Weekly Church Service – Day of Pentecost: June 9, 2019

Includes Sermon Audio

Sentence

God’s love has been poured into our hearts by the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.
Romans 5:5


Collect of the day

O God,
who in smoke and fire upon Mount Sinai
gave the law to Moses;
and who revealed the new covenant in the fire of the spirit,
grant, we pray,
that, kindled by that same spirit
which you poured forth upon your apostles
we may fulfill with joy your commandment of love.
We ask this through Christ our Lord who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen.


Today’s readings

  • Acts 2:1 – 21
  • Psalm 104:26 – 36
  • Romans 8:14 – 17
  • John 14:8 – 17

next week:

  • Proverbs 8:1 – 4, 22 – 31
  • Psalm 8
  • Romans 5:1 – 5
  • John 16:12 – 15

A thought to ponder upon

Day of Pentecost – John 14 8 – 17

Pentecost was the Jewish festival of the harvest (also called the feast of weeks), celebrated 50 days after Passover, when the 1st fruits of the common harvest were offered to the Lord. A feast of pilgrimage (hence the presence in Jerusalem of so many “devout Jews of every nation”) Pentecost also commemorated Moses receiving the law on Mount Sinai. For the new Israel Pentecost becomes the celebration of the spirit of God’s compassion, peace and forgiveness – this spirit that transcends the law and becomes the point of departure for the young churches universal mission (the planting of a new harvest?).

In his Acts of the possibles (reading 1), Luke invokes the 1st testament images of wind and fire in his account of the new churches Pentecost: God frequently revealed his presence in fire (the pillar of fire in the Sinai) and in wind (the wind that sweeps over the earth to make the waters of the great flood subside). The Hebrew word for spirit, ruah, and the Greek word pneuma also refer to the movement of air, not only as wind, but also of life-giving breath (as in God’s creation of man in Genesis 2 and the revival of the dry bones in Ezequiel 37). Through his life-giving “breath,” the Lord begins the era of the new Israel on Pentecost.

Today’s gospel of the 1st appearance of the risen Jesus before his 10 disciples (remember Thomas is not present) on Easter night is John’s version of the Pentecost event. In breathing the Holy Spirit upon them, Jesus imitates God’s act of creation in Genesis. Just as Adam’s life came from God, so the disciples new life of the spirit comes from Jesus. In the resurrection, the spirit replaces their sense of self-centred fear and confusion with the peace of understanding, enthusiasm and joy and shatters all barriers among them to make of them a community of hope and forgiveness. By Christ sending them forth, the disciples become apostles – “those sent.”

The feast of Pentecost celebrates the unseen, immeasurable presence of God in our lives and in our church; the ruah that animates us to do the work of the gospel of the risen one, the ruah that makes God’s will our will, the ruah of God the in us and transforming us so that we might bring his life and love to our broken world. God “breathes” his spirit into our souls that we may live in his life and love, God ignites the “fire” of his spirit within our hearts and minds that we may seek God in all things in order to realise the coming of his reign.

Today we celebrate the gift of God’s spirit, the spirit that enables us to love as selflessly and as totally as God loved us enough to become one of us, to die for us and to rise for us, the spirit that takes as beyond empty legalism’s and static measurements of “mine” and “yours”, to create a community of compassion, reconciliation and justice centred in “us”; the spirit that enables us to recreate our world in the peace and mercy of God.

In Jesus ” breathing ” upon them the new life of the spirit, the community of the resurrection – the church – takes flight. The same spirit continues to blow through today’s church to give life and direction to our mission and ministry to preach the gospel to every nation, to to proclaim the forgiveness and reconciliation in God’s name, to baptise all humanity into the life of Jesus’s resurrection.

The spirit of God enables the 11 – and us – to do things that they could not do their own, to understand the truth of God’s great love for his people that is embodied in the risen Christ, and then to boldly proclaim the gospel of Christ. The spirit empowers us with the grace to do the difficult work of gospel justice forgiveness and compassion.

The miracle of Pentecost Acts 2 is the spirit’s overcoming the barriers of language and perception to open not only the minds of the apostles hearer’s but their hearts as well to understand and embrace the Word of God.© Connections/media Works


Sermon Audio

The Reverend Josie Steytler preaches from the text after the gospel reading.

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