
Though chiefly of historical interest, a sentence may be added. The Pool of
Siloam is the same as ‘the King’s Pool’ of Neh. 2:14.a It was made
by King Hezekiah, in order both to divert from a besieging army the spring of
Gihon, which could not be brought within the City-wall, and yet to bring its
waters within the City.b This explains the origin of the name Siloam, ‘sent’—a conduitc—or
‘Siloah,’ as Josephus calls it. Lastly, we remember that it was down in the
valley at Gihon (or En-Rogel), that Solomon was proclaimed,d while
the opposite faction held revel, and would have made Adonijah king, on the
cliff Zoheleth (the modern Zahweileh) right over against it, not a
hundred yards distant,e where they must, of course, have distinctly
heard the sound of the trumpets and the shouts of the people as Solomon was
proclaimed king.f
But to return. When the Temple-procession had reached the Pool of
Siloam, the Priest filled his golden pitcher from its waters.2 Then
they went back to the Temple, so timing it, that they should arrive just as
they were laying the pieces of the sacrifice on the great Altar of
Burnt-offering,g towards the close of the ordinary Morning-Sacrifice
service. A threefold blast of the Priests’ trumpets welcomed the arrival of the
Priest, as he entered through the ‘Water-gate,’3 which obtained its
name from this ceremony, and passed straight into the Court of the Priests.
Here he was joined by another Priest, who carried the wine for the
drink-offering. The two Priests ascended ‘the rise’ of the altar, and turned to
the left. There were two silver funnels here, with narrow openings, leading
down to the base of the altar. Into that at the east, which was somewhat wider,
the wine was poured, and, at the same time, the water into the western and
narrower opening, the people shouting to the Priest to raise his hand, so as to
make sure that he poured the water into the funnel. For, although it was held,
that the water-pouring was an ordinance instituted by Moses, ‘a Halakhah of
Moses from Sinai,’a this was another of the points disputed by the
Sadducees.1 And, indeed, to give practical effect to their views,
the High-Priest Alexander Jannæus had on one occasion poured the water on the
ground, when he was nearly murdered, and in the riot, that ensued, six thousand
persons were killed in the Temple.b
Immediately after ‘the pouring of water,’ the great ‘Hallel,’
consisting of Psalms 113. to 118. (inclusive), was chanted antiphonally, or
rather, with responses, to the accompaniment of the flute. As the Levites
intoned the first line of each Psalm, the people repeated it; while to each of
the other lines they responded by Hallelu
Yah (‘Praise ye the Lord’). But in Psalm 118. the people not only repeated
the first line, ‘O give thanks to the Lord,’ but also these, ‘O then, work now
salvation, Jehovah,’c ‘O Lord, send now prosperity;’d and
again, at the close of the Psalm, ‘O give thanks to the Lord.’ As they repeated
these lines, they shook towards the altar the Lulabh which they held in their hands—as if with this token of the
past to express the reality and cause of their praise, and to remind God of His
promises. It is this moment which should be chiefly kept in view.
The festive morning-service was followed by the offering of the special
sacrifices for the day, with their drink-offerings, and by the Psalm for the
day, which, on ‘the last, the Great Day of the Feast,’ was Psalm 82. from verse
5.e 2 The Psalm was, of course, chanted, as always, to
instrumental accompaniment, and at the end of each of its three sections the
Priests blew a threefold blast, while the people bowed down in worship. In
further symbolism of this Feast, as pointing to the ingathering of the heathen
nations, the public services closed with a procession round the Altar by the
Priests, who chanted ‘O then, work now salvation, Jehovah! O Jehovah, send now
prosperity.’f But on ‘the last, the Great Day of the Feast,’ this
procession of Priests made the circuit of the altar, not only once, but seven
times, as if they were again compassing, but now with prayer, the Gentile
Jericho which barred their possession of the promised land. Hence the seventh
or last day of the Feast was also called that of ‘the Great Hosannah.’ As the
people left the Temple, they saluted the altar with words of thanks,g
and on the last day of the Feast they shook off the leaves on the
willow-branches round the altar, and beat their palm-branches to pieces.a
On the same afternoon the ‘booths’ were dismantled, and the Feast ended.b
We can have little difficulty in determining at what part of the
services of ‘the last, the Great Day of the Feast,’ Jesus stood and cried, ‘If
any one thirst, let him come unto Me and drink!’ It must have been with special
reference to the ceremony of the outpouring of the water, which, as we have
seen, was considered the central part of the service.1 Moreover, all
would understand that His words must refer to the Holy Spirit, since the rite
was universally regarded as symbolical of His outpouring. The forthpouring of
the water was immediately followed by the chanting of the Hallel. But after that there must have been a short pause to
prepare for the festive sacrifices (the Musaph).
It was then, immediately after the symbolic rite of water-pouring, immediately
after the people had responded by repeating those lines from Psalm 118.—given
thanks, and prayed that Jehovah would send salvation and prosperity, and had
shaken their Lulabh towards the
altar, thus praising ‘with heart, and mouth, and hands,’ and then silence had
fallen upon them—that there rose, so loud as to be heard throughout the Temple,
the Voice of Jesus. He interrupted not the services, for they had for the
moment ceased: He interpreted, and He fulfilled them.
Whether we realist it in connection with the deeply-stirring rites just
concluded, and the song of praise that had scarcely died out of the air; or
think of it as a vast step in advance in the history of Christ’s Manifestation,
the scene is equally wondrous. But yesterday they had been divided about Him,
and the authorities had given directions to take Him; to-day He is not only in
the Temple, but, at the close of the most solemn rites of the Feast, asserting,
within the hearing of all, His claim to be regarded as the fulfilment of all,
and the true Messiah! And yet there is neither harshness of command nor
violence of threat in His proclamation. It is the King, meek, gentle, and
loving; the Messiah, Who will not break the bruised reed, Who will not lift up
His Voice in tone of anger, but speak in accents of loving, condescending
compassion, Who now bids, whosoever thirsteth, come unto Him and drink. And so
the words have to all time remained the call of Christ to all that thirst,
whence- or what-soever their need and longing of soul may be. But, as we listen
to these words as originally spoken, we feel how they mark that Christ’s hour
was indeed coming: the preparation past; the manifestation in the present,
unmistakable, urgent, and loving; and the final conflict at hand.
Of those who had heard Him, none but must have understood that, if the
invitation were indeed real, and Christ the fulfilment of all, then the promise
also had its deepest meaning, that he who believed on Him would not only
receive the promised fulness of the Spirit, but give it forth to the
fertilising of the barren waste around. It was, truly, the fulfilment of the
Scripture-promise, not of one but of all: that in Messianic times the Nabhi, ‘prophet,’ literally the weller
forth, viz., of the Divine, should not be one or another select individual, but
that He would pour out on all His handmaidens and servants of His Holy Spirit,
and thus the moral wilderness of this world be changed into a fruitful garden. Indeed,
this is expressly stated in the Targum which thus paraphrases Is. 44:3:
‘Behold, as the waters are poured out on and ground and spread over the dry
soil, so will I give the Spirit of My Holiness on thy sons, and My blessing on
thy children’s children.’ What was new to them was, that all this was treasured
up in the Christ, that out of His fulness men might receive, and grace for
grace. And yet even this was not quite new. For, was it not the fulfilment of
that old prophetic cry: ‘The Spirit of the Lord Jehovah is upon Me: therefore
has He Messiahed (anointed) Me to preach good tidings unto the poor’? So then,
it was nothing new, only the happy fulfilment of the old, when He thus ‘spake
of the Holy Spirit, which they who believed on Him should receive,’ not then,
but upon His Messianic exaltation.
:37 On the last
day, that great day of the feast, Jesus stood and cried out, saying, “If anyone
thirsts, let him come to Me and drink.
:37 cried out
– krazo – speak with a loud voice
Last week we talked about Jesus speaking up in the Temple. He speaks up
again.
:37 thirsts – dipsao
– to suffer thirst, suffer from thirst
Figuratively,
those who are said to thirst who painfully feel their want of, and eagerly long
for, those things by which the soul is refreshed, supported, strengthened.
Present tense – Jesus is speaking to those who right now are thirsty.
Do you know what it means to be thirsty?
Play
video: Nestea Plunge
:37 let him
come – present imperative – a command.
This is something that we have to do.
:37 drink
– pino – to drink – present
imperative – another command. This is
something that we do.
a prolonged form of πιω
This reminds me of the discussion Jesus had with the Samaritan woman at
a well:
(Jn
4:13–14 NKJV) —13 Jesus answered and said to her, “Whoever drinks of this water will thirst
again, 14 but whoever drinks of the water that I shall give him will never
thirst. But the water that I shall give him will become in him a fountain of
water springing up into everlasting life.”
:38 He who
believes in Me, as the Scripture has said, out of his heart will flow rivers of
living water.”
:38 believes
– pisteuo – to think to be true, to
be persuaded of, place confidence in
Present participle
We think that Jesus is simply describing what it means to “drink” from
Him.
We “drink” from Him by “believing” in Him.
:38 heart
– koilia – belly, the origin of
thoughts, feelings, or choices.
:38 will flow
– rheo – to flow
Future tense – it’s not something that “might” happen, but it WILL happen.
:38 as the
Scripture has said
I’m not sure Jesus is pointing to a specific Scripture, but instead a whole
lot of Scriptures that speak of this, like…
(Is 41:17–18 NKJV) —17 “The poor and
needy seek water, but there is none, Their tongues fail for thirst. I, the Lord, will hear them; I, the God of
Israel, will not forsake them. 18 I will open rivers in desolate heights, And
fountains in the midst of the valleys; I will make the wilderness a pool of
water, And the dry land springs of water.
(Is 44:3 NKJV) For I will pour water on him who is thirsty, And floods on the dry
ground; I will pour My Spirit on your descendants, And My blessing on your
offspring;
(Is 58:11 NKJV) The Lord will guide you continually, And
satisfy your soul in drought, And strengthen your bones; You shall be like a
watered garden, And like a spring of water, whose waters do not fail.
:38 living water
– There were two types of water Jesus’ day.
Cisterns
There was water that was collected in underground reservoirs called cisterns. Some parts of Israel are a desert. The only way to survive was to build large
cisterns and channel the water into them during the rare rainstorms.
In Qumran, it rains very, very rarely. Yet a community of hundreds was able to survive because they
had a system of channels and cisterns.
In Jerusalem, there is only one spring, the Gihon, which Hezekiah had
channeled through solid rock to the pool of Siloam.
The rest of the water for the city came from water collected during
rainstorms and stored in these large cisterns, some carved out of solid rock.
Jeremiah was
imprisoned in a muddy cistern for a number of days.
There is a huge
cistern in the garden just outside the ancient city walls where there’s an
empty tomb.
Living Water
This is flowing water. Clean water. Water that bubbles up out of the ground.
There is a spring and waterfall at Ein Gedi (“spring of the
young goats”), along the Dead Sea. The
kibbutz located there bottles
and sells the water.
The one spring
in Jerusalem flowed into the pool of Siloam, where the water came from that was
being poured out on the altar during the Feast.
If I gave you two bottles of water to drink from, one with water from a
muddy cistern and the other from the Gihon spring, which would you want to
drink from?
:38 rivers
(Play Jordan Headwaters clip) What God wants to do is to satisfy your
thirst in such a way that not only will your thirst be quenched, but there is
enough to soak everyone around you.
Play “Water
Balloon” video clip.
:39 But this He
spoke concerning the Spirit, whom those believing in Him would receive; for the
Holy Spirit was not yet given, because Jesus was not yet glorified.
John gives us a little commentary on what Jesus has just said.
:39 Jesus was
not yet glorified
Before the Holy Spirit would come upon the believers, Jesus would first
have to pay for their sins by dying on the cross and rising from the dead.
Once He would ascend into heaven,
proving once and for all that He had won the victory over sin, then the Holy
Spirit could be given freely to all who trust in Jesus for their salvation.
Jesus said,
(Jn 16:7 NKJV) Nevertheless I tell you the truth. It is to your advantage that I
go away; for if I do not go away, the Helper will not come to you; but if I
depart, I will send Him to you.
After He rose from the dead, just before He ascended into heaven, He
told the disciples to wait for the promised Holy Spirit.
(Ac
2:1–4 NKJV) —1 When the Day of Pentecost had fully come, they were all with one
accord in one place. 2 And suddenly there came a sound from heaven, as of a
rushing mighty wind, and it filled the whole house where they were sitting. 3
Then there appeared to them divided tongues, as of fire, and one sat upon each
of them. 4 And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak with
other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance.
In explaining to the people what had happened, Peter preached, and
said,
(Ac
2:33 NKJV) Therefore being exalted to the right hand of God, and having
received from the Father the promise of the Holy Spirit, He poured out this
which you now see and hear.
It was after Jesus was glorified that the Holy Spirit came on the
church.
Lesson
Spirit Filled
Are you thirsty? Are you unsatisfied
with your life?
Maybe you have never opened your life to Jesus. Maybe you realize that you need help.
Maybe you are a Christian, but you’ve been living your life in your own
strength. Four things from this passage:
1. Thirst
You have to have a need for Him.
You have to “suffer from thirst”.
There must be a strong sense of need in our life.
We need to come to the point where we realize just how
much we need God's help.
If we're complacent about it, and don't really care one
way or another, then don't expect anything.
2. Come to Jesus
John the Baptist said,
(Mt 3:11 NKJV) I indeed baptize you with water unto
repentance, but He who is coming after me is mightier than I, whose sandals I
am not worthy to carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire.
You have to realize that to be filled with the Holy Spirit, you're going to
have to come to Jesus.
Going to Mohammed won't do. Nor Buddha.
Coming to a special pastor to pray over you is a nice
sentiment, but if you want to be filled with the Holy Spirit, you must come to
Jesus.
If you aren’t coming to Jesus to have your thirst met, it’s like (show video of Nestea gone
wrong – people falling backward and hitting the dust)
Only He has paid the price for your sins, enabling you to come into a
personal relationship with God.
3. Drink
To drink a glass of water, you first have to open up your mouth.
Imagine drinking a glass of water with your mouth closed.
You would certainly have a “drinking problem”!
To receive the Holy Spirit, you have to open up your heart.
Dr. A. B. Simpson used this illustration about being filled with the
Spirit:
“Being
filled with the fullness of God is like a bottle in the ocean. You take the
cork out of the bottle and sink it in the ocean, and you have the bottle
completely full of ocean. The bottle is in the ocean, and the ocean is in the
bottle. The ocean contains the bottle, but the bottle contains only a little
bit of the ocean. So it is with the Christian.”
A.W. Tozer wrote, “We are filled unto the fullness of God, but, of course,
we cannot contain all of God because God contains us; but we can have all of
God that we can contain. If we only knew it, we could enlarge our vessel. The
vessel gets bigger as we go on with God.”
Just open up and receive!
You might feel something.
You might not.
Wait a second here, is the Holy Spirit going to make me weird?
There have been so many abuses of the Holy Spirit over
the years, that it's easy for us to think that being filled with the Holy
Spirit must be a weird or strange thing.
We're afraid He might make us roll around on the floor or bark like a
dog.
I'm afraid that this isn't the Holy Spirit.
One of the fruits of the Spirit is self-control.
(Gal.5:23)
And Paul's admonition to the Corinthians was that all
things be done decently and in order.(1Cor.14:40)
Open up and receive it!
4. Believe
Jesus didn’t say, “He who feels this tingle down his back will have rivers
of living water ...”.
He said, “He who believes ...”
Being filled with the Holy Spirit is based on trust, on faith, not on
feelings.