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How do we know that the Gentile Pentecost was significant?

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The Gentile Pentecost is significant as it marks the inclusion of Gentiles into the covenant of grace and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon them (Acts 10:44-47).

The Gentile Pentecost, as described in Acts 10, is a crucial event in redemptive history, signifying that salvation and the Holy Spirit are now available to Gentiles without requiring adherence to the Jewish ceremonial law. The simultaneous outpouring of the Spirit upon the Gentiles, which mirrored the experience of Jews at Pentecost, served as God's declaration that His grace was granted to all, irrespective of their ethnic background. As Peter recognized, this reality was a fulfillment of the prophetic promise that in the last days, God's Spirit would be poured out on all flesh, emphasizing the universality of God's redemptive plan (Acts 2:17).
Scripture References: Acts 10:44-47, Acts 2:17

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