May 19, 2024 Pentecost

Memorial Church of the Good Shepherd                      Acts 2: 1-21

19 May 2024                                                                                    Psalm 104:25-35,37

The Day of Pentecost                                                                Romans 8: 22-27

10:30am                                                                                            John 15:26-27, 16:4b-15

 

                            

                             Who are Christians? Christians are drunks, people

                             who have been inebriated not by wine but by the

                             power of the Holy Spirit—so “drunk” on  Holy Spirit

                             that they recklessly stand up and speak for Jesus.

                                  from “Everybody’s a Prophet,”  in Will Willimon’s

                                  Lectionary Sermon Resource,  p. 324.

 

                             Does anyone have the foggiest idea what sort of power we

                             so blithely invoke? Or, as I suspect, does no one believe

                             a word of it? The churches are children playing on the floor

                             with their chemistry sets, mixing up a batch of TNT to kill

                             a Sunday morning. It is madness to wear ladies’ straw hats

                             and velvet hats to church; we should all be wearing crash

                             helmets. Ushers should issue life preservers and signal

                             flares; they should lash us to our pews.

                                    Annie Dilliard, Teaching A Stone to Talk

 

                             …the implication for history, and for politics, is not hidden:

                             it is personal love, personal commitment, personal loyalty

                             among individuals which is the civilizing moral standard

                             against which the state, its rulers, its manipulators are

                             judged by the common people. In the end, we may face a

                             vast political revolution in this nation; and, if we do, it will

                             be because we have not been overwhelmed by a moral

                             revolution.

                                      D.J.R. Bruckner, The Los Angeles Times, March 8, 1971     

 

                            

                       

 

 

I.The Day of Pentecost is the culmination of Easter and the beginning of the dramatic story of the formation and expansion of the church. As we know, Acts begins at the time of the Ascension and ends with the arrival of Paul in Rome. It is sometimes referred to by scholars as the “Acts of Peter and Paul, not only because Peter and Paul are the main characters in Acts but because of the fact that the first half of Acts is mostly about Peter and the second half is mostly about Paul. The more we read Acts, the more we see this.  

 

II. It is in the first Chapter of Acts that Jesus concludes his public life by preparing the apostles for the coming of the Holy Spirit and giving them instructions about how to proceed with their ministry, specifically that they are to stay in Jerusalem to await the coming of the Holy Spirit. We note Acts 1:8 when Jesus says very clearly what is ahead for the apostles: “…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.”

 

III. What was difficult for the apostles was understanding what we learn in the Gospel lesson this morning from John, that Jesus must leave and return to the Father “…I tell you the truth: it is to your advantage that I go away, for if I do not go away, the Advocate will not come to you; but if I go, I will send him to you.” (John 16:7) What the apostles come to learn, (and remember that in this time after the Ascension and before the coming of the Advocate, the Apostles, at the direction of Peter, elect Matthias as the 12th apostle), is that Jesus’ “going away” is “not a withdrawal” but “an expansion and intensification of presence, both across space and time… and bringing Christ nearer to us than we are to ourselves. The coming of the Spirit is the coming nearer of the Christ…” (From ”Going Away and Coming Closer,” by Robert Saler, in The Christian Century, May, 2024, p. 28)

 

IV. It is fascinating to recognize how seriously the Apostles—including Matthias—took the counsel of Jesus when they returned after the Ascension to the same upper room in Jerusalem where they had been staying. They were joined by “certain women , including Mary the mother of Jesus as well as his brothers,” and a large number of disciples. Chapter one of Acts suggests that when Peter called for the election of a12th apostle to replace Judas, there were 120 people crowded into that upper room. For much of the time the people were gathered together, they devoted themselves to prayer, a prayer that was likely not without some degree of anxiety as everyone wondered what the coming of the Holy Spirit would mean and how—and whether—their lives would be changed as they were by Jesus. They could not yet imagine and then realize, that the coming of the Holy Spirit would mean the return of Jesus. Robert Slater explains it this way: Beginning with Acts and proceeding through the early church…the story of the Spirit’s coming at Pentecost is the story of this Spirit’s work, taking on flesh across multiple bodies, multiple geographies, multiple contexts. Augustine’s famed dictum that the works of the persons of the Trinity ad extra (that is, in the world) are indivisible is relevant here: wherever the Spirit works, across time and place, is the site of Jesus Christ’s own work as well. When you get the Spirit, you get all of Christ. (Saler, op. cit.)

 

V. So, as Jesus had promised, on that first Pentecost, the Holy Spirit came to all those people in the Upper Room. The Spirit—the Advocate, the Paraclete, the Counselor, the Consoler, the Helper, the Intercessor—came with what could be called a gale-force wind, a wind very loud and not a little frightening. And then, as Luke describes, “Divided tongues, as of fire, appeared among them, and a tongue rested on each of them.” Remember, all this commotion, while happening in the upper room where the crowd was, was loud enough to be heard in the whole house and even in the street. Quickly, it would seem, a large crowd gathered around the house and this is the point when there would seem to have been an explosion of different languages.

 

VI. In the Jewish tradition, Pentecost is called Shavuot, the Feast of Weeks, and it comes 50 days after Passover. We can imagine, then, that there were large numbers of Jews in Jerusalem to celebrate Shavuot. And it is the “explosion of different languages” they heard as they came running to the house where the Upper Room was, having heard all the noise: each person in the crowd heard his/her mother tongue being spoken and everyone understood everyone else’s language. Right away came the “amazement and astonishment,” and the realization that all the people speaking were Galileans. “How is it that we hear, each of us, in our own native language.”

 

VII. Eugene Peterson’s translation of Luke’s Description of what happened on this first Pentecost is very accessible and helpful:

Parthians, Medes, and Elamites;

Visitors from Mesopotamia, Judea, and Cappadocia,

     Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia,

     Egypt and the parts of Libya belonging to Cyrene;

Immigrants from Rome, both Jews and proselytes;

Even Cretans and Arabs!

“They’re speaking our languages, describing God’s mighty works!”

      Their heads were spinning; they couldn’t make head or tail of any of it.

They talked back and forth, confused: What’s going on here?”

       Others joked, “They’re drunk on cheap wine.”

                             E. Peterson, The Message, p. 1391

 

VIII. Isn’t it revealing how often, when we experience something new, something important, something unknown, something unbelievable, something different, we respond with confusion, uncertainty, or maybe anger, or with any number of variations on the “they’re drunk on cheap. wine” tune? And isn’t it also revealing that among all the mysteries of our Christian faith, the story of Pentecost would seem to be among the most accessible and least complicated, a story we could enter into, could get inside of because it is a story about US. We know that we know the coming of the Holy Spirit is the story of the gift of breath, of language, of courage, and of discernment. We know that the Spirit is God’s gift to us, a gift we can take or a gift we can put aside. We even know that we know the Holy Spirit is the sustainer of life itself.  And, finally, we know that we know the power of the Holy Spirit is the gift of speaking out in any number of different ways against injustice, bigotry, hatred, deception, dissemblance, abuse. discrimination, violence, and war; of speaking out against the madness of the world.

 

IX. And perhaps the greatest gift of all is knowing that we can go our merry way and pay no attention to the Holy Spirit, and enter into  what my Preceptor in Seminary called the “dicey Truth of Pentecost.”  This is what he said over twenty years ago, well before we studied together. His words are a powerful way to think about and live out this extraordinary Day of Pentecost.

“If you chose not to enter into the dicey Truth of Pentecost, no one will hold it against you. All are called but few choose to accept, And they will never know what they miss. But if you choose to step into Pentecost—to live into the truth and onto the pathway that faith directs; to live, to speak, spend, forgive, hope, celebrate and serve as God created us to do; to freefall into the  Creator’s embrace—and if you choose the presence of God over the idea, reason over tradition, guidance over hope, freedom over security, newness over predictability, change over stability, justice over law, and love over practicality, then you will know the truth of this Day.  

From “Choosing the Spirit”—a sermon by the Rev. Dr. Francis H. Wade, St. Alban’s Episcopal Church, Washington D.C., June 8, 2003, Day of Pentecost.

 

What will the choice be for us?

 

Amen

 

 

May 12, 2024 the Seventh Sunday of Easter

Memorial Church of the Good Shepherd                                 Acts 1:15-17, 21- 26

12 May 2024                                                                                              Psalm 1

7 Easter                                                                                                       1 John 5: 9-13

10:30am                                                                                                      John 17: 6-19

 

                                 ….The heart and soul of the Bible is its story…Story

                                Is also  the word that best describes our own lives.

                                While we may or may not follow the right rules, investigate

                                certain facts, and attempt to live wisely, none of these

                                activities provides the central way we make sense of

                                our lives. Stories give context and provide meaning.

                                               Eugene Peterson, The Message, p. 1593

 

                                Christianity defined: Christians are those who believe

                                that in this Jew from Nazareth—his words, including the

                                most outrageous and confusing of them, and his deeds,

                                including the most offensive and incomprehensible of

                                them—we have seen the fulness of God.

                                                 Will Willimon, “Jesus as God,” p. 312

 

                                 Reclaiming our history of noble struggle reworks the

                                 polarizing language that has done us such disservice,

                                 while it undermines the ideology of authoritarianism.

                                                 Heather Cox Richardson, Democracy Awakening:                       

                                                Notes on the State of America, quoted in CC, p.91

                

                                  To be a good citizen, it is necessary to be warmhearted,

                                  but it is also necessary to master the disciplines, methods

                                  and techniques required to live well together: how to listen

                                  well, how to ask for and offer forgiveness, how not to

                                  misunderstand one another, how to converse in a way that

                                  reduces inequalities of respect. In a society with so much

                                  loneliness and distrust, we are failing at these social and

                                 moral disciplines.                   

                                                     David Brooks, Healing the American Soul, NYT,

                                                     Friday, May 10, 2024, p. A22

 

I.Everyone has a story, as do all different kinds of groups. For example, consider institutions, communities, clubs, cities, towns, villages, countries, nations, religions…the list is endless as are all the stories connected with all the groups. And surely, the  apostles had individual and collective stories as they gathered with the 125 believers to hear Peter explain the need to elect  a new apostle to replace Judas. Today’s first reading from Acts tells the story of the election of Matthias as the new twelfth apostle and Luke adds a good bit of background information so that the believers and others who were interested in learning about the new church being formed could know more and ask questions. We might think of this lesson from Acts as an information session which most likely would result in many more stories.  

 

II. In many respects, these days after the Ascension are filled with important stories we need to hear again. For instance, the first eleven verses of Luke’s first chapter of Acts are both a retelling of the Ascension itself and review of what is in store for the apostles—still only eleven--especially their baptism with the Holy Spirit. These eleven verses are Luke’s way of identifying the Holy Spirit as perhaps the most element in the formation of the early Church.

 

III. An important thread running through the three years of Jesus’s public life, is the mostly quiet presence of the Holy Spirit. And the story of Easter is not only the Resurrection but also the Ascension, and the pouring out of the Holy Spirit as tongues of fire, on Pentecost. The signs of the Holy Spirit were not always apparent, and this is why the other two readings for today, 1 John 5: 9-13 and John 17: 6-19, are so important as they offer us a chance to ask ourselves what we really believe. The crucial question is whether we believe Jesus is God. Whoever believes in the Son of God inwardly confirms God’s  testimony. Whoever refuses to believe in effect calls God a liar, refusing to believe God’s own testimony regarding his Son. This is the testimony in essence: God gave us eternal life; the life is in his Son. So, whoever has  the Son, has life; whoever rejects the son, rejects life.   

   (Eugene Peterson, The Message, p.1566)

 

IV. This is a very difficult—and quite awkward—issue. The author of John’s letter gives testimony that Jesus is the embodiment of God and that the testimony we receive from him is divine testimony. And this makes great sense, as long as we believe it. But what if we don’t believe this? Are we saying God is a liar?  The logic here seems straight forward but is really very challenging. The author of John’s letter keeps it “simple.” We are to believe that Jesus is the Son of God because Jesus says he is the Son of God. So, the author of John’s letter says that Jesus is the Son of God and Jesus himself says the same thing. This “logic” should be all the proof we need, right?  But what if we don’t believe or are not sure we believe? What do we do? Where do we go?

 

V. As the Christians we say we are, we acknowledge that we believe as much with our hearts as with our minds. And in certain beliefs, it is the heart that leads. Such is the case here: that Jesus is the Son of God, and as God’s son, he is God. The great Anselm of Canterbury, Abbot, Theologian and Archbishop of Canterbury, is one of the Holy Persons celebrated and remembered in the Episcopal Lectionary (c.1033-1109) and he can be of help to us here. This is a passage from the Lectionary:

Undergirding Anselm’s theology is a profound piety. His spirituality is best summarized in the phrase, faith seeking understanding. He writes,” I do not seek to understand that I may believe, but I believe in order that I may understand. For this too, I believe, that unless I first believe, I shall not understand.”

(from Lesser Feasts and Fasts: 2022, p. 201 (April 21)

 

VI. Perhaps a new story is unfolding for us here, a story we would not have anticipated, especially now in the last days of Easter and one week away from Pentecost. I would remind us that Easter is NOT a day but a remarkable coming out celebration of faith and understanding, of love and devotion, of preparation and affirmation, and a revelation of the Spirit in a very palpable way. If we think about it, this is quite a story, a story that is meant to inform and shape our lives and our souls.

 

VII. In these last few Sundays, I have brought the real story of our country

to the surface and I’ve begun to talk about what is happening “out there.”

In doing so, I have argued that we really know what is going on but may be uncertain what—if anything—we can do about it. Most of all, I have tried to bring us closer to our Christianity and to the WORD. So, in these last moments of our time together in conversation, I want to bring a conclusion to our story, a conclusion that has two parts. The first part is a recent commentary on the conditions “out there.”

VIII. From “Healing the American Soul” by David Brooks. The New York Times, Friday, May 10, 2024, p. A-22

To be a good citizen, it is necessary to be warmhearted, but it is also necessary to master the disciplines, methods and techniques required to live well together: how to listen well, how to ask for and offer forgiveness,

how not to misunderstand one another, how to converse in a way that reduces inequalities of respect. In a society with so much loneliness and distrust, we are failing at these social and moral disciplines.

This is a quiet but hard and pointed assessment of what things are like “out there.”

 

IX. We are fortunate today because the last lesson is from the 17th Chapter John’s Gospel and is meant to be a version in poetry. Chapter 17 is Jesus’s “Final Discourse,” given to his disciples at the last supper the evening before his passion and death. It can serve as a powerful counterpoint to what is happening “out there.”  Here is part of the prayer portion of that “Final Discourse,” in poetic form:

Holy Father, guard them as they pursue this life

That you conferred as a gift through me,

So they can be one heart and mind

As we are one heart and mind.

As long as I was with them, I guarded them

In the pursuit of the life you gave through me…

I gave them your word;

The godless world hated them because of it,

Because they didn’t join the world’s ways,

Just as I didn’t join the world’s ways.

I am not asking that you take them out of the world

But that you guard them from the Evil one.

They are no more defined by the world

Than I am defined by the world.

Make them holy--consecrated--with the truth;

Your word is consecrating truth.

In the same way that you gave me a mission in the world,

I give them a mission in the world.

I’m consecrating myself for their sakes

So they’ll be truth-consecrated in their mission…

From the Eugene Peterson translation in The Message,pp.1381-1382

 

X. Suddenly, we have a conclusion to our story of Easter and there is still more to come this week as we prepare for Pentecost. As Merton might say to us now, to “pray” is to BE in the Light of Jesus’s prayer from the “Final Discourse,” and to realize that perhaps we believe more than we understand, and that we are willing and able to examine more critically the mess “out there.” And that’s a good thing.

 

Amen