John 16:5-16 · The Work of the Holy Spirit
The Quiet Day of Pentecost
John 16:5-16, John 15:18--16:4
Sermon
by George Reed
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Pentecost is a celebration of the church's beginning. The coming of the Spirit brought great excitement and power to those early disciples of Jesus. In an extraordinary way, the presence of God was heard, seen, and felt as the rush of mighty wind, the tongues of fire, and the speaking in various languages which came upon them. As the story unfolds that day, there are about 3,000 souls added to the newly formed church. It is fitting for us to celebrate this day with great enthusiasm and joy.

Yet, there is also another side to Pentecost. It is a quieter, more reflective aspect. It is not opposed to the more exuberant side of Pentecost but is a complimentary facet to our understanding. Today's Gospel Reading helps us see this side of Pentecost.

The Gospel of John addresses the need for the early disciples and the church through the ages to have more direction and teaching from our Lord. The teaching time of Jesus was very short with the disciples and much of what he taught them they did not fully understand until after the resurrection. In John, we find a clue as to how they dealt with problems. Reflecting back on Jesus' teaching and having experienced the reality of the Spirit given at Pentecost, they understood that Jesus was, indeed, still with them to teach them and lead them. Just as to know Jesus was to know God, so to know the Spirit was to know Jesus. While Jesus of Nazareth, their rabbi and teacher, was no longer with them, the Spirit continued Jesus' presence and teaching.

The issue for the disciples now was discovering how to learn from the presence of the felt but unseen Spirit when they had been so slow to learn from the physically present Jesus. The answer lay in two events. They had met the risen Christ and they had been empowered with the Spirit. They now had the means to grow in the faith as the Spirit continued Jesus' ministry of teaching and guiding the little flock. All that Jesus had been unable to teach them, those things that Jesus said, "... you cannot bear ..." were now available to them in the teaching ministry of the Spirit. Jesus had given his assurance that he would declare to them all that was his and God's. That Pentecost not only was the church born, but so was the ministry of listening to the guidance of the Spirit, what we now call discernment.

The work of discernment or listening for and to the Spirit has been an important part of the church's understanding of its ministry, for it is not a call to simply be quiet and sit blissfully in the presence of God. It is the hard work of listening for the word of guidance from the Spirit that will send the church out into ministry and mission, enlarging the Body of Christ. Sometimes in the history of the church we have failed to give this part of our task its due. We have leaned on the sacraments without paying attention to the work of the Spirit in opening up the scriptures. We have centered everything on scripture and forgotten the work of the Spirit in the sacramental life of the church. We have relied on creeds, organization, and "know how" without the patient work of listening for the quiet, sure guidance of the Spirit.

Too often we have been like an orchestra where the members, individually or in small groups, have worked hard on their music but they have ignored the conductor. While they may be sincere, dedicated musicians, they cannot perform the work before them without submitting themselves to the direction of the conductor. Neither can we, as disciples of Jesus, be about the work that is before us if we do not submit ourselves to the direction and discipline of the Spirit.

The first skill we need in learning to listen to the Spirit, to discern the will of God, is to be quiet. It seems obvious enough. It is difficult to listen when we are talking. We all have had experiences where we have tried to talk with someone who just wouldn't be quiet long enough for us to say anything. Our prayers are often so overloaded with our talking that we leave no time for listening. Our culture does not help us, either. We are obsessed as a people with shutting out silence. We can't enter a store without constant music being played over the speaker system. We can't even take a short ride in an elevator without being serenaded by canned music. We even classify music as "elevator music" giving a whole genre to our desperate attempt to avoid silence.

Silence, however, often seems to be, if not the language of God, at least the background against which God speaks. It is in our silence that God is able to speak through the presence of the Spirit and teach us what we need to learn. It is in our stillness that we are able to hear what God has to say to us and to find the will and the courage to do what is asked of us.

This does not mean that we should stop talking to God. Our God loves us and cares about us and invites us to share our joys, our cares, and our entire lives in intimate caring. God wants us to be in conversation. But conversation involves both speaking and listening. We are much more adept at the former than the latter. It is not uncommon to find all kinds of books on how to talk to God. Few are written and even fewer read on the art of listening to God.

It is probably fitting that few books are written about listening to God because the instructions have been with us for a long time and are very simple. To hear God we need to sit quietly in God's presence and listen with our whole being. Simple but not easy. It requires discipline and patience. It is a new skill for most of us. We get impatient and edgy. We sit there and feel that we are wasting our time because nothing is happening. We don't immediately hear a word and we feel nothing deep within and we decide to give up and begin just talking to God or to get about the important work that is before us.

We fail to recognize the important work that God is doing within us and for us in that silence. Like a ham radio operator who has to carefully tune in the set to be able to listen to others, God patiently works to tune us to the divine frequency where we can hear and feel the Spirit. We have set ourselves to listen to so many other voices that it takes a while for us to be tuned in to God. We need to be patient and to set aside some time each day in our prayer life to quietly be open to God's presence.

The other skill we need is to be able to recognize God's voice when the Spirit speaks to us. We do this by becoming familiar with it. This is where all of our Bible study and devotional reading comes into play. We learn to recognize God's voice by reflecting on the ways in which God has spoken to others in the scriptural record. We all know of those who have claimed to have heard a clear word from God declaring when the world would come to an end. All this in spite of Jesus' clear teaching that even he did not know when the end would take place. We need the balance of good scripture study and reflection to assist God in tuning us in.

As the church we have also discovered that it is important for us to talk together about what God has to say to us. We are the Body of Christ. We are all endowed with the Spirit of God, and while none of us can contain the wondrous knowledge of God in its entirety, together we are able to experience and realize more than any of us can individually. As we share our joys and concerns, our trips to the mountaintops and to the depths, we discover more and more what God is saying to us.

Let us celebrate this Pentecost. Let this be a festival day that is filled with joy and enthusiasm for what God has done and what God continues to do in and through the church. Let us celebrate the awesome work that God is doing in redeeming the world, and let us commit ourselves to being good disciples of Jesus who are willing not only to work for him but to listen to him. Let us take up the task of discernment that will lead us to be more faithful followers of the Lord we adore.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons on the Gospel Readings: Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (First Third), Living in the Spirit, by George Reed