@Major You'll never convince anyone who has experienced the baptisim (Or infilling as it is sometimes called) that what we experienced was/is not real. The Holy Spirit would never allow it!
I have no intention of doing that in any way.
I also have experienced the baptism of the Holy Spirit my brother.
I know it was real.
Now the question must be....What is the Baptism of the Holy Spirit. Is it what the Bible tells us it is or is it what SOME MEN have told us it is???????
Now the Scriptures ACTUALLY tell us that the baptism of the Holy Spirit is defined as that work whereby the Spirit of God places the believer into union with Christ and into union with other believers in the body of Christ at the moment of salvation.
Mark 1:8 (ESV)
"I have baptized you with water, but he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit.”
1 Corth. 12:12-13.........is the central passage in the Bible regarding the baptism of the Holy Spirit: ........
“For we were all baptized by one Spirit into one body—whether Jews or Greeks, slave or free—and we were all given the one Spirit to drink”.
That Scripture clearly states that
all have been baptized, just as all been given the Spirit to drink (the indwelling of the Spirit).
Second, nowhere in Scripture are believers told to be baptized with, in or by the Spirit, or in any sense to seek the baptism of the Holy Spirit. This indicates that all believers have had this experience.
Third, Ephesians 4:5 refers to Spirit baptism. Since this is the case, Spirit baptism is the reality for every believer, just as “one faith” and “one Father” are.
So then, from where I sit, the baptism of the Holy Spirit does two things,
1) it joins us to the body of Christ, and
2) it actualizes our co-crucifixion with Christ.
Being in His body means we are risen with Him to newness of life which is seen in Romans 6:4.
We should then exercise our spiritual gifts to keep that body functioning properly as stated in the context of 1 Corth. 12:13.
Experiencing the one Spirit baptism serves as the basis for keeping the unity of the church, as in the context of of Eph. 4:5.
Being associated with Christ in His death, burial, and resurrection through Spirit baptism establishes the basis for our separation from the power of indwelling sin and our walk in newness of life according to Romans 6:1-10 and Colossians 2:12.
As seen in Acts 2.....for the first time, people were permanently indwelt by the Holy Spirit, and the church had begun.