Baptized into the Spirit
Tony E Dillon Hansen
Sermon based upon 1 Corinthians 12:3-13, John 20: 19-23, Acts 2:1-21
Opening prayer
Jesus came and stood among them saying, “Peace be with you.”
So often in our world we are told something completely opposite of peace. So often we are told to hate and despise, especially those that are not like us. Too often people listen.
When I was a young boy, I would tell my mother how much I wanted a particular toy or outfit. I would rationalize it with something like, “My friend James has one.” My mother would reply with something like “if James was going to jump off a bridge would you join him?”
Mother had a way .
When we read Paul’s words in Corinthians, we are reminded that we are bound together not by status, toys, or clothes, but by faith and the Spirit. We were all baptized into the one body.
Think about what that means for you and your baptism. When we are baptized I am baptized with you and you are baptized with me. A little close for comfort? Why think that?
Let me remind you that We read this chapter for confirmation to illustrate a few points. Now think about what that means for your confirmation of your baptism. Do you still confirm?
Those who were in class can tell you that we cannot read the first part of this chapter without going deeper into the rest of it. Paul uses the image of the body to help a community that is torn by many divisions, different ideas and ways to do things. Sounds kind of like us today?
“The eye cannot tell the hand, I don’t need you… There are many parts, but one body.” What Paul means by this is not that we have to do the same thing and have the same specialities. In our uniquenesses, we have a connection to something much greater than the individual self.
More importantly, Paul says that we need each other because if one suffers, all suffer and if one rejoices, all rejoice together.
How, you ask? I submit to you: baptism.
We are all brought together in church and community by this Spirit, the Spirit of God.
In the age of division, we are reminded, by the Spirit of our baptism, that we are connected and that we need each other. Thus, it is up to us to seek justice and safety for all because all people of the body, the baptism, deserve just as much as you and me. All will rejoice when we find the honor of God placed with us (and not just for folks with status.)
That, Beloved, is the power of Spirit. The ability to bring different people from different ways of life together and into community, into church, to recognize how much we need each other. We are called to include and to welcome. We are called by the Spirit to be with each other in each other’s hour of need.
Division, then, is a human construct that serves no sacred purpose. We like sports teams and rivalries in the arena, but even there, when the game is done, we are friends and family together. We hold each other in victory and in defeat.
How different it would be for commanders of war if they would have to actually consider hugging people on the other side? Doubt we ever have war again. (Lord, we could only hope! )
Yet, even those who seek to take away from others like what Putin is doing, will find that evil action can unify a response from divided communities like Ukraine and NATO. Still, war is extreme because war rejects reason and reject considerations.
For us today, we have to look around our community and realize that the person on the corner is also a child of God, a part of the body of this baptism. The mother, who weeps for her child’s murder at the violent end of some shooting rampage, is afforded our empathy and our work to prevent the next mother from having to weep. The Native American, who claims rights to water, is just as deserving of the claim as the greedy people and governments trying to steal from them again. The single parent just trying to make ends meet for the children is deserving of help and our willingness to help them, regardless of race, orientation or otherwise.
In the Spirit, we can be love. We can say “gay” because love, empathy, and compassion are more enduring and more God-like than hate and violence.
Why? We are part of the one body, the Spirit that connects us and compels us this way.
That is the breath of life and community God has set before us. That is Heaven on Earth poured out for all of us through the Spirit. We are connected, and we need each other more than we could ever know.
When we finally realize that, the commanders can go home. The mothers can feel safe for their kids. The homeless find food and shelter. Water is shared because we value each other. Parents can raise their children to be God’s children too.
That Beloved is the miracle of the Spirit waiting for us and for our own selves - to realize that our hearts and minds may think differently, but you are valued. You mean so much to your Creator, and you belong in the Spirit. You breathe today and tomorrow because God wants the most for you. God wants you to know how much you are loved.
My friends, I won’t be bridge jumping because I don’t like heights or deep water but more so, that sacred love touches and brings us together. That Spirit saves us, me and you.
God blesses you this day with the Spirit that connects and binds you to each other. Feel the calming fire of the Spirit with you.
Happy Pentecost Beloved!
Peace be with you!
Beloved that is…
Thanks Be to God.