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Camp Session 1: Acts 1:8 and John 14 reframe how we think about the Holy Spirit: not as a force, a feeling, or some power we use, but as a person we know. The Bible never asks "what is the Spirit?" but "who is He?", and that distinction changes everything: a person fully God, to be known and worshiped, who actually lives inside everyone who trusts Christ. The goal was never power for power's sake; it's relationship, and power is simply what flows out of walking with Him. When Paul says God's strength is made perfect in weakness, he points to a paradox: we are strongest not when we have it all together, but when we admit we don't and lean on the Spirit.
By Student MinistryCamp Session 1: Acts 1:8 and John 14 reframe how we think about the Holy Spirit: not as a force, a feeling, or some power we use, but as a person we know. The Bible never asks "what is the Spirit?" but "who is He?", and that distinction changes everything: a person fully God, to be known and worshiped, who actually lives inside everyone who trusts Christ. The goal was never power for power's sake; it's relationship, and power is simply what flows out of walking with Him. When Paul says God's strength is made perfect in weakness, he points to a paradox: we are strongest not when we have it all together, but when we admit we don't and lean on the Spirit.