24 May 2026 Saint Athanasius Lutheran Church
The Feast of Pentecost Vienna, VA
“From Jesus’ Heart to Yours”
Text: John
7:37-39; Acts 2:1-21; Introit
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God our Father,
and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
What the prophet Joel proclaimed and Jesus promised
has now been fulfilled. On the day of Pentecost, the Holy Spirit is poured out
in fullness upon the Church.
We heard Joel’s prophecy today from Peter’s
preaching in the reading from Acts, that in the last days, God would pour
out His Spirit on all flesh.
And the past few weeks we have heard Jesus’ promises.
When He had promised His disciples a Helper, the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of
truth, who He would send them from the Father (John 14:26; 15:26). And when right before He
ascended, as we heard just last week, He told them they would be clothed
with power from on high. And then He instructed them to stay in the city
until that happened (Luke
24:49).
And today we heard when it did. The Day of
Pentecost. Jews from all over the world had gathered to celebrate the Feast. A
Pentecost feast, it turns out, unlike any other. For just as Jesus had
transformed the great Feast of the Passover, filling it with new
meaning, with Himself as the new Passover Lamb, and with a new
deliverance - not from the slavery of Egypt but our slavery to sin - so now He
transforms the great Feast of Pentecost, from the beginning of the wheat
harvest to the beginning of the harvest of souls, with the work of the Holy
Spirit.
And so led by the Holy Spirit, and empowered with
the Holy Spirit, the disciples would now go out to all the world to proclaim
Jesus as Saviour and Lord. To proclaim the promise, that everyone who
calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved. A calling upon
made possible by that same Holy Spirit working faith in hearts through the
Word. Working faith in Jesus crucified, risen, ascended, victorious, and
reigning as the one true God.
That is to say, Jesus glorified. For
our faith is not just in a mighty God, a sovereign God, a transcendent God, but
in a dying God. A God whose glory is not just to be
mighty, sovereign, and transcendent, but whose glory is to lay down His life to
save the world. That’s why many couldn’t figure Jesus out. They expected big
and powerful Messiah, not Jesus. They expected their Messiah to smite their
enemies, not be smote, crucified, by them! So Jesus . . . He can’t be.
So the people were thirsty. Thirsty for life,
thirsty for God, thirsty for hope. The same ol’ same,
ol’ was, well . . . the same ol’,
same ol’! Day after day, year after year, nothing was
changing. And if it was, it wasn’t for the better. The glory days of Israel . .
. they wanted them back! The days of Kings David and Solomon, the days of peace
and prosperity, they were a long time ago. Hard to imagine them ever coming
back.
And it’s really the same today. Today, too, people
are thirsty for life, thirsty for God, thirsty for hope. We’re chasing after
life and hope but instead of finding them, we just get more thirsty. And tired.
Nothing seems to change. Or if it does, not for the better. The internet came
with such promise . . . until it got filled with pornography, and scammers and phishing
schemes and trolls and misinformation and influencers and algorithms to addict
us to it. AI, too. What’s real? What’s not? How do you know? Who’s informing
it? How is it taking over? So maybe you, too, long for the good ol’ days - thirst for the good ol’ days! - when things were simpler, safer, saner. And for
the glory days of the Church - a church filled with people, and when the Church
had influence in our society. Days that are probably not coming back.
Thirsty. That’s a pretty good description of our world,
isn’t it? In so many ways you can picture the devil offering us a drink, then
pulling it back. Here’s a drink! Or, there’s a drink! But never actually giving
it to us. Or if he does, giving an empty cup. And then filled with evil glee at
the confusion and pain and captivity and emptiness he lures us into.
But Jesus promises a drink. As we heard today, Jesus says If
anyone thirsts, let him come to me and drink. I will give
you what the world cannot. I will give you what the devil will not.
And is Jesus able to do that? Well, as the
Scripture has said, ‘Out of his heart will flow rivers of living water.’ Rivers
of water that give life - the life and hope we are thirsty for.
And what is this water? This he said about
the Spirit. For the Spirit gives what no one else can - what we need,
what we are thirsty for: the gifts of God won for us by Jesus on the cross.
And so the cross had to come first. For as
yet the Spirit had not been given, [like this] because Jesus was
not yet glorified.
Now, the Spirit had been active and working before.
He is mentioned often in the Old Testament - from creation to the prophets to
overshadowing Mary when Jesus was conceived in her virgin womb. But He had
not before been poured out like this. This was new. This was different. Because
Jesus had now been glorified in being hung up on the cross. For there, on the
cross, in a way like no other, we see the love of God and the glory of
God, in all that He would use His might and sovereignty to do for us. And so from
there also the Spirit is poured out for us in a way like no other.
For when Jesus was crucified, we are told that when
one of the soldiers pierced Jesus’ side with a spear, at once there came out
blood and water (John
19:34). Now
surely there are physical, medical reasons for that, bit this is not merely a
physical report being giving to us - there is also the spiritual meaning
for that. That out of Jesus’ side, out of Jesus’ heart - His
heart filled with great love for us in laying down His life for us - out of
that heart pours the blood of the altar and the water of the font. The very
places our hunger and thirst are satisfied. No bait and switch here! No
offering and pulling back. Just gifts. The gifts we need. The gifts we can find
no where else. The gifts that from the Spirit flow
(LSB #498 v.
7). The Spirit
poured out from and by Christ crucified.
So what are you thirsting for? Forgiveness,
meaning, value, purpose, life, hope, love, peace? The world cannot give these
things. Or if it does, only in the smallest measure. And usually only for the
shortest time. Until it decides not to. Until it’s standards change, or it’s
opinions change, or your usefulness to them ends. And they pull back the cup .
. . and you are left thirsty.
But not so with Jesus. From Him comes that river
of living water that never runs out. The Spirit poured out to fill us
with the forgiveness, life, hope, love and peace of God, and to give our lives
meaning and purpose and value. Because if Jesus would lay down His life for
you, it was to raise you up as He was raised up, to a new and eternal life. A
life you have already begun to live in Him.
Because you have received His Spirit. The pouring
out of the Spirit that began on that Pentecost continues still
today. The sound of the mighty rushing wind replaced by the voice
of those who speak the Word, and the mark of the tongues as of fire
replaced by the mark of the cross applied in the water of Baptism. But though
the signs change, it is the same Spirit, bringing Jesus and His gifts to you,
and you to Jesus. That all you need, all you are thirsting for, you have.
So if you find yourself still thirsty, still empty,
still searching, hounded by sin, tormented with doubts and fears, striving for
acceptance, chasing after meaning, what are you trying to satisfy your
thirsting and hungering and searching with? Is it with what the world is
offering? Where the thoughts and opinions of men are telling you it is? Is it
constantly changing? Does the bar keep moving? Are you striving harder and
harder but only getting more thirsty, more hungry, and less hopeful, and less
peace?
If so, and I think that happens to all of us from
time to time - or maybe a lot of the time! - maybe it’s time for a change;
time to be transformed. From the old, to the new. That with Jesus’ new
Passover and new Pentecost, there is a new you. In the
world but not of the world or filled with the world. In the world
but filled with Jesus and His Spirit and His gifts, that you
hunger and thirst no more. But when you do, come back and drink deeply of His
Word and forgiveness, and eat and drink Jesus’ Body and Blood. And be filled
with His life - which has no end.
When Jesus spoke those words we heard from Him
today, John told us it was the last day of the feast, the great day.
But when Jesus returns for us on the Last Day, the great day, it will not be
the last day of our feast, but just the beginning of the Feast! The
Feast of heaven. The marriage feast of the Lamb in His kingdom was has no end.
Where, as the book of Revelation tells us (7:16-17), in words very similar to those we heard today . .
.
They shall hunger no more, neither thirst
anymore; . . .
For the
Lamb in the midst of the throne will be their shepherd,
and he will guide them to springs of living water,
and God
will wipe away every tear from their eyes.
No more hunger. No more thirst. Just Jesus. Just
life. Life without end. That’s what the Day of Pentecost is all about. Not
weird signs and wonders! But this new life. Begun now. And with no end.
So on this day, we who are thirsty pray: Come,
Holy Spirit! Come from the heart of Jesus and fill the hearts of
the faithful. Fill us! That from our hearts, too, flow rivers of
living water. That filled with You and Your life, that from our hearts
and lives, all we think and speak and do, be filled with the Spirit of God. New
lives filled with faith and hope and love.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and
of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.