Joel 2.21-end
Acts of the Apostles 2.14-21
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You could say that the Day of Pentecost is the most
dynamic of the Church’s feasts: flames moving, breath stirring, tongues
loosened, and human hearts set in motion.
Our readings this evening place us right at the
heart of that movement: from promise to fulfilment, from desolation to
restoration, from fear to boldness.
Joel’s prophecy begins in devastation.
Israel has suffered a locust plague so severe that the
land is stripped bare, the people demoralised, hope worn thin.
Yet into that bleakness God speaks a word of
astonishing tenderness:
Fear not, O land; be
glad and rejoice, for the Lord has done great things!
Even the animals are addressed - ‘Fear not, you
beasts of the field’ - as if creation itself is being coaxed back to life.
Joel’s vision is one of total restoration.
Pastures become green again, trees bear fruit,
threshing floors overflow.
And then comes that extraordinary promise:
I will restore to you
the years which the swarming locust has eaten.
Not simply better days ahead, but redeemed time - lost
years, wasted seasons, barren stretches of life gathered up and made fruitful
again by the mercy of God.
But Joel’s prophecy rises beyond material renewal.
It culminates in something even more astonishing: ‘I
will pour out my spirit on all flesh.’
Not on kings alone, nor prophets alone, nor priests
alone - but on all flesh.
Sons and daughters, old and young, servants and
maidservants.
The Spirit will not be rationed; God’s life flows
over everyone.
Pentecost is the fulfilment of that promise.
When Peter stands before the crowds in Jerusalem, he
does not offer a new idea or clever argument.
He points back to Joel and says, ‘This is what was
spoken by the prophet Joel.’
What they are witnessing - the rushing wind, the
tongues of fire, the disciples speaking in many languages - is not chaos but
fulfilment.
The God who promised to restore the years eaten by
locusts is now restoring humanity itself, breathing new life into a fearful and
fractured world.
Peter emphasises the universality of the gift:
I will pour out my
Spirit upon all flesh… your sons and your daughters shall prophesy… your young
men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams.
The Spirit does not erase our differences; the
Spirit sanctifies them.
Young and old, men and women, servants and free—each
receives a share in God’s life, each is called into God’s mission.
Pentecost is not the birth of a spiritual elite; it
is the birth of a Spirit‑filled people.
Joel’s promise of restoration speaks powerfully into
our own lives.
The locusts of illness, grief, regret, missed
opportunities stalk our lives, ready to nibble away our hope.
Pentecost tells us that God does not only forgive;
God restores.
The Spirit brings life out of what seemed dead,
rekindles joy where it had faded, renews courage where fear had taken root.
The disciples themselves are living proof.
Only weeks earlier they had scattered in fear.
Peter, ‘The Rock’ - a somewhat ironic nickname at
this stage - had denied Jesus.
Their hopes had collapsed.
Yet on Pentecost morning Peter stands “with the
eleven,” no longer hiding, no longer ashamed, but proclaiming the gospel with
clarity and boldness.
The Spirit restores what fear had broken.
And forms and shapes a people, the Church.
Our task is then to be witnesses to this.
The disciples speak in many languages, not to
display spiritual gifts, but so that ‘each one heard them speaking in his own
language.’
Pentecost reverses the scattering of the Tower of Babel.
Where human pride once fractured communication, the
Spirit creates understanding.
Where suspicion once divided, the Spirit builds
communion.
This is what we must speak into a world marked by
polarisation, mistrust, and the retreat into echo chambers.
Pentecost calls the Church to be a community where
strangers become neighbours, where differences are gifts rather than threats,
where the Spirit enables us to hear one another deeply: this is what humanity
can look like!
And we cannot huddle in a like‑minded community,
because the Spirit of Pentecost sends us out in mission.
Joel’s prophecy ends with a promise of salvation:
All who call upon the
name of the Lord shall be delivered.
Peter echoes it:
Whoever calls on the
name of the Lord shall be saved.
Pentecost is not an inward‑looking feast.
It is the moment the Church is propelled outward.
The Spirit does not come to make us comfortable; the
Spirit comes to make us witnesses.
A Spirit‑filled witness is not someone who has pre-packaged
answers, but someone whose life points to the living God - someone who speaks
truth with humility, loves with courage, forgives with generosity, hopes
against hope.
Someone who, like Peter, can stand before the world
and say: God’s promises are trustworthy; God’s mercy is real; God’s Spirit is
for you.
Pentecost also invites us to dream again.
Joel says,
Your old men shall
dream dreams, and your young men shall see visions.
The Spirit gives the Church holy imagination - the
ability to see the world as God sees it, to envision what God desires, to
believe that renewal is possible even when circumstances suggest otherwise.
Perhaps the most countercultural thing the Church
can do today is to dream: to imagine a world reconciled, a community healed, a
creation restored, a humanity renewed by the breath of God.
Pentecost is God’s great ‘yes’ to a world that has
known too many ‘noes.’
It is the promise that the Spirit is still being
poured out, still restoring, still reconciling, still empowering.
No life is too broken, no community too divided, no
church too weary for God to renew.
So as we keep the feast, let us open ourselves again
to the Spirit who restores the years the locust has eaten, who forms us into a
people of compassion and understanding, who sends us out as witnesses of
Christ, and who teaches us to dream God’s dreams.
Come, Holy Spirit. Renew your Church. Renew your
people. Renew your world.
Bound together in the One Spirit let us pray the
Grace.