Acts 2:1-13 · The Holy Spirit Comes at Pentecost
WaterFire Faith
Acts 2:1-13
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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If you ever doubt the power of art to capture the imagination and revive a dead city, take a trip to Providence, Rhode Island.

Some years ago the “town fathers” of Providence, Rhode Island were desperate to find a way to revitalize the city’s downtown, and especially its dangerous waterfront. So what did they do? They hired an artist. The artist they chose was a multi-media public artist named Barnaby Evans, who is known for combining science and art, nature and the senses, especially soundcapes, to generate something magical.

The magic in this case took the form of a sculpture, a sculpture installed on the three rivers of the capital city of Rhode Island. This one sculpture has 100 component parts. Each part is a giant metal basket into which firetenders place wood and light the firewood. These sparkling bonfires have attracted millions of people to Waterplace Park. Anyone who has ever walked the river during WaterFire will never forget the experience of how “opposites attract.”

In other words, here’s a city that set fire to its water, creating a crowd-pleasing, family-friendly WaterFire Festival (www.waterfire.org). 100 “fire-pits” kindle a roaring, but carefully contained, fire in the middle of the water. People flock to water-fire and watch the flames from the shore while they dabble their toes in cold water while warming their faces by firelight.

Note: it didn’t take the construction of fancy shopping centers, or giant skyscrapers, or a big urban sports stadium, or a bells and whistles amusement park to bring people back downtown. All it took was the unquenchable artistic combination of two symbols that were allowed to spread their magic: fire-power and water-works.

Why is it that what city planners could see so clearly has been firmly forgotten by twenty first century Christians? Water and fire, that powerful, awe-inspiring combination of opposites, is the birth-right of all Christians. If anyone ought to know the power of life lived out of these two forces, water and fire, it ought to be us.

Before Jesus even started his public ministry, John prophesied and promised that there was one coming who would baptize with “the Holy Spirit and with fire.” This was what made Jesus unique: his baptism was a WaterFire baptism. And to follow him was to live a WaterFire life.

So what happened? Why has the Holy Spirit become such a sore point instead of a power source for the church? Maybe too many Christians over-indulged on one gift of the Spirit and got giddy on glossolalia. The Spirit isn’t just an occasional vocabulary booster. The Spirit is the power source and protective shield that flows through the Body of Christ. The Holy Spirit was what made it possible for the Body of Christ to draw breath, to be an animated, living force in the world. Spirituality for a Christian is not the living out of the human spirit; spirituality for a Christian is the living out of the divine spirit in our personal and communal life.

So why is a “Spirit-filled life,” why is a WaterFire baptism, such a foreign concept among Christians today?

Is anyone else having trouble keeping up with all the new words out there that this digital world is inventing? Someone has called this world we are now living in a “TGIF” world. Do you know what TGIF stands for? No, not “Thank God Its Friday.” It’s “Twitter-Google-Internet-Facebook:” TGIF. Only two years ago to “twitter” and “tweet” was just something small birds did. Now tens of millions of people twitter and tweet all day long. Tech-words are not intimidating — we’re so used to them springing up we can usually decipher what they mean even without a given definition.

I “tweeted” an off-the-cuff comment the other day that included a word I had just made up, but everyone “got it.” [NOTE: You can make this a generic story about seeing on twitter the following exchange.] More accurately, everybody got HALF of it. Here was the tweet:

what went wrong? the church cooked up programmatology, and made its leaders programmatologists, when we should have learned pneumatology

This just-created word, “programatology” was instantly deciphered and understood. The ancient word taken from the Christian tradition, from biblical referents, from the life of faith, “pneumatology,” the doctrine of the Holy Spirit, caused readers to run for their dictionaries. In fact, it became an online joke that people had to look up this word pneumatology, which literally means the study of the Holy Spirit.

Everyone immediately figured out that “programatology” was a dependence, trust, reliance upon the tools and techniques of planned-out programs. But people had trouble recognizing the presence of their birthright, “pneumatology” — a life steeped and soaked in the Spirit. The Greek word for “spirit” is “pneuma.”

Water and Fire is our baptismal birthright. Fire and Water is what brings divine power and presence to every member of Christ’s body.

Without the presence of the Holy Spirit, the new converts Philip had baptized were just wet Samaritans who had confessed “the Lord Jesus.” It took faithful hands of fellowship – extended from Jerusalem and from those first called by Christ to be his disciples — to bring the gift of the Holy Spirit to these newly faithful ones. Long ostracized and the ultimate outsiders, these Samaritans received the Holy Spirit and immediately felt the wholeness, the holiness that made them full members of Christ’s living Body.

The life of faith is not to live out of some program. The life of faith is to live out of God’s spirit.

Programatology puts its faith and its future in the hands of plans and programs. But what happens when the programs can’t unfold according to plan? What happened to plans to remodel the “Windows on the World” restaurant at the top of the World Trade Center? What happened to the planned events at the Super Dome in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina hit? What happened to your own plans for retirement, a cruise trip, a new car, a college education, when the stock market plummeted? In the past 18 months, the average household in the US has lost 20% of its net worth. This is a huge hit on every family here, every person here. Anyone plan for that? Anyone got a program for that?

Now consider what happened to first-century Christians. As he ascended Christ didn’t leave his disciples a “plan.” Instead he promised them the Holy Spirit and he provided them with a new identity: “You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8). Note how Jesus inserted that word “Samaria” in there and punctuated it — as if we his disciples might skip over that “godforsaken place” and people if he didn’t highlight it so that we couldn’t forget the outcast and the outsider.

In the first century, things did not go “according to any plan.” Stephen was stoned as Saul looked on approvingly. James was run through by a sword. Peter was imprisoned and chained down.

But things did go “according to the Spirit.” Saul became Paul on the Damascus Road. Peter’s chains fell off and the prison doors shook open. The Gentile world became the new fertile frontier for sowing faith.

Only WaterFire could have this first-century transformation possible.

Only WaterFire could have made Jesus’ dozen dense disciples into the apostolic beachhead of a mission to the whole world.

During our darkest, coldest winter months, there almost always seems to be a news story about devastating wildfires sweeping over the dry, sun-baked wilds of Australia. Right now it is the height of summer heat in the Southern hemisphere. The most dangerous combination, the conditions that spread flames far and wide, is when fire and wind meet.

Fire and wind is Luke’s best description of the Holy Spirit when it descended upon the disciples. There is no stopping an oxygenated flame — it burns high and hot.

But Christians aren’t just firebrands. We are tempered with the safe and secure fluid of water — the water of our baptism “in Jesus’ name.” And our baptismal waters give us a person, not just a purpose or a plan, to follow

This morning’s text is challenging us to live not out of our own power alone, but out of the power of the Spirit of life (Rom.8:1), the power of the Spirit of truth (John 16:13), the power of the Spirit of fellowship (2 Cor. 13:13), or most summarily, the power of the Spirit of Christ (Phil.1:19).

Don’t go it alone in life. We are still in the opening days of 2010, or as people are calling it, 2KX. Who knows what 2KX will bring? We need Psalm 31:15: “My times are in your hand."

Just don’t take yourself out of that hand. 2KX no "time" to go it alone. Go with God, the God whose hand turns everything dross and gross into gold. The Scandinavian (skaldic) term for gold is “fire in the water.”

You’ve struck gold. You’re as lucky as that legendary fellow in the Salvation Army who was playing the bass tuba the day it rained gold. But the “golden life” for us is a Spirit-drive, Spirit filled life. Gold for us is “fire in the water.”

Let’s live that WaterFire life this week. And let’s “Fire UP” by praying together what is sometimes called the “Prayer of Fire.” It’s a prayer many of you might know by another name. But let’s called it our WaterFire Prayer: “Our Father, Who Art In Heaven, Hallowed Be Thy Name . . .”

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet