Texts: Psalm 104. Acts 2.1-21 and John 14.8-17 (& 25-27).
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They were all together in one place. That’s how it
begins — and we might as well start there, because already, it’s a minor
miracle. In a world as fragmented as ours, the idea of all God’s people being
together in one place — mentally, spiritually, or even geographically — sounds
like the kind of thing only the Holy Spirit could pull off. But what really happened on that first
Pentecost?
Luke gives us a rousing account: a sound like a
rushing wind, flames dancing on heads, a wild outburst of languages no one had
taught, and a crowd amazed — not just that the disciples were speaking foreign
tongues, but that they were understood. And
that detail is key. Pentecost is not just about noise and spectacle. It’s about the Spirit of God making sense out
of chaos — creating connection across difference — renewing the face of the
earth, not with a magic wand, but with understanding, with truth.
But let’s be honest: have you ever heard a crowd
suddenly shout out a complete list of nationalities? “Parthians! Medes!
Elamites!” It’s as if a press officer from the tourist board got hold of the
script. No, something deeper was happening. This wasn’t a journalism report. It
was a poetic moment. Luke is doing theology,
not reportage. He is attempting to
describe the indescribable, to name the effect
of what happened more than the mechanics.
So perhaps we imagine it differently. Perhaps the
disciples, still blinking at their own boldness, began to speak — maybe
falteringly at first — to the strangers around them. And as they spoke, the
words landed. They hit home. And people who’d never met before found that they
were, in some strange way, known.
Understood. Drawn together. For a moment, the world wasn’t a Babel of confusion
— it was a communion of spirit. One
traditional way of understanding this key moment, this birthday of the church,
is that at Pentecost, the disruption of the common tongue at the Tower of Babel
is, for a glorious, poetic, but brief moment, undone.
Our Psalm, just now, had the lovely refrain, ‘Send
forth your spirit, O Lord, and renew the face of the earth’. Pentecost gives us the first hint at how the
Spirit might still renew the face of the earth: by restoring understanding. In our fragmented world
of echo chambers, fake news, tribal politics and international distrust, the
Spirit’s whisper is one of truth, of clarity, of connection. Jesus said the
Spirit would “lead us into all truth” — not “my truth” or “your truth” or “the
truth according to the algorithm” — but into the truth, the deep truth that flows from the heart of God. Truth
that humbles, truth that frees, truth that shines like sunlight through a dirty
window — suddenly revealing all the smears and streaks we’d rather not see.
And yes, that might be uncomfortable.
But truth-telling is one of the Spirit’s great gifts.
It’s why the Spirit so often shows up among the prophets — those inconvenient
people who tell us what we’d rather not hear. That our lifestyles are killing
the planet. That our politics serve the powerful. That our faith, sometimes, is
more about our comfort than our calling.
Still, the Spirit doesn’t come only to confront. The
Spirit also inspires, strengthens, consoles. The word “spirit” in Hebrew — ruach — means breath, wind, life-force.
That rushing wind of Pentecost wasn’t just theatrics. It was the sound of
creation being stirred up again. A divine defibrillator shocking the church
into life.
And how we need that breath now! We are winded — by war, by climate breakdown,
by injustice, by despair. And too many of us — in our churches, in our
politics, even in our own hearts — are gasping for breath. Pentecost is a
reminder that we are not alone, not abandoned, not powerless. There is breath
for us still. There is life for us still. And not just for us, but for the
world.
“Send forth your Spirit, O Lord, and renew the face of
the earth.”
That refrain is not just poetic — it is a plea, and it
is a programme. It means we need to become participants in the Spirit’s work.
And we can start small. We renew the face of the earth when we care for
creation — plant a tree, skip a flight, fight for green policies and an
Eco-church. We renew the face of the earth when we speak truth with love — in
the pulpit, the pub, or the family WhatsApp group. We renew the face of the earth when we refuse
to give in to cynicism, and instead bear witness to joy.
And we renew the face of the earth when we make space
for the Spirit in our own souls. That may mean silence, prayer, listening — and
yes, perhaps some holy courage. Because the Spirit, once invited, has a habit
of making demands. Of sending us out to speak uncomfortable truths. To cross
borders. To forgive enemies. To hope against hope.
The Spirit doesn’t always make things easy — but he
does make things possible.
And before we finish, let me leave you with this one
whimsical thought. I sometimes imagine the moment just before Pentecost, when
the disciples are sat nervously in that upper room. Peter is pacing and Thomas
is already halfway out the door, muttering something about “foolish optimism.”
And someone — probably Mary — says, “Just wait. Something’s coming.”
And it did.
And it still does.
The Spirit still comes — not usually with fire and
wind, but more often with a nudge, a whisper, a breath.
So let’s be ready. Let’s be expectant. Let’s be
inspired. Let’s open our hearts to the
Spirit of God — the One who renews, the One who leads into truth, the One who
reminds us that no matter how broken the world may seem, the story is not
finished. Because when God sends forth his Spirit, the face of the earth is renewed.
Amen.
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DID YOU ENJOY THIS SERMON? DID YOU HATE IT? PLEASE take a moment to make a comment, so that I can get better at this sermon-writing lark!
Again I couldn't attend in person but I always read or watch your sermons. This one, as usual, is thought provoking and so well written. Your sermons make me use my brain haha and I absolutely loved this one. I'm just going to keep my eyes firmly on the Lord.
ReplyDeleteThank you Anonymous!
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