May 31, 2020 Mighty Winds Blow
Someone once said that the church is like a sport’s huddle: you know something important is being said there, but you can’t understand a word of it and all you can see is their rear ends.
In fairness to the church, we must admit that it isn’t easy to be understood by the world. After all, what we’re talking about, in this huddle called the church, is God. And that’s hard to talk about.
A couple of weeks ago, I spoke about talking to other people about our faith. It’s difficult to talk about God, especially when some extremely evangelical churches do it so often with quite a conservative tone. We get intimidated, not wanting to be identified with fundamentalists. Besides, whenever we do try to speak about God, our words fail us; just as the words of the scriptures probably fail to capture what the disciples really experienced when they felt God surround them and the Holy Spirit filled the house where they were together.
Further, there are powerful forces against speaking about God. As I already mentioned, evangelical-fundamentalists do it so frequently that we don’t want our friends to think that we’ve gone over to the dark side. Besides, society has become so secularized that we cannot assume that people have any desire to hear of our Christian bias toward the world and of our experience. Most want to keep religion, private and personal. We don’t want to be showy, wearing our faith on our sleeve.
The reading from the Book of Acts contains a very dramatic picture of the first Pentecostal Sunday. We have a freight-train sized sound of wind from the heavens, tongues of fire dancing on the heads of the disciples, United Nations’-styled multiple language proclamation, cries of amazement mingled with yelps of mockery among the crowd and then, a powerful sermon from Peter that resulted in the conversion and baptism of 3000. It is obvious that the writer is trying to impress us with the power and effect of God’s Spirit. In addition, it is no accident that this life-giving experience is reported to have taken place on the day of Pentecost.
The Luke, assumed writer of the Book of Acts, says that on the Jewish harvest festival of Pentecost, Jews from every nation would have gathered together in Jerusalem as prescribed by The Torah. Can you imagine what that would have been like? They could have had trouble understanding one another with their various languages, customs, dress codes, smells. But I suspect being religious Jews, they would all have been able to speak Hebrew; but they had come various countries and adopted local customs. So even though they shared the same faith, they were still divided; just like when God confused the people at the Tower of Babel, giving different languages dividing people; until now.
In the Hebrew mind, God cannot be contained; could not be bound by some statue, pillar of wood, stone or place although they did get hung up with the Temple after Solomon convinced them that God needed one! But usually God’s presence, activity or influence was symbolized with the unquantifiable images of water, wind and fire; forces which we can experience but cannot contain nor really predict how they will flow, blow or go. Catherine Rossetti upon whose poem the great Canadian writer W.O. Mitchell wrote his famous novel “Who Has Seen the Wind” describes the wind as something that can be felt but cannot be seen: “Who has seen the wind, neither you nor I but when the trees bow down their head, the wind passes by. Who has seen the wind, neither I nor you but when the leaves hang trembling, the wind passes through.” God has often been described as wind, breath; an unknowable, unsee-able presence which makes the difference between life and death. The Hebrew word “Ruach” describes wind, breath, even spirit!
Into a thing blew God’s spirit and that thing became a living soul. “Breathe on me breath of God, fill me with life anew, that I may love what thou dost love and do what thou wouldst do.” Without God’s spirit, breath and power, the crowd that followed Jesus was just another crowd. But stirred by the spirit of God that crowd became a living force that could and would transform everything! Those whom once feared for their lives, denying their allegiance to Jesus and refusing to speak were changed and empowered.
A similar transforming experience happened to the prophet Elijah. There too, was a strong and rushing wind and there, were great shakings and fire but the word of God was not in the wind, the earthquake nor the fire but in the still small voice ... the voice that changed him.
At Pentecost as well, God’s power is in the voice. The miracle of Pentecost is not that the church received heavenly fireworks, nor that the mighty winds blew but that the church was given a voice. “In the last days,” quotes Peter, “your sons and daughter shall prophecy.” At Pentecost, the church was gifted by the spirit with a voice. It was given something to say and the power to proclaim and understandable message that would be a blessing to all the nations of the earth.
At the very beginning of Jesus’ ministry, he was asked to read a lesson in the Synagogue, remember? Commenting on it, he said “today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing. The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because God has anointed me to preach good news to the poor, to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed; to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord.” In other words, Jesus’ ministry was to be a preaching and proclaiming one, leading to acts of liberation. Quoting the prophet Joel, Peter says, “I will pour out my spirit on all flesh and they shall prophesy And I will show wonders in the heavens a voice and signs on the earth beneath.” God’s mighty winds blow so that the church’s ministry, like that of Jesus will be one of preaching, proclaiming and providing liberation.
“And there arose a generation who knew not God.” Now ,how did that happened? How is it that a generation grew up no knowing God? Because their parents and the elders of the tribe and the leaders stopped speaking: stopped giving testimony ¬– stopped proclaiming their faith.
“Oh, what I believe is between me and God.” Maybe so, but if it stays there, the faith will stay there too and a generation will rise who know not God nor God’s voice. The voice, and in too many cases, a still small voice is not to be limited to the professional church worker like me or my collogues nor is it a voice that should only be heard inside the sanctuaries and great cathedrals. The emphases of Pentecost is that the church receives its voice in a place where the whole city could see and hear what was happening.
John writes that the disciples were hiding behind shut doors, afraid of the authorities who had just killed Jesus. We may not need to fear the authorities of our land but we do fear. We muzzle the voice, restrain the power and block the vision. For fear of challenging the status quo or paying the cost of discipleship, or maybe even to avoid embarrassment, something about our inability to speak of spiritual, emotional things, we refrain from speaking the liberating word or acting upon it. We are so afraid of being seen as political or taking sides which might offend, or of having any spiritual sense about us that we resist the blowing of God’s spirit and we strongly stand silent. We might have seen the vision and know what Jesus would do but refrain, for fear.
“Peace I leave with you,” Jesus promised, “my peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid.” Equipped with Christ’s peace and in the power of the spirit, we are once again freed from the fear of the world, and need to unlock the church’s doors, leave the safety of the sanctuary and bear witness in the world. In another way, Pentecost is the reversal of the story of the Tower of Babel. There, humanity was confounded, divided and confused – inhibited. There were many voices but no understanding. With the spirit of God, there are many languages but one Word. At Pentecost, God’s mighty winds blow upon the birthing church bringing understanding, unity and a focus of vision. Before, the faithful believed that salvation had to come through the Law – God’s directives. Those who followed Jesus believed that in him, God was rebuilding and remolding all of creation and of that rebirth the church is mandated to speak.
People will not flock to the church simply because people are there. Only when Jesus’ friends move out, seeking the lost, the hopeless and the confused, the confounded and the divided; sharing the gift of the spirit, befriending, welcoming and nurturing in the name of Jesus. Then, and only then will they stop and listen to our voice, his voice, God’s voice. Some will think that we are spirit-filled, others will only see us as fools babbling to the wind or worst – drunk. We have been given a voice by God. It is a voice needed for the salvation of the world. “peace be with you, as the Father sent me, even now I send you. Receive the Holy Spirit.” At least that’s the way I see it!