God’s
grace, peace and mercy be with you. My focus is Acts, Chapter 2. … Let us pray.
Heavenly Father, the psalmist wrote, “I rejoiced when they said to me, ‘Let us go
to the house of the Lord.’”[1] Now that our feet are
within your gates, we rejoice to hear your Word. As we listen, may your Spirit
enlighten our minds and move our hearts to love deeply as Jesus loved. This we
pray to you, Most Holy Trinity. Amen.
Four-Eyes!
Kids called me that as soon as I started wearing glasses. Kids have called their
classmates four-eyes for over 100 years. Four-eyes is simply slang for a person
who wears glasses. Four I’s is also the title of my sermon. Four I’s as in the
letter between H and J, and not the organ for vision. Four I’s: intoxication,
indwelling, involvement and indifference. Intoxication and indwelling from Acts;
involvement and indifference from our place in the world today.
First,
intoxication. We commonly understand intoxication as drunk. Picture Mayberry’s Otis
or the lovable Foster Brooks. Drunks. Only for 400 years have we understood
intoxication as drunk on rum, rye or red wine. Before that, intoxication meant
poisoning. The root word – toxic – pertains to Greek warriors who dipped their
arrows in poison before combat and shot them at their enemies.
Intoxicated
is what the apostles’ opponents claimed they were. And while I enjoy the way
the New Living Translation of the Bible puts it – “They’re just drunk, that’s all!” – the version that reads – “They had too much new wine” – is
ironic. Ironic because in the Old Testament, new wine or sweet wine symbolized
the joy and abundant blessings that God would give his people in the messianic
age.[2] In Joel, we read, “On that day the mountains shall drip sweet
wine, and the hills shall flow with milk.”[3]
In
Amos, we read, “Behold, the days are
coming, declares the Lord, when the plowman shall overtake the reaper and the
treader of grapes who sows the seed; the mountains shall drip sweet wine, and
all the hills shall flow with it. I will restore the fortunes of my people
Israel, and they shall rebuild the ruined cities and inhabit them; they shall
plant vineyards and drink their wine, and they shall make gardens and eat their
fruit.”[4]
Jesus
hinted that he would give the new wine of divine life when he turned water into
wine at Cana. And in Mark, chapter two, he said, “No one puts new wine into old wineskins. If he does, the wine will
burst the skins – and the wine is destroyed, and so are the skins. But new wine
is for fresh wineskins.”[5]And so, at Pentecost, new
wine is the Holy Spirit, the gift of love that is poured forth into our hearts.
Though
the crowd heard diverse languages from a group of Galileans, their reactions
differed widely, from bewilderment to scoffing accusations that the believers
were drunk; however, miraculous signs invite faith but do require an
explanation of what they signify.[6] In other words, the
apostles were intoxicated, but not poisoned. Intoxicated with the Holy Spirit, but
not wine.
From
intoxication to indwelling. Indwelling describes a medical condition, such as a
catheter, but more commonly describes an inner guiding force. Something takes
up residence within you and becomes part of you, such as a catheter or a
spirit.
Something
took up residence in the apostles and became part of them. Acts described this
force as the Holy Spirit that descended from heaven like a terrifying wind,
filled the house and then rested on each believer.
The
indwelling of the Holy Spirit on Pentecost reminds us how indispensable the
Spirit is for our faith and salvation. Pentecost reminds us that we are not saved
by doctrinal orthodoxy or our determination to follow scrupulously rules and
commandments. We are saved by the acts of God.
The
indwelling Holy Spirit bestows on us the virtues of faith, hope and love from
which all other Christian virtues and actions follow. As it did in the first
believers, the Spirit produces in us a particular kind of fruit. St. Paul
listed the fruit as love, joy, peace,
patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.[7] In short, the Holy Spirit
dwelling within the believer produces the character of Jesus.
On
Pentecost, the Trinity imparted a gracious gift that produced in each believer
the character of Jesus. Frightened men and women who hid from authorities no
longer feared dungeon and death. They faced it because the character of Jesus
now dwelt within them. The character of Jesus dwelt within them.
From
indwelling to involvement. Acts teaches us that on Pentecost, the believers did
not remain in the place where the Holy Spirit descended upon them. Rather, as
soon as they received the Holy Spirit, they began to witness.
Following
Jesus’ last command – You will receive
power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in
Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth[8]
– their witnessing flowed naturally.
Their
witnessing began in Jerusalem, and quickly reached Italy, Greece, Turkey, Iran,
Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Libya – the cities and regions mentioned in
verses 9 and 10. The Gospel spread like wildfire because Christians – filled
with the Holy Spirit – cut people to the heart with words like repent and be baptized in the name of Jesus
Christ for the forgiveness of your sins, and you will receive the gift of the
Holy Spirit; and save yourselves from
this crooked generation.[9]
Christians
spoke like that because they were intoxicated with the power of the Holy
Spirit. The power of the Spirit brought about their ability to speak other
languages, but it was clear that the church was not building a language
institute but a body of believers sent to every nation on earth.[10] Christians involved in
the world resulted in 3,000 baptisms on Pentecost.
Folks,
I have preached and pastored since 1987. I participated in gatherings of a
million Christians, and in 2015 traveled to Ecuador where I saw the phenomenal
growth of an evangelical churches, but I never witnessed a baptism of 3,000
people. This occurred because Christians intoxicated with the Holy Spirit were involved
in the world.
Christians
intoxicated with the Holy Spirit involved in the world. … Folks, are you
intoxicated with the Holy Spirit? Does the Holy Spirit dwell within you to the
degree that you speak and act like you drank too much? Are you involved in the
world?
Apart
from voting, most Christians avoid involvement in the world. We excuse
ourselves because we dislike politics and despise dirty tricks. Yet, we see
that Jesus involved himself in the lives of thousands of people by teaching
God’s Word, forgiving their sins, healing their infirmities and quenching their
hunger. In short, Jesus challenged the establishment.
Jon
Kuhrt, a Christian involved with London’s homeless recently wrote, “We have no
choice about being political because if we choose not to engage then it is a
vote for the status quo … Christians [must] be involved because we believe in a
God who cares passionately about his world and his creation, and consequently
how it is run. The Bible is hugely political – in that it is about how God
wants people to behave and act towards him, and towards each other. This
involves economics and law because these are tools that need to be used to
build justice.
As
believers in God we have much to bring to politics – a deeper commitment to
justice and compassion which throughout history has made a difference in the
political sphere through people like William Wilberforce, Martin Luther King,
Desmond Tutu and many others.”
Kuhrt
goes on to say, “Be involved in your local community – what issues do local
people care about? How can you help make a noise about key issues local to
you? How does your church or youth group
connect with issues of justice either locally or globally? How can you build knowledge of what is going
on and get passionate with others about making a stand?
Join
the Christian group of the party that you believe in and be an advocate for
Jesus’ politics within it. Be brave and
courageous – don’t just follow the crowd, but be willing to ask the difficult
questions.”[11]
Be involved, but be indifferent.
Hence,
my last point, indifference. My last point does not contradict my previous
point. By indifference I do not mean apathy or a “who cares” or “whatever”
attitude. On the contrary, holy
indifference means total openness to God’s will in one’s life. In other words,
whatever God wills for me, I will strive with all my heart, mind and soul to
conform to His will. I will not prefer health to sickness, riches to poverty,
honor to dishonor, a long life to a short one.
How
did Jesus expect His disciples to attain holy indifference? How did the first
Christians achieve acceptance of God’s will? How did sentenced Christians bring
glory to Christ? Through a constant, dynamic prayer life which led them to
total confidence in God and a willingness to give themselves wholly to the
Trinity.
They
were indifferent because they knew God directed them. Their love for Father,
Son and Spirit was so deep that all obstacles between God and themselves were
removed to the point that they knew how to use things properly, for example, talent,
money, property or politics to glorify God. They were able to do so because
they recognized that all things came from God, and that all people were from
God. Hence, the first Christians not only withstood their enemies’ insults
about intoxication, but also welcomed them if they brought glory to Christ and
His Gospel.
Friends,
four-eyes is not the worst insult people will hurl at you. Intoxication is not
the worst accusation people will make. A Christian intoxicated with the
indwelling Holy Spirit involved in the world who employs holy indifference will
make all the difference needed to bring about God’s Kingdom because of what
Father, Son and Spirit have done. Allow God to work in you, and know that when
He does, the peace of God that surpasses all understanding will keep your
hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.
[1] Psalm 122.
[2]
William S. Kurz, Acts of the Apostles. (Grand Rapids: Baker Publishing, 2013),
46.
[3] Joel
3:18.
[4]
Amos 9:13-14.
[5]
Mark 2:22.
[6]
Kurz, 46.
[7]
Galatians 5:22-23.
[8]
Acts 1:8.
[9]
Acts 2:37-40.
[10]
John W. Martens, “Continuing Education,” America.
May 16, 2016.
[11] Krish
Kandiah, “Why Christians should be involved in politics,” https://resistanceandrenewal.net/
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