Sunday, May 24, 2015

The power of Pentecost can transform and enlarge our human hearts.


Luke is the author of the third Gospel as well as the Acts of the Apostles from which the first Scripture reading is taken that describes the Pentecost event.  Luke’s account of Pentecost in the Acts of the Apostles also repeats the story of the Incarnation at the start of the Gospel.  Just as the Holy Spirit enabled Mary to conceive and give birth to Jesus, so the Spirit conceives and gives birth to the church, the Body of Christ in the world, at Pentecost.  This is why it was important for Luke to place Mary among the disciples in the upper room praying for the coming of the Spirit.  Mary’s faith inspires the faith of the disciples, who must say yes, as Mary did at the Annunciation, for the Church to be born.

As Mary responded to the angel Gabriel at the Annunciation:  “I am the servant of the Lord; be it done unto according to Thy Word.”  May we too on this Feast of Pentecost say yes to the plan of God in our lives.

As the great feast of Christmas marked the birth of Christ, the second person of the Holy Trinity; the Feast of Pentecost marks the birth and the presence of the Holy Spirit in our lives.  Pentecost does not draw the same attention as the Christmas feast, but the grace and the meaning of Pentecost – the Spirit of God’s presence in our lives in the here and now – is of supreme importance in the life of the Church.  Yes, we are an Easter people and Alleluia is our song; and yes we are a Pentecostal people who seek to discover the God’s presence in all of life – in good times and in bad, in sickness and in health.

The great truth of Pentecost -- for the first disciples and us as well – is that the Holy Spirit has the power to enlarge and expand the human heart if we allow the Spirit of Jesus within us to grow and enliven us with the power to live, with the power to forgive, with the power to welcome and receive all others in Jesus’ name.  That power, the power of Pentecost becomes our own.

On this day of Pentecost, listen and pray over the questions the Spirit of the Risen Christ is asking you and is asking me?  Do you love me enough to forgive others as I forgive them?  Do you love me enough to forgive yourself your failures as I have forgiven you?  Do you love me enough to sacrifice more of your lifestyle so that others can live better?  Do you love me enough to spread the word that I have come to take the sins of the world?  Do love me enough to stand for justice in an unjust world?  Do you love me enough to stand for peace rather than for war and violence and terrorism?  Do you love me enough to welcome all people into your heart and spirit?  Do you love me enough that you are willing to use your God-given giftedness in the building of our faith community?

To the degree we answer yes to these questions, we are claiming the grace of the Holy Spirit that is within us.  The first Scripture this morning tells the story of Pentecost for the first Christian disciples.  They experienced conversion.  Their lives were transformed.  They proclaimed the good news of the love of Jesus.  There was a fire in their belly that shaped their entire lives.

We too on this day of Pentecost seek to have our lives transformed and filled with the Holy Spirit.  The Risen Lord spoke to the first disciples and speaks to us:  Peace be with you. The inner peace the Risen Lord offers touches our spiritual center.  We too are to offer the Peace of Jesus to one and all – the old and the young, male and female, long-time parishioners and those newly registered.  All are welcome.  We are all brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus.



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