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Summary: A sermon for Pentecost Sunday, Year C

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June 5, 2022 - Pentecost Sunday

Hope Lutheran Church

Rev. Mary Erickson

Acts 2:1-21; John 14:8-17

The Spirit’s Breath among Us

Friends, may grace and peace be yours in abundance in the knowledge of God and Christ Jesus our Lord.

The Holy Spirit has long been associated with wind and breath. The Hebrew and Greek words for Spirit, ruach and pneuma, have to do with air and breath. The wind of the Spirit makes its entrance in the first chapter of Genesis. A wind from God covers the face of the unformed deep. Then in chapter two of Genesis, God breathes life into the newly formed human. Picture God doing mouth to mouth resuscitation on Adam.

Breath. It defines life. Babies take that first big gulp of air when they’re born. Their entrance into the world is defined by their first cry. We keep on breathing until we exhale our final breath.

Every day, we breathe about an average of 20,000 times. By the time we reach 50, we’ve taken about 400 million breaths. Typically, it’s not something we think about. Breathing occurs all on its own. We’re programmed to breathe in the same way our heart beats automatically.

Today we celebrate the day of Pentecost. It was the day when the Holy Spirit of God breathed into the young community of Jesus’ followers. As Jesus prepared his disciples for his departure, he promised them that God would send a Holy Advocate to remain with them.

It was on this Jewish feast of Pentecost that the Holy Spirit breathed upon the early church. They were gathered in Jerusalem. Huddled, actually. They were cloistered together inside of a house. While in the house, the Spirit came. It filled the house with the sound of a mighty wind. Not a gentle breeze – no, the sound of a violent wind. This wind breathes holy, heavenly life into the disciples. Three things happen:

- It pushes them out into the streets of Jerusalem. They’d been cloistered, but the Spirit directs them into the public square.

- They speak in varied languages, but the message is all the same: they proclaim God’s deeds of power. They tell the message of Jesus’ victory over death.

- And thirdly, these Galileans speak in the languages of the world. It’s a preview of what’s to come. This good news message of Jesus’ healing love and life will spread to the entire world. This Holy Spirit wind will circle the earth and fill all things, all people.

Breathing. For the most part, we’re unaware of our breathing process. It’s just a background thing and occurs unconsciously. The same might be said of our relationship with the Holy Spirit of God. We aren’t really aware of its working. But there it is, actively engaged in and through and around us. Sometimes the Holy Spirit is known as “the shy member of the Trinity.” For the most part, the Holy Spirit works quietly and inconspicuously.

Jesus called it the “Paraclete.” Loosely translated, it means Advocate or Helper, or Comforter. Literally, the work Paraclete means “to call alongside.” I picture a running coach who runs along your side as you run a marathon. They run along beside you, calling out words of encouragement. They warn you when some sketchy terrain or a big hill is coming your way.

This is the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit of God quietly encourages and urges us. It calls to us through hearing the good news. It enlightens and equips us through gifts of the Spirit. It gathers us together and sanctifies us for good works.

There are moments, in quiet times, when we become aware of our breathing. It’s when we slow down and rest that we notice this dynamic that’s always faithfully at work within us. When we lie down to sleep, when we sit quietly in a chair, that’s when it occurs to us that our breathing has been going on all the time.

In the same way, this quiet activity of God’s Holy Spirit becomes more apparent to us when we’re still. It was in the stillness of Mount Sinai that Elijah heard the still small voice of God. Samuel heard God call his name in the middle of the night when all was quiet in the house.

Being still may seem like we’re doing nothing, but it’s at these quiet times that the gentle actions of the Holy Spirit become more apparent to us. Becoming aware of your breathing is a tried and true part of meditation. It slows us down. As we center on our breathing, we slow down from our anxious pace of living. Our heart rates decrease, our breathing eases.

Isn’t this a lot like prayer? A prayerful pause can be a great oasis the middle of a hectic day. To just sit quietly, become aware of our breathing and repeat within, “Come, Holy Spirit. Come, Holy Spirit.”

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