Sunday, May 20, 2018

Come, Holy Spirit, Come!

It has been an eventful weekend.  A horse named “Justify” won the Preakness yesterday, the second leg in his journey to the Triple Crown.  


Megan Markle married Prince Harry and became the first American and bi-racial member of the Royal Family of England.  


Closer to home was the violence that was visited upon a school only 8 miles from where we sit right now.  And I would be willing to bet that everyone here knows someone that was personally affected by that event.    


And there are those who would ask, ‘if God exists, where was He when the shooting started.”  When I was a police officer, I never had to face the kind of trial that those responding officers faced on Friday.  I can only imagine what it must have been like, and I can only pray that they never have to experience that again.  


The last three years that I taught school, I taught at Santa Fe High School.  Many of the teachers I taught with have retired now, but I can only imagine what the teachers and students experienced on Friday.  No teacher and no student should ever have to face that kind of devastating event.  


This could have happened right across the street from my house, or 8 miles down the road in the other direction at my grandson’s school.  We are not isolated and protected.  It is happening here and it touches all of us.  


The Bible tells us that we will experience trials and strife in this life because we live in a broken and sinful world.  

And as much as we want God to remove all evil from the world, that would require that he take away our freewill and our freedom to become children of God.


You’ve heard me say it before, and I will continue to say it, God’s promise is not that life will be perfect, but that he will be with us as we go through the pain, through the suffering, through the heartbreak.  We have a God who has suffered himself - Jesus Christ hung on the cross for our sake, to save us, to redeem us, to identify with us, to suffer with us.  We have a God who knows heartache - our Heavenly Father who watched his only Son die on the cross so that we might find entry into heaven.


A friend reminded me of this scripture:  A voice is heard in Ramah, lamentation and bitter weeping.  Rachel is weeping for her children; she refuses to be comforted, because they are no more.  (Jeremiah 31:15)  When we weep, God weeps with us. 


In today’s lesson from Acts, Jesus is gone – risen – no longer with the disciples.  They are having to learn to live without Jesus.   


They are all together – around 120 of them, praying and worshiping God in the upper room.  And then the wind begins to blow – probably not much different from the way the wind that picks up as a front blows in – you hear it coming, this one was blowing strong and bringing fire.


The tongues of flames danced on the disciples – and they were filled with the Holy Spirit. They began to speak in other tongues – languages.  Not the kind of prayer language that many people discover today, but known languages.  The people who had come from all these different places each recognized their own language – and the gospel was being spoken and understood by everyone there.  


Jesus had gone, but he had sent a gift – the gift of the Holy Spirit.  This had to happen for any number of reasons.


Jesus had to go in order that we might see him more clearly.  It is in looking back over the things that he said, and the things that he did – as recorded in scripture – that we begin to understand what was going on.  The gospels weren’t written until years later.  Partly because people caught up in the moment of these situations simply looked at the surface – the immediate effect of what was happening.  It was only years later – and in the light of the resurrection - that they began to understand Jesus more fully.


Jesus had to go so that all people might know him.  While he was here on the earth, his influence was limited – limited to those he could physically see and touch.  When Jesus left, it opened the door to allow the Holy Spirit to come in and fill those who were there.  As they were filled with the Holy Spirit, they were empowered to go out themselves and to take the message wherever they went.  And everyone they touched were empowered to go out also to spread the gospel even further.


Jesus had to go so that we would take responsibility to spread his message around the world.  You know the disciples were perfectly happy following Jesus around – listening to what he taught, watching what he did, and occasionally being sent out on a little test run.  They were in no big hurry to go running out to tell everyone about Jesus – they were somewhat greedy and wanted to soak it all up themselves and to bask in his glory.  So like baby birds, they had to be pushed out of the nest in order to learn how to fly on their own.  As long as Jesus was there, they weren't going to leave.


Toward the end of today’s gospel reading Jesus says, “I still have things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now.  When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth.” 


I’ve heard people make a lot of statements about any number of subjects – quoting scripture to prove a point.  And the corollary of that is that if it isn’t in scripture, then it is false.  But that’s not true according to this statement.  Jesus clearly states that he hasn’t closed the books – he hasn’t told us everything.  There are other things he wants us to know that the world wasn’t ready for 2000 years ago. 


This is one of those scriptures, the living word of God that keeps on giving and giving.  As the world progresses and as we grow as a people – as we mature – we understand more and more of the scriptures – but we have to be careful.  Jesus didn’t have any trouble re-interpreting, or even changing what scripture said, when he saw that a scripture no longer served its purpose in his modern world.    I think we have to look at the way Jesus interacted with people – and the way he approached both the people and the establishment to understand what he was trying to say.  We need to look at the way Jesus lived his life.


Last year on Pentecost, I shared a Hasidic tale that asked the question, “Where is the Spirit of God?”  The answer: “God is where you let God come in.”  The Holy Spirit is the power that ushers God into our lives - whenever and wherever we allow that to happen.   


As we look back over this weekend, we want to think that the Spirit of God - that Jesus - was only in the good parts, but that’s not true.  Jesus was with every single person who died and who was injured at Santa Fe High School.  Jesus was with all the students who hid or fled in panic.  Jesus was with each panicked parent and friend.  


Jesus will find us when we are stressed, when we are scared, when we don’t know which way to turn.  His Spirit will find us to guide us and to comfort us and stay with us until the end.  In times like these, let us cry out:  “Come, Holy Spirit, Come!”




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