Seeking transformation

by Demi Prentiss

Just this past Sunday, many Christian congregations celebrated the Feast of Pentecost as “the birthday of the church.”  The word “Pentecost” comes from the Greek word for “fiftieth,” and was marked as the fiftieth day after Passover with the Feast of Weeks (Shavuot).  In first century Judaism, Shavuot celebrated the end of the wheat harvest and was considered the anniversary of the giving of the Torah (the Law) to Moses on Mount Sinai. Pentecost was one of three major festivals when Jewish men made a pilgrimage to the Temple in Jerusalem, so on that day the city was packed with pilgrims from many lands.

Acts 2 tells the story of Pentecost as the day when the Holy Spirit – manifest in wind and fire – fell upon the crowd of Jesus followers and skeptics alike. The early church understood that Pentecost extended the giving of the Law, written on stone tablets, with the out-pouring of the Holy Spirit, writing God’s laws on the hearts of all believers.  The Message, a paraphrase of the Bible, says, “like a wildfire, the Holy Spirit spread through their ranks, and they started speaking in a number of different languages as the Spirit prompted them…. When [the crowd of Shavuot pilgrims] heard the sound they came on the run. Then when they heard, one after another, their own mother tongues being spoken, they were blown away….  ‘How come we’re hearing them talk in our various mother tongues?’” (Acts 2:2-8)

Eric Law, in his book The Wolf Shall Dwell with the Lamb, explains the miracle of Pentecost as a two-fold breach of cultural boundaries.  The Christ-followers – largely Galileans, considered rednecks with country accents – were suddenly speaking aloud, describing God’s mighty works. And the skeptical Shavuot pilgrims – many of them among Judaism’s elites – were listening and understanding. The Galileans’ “miracle of the tongue” was matched by the elites’ “miracle of the ear.”  The marginalized gained their voices, despite their fears, and the elites understood more than words, overcoming division and contempt.  Instead of the Tower of Babel, the crowd experienced cross-cultural connection and clarity.  The multi-dimensional transformation was not “one size fits all.”

Br. Lain Wilson, SSJE, speaks to the reach of the transformation unleashed by the events of Easter – life-giving transformation in multiple dimensions far beyond first-century Jerusalem and beyond our own doubts:

Our primary response, in bearing witness to the Resurrection, is to be transformed – to recognize ourselves as having passed through death with Christ into a new life, a life marked by mercy, peace, love, truth, and hope. To believe that this joy we feel is real. And to hold this fact as primary, and thereby to meet all the suffering that surrounds us as a transformed, Easter people.

The new life we enter may be distinctive for each of us, addressing our personal pain, doubts, and fears and kindling hope. As Pentecost proclaims, beyond those personal transformations, God is at work through the shared life of the community of believers. Through the Body of Christ, the work of the Spirit extends to all God’s people – Greek or Jew, servant or free, woman or man (Galatians 3:28), and even bumpkins or elites. God’s Spirit reaches beyond our small stories to shape the larger story of God working in and through all of us.

Justice now as well as then

by Wayne Schwab

This week’s post is a recent podcast featured on The Member Mission Network website:

Welcome to another adventure in love and justice.  I’m Wayne Schwab of the Member Mission Network.  We help people to live better every day.  This time two stories about justice – one from the present, one from the past.

The present day story is about lawyer, Alicia.  She defends criminals.  Each client wants a miracle.  That result is usually unavailable.  So she is under great pressure.  Yet, she never yells or raises her voice with clients or staff.  How does she do it her colleagues and staff ask.  And so do we.  For the answer, a story from the past.

Jesus loved to dine with people who were social outcasts.  Some religious leaders of the Jews were shocked and angry.  In their mind, good Jews were supposed to avoid outcasts.  “Why does he eat with those people! (They were wrong-doers and tax collectors working for the Roman oppressors.)  He’s breaking our laws!”  The religious law governing Israel could be applied unfairly and outcasts could be treated unjustly as a result.  Jesus corrects the injustice by eating with the outcasts over and over.  Jesus says those leaders interpret wrongly.  He is not against the law itself.

Jesus is living God’s justice.  When people’s customs are unfair and abusive, Jesus breaks those customs and laws – even when he angers others so much they want to kill him.

Where does he get the power to befriend social outcasts in the face of threats to his life?  From the Holy Spirit – from God’s power at work in him.

The good news is that the Holy Spirit, God’s power for justice, works in us too!  That’s Alicia’s story.   Criminals are outcasts and Alicia befriends them by taking their cases.  How does she keep her cool?  She says, “God helps me to be patient.  I’ll keep asking God to help me to be patient.”  God supports Alicia’s patience and her clients get a decent defense.  Regardless of the outcome, she has done what she could for justice – with God’s help.

So that’s today’s adventure in justice.

For more, see membermission.org.

What is salvation?

by Wayne Schwab

“Salvation” and being “saved from sin” are familiar words in the church and, often, in the media.

How can we talk about them afresh in today’s world?

There is a fresh and biblical way to understand them.

We have a problem.  So often we fall short of being loving and just.  We even do the opposite at times.

While we are strong in so many ways, we are also weak in so many ways and need help–we need more strength than we have in us.

We need strength or power to back up our limited strength or power to be loving and just.

“Receive the Holy Spirit,” says Jesus.  He shares his strength, his power, the Holy Spirit, with us!

With the Spirit’s power backing up our power we can begin to be more loving and just.

We are saved from our weakness.  Thanks be to God!