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Free the Spirit
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f you were a Free Methodist in the 1970s or early 1980s, you may remember hearing Free Spirit in concert or on record, cassette or eight-track. The denomination-sponsored music group performed not only at FM churches but also at venues such as the world’s fair and the White House. Several Free Spirit album covers include a dove evoking the Holy Spirit descending on Jesus (Matthew 3:16, Mark 1:10, Luke 3:22 and John 1:32). These musical ambassadors have long since gone their separate ways (although one Free Spirit song can be heard online at bit.ly/fmfreespirit), but the Free Methodist Church continues to promote the Holy Spirit around the world. Our denominational logo (fmcusa.org/fm-logos) includes
a globe, a cross and a flame stretching across the globe. The latter recalls the arrival of the Holy Spirit with “what seemed to be tongues of fire” (Acts 2:3–4). Despite our use of symbols for the Holy Spirit, the Spirit isn’t symbolic for Free Methodists. We should rely on the Spirit every day. As FM founder B.T. Roberts wrote, “In many things respecting which the word of God is silent, or speaks only in general terms, we need specific directions by the Holy Spirit.” Visit llcomm.org or facebook.com/ fmcusa and share how the Spirit is workFinley i Jeff Managing Editor ing in your life and local church. [LLM]
EXTRA! EXTRA! Read more about the Holy Spirit at llcomm.org 1] Do you use QR codes? Scan this box with your smartphone to read more articles on this issue’s theme. 2] Turning Point Cari Johnson says maturity happens slowly. 3] Shot in the Back Ray Houser warns about churches’ “friendly fire.”
“In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind.” — John 1:4
LLM LIGHT & LIFE MAGAZINE
Developing Earnest Christians Since 1868
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Whole No. 5244, Vol. 145, No. 10 Printed in U.S.A. Member: Evangelical Press Association, Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability Periodicals postage paid at Indianapolis, IN, and additional mailing offices. Postmaster, send address changes to: Light & Life Magazine, 770 N. High School Rd., Indianapolis, IN 46214
BY JACK LEVISON
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n Jan. 24, 1885, the front page of The New York Times carried an unlikely story about a little-known evangelist with Wesleyan roots who held sway in red-barn farmland, roughly midway between Indianapolis and Fort Wayne, Ind. uuu
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What drew crowds — and reporters — to Hartford City were the mystery and magic of Maria Woodworth-Etter, the “trance evangelist.” Her evangelistic meetings outgrew her grand tent, which accommodated 8,000 people. Woodworth-Etter refused to prepare her sermons in advance and once preached without notes for 75 minutes. She determined rather to “take a text and trust God to lead me in his own way.” Sometimes, relying on Scripture, “I opened the meeting and repeated the text. As I did so the power came, and it seemed that all I had to do was to open my mouth,” according to her autobiography, “The Life and Experience of Maria B. Woodworth.” (For more on this fascinating woman, read Priscilla Pope-Levison’s “Turn the Pulpit Loose: Two Centuries of American Women Evangelists.”)
Which Is It? No doubt many Free Methodists have wished for a similar experience
of the Spirit — to be taken in a trance or to open our mouths and have the words flow. This is for some the pinnacle of spiritual vitality. And no doubt many Free Methodists have repudiated such an experience of the Spirit. To be taken in a trance or to expect spontaneous inspiration is for some a caricature of the Spirit, who first and foremost inspires spiritual virtues such as love, joy and peace. So which is it? Does the Holy Spirit inspire the spectacular, the spontaneous, the scintillating? Pentecostalism is projected to grow to 1 billion worldwide by 2025. This meteoric growth suggests that the Holy Spirit inspires the extraordinary. Or does the Holy Spirit inspire the mundane, the commonplace, the routine? The steady contribution of Methodism to the abolition of slavery — and now to the dalits of India, the minjung of Korea and the barrio dwellers of Latin America — suggests that the Holy Spirit inspires the ordinary.
The Answer It’s both! Open your Bible to the story of the church’s birth. The earliest Christians didn’t squash the spectacular, but they rooted their experience in the
rich soil of daily discipline. There, in the chemistry of dogged discipline and spellbinding spontaneity, lies the genius of the early church. The story of Pentecost (Acts 2) is nothing if not spectacular. There’s a violent wind, fiery tongues, filling with the Holy Spirit, miraculous foreign languages, the spectacle of apparent drunkenness and Peter’s successful debut (3,000 converts in a pop). This is not a typical Free Methodist worship service. This is the spectacular on steroids. Yet that’s only a thin slice of the story. Notice what led up to Pentecost.
They Waited Jesus gave clear instructions: “Do not leave Jerusalem, but wait for the gift my Father promised, which you have heard me speak about” (Acts 1:4). Then away He went. So Jesus’ closest followers and family settled down and waited for God’s promise — the gift of the Holy Spirit. “Then the apostles returned to Jerusalem from the hill called the Mount of Olives, a Sabbath day’s walk from the city. When they arrived, they went upstairs to the room where they were staying” (Acts 1:12–13). They were so serious about taking
[feature] 4 Jesus at His word that they didn’t even stay at the Mount of Olives, but walked the mile and a half or so to the old city of Jerusalem. It would have been easier — and seemingly more spiritual — to bend the rules and sleep in the shadow of Jesus’ Ascension. They didn’t. They went back to Jerusalem and waited, away from the fray of a miracle-fed faith.
They Prayed They waited, but not passively. Jesus’ disciples “all joined together constantly in prayer, along with the women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his brothers” (Acts 1:14). Jesus’ earliest followers prayed. They prayed a lot. They didn’t fill Jerusalem with frenetic activities, even charitable ones. If they’d been out and about, they wouldn’t have prayed in so sustained a way. Life would have been too busy, too frenzied and too productive.
They Studied After Jesus’ followers had waited and prayed, Pentecost broke loose. Spectators asked, “Then how is it that each of us hears them in our native language?” (Acts 2:8–11). Moses encouraged the Israelites to acknowledge God’s “majesty, his
mighty hand, his outstretched arm” (Deuteronomy 11:2). One of Israel’s poets urges: “Sing to [God], sing praise to him; tell of all his wonderful acts” (Psalm 105:2). Strip off the spectacular, and you’ll see something going on in that Upper Room ahead of Pentecost. With all the talk of tongues and fire and drunks at 9 a.m., we tend to miss this part. What led up to a spectacular experience of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost was the practice of ordinary disciplines: waiting, prayer and study. Without these, the wind wouldn’t have blown, the fiery tongues wouldn’t have descended and the Holy Spirit wouldn’t have filled an ordinary band of believers. Still, how heady the spectacular events of Pentecost must have been. How giddy Jesus’ followers must have become when millions of goose bumps erupted as 3,000 bodies were baptized on the spot. How did they respond to this spectacular outbreak of the Holy Spirit? They returned to where they began and immediately put in place safeguards, disciplines, which whisked attention away from the fervor and fever of those exhilarating first days. “They devoted themselves,” Luke tells us, “to the apostles’ teaching
Pentecost offers a vibrant model of life in the Spirit. Those earliest events emerged from a unique combination of ecstasy and restraint, spontaneity and sanity, utter abandon and absolute clarity. and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer” (Acts 2:42). They studied some more. They prayed still harder. They ate together, too, in uncommon unity.
5 [feature] Life in the Spirit Over the past two years, I’ve hung out with a terrific group of students who discussed my latest book, “Fresh Air: The Holy Spirit for an Inspired Life,” even before it had a title. Early on, all of them confessed that they associated the Holy Spirit with mountaintop experiences — campfires, retreats — but not the grit of everyday life. Pentecost offers a vibrant model of life in the Spirit. Those
www.fmfoundation.org
earliest events emerged from a unique combination of ecstasy and restraint, spontaneity and sanity, utter abandon and absolute clarity — being drunk with the Spirit and able, simultaneously, to recite God’s praiseworthy acts with pinpoint accuracy. What a thrill, to practice determination and discipline — waiting, praying, studying together — and, in the middle of all this hard work, to experience God so deeply, to receive the Spirit so lavishly and to communi-
cate the truth so cogently. [LLM]
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Jack Levison is a professor of New Testament studies at Seattle Pacific University. The prolific author’s books include “Filled with the Spirit” and “Fresh Air: The Holy Spirit for an Inspired Life.”
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[bishops] 6
It’s Windy Inside
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he Holy Spirit moves into us when we accept God as our sovereign. As we invite God into His rightful place in our lives, He inhabits us. His will, presence and voice enter our lives. He dwells in us. Yet many of us live a miserly spiritual existence. Why? Before Jesus, the Holy Spirit visited certain people and empowered them for service. Now followers of Jesus have the gift of His presence. Yet many of us live destitute, from handout to handout. Why? Where do the outbursts of anger, critical spirit and memories of injustice come from? What about that thought of maneuvering to gain an advantage, or stuff that junks up our lives and impedes our progress? Why do we put blinders on and continue to blunder when help — the Holy Spirit — is so near at hand? I remember the day when I realized it was up to me. No one else could move me to the next step of intimacy. If I wanted to connect with the Holy Spirit at a new level, I had to let Him overwhelm me. I knew the Holy Spirit was in me, but I wasn’t paying much attention. I began to set aside my poverty that had locked me in a room by myself. I opened the door. I stepped out of my smallness and into Him. I began to practice slowing down my responses to give the Holy Spirit a chance to get a word in edgewise. I began to practice sorting out my thoughts from His thoughts. I slowly realized I didn’t have to sort out thoughts. The Holy Spirit’s character and purpose could overtake my character and purpose. His thoughts could become my thoughts. I didn’t have to guard against myself anymore. He didn’t make me better. He changed me. There’s a difference. We Jesus-followers no longer navigate the tricky waters of self-denial, good works or searching for meaning. The Holy Spirit knows the way. If we hoist our sails, He blows a wind toward wholeness, meaning and service. If we insist on leaving our sails neatly lashed around the boom, or if we reef the cloth because of fear of sailing fast, we will always struggle. But we are a people of adventure, not of fear! We always want to go faster and deeper. The Wind blows. [LLM]
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Bishop David Roller
To read more from Bishop Roller, visit fmcusa.org/ davidroller.
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Is the Spirit in the Church? S C RI P T U R E : Acts 1:8 Luke 4:1, 14 Acts 2:2–4, 47 Acts 5:12–16
BY PAUL ALF
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he first question most people ask about a church is: “How many people attend?” In “Forgotten God,” Francis Chan says, “The benchmark of success in church services has become more about attendance than the movement of the Holy Spirit.” One of the last things Jesus said to His disciples was, “But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you” (Acts 1:8). When Jesus ascended to heaven, He didn’t leave His disciples, or us, empty-handed. He left us the same One that guided and empowered Him — the Holy Spirit (Luke 4:1, 14). Following Jesus’ Ascension, the disciples gathered in a room and had a profound experience. “Suddenly a sound like the blowing of a violent wind came from heaven and … they saw what seemed to be tongues of fire that separated and came to rest on each of them. All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit” (Acts 2:2–4). They were instantly changed. These once-powerless and fearful disciples were now powerful and courageous. They immediately went out and started performing the same type of miracles they had seen Jesus do (Acts 5:12–16). That same Spirit, which empowered Jesus in Luke and filled the disciples in Acts, is with us today. What would happen if we could fully release our own control to the Holy Spirit, lay our fears aside, surrender our uncertainties and allow the Spirit to fill and empower us? Does it matter if your church has 10 or 1,000 people? Acts mentions numbers of believers (Acts 2:47, 5:14), but it first mentions the work and power of the Holy Spirit. More important than attendance is how the Holy Spirit moves in your church and in your heart. [LLM]
Paul Alf is the pastor of Grace FMC in McConnell, Ill.
t Pentecost by El Greco
[history] 8
Moody’s Free Methodist Intercessors BY GEORGE WHITTEN
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arah “Auntie” Cooke arrived in Chicago in 1868 and immediately became involved in D.L. Moody’s ministry when the evangelist was just 31 years old. She described Moody as a “diamond in the rough” who needed the divine unction and power. During a Free Methodist camp meeting in 1871, she felt an intense burden to pray for Moody. Along with her friend, Mrs. W.R. Hawxhurst, Cooke began praying that Moody would be filled with the anointing power of the Holy Spirit. Although Moody was unsure of this need, he asked the two ladies to meet with him every Friday afternoon, and they began to earnestly pray. Moody’s hunger for the power of the Spirit increased. The Friday before the Great Chicago Fire, Cooke testified, “Mr. Moody’s agony was so great that he rolled on the floor and in the midst of many tears and groans cried to God to be baptized with the Holy Ghost and fire.” Shortly thereafter, Moody went to New York to raise funds for the rebuilding of his church that was destroyed in the fire. While walking down Wall Street in New York City, Moody was hit with power. He recalled how he cried, “Hold, Lord, it is enough!” Moody, the founder of Moody Bible Institute, testified how this was the turning point in his ministry: “I went to preaching again, the sermons were not different; I did not present any new truths, and yet hundreds were converted. I would not now be placed back where I was before that blessed experience if you should give me all the world.” The lasting legacy of Moody’s ministry is connected to two Free Methodist ladies. You may never read other stories about these women, but their contributions are counted in glory. Do you want to have a lasting legacy? Become an intercessor! [LLM]
George Whitten is the editor of Worthy Devotions, worthydevotions.com.
p Auntie Cooke and helper (Photo courtesy of Marston Memorial Historical Society)
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movement of the
Spirit
BY MICHAEL J. METTS
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liquippa, Pa., has seen hard times. In the past, the town benefited from a booming steel industry that provided steady employment to area residents. The steel industry left town in the mid-1980s, and now the town is home to fewer than 10,000 people, with an estimated median household income of just over $27,000 per year. Addiction and crime are commonplace. uuu
Photos by Michael J. Metts
[action] 10 “Aliquippa is a rough place, but God has put us here to worship and glorify His name,” said Pastor Leroy Netting during a recent worship service at Aliquippa FMC. At one point, the congregation averaged an attendance of more than 120 people. A few years ago, however, the church was in danger of closing its doors. Ten to 15 people attended regularly. The church was without a pastor. Funding was low. The congregation never lost hope. “We decided, as this group that was still here, that God didn’t want to close the church,” said Maureen Egenlauf, who has attended Aliquippa FMC for more than 60 years. “Miracles were still happening, and we had answers to prayer.” Netting arrived as pastor with his contagious desire to see God transform Aliquippa. “You can’t be around him long that you don’t see that spark,” Egenlauf said. “He just moves you.” Members of the congregation go door-to-door and invite people to church. Though some church members were initially uncomfortable with this method, they believe the Holy Spirit is working in their community, and they have a desire to bring in the harvest. “I’ve never had a group of people
do this, so I know for a fact it’s the Holy Spirit working,” Netting said. “He has done so many miraculous things.” Members are changing their ministry mindset in a variety of ways. “We’ve got to become a multicultural church,” said Egenlauf, who referenced Bishop David Roller encouraging the Pittsburgh Conference to reach out to people of every culture and background. The congregation has also seen God provide financially in amazing ways. They have completed two improvement projects and recently purchased land for a new facility. Chuck Hilt, who has been attending the church for five years, envisioned using an abandoned piece of city property to build a new church building. Through Hilt’s friendship with an Aliquippa council member, the congregation was given the opportunity to purchase the property. With help from the Pittsburgh Conference, the congregation has received the necessary funds to buy the land. “We have to rely on the Holy Spirit,” said Egenlauf, who also serves as the church treasurer. Members hope to use the new facilities to create a safe after-school environment for young people. Each year, Netting holds revival
“The Holy Spirit is everything. Without Him, we have no hope.” meetings. People rededicate their lives to Christ and come to salvation. Netting is quick to give the glory to God for the blessings of his ministry. “The Holy Spirit is everything,” he said. “Without Him, we have no hope.” [LLM]
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Serving God at Age 100 BY MICHAEL J. METTS
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ewis Seifert celebrated his 100th birthday on April 1, but his passion for serving the Lord hasn’t diminished. “My heart goes on with thanksgiving to God for life and health and for the many opportunities that God has given to me to witness,” said Seifert, who pastored Free Methodist churches in New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Missouri and Florida. Seifert’s parents were members of the Allentown (Pa.) FMC. After graduating high school, Seifert told his pastor, Gertrude Ross, of his desire to be involved in pastoral ministry, but Seifert pursued a painting apprenticeship with his uncle in Madison, Wis. After two years in Madison, Seifert was offered a pastorate by New York Conference Superintendent T.M. Holcom. “After I made the decision, there was never an idea to turn back or get into anything else,” Seifert said. “It was definite.” For an in-depth Seifert invited Canadian version of this story, visit evangelist Levi Ecker to hold a bit.ly/seifert. revival meeting at Outlet FMC
Lewis Seifert (Photo by Michael Metts)
in Dallas, Pa. Promotional fliers announced the meeting would “continue indefinitely.” The meetings continued for four straight weeks. “The altar was lined with seekers. They stood in line, waiting to kneel at the altar,” he said. At one point, Seifert spoke at three different FM churches every week. He and his wife, Prudence, felt blessed. “There were weeks where I didn’t even cash my check to put it in the bank,” he said. “They were so gener-
ous with their meat and their vegetables I didn’t have to buy anything.” Seifert is now a resident of the Village Woods retirement community in Crete, Ill., where he is responsible for daily devotions and fills in as a Bible study leader. He gives God the glory for his continued ministry. “The fact that I’m happy doing it, that I’m happy in the Lord, is a greater testimony than a verbal testimony many times.” [LLM]
[news] 12 BISHOPS SHARE MISSION, VISION, STRATEGIES Indianapolis
Bishops Matthew Thomas, David Kendall and David Roller shared an updated mission and vision of the Free Methodist Church – USA during a live Vision Cast on Aug. 26. The bishops also discussed three of nine strategies local congregations can use to implement the church’s mission and vision. To watch the Vision Cast, go to fmcusa.org/?p=493563.
CHURCH PLANT REACHES EATERY EMPLOYEES Baltimore
Loren and Pam Edwards, pastors of Baltimore First FMC, have worked to plant a church among Chinese restaurant workers. They meet on Wednesdays at 11:30 p.m. with an average of 22 people. The Edwardses request prayer for a pastor who can focus on ministry to the workers and for more lives to surrender to Jesus.
RWC ALUMNA WINS OLYMPIC GOLD London
Jenn Suhr, a 2004 graduate of Roberts Wesleyan College, won the Olympic gold medal in the women’s pole vault in London on Aug. 6. More than 250 people from the Rochester, N.Y., area gathered at the college for the “Suhr Sundae” viewing party. Suhr, 30, was a top basketball player at RWC. To read more, visit bit.ly/suhrrwc.
FM YOUTH GROUPS MEET AT AIRPORT Miami
While waiting July 24 at a Miami International Airport gate to fly to Belize for a youth missions trip, 56 people from the Greenville (Ill.) FMC unexpectedly discovered they were sitting near 35 members of the youth group from the Chelsea (Mich.) FMC waiting to fly on a missions trip to the Dominican Republic.
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The Rest of the Story Want to find indepth stories of remarkable Free Methodists? Visit fmcusa.org.
We want to hear from you! Tell us what your church is doing to impact lives in the United States and around the world. Submit your story at fmcusa.org/ yourstory.
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Bible Quizzers Answer Kenyan Call BY JEFF FINLEY
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ight Bible quizzers had a radically different summer vacation than their Midwestern peers did. While their friends flocked to pools and summer jobs, the Free Methodist teens and their adult chaperones spent the last half of July working with International Child Care Ministries and FM missionaries Mike and Vickie Reynen in the Kawangware and Kibera slums of Nairobi, Kenya. Participants included Carla Fausnaugh, Bekah Greenwood and Bob Swank of Vincennes (Ind.) FMC; Brandon Gilstrap of Bedford (Ind.) FMC; Brad and Heather Anderson of West Morris Street FMC in Indianapolis; Levi Stout of Winona Lake (Ind.) FMC; Fadra, Olivia and Ben Coates of Moundford FMC in Decatur, Ill.; Kelli Moore of
Clarkston (Mich.) FMC; and Rebecca Stephenson of LifePointe FMC in Tiffin, Iowa. Stephenson has sensed a call to go overseas since another event linking ICCM and Bible quizzing. “A couple of years ago, God spoke to me at Bible quizzing nationals, after [ICCM Director] Linda Adams spoke,” Stephenson said. “I felt God calling me to missions.” Brad Anderson, Wabash Conference quizzing director, explained how Daniel Shanzuh, ICCM’s Kenyan director, had a vision for every ICCM school in the East African nation to join Bible quizzing. Shanzuh’s vision led to this trip. Moore said that the Kenyan students “were amazingly good at Bible quizzing for beginners,” and Gilstrap noted the students’ quick learning caused him to be “greatly encouraged that our work there will bear fruit and continue for quite some time.” Bible quizzing wasn’t the only activity. Fadra Coates said the team also worked in Kawangware to “lay concrete and roof the church, along with repainting the school’s fence.” The teens expressed gratitude for donors’ support. “The cost of the trip was rather expensive, but I knew that if God wanted me to go, He would provide,” Greenwood said. Fausnaugh, a chaperone and former quizzer, said she experienced “priceless memories” that included meeting the girl she sponsors through ICCM. [LLM] t Bible quizzers and chaperons pose for a photograph in their new quiz shirts in Kenya. (Photo courtesy of Carla Fausnaugh)
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Empowered for a Purpose BY JOE WICKMAN
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eedless confusion surrounds the Holy Spirit. Many Christians are unclear about this Third Person of the Trinity, and they consequently misunderstand His work in their lives. God’s Word perfectly displays the Holy Spirit’s nature and role; it also gives every follower of Jesus Christ the assurance of the Spirit’s indwelling presence. Although deep mysteries remain, Christians can experience the Spirit’s work in and through them. Pentecost ushered in a new era of access to the Holy Spirit for every believer. Tongues of fire and a whirlwind accompanied the outpouring of God’s person and power into His followers. Whereas these “fireworks” inspired marvel and astonishment, the subsequent actions of empowered believers netted immediately tangible results that were useful for God’s kingdom. While we share the awe and wonder of those who first witnessed this fresh work, we should shift our attention to God’s purpose for the empowerment of His people. Witnesses of the outpouring of God’s Spirit said, “We hear them declaring the wonders of God in our own tongues” (Acts 2:11). Supernatural results followed the clear declaration of God’s wonders by the empowered believers: 3,000 were baptized that day. This new community of Christ-followers continued their lives empowered by the Holy Spirit. As they discovered how to live in the fullness of His indwelling, “the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved” (Acts 2:47). Today’s world desperately needs to hear God’s people declare His wonders in understandable language. Rather than look heavenward for tongues of fire, believers should desire the functional abilities bestowed on the first Christians. We are empowered for a purpose. May He speak through us to a world that needs the hope of Jesus Christ. [LLM]
Joe Wickman is the family ministries pastor at New Life Ministries, a Free Methodist congregation in Endicott, N.Y.
GROUP DISCUSSION: [1] What causes confusion about the Holy Spirit?
[2] How does the Spirit work through believers?
Did you know a new discipleship article is posted to our website each week? The four monthly articles are perfect for use in your small group or as a weekly supplement to individual study.
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[resources] LEVISON ONLINE Find more of feature (Page 2) author Jack Levison’s writings about the Spirit: johnrlevison.com.
Increase your understanding of the Holy Spirit and learn how the Spirit’s power can change your life.
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“FORGOTTEN GOD” Read Francis Chan on how to reverse “our tragic neglect of the Holy Spirit”: bit.ly/chanspirit.
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BAPTISM Watch Spring Arbor FMC Pastor Mark Van Valin discuss the baptism of the Spirit: bit.ly/safmc.
COME HOLY SPIRIT Hear Park Ridge FMC Pastor Deano Pulice speak about the need for the Spirit: bit.ly/prnyfmc.
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