The Spirit’s Work Continues
This week’s devotions are based on the message, ‘The Spirit’s Still Working!” (WATCH HERE)
Acts 2:17 “I will pour out my Spirit on all people.”
Pentecost was not the end of God’s work. It was the beginning of a new chapter in His mission.
The Spirit was poured out not just for one day, but for every generation that would follow. Peter quotes the prophet Joel to show that God’s promise extends far beyond that moment in Jerusalem.
The Spirit continues to work today.
He calls people through the Gospel.
He creates faith through the Word.
He strengthens believers in their struggles.
He comforts the hurting.
He equips God’s people for service.
Most importantly, He continually points us to Jesus.
Sometimes we imagine Pentecost as a dramatic event from long ago that has little connection to our daily lives. Yet the same Spirit who filled the disciples is actively at work in the church today.
Every baptism is evidence of His work.
Every person who comes to faith is evidence of His work.
Every believer who grows in Christ is evidence of His work.
The Spirit often works through ordinary means. Through a sermon. Through a Bible reading. Through a conversation with a friend. Through a prayer spoken in faith.
We may not hear rushing wind or see tongues of fire, but God’s Spirit is no less powerful today.
As believers, we are invited to participate in His mission. The Spirit who fills us also sends us. He calls us to share the hope we have found in Christ with others.
Pentecost reminds us that Christianity was never meant to be kept private. The Gospel is good news meant to be shared.
Ask God today to open your eyes to opportunities around you. Someone in your family, workplace, neighborhood, or circle of friends may need encouragement, hope, or truth. The Holy Spirit delights in using ordinary people to accomplish extraordinary things.
The story that began in Acts 2 is still being written. By God’s grace, you are part of it.
Reflect: Where have you seen evidence of the Holy Spirit’s work in your life recently? Who in your life may need to hear the hope of the Gospel this week?
Prayer: Holy Spirit, thank You for continuing Your work in the world and in my life. Help me remain attentive to Your leading and willing to serve wherever You call me. Use me to share the hope of Christ with others and keep me growing in faith each day. Amen.
The Promise Is for Everyone
This week’s devotions are based on the message, ‘The Spirit’s Still Working!” (WATCH HERE)
Acts 2:21 “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.”
This verse is the heart of Peter’s Pentecost sermon.
The wind, the fire, the languages, and the crowd all lead to this promise. God’s ultimate purpose was not to impress people with miracles. His purpose was to bring people to salvation through Jesus Christ.
Notice the word “everyone”.
That single word carries enormous hope. It means the promise is open. It means no one is excluded because of their background, failures, nationality, age, or past mistakes.
Everyone.
The world often divides people into categories. Successful and unsuccessful. Important and unimportant. Deserving and undeserving. But God’s grace is given freely to all who call on the name of Jesus.
This promise points directly to the Gospel. We are not saved by our efforts, morality, or accomplishments. We are saved because Jesus died and rose again for us.
Romans 10:13 repeats this same promise: “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.”
Calling on the Lord is an act of faith. It is trusting Christ alone to rescue us.
Many people carry hidden burdens of guilt and shame. They wonder if God could really forgive them. Acts 2:21 answers with a resounding yes. God’s grace is greater than our failures. Christ’s sacrifice is sufficient for every sin.
The cross stands as proof that God’s love reaches farther than we can imagine. Jesus did not come to condemn the world but to save it. Through faith in Him, forgiveness, peace, and eternal life become ours.
Today, rest in that promise. Your salvation does not depend on how strong your faith feels. It depends on the strength of the Savior in whom your faith rests.
Reflect: Are there areas of guilt or shame that you need to surrender to Christ today? How does God’s promise of salvation give you hope and confidence?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, thank You for the promise that everyone who calls on Your name will be saved. Thank You for Your forgiveness, mercy, and grace. Help me trust fully in Your finished work and live each day in the joy of salvation. Amen.
Courage Beyond Yourself!
This week’s devotions are based on the message, ‘The Spirit’s Still Working!” (WATCH HERE)
Acts 2:14 “Then Peter stood up with the Eleven, raised his voice and addressed the crowd.”
The Peter who stands before the crowd in Acts 2 looks very different from the Peter we encounter during Jesus’ trial.
Only weeks earlier, Peter denied even knowing Jesus. Fear controlled him. He worried about what others might think or do. Yet on Pentecost he stands before thousands and boldly proclaims Christ.
What changed?
The Holy Spirit.
Peter did not suddenly become naturally brave. His circumstances had not become safer. Opposition still existed. Risk still remained. What changed was that the Spirit strengthened him.
Many people think courage means having no fear. The Bible presents courage differently. Courage is moving forward in faith even when fear is present because God is with you.
This is why Joshua could enter the Promised Land. God told him, “Be strong and courageous… for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go” (Joshua 1:9).
God’s presence changes everything.
The same Spirit who strengthened Peter lives in every believer today. He strengthens us to stand firm in our faith, to speak truth with love, to endure hardships, and to trust God in uncertain situations.
Perhaps your challenge is not preaching to a crowd. Maybe it is having a difficult conversation, standing for biblical truth, facing a health concern, or navigating a season of uncertainty. Whatever the challenge, God’s promise remains the same.
You do not walk alone.
When we focus on our weaknesses, fear often grows larger. When we focus on God’s presence, faith grows stronger.
Remember that Peter’s confidence was not in himself. It was in Christ. The Holy Spirit does not point us toward greater self confidence. He points us toward greater confidence in God.
Today, ask yourself where fear has been holding you back. Then remember the promise of Pentecost. The Spirit who empowered Peter has not changed. He is still strengthening believers to live faithfully and courageously.
Reflect: What situation in your life currently requires courage and trust in God? How does remembering God’s presence help you face your fears differently?
Prayer: Father, thank You that I never face life’s challenges alone. Strengthen me through Your Spirit and help me trust Your presence more than my fears. Give me courage to follow You faithfully wherever You lead. Amen.
The Spirit Speaks!
This week’s devotions are based on the message, ‘The Spirit’s Still Working!” (WATCH HERE)
Acts 2:5 Now there were staying in Jerusalem God-fearing Jews from every nation under heaven. 6 When they heard this sound, a crowd came together in bewilderment, because each one heard them speaking in his own language. 7 Utterly amazed, they asked: “Are not all these men who are speaking Galileans? 8 Then how is it that each of us hears them in his own native language? 9 Parthians, Medes and Elamites; residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, 10 Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts of Libya near Cyrene; visitors from Rome 11 (both Jews and converts to Judaism); Cretans and Arabs—we hear them declaring the wonders of God in our own tongues!”
One of the most remarkable details of Pentecost is not simply that the disciples spoke in different languages. The greater miracle is that people heard and understood the message of God!
The crowd gathered from many nations. They spoke different languages and came from different cultures. Yet every person heard the wonders of God declared in a way they could understand.
This reveals something important about God’s heart. He is a God who speaks so people can know Him.
Throughout history, God has revealed Himself through His Word. He spoke through the prophets. He spoke through His Son. He continues to speak through the Scriptures today. The Holy Spirit’s mission is always connected to God’s Word.
Jesus said in John 15:26, “When the Counselor comes… he will testify about me.” The Spirit’s primary work is not to draw attention to Himself. He points people to Jesus.
Many people today wish God would speak audibly from heaven. Yet they fail to realize every day we have access to His living Word. The Bible is not merely a collection of ancient writings. Hebrews 4:12 describes it as living and active. Every day through Scripture, the Holy Spirit speaks comfort to the anxious, truth to the confused, conviction to the wandering, and hope to the weary.
Think about how personal God’s communication is. At Pentecost, people heard in their own language. Today, God still meets people where they are. He speaks into our circumstances, struggles, fears, and questions through His Word.
When we neglect Scripture, we often feel spiritually dry and disconnected. We try to navigate life like trying to navigate a dark road without headlights. Go back and turn on the light of God’s Word! God’s Word illuminates the path before us. Psalm 119:105 says, “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my path.”
The Spirit who spoke at Pentecost is still speaking today. Every time you open God’s Word, you have an opportunity to hear His voice. The question is not whether God is speaking. The question is whether we are listening.
Make time today to sit quietly with Scripture. Read slowly. Pray thoughtfully. Ask the Holy Spirit to reveal Christ more clearly to you. He delights in answering that prayer.
Reflect: How regularly are you creating space to listen to God through His Word? What is God teaching or reminding you of through Scripture right now?
Prayer: Holy Spirit, thank You for speaking through Your Word. Open my ears to hear Your truth and my heart to receive it. Help me grow in my understanding of Jesus and trust more fully in His promises each day. Amen.
Waiting Together
This week’s devotions are based on the message, ‘The Spirit’s Still Working!” (WATCH HERE)
Acts 1:4 On one occasion, while he was eating with them, he gave them this command: “Do not leave Jerusalem, but wait for the gift my Father promised, which you have heard me speak about. 5 For John baptized with water, but in a few days you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit.”
Acts 2:1 “When the day of Pentecost came, they were all together in one place.”
Before there was the sound of wind, before there were tongues of fire, before Peter preached and thousands believed, there was waiting. The disciples were gathered together in obedience to Jesus’ command. They did not know exactly what would happen next. They did not know when the promised Holy Spirit would come. They simply trusted Christ’s promise and waited.
Waiting is not something most of us enjoy. We prefer action. We like answers, solutions, and progress. Yet throughout Scripture, God often does some of His greatest work while His people wait. Abraham waited for a son. Joseph waited in prison. David waited to become king. The disciples waited for the Spirit.
Waiting does not mean God is inactive. It often means He is preparing us for what comes next.
The disciples could have scattered after Jesus ascended. They could have returned to their former lives. Instead, they remained together. They prayed. They trusted. They stayed where Jesus told them to be.
There is an important lesson for us here. Sometimes we become discouraged because God has not answered a prayer as quickly as we hoped. We wonder why circumstances have not changed. We question why doors have not opened. Yet God may be doing work beneath the surface that we cannot see.
A seed planted in the ground looks inactive long before it breaks through the soil. Roots are developing. Life is growing. The process is hidden, but it is real.
The same is true in our spiritual lives. God often works in unseen ways before His purposes become visible. Through His Word, through prayer, through worship, and through Christian fellowship, He strengthens our faith while we wait.
Isaiah 40:31 reminds us, “Those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength.” Notice that strength comes not from frantic activity but from hoping in the Lord.
The disciples waited together. They waited expectantly. Most importantly, they waited trusting Jesus’ promise. The same Savior who kept His promise to send the Spirit is still faithful today. Whatever season of waiting you find yourself in, remember that God has not forgotten you. He is still at work.
Reflect: What area of your life currently requires patience and trust in God’s timing? How can you use this season of waiting to grow closer to Christ?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, thank You for Your faithfulness. When I become impatient or discouraged, remind me that You are always at work, even when I cannot see it. Help me trust Your promises, remain faithful in prayer, and wait with confidence in Your perfect timing. Amen.
