Sunday, June 8, 2014

Acts 2:1-21; I Corinthians 12:1-13

Gracious God - bless now the words of my lips and the    meditations of our hearts. Breath your Spirit into us andgrant that we may hear and in hearing be led in   the wayyou want us to go.  Amen.

There is a story which I told before, about a boy who waswandering around the   narthex of an Cathedral one Sundaymorning and stopped and examined a large bronze plaque   that was hung on the wall.  

"What are all those names up there?"  he asked one of the ushers.  

"Those are  the names of people who died in the service." the usher replied.  

Curious, the boy asked the usher.  "which service, the   9:00 service or the 11:45 service?"

I am happy to report today that what we are celebrating, is a birth - not a death- the  birth of the church - the birth of Christ in you and me - and in all who   call on his name.

It is a significant day - the day on which the first     believers came alive in their faith, the day when the    Rock upon which Christ planted his church began to       support and uphold an incredible new life - a life that  has existed since the world began, but which was poured  out in a special fashion and took on flesh in  you and memuch as it took life in Jesus, the earthly son of Mary,  the son of Godso long ago.

Pentecost is an event that the world has long been       promised and which the people of God have long awaited.

Pentecost is the reversal of what occurred at the Tower  of Babel when, because  of our sinfulness, we became     unable to understand one another.

It is the gifting of God to make us one - and to make us one in the way he is one.

Pentecost is our becoming Christ in the world.  It is Godtaking on flesh - not  only in the least of those to     whom we give water to drink or clothes to wear; but      taking on flesh in us.

Praise be to God.  God keeps all his promises.

Pentecost gives us the eyes to see and the ears to hear.

The eyes to see that God is in the details, that God is  in the flesh - as well as in the Spirit.  And the ears tohear him speaking in our hearts and upon the lips of     others - in the rush of the wind.

The eyes to see and the ears to hear - as one - and as   unique persons valued and treasured so much by God that  God comes to us as we are and makes us even more   truly who we are when we are His. The story of the birth of thechurch, of that  day some fifty days after the death and resurrection of Christ Jesus that Jews   and Christians  call Pentecost - tells us that this what God has done -  and is yet doing.  

The followers of Jesus are given the ability to speak the languages of all those who are assembled in the city and beyond.  God grants that we might understand   one      another and that we might understand the good news - in  just  the way we need to hear it.

Much as God communicates to each one of us here today.

We hear the gospel in our own language, in our images,   with our own metaphors, with our own ears.

Some today will be encouraged to spend more time in      praise and wonder to thank God for blessings, others will hear that the power that they need for tomorrow's trials and tribulations will come, still others will take heart - knowing that God is present to them at all times.

Whatever it is - it will be filled with God - and        uniquely yours.

Pentecost is the birth of the Church.  It is God amongst us in power, making us  not simply a group of believers, but Christ in the world, unafraid, empowered.   bearing   the cross out of love, and being raised from the Grave  in glory.

I began with a story - I would like to end with another. One that I pray that   God will use in your life as you  meditate upon it from time to time.  It is a very simple,but true story about a man called Yates, but who could
be you and me - and this congregation - or any of a      thousand and one other  congregations, a thousand and oneother persons. 

The story is told of a man called Yates who, during the  depression, owned a sheep ranch in Texas.  He did not    have enough money to continue paying on the mortgage -in fact he was forced like many others to live on governmentsubsidies.  

Each day as he tended his sheep he worried about how he  was going to pay his bills.  Sometime later a            seismographic crew arrived on his land and said that     there might be oil on his land and could they test drill.After a lease was signed they went ahead. 

At 1115 feet a huge oil reserve was struck - subsequent  wells revealed even more oil than the first well         revealed.  Mr Yates owned it all.  He had the oil and    mineral rights.  He had been living on relief - yet he   was  a millionaire.  Think of it - he owned all that oil with its tremendous potential, yet for many  years he didnot realize it.

How often are we like Mr. Yate's?  Considering ourselves poor and helpless all   the while unaware of the         extraordinary power that we have available to us - that   which is lying just below the surface in our minds and  our hearts.

We here today are a Pentecost People. 
The Spirit has been and is being poured out upon us.
The gift of God is just below the surface in our minds   and hearts, and to the  right and to the left of us -    above us and below us, to the front and to the rear.

Blessed be God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, One, and   blessed be the church   which his victory has won.  Amen.