PENTECOST 2019 St. Andrew’s
Northford
Fear
always says “no”.
If
you’re going to remember anything I say this morning—remember this: FEAR ALWAYS
SAYS “NO.”
And
remember this as well: GOD SAYS “YES” TO US….
****
Jesus’
friends were gathered in the same room they’d been using to hide. How many were
there isn’t clear. The book of Acts says 120—though that number may be high.
They huddled together, still frightened that the Temple authorities might be
after them, still grieving in some way—though they had seen the Risen Lord time
and again, felt his breath upon their faces—and, most…most of all, they were terribly, wrenchingly lonely.
Jesus
had promised them they would be clothed in power. Jesus had promised them he
would send an Advocate to be with them. Jesus had promised them they would be
baptized in Fire. Jesus had promised them he was already preparing a place for
them.
But
the promises seemed like so much pie crust to the disciples. They were still
waiting for the promises to be fulfilled. They were frightened. And they were
so lonely—so profoundly lonely.
****
That
image…that metaphor…that paradigm of being crowded into a lonely, frightening
room rings true for us today.
Fear haunts us these days. And though we
huddle together in our fear, we are still so profoundly lonely. Fear speaks but
one word and that word is “NO”.
Our
faith teaches us to be hospitable to strangers—but our Fear says “no” and we
distrust those who are different from us.
Our
faith teaches us to be compassionate—but our Fear says “no” and we ignor the
'least of these' in our midst.
Our
faith teaches us to share our gifts with those in need—but our Fear says “no”
and we live in the richest nation in the history of human kind where the gap
between the rich and the poor gets wider every day.
Our
faith teaches us that “a little child shall lead us” and that we must become
like children to enter the Kingdom of God—but our Fear says “no” as millions of
children go underfed, undereducated and neglected around the world and in our country.
Remember
this: Fear always says “NO”.
****
There is no easy
or simple way to explain it, what happened in that closed and fearful room on
the first Pentecost—it happened like this: one moment the room was full of fear
and the next moment the room was full of fire and a mighty wind fanned the
flames until the fear was burned away and all that was left was hope and joy
and those formerly frightened people “found their voices” and left their hiding
place and spoke words that transformed the world.
We need the Fires
of Pentecost to burn away our fears and the Winds of Pentecost to blow away our
loneliness. We need the Spirit to give us our voices so we may proclaim the
“Yes” of God to this world.
Fear always says
“NO”—but God always says “Yes”….
We need a
Pentecost. We need to know that God says “Yes” to us. That God calls us to
wonder and joy and love and compassion and hospitality. And not just in the
“big things”—God’s “Yes” to us is about “little things” too. God’s “Yes” to us
is global, universal, total.
This is a poem by
Kaylin Haught titled God Says Yes to Me. It is a
Pentecost poem, whether she knew it or not.
I asked God if it was okay to be
melodramatic
and she said yes
I asked her if it was okay to be short
and she said it sure is
I asked her if I could wear nail
polish
or not wear nail polish
and she said honey
she calls me that sometimes
she said you can do just exactly what
you want to
Thanks God I said
And is it even okay if I don’t
paragraph
my letters
Sweetcakes God said
Who knows where she picked that up
What I’m telling you is
Yes Yes Yes
What
Pentecost is about is God saying “Yes” to you and you and you and you and you
and all of us. What Pentecost is
about is the Spirit coming so we are never, ever, not ever lonely again.
What
Pentecost is about is Fire burning away Fear.
What
Pentecost is about—and listen carefully, this is important—Pentecost is about
God saying to you and you and you and you and you and all of us:
Sweetcakes,
what I’m telling you is Yes Yes Yes.
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