Acts 2:1-13 · The Holy Spirit Comes at Pentecost
Have You Had Your Caffeine Today?
Acts 2:1-13
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Pastor Scott Hippler tells about a day when he was about 7 years old.  His grandmother had taken him and his cousin to the grocery store. On the way, his grandmother stopped at another store for a few minutes. Young Scott and his cousin stayed in the car. Scott Hippler blames his grandmother for what happened next. She was gone longer that she had said she would be.

Back then, he remembers, they put prizes in laundry detergent boxes as an incentive for people to buy those detergents. His grandmother always bought everything in bulk so there were two giant boxes of laundry detergent in the car. On top of that, Scott had discovered that, in grandmother’s car, you could pop the ashtrays out of the doors in the back seat. When you did that and looked down into where the ashtrays had been, you could see a big black hole. So, he and his cousin popped both ashtrays out, opened both boxes of detergent and began to pour the detergent into the hole where the ashtrays had been in order to get to the prizes in the boxes of detergent. Before they knew it, the boxes were empty and they had retrieved the two prizes a small coffee cup and a small salad dish. It was then that they realized what they had done. All the detergent was gone. And there was no way to hide their misdeed. But, after all, it was his grandmother’s fault. She had kept two little boys waiting, and you can get into a lot of trouble while you are waiting, especially if there is no purpose to your waiting. (1)

The last thing Jesus said to his disciples before his ascension to heaven was that they were to wait in Jerusalem. However their waiting had a critical purpose. They were to wait for the gift of the Holy Spirit to come upon them; for when that happened they would be Christ’s witnesses “in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:4-7). And so they waited.

Fortunately they didn’t get into mischief like little boys left alone in a car. Their waiting had an intense purpose. Their Master told them to wait until the Holy Spirit came upon them and so they devoted themselves to prayer and to fellowship. And because they waited, they were rewarded in a powerful way.

Welcome to this celebration of Pentecost, the day the Holy Spirit came upon the church. This is one of the most important days in the church year. Our lesson for the day is from the book of Acts. Though the book is popularly called, “Acts” or “Acts of the Apostles,” it would be more appropriate to call it, “The Acts of the Holy Spirit,” for it is the Holy Spirit that empowered the disciples to do all the amazing things that they did.

Jesus had said to his disciples to go into all the world and preach the Gospel. But how could a small group of uneducated men and women with few resources possibly have any impact on the world? There is only one way. God would be working through them. That is why it was important for them to first wait in Jerusalem for the Holy Spirit to come upon them. They would only be successful in being his witnesses if the Spirit was with them and working through them. And thus, in chapter 2 of Acts, we discover what our Lord was talking about. The Holy Spirit came upon the disciples with power. 

This happened on the Day of Pentecost. Jesus’ disciples were waiting “all together in one place” as they were instructed by the Lord. This singular act of obedience waiting and praying would change their lives forever.

Have you ever felt tired and listless, without energy? Can I see your hands? I’m not talking about being tired because you’ve just finished a 26-mile marathon. I’m talking about being tired and without energy when you haven’t done anything physical at all. I’ve been reading recently about one manifestation of our lack of energy the rising demand in our land for coffee. The U.S. seems to run on caffeine 90 percent of adults consume it every day. But not just in coffee. The demand for an energy boost is so strong that caffeine can now be found in all sorts of unusual products, far beyond coffee and energy drinks. For example, it can now be found in marshmallows. That’s right marshmallows. You can now obtain mail-order marshmallows loaded with caffeine. A box of 24 costs $20, but it’s worth it each piece contains as much caffeine as half a cup of coffee, without the yucky aftertaste that coffee can give you.

Or, if that doesn’t appeal to you, you can order beef jerky that’s infused with caffeine. Perky Jerky they call it. However, if you are off beef jerky you can order Turkey Perky Jerky. I’m not making this up.

Or how about Biofuel Caffeinated Popcorn with a caffeine-laced caramel coating? One bag provides as much stimulation as three cups of coffee. (2)

There is caffeine for every taste. It appears that we need energy to keep up with the demands of our busy lives.

Can you imagine that after Jesus’ crucifixion that his disciples would have had their energy level drop and their enthusiasm go off a cliff? That would be a normal reaction to the disappointment they had experienced. Then, they discover that he has risen from the dead. This would certainly lift their spirits, but how long would that last? Would it carry them through the persecutions that they would endure now that he was no longer with them? You know the answer to that as well as I do. They were human beings, just as you and I are human beings. They would be facing the might of the Roman Empire as well as the opposition of their own religious establishment. How could they possibly find the power to endure, much less be victorious? Obviously the task was impossible if they attempted it under their own power.

That is why the Day of Pentecost is such an important day on our church calendar. Pentecost is the celebration of that day when the Holy Spirit came upon the first-century church and gave them the power they needed to turn the world as they knew it upside down. And we need to pray that the same thing will happen to us if we’re going to turn our world upside down as well.

You know the story of that important day. “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.” Let me pause here for a moment. 

The word for Holy Spirit is pneuma, which comes from the same root word as wind pneo which means “to breathe or to blow.” For example, in Genesis, God “breathed” or “blew” into man and man became a living soul. This was the beginning of human life. In Acts, when the Holy Spirit blew upon or breathed upon the followers of Christ who obediently waited, they received a newness of life that would stun those who looked on. Let’s keep reading.

“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 is getting exciting. This is a miraculous scene.

That wonderfully creative preacher Dr. Tom Long tells about taking his two small children to church with him on Pentecost Sunday years ago. This particular Pentecost, the minister decided to infuse a little drama into the service. When he got to that part of the story about the blowing of a violent wind, he had someone play over the PA system at maximum volume the sound of a hurricane. Dr. Long said his two children who had been lazily coloring on their bulletins with crayons up to this point, suddenly snapped to attention and began looking around the sanctuary.

When the minister read about tongues of fire landing on people’s heads, people in the sanctuary who had been recruited for this purpose began waving red, flashy pom-poms above their heads. When he got to the part about the disciples speaking in other languages, some people in the congregation who had immigrated to this country from other countries began to speak in their own native tongues. By this time Dr. Long’s children were really involved in the service. Then the choir began to lead the congregation in a gentle rendition of “Breathe on me, Breath of God.”

As soon as they had finished, the pastor mounted the pulpit to begin his sermon. He had scarcely begun before he was interrupted by a man in the balcony laughing rudely and raucously saying, “They must be drunk on new wine!” You can imagine the effect this had on Dr. Long’s two children.

As they were leaving the sanctuary, Dr. Long’s small son looked up at him and said, “Wow, Dad! That was really church!” (3)

Well, that was really church. I know what some of you are thinking. You would like us to have a service that exciting. It’s a shame that every Sunday isn’t Pentecost. Maybe it ought to be. The story continues. “Now there were staying in Jerusalem God-fearing Jews from every nation under heaven. When they heard this sound, a crowd came together in bewilderment, because each one heard their own language being spoken. Utterly amazed, they asked: “Aren’t all these who are speaking Galileans? Then how is it that each of us hears them in our native language?”

This is important. Each of the disciples began to speak in tongues. The word used here is dialekto, which means recognizable languages. They weren’t speaking in tongues, as some people today speak in tongues, a form of ecstatic utterance primarily for their own benefit. These tongues were real, living languages. It was a fulfillment of Jesus’ promise that the disciples would receive power from the Holy Spirit to be his witnesses in Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth. When the Holy Spirit came upon them, they immediately became his witnesses to all the world, for they were speaking the languages of various people in their audience.

You see, Jews from all over the known world were visiting Jerusalem on this day to celebrate Pentecost. They spoke the languages of their native lands. Can you imagine their shock at hearing ordinary men from Galilee speaking their native tongues? Here, these Jews from other lands heard the Gospel of Jesus Christ not from the religious elite or learned men in the synagogues but from ordinary people who had no “name” or “qualification.” It blew their minds. Of course, there were cynics. Some laughed, mocked and accused the disciples of being drunk.

It was at this point, you will remember, that Simon Peter began to address the crowd. The power of his words as well as the power of the Pentecost event itself was so strong that about three thousand new believers were added to their number that day. This is the same shy, timid Simon Peter, by the way, who was too ashamed to own up to being a follower of Jesus when Christ was arrested. Yet here he was boldly claiming Jesus as the Christ and clearly articulating his gospel. “A fisherman?” they thought. How does he know how to articulate this good news so well? It was the power and fullness of the Holy Spirit. There is no other explanation.

But so it was with all the disciples. Men and women who had been hiding behind locked doors became unstoppable witnesses for Christ and his kingdom. And it was all because they heeded their Master’s words to wait for the gift of the Holy Spirit.

I want the Holy Spirit to be experienced in our church. If any generation ever needed God’s power in order to provide a witness to their generation, it is the church today.

Our society is slipping quite rapidly from being at least tolerant of Christians to being somewhat antichristian. Have you noticed a change, for example, on our television networks? Shows that use to be generally supportive of faith are now openly mocking it. While they exploit sex and violence in ways that would not have been dreamed of twenty or thirty years ago, TV characters not only sleep around without hesitation, but they proudly proclaim to be atheists. Practically the only examples of religious characters on television today are self-righteous prigs or murderous zealots who are examples of no Christians that I have ever known. No wonder so many young adults will not even give the church a try. They assume they know what we are like and that either we will reject them on the basis of their appearance or they will find us so repulsive, that they will quickly flee from our presence.

We need the power of the Holy Spirit to meet the challenges of our time just as the first-century church needed the power of the Holy Spirit to meet the challenges of its time. We need to spend time waiting and praying that God Himself will intervene in our lives and in our church that we, too, might receive this precious, transforming gift.

Someone has said that the average Christian and the average church are somewhere bogged down between Calvary and Pentecost. We have been to Calvary for pardon, but we have not been to Pentecost for power. “Bethlehem means God with us,” this unknown author explains, “Calvary means God for us. Pentecost means God in us.”

All three, of course, are vital Bethlehem, Calvary and Pentecost. We devote whole seasons to preparing for Bethlehem and Calvary. We put little emphasis on Pentecost. Maybe it’s time we change that. We need the Holy Spirit in the church today.

I love the way the Rev. Rick Kirchoff put it, addressing a group of Methodists in Memphis about Pentecost. He said, “When God sends forth the Spirit, amazing things happen: barriers are broken . . . communities are formed . . . opposites are reconciled . . . unity is established . . . disease is cured . . . addiction is broken . . . cities are renewed . . . races are reconciled . . . hope is established . . . people are blessed . . . and church happens.

“Today the Spirit of God is present and we’re gonna have church. So be ready . . . get ready . . . God is up to something . . . discouraged folks cheer up . . . dishonest folks ’fess up . . . sour folks sweeten up . . . closed folk . . . open up . . . gossipers shut up . . . conflicted folks make up . . . sleeping folks wake up . . . lukewarm folk . . .  fire up . . . dry bones shake up . . . and pew potatoes stand up!

“But most of all . . . Christ the Savior of all the world is lifted up. (4)

Are you ready for the gift of the Spirit? Are you praying for the gift of the Spirit? It might be easier to get energized from a box of caffeine-laced marshmallows or beef jerky or popcorn. But you won’t make a difference in the world. Wait and pray on the Spirit of God to come into your life and the life of our church. Ask God to breathe new life into each of us today.


1. http://www.sermoncentral.com/illustrations/sermon-illustration-scott-hippler-stories-secondcoming-peace-christmasadvent-4845.asp.

2. Uncle John’s 24-Karat Gold Bathroom Reader, Bathroom Readers’ Institute, (Kindle Edition).

3. The Rev. Dr. Thomas G. Long, http://day1.org/3822-whats_the_gift.

4. The Rev. Rick Kirchoff, address to the Memphis Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church. Cited at http://encinitaschurch.com/uncategorized/pentecost/.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Sermons Second Quarter 2015, by King Duncan