The Silsbee Bee (Silsbee, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 8, 1986 Page: 15 of 30
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Silsbee Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Silsbee Public Library.
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4
NOW - SILSBEE'S NEW J 4 M
NOW OPEN IN BOTH 10CATI0NS
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K N SltSMi • 116 fINI PLAZA SHOPPIMO CINTfl - SIUME
BORIS. GOOD OLD CLASSIC MOVIES AND THE UTIST NEW RELEASES
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4 FRIDAY MAT 9TN AND SATURDAY MAY 10TH
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MOTHER’S DAY SPECIALS
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LIMIT (1) WITH S5.00 OR MORI PURCHASE EXC. ALCOHOL A TOBACCO
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THE LANGUAGE
THE SPIRIT SPEAKS
May 11,1914
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SALIDATIS
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14
11
IS
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14
lKk|mii Scrlptart: Act! 1:4-8; 2:1-
21; 13:1-12.
Dcvotlonl RcwMn: John 16:12-13
Many Christians don’t know
what to do with Pentecost. It is
an experience they have never
had. Furthermore, they’re not
even sure they would want it if it
were offered to them. Eaentiallv,
as presented in Acts 2, Pentecost
is an ecstatic experience and
ecstasy, particularly spiritual
ecstasy, is a rather rare com-
modity in standard brand Chris-
tianity where there is a kind of
common, unspoken understand-
ing that, if you feel some ecstasy
comingon, take a deep breath and
hold it in until it passes. Fearing
the consequences of religious
emotional excess, we have pretty
well eliminated the emotional di-
mension of religion in many
churches.
INSPIRED CONTROL
As a result, many Christians
are bored by a religious lifestyle
that so tightly reigns in all emo-
tion that it is always “safe” and
correspondingly impotent to lift
us out or above ourselves. At the
same time, we both covet the ap
parent power of the spiritually
less inhibited and remain eternal-
ly vigilant lest anything, including
the Spirit of God, causes us to lose
control of our normal detached
demeanor.
Is there no middle ground be
tween these two apparent ex
tremes? I believe Pentecost indi-
cates that there is. That which
makes Acts 2 a Pentecostal ex-
perience is not that the disciples
of Jesus were ‘‘out of control”
with religious ecstasy, but that
they were under the precise inspi-
ration of the Holy Spirit. The
experience was not one of chaos,
but of an inspired order. This was
not a case of each worshipper
“doing his own thing,” but of
doing God’s “thing” under the
direction of his Spirit.
Furthermore, many people
have a picture in their minds
of Pentecostal Christians speak-
ing ecstatically in unintelligible
sounds or tongues. But, if you
read carefully Acts 2 you ytHI find
that the tongues in whicfT these
people were found speaking were
not unintelligible tongues but
bona fide languages that could be
and were understood by many
people in the vicinity. No less than
three times the writer of Acts tells
us “each one heard them speak
ing in his own language” (2:6,8,
11) and goes on to list the differ
ent languages that were recognized
INSPIRED POWER
The essence of the Pentecostal
experience, therefore, was not
ecstasy for its own sake nor exhi-
bitionism, but power to wimess
to the saving grace of God The
“tongues” were intended, not to
point to those who uttered them
or to say, ’“Look what we can
do!” but to point to God and
say “Look what He has done and
is doing!” The Spirit had the
worshippers speak in intelligible
tongues so that others could be
edified, not mystified
In other words, Pentecost gave
the disciples the pqwer to speak
of God in Christ to people in
words they could understand.
Bated on copyrighted outlines produced by the Com
mitiee on ihe Uniform Series and used by permit
sion Released bv Community A Suburban Press
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Read, R. L. The Silsbee Bee (Silsbee, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 8, 1986, newspaper, May 8, 1986; Silsbee, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth820375/m1/15/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Silsbee Public Library.