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Pentecost- What does it mean?
Location: BlogsPastor Teri Thomas' Blog    
Posted by: Teri Thomas 5/6/2008

It is amazing how three people can read the same passages and hear different things. I guess I just tend to skip over the speaking in tongues. People I love and respect claim it as a true spiritual gift. I do not have that gift. In the context of scripture it makes more sense for me to understand it as the different languages. The amazing thing at Pentecost was that everyone could hear of God’s deeds in a language they could understand. The message of God was comprehendible to all. That is a message of inclusiveness and diversity.

We have been trying to help Mekonen Wube (from Eritrea) get his driver’s license. The BMV allows to have the test translated, but they don’t provide a translator and they must certify all translators. Around and around and around we go with newcomers to our country, our language and our processes.

We can exclude people, or make them feel like outsiders, unintentionally. Loui mentions wearing red on Pentecost. We decided not to stress that tradition this year for precisely that reason. We don’t want a visitor to walk in and be the only person wearing brown or green in the congregation. So those who want to wear red will. But visitors should not feel out of place.

The coming of the Holy Spirit fulfills Jesus promise and is the most important event in the life of the early church. The God who created the entire world is at work in this small group of disciples. The breath theme from creation is replayed at Pentecost.

Pentecost is 50 days after Passover and was the Festival of Weeks. It began as a harvest festival and then became focused on preserving Jewish heritage. By the first century the festival became a celebration of God giving the law to Moses. So compare the fifty days from the Passover of Israel to the giving of the law at Sinai to the fifty days from Jesus’ crucifixion to the giving of the Holy Spirit.

Old Testament-
Winds from God swept over the water in creation
The whole earth had one language confused at Babel
Moses received the law amid smoke, thunder and fire

Acts
The violent rush of wind from heaven
Jews hear the disciples speak in many languages
Disciples receive Holy Spirit amid tongues of fire

As for the speaking in tongues…it is clear that it happened in the early church. Paul shares many accounts. Paul claimed it was a gift from God and an ecstatic experience.

The passage moves on to Peter’s sermon. He quotes the prophet Joel to explain the behavior of the disciples.

I think Luke would be shocked at how the modern church separates the resurrection, the ascension and Pentecost into three distinct events. Luke saw them all part of the same action of God. The God who raised Jesus from the dead and took him into heaven sent the Spirit to the disciples. All one God. All one act.

Luke’s account tells us a story which can be interpreted in many ways. It is an account of something strange and miraculous. It is a story filled with mystery and wonder. The power of God enters the ordinary in a most extraordinary way. The purpose of this intervention is to provoke proclamation. The people ask questions and the disciples stand and speak.

Today many folks feel the power of the Holy Spirit to be something they experience inside themselves, alone, in a personal way. But this account says that’s not the way it worked. The Spirit came in public, in fire, in wind, in noise, in a crowd, in confusion, and the purpose was to get the disciples out of hiding and out proclaiming the gospel.

Copyright ©2008 Teri Thomas
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Re: Pentecost- What does it mean?    By Joe Marine on 5/6/2008
Yet the Spirit does come to individuals, surprising us with assurance and reassurance, a "still, small voice". Mystery. Thanks, Teri.

Re: Pentecost- What does it mean?    By Bobbie on 5/6/2008
First let me say that I think the whole "burning straws through holes in the roof" is very compelling and certainly would have been something to see!
Like Loui, I have had a couple of interesting experiences with speaking in tongues. Both were while I was in college. The first was during a worship service I attended--almost all members of the congregation began speaking in tongues. I recall feeling shocked and amazed at the intensity of the event and the passion of those participating. My second experience was later that year. Our psych nursing clinicals took place at the old Central State Hospital. There was a schizophrenic patient named George who lived in the cottage where I was assigned. At least twice a week he would bring his Bible to the day room, recite Acts 2:19-21 in a very loud voice (with special emphasis on the part about the moon turning to blood), and then spend several minutes speaking unintelligibly. All the while running about the room in an effort to avoid the attendants who were trying to keep him under control. Hard to take that seriously. I remember considering how totally opposite these two experiences were, and I remember feeling sad that, if this speaking in tongues "thing" was so significant why wasn't there someone to interpret what these people wee saying. I thought that surely if this was a message from God, He would have provided and interpreter. I remember thinking, "What good is a gift if you can't figure out how to use it?"
Teri, perhaps you are on point--the whole notion of the Holy Spirit has become too symbolized and not real enough. Or perhaps it has become more of a cartoon--something we just can't take seriously enough to consider as part of our daily lives. After all, aren't prophesy and visions the things television and movies are made of, not things we are to genuinely consider as part of our worship experience or our personal relationship with God.
I prefer the verses from 1 Corinthians. I like the idea that we each are "given the manifestation of the Spirit," we just need to keep in mind that it is "for the common good." I need to be reminded on a regular basis that wisdom, knowledge, faith, healing, etc., are all gifts of the Spirit--to be neither rejected nor taken for granted. To be able to understand the purpose of these gifts, to be able to use them for the common good, what a blessing! To be able to celebrate and rejoice and share this happiness and these blessings with those who might be visiting our worship service on Sunday--what a gift!

Re: Pentecost- What does it mean?    By Paula on 5/7/2008
The concept of the Holy Spirit is one I struggled with for years. Now I can't imagine not having the Holy Spirit as part of my understanding of God.

Teri mentioned that today the Holy Spirit is something felt and understood by the individual and on an individual basis; I wonder if that is due to the individualistic nature of the western culture or if it is because we may not understand someone else's experience of the Holy Spirit and so we don't talk about it. And we don't think someone else will understand our own. Even though we may all speak the same language, we still struggle with listening intently and understanding where someone else is.

Paula


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