Engage / Language of Love

Language of Love

All . . . were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit enabled them. Acts 2:4
Engage / Language of Love

Language of Love

June 8, 2025
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Today's Scripture
Acts 2:1-12
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Mon Dieu. Lieber Gott. Drahý Bože. Aγαπητέ Θεέ. Dear God. I heard French, German, Slovak, Greek, and English prayers echo through the central Athens church as, in unison, we prayed in our native languages for people in our home countries to hear of God’s love. The beauty of the gathering was magnified when we realized our gathering was happening on Pentecost.

In the Old Testament, Pentecost was a harvest festival celebrated fifty days after the Passover festival (Leviticus 23:15-21). On the first Pentecost following Jesus’ death and resurrection, believers gathered in Jerusalem. Suddenly a sound like “violent wind” came, and “what seemed to be tongues of fire” appeared as they were filled with the Spirit and “began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit enabled them” (Acts 2:2-4). Visitors from other nations heard “the wonders of God” in their own language (v. 11). Then, after Peter “addressed the crowd” (v. 14), many believed the message that Jesus was crucified and raised to life to offer forgiveness (vv. 22-41).

The multilingual prayers of the ministry leaders assembled in Athens reminded me that Peter’s message heard at Pentecost continues to be shared around the world, and people are still responding in faith.  

Let’s pray for the Spirit to empower us like the early believers in Jesus at Pentecost to tell of God’s love. And let’s pray for the message to be heard in every language spoken around the world.

Reflect & Pray

When did you first hear of God’s love for you? How can you pray for others to hear?

Holy Spirit, please empower me to share God’s love.

Today's Insight

An unusual thread—language—connects Acts 2 to the story of the tower of Babel. “The whole world had one language and a common speech,” says Genesis 11:1. The citizens of Babel said, “Let us build ourselves a city, . . . so that we may make a name for ourselves; otherwise we will be scattered over the face of the whole earth” (v. 4). God “confuse[d] their language” (v. 7) and “scattered them from there over all the earth” (v. 8). At Pentecost (Acts 2), people from many different nations and languages miraculously heard the good news of Jesus in their own tongue. By giving people understanding instead of confusion, God reversed what He’d done at Babel. In Acts 1:8, Christ had said, “You will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” Pentecost launched that worldwide mission of believers telling others of God’s love.