How to Receive Fresh Fire from God: Biblical Steps to Reignite Your Spirit
"Divided tongues, as of fire, and one sat upon each of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit."
— Acts 2:3-4
How do you receive fresh fire from God?
To receive fresh fire from God, the Bible reveals a clear pathway:
- Acknowledge that the fire has cooled — denial keeps the smoldering wick smoking
- Repent of every fire-quenching sin and unconfessed weight
- Stir up the gift through prayer, worship, and the Word (2 Timothy 1:6)
- Ask the Father directly for the baptism of the Holy Spirit and fire
- Surround yourself with other burning believers — fire spreads
- Steward the flame daily through obedience and consecration
Key Scripture: Acts 2:3-4 — "And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance."
"Then there appeared to them divided tongues, as of fire, and one sat upon each of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance."
— Acts 2:3-4 (NKJV)A Word from Sanmi Dawodu
If you're asking how to receive fresh fire from God, you're not alone. Many believers sense their flame has dimmed — and the Bible gives a clear, hopeful pathway to receive fresh fire from the Holy Spirit, no matter how cold the season has felt.
We enter Week Two clean. The first week stripped away what was hindering — the drift, the guilt, the unconfessed sin, the broken conscience. Now we build. Now we fill. And the first thing God wants to fill every cleansed vessel with in Week Two is fire. Fresh fire.
Fire is one of the dominant metaphors of the Holy Spirit in Scripture. John the Baptist declared of Jesus: 'He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire' (Matthew 3:11). The tongues of fire at Pentecost were not decorative. They were descriptive — they told us something essential about the nature of the Spirit's presence: it purifies, it illuminates, it warms, it consumes, it spreads, and it transforms everything it touches. A church without fire is a church in spiritual hypothermia — still alive, but barely. Today we ask for fresh fire.
What Is the Baptism with the Holy Spirit and Fire?
John the Baptist made a stunning prediction about the One coming after him: "He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire" (Matthew 3:11). The baptism with the Holy Spirit and fire is not the same thing as conversion — it is an immersion in the empowering presence of the Holy Spirit that purifies, equips, and ignites a believer for Spirit-led life and witness.
If you have already asked God for a clean heart (Day 7), fresh fire is the natural next step. A cleansed vessel is ready to be filled. Continue your daily walk through the 40 Days of Prayer series to keep the fire burning long after Day 8.
The Fire of Pentecost: What Acts 2:3-4 Actually Means
Acts 2 describes one of the most significant moments in human history: the descent of the Holy Spirit upon 120 believers gathered in an upper room in Jerusalem. The fire that fell on that day was not symbolic — it was visible, audible, and supernaturally real. 'Divided tongues, as of fire' — the Greek word is 'glossa' for tongues and 'pur' for fire. The fire distributed itself individually, sitting upon each person. Not a fire that hovered over the group collectively — but a fire that individualized itself, one for every single person in the room.
This is the nature of the Holy Spirit's fire: it is personal. God does not give you someone else's fire. He gives you your fire — calibrated to your calling, your assignment, your personality, and your season. The fire that sat upon Peter was not the fire that sat upon Mary. Each flame was distinct, personal, and purposeful. And the result was transformation — fishermen became theologians, cowards became martyrs, the grieving became the glorious, and 120 frightened disciples turned a known world upside down within a generation.
The Fire That Purifies: Isaiah's Coal and How God Cleanses
Isaiah chapter six records one of the most dramatic prophetic commissions in all of Scripture. The young prophet stands in the throne room of God — overwhelmed, undone, aware of his sinfulness in the blinding holiness of the divine presence. 'Woe is me, for I am undone! Because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips; for my eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts' (Isaiah 6:5).
The response of God is fire — a live coal from the altar, carried by a seraph, applied directly to the prophet's mouth. The place of his greatest acknowledged weakness — 'unclean lips' — became the precise point of the fire's application. God always applies His purifying fire to the point of deepest need. The coal touched his lips and the seraph declared: 'Your iniquity is taken away, and your sin purged.' Fire and cleansing are inseparable. Fresh fire does not descend on a heart that refuses to be purified.
"But who can endure the day of His coming? And who can stand when He appears? For He is like a refiner's fire and like launderers' soap. He will sit as a refiner and a purifier of silver."
— Malachi 3:2–3 (NKJV)The Smoldering Wick: When Your Fire Has Almost Gone Out
Isaiah 42:3 contains a beautiful promise about the ministry of the Messiah: 'A bruised reed He will not break, and a smoking flax He will not quench.' A smoking flax — a wick that still has some ember in it, still producing a faint wisp of smoke, still technically alive but no longer giving light or warmth — the Messiah will not extinguish. He will tend it, fan it, and restore it to full flame.
This is the condition of many believers who come to this week of spiritual renewal: they are not dead — but the flame has reduced to a wisp of smoke. The fire that once burned so brightly — that made them leap out of bed to pray, that made worship feel like flying, that made the Word of God taste like honey — has been reduced to a barely-perceptible flicker. Jesus does not despise the smoldering wick. He comes to it with breath — the breath of the Holy Spirit — and fans it back to full flame.
️ Fire Extinguishers: Paul identifies specific behaviors that quench the Spirit's fire: 'Do not quench the Spirit' (1 Thessalonians 5:19). The fire is quenched by unconfessed sin, spiritual neglect, religious formalism, bitterness, persistent disobedience, and the gradual replacement of Spirit-dependence with self-sufficiency. Identify which of these has been cooling your fire — and bring it to the cross.
How to Stir Up the Gift of God in You (2 Timothy 1:6)
Second Timothy 1:6 contains a striking command from Paul to his spiritual son: 'Therefore I remind you to stir up the gift of God which is in you through the laying on of my hands.' The Greek word for 'stir up' is 'anazopureo' — literally to fan into flame, to rekindle, to cause a dying fire to blaze again. This implies that the fire of God in a believer can die down — and that there is a human role in its rekindling.
The fire of God is sovereign in its giving — we cannot manufacture it or work it up emotionally. But the maintenance and the re-ignition of that fire involves our cooperation. Prayer stirs it. Worship stirs it. Fellowship with other burning believers stirs it. The Word, received hungrily and obeyed promptly, stirs it. Fasting — which creates a kind of spiritual oxygen — stirs it. Paul commands Timothy not to wait passively for the fire to return but to take active, deliberate steps to fan it back into flame.
The 5 Conditions for Receiving Fresh Fire from God
The 120 in Acts 2 did not receive the fire casually. They had been in continuous, united, devoted prayer for ten days (Acts 1:14). They had obeyed the command to wait — choosing the upper room over the street, the prayer meeting over the marketplace, the posture of seeking over the posture of striving. When the fire fell, it fell on people who were in the right place, with the right posture, for the right amount of time.
This does not mean that fresh fire is earned by prolonged prayer — the fire is always God's sovereign gift. But the 120 were positioned to receive it. They were gathered, not scattered. Unified, not divided. Seeking, not presuming. Empty, not self-sufficient. The fire tends to fall on gatherings marked by desperation, unity, surrender, and sustained seeking. Where those conditions are met — in a single believer's prayer closet or in a church gathering of thousands — the fire falls.
What Fresh Fire Produces in a Believer's Life
When fresh fire falls, the results are always recognizable. Boldness erupts where timidity ruled — Peter, who denied Jesus three times in the courtyard, stood before thousands in Jerusalem and proclaimed the resurrection without apology. Witness overflows — 'you shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be witnesses to Me' (Acts 1:8). Gifts are activated — tongues, prophecy, healing, miracles — the supernatural becomes natural. And the presence of God becomes not an occasional experience but the continuous atmosphere of daily life.
Fresh fire also produces a renewed hatred of sin — because the purer the flame, the more intolerable the darkness. Fresh fire and compromise cannot coexist. This is why genuine revivals are always accompanied by deep conviction of sin, public confession, and radical lifestyle change. The fire does not merely warm us — it burns away everything that is not of God.
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Altar Call: When God Reignites What Religion Has Extinguished
Day 8 of Week 2 calls you forward — not into intellectual agreement with what you have read, but into actual surrender. Fresh Fire is not a topic to study; it is an invitation to receive.
The fire that fell at Pentecost is still falling on every heart positioned to receive it. Tomorrow, in Day 9: How to Hunger for God, we discover the holy hunger that draws the fire even closer.
Receive what God has been speaking to you today. Pray the prayer below from your heart.
A Prayer for Fresh Fire
Father, I come before You as a vessel that has been cleansed but needs to be filled. I have felt my fire reduced to a wisp of smoke, and today I bring that smoldering wick to You.
Baptize me afresh with the Holy Spirit and with fire. Let Your purifying flame remove every residue of the old life. Let Your illuminating fire fill me with revelation. Let Your warming fire restore the love that first set me ablaze.
I receive fresh fire from heaven today. In the name of Jesus, Amen.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does it mean to be baptized with fire in the Bible?
How do I stir up the gift of God in me?
What does it mean to quench the Spirit?
Can the fire of God die down in a believer?
How do I pray for fresh fire from God?
The fire of God has not gone cold. Ask Him for fresh fire today — not someday.
Continue the 40-Day Journey
Access all 40 daily sermon packs, 30-point prayer sets, and Spirit-led devotionals at Sanmi Dawodu Ministries.
Explore the Full Prayer Series →Continue the 7-Day Week 2 Series
Each day of Week 2 builds on the one before. Read the full Spiritual Renewal series at sanmidawodu.org/40-days-prayer.
- Day 9:How to Hunger for God: The Holy Hunger That God Always Satisfies
- Day 10:How to Pray for Personal Revival: Biblical Keys to Revive a Cold Heart
- Day 11:How to Be Filled with the Holy Spirit Daily: Biblical Steps to Stay Continuously Filled
- Day 12:How to Hear God's Voice Clearly: Biblical Steps That Tune Your Spirit
- Day 13:New Beginning: How to Recognize and Step Into God's New Thing
- Day 14:How to Develop a Deeper Prayer Life: Biblical Steps That Actually Work
Building on Week 1: Repentance & Cleansing
This week's journey of renewal stands on the foundation laid in Week 1. If you missed it, start here:
