Acts 2:1-21
It is a lay
lector’s nightmare lesson and even those who wear the collar tread lightly in
the linguistic territory of “Phrygia and Pamphylia.” But then the confusion of language
has spawned more trouble than mispronunciations and the divisions that begin with
the inability to understand what the other is saying are too often translated
into the universal language of bigotry and violence. In whatever way we understand
the historical Day of Pentecost the meaning could not be clearer. The lines of
language that divide were erased by the “Spirit poured out on all flesh.” Of
course the language that was understood on that day was discounted as tongue
tied drunkenness but there was a moment when the confusion of the Tower of Babel
was reversed and suddenly every tongue was translated into the powerful deed of
God that is the cross of Jesus Christ. It didn’t take long for the universal
language of mercy to be confused and confined and the ability to speak in
tongues became more important than understanding what was said. But the Day of
Pentecost was not about speaking in tongues. It was about declaring the
powerful deeds of God in ways that people could understand no matter where
they came from or what language they spoke.
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