When
Pentecost Day arrived, they were all together in one place. 2 Suddenly
a sound from heaven like the howling of a fierce wind filled the entire house
where they were sitting. 3 They saw what seemed to be
individual flames of fire alighting on each one of them. 4 They
were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages as
the Spirit enabled them to speak.
5 There
were pious Jews from every nation under heaven living in Jerusalem. 6 When
they heard this sound, a crowd gathered. They were mystified because everyone
heard them speaking in their native languages. 7 They were
surprised and amazed, saying, “Look, aren’t all the people who are speaking
Galileans, every one of them? 8 How then can each of us hear
them speaking in our native language? 9 Parthians, Medes, and
Elamites; as well as residents of Mesopotamia, Judea, and Cappadocia, Pontus
and Asia, 10 Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the regions of
Libya bordering Cyrene; and visitors from Rome (both Jews and converts to
Judaism), 11 Cretans and Arabs—we hear them declaring the
mighty works of God in our own languages!” 12 They were all
surprised and bewildered. Some asked each other, “What does this mean?” 13 Others
jeered at them, saying, “They’re full of new wine!”
14 Peter
stood with the other eleven apostles. He raised his voice and declared,
“Judeans and everyone living in Jerusalem! Know this! Listen carefully to my
words! 15 These people aren’t drunk, as you suspect; after all,
it’s only nine o’clock in the morning! 16 Rather, this is what
was spoken through the prophet Joel:
17 In the last days, God says,
I will pour out my Spirit on all people.
Your sons and daughters will prophesy.
Your young will see visions.
Your elders will dream dreams. 18 Even upon my servants, men and women,
I will pour out my Spirit in those days,
and they will prophesy. 19 I will cause wonders to occur in the heavens above
and signs on the earth below,
blood and fire and a cloud of smoke. 20 The sun will be changed into darkness,
and the moon will be changed into blood,
before the great and spectacular day of the Lord comes. 21 And everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.
I will pour out my Spirit on all people.
Your sons and daughters will prophesy.
Your young will see visions.
Your elders will dream dreams. 18 Even upon my servants, men and women,
I will pour out my Spirit in those days,
and they will prophesy. 19 I will cause wonders to occur in the heavens above
and signs on the earth below,
blood and fire and a cloud of smoke. 20 The sun will be changed into darkness,
and the moon will be changed into blood,
before the great and spectacular day of the Lord comes. 21 And everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.
Today, we are celebrating
Pentecost. Pentecost is the conclusion
of the great Easter season, and it occurs fifty days after Easter Sunday. Pentecost is sometimes referred to as the
birthday of the Church, because on the day of Pentecost the Holy Spirit was
poured out on the followers of Jesus, and the Church began. Every year, the Church continues to celebrate
Pentecost, and pray for the Holy Spirit to be poured out on us, just as it was
on the first followers of Jesus.
A young
man visited a prominent church in his
town. Let’s just say he didn’t fit
in. He was “different” than the majority
of people who attended that church.
After worship, he greeted the pastor on his way back outside, and said,
“Pastor, I really enjoyed worship today.
I think I’d like to join this church!”
The pastor was visibly agitated by this – anyone could see that this
young man was “different,” and the pastor didn’t need the headache of what
people might say if someone like this young man joined the church. But, trying to be diplomatic and pastoral, he
said, “Well, joining a church is very serious business. Why don’t you go home this week and pray for
the Holy Spirit’s guidance about this very important decision?”
The
young man walked away, and the pastor was surprised to see him sitting in the
congregation the next week. As he left
worship, the pastor said, “Did you pray about what we talked about last
week?” The young man said, “I sure did,
and I’ve decided not to join your church.”
The pastor was visually relieved that this undesirable person would not
join his church. The young man
continued, “I did what you said, and the Holy Spirit told me I shouldn’t
bother; she’s been trying to get into this church for the last ten years!”
I’ve
known plenty of folks who speculate about whether or not the Holy Spirit shows
up in Methodist churches. My friend,
Oliver Box, says, “The Holy Spirit does, indeed, show up at the Methodist
church. He just knows to mind his
manners when he’s there.” And, perhaps
that’s the problem.
The United Methodist "cross and flame" |
Take a
look at our denominational logo, our
trademark “cross and flame.” That red
thing beside the cross is supposed to represent the fire of the Holy
Spirit. Even on our logo, it looks like
a pretty controlled burn, doesn’t it?
Not getting out of control, burning quietly, never really flaring up too
much.
We are
good with God the Father, whom we have experienced as a loving parent, whose
creation we see and are struck with awe and wonder. We are good with God the Son, because we can
see and understand the life, teaching, and example of Jesus Christ. When it comes to God the Holy Spirit, we
aren’t quite sure what to do there.
We’ve
seen that the Spirit can be wild and unruly and unpredictable, and we’re not
sure we want the wind and fire of God’s presence blowing through our tidy and
neatly-ordered lives. We’ve worked hard
for this, we’ve put everything where we want it, we like it how it is – and the
last thing we need is the Holy Spirit getting loose and going wild and messing
everything up. And so, we invite the
Holy Spirit in, but with a list of conditions: “Sit in the corner. Don’t make too much noise. Don’t draw attention to yourself. And don’t mess with our stuff.”
We want
to experience the Holy Spirit as a controlled burn, as tame as the pilot light
on your water heater, as contained as candle flame on the altar table, as easily-extinguished
as a cheap pocket lighter. We want a
Holy Spirit we can control.
But
friends, the Holy Spirit is not a controlled burn. The Holy
Spirit is wildfire. When we pray for and
open ourselves up to the Holy Spirit, we are praying with wildfire! We are praying for fire to fall from heaven
upon us and ignite something within us we would never light for ourselves. We are praying to be blown out of our comfort
zone, out of our control zone, swept up in a holy consuming fire we did not start
and can never hope to extinguish. Who in
the world would want something like that?
The
followers of Jesus, that’s who.
In the Scripture we’ve read, when the first
followers of Jesus received the Holy Spirit, they found themselves getting into
all sorts of things they never would have on their own. They were speaking in languages they’d never
learned, prophesying about things they didn’t know anything about, not bound by
a spirit of fear and timidity but boldness and courage – all because they
received the Holy Spirit.
The same is true for us. Having the Holy Spirit in our lives means
giving up control and opening ourselves up to things and people and experiences
we would never seek on our own. It means
getting out of the drivers’ seat and letting the Holy Spirit set the
course. It means getting caught up in
the wildfire of the Holy Spirit.
The power and presence of the Holy Spirit is the
difference between going to church
and being the church – the living,
breathing, body of Christ, the real hands and feet of Jesus in the world – if we’re going to do
all that we have been called to be, we need the Holy Spirit.
We’ve
got to get fired up. The first car I bought was a 1986 Honda
Prelude, and it was everything you would expect from a first car a high
schooler bought for himself with what he had saved over a couple years of a
part-time job. On cold mornings in
upstate New York, it had trouble getting fired up. You had to turn the ignition and then mash
your foot down on the accelerator, hoping it wouldn’t die right away. The goal was to increase the RPMs on the
engine and let it run long enough that it would warm up enough to not stall out
when you let it idle. There were some
mornings I had to turn the ignition 20 times just to finally crank it up enough
that it would continue to run.
With
that car, if it didn’t get fired up in the morning, do you know what
happened? It didn’t go anywhere. Likewise, when the church fails to get fired
up with the Holy Spirit, we don’t go anywhere, either.
Or, to
put it another way, we need fire in our belly.
When we see someone with passion for something, we say they have fire
in their belly. We need passion for the
things Jesus was passionate about.
We need to get fired up. We need some fire in our belly. We need passion for the things God would have
us be passionate about. We need the
wildfire of the Holy Spirit. Without
that wildfire, without that passion, without that fire in our belly, we just
sit on the curb like my first car on a cold morning; all we do is sit there and
occupy space, but we’re not taking anyone anywhere.
Friends, the presence
and power of the Holy Spirit is the difference between just going to church and being the church.
John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, wrote, “I
am not afraid that the people called Methodists should ever cease to
exist. But I am afraid they should only
exist as a dead church, having the form of religion without its power.” “My fear is that our people will become
content to live without the fire, the power, the excitement, the supernatural
element that makes us great.”
Too often and too easily, we settle for a faith
experience devoid of the Holy Spirit.
Tidy, neat, predictable, under control – and completely powerless to
change our lives, let alone change the world.
The worst thing is not that we would cease to
exist. No, the worst thing would be to
lose our vitality, to have the outward form of religion without its power.
Every weekend – sometimes on Saturday, sometimes
on Sunday morning – I walk through the sanctuary and fellowship hall, and I
touch every seat, and I pray for the Holy Spirit to fill the hearts of the
people who will sit there and kindle in them the fire of God’s love. I do the same thing for every outside door,
up and down every hallway, pausing at the door of each room, praying for the
Holy Spirit to be poured upon each person who walks through them, down these
halls, and into each room.
So, when you show up on Sunday morning, I have
prayed for you. As you sit in these seats
and walk through these doors, I pray you feel the power of those prayers and
sense the presence of the Holy Spirit upon you and full within you.
But remember, that’s just the beginning. I want you to remember what
those first followers of Jesus did as soon as they received the Holy Spirit. They unlocked the door and boldly went out to
share God’s good news with the world.
The first thing they did was take a mission trip. They didn’t build a building, they didn’t have
a worship service, they didn’t create a budget, they didn’t have a stewardship
campaign, they didn’t create any programs, and they most certainly didn’t form
any committees. They boldly went out in
mission. The very first thing the Church
did was to leave the building, because their passion for the Gospel was greater
than their personal preference, comfort, and control.
If you keep reading the book of Acts, you’ll see
that those winds of the Holy Spirit kept right on blowing. The wind that first blew the disciples out of
their comfort zone, beyond their locked door and into the street with God’s
good news kept blowing.
Today, I’m praying for the Holy Spirit to be
poured upon us just as it was poured upon the first followers of Jesus so many
years ago. Our faith is not just the
story about what God did once upon a time, to some people we don’t know, in a
land far, far, away. God’s story is
still being written, and it continues in us, so long as our hearts are open and
receptive to the warm winds of the Holy Spirit.
There are times when the work of the Spirit is
imperceptible, but there are other times when you can see it, hear it, and feel
it. To this day, every time I see the color red or a fire burning, when I feel
the wind stir or hear the flap of a dove’s wings, I think, “Holy Spirit! I wonder what wild and unpredictable and
wonderful thing God is up to today.”
I don’t know when or in which direction the
Spirit might blow. I only know that it
will. Let’s be open enough to get caught
up in the fiery wind when it comes by.
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