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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page essay/research paper that discusses the meaning of baptism of the Holy Spirit in contemporary Christianity. Many Christians today promote the concept that "speaking in tongues" is proof-positive of "baptism of the Holy Spirit" (Williams 84). This brings up the questions as to whether or not those who have not spoken in tongues are without the Holy Spirit (Williams 84). There are dedicated Christians on both side of this debate. Basically, opinion on this issue falls into two camps. The Pentecostals or charismatic movement maintains that gifts of the Holy Spirit that the apostles experienced at Pentecost are still being experienced by Christians today. The opposite camp believes that the gifts of the Holy Spirit ended in the first century of Christian history. Both positions are discussed. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khbaphs.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
whether or not those who have not spoken in tongues are without the Holy Spirit (Williams 84). There are dedicated Christians on both side of this debate. Basically, opinion on
this issue falls into two camps. The Pentecostals or charismatic movement maintains that gifts of the Holy Spirit that the apostles experienced at Pentecost are still being experienced by Christians
today. They believe that Christians can experience the "power of the Holy Spirit through prophecies, divine healings, speaking in tongues and in various physical phenomena" (Williams 84). The opposite camp
believes that the gifts of the Holy Spirit ended in the first century of Christian history. The phenomenon of speaking in tongues (referred to also as "glossolalia) is typically
identified as speaking suddenly in an language previously unknown to the speaker during a epiphany of divine revelation (Williams 84; DeShane 271). Those who believe that the Holy Spirit interacts
with humanity in the same manner that occurred at Pentecost are also known as charismatics. This doctrine holds that this form of baptism is "distinct from and subsequent to salvation,"
and signals that the believer has "completely receives the Holy Spirit into his life, fully empowering...(the believer) for worship and service" (Zaspel). Without this "second blessing", charismatics believe that person
may be a Christian, but not fully "blessed or fully enabled to worship and serve the Lord" (Zaspel). Proponents of this belief cite Acts 2:4, 6. Others, however, assert that
the baptism of the Holy Spirit impacts knowledge of an angelic language and cite I Cor. 13:1. For many, this is the "initial evidence" of the person having undergone a
"baptism in the Spirit (Williams 84). As this positions indicate, there are scriptural references that associate baptism in the Holy Spirit and speaking in tongues. Acts 1 and 2
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