15 May 2016 St. Athanasius Lutheran
Church
Feast of Pentecost Vienna, VA
“The Tower of the Cross”
Text: Genesis
11:1-9; John 14:23-31; Acts 2:1-21
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God
our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
The Tower of Babel is one
of those cool Bible stories you learn about in Sunday School.
It’s easy to teach, on one level. Simple and understandable.
The people at that time, all speaking the same language,
decided to build a tower with its top in the heavens to make
a name for themselves. God, on the other hand, decided this was
not a good idea, and so confused their languages so they could no longer speak
to one another. The building project stopped, the Lord dispersed the people
over the face of the earth, and that’s how all the different languages of the
earth came to be.
But if that’s all we get
out of this story, we haven’t understood it. Because as Jesus taught His
disciples after the resurrection, and as we heard in the some of the readings
this past Easter season, the Bible isn’t just about giving us cool information
- like how all the different languages came to be - it’s all about Jesus.
And so we need to try to understand how this story teaches us about
Jesus. Then it will be more than just a cool story; it will be a helpful one. A saving one.
And the key, I think, is
to look at what God said about this project, when He said: and this is
only the beginning of what they will do. And nothing that they propose to do
will now be impossible for them. Or in other words, they
will think they can do anything. They will think they can do everything. They
will think they do not need God. Engineering, science, and a bit of ingenuity
is all the help they will think they need. For look at what we can do! Man
is supreme. Man is God.
Which
sounds very much like the way so many people think today.
We can do it. Nothing is impossible. We put a man on the moon. We hold in our
hands computers which are amazingly powerful and can connect us to people all
over the world. We are doing things today our ancestors never dreamed of.
Surgeons transplant organs. Medical technology has created artificial limbs and
3D printers are even beginning to print out replacement body parts. Mankind
keeps improving and getting better. We know more now than ever before. And
there seems to be no limit to what we can do. Nothing is impossible for us.
It seems as if the dream of Babel is finally becoming a reality - even with our
mixed-up languages.
Except
the picture is not all that rosy. Science and technology
may be advancing, and new discoveries are being made, but are we better off?
Is all the help we really need in our own two hands and in our minds? Yes,
computers connect us but they also separate us. People are living longer but
not necessarily living better. When a cure is found for one disease, another -
and often worse one - mutates to take its place, or a new one comes along. And
what about peace in a world where hostilities never cease, fear is the currency
of terrorists, the comment sections on social media sites are among the most brutal places on earth,
and even our own consciences accuse and torment us.
And then there’s death.
Some people deny it, some people hasten it, some
people postpone it as long as they can. But if there really is one thing that
unites all people in this world, that’s it. We’re all going to die. One day. Sooner or later. And no tower, no achievement, no name we
make for ourselves, can stop it. In fact, that name we make for ourselves will
just be chiseled onto our tombstones.
That was the trajectory
of the people in the land of Shinar who built that tower. But God wanted more
for them than that. And so He stopped them, to help them. He stopped them, to
save them from themselves. He stopped them and scattered them, so that one day
He could gather them around a different tower and give them what they need;
what no tower into the heavens or effort of man could give them - a way to
life. A way to Himself.
And that’s exactly what
we’ve been celebrating the past fifty days, the Easter season - that Jesus has
provided that way. That not by a tower into the heavens, but by a cross; and
not by man, but by God, the unbridgeable gap between the earth and the
heavens has been bridged. That as God and man in one flesh, one person,
the sin that separated us from our Father in heaven has been atoned for by
Jesus’ death, and the death that robs us of life has been overcome in His
resurrection. That’s Easter.
But still, that was not
enough. The tower of the cross has been built by God, but we need to be
gathered back to it and around it. For the peace of mind and peace of heart
that we need, we need someone to teach us about that tower, to point us to the
cross and to Jesus. We need the sin and wrong trust in our hearts to be
overcome, that we not be like the people building the tower and trust in what
we can do, and wrongly think nothing is impossible for us, butrepent,
confess, and turn away from that, and trust in the One who bridged the gap for
us, in Jesus, and correctly believe that nothing is impossible for Him.
We need a Helper.
And that’s who today,
Pentecost, is all about. The Helper. The Holy
Spirit who, we heard Jesus say today, the Father will send in His name. The
Spirit who will teach us of Jesus, and point us to Jesus, and give us the peace
of heart and peace of mind that comes with the forgiveness of sin and the
promise of a life that not even death can end. The gifts that
Jesus won for us on the cross, are now given to us by the Helper, the Spirit.
And so when Jesus spoke
of the gift of the Holy Spirit, He said this as well: Peace I leave with
you; my peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you.
With the gift of the Spirit comes the gift of peace. A peace
that doesn’t come from the world, or from you and what you do, but only from
God. From the Father, who sent His Son to build a heaven-reaching tower,
and His Spirit to then gather all people to it and back to Himself.
And we heard that
impressive list of folks who heard and were gathered on that first Pentecost -
they were from all over the place: Parthians and Medes and Elamites and
residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and
Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts of Libya belonging to Cyrene, and visitors from
Rome, both Jews and proselytes, Cretans and Arabians. But it didn’t
stop with them. The Spirit sent the apostles out even further to proclaim the
Word through which the Spirit would work and continue to give His gifts of
forgiveness and peace. For as the prophet Joel said, in the last days God
would pour out His Spirit on all flesh. Men
and women, Jews and Gentiles, young and old. A pouring
out and gathering that started on the Day of Pentecost, and hasn’t
stopped.
Because
you are here. You wouldn’t be here were it not for the Spirit. The
Spirit who is still being poured out and still working and gathering people to
Jesus and His cross through the Word of God - the Word preached and the Word
joined to the water of Baptism. The Word which points us to
Jesus and connects us to Jesus. The Word through which the Helper is
teaching you, forgiving you, and pointing you to the tower of the cross and
testifying to you: There is your hope. There is your confidence. There is your
peace. Peace in life and peace in death. That our hearts not be troubled,
nor be afraid.
And so He has gathered
us today in the midst of a world fraught with danger, sin, trouble, change, and
much to be fearful and worried about. He has gathered us here today
around the cross that is planted here - on this altar. For here is the Body and
Blood that hung upon that cross, and the Body and Blood that then rose from the
dead, that receiving this gift, our bodies too rise from the dead to life
again, finally and fully free from all that troubles us here. Fully at peace in Jesus.
So by teaching us of the past
and giving us confidence for the future we can deal with the present,
and know that whatever is happening is not such a big deal after all. The world
may be going crazy with its politics, political correctness, divisiveness, new
kinds of wickedness and evil being invented every day,
and false gods a-plenty, but none of that can win; none of that can conquer a
child of the Father, in Jesus, with the Holy Spirit. Our God has conquered all our
foes and provided us with a sure and certain future. We may not know how we
will get to the future - the twist and turns in the road, the challenges and
obstacles that face us - but we will get there. We have our Lord’s
promise. So there is peace, for we have certainty in our Lord. And we can
rejoice, for we are not on our own, but have a Helper.
And so one day, Jesus
will say to us what He said to His disciples, as we heard at the end of the
Holy Gospel today: Rise, let us go from here. When He spoke that
to the disciples, Jesus was going to the cross to defeat sin and death for us
there. When we hear Him speak those words, it will be from the
places where our bodies lay, when we will rise
and go from the dust to which we returned to life again - sin and
death defeated and nothing but life ahead for us. Life, with
our Saviour, with His name, and in His Kingdom, which
will have no end. And the only tower we’ll need to get there, we have: the
cross.
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.