Acts 10:23b-48 · Peter at Cornelius’ House
Enough Spirit to Go Around!
Acts 10:44-48
Sermon
by Ken Lentz
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A minister once received a bottle of apricot brandy from one of his parishioners under the condition that the minister thank the donor for his gift in the Sunday bulletin. On the following Sunday, the notice read: "The pastor thanks Mr. Jones for the apricots and the spirit in which they were given."

Some Bible readers look at the words from Acts 10, "While Peter was still speaking, the Holy Spirit fell upon all who heard the word" (v. 44), and conclude, "Aha! A Pentecost story!" Then the words of verse 45 pop out: "The circumcised believers ... were astounded that the gift of the Holy Spirit had been poured out even on the Gentiles." Conclusion? This Easter text is about a Gentile Pentecost! We can imagine that the Gentile (uncircumcised) hearers of Peter's words might have said, "We wish to thank Peter for his sermon from which the Spirit was poured out upon us!"

Peter makes it clear that there is enough Spirit to go around for all interested parties. He appears to be finally convinced that God's Spirit and the gifts of the Spirit are plentiful enough to be poured out upon the Gentiles, as well. Of course, the few verses that relate the "Gentile" Pentecost hardly seize the imagination of the reader like the account in Acts 2 that led one leading one New Testament scholar to declare that it was an event marked by "a freight-train-sized sound of wind from Heaven, tongues of fire dancing on heads of disciples ... cries of amazement ... and a powerful sermon [resulting] in 3,000 baptisms."1

The Gentiles experienced their own day of Pentecost but, alas, it seems that little notice of it is mentioned by the press!

For most of us who are of Gentile lineage, this account should be printed and framed and hung upon a prominent wall in our homes! Or how about a banner for the sanctuaries of our churches? Peter asks, "Can anyone withhold the water for baptizing these people?" Absolutely not! We Gentiles get to be baptized! We Gentiles are included in the kingdom! We Gentiles are candidates for heavy doses of the Spirit!

The history of the early church becomes the story about Gentile converts who take center stage because their Pentecost experience was also a "Day of Grace!"

Paul's missionary story is a story about the presence and power of the Spirit. He went about proclaiming the good news and then he stood back and watched the Spirit take over!

He didn't run for congregational president in any of the churches he founded and he didn't hand out copies of model church constitutions. Paul's model of Spirit-led direction in the church, without concern for ordered church governance, did not prevail. The disciples in Jerusalem, led by James, imposed the traditional Jewish elder system upon the emerging church and churches dominated by Gentiles even themselves wanted churches to be led by bishops and deacons.

The Spirit cannot be discouraged by orderliness and structure! The Spirit that descends upon Jews and Gentiles alike is the Spirit that refuses to be contained nor restrained!

There's enough Spirit to go around to bring unity for all. This lesson for the sixth Sunday after Easter is a lesson about the fulfillment of old prophecies. Division among earth's peoples, contention and war, competition and racial prejudice, and distrust will come to an end. The Spirit of Jesus alive and proclaimed in and among the community is bringing to an end the days of human disunity.

Isaiah saw the deliverer coming "to gather all nations and tongues" (66:18); Jeremiah envisioned the time when all nations will gather at Jerusalem (3:17); Micah announced that many nations will "go up to the mountain of the Lord" (4:2); and Zechariah knew that Gentiles seeking God's favor will cling to the shirttails of the Jews to be dragged to God's presence if they have to (8:20-23).

It took a while for Peter to grasp the concept but he finally got on the bandwagon rolling to the kingdom of the future. In fact, the future was already present on that day when the Gentiles matched the spiritual signs of the Jews. The proof in the pudding was baptism, the great sign of inclusion in the kingdom.

The unity that we believers feel in those precious moments standing at the altar to drink from the same cup of communion and when we pray together the Lord's Prayer is trumped by chaos in the Middle East, rampant genocide and hunger in Africa, and murder and mayhem in our urban ghettos. Early Christians believed that the bread of the Lord's table was gathered from the grain gathered from the fields. As the grain is gathered into one (loaf) so are we gathered into one people. We can envision a world of harmony and unity but we cannot make it happen. Perhaps it is only the vision of the kingdom that is coming that keeps us from absolute despair.

We don't know how biblically literate Peter was (he points out that Jesus is the descendant of the line of David in his Acts 2 Pentecost sermon), but he must have known about the hope foretold by the prophets. It might have taken some time, but he must have caught on at some point and realized that the resurrection and ascension of Jesus was a glimpse into the glory of the future, a future that was somehow embodied in the concept of Jerusalem, the holy city.

A Christian went on a tour with other Christians to the holy land. His was his first trip to Israel. When his group, having just landed at Tel Aviv, was safely settled in at the hotel just outside the old walls of the city, he decided that he couldn't wait until the morning to see the city. As he walked through the ancient gate across the street from his hotel, he felt transported to another time and place. He walked through the dark, narrow streets experiencing the sights and sounds and smells of another world. He heard the voices of another dimension, at the same time parallel and ancient, from behind shuttered windows, in the back rooms of tea cafes and Middle Eastern bazaars. He walked suddenly into the moonlight and saw the Wailing Wall before him. Abraham, Saul, David, Solomon, Isaiah, and Jeremiah whispered to him. He saw the same wall, the same stones gazed upon by Peter, John, Mark, Paul, and yes, the great carpenter himself, reaching out to him in the soft breezes and shadows of the evening, Jerusalem that night was mysterious, enchanting, other-worldly, and magical. It was a foretaste of the New Jerusalem to come.

And all nations would be gathered there. An American soldier died of his wounds in France in the First World War. His comrades took him to a small church and asked the village priest if they could bury him in the parish graveyard. "Was he a Catholic?" asked the priest. "No, Father, he was not," replied the men. "Then you must bury him outside the fence of the cemetery," answered the priest. The fallen man was buried and his comrades returned the next morning to pay their last respects. They were surprised to see that the fresh grave was within the cemetery's fence. They summoned the priest who said, "My conscience bothered me last evening; I could not sleep so I arose in the night and moved the fence to include your comrade who died for France." Christ died for all people; all people are included within the parameters of the kingdom.

The coming of the Spirit to those seeking salvation (both Jews and non-Jews) is the coming of great power that crosses human boundaries. The "signs" of the Spirit are empowering, life changing.

Once a pastor witnessed the painful odyssey of a middle-aged mother. Her husband met him in his office one day in order to explain that his wife, Sally, had been hopelessly addicted to alcohol for a number of years. Her addiction was ruining their marriage, destroying her relationship with her three teen sons, and perhaps most urgent of all, physically destroying her life. If she did not seek treatment soon, according to the testimony of her physician, she would die of an already heavily damaged liver.

Her husband suggested a plan. He asked the pastor to meet him and Sally's oldest son at their home in order to confront her and persuade her to enter a treatment center immediately.

The minister was not optimistic about the plan; he had recently been involved in a crisis intervention that had failed miserably, although orchestrated by a psychiatrist. But what was there to lose? The three of them surprised Sally in her living room and spoke of their love for her and outlined the continuing consequences of her addiction. They revealed the plan: They would immediately take her to her doctor for a consultation and then whisk her immediately to a treatment center for a six-week detoxification program. Sally broke down in tears. She apologized for all the sorrow she had caused. She thanked them for their love and courageous confrontation.

Three decades later, Sally is still a recovering alcoholic who is one of the finest wives, mothers, grandmothers, and productive Christians the pastor has ever met. Her life took a turn for the better when she realized that she was included within the parameters of God's kingdom. Her "saviors" envisioned a better life for her and, prayerfully Spirit-led, brought to bear the power of God's future into her life. She rediscovered that she in her journey was accompanied by the Lord of the kingdom. She would not fall by the wayside. She would not become a helpless alcoholic tossed aside and forsaken. God picked her up and moved her into the line of countless people heading into the light of God's future.

Peter, likewise, must have been one who saw beyond the dust, the chaos, the treachery, and the hypocrisy of his Jerusalem and shattered lives. He saw the vision of the prophets and savored the promises made to the patriarchs. He was glad to be a citizen of Israel, one included in the world to come. God spoke to him and asked him to take a second look at the words of the prophets. The old Israel was gone; the new Israel was raised from the dust and faded promises of the old Jerusalem. Like the phoenix, Jesus rose from the tomb to raise the heads of those in despair and hopelessness. "Don't look down, my friends," Jesus said. "Look up! See what is before you! See what is coming!" Peter saw a new world coming and he came to know that the new world included all nations.

So Peter went forth. He inspired the Jews who gathered in Jerusalem at Pentecost. He baptized those who wanted to be included. But Peter baptized others. He shared his vision with the Gentiles and marked them with the sign of the kingdom as well. He shared the bountiful riches of the Spirit. Amen.


1. Thomas G. Long, Proclamation 4 Pentecost 1 (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1989), p. 5.

CSS Publishing Company, Sermons for Sundays in Lent and Easter: God, The Good Ally, by Ken Lentz