Acts 2:1-13 · The Holy Spirit Comes at Pentecost
A Violent Wind
Acts 2:1-13
Sermon
by King Duncan
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In May of 1997, a powerful tornado swept through parts of Texas, flattening buildings and overturning cars. Shoppers at the Albertson’s supermarket in Cedar Park, Texas, were in a state of panic. Then a commanding voice come over the intercom, the voice of Larry Fore, the manager of Albertson’s. This is what he said:

“Don’t leave the store or you will die . . . Your only chance of survival is to do exactly what I tell you.” Fore then directed the shoppers to enter the nearest meat locker. They did just as he said, and all the shoppers survived the tornado without incident. Why did Larry Fore speak to the shoppers with such authority? Because 18 years before, Fore had survived a more devastating tornado. He had been through the danger before, and he knew how to bring others through safely. (1)

I suppose that there is nothing scarier than a tornado. That’s what I think of when I read today’s lesson about “a violent wind.” It is astounding how powerful the wind can be at times, as any of you who have been through a tornado or hurricane can attest.

I was reading about a town on the coast of Scotland that was experiencing a particularly heavy gale-force wind.

At the height of the gale, the harbor master radioed an officer of the local coastal authority and asked him to estimate the wind speed. The officer replied he was sorry, but he didn’t have a gauge. However, if it was any help, he said, the wind had just blown his Land Rover off the cliff. That’s a strong wind. Scary.

It reminds me of the two farmers who were boasting about the strongest kind of wind they’d seen.

“Out here in California,” said one, “I saw the fiercest wind in my life. You know these giant redwood trees? Well, the wind once got so strong, it bent them right down.”

“That’s nothing,” said the other. “Back on my farm in Iowa, we had a terrible wind one day that blew a hundred miles an hour. It was so bad one of my hens had her back turned to the wind and she laid the same egg six times.” Now that’s a strong wind.

One of the most interesting true stories I’ve read involving wind is found in the book, Small Miracles. It concerned the British astronomer Camille Flammarion.

In 1900, while writing his famous book on the atmosphere, Flammarion was working on the chapter on wind when a sudden, unnaturally strong gust of wind swept all his papers off the table and blew them out of the window. As they fluttered to the ground several yards away from his home, a friend of Flammarion’s was walking by and saw the pile of papers heaped on the ground. Looking them over, he discerned immediately that they were Flammarion’s work and assumed that he had dropped them on his way to his publisher’s. Hoping to avert a small crisis, the man decided to personally deliver the pages to the publishing house. However, the editor was not in his office. Flammarion’s friend simply placed the chapter on the editor’s desk, without leaving a note of explanation. The editor’s office featured several huge windows which were open at the time.

The next day, Flammarion was astonished to learn from the editor that he had in his possession the missing chapter. Both concluded with growing excitement that it must have been blown there by the wind completely intact! It was only several days later that the friend would meet Flammarion and admit the truth of what happened. (3)

Our lesson from the book of Acts for today begins this way in the New International Version of the Bible: “When the day of Pentecost came, they were all together in one place. Suddenly a sound like the blowing of a violent wind came from heaven and filled the whole house where they were sitting. They saw what seemed to be tongues of fire that separated and came to rest on each of them. All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit enabled them.”

This wind that came down on the Day of Pentecost was the most significant wind that has ever blown. You are aware that the word for wind in both the Greek and the Hebrew is also the word for the “Spirit.” I believe that we will understand the work of the Holy Spirit better if we think for a few moments about the nature of wind.

Wind is necessary for life. As Dr. Donald B. DeYoung notes in his book, Weather and the Bible, “Wind is moving air, and this fresh air is needed continually for life itself. Even seeds often require wind for their dispersal and subsequent growth. Similarly, the Holy Spirit is the presence of God, the source for all life . . .” (4)

The word for wind and Spirit is also the same word for breath. So, in the creation story, God not only breathed air into Adam but also His own Spirit and Adam became a living being. It is not air that makes us unique among all living creatures. It is the fact that we have God’s Spirit within us.

All first aid courses include instruction in CPR cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The A-B-C steps of CPR are: Airway opened, Breathing restored, and Circulation restored ABC. The first two steps are crucial because they get oxygen into the victim’s body. Without life-giving oxygen, the person will die, no matter how effective the chest compressions in Step C. The rescuer breathes his very breath into the helpless victim’s lungs.

Jesus promised his disciples before he left them that the Holy Spirit would come upon them. In essence he was saying, “I will give you the very breath of my life.” On Pentecost, God breathed new life into Christ’s disciples. The upper room experience described in Acts 2 is, so to speak, God’s CPR for dispirited followers. (5)

When you and I were born, the doctor slapped us on the behind and we started breathing. That was physical air. But Jesus promised us a gift far greater than physical air. He promised those who seek it, that the Holy Spirit would come upon us and give us new life.

Let’s face it, most people just exist day to day. Their lives have no zest, no joy, no real purpose. Few of us have what the disciples had on the Day of Pentecost. They had such a party that passersby accused them of being drunk and disorderly. I doubt that anyone will make that mistake about our service. We don’t seem to have God’s Spirit at work within us like they did. And it’s sad. We don’t know what we are missing.

In 1865, a Wells Fargo stage coach was robbed of $180,000 in money and gold bullion. A posse cornered the robbers as they tried to cross Mud Lake, a lake in Idaho. Knowing that they couldn’t escape their pursuers while weighted down with all that gold, the robbers dumped the gold into the deepest part of the lake. Then they made their escape. In the 138 years since the robbery, few people have turned up any of that treasure. In 1901, treasure hunters recovered three bars of gold bullion, worth $25,000. But much of the treasure is still believed to be sitting at the bottom of Mud Lake. (6)

All that gold just sitting at the bottom of a lake waiting. In the same way, we have available to us potential for new life, new purpose, new joy just waiting for us to claim. All we need is to open ourselves to God’s Spirit. The Holy Spirit brings us life.

There is a second characteristic of wind we need to consider: wind is unseen. We know it by its results. Maple trees depend on the wind to blow their seeds to new places where they can grow into new trees. Hot air balloons go wherever the wind takes them. Hurricanes devastate coastal areas while bringing much needed rain to drought-stricken areas. “Wind has no material shape or form. It is invisible; we cannot see the source or the destination of wind. It is a mysterious, unseen force. Nevertheless, its presence is known by its effects. Likewise, the unseen Holy Spirit can be experienced in a refreshing way. His presence is displayed in the work he does in human lives by transforming, sanctifying, encouraging, and teaching.” (7) People have had their lives changed by the Holy Spirit. It is the Spirit that lifts us above the mundane in life.

Charles Swindoll tells about a bazaar that was held in a village in northern India. Everyone brought his wares to trade and sell. One old farmer brought in a whole covey of quail. He had tied a string around one leg of each bird. The other ends of all the strings were tied to a ring which fit loosely over a central stick. He had taught the quail to walk dolefully in a circle, around and around, like mules at a sugarcane mill.

Nobody seemed interested in buying the birds until a devout Brahman came along. He believed in the Hindu idea of respect for all life, so his heart of compassion went out to those poor little creatures walking in their monotonous circles.

“I want to buy them all,” he told the merchant, who was elated. After receiving the money, the merchant was surprised to hear the buyer say `Now, I want you to set them all free.”

“What’s that, sir?” asked the merchant.

“You heard me. Cut the strings from their legs and turn them loose. Set them all free.”

With a shrug, the old farmer bent down and snipped the strings off the quail. They were freed at last. What happened? The birds simply continued marching around and around in a circle. Finally, the man had to shoo them off. But even when they landed some distance away, they resumed their predictable march. Free, unfettered, released . . . yet they kept going around in circles as if still tied. (8)

So many Christians are like those birds. They are good people. They believe in God. They accept the great doctrines of the church. But they are marching around in circles like those birds. They do not feel God’s presence in their lives. They have never heard the sound of a violent wind blowing.

We can’t see the Spirit, but we should be able to see its effect in our life. We should have more joy, more love, more vitality if God lives within us. The church at Pentecost was a joyful, loving dynamic group of individuals when the Spirit came upon them. We need that kind of Spirit if we are going to be what God calls us to be.

Here’s the final thing to be said about wind: wind cannot be controlled; it blows where it will. As Dr. DeYoung puts it, “Wind is a powerful force. It cannot be stopped or controlled by people. Likewise, the Holy Spirit is not subject to human control. The moving of the Holy Spirit is God at work. There is great variety in the wind. It may be a soft whisper gently rustling the leaves on the trees, or it may be a hurricane uprooting trees. Likewise, the Holy Spirit may gently bring a person to Christ, such as a little child raised in a Christian home, or he may work in some climactic, dramatic way to bring conviction and conversion to the hardened sinner.” We never know when or where the Spirit will manifest itself. Sometimes it comes when we least expect it.

Pastor Richard E. Stetler tells a delightful story of a very wealthy woman who left the church but chose to remain on the rolls in order to receive the church newsletter. She had a falling out with the minister some years before and vowed never to return.

She became hospitalized and the minister became informed of this by another member of the congregation. Knowing that this woman would not be overjoyed to see him, the minister chose to send the newly hired seminary student on the church staff. He told the seminarian none of this woman’s history.

The young man went. He entered her very dark, private room and as he approached the bed, he accidentally dislodged the side railing and it slammed down. As he was explaining who he was, he attempted to raise the side railing to its proper position. In so doing he knocked over the woman’s water pitcher and water spilled over the top of the stand and onto the floor. Totally humiliated the young seminarian decided to say a prayer and leave. As he prayed, his anxiety level allowed none of his words to come out correctly. He was emotionally hemorrhaging as he said, “Amen.” He left the room believing he was not destined to become a minister.

When he got back to the church, a phone call came for him. It was the patient he had just visited. She said, “Young man, you must come back. I apologize for not speaking. I was trying so hard not to burst out laughing at what you were trying to do with such sincerity that I was too embarrassed to speak. I have not laughed for years. You gave me a precious gift. You helped me realize that for the last several years I have been in a prison of my own creation.” (10)

This young seminarian went to minister to this woman. His intentions were good, but his actions were inept. That’s all right, because when we go out to serve Christ, we do not go alone. The Holy Spirit goes with us. The Holy Spirit found a way to minister to this woman through the ineptness of the young seminarian. And this is what we discover time and time again. The Holy Spirit makes up for our inadequacy.

When Christ left our world, he promised that the Holy Spirit would come upon all who believed in him. We cannot program the Holy Spirit. It blows where it will. But we can let it blow into our hearts and make us new people. The Holy Spirit may be working in someone’s heart this moment. Here is what it offers new life, new joy, and new effectiveness in serving Christ. Won’t you open your heart and let the wind of God blow into your life today?


1. Richard Exley. Deliver Me (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1998), pp. 239-240.

2. Aberdeen Evening Express.

3. Yitta Halberstam and Judith Levanthal (Holbrook, MA: Adams Media Corporation, 1997), p. 183.

4. (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House Company, 1992).

5. Dr. William P. Barker, Ed., Tarbell's Teacher's Guide (Elgin, IL. David C. Cook Co., 1990).

6. Uncle John’s Ahh-Inspiring Bathroom Reader (Ashland, OR: Bathroom Readers’ Press, 2002), pp. 509-510.

7. DeYoung

8. Day By Day (Nashville, TN:W Publishing Group, 2000), p. 35.

9. DeYoung

10. http://www.stmatthews‑bowie.org/Worship/Sermons/1998/sermon_6_28_98.asp.

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