Happy Birthday to you
Happy Birthday to you
Happy Birthday dear Church
Happy Birthday to you!
Today,
we are celebrating the birthday of the church. On the day of Pentecost over
2,000 years ago, the Holy Spirit came to the disciples, and through the Holy
Spirit the church was born. It is a time when the church traditionally concentrates
on the gift of the Holy Spirit and the ways in which it strengthens the church.
It is a time to consider how the Spirit has created and sustained faith in our
lives. It is a time to explore how the Spirit empowers our witness so that
others might have faith.
The
power of the Holy Spirit ignited the disciples. Peter was ignited and gave one
of the most powerful sermons in history. It included both the fulfillment of
Joel’s prophecy and a strong rebuke/accusation. The effect was remarkable. The
message pierced the hearts of the people, and as a result more than 3,000
people were baptized and filled with the Holy Spirit. When these new converts
returned home, they spread the message, and thus the church was born.
This
would not have been possible without the Holy Spirit. The Spirit is not an
impersonal force. It is a person. It possesses the mind of God, emotions and
will---because it is God. It
performs the actions of God. It has the attributes of God.
As
a result of the Holy Spirit, the church opened its hearts to fellowship. It
opened its hands to care for each and every member. Members opened their homes
to each other, especially for worship. They devoted themselves to prayer. As a
result of all of this, the church grew and found favour with other people-both
inside and outside the church.
The
term “Spirit” describes wind or breath. The Pentecost wind is no wind of
destruction. It blows where it will and fires up people with faith and
spiritual power. The church did not come alive until after God breathed the
Holy Spirit. The wind was an outward sign of what was happening within the
disciples. The Holy Spirit came like a rushing wind on the first Pentecost, and
it still comes like a rushing wind today. We can’t control the wind, and we
can’t control the Holy Spirit no matter how hard we try. We try to control what
it tells us to do or who it wants us to allow into our churches. Many
Christians want just enough religion to be comfortable, to be respected, to
feel good about themselves, but not so much that it shakes up their routines
and changes their way of living. Many Christians want the benefits of the Holy
Spirit without having to experience much of the Spirit.
Differences
can enrich and enliven our worship experiences. Differences force us to reach
across what divides us. Differences and diversity force us to rely on the Holy
Spirit in order to remain faithful to the Gospel of Jesus in more creative and
dynamic mission efforts. We are called on to share the Good News with others
and welcome them to find love of each other and the love of God. If we do not
share the Good News, it is wasted. The Holy Spirit calls on us to share our
gifts and love with those who are different from us.
God
gave the disciples supernatural ability to speak the languages of all those who
had gathered in Jerusalem from around the known world at that time. The
Spirit’s presence signified their baptism into the spiritual body of the
church. This gift was the result of being filled with the Holy Spirit so the
disciples could preach the Gospel to all the people.
God
does the same thing today. He speaks through both chosen people and simple
people like you and me. This message of being somebody again through God alone
is communicated. Why? So that it might get through to everyone. For example, I
post my sermons on my blog, and I also post links to these sermons in several
Facebook groups. As of the date I prepared this message, my sermons have been
viewed over 100,000 times by people around the world. As people who have
received God’s grace we get to be a bridge of that good news to people we know
and love.
Part
of the Jewish liturgy involved reciting one of the great acts of God in their
history. When the Holy Spirit came they all worshipped and rehearsed his
wonderful works. Bystanders understood them because of the Jewish liturgy. When
the Holy Spirit comes to fill a Christian, he/she speaks and acts in ways that
weren’t possible before. Christians live supernaturally because the Spirit of
God within them controls them.
For
example, just a few days before Pentecost, Peter was too scared to admit he
knew Jesus. Now, filled with the Holy Spirit, God changed him. In Acts 2:16-21,
Peter quoted Joel 2:28-33, which was Joel’s prophecy of the Holy Spirit and the
beginning of the last days. On that first Pentecost, the Spirit came to people
in a new, more powerful way that signalled the beginning of the new covenant
age, which runs from the time of Christ’s death until he returns at some time
in the future. These are the last days in that the coming of the Messiah, which
was foretold in the Old Testament, have now occurred. His saving death and
resurrection have been accomplished, and now the Holy Spirit has to build the
church before Christ returns.
Acts
2:1-21 is the marching orders for the church. The coming of the Holy Spirit was
an awe-inspiring moment that changed the world. It was a tipping point when
history was changed. We have to go with the flow. It asks us to go beyond our
comfort zone. God’s dream was one where all believers would gather together in
unity and faith. Gold calls on us to love one another. That love changes us. It
allows us to show grace to everyone.
Sometimes
we wonder if what happened at Pentecost can happen today. We wonder if we can
gain a deeper understanding of the Holy Spirit and experience its transforming
strength. We want to deal with our own feelings of spiritual inadequacy. God answers
these questions and other questions people are really asking. People want
something more than ordinary, dull religion. They want the power and intimacy
of the Holy Spirit. It changes us. We were created for union and communication
with the Holy Spirit. The greatest need for both society and the church today
is for a contemporary Pentecost. We, like the disciples, must be ready for the
miracle of the supernatural endowment of the Holy Spirit’s power.
The
flames represented the purity and power with which the disciples would speak as
they proclaimed what God had done. The fire of the Holy Spirit burns away
anything that will keep us from being the people God wants us to be. It
convinces us that God loves us unconditionally and that we can love others unconditionally.
It gives us the ability to love others deeply. The Holy Spirit releases us so
that we can praise others. That praise becomes very effective proclamation. It
frees us from self-concern and to Spirit-consciousness. We are free to praise
God and to receive what he will do.
When
people hear a minister preach on a Biblical text with the power of the Holy
Spirit, and the people have been prepared by the Holy Spirit, the result is
conviction, faith and changed lives. In contrast to the baptism with the
Spirit, which is the one-time act by which God places believers into His body,
the filling is a repeated reality of Spirit-controlled behaviour that God
commands believers to maintain. The work of the Holy Spirit in the church today
is to dwell with believers so they will look like Christ and be empowered to
continue his ministry here on earth.
How
does the Holy Spirit work in the church today?
- He convicts us of our sin, shows us that none of us can live up to the righteousness of Jesus, and reveals to us the judgment that is coming to those who die without faith in Christ.
- He immerses us into the family of God.
- He encourages and comforts us when we are hurting or discouraged.
- We work with him to maintain unity among Christians.
- He brings peace in the midst of life’s storms.
- He pours out the power for victorious living.
- He helps us to study and understand the truths of the Bible.
- He intercedes for us when we can’t put our feelings into words.
- He gives us power for evangelism.
- He distributes spiritual gifts as he deems best throughout the Body of Christ.A life in Christ is God’s will for his people. God’s plan can’t be stopped. Pentecost is a taste of what will happen in God’s kingdom when the Spirit is poured out on all people. The Holy Spirit will live in all believers.The Holy Spirit is more than a tool to help us overcome life’s challenges, but much of what we are asked to do is far beyond what we are called to do. On our own, we are never enough. The outpouring of the Spirit is far greater than anyone expects. It will be poured out on all flesh and everyone who calls on the Lord will be saved. The Spirit will give us the strength we need to do God’s work in our world.In return, we are called on to be wanders. We aren’t meant to be too settled, rooted or rigid. Our spiritual lives are meant to be a pilgrimage. The dangerous place is the place that gets too comfortable or stagnant. We are to be on the move, and our churches are meant to be on the move as well.Pentecost is the day when we remember the eruption in which the Church came to birth. It is also the day when we remember the countless ways in which the Holy Spirit shapes the Church as an institution and ourselves as individuals. It is also the day when we are reminded that once we have received the Holy Spirit, we are required and enabled to take a stand for good and against evil in whatever circumstances we find ourselves. The Holy Spirit will teach us to love God and neighbour-and he will reward us by giving us a life worth living. That life won’t be easy or trouble-free, but it will be worth living and dying for-and that is the greatest birthday gift of all.Thanks be to God, AMENBibliography
- Jeremiah, Dr. David: The Jeremiah Study Bible, NKJV (Brentwood, TN: Worthy Publishing; 2013)
- ESV Study Bible. Part of Wordsearch 10 Bible software package.
- George Hermanson, “All You Need Is Love.” Retrieved from www.holyscriptures.com
- David McGee, “Grace for Life.” Retrieved from www.crossthebridge.com
- Ogilvie, L.J. & Ogilvie, L.J.: The Preacher’s Commentary Series, Vol. 28: Acts (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Inc.; 1983)
- Stanley, C.F.: The Charles F. Stanley Life Principles Bible, NKJV (Nashville, TN: Nelson Bibles; 2005)
- MacArthur, J.F. Jr.: The MacArthur Study Bible, NASV (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers; 2006)
- Rev. Gregory Seltz, “That’s Just Who God Is.” Retrieved from lh_min@lhm.org
- Dr. Roger Barrier, “What is the Role of the Holy Spirit in the Church Today?” Retrieved from Crosswalk@crosswalkmail.com
- The Rev. Dr. Charles Reeb, “Controlling the Wind.” Retrieved from www.day1.org
- Pastor Dave Risendal, “The Holy Spirit Has Called Me.” Retrieved from donotreply@wordpress.com
- Jacob Myers, “Commentary on Acts 2:1-21.” Retrieved from http://www.workingpreacher.org/preaching.aspx?commentary_id=1296
- Rick Morley, “Wanderlust-a Reflection on Pentecost.” Retrieved from http://www.rickmorley.com/archives
- Jeremiah, Dr. David: AD: The Bible Continues: The Revolution that Changed the World (Carol Stream, Illinois: Tyndale House Publishers Inc.; 2015, pgs. 39-56)
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