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    Matthew 25:1-13 No matter the custom or culture, weddings are important and revered events. As a pastor I have always been extra sensitive...
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    Romans 13:8-14 The old adage says, “If your output exceeds your income, your upkeep will be your downfall.” Stress is the leading...
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What In The World Is He Doing?
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What In The World Is He Doing?
By David R. Tullock

Acts 2:1-21

I like Sundays with big words: Annunciation, Christmas, Epiphany, Transfiguration, Passion, Easter, Ascension, and Pentecost.  Big words mean big things have happened.  Today’s big word is Pentecost.  It always occurs fifty days after Easter, and it is the celebration of the arrival of the Holy Spirit.

Are you yawning or cheering?  This is the day to celebrate the arrival of the Holy Spirit!  Do you realize that all the big words before Pentecost would drop with a thud like wingless doves if it were not for Pentecost when the next chapter of God’s redeeming work continued with His presence through the Holy Spirit

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Not only do these big word Sundays mean that something big has happened, they also mean that something mysterious has happened, and I like mystery, too.  I don’t understand people who don’t.  There is no event in New Testament life that is more mysterious that the coming of the Holy Spirit, yet we are restless with its mystery.  There is something about it that unsettles us so much that we think that we have to package it in a formula or a certain emotion.  No day in the life of the church exposes our lack of trust of mystery more than Pentecost.

To be honest, I would like to be about to point to something and say, “There it is.  There is the Spirit of God.”  I would like to experience an emotion that I could say was the presence of God.  I would like to be able to tell you this morning that God’s Spirit is here and there it is!”  But, I can’t.  The Holy Spirit is illusive and unpredictable.  It is, well, mysterious.  I can tell you one thing for certain.  When you hear someone say, “That’s it! And if you don’t see it, then you don’t have it!” they don’t see it either.  Jesus told Nicodemus that “The wind blows where it wills, and you hear the sound of it, but you do not know whence it comes or whither it goes; so it is with every one who is born of the Spirit” (John 3:8).

Karl Rahner in Poetry and the Christian says it well: “If God’s incomprehensibility does not grip us in a word, if it does not draw us into his superluminous darkness, if it does not call us out of the little house of our homely, close-hugged truths. . . we have misunderstood the words of Christianity.”

What do we need to understand about how God uses his Holy Spirit to “call us out of our little house of homely, close-hugged truths?”

First, let me say a good word about these homely, close-hugged truths.  We all have them.  They are important because they serve as our compass in daily life.  We have to trust them because they are all we have sometimes to make proper decisions.  The problem comes when these homely, close-hugged truths become the spirit for us.  It is so easy to concertize what our perception of what God has done when in fact it may not have anything to do with God at all.  It may have to do with our family’s way of thinking, or our cultures or our political parties, or even a popular fad and we hug them closely as if they were God.  A corrective of this kind of philosophy is the Holy Spirit, blowing in ways and directions that is counter to family, culture, political parties and popular fads, calling us out of our” little house of homely, close-hugged truths.”  Simply put, that is what God is doing in the world today, calling us from ourselves into Himself. 

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