Sermon Tone Analysis
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Acts 2:4
Introduction
Series background
The Promise of the Spirit
The Advent of the Spirit
The Fullness of the Spirit
The meaning of the word
The Greek word pleroma translated “fullness or filled” suggests the picture of a Greek warship which contained three ranks of rowers.
When the ship was fully equipped with rowers it was “pleroma.”
The idea in the original is to make complete.
Without the fullness of the Holy Spirit we are incomplete.
In the Acts of the Apostles, the word “full” (as related to the Holy Spirit) occurs many times.
There is such a condition as the fullness of the Spirit.
This is not an issue of quantity but control; we do not need more of the Holy Spirit we must surrender completely to Him.
As we study these passages, we are compelled to think of three vital aspects of this fullness.
\\ 1A.
The Fullness of the Spirit is Essential for Every Christian (2:4)
The fullness of the Holy Spirit is to be the initial and continual experience of each individual believer, as well as of the church as a whole.
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God’s Word Commands the Fullness of the Spirit
Ephesians 5:18 (NKJV) 18And do not be drunk with wine, in which is dissipation; but be filled with the Spirit,
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