5/24/15
Acts 2:1-21
Come, Holy
Spirit. Open our hearts to hear your word, and our minds to understand your
guidance for our lives. Bless us as we seek to follow where you lead. Amen.
In today’s first reading, from Acts, chapter two, we
heard the story of the first Pentecost.
Pentecost
takes place 50 days after Easter. On Pentecost, the disciples receive the Holy
Spirit, which God sends to be with them once Jesus has ascended into heaven and
is no longer with them on earth.
For any church nerds out there, Pentecost is the third
most important holiday in the church year, after Easter and Christmas.
But to me, Pentecost is really where it all begins.
Without the story of Pentecost, I probably wouldn’t be
a Christian. I definitely wouldn’t be a pastor.
I love the
story of Pentecost.
It has made a difference in my
life and in my faith.
I love this story because it
says...
Whether you’re an immigrant or
foreigner, an American citizen or an undocumented worker – the spirit of God is
poured out on you.
Whether your personal ad would
say woman seeking woman, or woman seeking man, or man seeking woman, or only
looking for fun, or seeking a serious relationship – the spirit of God is
poured out on you.
Whether your skin color is
brown or peach or olive, red or yellow, black or white – the spirit of God is
poured out on you.
Whether your preferred
flatbread is tortillas or naan or ciabatta or injera or lefse – the spirit of God
is poured out on you.
Lutherans in this part of the world sometimes have a hard
time figuring out that Norwegians have no monopoly on right faith.
One of the most offensive things I've been told by
well-meaning Norwegian-American Lutherans is that I'm an honorary Scandinavian.
They are entirely missing the point.
I don't want to be an honorary Scandinavian. I want to be
a Russian-Puerto Rican-American woman from Wisconsin, I want you to acknowledge
and appreciate who I am – and I still
want to be in community with you.
The story of Pentecost tells
us that national heritage, culture, language and race are important. People are
different from one another. The disciples did end up speaking in a number of
different languages, after all.
But Pentecost tells us that the community of faith is not
complete until all of those cultures and languages and nations can peacefully
coexist in one community of faith.
I love the story of Pentecost
because it says…
Whether you are fat or skinny,
whether you are living with an eating disorder or thyroid disease, whether you
are in shape or a couch potato or somewhere in between – the spirit of God is
poured out on you.
Whether you are living below
the poverty line or are part of the richest 1%, whether you are on food stamps
or a millionaire, unable to find meaningful employment or loving the career
that you’ve been in for decades – the spirit of God is poured out on you.
Whether you are a second
grader or a PhD, a high school dropout or a professional degree holder – the
spirit of God is poured out on you.
This last one is hard for us sometimes, especially in our
educated community of Madison, WI. It is easy to blame problems on people who
don't know any better, who haven’t been taught any differently. Education is highly
valued here.
But in the kingdom of God,
educated uneducated alike receive a portion of the spirit – the same portion of the spirit.
I love the story of Pentecost
because it tells me that the spirit of God can be poured out even on me, and I can be a pastor.
I love it because it tells me that
the spirit of god is poured out on each one of you, so I don't have to be the
only minister in this congregation.
You all know people who believe that women can’t be
pastors.
When you
are a woman, and a pastor, these people seem to come out of the woodwork.
I can’t even begin to count the times I’ve heard… “What makes you think you can be a pastor?
Isn’t this whole women in ministry thing still too new and untested? Anyway,
Jesus didn’t have women disciples. Why should we have women pastors? What’s
wrong with the way we’ve always done it?”
The best
answer to those naysayers is the story of Pentecost. On this day, after Jesus
had died and been raised from the dead, and had ascended into heaven, the Holy
Spirit came to the faithful people in Jerusalem.
And women were included in that group of faithful.
And women were included in that group of faithful.
Of course, I’ve got about a hundred other answers to
people who think that women shouldn’t be pastors, and if you’re interested, we
can talk about them sometime. But Pentecost is at the root of all the rest of
those answers.
On that
day, God says, I will pour out my spirit on all
flesh – not just the men, not just the people in power, not just those who
have enough life experience to seem credible, not just the wealthy folks or the
white folks or the government officials – God’s spirit will come to all people, and they will prophesy.
My undergraduate degree is in psychology.
I
learned a lot about people in
college.
One of
the most interesting projects I was involved with was a study on attractiveness
– what kinds of faces do we humans find to be attractive?
For example, facial symmetry is one of the primary
things that makes human beings attractive to one another.
Denzel
Washington has a very symmetrical face, which can explain why so many people
find him attractive.
But here’s what’s even more interesting, in my
opinion.
Composite
faces tend to be perceived as more attractive than any single person’s face.
If you take the average of my face, and [name]’s face, and [name]’s face, you will end up with someone more attractive than any
of us are on our own.
If you
were to average together the faces of everyone in this congregation, everyone
in Madison, everyone in Wisconsin, we would get an unbelievably attractive
composite face.
The more characteristics you combine together – the
more colors of skin and shapes of eyes and noses and mouths – the more
appealing the face becomes to people of all ages, races, and cultural
backgrounds.
The more we are united together – the more we act as a
singly body – the more attractive we become. And the more attractive we become,
the more we live out the reality of being created in the image of God.
If you were here last
week, you heard Kyle Rader tell us that we are the body of Christ – and that’s
not a metaphor.
Now that Jesus is no longer physically with
us in the world, it is up to us to be his hands and his feet and his heart here
on earth.
The
Spirit of the Lord is upon us.
The
Spirit has anointed us to proclaim good news to the poor.
The
Spirit has sent us to proclaim freedom for the prisoners
and
recovery of sight for the blind,
to
set the oppressed free, and to
proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.
(Luke
4:18-19; Isaiah 61:1-2)
The spirit of God is here.
That’s what the Pentecost story tells us.
I think I’ve made that point by now.
But so what? Why should we care?
Let me tell you.
If the spirit of God is with you, it is good news.
The spirit of God gives you power to change the world.
The spirit of God is what created the world.
The spirit resurrected Jesus from the dead.
The spirit is the one who inspired the prophets, from
Isaiah and Jeremiah to Martin Luther and Martin Luther King.
The spirit of God is here, is on you, and on the
person sitting next to you.
When we see that Spirit in others, we get to see them
as they really are, as beloved children of God, who have the power to change
the world.
Do me a favor.
Turn to the person next to you and say, the Spirit of God is upon you.
Turn to the other side and tell them too.
Now tell the people on either side of you, You have the power to change the world.
That must be what it sounded like on the first
Pentecost, with so many people talking all at the same time!
The promise of Pentecost – the good news today – is
that no one is excluded from God’s kingdom. Today’s story puts men and women,
slave and free, and people from all different countries around the world on the
same playing field.
The
spirit of God is on each one of you, which means that you are able to hear the
voice of God. You can share the good news with others. You can work together
with other people to embody the mission of Christ.
Sure, the Pentecost story helps me know that I can be a
pastor.
But this story also gives encouragement to everyone who might want to follow Jesus.
Because of Pentecost, we know that Jesus’ promise “I will be with you always”
has already come true. Jesus isn’t here with us, but he sent the Spirit to be
reflected in every one of us… and he gave us the ability to see glimpses of
that Spirit in each other.
So I
know that women can be ordained because of the Pentecost story.
What
else do we know because of this story?
At the very least, I think we know that all people are
created equal. Culture, ethnicity, race, gender, age – those things that tend
to divide us are not actually supposed to be divisive. God comes to all of us
regardless of what labels we would use to describe ourselves.
God’s spirit is on every single one of us.
And the
more we work together, we closer we get to truly being the body of Christ in
this world.
So let’s work together, let’s live out God’s promise
for humanity.
Let’s go out, and change the world.
Amen.
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