Breaking Down the Walls in the Name of Christ
based on Acts 2:1-21
Rev. Frank Schaefer
Pentecost is one of those Christian holidays few people
can explain off the top of their heads. Unless you're a Pentecostal
believer, people usually scratch their heads and come up with all kinds
of answers.
Christmas is about the birth of the Christ. Good Friday
is about Christ's Crucifixion. Easter is about Christ's resurrection.
Easy enough. But what exactly is Pentecost?
Answers vary. Some say: it's the birthday of the Church
(but Church didn't really form until much later). Other say: it's the
arrival of the Holy Spirit (but wasn't the Holy Spirit present before
Pentecost?) Still others say: Pentecost is Christ's second coming (well,
at least in terms of the arrival of the Spirit of Christ).
All of these answers along with a host of others have
something theologically important to say about Pentecost. But they are
also quite different and so it is easy to see why Pentecost is one of
those complicated holidays that people can't really explain with one
simple word.
Well, this morning, I want to highlight one of the most important
aspects of Pentecost. I don't intent to to complicate things even more,
but would rather like to point to a central truth of the Pentecost
message:
Pentecost is about Breaking Down the Walls in the
Name of Christ.
The Book of Acts gives us an account of the history of
the early Church. It starts with an account of the Ascension of Christ,
a promise about the return of Christ's Spirit. Christ is reported to say
to his disciples:
“But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes
on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and
Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” Acts 1:8
In chapter 2 the narrative quickly moves into the
realization of this promise of Christ's gift—the outpouring of the
Spirit of God, the Spirit of Christ. On the day of Pentecost the
disciples were having a gathering and suddenly they had a bizarre
collective experience. I'm calling it a bizarre experience because
apparently it was such an unusual and extraordinary experience that
metaphoric language had to be borrowed to describe it.
It was like tongues of fire were coming out of the
disciples' heads, surely described a new spirit of joy, enthusiasm, and
fire within the disciples. Whatever they experienced empowered them,
gave them courage to step out of the confines of their gathering place
into the streets of Jerusalem. And it gave them new and powerful
communication skills. The metaphor of speaking in other tongues,
certainly expresses that they found new and powerful ways in which to
communicate the good news of Christ. So much so that suddenly people in
the streets got it. So much so that many of them became instant
followers of Christ.
And what was so attractive about the disciples'
enthusiastic message?
The extraordinary and unexpected momentum of the young
Christian movement prompted the early disciples to recognize a
connection between what they saw happening and the words of the prophet
Joel...
“In the last days it will be, God declares, that I will
pour out my Spirit upon all people, and your sons and your daughters
shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and your old men
shall dream dreams. (Joel 2:28-32, Acts 2:17 )
The phrase "in the last days" was clearly understood by
the disciples to be a new and final era in which God's spiritual graces
were available to all people. They were no longer limited to the priests
or religious leaders. They were available to all people, men, women,
young and old. This new move of the Spirit re-defined God's community.
The religious system of first-century Judea was a top-down hierarchical
and patriarchal system. Men were viewed as lords over women, children
were considered property of their fathers, ethnic Jews had little
opportunities. Mostly men residing in Judea were able to become rabbis,
leaders and priests.
Pentecost turned the understanding of this political and
patriarchal organized system on it's head and gave us a grassroots
movement in which people of all colors, ethnicities, genders and ages
have equal access to God's grace and power and where all are included in
the community of Christ. All are equal in the eyes of God regarding
standing and opportunities.
The Pentecost message stands for the breaking down of
conventional walls. It was a message that empowered the people. It
fleshes out the concept of the priesthood of all believers. It fleshed
out the meaning of the temple veil that separated the sanctuary from the
holy of holies. The Pentecost message was a continuing realization of
Christ's work toward breaking down the walls among us-- the walls of all
the isms, racism, ethnicism, sexism, ageism and hetero-sexism.
And the story in Acts chapter 2 is just the beginning of
the Pentecost spirit. The narrative that follows in chapters 3 and
following shows how more and more walls were broken down by the young
church in the name of Christ. The young church learned to draw the
circle of God's grace ever wider to include more and more of God's
beloved children.
Here are some prominent examples:
Acts 6: Following the stoning of Stephen, the gospel
started to spread to many nations as the persecution of the Jesus
followers caused people to leave Jerusalem and the middle East. Those
early missionaries went to Egypt, Asia, Minor, Europe, and even the Far
East. Another wall was broken down in the name of Christ as the Gospel
spread well beyond the borders of Judea.
In Acts 8:26-40, we read about the baptism of the Eunuch. Eunuchs were
banned from entering the temple proper, they were only allowed to
worship in the outer temple courts (according to Deut 23:1)
“No one who has been emasculated by crushing or cutting
may enter the assembly of the Lord.” Deuteronomy 23:1
The evangelist Philip met this Jewish Eunuch who had
worshiped at the temple in Jerusalem and was on his way back to
Ethiopia. He was reading Isaiah 53, the Suffering Servant passage, and
asked Philip to explain it to him. And Philip, I'm sure, shared with the
Eunuch that this man of public humiliation, this suffering servant, is a
prophetic word about Jesus, who lived and taught that all people are of
sacred worth, that nobody is rejected by God, that God loves all God's
children. He surely explained how Jesus healed the lepers, invited the
outcasts and embraced the “unloved.” He must have shared about his death
and resurrection and this new movement Jesus started that was ushering
in the reality of that hope for all who are excluded, forsaken,
forgotten, and marginalized.
Philip told him that through the waters of baptism, that he would be
accepted and included for the person he was. He was going to become a
full member of the body of Christ. No more exclusion, no more ridicule,
no more discrimination. And Philip baptized the Eunuch and, it says in
Verse 40, “ he [the Eunuch] went on his way rejoicing,” The young Church
had broken down another wall in the name of Christ.
In Acts 10:9-23 we read about Peter's Vision and
subsequent experience of Gentile Christians. There were two very
distinctive cultural and spiritual features about Judaism: circumcision
and the kosher food laws. It set Jewish believers apart. God spoke to
Peter in a vision challenging this very concept in Peter's thinking—a
premise which must have gone against his understanding of holy and
unholy. But the vision is not ultimately what changed Peter.
It was seeing how the holy spirit had filled the Gentile Cornelius and
his family is what did it.
The result: Peter goes back to Jerusalem, convenes a
counsel and after much deliberation, the Gentile believers are accepted
as fellow Christians and children of God—without circumcision and kosher
food laws. Peter experienced a transformation and was able, along with
Paul, to report to the Council of Jerusalem (Acts 15) and to share their
experiences among the Gentile Christians. Their witness was that God's
spirit was manifest in Gentiles as much as it was in any
Jewish-Christian community. And the Council decided to include Gentile
believers in the Church without expecting them to convert to Judaism.
Another wall broken down in the name of Christ.
And that gives hope to all of us. For we are all called
to break down the walls in the name of Christ In our modern struggle in
the church to accept our LGBT brothers and sisters as God's beloved
children. God not only gives us visions, but also provides us with the
testimony of our LGBT brothers and sisters. So, here you have it...
Pentecost is about Breaking Down the Walls in the Name of Christ.
The spirit of Pentecost wants us to...
-
tear down the walls that society has built.
-
Tear down the political, social, economic, religious,
racial, ethnic and sexist walls
For Christ has broken down the walls to include all
God's beloved children. All are welcome, all are accepted, all are
included. Happy Pentecost, church!