On Pentecost, one hundred and 
          twenty believers gathered in prayer in Jerusalem after listening to 
          Peter describe the farewell message of their Master. As they prayed, 
          the became filled with a new consciousness of spiritual joy and power, 
          followed by an urge to publicly proclaim the gospel. The Spirit of Truth, 
          the promised new teacher, had arrived.
        The apostles emerged from forty days in 
          hiding and began to preach their new message in the temple. Peter delivered 
          an appeal which won more than two thousand souls. The Jewish leaders 
          were astounded at the apostles' boldness.
        Jesus' followers quickly discovered that 
          the story of his resurrection held great allure. The gospel of the Fatherhood 
          of God quickly changed into the gospel of the risen Lord Jesus Christ. 
          The apostles proclaimed the facts of Jesus' life, death, and resurrection, 
          and the fervent hope of his imminent return. 
        The Jesus brotherhood grew. Converts to 
          the gospel prayed together, broke bread together, referred to each other 
          as brothers and sisters. They ministered to the poor and shared their 
          material possessions. The new fellowship spread rapidly for many years. 
          Jewish leaders, seeing that they didn't pose any threat and that they 
          continued to follow Jewish law, took little notice.
        All went well in Jerusalem until pupils 
          of Rodan began to make converts among the Hellenists. Greeks did not 
          conform to Jewish practices and ceremonies and this eventually caused 
          relations between the Jesus brotherhood and the Jewish leaders to deteriorate. 
          One Greek convert, Stephen, was stoned to death as he preached, thus 
          becoming the first martyr of the new religion.
        Stephen's death brought about the formal 
          organization of the early Christian church. Believers agreed to separate 
          themselves from unbelievers. Within a month of Stephen's death, Peter 
          and James were leading the new church in Jerusalem. Missionaries went 
          forth throughout the Roman empire carrying the message of the new gospel, 
          and relentless persecution by the Jews began.
        Pentecost was a call to spiritual unity 
          among believers. The Spirit of Truth descended in Jerusalem, Alexandria, 
          Philadelphia, and all other places where true believers lived. The Spirit 
          equipped teachers of the new faith with spiritual weapons: unfailing 
          forgiveness, matchless good will, and boundless love. Among themselves, 
          followers of Jesus were set free from discrimination based on sex, race, 
          culture, and social status.
        The life and death of Jesus eternally 
          prove that goodness and faith will always be vindicated. Michael, as 
          Jesus, revealed God to mankind as the Spirit of Truth reveals Michael 
          to mankind. The mission of the Spirit is to foster and personalize truth 
          and to destroy mortal feelings of orphanhood. The Spirit of Truth purifies 
          the human heart and leads us to commit to the will of God and the welfare 
          of humankind. The joy of this Spirit is a tonic for health, a stimulus 
          for mind, and an unfailing energy for the soul. The Spirit of Truth 
          brings a restatement of the message of Jesus to every new generation 
          of believers, providing personal enlightenment and guidance for the 
          spiritual difficulties of mortal life.