Bloomsbury Central
Baptist Church
Pentecost - 9/6/19
Acts 2.1-21, 37-41
Exodus 19.1-6, 16-20
Listen to this sermon here: https://soundcloud.com/bloomsbury-1/pentecost-and-the-ethic-of-the-spirit
Listen to this sermon here: https://soundcloud.com/bloomsbury-1/pentecost-and-the-ethic-of-the-spirit
Today is one of those days when I get to preach on one of
our stained glass windows.
Have you
ever looked at them carefully?
We used to have some postcards of them for sale in the
foyer,
but I guess
they sold out…
The windows are of four New Testament preachers,
and apart
from anything else they tell us a lot
about what
this building was built for.
Imagine the old Victorian raised pulpit that used to be
behind me,
with an
elevated preacher standing six feet above contradiction,
flanked on
either side by biblical preachers.
Then imagine the building full to overflowing:
apparently
in 1851 the evening service was attended by 1,711 people.
The pews were different back in those days,
and there
was an extra upper gallery,
and they
hadn’t heard of fire regulations.
But just imagine…
The only place where a preacher can stand
to be both
seen and heard is just up there:
all the sight lines point to just there,
and if you
ever fancy an experiment come back when the building is empty
and wander
around the upper platform behind me whilst speaking.
You’ll
find that there is a perfect acoustic sweet spot, front dead centre,
where
you could whisper and be heard throughout the auditorium.
This building is built as a preaching box.
It is
designed for the proclamation of the word.
And then when you’re up there, look over your shoulders.
Behind you we have John the Baptist preaching, and Jesus preaching,
and Paul
preaching in Athens,
and then just over my shoulder here,
we have
Peter preaching on the day of Pentecost.
The quote beneath him is from our reading for this morning,
from Acts 2.14,
‘Peter,
standing with the eleven, raised his voice and addressed them’.
The crowd he spoke to was far in excess
of anything
this building could ever hold.
We’re told that at the end of the sermon,
3,000
people welcomed his message and were baptised, which would seem to imply a
crowd of rather more than this… In the Bloomsbury window, I counted twenty
people, so I can only assume the other few thousand are standing just out of
shot.
The largest crowd I’ve spoken to is about 2,000,
down at St
George’s Catholic Cathedral in Waterloo,
for the London Citizens event with Sadiq Khan which I
chaired last year.
It had the benefit of being inside, with a good acoustic,
and a great PA system,
and I do
find myself wondering how people could project
to crowds
of several thousand in the way described here.
But anyway, this was no ordinary sermon, it turned out,
because
there was something strange going on.
The great crowd were not all Jerusalem Jews,
they were
from the far corners of the known world.
Diaspora Jews, who had made their home in other countries,
had
returned to Jerusalem for the great feast of Pentecost,
and they heard the disciples speaking clearly in their own
native languages.
Much ink has been spilled over the years
on whether
this is a miracle of hearing or a miracle of speaking.
If you have a background in the Pentecostal or Charismatic
traditions of Christianity,
you will
probably have been told that the miracle at Pentecost
is an extension of a phenomena spoken of elsewhere in the
New Testament,
often known
as speaking in new kinds of tongues.
Just to help us understand some of the background
to
interpreting our passage from Acts this morning,
it’s worth hearing these other biblical references…
- Mark. 16.17-18 And these signs will accompany those who believe: by using my name they will cast out demons; they will speak in new tongues; 18 they will pick up snakes in their hands, and if they drink any deadly thing, it will not hurt them; they will lay their hands on the sick, and they will recover."
- Acts 10.45-46 The circumcised believers who had come with Peter were astounded that the gift of the Holy Spirit had been poured out even on the Gentiles, 46 for they heard them speaking in tongues and extolling God.
- Acts 19.6 When Paul had laid his hands on them, the Holy Spirit came upon them, and they spoke in tongues and prophesied
- 1 Cor. 12.10 to another various kinds of tongues, to another the interpretation of tongues.
- 1 Cor. 12.30 Do all speak in tongues?
- 1 Cor. 13.1 If I speak in the tongues of mortals and of angels, but do not have love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal.
- 1 Cor. 13.8 Love never ends. But as for prophecies, they will come to an end; as for tongues, they will cease
- 1 Cor. 14.5 Now I would like all of you to speak in tongues, but even more to prophesy.
- 1 Cor. 14.18 I thank God that I speak in tongues more than all of you;
- 1 Cor. 14.22-24 Tongues, then, are a sign not for believers but for unbelievers, while prophecy is not for unbelievers but for believers. 23 If, therefore, the whole church comes together and all speak in tongues, and outsiders or unbelievers enter, will they not say that you are out of your mind? 24 But if all prophesy, an unbeliever or outsider who enters is reproved by all and called to account by all.
- 1 Cor. 14.39-40 So, my friends, be eager to prophesy, and do not forbid speaking in tongues; 40 but all things should be done decently and in order.
The question, however, is whether what happens at Pentecost
is the same
thing as ‘speaking in tongues’,
and I’m not at all sure that it is.
Speaking in tongues seems to be primarily a devotional
practice,
probably
similar to meditative chanting,
which allows the person doing it to enter into an ecstatic
spiritual state
where they
feel particularly close to God.
Certainly in my experience of this,
it has been
for me a way of releasing my mind
from the
very word-bound thought patterns that tend to dominate,
allowing me to speak with God ‘spirit-to-Spirit’.
In my youth, when I was hanging out around more charismatic
churches,
people
would often try and work out what earthly language
they
were miraculously speaking
- did it
sound like Italian? or Arabic? or Hebrew? or whatever…
And there were various stories circulating
of people
suddenly and miraculously speaking
in a
language they had never learned.
I’m afraid that my experience of speaking in tongues
has led me
to rather doubt these stories
-
they always seemed to me more like an urban legend.
You know
the kind of thing,
‘It
happened to a friend of a friend… so it must be true.’
My suspicion is that these stories arise
from a conflation
of the devotional practice of speaking in tongues,
which
Paul says is a sign for believers,
with the
events of Pentecost, which is clearly a sign for unbelievers.
For my money, the miracle of Pentecost in the book of Acts
is a miracle of hearing.
The disciples may have been engaging in speaking in tongues
as they
were all together in one place,
ecstatically
responding to the Spirit’s presence with them.
But the ability of people from all over the known world
to hear
them in their own languages
doesn’t mean that the believers were actually speaking
all those
different languages.
I mean, apart from anything else,
there would
have been this huge logistical problem
of making sure that the Parthians were close to the disciple
speaking Parthian,
and that
the Medes could hear the Mede-speaking disciple,
and so on,
and so on.
No, this is a miracle of hearing, of understanding,
and it is
making a very clear point, as biblical miracles usually do:
which is that in the new community that the Spirit is
calling into being,
people are
enabled to hear and understand each other in new ways.
The barriers of division symbolised by language and
geography are broken down.
As Peter
says in his sermon on the book of Joel,
‘God
declares, I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh’.
This is the beginning of the mission
to take the
good news of Jesus to the whole world,
and the disciples will need to learn again and again
that God is
calling them to cross boundaries;
of
language, culture, religion,
purity,
class, gender,
ethnicity,
and geography.
The message of Pentecostal miracle
is that God
will not be contained in our meetings,
or
in our communities;
God will
not be constrained by our boundaries
or
our norms of behaviour.
God is
bigger than any attempt we might make to contain or understand.
And the biggest hurdle that these newly baptised believers
were going
to have to get to grips with pretty quickly
was
that of ethics:
The key
question of what behaviour is acceptable, and what isn’t?
These three thousand Pentecostal converts,
whilst they
came from all over the known world, were still all Jewish.
They would all have accepted the laws of Moses
as the
basis for their behaviour,
based on
the ten commandments.
That, after all, was why there were all there in Jerusalem
in the first place.
They had
come to the capital city of their culture and their religion,
to
celebrate the great Jewish feast of Pentecost.
Perhaps
more properly known as the Festival of Weeks,
and
these days still celebrated within Judaism as the feast of Shavuot.
The Festival of Weeks has its origins in the Old Testament,
as the
festival of the grain harvest.
It was when Jews would make an offering of the first fruits
to God,
as a symbol
of the fact that whole harvest belonged to God.
- Exodus 34.22 You shall observe the festival of weeks, the first fruits of wheat harvest
- Deuteronomy 16.10 Then you shall keep the festival of weeks for the LORD your God, contributing a freewill offering in proportion to the blessing that you have received from the LORD your God.
This symbolism of the first fruits and the great harvest
adds a
layer of understanding to what is going on
in
the Pentecost story in Acts,
because the
invitation is to understand
the
three thousand converts in Jerusalem,
as the
first fruits of a much greater harvest of salvation
that
would encompass all the nations of the earth.
The outward-looking nature of the events of Pentecost
are in this
way reinforced
by their
association with harvest festival of Weeks.
The Spirit will be poured out, as Peter quotes from Joel,
on ‘all
flesh’, not just on Jews in Jerusalem.
This idea of using the image of first fruits and great
harvest
to
symbolise the mission of Christianity
is
certainly not unique to Acts chapter two.
You find it in Paul’s writings (Rom. 8.23, 11.16; 1 Cor.
15.20, 23; 2 Thess 2.13),
and also,
as we shall see in a few weeks, in the book of Revelation (Rev. 14.4),
where
the believers are merely the first fruits
of
a much greater harvest that will follow.
But there is yet another layer of meaning to be unearthed
here,
from the
placing of these events at the feast of Pentecost,
the Jewish
harvest festival of weeks.
If you ask a Jewish person today
what the
feast of weeks, or Shavuot, means to them,
they will
tell you that it means two things.
Firstly, it is the thanksgiving for gift of the harvest;
and
secondly that it is the thanksgiving
for the
gift of the law of Moses.
Graphics for Shavuot online typically have
both wheat sheaves
and the two tablets of the ten commandments.
This association of Pentecost with the giving of the law
seems to
have come about during the period
we
call ‘the intertestamental period’;
that is the
time between the end of the Old Testament and the time of Jesus.
So by the time Luke is writing the book of Acts in the first
century,
the Jews
would have known that events taking place at Pentecost
weren’t
just about the first fruits and the great harvest,
they would
have known that they were also about the giving of the law.
And once we know this,
we can
start to see elements of the way Luke tells the story
that
emphasise this parallel.
The story of Moses going up the mountain to receive the law,
which we
heard in our first reading this morning,
has thunder, lightning, a thick cloud,
the blast
of a trumpet, smoke, fire, and an earthquake.
The events of Pentecost as Luke describes
them have a
sound like the rushing of a violent wind,
divided
tongues of fire falling on people,
and the
loud noise of people praying words
that
come directly from the Spirit of God.
Luke is trying to draw our attention to the fact
that the
events of Pentecost find their significance
in the
giving of the law to Moses on Sinai.
And the point of this is that,
whereas
Moses had received the Jewish law from God on Mt. Sinai,
the Jews gathered in Jerusalem at Pentecost
received a new
law, a new covenant,
given
through the direct action of the Holy Spirit of God.
When God gave the law to Moses on Sinai,
it formed
the basis of the covenant between God and the people of Israel:
- Exodus 19.5-6 ‘If you obey my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my treasured possession out of all the peoples. Indeed, the whole earth is mine, 6 but you shall be for me a priestly kingdom and a holy nation.’
When God’s gave the Spirit to the believers at Pentecost,
it
inaugurated a new covenant
between God
and all the nations of the earth.
As Peter quotes Joel, ‘I will pour out my Spirit upon all
flesh’.
The diaspora Jews had come to Jerusalem
for the
harvest festival of weeks,
expecting to make their offering in the temple
as a symbol
that the whole offering belonged to God,
and to renew their commitment to the covenant
established
between God and Israel on Sinai.
What happened in the Pentecostal outpouring of the Spirit
was not
just a renewal, but a re-establishment of their faith.
They themselves became the first fruits
of the
great harvest of the world,
and the Torah Law of Moses
became the
law of the Spirit of God,
written not on tablets of stone
but on
their hearts.
The boundaries of their faith are blown wide open,
as the
central markers of their religious observance
are
re-interpreted for them by Peter’s sermon.
God is God not of one people, but of all peoples,
and the law
is no longer ten commandments
to
be memorised and obeyed,
but a
spiritual ethic to be lived into being.
But it’s not just the law of Moses that finds its fulfilment
at Pentecost,
it is the
covenant of God to Abraham.
The promise of God to Abraham
was that
through his offspring,
all the
nations of the earth would be blessed (Genesis 22.17-18),
and Peter picks up on this in his sermon
when he
echoes the promise to Abraham
and
reinterprets it for the Pentecostal generation.
- Genesis 22.17-18 I will indeed bless you, and I will make your offspring as numerous as the stars of heaven and as the sand that is on the seashore… and by your offspring shall all the nations of the earth gain blessing for themselves.
- Acts 2.38-39 "Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ so that your sins may be forgiven; and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. 39 For the promise is for you, for your children, and for all who are far away, everyone whom the Lord our God calls to him."
The call here is clear:
The coming
of the Spirit on the disciples at Pentecost
inaugurates
and commissions them
for
public ministry to the whole world.
They are to
be those who will take to all the nations
the
good news that God is not just for one segment of humanity,
but
rather is for all of humanity.
All flesh
can receive the Spirit of God.
Those who received the good news first,
are merely
the first fruits of the great harvest of all flesh.
The covenant between God and humans
is no
longer restricted to those
who
obey the ten commandments of Moses,
or to those
who are descended from Abraham,
but rather the covenant between God and humans
is now open
to all people, in all places.
The great tragedy of Christian history
is that for
much of the last two thousand years,
we have
spent a vast amount of effort keeping God to ourselves.
Even our great missionary endeavours
all too
often dressed God up
in cultural
clothing of our own specification,
requiring those who converted
to receive
not just the teaching of Christ
but also the
trappings of Western culture.
All too often we have busied ourselves
with the
task of writing again the law of God,
defining which behaviour is acceptable and which is not,
so we can
know who is out and who is in.
We have exchanged the ethic of the Spirit
for laws
set in stone,
and in so doing have missed the fact
that God
has long gone on ahead of us,
out
there into the world beyond us,
drawing all
kinds of people to himself,
and
pouring out his Spirit again and again on all flesh.
We need a new Pentecost.
We need a
sudden dramatic realisation in our time
that
the Spirit of Christ is already present in the world,
working
beyond us, drawing all things to God.
So this Pentecost I pray a blessing on all of us:
May the fire of the Holy Spirit grant us the spiritual gift
of
understanding those who are not like us.
May the voice of the Spirit speak to us of great harvest
that is to come,
of which we
are merely the first fruits.
May the breath of the Spirit speak into our hearts the law
of love,
releasing
us from the laws of stone
that we
have chiselled into our souls.
No comments:
Post a Comment