Texts: Acts 2:1-21; Psalm 104:25-35, 37b; I Corinthians 12:3b-13; John 20:19-23


Isn’t it amazing what God has done?

God took the stuff of the earth, and formed a people in his image, to be his friends and fellow workers in the business of creation. He breathed into the earth, and we became his image on this earth, to be his people, working and living for God’s pleasure, in the midst of the glory of God’s handiwork—the world around us. We are dust and to dust we shall return, but while we breathe, we are God’s holy people. Dust imaging God! Dust made to glorify God!

That’s amazing!

Isn’t it amazing what God can do?

God took a dispirited, discouraged, disorganized, dysfunctional, dis-this and dis-that bunch of Galilean fishermen, Jewish zealots, former tax-collectors and other sinners and hangers-on, and turned them into the most powerful force in human history. And it started when one of them stood up in front of the people and spoke the truth about their departed leader. Peter raised his voice, no longer denying Jesus, but proclaiming him as God’s anointed one—the saviour of all humanity.

And that too is amazing!

Isn’t it amazing what God continues to do?

God still takes human beings of every race, language, age and ability, filling us with the power of the Holy Spirit, forming us into a mighty band of faithful followers, companions on the way, proclaiming his love and mercy, and the salvation of the world through the Resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth.

Truly, this is all amazing!

And yet…

Do we not sometimes take it for granted?

Do we at times put our own needs ahead of the needs of God’s creation?

Do we at times give lip service to the power of the Holy Spirit, forgetting that it was given to us ours to use for God’s work?

Do we give greater honour to the church’s institutional history and life than to its continuing mission?

All too often, we keep our heads down, going about our daily business, not taking the time to reflect on the amazing things God has done and continues to do.

It is truly amazing what God can do!

All we have to do is let it happen—open our hearts to the movement of the Holy Spirit, setting free the gifts God has imparted to each and every one of us, looking with ever-fresh eyes at the world, at God’s people, and at the mission God has entrusted to us.

The church never fails to amaze me, in its wonderful and sometimes exasperating diversity, in the bounty of gifts among its members, in their devotion and humility. Yes, we sometimes fall short, finding things not working quite the way we think they should. But God has a way of taking the most commonplace materials and making something beautiful and marvelous out of them.

God has a way of amazing us—filling us with awe and wonder and holy energy—if we will just lift our eyes and our hearts to behold the wonders he has set before us. Take a look around the church today. Look at all these people who have joined together to celebrate this holy feast. We’re just ordinary people, each with our own tics and foibles, our likes and dislikes, our abilities—and our disabilities. God has called us together on this day to be the people of Pentecost—divinely gifted and inspired for the work of ministry, raising our voices to proclaim God’s amazing deeds, and in Thomas Merton’s words,

… committed to the belief that Love and Mercy are the most powerful forces on earth.

Isn’t that truly amazing?

Surely we must be filled with awe and wonder that God could send ordinary people like us out to do the most important work in the world!

Let us never believe that we can not do God’s work. We have every gift required to accomplish the task to which God has called us. We are filled to overflowing with love and mercy, with faith and hope, with wisdom and knowledge, with all that is needed for the mission of the Church.

Isn’t it amazing what God has done and continues to do?

Isn’t it amazing that God equips us and sends us forth to carry on his work?

Now let’s get out there and do it!

And let’s amaze the world with the power of God’s love and mercy.

Amen.