Mr.
Pentecost
.
David
du Plessis
Was Called by
the Lord to Be
a Bridge
Builder
in the
Charismatic
and Ecumenical
Movement
.
by
Fred
Lilly
“The purpose of
the gifts is to help us to love,
to forgive, to serve. And those
are the things that most
effectively lead people to a
saving encounter with the
baptizer, Jesus Christ.” |
David du Plessis thought that Catholics today
were too concerned with miracles and not
concerned enough about forgiveness.
Rev. Du Plessis (1905 - 1987), recognized
throughout the world as a prominent figure in
the ecumenical movement, bases this opinion on
20 years of dealings with Catholics, ranging
from top Vatican officials to members of small
charismatic prayer groups. His ministry began in
l936 when Smith Wigglesworth, a British
Pentecostal evangelist, prophesied that God
would use Dr. Du Plessis as abridge between the
Pentecostals and other Christian churches.
"Miracles didn't persuade very many people that
Jesus was God,” the 80-year-old evangelist says.
"But when the Lamb of God, dying on the cross of
Calvary, said, 'Father, forgive them; they do
not know what they are doing, the success of
Christianity was assured. That miracle of
forgiveness paved the way for the coming of the
Holy Spirit at Pentecost, and the Spirit has led
millions to belief in Jesus.
“When God sent me to speak to the leaders of
various churches about the baptism in the Holy
Spirit, he told me that I had to be forgiving.
“Before you talk to one of them,” God told me,
“make sure you haven't got a grudge against him
for anything he teaches, preaches, or practices.
Forgive totally.”
“I had to obey the God I had promised to serve,
so I began to forgive the Protestants for
expelling the Pentecostals from their churches.
And I forgave the Catholics for everything that
I had blamed on them.
“Forgiveness is unconditional.” he adds. “You
can't really love anyone unless you are willing
to forgive everyone. One of the reasons that
there are so many divisions among Christians
today is that very few of us have been willing
to forgive.”
Rev. Du Plessis says that when he learned how to
forgive, God opened many doors for him, doors
that had been closed to Pentecostals for
decades. During almost 50 years of ecumenical
work he has been the most prominent figure in
the movement to erect bridges between
Pentecostals and various Protestant churches and
between Pentecostals and the Catholic Church.
David du Plessis was born near Cape Town, South
Africa, in 1905 and grew up in the fertile South
African countryside. The du Plessis family,
descended from French Huguenots, joined the
Pentecostal movement when David was about nine
years old. By the time David was l5 he was
preaching at outdoor revival meetings in his
hometown. A short time later he went to
Johannesburg to serve as a printer's apprentice
at a Pentecostal church headquarters.
Eventually he was ordained to the ministry, and
he went on to become one of the most well known
preachers in his country. His ministry became
international shortly after the Smith
Wigglesworth prophecy in 1936. He moved to the
United States in 1947.
The consequences of Pentecost
A story that Rev. Du Plessis never tires of
telling deals with one of his first
conversations with Cardinal Johannes
Willebrands, the Vatican official responsible
for ecumenical discussions with leaders of other
churches.
Dr. du Plessis met the Cardinal while attending
the Second Vatican Council. One day while they
were talking he said, “Tell me, Cardinal, who is
the head of the church?’
“Certainly you know the answer to that,” the
cardinal replied. “Of course I know, but I want
to hear what you have to say.”
“Doesn’t scripture say that Christ is the head
of the church?” *Yes,” Rev. Du Plessis answered.
“I want to know if you Catholics believe it.”
“Of course we do.” “What about the pope?” “He’s
only the vicar of Christ,” the cardinal said.
“Christ is the head of the church.”
“Beautiful,” Dr. Du Plessis replied. “That
solves my difficulties with Catholics
altogether.”
"Why?” asked Cardinal Willebrands.
“Because I want you to know that for ages
Catholics have not recognized the ministry of
Christ as the baptizer. But if you recognize
that Christ is the head of the church because
the scriptures say so, then you also have to
recognize that he is the baptizer, because the
scriptures say that too.”
“We believe in baptism,” he replied.
“Yes, but that is the baptism of John. I am
speaking of the baptism of Christ Jesus, what
the scripture calls the baptism in the Holy
Spirit.”
That conversation was the first of many between
Vatican officials and Rev. Du Plessis and other
Pentecostals. It took place in the l960’s, about
the same time that Catholics the world over were
beginning to experience the baptism in the Holy
Spirit. Now, some 20 years later, Rev. Du
Plessis is concerned that Catholics who have
received this important blessing from God
realize what their baptism in the Spirit
requires of them.
“First of all,” he says, “we need to realize
that it is incorrect to say that we receive the
Holy Spirit. We don't receive the Spirit; the
Spirit receives us. When Jesus was baptized at
the Jordan he didn't receive the Spirit; the
Spirit received him, and he said so: You are my
beloved Son. On you my favor rests (Luke 3:22).
“The dove descended on him,” Rev. Du Plessis
continues,” and not a feather got inside. The
same kind of thing happened on the day of
Pentecost. The fire of the Spirit descended upon
them, and not a spark got inside. When the Bible
says that they were “filled with the Spirit (see
Acts 2:4) it means that they overflowed as the
consequences of the Spirit receiving them.
“These consequences were speaking in tongues and
boldly preaching the message of Jesus. I never
call tongues “the evidence” of the baptism in
the Holy Spirit. Tongues is not evidence; it is
a consequence.”
Rev. Du Plessis is deeply concerned that
Christians today understand God’s intention for
giving gifts like tongues, evangelism, and the
other “consequences” of the baptism in the Holy
Spirit.
“God wants to restore unity to Christian
people,” he says, “And one of the things he is
using is language, the very thing that has
divided mankind since the tower of Babel.
Tongues is a spiritual language, and it is
uniting Christians from many different churches
in many different lands. Once they’ve had the
same experience of the Holy Spirit they begin to
understand each other. Then they begin to find
other ways to be united to each other. This is a
wonderful thing, and I’ve seen it happen all
over the world.”
If unity is a reason that God gives the gift of
tongues, ministry is a reason for baptism in the
Spirit.
“Anyone who desires this baptism must be taught
that the next thing God expects of him or her is
to minister, because that is what Jesus did and
that is what the apostles did. After the Spirit
came upon Jesus he spent a short while wrestling
with the devil in the desert, then he
ministered.”
How did he minister? 'He taught them, he healed
them, he delivered them from evil spirits, he
loved them. That is also what the apostles did
immediately after Jesus baptized them on
Penteand that’s the ministry God calls us to
today.
“We have to remember,” Rev. Du Plessis adds,
“that the Spirit did not come on men alone. We
know that Mary and some other women were present
in the upper room, and the Spirit came on them
just as he did on the men. On that day Jesus
anointed all the people for ministry. He
liberated women from the law that had excluded
them from ministry. His intention is that men
and women work together so that the kingdom will
come.”
Rev. Du Plessis says that the baptism in the
Holy Spirit enables men and women to communicate
the gospel by means of teaching, preaching,
healing, and the other gifts. But God’s purpose
in this ministry is much deeper.
“The fruit of the Spirit is more important than
the gifts,” he says. “The message of the
thirteenth chapter of the first letter to the
Corinthians is something that should ring in our
hearts:
“If I speak with human tongues and
angelic as well, but do not have love, I am a
noisy gong, a clanging cymbal. If I have the
gift of prophecy and, with full knowledge,
comprehend all mysteries, if I have faith
great enough to move mountains, but have not
love, I am nothing” (2 Corinthians 13:1-2).
“God wants us to love. That is the basis for all
ministry; that is real spirituality. Gifts like
tongues and prophecy don't make us spiritual.
It's the response to the gifts-love and the
other fruit of the Spirit-that’s what God is
really after.
“The purpose of the gifts is to help us to love,
to forgive, to serve. And those are the things
that most effectively lead people to a saving
encounter with the baptizer, Jesus Christ.”
Rev. Du Plessis continues to travel throughout
the world spreading the good news about Jesus
the baptizer and building bridges of ecumenical
cooperation. He says that he plans to continue
his ministry as long as God gives him the health
to carry on. Last year Fuller Theological
Seminary, a leading Evangelical institution in
Pasadena, California, established the David du
Plessis Center to help him organize the papers
he has collected during more than 60 years of
ministry and to continue his work far into the
future.
David du Plessis sees continued growth ahead for
the Pentecostal revival and charismatic renewal.
“The Spirit has been moving in the churches for
most of this century,” he says. “But now the
Spirit is moving ahead of the churches. There is
a new wave of Holy Spirit revival all over the
world, and I expect it to produce dramatic
changes, exciting changes, in the years ahead.”
He also foresees continued progress in the
ecumenical discussions in which he has been
involved. But, he says, if significant progress
is to be made all churches are going to have to
eventually allow non-members to receive Holy
Communion.
“Jesus’ prayer for unity in the seventeenth
chapter of John's gospel was prayed at the first
Eucharist,” he says. “I hope that the day will
come when all Christians can sit at the same
table, worshiping the same Lord, and serving him
in a united witness to the world.”
When that day comes a great deal of the credit
will be given to David du Plessis. In the
meantime, Christians on every continent continue
to turn for guidance to the man who has been
given the affectionate nickname of “Mr.
Pentecost.”
[This article was first published in New
Covenant Magazine, January 1986]