The Spirit and the Promise: A Prophetic Advent
Isaiah 9:2-7 • Luke 1:46-55
The Holy Spirit's role in the Advent promise, prophetic expectation, and the continuity between Advent waiting and Spirit-filled worship
Pentecostal
The work of the Holy Spirit and spiritual gifts
The Spirit Who Spoke Through the Prophets
Simeon in the Temple
Simeon had been told by the Holy Spirit that he would not die before seeing the Messiah. For years — perhaps decades — he waited. Not in despair but in prophetic confidence. The Spirit had spoken. The promise was certain. And when Mary brought the baby Jesus into the temple, Simeon recognized Him immediately — not because of the baby's appearance, but because the Spirit revealed it. "Sovereign Lord, as you have promised, you may now dismiss your servant in peace. For my eyes have seen your salvation." Simeon is the patron saint of Advent: a Spirit-filled man who waited with prophetic confidence until the promise was fulfilled.
Source: Luke 2:25-32
The Magnificat: When the Spirit Breaks Into Song
Expecting the Fire
Applications
- 1Ask the Spirit to give you a prophetic word this Advent. The Spirit who spoke through Isaiah still speaks. Be open. Be listening. Be expectant.
- 2Let your worship overflow. Do not contain it. If the Spirit moves, let the praise come — spontaneous, prophetic, full-throated. Mary did not rehearse the Magnificat.
- 3Expect the supernatural. The first Christmas was not quiet — it was the most dramatic supernatural event since creation. Expect God to show up in power.
- 4Pray for fire. Not metaphorical fire — the real, glory-of-the-Lord, field-illuminating, angel-appearing fire of the living God. Advent is not polite. It is powerful.
Prayer Suggestions
- Holy Spirit, You spoke through the prophets. Speak through us. Give us prophetic words, prophetic songs, prophetic boldness this Advent.
- Fill us the way You filled Elizabeth and Mary. Let the Magnificat arise — spontaneous, Spirit-soaked, overflowing praise.
- Send the fire. Let the glory of the Lord shine in this place the way it shone in the shepherds' field. We are not afraid of the supernatural. We are hungry for it.
- Come, Lord Jesus. Come with power. Come with angels. Come with glory. The Spirit and the bride say "Come." Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)
Roy Neary is drawn to Devils Tower by a compulsion he cannot explain. Something is coming. He does not know what. But the pull is irresistible. And when the mothership finally appears — massive, luminous, shaking the earth — it is not what anyone expected. It is overwhelming. It is terrifying. It is beautiful. The shepherds had a close encounter of the divine kind. They were drawn to a field. The sky opened. The glory came. And nothing was ever the same. Advent is the season of being drawn — pulled by the Spirit toward something you cannot see yet but cannot resist.
3 Voices
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The Spirit who spoke through Isaiah is the same Spirit available today. Prophecy has not ceased. The gifts have not been withdrawn. Expect the Spirit to speak this Advent.
Mary did not rehearse the Magnificat. It overflowed from a heart filled with the Spirit. If you feel the stirring, open your mouth. The song will come.
The first Christmas involved an army of angels splitting the sky and the glory of God flooding a hillside. If your Advent is quiet and comfortable, you are expecting the wrong God.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How do Pentecostal and charismatic churches observe Advent?
Not all do, but many are rediscovering Advent as a season of prophetic expectation. Rather than a purely liturgical observance, Spirit-filled churches approach Advent as a time to seek the Spirit's fresh voice, expect supernatural encounters, and prepare hearts for the glory of God.
How does the Holy Spirit connect to Advent?
The Spirit inspired the Advent prophecies (2 Peter 1:21), filled Elizabeth and Mary at the visitation (Luke 1:41), prompted Simeon's prophetic recognition (Luke 2:26), and orchestrated every detail of the first Christmas. Advent is inherently a Spirit-driven season.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the advent (hope & waiting) sermon.