Intro
The crowd at Pentecost thinks the first Christians are drunk.  They hear the 
cacophony of 120 Christians.  They hear the old and wrinkled, the young and 
sparkly eyed, men and women, and pastors and parishioners all speaking in the 
rush of excitement.  The crowd thinks they are hearing a bunch of drunkards.  
That’s what St. Luke tells us: “But some sneered at them and said, ‘They are 
full of sweet wine’” (Acts 2:13).

But it’s not only because they can’t understand all the languages the first New 
Testament Christians are speaking when they come running out.  It’s also the 
goofy smiles on their faces.  It’s also the bounce in their step.

The Psalms say the Lord gives “wine to gladden human hearts” (Psalm 104:15).  
And so the people at Pentecost mistake the glad hearts and joy of the first 
Christians for a drunken high from last year’s autumnal wine.  But the joy of a 
sweet wine, which naturally fermented after the grape harvest, compared little 
to the joy of God finally breaking His long-binding curse.

Main Body
For it is Pentecost.  The Holy Spirit now descends and breathes on His people.  
Pentecost means “50” in Greek.  Originally, Pentecost was the harvest festival 
of the winter wheat, 50 days after the Feast of Unleavened Bread.  In the 
rabbinic tradition, Pentecost celebrated God giving Moses the Torah at Mt. 
Sinai, 50 days after the exodus.

But this is the new Pentecost, not the old.  The new Pentecost took place, not 
at Mt. Sinai, 50 days after the exodus, but at Jerusalem, 50 days after Jesus’ 
resurrection.  It’s not God giving Moses the Torah.  It’s God giving His people 
His Holy Spirit that they may proclaim the New Torah, the Gospel, throughout 
the world.

To usher in this new reality, Jesus sends us the Holy Spirit from the Father.  
Through the Spirit He has sent, Jesus is now sending out His people to begin 
the end-time harvest of all humanity into His kingdom.

That day, the breath of God moved and stirred on Christ’s Church like never 
before.  It sounded like a mighty wind, perhaps, even a tornado.  That was the 
sound that gathered the people who were there to celebrate the old Pentecost.  
Above each Christian, “separated tongues, liked flames of fire, came to rest on 
each of them” (Acts 2:3).  And the Spirit within them could not be contained.

120 Christians ran outside, and all began to speak in other languages.  That’s 
why the Jews celebrating the old Pentecost thought, at first, they were drunk.  
It sounded like babble.  But instead of dividing and separating, now the 
differing languages were to make them all one in Christ.

Wind and fire were signs of God being with His people during their exodus out 
of Egypt.  Later, John the Baptizer promised that Jesus would “baptize with the 
Holy Spirit and with fire” (Luke 3:16).  And on Pentecost, Jesus fulfilled that 
promise.  Tongues of fire rested on all 120 Christians, and the Holy Spirit 
filled each of them.  Then they began to speak in various languages and 
dialects.

On Pentecost, we see a beautiful picture of the Church.  All 120 ran out to 
proclaim Jesus to others.  On Pentecost, we see a picture of all Christians 
confessing Jesus to others.  But it’s the Apostle Peter who stands up to 
preach.  On Pentecost, we see a beautiful picture of the Church, with both 
pastor and layperson working in harmony, proclaiming Jesus in the various 
vocations where God had placed them to serve.

No longer would the Old Testament Temple be the place of God’s Holy Spirit.  In 
the Old Testament, God in the form of His Shekinah, the cloud, revealed Himself 
to His people above the Ark of Covenant in the Holy of Holies.  No longer was 
the Holy Spirit only given to people in positions of leadership, to do the 
tasks God had given them to do.  Because of Pentecost, the Holy Spirit has 
brought all Christians into the Royal Priesthood, with each Christian now being 
a temple of the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:19).

Because of Pentecost, the people who gathered in Jerusalem heard Jesus 
proclaimed in their own languages and dialects.  The gluttonous Cretans, the 
bullying Romans, and the proud and belligerent Parthians all heard about Jesus. 
 Brought into the harvest were also the small-town folks of Phrygia, the rich 
and vain Arabians in their jeweled turbans, and the cynical Jews and 
halfhearted proselytes.

But the Spirit continued to breathe where He promised to be: in the Word of 
Christ.  Now, we even find stiff-necked Germans, the fickle French, the stiff 
upper-lipped English, and optimistic Americans have all been brought into the 
fold of the Church.  Today, the Holy Spirit is blowing strongly throughout 
Africa, South America, and China.

Our Old Testament reading spoke of a different language-event: the tower at 
Babel.  There, God thwarted our ambitions to build a tower to the heavens by 
confusing our languages.  How wonderfully understated, yet subversive, of God.  
If you want scatter people, make it so they don’t understand each other’s 
subjects and verbs.

Our Old Testament reading reminds us that, apart from God, our ambitions will 
result in confusion and chaos.  Without the Lord, our efforts to unite, to be 
“one people,” will come to nothing more than tower building.  Our Old Testament 
reading also reminds us who’s in control, who’s running the verbs when it comes 
to our faith.  We don’t; God is.

We don’t climb our way up to God--not with our towers reaching to the heavens 
or with our religions that try to do the same.  God comes down to us.  God 
becomes one of us and one with us: “The Word became Flesh” (John 1:14).

At Pentecost, God undoes the confusion of Babel.  Oh, the diversity of 
languages remains.  But now God uses the diversity of languages as a sign of 
His Spirit.  God brings His people together--not by giving them one 
language--but by giving them one Savior and so bringing them into “one, holy, 
catholic, and apostolic Church” (Nicene Creed).

There is “one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all” 
(Ephesians 4:5-6).  There is one Spirit, one bread, and one cup.  Our union in 
Christ is the true unity of the Church.  At Pentecost, God gathers all nations 
once again into His fold.  All are to be one in Christ.  Once again, all are to 
be of one tongue, even if we still speak many different languages.  For this 
oneness is not of grammar and syntax.  This oneness is based on our union with 
Christ.

The ordinary way of Pentecost is the preaching of the Word, Jesus.  It’s 
baptism and it’s body and blood.  Immediately after Pentecost, St. Luke tells 
us this.  The first Christians “devoted themselves to the Apostles’ doctrine, 
to the fellowship, to the Breaking of the Bread, and to the prayers” (Acts 
2:42).  In other words, they worshiped in much the same way that we still do 
today: Preaching, teaching, fellowship in the Bread (which is the Body of 
Christ and the cup that is His blood), and in the prayers.

So the language we are now to speak is the language of the Church.  That is how 
we live out our unity in Christ.  The language of the Church, no matter the 
tongue in which it is spoken, is always the same.  It sounds like what Peter 
preached on Pentecost.  “Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name 
of Jesus the Messiah for the forgiveness of your sins, and you will receive the 
gift of the Holy Spirit.  For the promise is for you and for your children” 
(Acts 2:38-39).

So, saints loved by God, repent!  As Peter preached on Pentecost, so I preach 
to you: repent!  Turn from your sins.  Return to your baptism.  Leave your 
vices behind and come begging for mercy from the King of the Jews.  “For you 
are not your own, you were bought with a price” (1 Corinthians 6:19-20): the 
blood of Jesus.

Because of your unity with Christ, your citizenship is now in heaven.  Your 
passport is your baptismal certificate and it is stamped in the blood of the 
Supper.  You are a forgiven child of the Father.  Your sin has been removed.  
The promise of the Kingdom of God is yours.

Jesus knows what is best for His Church.  And He has promised to be with us 
always.  The Spirit is how Jesus can both be in heaven and, yet, still be with 
us.  Yes, Jesus “went away” when He ascended; yet, He didn’t go “somewhere” in 
the sense of place.  Instead, He withdrew His visible and touchable presence.

Today, we can’t see Jesus as His disciples did, nor can we see Jesus in all His 
glory.  And yet He still comes to us.  He is still with us.  He comes to us by 
the Spirit He sends, in the Spirit-ed Word that has His own presence.  He come 
to us in His Supper, where the Spirit working through the Word gives us Jesus’ 
body and blood for the forgiveness of our sins.

Conclusion
Today, that same Spirit is here, working among us, delivering the peace Jesus 
won for us on the cross.  Jesus said, “Peace I leave with you.  My peace I give 
you.  I do not give to you as the world gives.  Do not let your hearts be 
troubled and do not be afraid” (John 14:27).

His peace is the peace of sins forgiven.  It’s standing before God fully 
“Jesused,” covered and filled with Christ’s divine nature and righteousness.  
It’s having Jesus defeat death for you and your salvation.  It’s the peace that 
Jesus gives you in the Holy Spirit.  That’s the true peace and joy of 
Pentecost.  Amen.


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and spirit.

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