Sunday, May 24, 2015

God pulls us up by the flame of the Spirit – Acts 2:1-11

Pentecost; Holy Cross Parish.

Fire.  It fascinates us.  It captures our gaze and delights us.  How often do we gaze up in wonder at the stars; those gigantic balls of fire that seem so small to us?  Or did you, like me, feel extra joy these past few days when the sun finally came out?  Or have you ever spent time around a camp fire, or in front of a fire place, fascinated by the flickering?  Fire warms us, it lights up our world, it cooks our food, it fascinates us and attracts our gaze.


I invite you to raise your heads and look up.  Because those of us who are baptized (and if you’re not, let me know and we’ll get that sorted by this time next year) have been gifted with God’s own dignity and life, through water and the Spirit and resting on us are tongues as of fire, descended from above.  Today at St. Matthew’s cathedral, 43 adults from all over this half of the diocese will come together to receive the sacrament of confirmation, including four from our parish.  For those of us who are confirmed (and again, if you’re not, talk to us), those tongues of fire are strengthened.  It’s a blazing fire, tenderly lapping the top of your head, and it should capture our gaze, it should draw us up, to the full stature God created us to have, to gaze with longing at the heavens for which God has claimed us, by making us mature, confident, heads-held-high, missionary disciples, gaze captured by the delightful fire of the Spirit.


Ninety-six days ago, we were marked with ashes on our foreheads and remembered that we are dust.  We lamented that sometimes that’s all people can see when they look at us, the leftovers, the remnants of God’s fiery passion in which we each have been embraced, because a fire in which what grabs your attention first is the ashes isn’t much of a fire.  But there are no ashes without flames.  There is lamenting to be done for each of us and for all of us, but not today.  No, today, we celebrate.  We have lamented and sought to grow in grace and virtue through our fasting, prayer and almsgiving; we have celebrated Easter, set alight the new fire, and watched our Paschal candle burn throughout these fifty days of Easter.  And now, we celebrate, that God has gifted us with His own fire.  It does rest on us.  It is pulling us up and, however far we have to go, we will blaze triumphant with him forever.

And the lesson of Acts is that this gift of the Spirit is given at the service of universal proclamation, that the good news of the Gospel, of God’s fiery redeeming love which he shares with us, may resound in every human tongue.  Because no human way of speaking is unable to communicate the Gospel.  No human is undeserving of hearing that Gospel, hearing it as proclaimed at once universally and uniquely, personally to them.  To you, to me, to each of us.


God is among us and within us, dwelling with us in an even more intimate way than when Christ walked the earth.  Our breath, our sighing is alive with the Spirit of God.  And fire spreads; breath is exhaled; the gift we are given is given to be shared.  Alleluia!  We are aflame with the brilliance of God’s love, and that love can set the world ablaze.

No comments:

Post a Comment