A Sermon for Whitsunday
Bible Text: Acts 2:1-11 | Preacher: The Rev’d William Klock | Series: The Church Year | A Sermon for Whitsunday
Acts 2:1-11
by William Klock
So Pentecost. It simply means “fiftieth” in Greek. Long before it was a Christian feast day, it was important Jewish festival. Greek-speaking Jews gave it this same because it fell fifty days after Passover, but the biblical name was the “feast of weeks” and it was connected to the wheat harvest. It’s important to remember that Jesus and the Church don’t stand apart from the bigger picture, the bigger story of God and his people.
So, again, Pentecost. God instructed his people to bring him the firstfruits—the very first part of the harvest, as an offering. That offering of the firstfruits—much like our tithes and offerings today—given before the full harvest had arrived, was an offering of faith. Other peoples would offer their gods what was left over after the harvest was brought in and they knew what they could afford to give, but God expected his people to give in faith, not knowing what the harvest would bring, but trusting that he would take care of them no matter what happened, just as he had in the wilderness. It was a feast of expectation and faith. That was the first aspect of Pentecost.
But Pentecost was also connected with the giving of the law. That’s where the significance of “fifty” comes in. Again, Pentecost follows fifty days after Passover. You’ll remember that Passover commemorated Israel’s exodus from Egypt: their slavery, Moses and the Lord’s commands to Pharaoh, “Let my people go!”, the plagues, the blood painted on the doorposts, the sparing of Israel’s firstborn sons, the flight from Egypt, and Israel’s rescue at the Red Sea. Passover was a festival of the Lord’s deliverance of his people and it celebrated the great event in which Israel was born as a nation—and each generation participated in those events anew as they gathered in their homes to share the Passover meal. It marked them out as the Lord’s covenant people.
But the story didn’t end at the Red Sea. The Lord led his people into the wilderness and fifty days later they arrived at Mt. Sinai. Moses went up onto the mountain to meet with the Lord and when he came back down he was carrying the law, carved on stone tablets. So at Passover the people celebrated their redemption and at Pentecost they remembered that God had redeemed them for a reason: to live a new kind of life in order to fulfil his purposes and their calling.
This is the backstory for what we read in the book of Acts. Can you see the parallels? Our Easter celebration of the death and resurrection of Jesus each year is the Christian Passover. As Israel was redeemed from slavery by the blood of the Passover lambs painted on their doors, so we are saved from our bondage to sin and our slavery to death by the blood of Jesus, the true, perfect, and eternal Passover lamb who not only died, but rose from the grave. That’s our Passover; that’s our exodus.
And now, fifty days later, we celebrate our Pentecost. Look at Acts 2:1-4 where St. Luke describes that first “Christian Pentecost”:
When the day of Pentecost arrived, they were all together in one place. And suddenly there came from heaven a sound like a mighty rushing wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting. And divided tongues as of fire appeared to them and rested on each one of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance.
Something new and something big was happening. When Moses went up onto Mt. Sinai the people were afraid because of the thunder and lightning surrounding it. Now like wind and fire the Spirit rushes into the house where the disciples were gathered. And as the Spirit comes they all start to speak in different tongues, in different languages as the Spirit directed. We’ll come back to that part as we look at the rest of the story in Acts 2, but for now notice the parallels with the “original” Old Testament Pentecost.
What we read here is the birthday, the start of the Church. What we see here is the firstfruits of Jesus’ ministry. Consider the Ascension Day Epistle and Gospel where we read about Jesus ascending to heaven. The night he was arrested Jesus told his disciples at some length that he was leaving soon, but that it was for the best. He would leave, but in doing so he would send them his Spirit to equip them for ministry. As he was leaving he commissioned them: Go and make disciples of all the nations, baptising them and teaching them everything I’ve taught you. And as they stood there staring into space two angels appeared and asked, “Men of Galilee, why are you standing here staring into the sky. Jesus left on the clouds and he will come back on the clouds one day. In the meantime, didn’t he give you something to do?” Jesus commissioned his people to engage in a ministry of gigantic and intimidating proportions: to make him known throughout the world—to proclaim like royal heralds that Jesus is Lord, that he is God’s King, and that he has come to fulfil God’s promises and to set the world to rights—everything that we’ve made wrong. He’s risen from the grave and is victor over sin and death.
But to take that message to the world was—and still is—a daunting task. It was daunting that when Jesus gave this commission to his disciples, they didn’t even realise the full scope of it. In these first chapters of Acts, taking the message to Jerusalem and Judea was challenge enough. And then to Samaria—eeww! To those people. But the whole world? They saw that in terms of the Jewish diaspora—taking the message to their fellow Jews throughout the world. Actually, deliberately going to Gentiles? That was a crazy idea and it would take Paul to make the Church really understand that part of the commission. But this commission to proclaim the good news about Jesus to everyone everywhere was impossible. The field, the harvest was just too big—and as far as Jesus’ friends were concerned, most of those fields weren’t even theirs to harvest. But here at Pentecost he sends the Holy Spirit to equip Jesus’ friends for their impossible mission and not only that but here we see the firstfruits of the harvest and we know that what God has begun he will always finish—even if it takes a long time.
In verses 5-11 Luke goes on, saying:
Now there were dwelling in Jerusalem Jews, devout men from every nation under heaven. And at this sound the multitude came together, and they were bewildered, because each one was hearing them speak in his own language. And they were amazed and astonished, saying, “Are not all these who are speaking Galileans? And how is it that we hear, each of us in his own native language? Parthians and Medes and Elamites and residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts of Libya belonging to Cyrene, and visitors from Rome, both Jews and proselytes, Cretans and Arabians—we hear them telling in our own tongues the mighty works of God.”
These were all Jews or converts to Judaism, but they represented every corner of the known world. Looking out on the field of the world the harvest looked overwhelming, but now we see the Spirit equipping these men who, themselves, came from every corner of the world and if the Spirit could equip them to proclaim the mighty works of God he could certainly send them out and then gather more to send out to follow them.
When we look at Pentecost in the context of the larger story of redemption it really is remarkable. Back at the beginning the Lord had chosen and called Abraham. In Genesis 12:3 we read the Lord’s promise to Abraham: Through you and through your family all the nations of the world will be blessed. This was Abraham’s mission and then it became Israel’s mission. And Israel was generally a miserable failure at fulfilling that mission. More often than not the nations were laughing at Israel and asking, “Where’s your God now?”—not because God failed, but because his people weren’t living as if he were real and able.
But here at Pentecost we see the new Israel, born of Jesus, now empowered by the Holy Spirit and proclaiming with supernatural power the mighty works of God and ready to take that proclamation back home to their corners of the world. Again, just as the old Pentecost festival was a celebration of the harvest in which the firstfruits were offered to the Lord in faith, so the “new” Pentecost is a celebration in which the Holy Spirit gives a foretaste of the harvest to come and in which we commit ourselves in faith to doing the work Jesus has commissioned us to do and for which the Spirit has equipped us.
But that’s just the aspect of Pentecost that has to do with the harvest. Pentecost is and always was a celebration and commemoration of the new life of God’s people. In the exodus the Lord redeemed and rescued his people and at Mt. Sinai he gave them his law. The law was meant to set them apart them, to remind them that they belonged to God and that they were a holy people, and it was also meant to be a witness to the nations of what it looks like and what it means to walk as God’s people. Moses went up onto the mountain and he came back down with the law written on stone tablets—how to be God’s people. And now at this “new” Pentecost we remember that just ten days before, Jesus ascended to his heavenly throne and he has sent the Spirit down with a new law, not this time written on tablets of stone, but come to tabernacle with his people, to fill us up, and to write that law on our hearts. The problem with the old law, the reason it was so difficult for Israel to keep, was that it was external—it said “do this” and “don’t do that”, but it didn’t have the power to transform sinful hearts, to actually reorient fallen human desires and affections. But this new law that Jesus has given is different. It’s written on the very hearts of his people by the Spirit who renews our minds and regenerates our hearts—he clears our thinking and he changes the desires of our heart from sin to holiness, from the values of the present age to the values of the age to come, from love of ourselves to love for God.
With all this in mind it makes sense that the Spirit comes like the wind here in Acts. The Hebrew word for “spirit” is also the word for breath and it’s connected to the verb meaning “to blow”. God’s Spirit was there in the beginning, hovering over the waters. God’s Spirit was there in the beginning when he breathed life into us. And God’s Spirit came like a wind again at Pentecost to breathe or to blow the new life of Jesus into his people in a new act of creation. What Jesus has accomplished in his death and resurrection was applied to his people by the Spirit at Pentecost. And each of us, every Christian since that first day, has experienced Pentecost. In the waters of baptism Jesus calls us to follow him in faith. Each of us once passed through the baptismal waters much as Israel, in faith, followed Moses through the waters of the Red Sea. And as God met Israel on the far side to give her his law, so the Spirit meets us in our baptism, pours himself into us, and writes the law of grace on our hearts, applying the death and resurrection of Jesus to us and making us new.
And this is it. This is what we were made for. Going back all the way to the beginning of the story, back before Abraham, all the way back to Adam we see that human beings, men and women, were created by the Lord to be his priests. His Creation was his temple and he placed us in it to live in his presence, to experience his goodness, and to serve him in return by bearing his image as we expanded his rule, his dominion to the far reaches of the earth.
Instead, we rebelled. We made a mess of everything. We sinned, and because sin cannot exist in the presence of the holy, we were cast out of the garden and out of God’s life-giving presence. We began to die and the world began to die with us. But in his loving grace the Lord did not give up on us. Again, the story. At the tower of Babel we see humanity at one of its lowest points, sunk in utter paganism, having lost all knowledge of God. And that’s precisely the time when the Lord stepped in and chose and called Abraham. And from Abraham on we see his redemptive work unfolding.
Jesus finally completed that work. In his death and resurrection he defeated sin and death and then he ascended. From his throne he sent his Spirit to apply his life-giving and life-restoring work to us. Think about that for a minute. Jesus is himself the firstfruits of God’s new creation, the first to be transformed and made new, the first human being to once again be as at home in heaven as on earth. In him we see heaven—God’s realm—and earth—our realm—coming back together as they were before our sin broke them apart. He ascended to his throne and from there he sends his Spirit back to us and in the Spirit the power and life of heaven are poured out on earth through us.
The Holy Spirit transforms us as he applies the work of Jesus to us and as he equips us to go out into the world with the power of heaven to make the lordship of Jesus known. On that first Pentecost the gift of tongues was especially prominent. It was a visible sign of the Spirit finally un-doing the curse of Babel—the firstfruits of an enormous harvest that Jesus calls and that the Spirit equips us to bring in. We need to look around us and ask what the Spirit is doing today, what he’s equipping and calling us to do here and now. The Spirit’s work isn’t always accomplished in wind and fire. The Spirit can just as well be subtle and move quietly. But the result of his moving—whether in big and loud ways or in quiet and small ways—is always dramatic. Men and women hear the royal proclamation of Jesus’ lordship, they hear the call to repentance, and they change. Hearts and minds are made new. But is that change happening around us? Again, looking out at the harvest to be brought in can be overwhelming. Brothers and Sisters, begin by bearing the Spirit’s fruit—live the life he has given you in Jesus. Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control—these are the fruit the Spirit bears in our lives as he unites our dead wood to Jesus the living vine. Pray for grace, pray for the Spirit to breathe the life of Jesus into you and to change you. And then pray for the faith and courage to use the gifts the Spirit has given to make Jesus known. Be faithful in using those gifts. Some are big and obvious, others are still and quiet. Some are meant to be used out in the world and others are meant to be used here in the Church to equip those who go out, but whatever your gifts use them faithfully to support the body of Christ. If you’re an eye be an eye, if you’re a foot by a foot, if you’re a mouth be a mouth, if you’re a heart be a heart, if you’re an eyelash be an eyelash, and if you’re a little toe be a little toe—big or small, seemingly small or seemingly big, we are together the body of Jesus and it’s as we work together, living in love and grace, sharing our gifts, supporting and exhorting one another, and bearing the Spirit’s fruit that we bring in the harvest, that we bless the world around us with the renewing life of Jesus, that we proclaim the good news of his death and resurrection, that we call people to repentance and faith in the Lord Jesus, and that his kingdom comes on earth as in heaven.
Let us pray: Heavenly Father, we pray that your kingdom will be manifest on earth as in heaven. Remind us this Pentecost that your kingdom comes as the life of Jesus is made known through us by the Holy Spirit. Make us faithful stewards of your grace and life. Teach us to bear your fruit and to be faithful with the gifts you have given and work through us, we pray, to gather in your harvest. We ask this through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.