May 23, 2021
Ezekiel 37:1-14; Acts 2.1-21
+ We are of course celebrating
Pentecost today.
It’s a very important day in the
life of the Church—a day right up there with Christmas and Easter.
It is, essentially, the “birthday”
of the Church.
It now 50 days after Easter.
The word “Pentecost” refers to the
Greek word for 50.
And it’s connection with the Jewish
feast of Shavuot (which ended on Tuesday) is pretty clear.
Shavuot is a wonderful and important
Jewish feast.
Shavuot 50 days after Passover.
The belief is that, after fifty days
of traveling after leaving Egypt, the nation of Israel now has finally arrived
at Mount Sinai.
And on Shavuot, the Torah, the
“Law,” the 10 Commandments were delivered to them by Moses.
Shavuot is also a the feast on which
the early Jews offered to God the first fruits of their harvests.
Now that is particularly meaningful
to us Christians and what we celebrate on this day of Pentecost.
It is meaningful that the Holy
Spirit came among us on this feast in which the first fruits were offered to
God.
After all, those first Christiana who
gathered in that upper room in our reading this morning from Acts, were truly
the first fruits of the Church.
And let’s not forget that those
first Christians were also Jews, gathering to celebrate the festival of
Shavuot.
God chose to send the Spirit on
those first followers of Jesus on just the right day.
Still, like nuclear power or
electricity, God’s Spirit is sometimes a hard thing for us to grasp and
understand.
The Spirit can be elusive and
strange and sometimes we might have a hard time wrapping our minds around the
Spirit.
But it is clear from the words of
Jesus before he ascends back into heaven what the role of the Spirit is for us:
"It is not for you to know the times or periods that the Father
has set by his own authority. But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit
has come upon you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and
Samaria, and to the ends of the earth."
So, Jesus will leave—at the ascension,
he went physically back up to heaven.
We will not be able to touch him and
feel him and listen to his human voice again, on this side of the veil.
But God is leaving something amazing
in Jesus’ place.
Jesus is gone from us physically,
but God is still with us.
In a sense what happens with the
Descent of God’s Spirit upon us is the fact that we now have the potential to
be prophets ourselves.
You hear me talk about this all the
time.
The same Spirit which spoke to
Ezekiel in our reading this morning, which spoke to Isaiah, which spoke to
Jeremiah, which spoke to Moses, which spoke through Jesus, also can now speak
to us and be revealed to us just as it spoke and was revealed to those prophets
from the Hebrew Bible and through Jesus.
That is who the Spirit is in our
midst.
The Spirit we celebrate today—and
hopefully every day—is truly the spirit of the God that came to us and
continues to be with us.
It is through this Spirit that we
come to know God in ways we might never have before.
God’s Spirit comes to us wherever we
may be in our lives—in any situation or frustration.
God’s Spirit is with us, as Jesus
promised, always.
Always.
For those of us who want to grasp
these experiences—who want to have proof of them—the Spirit doesn’t fit well
into the plan.
We can’t grasp the Spirit.
We can’t make the Spirit do what we
want it to do.
In that way, the Spirit truly is
like the Wind that came rushing upon those first disciples.
So, how do we know the Spirit is
working in our lives?
Well, as Jesus said, we know the
tree by its fruit.
In our case, we know the Spirit best
through the fruits God’s Spirit gives us.
Remember what the feast of Pentecost
originally was? The feast of Shavuot?
It was the Jewish feast on which the
first fruits were offered to God.
In a sense, what happens on our
Pentecost, is God returning those fruits back to us.
On the feast of Pentecost, we
celebrate the fruits the Spirit of God gives to us and we can be thankful for
them, and, most importantly, share them in turn with those around us.
The Spirit comes to us and manifests
itself to us in the fruits given to us by the Spirit.
For me, the Spirit of God comed to
me not in a noisy, raucous way, but rather in a quiet, though just as intense,
way.
The Sprit of God as I have
experienced it has never been a “raining down” so to speak, but rather a
“welling up from within.”
The fruits of the Spirit for me have
been things such as an overwhelming joy in my life.
I have known the Spirit to draw
close when I feel a true humbleness come to me.
When the Spirit is near, I feel
clear-headed and, to put it simply, happy.
Or, in the midst of what seems like
an unbreakable dark grief, there is suddenly a real and potent sense of hope
and light.
When the future seems bleak and
ugly, the Spirit can come in and make everything worth living again.
We experience God’s Spirit whenever
we feel real joy or real hope.
As Jesus says in today’s Gospel, the
Spirit of God is a Spirit of Truth.
We experience God’s Spirit when we strive
for truth in this world, when truth comes to us.
In turn, we are far from God’s Spirit
when we let bitterness and anger and frustration lead the way.
We frustrate God’s Spirit when we
grumble and mumble about each other and hinder the ministries of others in our church,
when we let our own agendas win out over those who are trying also to do
something to increase God’s Kingdom in our midst.
We deny the Spirit when we deceive
ourselves and the truth is not in us.
No doubt everyone here this morning
has felt God’s Spirit in some way, although we might not have readily
recognized that experience as God’s Spirit.
But our job, as Christians, is to allow
those fruits of the Spirit to flourish and grow.
For us, we let the Spirit of God
flourish when we continue to strive for truth and justice, when stand up against
the dark forces of this world.
The Spirit of God compels again and
again to stand up and to be defiant against the dark forces of this world!
On the feast of Shavuot, the
scripture we heard from Ezekiel today is read.
Again, remember, those first
followers of Jesus on that first day of Pentecost would have heard this
scripture that same day as well.
It is an amazing scripture and an
amazing vision.
In it, God’s Spirit revives the
bones in the valley.
What appears to be dead and lifeless
is given life by God’s life-giving Spirit.
And that reading ends with these
very powerful words that speak so clearly not only to the Jewish people, but to
us as well.
Ezekiel says,
Thus
says the Lord God:
I am going to open your graves, and bring you up from your graves, O my people;
and I will bring you back to the land of Israel. And you shall know that I am
the Lord,
when I open your graves, and bring you up from your graves, O my people. I will
put my spirit within you, and you shall live, and I will place you on your own
soil; then you shall know that I, the Lord, have spoken and will act,”
says the Lord.
God’s Spirit is placed within us so
that the graves of our lives may be opened, and we can stand in that place to
which God has lead us.
That dynamic and life-giving presence
of the Spirit of God speaks loudly to us.
Certainly we have seen God’s Spirit
at work here in our congregation as we celebrate a bountiful harvest—the growth
and vitality here.
We see the Holy Spirit at work in
the ministries we do, in the love we share with others, with the truth we
proclaim as Christians, even in the face of opposition.
We experience this Spirit of truth
when we stand up against injustice, wherever it may be.
This is how God’s Spirit comes to
us.
The Spirit does not always tear open
the ceiling and force its way into our lives.
The Spirit rather comes to us just
when we need the Spirit to come to us.
Often the Spirit comes to us as
fire—an all-consuming fire that burns way all anger and hatred and fear and
pettiness and nagging and all the other negative, dead chaff we carry within
us.
So, this week, in the glow of the Pentecost
light, in the Shavuot glow with the Law written deep in our hearts, let us look
for the gifts of the Spirit in our lives and in those around us.
Let us open ourselves to God’s
Spirit and let it flow through us like a caressing wind and burn through us
like a purifying fire.
And let us remember the true message
of the Spirit to all of us.
Whenever it seems like God is
distant or nonexistent, that is when God might possibly be closest of all,
dwelling within us, being breathed unto us as with those first disciples.
On these feasts of Shavuot and Pentecost—these
feasts of the fruits of God—these feasts of the fire of God—let us give thanks
for this God who never leaves us, who never stops loving us, but who comes to
us again and again in mercy and in truth.
Let us pray.
Come, holy Spirit, come!
Come as holy fire and burn in us,
Come as holy wind and cleanse us,
Come as holy light and lead us,
Come as holy truth and teach us,
Come as holy forgiveness and free us,
Come as holy love and enfold us,
Come as holy power and enable us,
Come as holy life and dwell in us.
Come, Holy Spirit, and increase in us your gifts
of grace
Convict us, convert us,
Consecrate us, until we are wholly yours
And Transform us into the image of Christ. Amen
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