06/01/2026
Pastor’s Note
Pentecost is always a great celebration for the Church! Each year on Pentecost, we hear the story of the birth of the Church told in Acts 2— when the Holy Spirit came upon the apostles like the rush of a violent wind, with tongues as of fire dancing on their heads; people from all nations hearing the apostles speaking in their own language, and more than three thousand responded by being baptized into Christ.
However, before Pentecost, there is simply a room full of people waiting. They are not confident. They are not bold. They are not ready to change the world. They are doing the one thing Jesus asked of them: “Stay in the city until you have been clothed with power from on high.” They wait because they know they cannot face the world in their own strength. And perhaps that is where many of us find ourselves today. Waiting. Unsure. Aware of our limitations. Aware of the fragility of the world around us. Aware that we cannot navigate life by sheer willpower. Pentecost begins exactly there — not with heroes, but with ordinary people who know their needs.
And then in Acts 2, when the day of Pentecost had come, a wild, untamable wind and fire that sweeps through the lives of Jesus’ followers, transforming the disciples from confusion and uncertainty into boldness and belonging, and empowering them for God’s mission. Pentecost bursts into the story of God like a firework. It is one of the most dramatic, exhilarating moments in all of Scripture. Look at the disruption the Holy Spirit causes on Pentecost! A sound like a mighty rushing wind roaring through the house. Flames of fire dancing above the heads of ordinary people. When the Holy Spirit comes, it’s not gentle. It’s not a whisper, rather it’s very loud! It’s a force that fills the whole house. It’s fire that rests on each person. It’s God’s way of saying: “You are not alone. You are not powerless. You are not abandoned. My life is in you.” Wind and fire are not safe! They transform! They unsettle! They disrupt! They change things! And that is what the Holy Spirit does!
On Pentecost, people from every nation hear the gospel in their own tongue. Suddenly every language becomes a medium for declaring the mighty works of God. This is not just about speaking in tongues, but about creating a community of radical belonging. God’s story becomes accessible to everyone. God’s dream is for every person to hear and understand the good news in their own language, culture, and experience. It is God saying: “My message is for everyone, and my Church will speak in ways the world can understand.” Today, the Spirit still gives us a language for an anxious world: a language of peace when the world is full of conflict… a language of compassion when society feels divided…a language of hope when people feel overwhelmed… a language of truth when misinformation spreads fear… a language of grace when judgement comes too easily. Pentecost is not just about speaking; it is about being understood. The Holy Spirit enables the Church to speak God’s love into the real fears of real people. That’s what the Holy Spirit does!
And then, a frightened group of disciples suddenly stepping out with courage, clarity, and joy. This is the moment the Church is born — not quietly, not politely, but with power, color, noise, and holy disruption. Pentecost is God saying to the world: “Now watch what happens when my Holy Spirit is set loose among my people.” The Holy Spirit’s arrival in Acts 2 is not a gentle breeze but a hurricane, a wildfire that refuses to be contained. In that upper room, the Spirit’s power is not just about miraculous speech, but about radical inclusion: every person hears the good news in their own language, signaling that God’s salvation is for everyone to belong, just as they are. This is not a polite, gentle or predictable; it is a call to embrace the chaos of transformation and to trust that God is doing something new, even when it feels unsettling. The Holy Spirit’s arrival is a reminder that God often moves in ways that unsettle our comfort, pushing us into new territory where growth and change are possible. When life feels chaotic, it may be the Spirit stirring us toward something new.
Pentecost is not the end of the story; it is the beginning. The Spirit does not come so the disciples can stay in the upper room. The Holy Spirit comes so they can go into the world. And the same is true for us. The Holy Spirit sends us into workplaces that feel pressured, into neighborhood and communities that feel fractured, into conversations that feel difficult, into situations that feel uncertain. But we go with God’s presence within us. The world may feel unsafe, but we are Spirit‑filled people. We carry God’s peace. We carry God’s courage. We carry God’s hope. Pentecost tells us that God does not wait for the world to become safe. God fills us with the Holy Spirit so we can live faithfully in the world as it is.
God often moves most powerfully in the midst of our confusion and unknowns, inviting us to embrace transformation rather than fear it. Therefore, this Pentecost season, we are called to be bold, to speak the language of radical love, and to show up for one another again and again. The Holy Spirit is not finished with you and me yet! Pentecost is an ongoing invitation to trust, to risk, and to be transformed. As we continue to gather, serve, and love, we participate in God’s dream of a community where all are welcomed, embraced and where healing and transformation are possible.
Let us pray…Empowering Holy Spirit, when we settle into our accustomed, comfortable routines as individuals and as a church, disrupt us and raise us from the dead. When we become too cozy with our friends and neighbors who look and think much like us, disrupt us and bring us new friends and neighbors who gather with us around the Lord’s table as brothers and sisters in Christ. When we think we know exactly what the Bible says on some issue, secure in our knowledge that we know what you would say to us, disrupt us with fresh insight and new revelation that pushes us out of our self-securities. When we become fully at ease with our relationship with God, when we think that we have arrived in our Christian pilgrimage, disrupt us by leading us into new territory, restoring again the adventure of discipleship. This we are bold to pray in the Name of the Father, the Son, and today, especially in the power of the Holy Spirit. Amen.