Sunday, May 24, 2026

Pentecost

 


May 24, 2026

I honestly do not understand why the Feast of Pentecost is not on the same level of importance as Easter or Christmas.

 Because, it should be.

 It is a vitally important feast.

 And has always been seen so in the long history of the Church.

 Maybe it’s because it’s even more dramatic than Easter or Christmas.

 There’s wind.

 There’s fire.

 There’s lots and lots of noise.

 There’s. . . chaos.

 There’s this cacophony of sound as people pour into the streets speaking languages they did not know the day before.

 The Church was not born in silence or order or careful ecclesiastical planning.

 It is born in interruption.

 And maybe that’s our biggest lesson for today.

 Let’s face it, whether we admit it or not, many of us secretly want some sort of manageable God.

 A God who stays very politely inside the sanctuary of the church building.

 A God who blesses our routines.

 A God who confirms our politics.

 A God who reassures us that everything will remain basically stable and safe and nice.

 But the Holy Spirit in Acts behaves nothing like that.

 The Spirit of God comes crashing in  through locked doors.

 The Spirit disrupts certainty.

 The Spirit makes people speak in ways that disturb the established order of things.

 And the strange thing is: the miracle of Pentecost is not really that everyone suddenly speaks the same language.

 It is that they remain different and still understand one another.

 The temptation of religion has always been toward uniformity.

 Toward making all people the same.

 Carbon copies of each other. 

 Toward deciding there is only one acceptable culture, one acceptable voice, one acceptable way of being faithful.

 But Pentecost refuses all of that.

 Look at who is present.

 These Parthians and Egyptians and Romans.

 These Arabs and Jews from every corner of the known world.

 It’s interesting when we think of the diversity included in this account.

But what’s more amazing is what the Spirit does.

 Or rather, what the Spirit doesn’t do.

 The Spirit doesn’t erase their identities.

 What does the Spirit do?

 The Spirit speaks through them.

 ALL of them.

 The birth of Christianity doesn’t begin with domination, but with translation.

 It begins with understanding.

 It begins with radical hospitality.

 And nothing’s changed on that level, today

 That’s still the work of the Spirit.

 Right here.

 Right now.

 Because we are living in a world increasingly incapable of listening and hearing one another.

 Everyone is shouting.

 Everyone is interrupting one naother.

 Everyone is certain.

 Everyone is terrified.

 And fear always makes us narrower.

 Fear shrinks our souls.

 It makes us tribal and defensive and cruel.

 We begin dividing the world into the pure and the impure, the saved and the damned, the deserving and the disposable.

 But the Spirti does the opposite of that.

 The Spirit keeps breaking down those walls.

 That is why Pentecost is kind of frightening.

 Because the Spirit is not merely comforting.

 The Spirit is liberating.

 And liberation can be horribly disruptive.

 The Spirit tears off ceiling and opens sealed rooms where people have hidden themselves away in grief and fear.

 The disciples, remember, are not by any means brave when this story begins.

 What are they doing?

 They’re hiding.

 The crucifixion has shattered them.

 The Resurrection has bewildered them.

 They don’t know what comes next.

 And then what actually comes next?

 Wind.

 This almost-violent breath of God.

 Scripture says it fills the whole house.

 Not part of it.

 But all of it.

 Which means there is no protected corner left untouched.

 The fire of Pentecost is not destructive in the way human violence is destructive.

 It’s a refining fire.

 It burns away fear.

 It burns away despair.

 It burns away the lie that death and cruelty and empire will ultimately rule the world.

 And suddenly these frightened disciples are outside speaking hope publicly.

 That’s the miracle.

 Not spectacle, but courage.

 The Spirit gives them courage to become visible again.

 And perhaps that is the Pentecost we need now.

 We don’t need a louder, flashier Church.

 We don’t need mega-church crowds.

 We don’t need better branding.

 We don’t need to desperately try to impress anyone.

 Instead, we need to be people brave enough to speak mercy in a brutal world.

 We need to be people brave enough to tell the truth.

 We need to be people brave enough to love without guarantee of being loved back. 

We need to be people brave enough to remain tender when cynicism would be just so much easier.

 Because the Spirit doesn’t make us powerful in the way the world understands power.

 The Spirit makes us alive.

 Vital!

 And alive people are dangerous to systems built on fear.

 The Church at its best has always been a strange, eclectic, diverse  people, crossing boundaries, speaking across divisions, caring for those the world discards, refusing to accept that violence is inevitable, insisting that every human being carries the breath of God within them.

 That breath of God is what Pentecost is really about.

 In Genesis, God breathes life into dust.

 In Ezekiel, God’s breath enters dry, dead bones.

 In John’s Gospel, the risen Christ breathes upon the disciples.

 And in Acts, that breath becomes wind sweeping through the world.

 The Spirit is the breath of God refusing to abandon creation.

 Even now.

 Even here.

 Even among us.

 And perhaps that is the deepest comfort of Pentecost is  the realization that God has not left the world alone.

 Not to the powers of this world.

 Not to hatred.

 Not to despair.

 Not to death.

But to renewal and change and hope. 

 The breath of God still moves.

 The fire of God still burns.

 In us.

Through us.

And somewhere beneath all our exhaustion and fear and loneliness, the Spirit is still teaching us how to speak to one another again

 

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Pentecost

  May 24, 2026 I honestly do not understand why the Feast of Pentecost is not on the same level of importance as Easter or Christmas.   ...