Sunday in the liturgical calendar of the church year is
Pentecost Sunday. The feast of Pentecost is a holy day in the church that
commemorates and celebrates the descent of the Holy Spirit onto the apostles of
the church after Jesus’ ascension. The church is to be decorated in festive
reds, oranges and yellows to symbolize the tongues of fire that were over the
apostles’ heads during the Pentecost experience. During this experience, which
can be found in Acts, the apostles started speaking in different tongues.
Some of the
tongues that were spoken were from regions such as the Parthians, Medes, Elamites, and residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and
Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts of
Libya belonging to Cyrene, and visitors from Rome, both Jews and proselytes,
Cretans and Arabs. I bring this to your attention to point out the diversity of
faith, which goes beyond just the Jewish community of the day. The grace of God
was extended to everyone in attendance and beyond.
All the way in Boone I have heard
stories of the Klu Klux Klan meeting that will occur in Northern Iredell County
tomorrow (Saturday). I would encourage each of you to be in prayer for members of this
organization, that God might be at work in their lives, changing, restoring and
transforming the broken nature of racism that we see.
I have been an advocate throughout
my column’s articles on an inclusion of love and an exclusion of hate, but it
seems that some residents of the great county of Iredell feel that hate is more
important than love. How do we respond? How do we fight the evil powers of this
world?
We stand, together. Beyond the lines
of denominationalism, nationality, race, gender, and clan, we give a resounding
yes to the world’s no. Where the world says we can’t, we say we can with the
power of the Holy Spirit that was present those many millennia ago.
Tomorrow (Saturday) I will be praying for the
people who will participate in the cross-burning, I will pray that the same
grace that transformed us to transform them, so that one day the transformation
in all our lives will be complete. I look to a wonderful man by the name of Martin
Luther King Jr. who said so eloquently,
“An individual has not
started living until he can rise above the narrow confines of his
individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.” People of faith that is what Pentecost is
about.
Pentecost is about the life-changing
act of the individual becoming the communal; it is about grapes and wheat
becoming the bread and wine that grace our table. Pentecost is the resounding
grace that conquers the bonds and chains of racism. Pentecost is the speaking
in tongues that changed the course of those apostles’ lives, and ever more
presently changes our lives as well. In that we can say, “Thanks be to God”