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Famous Bible event · Acts 2

Pentecost and the coming of the Spirit

A waiting group becomes a public witness, and the good news is heard across the languages of a festival crowd.

Pentecost is sometimes reduced to wind, fire, and an extraordinary speech. Acts 2 gives those signs a direction. The Spirit enables Jesus’ followers to speak to a multilingual crowd, Peter interprets the moment through Scripture and the story of Jesus, and the listeners must decide how to respond. The chapter ends not with spectacle but with a community learning a shared way of life.

The short answer

Jesus’ followers are together in Jerusalem during Pentecost when a sound like a violent wind fills the house and what look like tongues of fire rest on them. Filled with the Holy Spirit, they speak in other languages. Jewish pilgrims from many regions hear the message in their own native speech and ask what the event means.

Peter says that the moment fulfills the promise that God would pour out the Spirit, and he announces the crucified and risen Jesus as Lord and Messiah. About three thousand people receive the message, are baptized, and join a community devoted to the apostles’ teaching, fellowship, shared meals, and prayers.

Acts 1:4–14 · 2:1

The chapter begins with people who have been told to wait

Before the noise and the crowd, Acts describes a small group without a public strategy of its own. Jesus has told the followers to remain in Jerusalem and wait for the promised Holy Spirit. They gather, pray, and stay together while the next step remains outside their control.

Pentecost is already a Jewish festival before Acts 2. Pilgrims have come to Jerusalem, creating the multilingual audience that will soon hear the message. The event therefore arrives at a particular time and among people already gathered from many places.

Read in the BibleActs 1:4–14 · 2:1

Acts 2:2–13

The signs draw attention, but the languages carry the message

A sound like a powerful wind fills the house, appearances like divided fire rest on the followers, and they begin speaking as the Spirit enables them. Acts uses comparison carefully: the sound is like wind and the visible sign is like fire. The point is not to turn the scene into a technical description of weather or flame.

The crowd’s repeated surprise centers on understanding. Visitors from a long list of regions hear the mighty works of God in the languages in which they were raised. Some ask honestly what this means; others dismiss the speakers as drunk. The same public sign does not produce the same interpretation in every listener.

Read in the BibleActs 2:2–13

Acts 2:14–36

Peter explains the event instead of leaving it as a mystery

Peter stands with the other apostles and answers the accusation. He turns first to the prophet Joel, where the pouring out of God’s Spirit reaches sons and daughters, young and old, servants and all who call on the Lord. The languages are placed inside a larger promise about witness and access, not treated as an isolated marvel.

He then tells the story of Jesus: public ministry, crucifixion, resurrection, exaltation, and the gift of the Spirit now seen and heard. Peter’s argument repeatedly appeals to what the crowd knows, to Scripture, and to the claim that God raised Jesus. Pentecost is interpreted through Easter rather than presented as a separate religious experience.

Read in the BibleActs 2:14–36 · Joel 2:28–32

Acts 2:37–47

The answer becomes baptism, practice, and a shared life

The listeners are cut to the heart and ask what they should do. Peter calls them to repent and be baptized, assuring them that the promise reaches them, their children, and those far away whom God calls. About three thousand people receive the message and are added that day.

Luke then slows down to describe ordinary practices: learning from the apostles, fellowship, breaking bread, prayer, generosity, worship, and meals shared with gladness. These verses do not claim that every later problem has vanished; Acts will soon record conflict and failure. They show the first visible shape taken by the message proclaimed at Pentecost.

Read in the BibleActs 2:37–47 · 5:1–11 · 6:1–7

Read Pentecost by following what can be heard

Sound, languages, Scripture, proclamation, questions, and shared prayer give the chapter its movement.

  1. 01

    List every voice

    Notice who speaks, who understands, who questions, who mocks, and how Peter answers each response.

    Acts 2:1–21

  2. 02

    Trace Peter’s explanation

    Mark every connection Peter makes among Joel, David, the resurrection of Jesus, and the gift now witnessed.

    Acts 2:14–36

  3. 03

    Continue past the sermon

    Ask which repeated practices turn a one-day crowd into an identifiable community—and where Acts later shows strain.

    Acts 2:37–47 · 5:1–11 · 6:1–7

At Pentecost, the promise becomes audible—and then becomes a way of life.

Acts 2 moves from waiting to witness and from a crowd’s question to a community’s daily practices. The Spirit’s arrival does not erase language or difference. It makes the message of Jesus understandable across those differences and sends its hearers into repentance, belonging, generosity, prayer, and public testimony.