Happy Pentecost! Today we celebrate the gift of the Holy Spirit – and the gifts the Holy Spirit empowers in us. The gift of the Holy Spirit came on that first Pentecost like the wind. They could not see it. But they could hear it come “like the rush of a violent wind” – and they could feel the effects of it.
If you have ever driven along the interstate in Nebraska you might have seen a highway sign that says, “Watch for the wind”. That might seem like a silly thing to say – because you can’t see the wind. But as those who drive that freeway know, when the wind gets going on the prairie, it is a powerful force and can easily tip over huge semi-trucks, uproot trees and change the landscape.
I learned this the hard way years ago when I was going to visit my sister in South Dakota. When we were half way there, she called and said, “You may not want to come. There’s a blizzard brewing”. I was young and thought that I knew how to drive in snow so I dismissed her warning as that of my overly protective sister – she had just had a baby and so I figured it was her maternal instinct on overdrive. But.. of course. She was right. It wasn’t the snow – it was the wind that made it impossible to drive. They closed the freeways and I think we ended up staying in a little motel 6 for the night. In the morning – that fierce wind was nowhere to be found—but the evidence that it had been there was written on the mountain of snowy drifts covering the cornfields.
Like the wind, the Holy Spirit blows in unexpected places and unexpected ways. But unlike the wind, what the Holy Spirit brings is always a gift – even if we do not realize it at first.
On that first Pentecost, one of the gifts that the Holy Spirit brought the apostles was the gift of language. This was not the gift of spiritual tongues that needs an interpreter. Rather, the Holy Spirit gave the apostles the gift of being able to speak in the native language of all the pilgrims and expats who had gathered in Jerusalem for their harvest festival.
Have you ever tried to learn another language? If you began when you were two or less, it wasn’t a problem at all. Your brain simply made space for more than one language. But as we age, it becomes harder. I know this from experience. This past summer we were going to travel in Germany so I thought I should learn the language. I made a valiant attempt. And, the people were very gracious when I tried to speak, but often, what I said came out as a mixture of German, my high school Spanish and English.
As adults, learning a new language does not come easily for most of us even if we study and train. Recognizing this, the pilgrims and people from other lands were amazed and astonished when Galilean fishermen, who would not have picked up foreign languages from travel or study. began speaking fluently of God’s power and awesome deeds in their native languages. Some were filled with awe and wonder. Others quickly dismissed this as drunken jibberish. But those who were able to wonder asked the question, “What does this mean?”
It is also a good question for us today. What does the coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost mean for us?
It is tempting to treat Pentecost as the amazing coming of the Holy Spirit, a unique event that happened in the past. We celebrate it as the birthday of the church and are amazed too at what happened in the past. But… friends, let us not think for a moment that the Holy Spirit is confined to history and that we can simply count the candles since that holy day – and then blow them out. Like the wind, the Holy Spirit hasn’t left and will not be blown out like a candle – it’s more like one of those relighting candles that simply doesn’t want to quit burning.
But before we try to answer the question of “what does this mean” or even the question of where and how is the Holy Spirit blowing today? I think we need to ask another question: Why?
Why did the Holy Spirit come and give Galilean fisherman the ability to speak in the native language of all of the pilgrims?
Many interpreters have understood the giving of languages in Acts as the antidote to the story of Babel in Genesis in which all of the languages of people were confused. But Professor Eric Barreto points out that at Pentecost, God doesn’t choose or create one single language that everyone can understand but instead, enables the disciples to speak the native, home language of each person there. Recognizing that one’s home language, culture, heritage and experiences are core to who you are, the Holy Spirit meets them and us in the midst of our differences.1 And instead of choosing one over another, the Holy Spirit creates community between, across and despite differences.
Together, with all of our varying gifts, talents, abilities and languages, we are all one in Christ. As we read in Paul’s letter to the Corinthians, For just as the body is one and has many members, and all the members of the body, though many, are one body, so it is with Christ. We are all parts of one body –Christ’s body. This is through the gift of the Holy Spirit. Again, as Paul writes, “For in the one Spirit we were all baptized into one body—Jews or Greeks, slaves or free” – different heritages, different economic status, different nationalities, different traditions – we are not the same. And yet, we are all one in Christ.
So again, what does that mean? What does it mean for us? Maybe we need to watch for the wind of the Holy Spirit, for like the wind, it blows where it will. Where and how is it blowing us today?
In the midst of a world that is being torn apart by differences, we, as people who belong to Christ – who are Christ’s body –can proclaim this unity in Christ to and for all people. For when two or more are gathered, together we are the community of Christ.
We are the community of Christ whenever we gather for worship – today as we welcome Deb and Joe into our midst – and each time we meet.
We are the community in Christ when we gather with First Lutheran and Cross of Glory for worship. I saw the Holy Spirit at work here on Good Friday and at Cross of Glory on the first Sunday in May. The Spirit sang through the joint choir, skipped through the congregation with the children as they marked the congregation with the sign of the cross and whispered hope in our hearts. This is the Holy Spirit at work creating Christian community.
This summer we are continuing the New Creation exploration through five vision groups comprised of people from all three churches. We began with the 30 member Worship & Music & Art Visioning Group -and I’m glad that we did because it turned out to be impossible to find a two-hour time slot the fit everyone’s schedule so we had the same meeting twice. In this first meeting, we invited people to share the gifts they saw in their congregation with each other. We discovered there was a lot of overlap – and some differences. And that that was ok. The Holy Spirit can work through and across differences. In fact, differences provide opportunities to see something in a new way.
Seeing something in a new way is actually the next step for this group. They will be going out and exploring how other congregations worship through field visits to other congregations, one-on-one conversations and other research. The goal is to experience what other churches in the larger community are doing and then share how the Holy Spirit is at work in these places. And then together, hearing all of these experiences, we will be listening for how God is calling us to use both the gifts that we love and already have and the new ideas and inspiration that the team shared. This is how the Holy Spirit creates Christian community.
To answer the Pentecost question: What does this mean? The answer might be: Watch for the Holy Spirit. For like the wind, you may not see the Spirit but you will see the Holy Spirit at work in our world, today, speaking our language and traditions and helping us listen to the language and traditions of others. And, in the process, the Holy Spirit creates Christian community. And this is good news. Thanks be to God. Amen.
Faith-Lilac Way + Pentecost 2026 + Pastor Pam Stalheim Lane
1 Eric Barreto: Can't We All Just Get Along? Sunday June 04, 2017Day One