So why does the "birthday of the church" have the Greek prefix for fifty in it?
Because  Pentecost wasn't originally the birthday of the church, but an   observance commanded by God in the Law of Moses which is to be held   fifty days after the second day of Passover, with each day formally   counted.
The Original Pentecost In The Law Of Moses.
The  counting is called the Counting of the Omer. What's an omer? Omer are  the sheaves of a harvested crop. During the days of the physical  Temple,  the priests would offer newly harvested barley on the second  day of  Passover, which represents the start of the seven week harvest  season.  Which is why Pentecost is also called the Feast of Weeks. In  the Law,  Shavuot is called Hag ha-Katzir, the Holiday of Harvest's End.
Ah,  so we have a harvest festival, taking its place among the various   harvest festivals in world culture and religion. Well, yes and no. Yes,  it's another harvest festival, another instance of a human cause for   celebrating a human milestone, the end of the harvest, particularly in a  pre-industrial society. But there's something a little different about  this one.
The Talmud (what's a Talmud? -- ancient  rabbinical  writings; for more, look it up, Wikipedia is linked to the  right of the  page) says it was on the 6th of Sivan (a month in the  Jewish lunar  calendar), which is the first night of Shavuot, that God  gave the Ten  Words, better known among Gentiles as the Ten  Commandments.  Consequently, a popular observance has been an all night  Bible study at  home or in the synagogue, breaking for morning service,  called  shakharit, the ancestor of our, well, morning service. This all  nighter  is called tikkun.
Traditionally only dairy  foods are eaten on  Shavuot, and while no-one knows why for sure, the  thinking is that on  the first Shavuot they had slaughtered all these  animals for food but  after the Law was given it turned out they were  not kosher so they only  ate dairy foods.
In the  liturgy of the synagogue, the readings  for the service for the first  day of Shavuot are: Torah portion Exodus  19:1 - 20:23 and Numbers  28:26-31; haftorah Ezechiel 1:1-28 and 3:12. In  case you're a little  rusty, this is the Exodus account (actually the  first of two Exodus  accounts, the other being Chapter 34, and there's  another in  Deuteronomy) of the giving of the Law, specifically the Ten  Words, and  Ezechiel's account of the chariot of fire -- you know, the  flying  saucer.
This is the feast that Acts 2:1 (in the Epistle  for Pentecost, which even the Vatican II three year lectionary  couldn't  overturn) refers to when it speaks of Pentecost arriving, and  why there  were men from all over everywhere in Jerusalem for it. It's  to celebrate  the giving of the Law, the whole reason why there was a  Passover and a  deliverance, the most important event in Judaism. And  like Passover just  had been, it was about to be transformed!
The Original Pentecost Transformed!
For  God himself had become Man in Jesus Christ, suffered the condemnation  for our sins in his death, and then rose again. Now, if this were all  to  the story, why didn't he just stick around, proof positive that he  had  risen? If the whole point were "All you need is Jesus", "I am saved  because Jesus died for my sins and rose again", "Jesus first, as long  as  you believe that the rest isn't that important", then what would  make  that point better, what would make that point more irrefutable,  than if  he had stayed right here, so you could see him, talk to him  face to  face, hear him teach, and say to those who don't believe "Look, there he  is right there, go ask him yourself".
But it didn't happen that  way, because that is not the whole point and not  all to the story. Just  as the Passover and exodus from bondage in Egypt had been not for its  own sake but in order to gather with God so he  could give his people his  Law, so the Passover of the full paschal lamb Jesus had been not for  its own sake but in order to gather with God so he could give his people  his Spirit! Just as God had commanded the  counting of the Omer, the  fifty days connecting Pesach, Pascha, and  Shavuoth, Pentecost, so now  God himself counts the Omer from the Pascha of the Lamb he provided, his  Son, to the Shavouth or Pentecost so that on the very day where his  people once celebrated only the giving of  the Law, they still celebrate  that and added to it is the giving of the Spirit!
And what  happened as a result of that? His  Apostles, men who knew all you need is  Jesus, men who knew for a  physical fact that Jesus had died and risen  again, men who knew Jesus  is first, men who had all that and like any  men on that basis alone  were scared and afraid and huddled around each  other in the comfort of  others who had all that, tending to their  prayers and the internal  matters of their little band, did something  utterly amazing on this day of celebrating the giving of the Law -- they  gave the Law, and the  Gospel. Not only that, each one there heard it in  his own language,  addressed directly to him!
And what did the  people do? Same as the Apostles had done when the women told them the  tomb was  empty and he had risen. They didn't believe them. Some thought  this is  just a foolish wishful story, others sought to figure out what  this  means, others thought they're just crazy, probably drunk, out of  their  minds. That's what happened first. Pretty much what still happens  when  people hear the mighty works of God told to them -- when WE hear  the  mighty works of God told to US. It's a really nice story stemming  from  our deepest wishes; let's talk about this and dialogue as to what  it  all means; those guys are crazy. That's what happened first. The rest   didn't happen until something else happened.
The Biggest Sign and Wonder Of Pentecost.
Peter  then stood with his brothers in the Office of Holy Ministry and laid  it  right out for them, clean and clear. This is what Joel and David had  spoken about, Jesus delivered by the plan of God to us whom we in our  sinfulness abandoned the Law and in turn delivered him to the power and  law of the world to be killed, Jesus delivered by the power of God  from  the power of death and our sinfulness which inflicted that on him, Jesus  risen again and now placed on the throne of David at the right  hand of  God, Jesus having been given the promise of the Spirit so that  now you  see and hear this: Therefore let all the house of Israel know  assuredly,  that God hath made that same Jesus, whom ye have crucified,  both Lord  and Christ.
That's the Law. And when they  heard the Law, given  now for the first time in its fulfillment on this  day of celebrating the  giving of the Law long ago, they were cut to the heart. People by  nature want a religion of works, stuff they can do to make it all right,  stuff they can do to feel OK with God, with each  other, and within  themselves. And the world offers all sorts of  versions of that. Some of  them go by the name Christianity. And the  feelings and purpose they  impart are utterly false.
God himself has shown us in the Law  exactly the stuff he wants us to do,  and we showed ourselves absolutely  incapable of it by our own reason  and strength, even in a scenario where  there are but two people and one commandment, even when a people is  called and set apart to do the full Mosaic Law and be an example to the  nations, to the extent that we  handed his prophets and finally the One  he sent over to the power of  our own ideas and law to be killed, and  still reject their message to  this day.
So much for a religion of  works. We can't do it even when God himself shows us exactly how, no  matter how hard we  try in purpose driven living or to attain our best  life now. What's  worse, just like those on this Pentecost, we don't get  it even when the mighty works of God are directly addressed to us even  with wondrous  signs, preferring instead to think it over or think  they're just nuts!
Pentecost came to-gether not in the signs and  wonders, which can still leave us  in unbelief, but when Peter and his  brothers in the Office of Holy  Ministry laid it out clean and clear. It  still does. It was then, when  Peter had given the Law in its horrible  consequences, that they, we,  thought not about what it all means, not  let's think this over, not  maybe there's some good ideas here, not maybe  these guys are nuts, but  instead were cut to the heart by the  fruitlessness of their, our, own  reason and strength, and asked Peter  and his brothers, Men and  brethren, what shall we do? It was then and  only then that they could  tell them the Good News, the Gospel.
Repent,  and be baptised every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the   remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. For  the promise is unto you, and to your children, and to all that are afar  off, even as many as the Lord our God shall call.
What  happened then? Same thing that happens now. They that gladly received  his word were baptised, and they continued steadfastly in the apostles'  doctrine and fellowship, and in breaking of bread, and in prayers.
The Holy Ghost Church.
Guess  what! There's an emerging church all right. Not just lately, not out  of  some marketing scheme supposedly crafted to the taste of the times,  but  ever since the outpouring of the Spirit on that Pentecost whose   historical happening we celebrate every feast of Pentecost.
We  may not be in Jerusalem, the Temple is not physically there to go to  in  one accord, and Peter and the other Apostles are not personally our  preachers. And it makes not the slightest difference. The taste of our  or any time has no taste for the Gospel and it is worthless to pander  to  it thinking that will produce a taste for the Gospel. That will  produce  only what it always produces -- a religion of works, stuff to  do to  catch the God buzz in a quest after one's own feeling better, on  the  surface all about Jesus or God but really all about me, or, a lot  of  discussion about what it all means, or, a rejection of it as wishful  thinking at best and lunacy at worst.
What produces a taste for  the Gospel is the Law. That's why the Spirit was given to  proclaim the  Gospel on the feast celebrating the giving of the Law! And we have the  reality of Pentecost before us no less than they. The  Temple is in ruins  and Peter and the Apostles are gone. So how's that,  how is Pentecost  not just another thing you read in a book that  supposedly comes from  God, maybe it does, maybe it doesn't.
Because the true Temple  Jesus has been raised again on the third day, and has  taken his place  with the Father, and has sent his Spirit as he  promised. And that Spirit  speaks the same message to us as it did that  day in unbroken continuity  and succession, not that Peter and the  Apostles are still physically  here, not that other men are still here  in a succession of corporate  hierarchy, not in those who produce signs  and wonders or miracles of  church growth and attendance in his name,  but that the clean and clear  laying out of Law and Gospel as was heard  that Pentecost continues to be  heard in the faithful preaching of those in the Office of Holy Ministry  unto the ends of the earth despite sin, the world and the gates of hell  itself.
And when this happens, the same thing follows as did  then. Those who receive this  proclamation of Law and Gospel are  baptised, they continue steadfastly  in the Apostles' teaching handed on  in the church, especially in those  books upon which the church has said  you can absolutely rely as the  inspired word of God without error, the  Bible, and in preaching by  those called to do so of that Word, they  continue steadfastly in  fellowship and community and gathering with each  other, they continue  steadfastly in the breaking of the bread, the  mass, the church's  liturgy, wherein Jesus was only fully discerned for  who and what he is  even when he was bodily here for forty days after he  rose, and they  continue steadfastly in prayer.
Conclusion.
That is the  gift of the Holy Ghost, and every bit of it is as available  here and now  as it was on that day we read about in Acts, in the  Epistle or  Christian haftorah for Pentecost, every bit of what was  pointed to in  Ezechiel's chariot of fire we read about in the original  Pentecost  haftorah. Pentecost comes to-gether, despite all our vain and sinful  efforts to make it happen in some other way more to our liking, the same  now as then as ever. Accept no substitute! There is no  substitute, even  if it claims his name or produces signs and wonders  and warm feelings  in his name, as true and false teachers and even  Satan himself alike can  do!
Pentecost is about the one thing they cannot produce and only the true Spirit of God can. As the Little Catechism explains:
I  believe in the Holy Ghost; the holy Christian church; the communion of  Saints; the forgiveness of sins; the resurrection of the body; and the  life everlasting.
Amen.
What does  this mean? I believe  that I cannot by my own reason or strength believe in Jesus Christ, my  Lord, or come to Him; but the Holy Ghost has  called me by the Gospel,  enlightened me with his gifts, sanctified and  kept me in the true faith;  even as He calls, gathers, enlightens, and  sanctifies the whole  Christian church on earth, and keeps it with Jesus Christ in the one  true faith; in which Christian church He daily and  richly forgives all  sins to me and all believers, and will at the Last  Day raise up me and  all the dead, and give unto me and all believers in Christ eternal life.
This is most certainly true.
VDMA
Verbum domini manet in aeternum. The word of the Lord endures forever.
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
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20 May 2013
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