I distinctly
remember the moment when I knew seminary was for me. It was the summer before
my senior year of college, and Pastor Sarah took me to see Wartburg Seminary,
and I got to sit in on a class
—it was focused exclusively on the Holy Spirit showing up in scripture before Pentecost
—so brooding over the chaotic waters in Genesis,
enlivening the valley of dry bones before Ezekiel,
and the like. Mind blowing, the Spirit acting in such a variety of ways,
invisible even while right in front of our eyes throughout the Hebrew Bible.
There are a
wide variety of interpretations of the Holy Spirit—the Spirit does a lot.
Think of our own confessional documents, the Holy Spirit: calls, gathers, enlightens,
sanctifies, and keeps us. Not only that, but the Spirit will forgive and raise
us up to Eternal Life.
-Our Pentecostal siblings see the
Spirit as all excitement and ecstasy.
-The Society of Friends—my wife’s faith
tradition—sometimes describe themselves as “introverted Pentecostals”
they simply wait on the Shy Sovereign to come among them and reveal a Word out
of silence.
-We Lutherans understand the Spirit
to be a Baptismal being
—wrapped up in that Identity we have in Christ,
flowing from us as we live out that identity in our day-to-day life.
And today, I’d
like us to consider the Spirit in light of some of the ministries of the Church
—actual concrete committee work…
even that is Spirit-work.
Particularly:
-Outreach and Evangelism,
-Fellowship and Pastoral Care,
-Stewardship and Caretaking.
Yes, the Spirit is among us in our outreach,
our fellowship, and in our stewardship.
Prayer
The Pentecost,
which we find in Acts, is the most in your face example of the Spirit’s work.
It is loud and big,
fire and flame,
prophecy and portents in the sky.
The disciples
are given words that will reach the wild and wide diversity of people gathered
in Jerusalem on Pentecost—the Jewish Feast Day of Moses receiving the 10
Commandments. People from all around the Empire, hearing
gospel in their language. Euangelion to the Greeks,
Evangelium to the Romans,
Injil to the Arabs,
Basharta in Aramaic, and so on.
Pentecost is
a proclamation that the Word of God is for everyone,
the Good news: “Jesus is Lord! In him there is salvation” is to be
translated, told, enacted, and offered, in whatever form people will hear.
Truly, the
Spirit is about making the good news plain—Evangelism and reaching out—Outreach…
Then there is
John’s version of Pentecost, the resurrected Christ coming to the upper room to
these dispirited disciples of his,
shut away out of fear and huddled together in gloom of night…
and Jesus appears, a light in the darkness, an opening for those trapped behind
doors.
He comes,
quiet, intimate, personal.
He breathes
into them
—inbreathing,
comfort, order out of chaos
—like the Spirit hovering over the waters, like a pile of dry bones becoming a
living people.
The breath
of Jesus, his ongoing presence with his people—the Spirit!
The Spirit is the one who accompanies us on Jesus’ behalf!
The one who gives us Peace and sends us out.
Peace—that
our griefs and fears might be overcome by comfort
—the Spirit is the Comforter!
Sending—opening
those doors, so that they might be courageous and walk in and with the Holy
Spirit,
proclaiming Jesus’ forgiveness to a fallen and frightened world, even as we get
to hear it again and anew ourselves!
In our fellowship
and our care for one another, I assure you the Spirit is with us!
Paul speaks
of the Spirit’s work as well, in his letter to the Corinthians…
The Corinthian Church, these people
who frustrate him to no end, people who always brag of their spirituality,
their ecstatic experiences,
to the point that Paul is pretty sure they are using spiritual things as a
way to establish a pecking order…
And so he gives a formula
(we only have part of it in today’s reading)
a formula for how to know if a Christian is dealing with a Spiritual Thing,
or are in relationship with the 3rd person of the Trinity—the Holy
Spirit—you hear that, right?
The Spirit is a Person;
abuse of spiritual powers is a thing.
Paul’s formula is that Abusive Spirituality
will curse Christ,
the Holy Spirit will affirm Jesus as Lord.
And to undergird this point, he again
makes a similar distinction between “Spiritual Things” and Spiritual Gifts.
What do they empower?
If they strengthen a hierarchy in the Church, they’re a thing,
if they help us live out our roles, relationships, and responsibilities in ways
that honor God and aid our neighbor
—then that’s the Holy Spirit.
All that to say, when it’s about Stewardship
—putting gifts, passions, and talents to work for the Common Good
—that’s the Spirit at work.
Holy Spirit!
Sanctifier! Prophetic Flame! Shy Sovereign! O Voice of Baptism! Holy Presence
who hides in plain sight throughout our scriptures, Empower, we pray:
our Outreach—may it be ongoing acts of gracious translation!
our Fellowship—comfort and courage as your new world is being born.
our Stewardship—your gifts, used for the common good. Amen.

No comments:
Post a Comment