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Music For the Soul
Devotional: June 1st

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THE GIFT OF THE SPIRIT

And there appeared unto them tongues parting asunder, like as of fire; and it sat upon each one of them. - Acts 2:3

The Spirit that came at Pentecost is not merely a Spirit of rushing might and of swift-flaming energy, but it is a Spirit of holiness whose most blessed and intimate work is all the homely virtues and sweet, unpretending goodness’s which can adorn and gladden humanity. And then the early story carried in it the promise and prophecy of a Spirit granted to all the Church. "They were ail filled with the Holy Ghost."

There is the true democracy of Christianity, that its very basis is laid in the thought that every member of the body is equally close to the Head, and equally recipient of the life. There are none now who have a Spirit which others do not possess. The ancient aspiration of the Jewish Lawgiver, " Would God that all the Lord’s people were prophets, and that the Lord would put His Spirit upon them," is fulfilled in the experience of Pentecost; and the handmaiden and the children, as well as the old men and the servants, receive of that universal gift. Therefore sacerdotal claims, special functions, privileged classes, are alien to the spirit of Christianity, and blasphemies against the inspiring God. If " one is your master, all ye are brethren." And if we have all been made to drink into one Spirit, then no longer hath any man dominion over our faith for power for us to intervene and to intercede with God. The promise of the early history was that of a spirit of swift energy, of transforming power, acting upon the moral nature granted to the whole Church, and filling the whole humanity of the men to whom He was granted; filling in the measure, of course, of their receptivity; filling, as the great sea does, all the creeks and the indentations along the shore. The deeper the creek, the deeper the water in it; the further inland it runs, the further will the refreshing sea water penetrate the bosom of the continent. And so each man, according to his character, stature, circumstances, and all the varying conditions which determine his power of receptivity, will receive a varying measure of that gift; and yet it is meant that all shall be full. The little vessel, the tiny cup, as the great cistern and the enormous vat, each contains according to its capacity. And if all are filled, then this quick Spirit must have the power to influence all the provinces of human nature, must touch the intellectual, must touch the moral, must touch the spiritual. The temporary manifestations and extraordinary signs of His power may well drop away as the flower drops away when the fruit has set. The operations of the Divine Spirit are to be felt thrilling through all the nature, and every part of the man’s being is to be recipient of the power. Just as when you take a candle and plunge it into a jar of oxygen it blazes up, so my poor human nature, immersed in that Divine Spirit, baptized in the Holy Ghost, shall flame in all its parts into unsuspected and hitherto inexperienced brightness. Such are the elements of the promise of Pentecost

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