This sermon is 98% the same as what I sent yesterday.  I had to change a couple 
of errors and I added a touch more about Pentecost in the Old Covenant.  Please 
accept my apologies for sending the sermon prematurely. 

--------------


Intro
Pentecost was a feast that God told the Israelites to celebrate.  The Jews 
celebrated Pentecost 50 days after Passover; that’s why it had the name 
“Pentecost.”  That Old-Covenant feast was a joyous day, where the people 
thanked God and presented offerings from the new grain of the first wheat 
harvest.  

Believers presented to God two loaves of bread, made from fine flour and baked 
with leaven, as the first-fruits of the wheat harvest.  In the rabbinic 
tradition, Pentecost also celebrated God giving Moses the Torah at Mt. Sinai, 
50 days after the exodus.  And so in the Old Covenant for Pentecost, we had a 
double dose of 50. 

Main Body
Because Pentecost was a feast that God had commanded (Leviticus 23), it was a 
feast that many Jews traveled to Jerusalem to celebrate.  And so when we find 
the Jews gathering for Pentecost 50 days after Jesus rose from the dead, we 
find the infant New-Testament Church on the cusp of many changes.  Then, the 
Church numbered 120 people: 11 Apostles and around 110 laypersons, including 
women and children.  

This infant Church did not yet know how Jesus fulfilled the Old Covenant feast 
of Pentecost.  On that feast day, there was the New-Testament Church, all 
gathered in one place, surrounded by Jews from all over the Roman World.  
Jewish visitors and pilgrims filled Jerusalem.  These were people who had fled 
Israel during the previous 600 years because of oppression and war.  

Yet, most of those Jews couldn’t speak or read Hebrew.  They knew Greek as that 
was that language of business transaction, a holdover going back to the days of 
Alexander the Great.  But for everyday use, most of the Jews had long ago 
adopted the local languages where they lived. 

So, on the day of Pentecost, the 120 followers of Jesus would’ve been unnoticed 
among the tens of thousands who flooded the city.  Yet, God would do something 
miraculous that day.  He would send His Holy Spirit through His Son, just as 
Jesus had promised.  That would begin a new feast in the Church’s life, also 
called Pentecost, which would supersede the Old-Covenant Pentecost.    

So we find the first Christians all huddled together.  As they were there on 
that Pentecost day, the sound of a mighty, rushing wind--the breath of 
God--filled the room they were waiting.  As they looked at one another, they 
saw what looked like tongues of fire on top of each person’s head.  

Suddenly, as if swept up by the wind, they were outside.  Others were near the 
house where they were, for they, too, heard the mighty wind and were curious.  
And what did they see?  They saw confusion.  They saw 120 people speaking in 
different languages.  

What did they hear?  They heard a cacophony.  The old and wrinkled, the young 
and sparkly-eyed, pastors and parishioners were all speaking other languages in 
the rush of excitement.  And so “some sneered at them and said, ‘They are full 
of sweet wine’” (Acts 2:13). 

But, of course, it was confusing.  That was 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.  This new Pentecost wasn’t God 
giving Moses the Torah, but God giving His people His Holy Spirit, so they 
could proclaim the New Torah, the Gospel, throughout the world.  

So, why did God use wind and fire?  They were signs that God used to lead His 
people during their exodus out of Egypt.  Later, John the Baptizer promised 
that Jesus would “baptize with the Holy Spirit and fire” (Luke 3:16).  And on 
Pentecost, Jesus fulfilled that promise.  Tongues of fire rested on all 120 
Christians, and the Holy Spirit lived and moved in them all.  And then they 
began to speak in various languages and dialects.  

On Pentecost, we see a beautiful picture of the Church.  All the Christians 
that day confessed Jesus to others.  But it was the Apostle Peter who stood up 
to preach.  We see a beautiful picture of the Church, with both pastor and 
people working in harmony, proclaiming Jesus in the various vocations where God 
had placed them to serve. 

If Jesus’ crucifixion wasn’t enough to make the point that the Jerusalem Temple 
no longer served its purpose, Pentecost confirmed it.  For the Temple would no 
longer be the place of God’s Holy Spirit.  In the Old Covenant, God in the form 
of His Shekinah, the cloud, revealed Himself to His people above the Ark of 
Covenant in the Holy of Holies.  In the Old Covenant, the Temple was the 
primary place where the Holy Spirit made Himself known. 

But because of Pentecost, each Christian is now a temple of the Holy Spirit (1 
Corinthians 6:19).  As God breathed into Adam, and he became a living being, so 
Christ breathes the Holy Spirit of life into His people, and His people become 
spiritually alive in the New Covenant.  That’s what Pentecost is all about--the 
Spirit giving His living breath.  And filled with the Spirit, God’s people 
become alive, unable to be silent, confessing and proclaiming Jesus Christ.  
Indeed, Pentecost forever changed the New-Testament Church. 

But there can be a danger of letting Pentecost enchant us for the wrong 
reasons.  After all, Pentecost is exciting.  We imagine what it would be like 
to have tongues of Holy-Spirit fire atop our heads.  We imagine what it would 
be like, instantaneously speaking in other languages by a Holy-Spirit inspired 
fervor.  

But what was the focus of Pentecost?  It was Jesus.  That’s what Peter 
preached, and that’s whom the people believed in that day.  And that’s also 
where the Holy Spirit wants us to look, to Jesus, not Himself. 

Getting caught up in all the Pentecostal pyrotechnics is not the Holy Spirit’s 
doing, for the Holy Spirit brings glory to Jesus, not Himself.  The Holy Spirit 
is like a spotlight shining on Christ.  And as with all spotlights, you focus 
on where the beam is shining, not on the beam itself.  So it is with the 
Spirit. 

Our confidence in the Spirit’s presence and working is not in the wind, fire, 
or tongues.  No, it’s in the preached Word of Jesus, in the hearing of His 
forgiveness, in holy baptism, and in His body and blood.  In the New Covenant, 
that’s where God has promised to be and work.  And so that’s where the Holy 
Spirit is active and working!  That’s where Pentecost is happening today, here 
and now, for you.  And that’s where you go looking for it!

What does that mean?  It means that your baptism is your Pentecost.  Every time 
you hear the Word of Christ coming to you in your own language, that’s also 
your Pentecost.  Whenever you eat Christ’s body, and whenever you drink His 
blood in the Supper, that’s also your Pentecost.  Getting more Spirit into you 
is to be where the Holy Spirit is doing His work--and that work is done through 
Word and Sacrament. 

The continuing work and life of Pentecost are not in the fire and the flaming 
tongues--even as enthralling as that is.  The continuing work and life of 
Pentecost are in the Word that brings repentance and faith in Jesus--just like 
at the first Pentecost!  

On that first Pentecost day, tens of thousands left confused and perplexed.  
They were the ones who didn’t believe in Jesus as the Messiah.  But a smaller 
group, a group of 3,000, did believe.  They heard Peter preach Jesus Christ and 
Him crucified.  They were brought into the Church through the waters of 
baptism.  That was the big deal of Pentecost--not the tongues of fire, the 
wind, or the languages. 

St. Luke tells us that after Pentecost, those 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.  What is 
that language?  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 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.  

Today, that same Spirit at Pentecost is also here, working among us, and 
delivering the peace that 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.  50 days after Easter, we in Christ’s New 
Covenant gather--not just to offer our first-fruits to God--but to receive the 
first-fruits of the Spirit. 

Conclusion
And so, even you are part of that powerful breath and wind of Pentecost.  For 
you, who were once spiritually dead in your trespasses and sins, now live in 
Christ (Ephesians 2:1).  For you believe in Jesus--and you can only do that by 
the Holy Spirit’s working in your life.  That’s why Jesus’ death is yours.  
That’s why His life is yours.  That’s why His Spirit is yours.  And whenever 
that is true, you are living in 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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