Sunday, June 08, 2025

Pentecost, Year C (2025)

Genesis 11: 1–9 / Psalm 104: 24–34, 35b / Acts 2: 1–21 / John 14: 8–27  

The is the homily given at Flohr’s Evangelical Lutheran Church (ELCA) in McKnightstown, Pennsylvania on Sunday, June 8, 2025 by Fr. Gene Tucker, Interim Pastor.

 

“GOD’S ‘CORRECT’ BUTTON”

(Homily texts:  Genesis 11: 1–9 & Acts 2: 1–21)

Whenever I have to address an envelope, or to write something that others will need to be able to read, I use a typewriter. No, not an old, mechanical one like an old Underwood, but an electric one. The reason I use one of these things is because my handwriting isn’t at all good. In fact, it’s terrible, and worst of all, it’s getting worse as time goes along.

I can’t use a typewriter without having correcting ribbon in the machine. The reason for that is that my typing skills aren’t all that good, either. (In fact, I am self-taught…I can manage, but sometimes typing is a real challenge.)

As I think about the history of God’s dealing with human beings, I think that God must need to have a whole lot of correcting ribbon in the typewriter of His plans and desires for humankind.

Consider, for example, the two accounts of people speaking the same language, or speaking different languages that are before us this morning.

Our Old Testament reading relates to us the tale of the building of the Tower of Babel, while our reading from Acts informs us about the Holy Spirit’s gift of being able to speak in different languages.

In the Genesis account, we read that the whole human race spoke the same language. And so, those ancient peoples decided to make a name for themselves by erecting a tower that would reach to the heavens. When God sees this activity, and – more importantly – the motivation for it, He decides to confound their speech, making them speak different languages so they couldn’t understand one another, and – in the process – couldn’t manage to do anything they set their minds to.

In the Acts reading, recounting to us the coming of the Holy Spirit with discernable and powerful signs of His presence, people who spoke the same language were suddenly able to speak languages they had not previously known. The purpose of the Spirit’s gifting is obvious: It provides a tool to spread the Good News of what God had done in the sending of Jesus Christ.

Notice the correction to the human condition and to human behavior: In the Genesis account, those tower-builders were out to make a name for themselves, to promote their own glory. In the Pentecost event, God is glorified by the spreading of the Good News.

God does, indeed, have a “correct” button, and plenty of correcting ribbon as He deals with us human types.

The pages of Holy Scripture are filled with accounts of people who interacted with God, but who needed “fixing” in some way or another.

This last point brings us back to the Pentecost event.

We read Peter’s sermon, delivered on Pentecost, in our reading from Acts this morning. Gone from Peter’s character and behavior are his bumbling ways, and his inability to understand what God was doing in the person and work of Jesus Christ. God has corrected the text of Peter’s life, and now his speech is clear, and it is powerful.

We should ask, “What does all this have to do with me, and how does it inform my walk with God?”

That’s always a question that ought to be in our minds and hearts, and on our lips. After all, one of the purposes of Holy Scripture is to inform us about God’s nature and God’s ways, and to relate to us the ways that God has dealt with those He has chosen to be His emissaries to the world in ages past. In those sacred pages, we read of the successes, the mistakes, and the outright failures of those chosen ones. But we also read about God’s determined efforts to correct and fix what was less-than-useful for His divine purposes in those He had chosen to be His servants and witnesses.

So, too, will this same dynamic work its way out in our own lives: God will patiently correct, form, mold and shape us so that we can fulfill that divine plan that God has in mind. To be sure, the Holy Spirit has a major role to play in this process, as the Spirit did on Pentecost. The Spirit’s power to inform, to convict, to correct, to empower, and to enlighten is the same yesterday and today, and it will be the same until the end of time.

Thanks be to God for His patience, for His forbearance, and for His insistence on correction and amendment of life, so as to fit us out and make us into instruments of His divine will and purpose.

AMEN.