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Sunday Morning Messages

Fired Up

6/9/2025

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Scripture:  Acts 2:1-21

There are a lot of sports fans.   In fact, it is estimated that close to half the world’s population consider themselves fans of what we call soccer and the rest of the world calls football.  It seems that one of the universals to the human experience that crosses cultural and economic lines is a love for sports.  There is something wired into being human that drives us to compete and to cheer on others in competition.    Many of you no doubt consider yourselves a sports fan.  Perhaps, you are a long-suffering Cubs fan hoping that this might once again be their year, or maybe you are just counting the days until the boilermakers get back onto the football field, or perhaps you are all set to root on the Pacers to win game 2 tonight.  Whatever it is for you, many of us have a sport or team that we are a fan of.   But there are sports fans, and then there are superfans.  Perhaps you know someone like this, but if not you might have seen them on TV at some point. 

The super fans miss as few of the games as they can for their chosen team in their chosen sport.  They will be there in stands, decked head to toe in their team’s colors and they might even paint their face to match.   They will be among the loudest in the stands.  Super fans are not fair-weather fans.  In the worst seasons, they still show up with just as much enthusiasm as the winning seasons.   The homes of these fans might look like a museum dedicated to their team, and their knowledge of their team is encyclopedic, containing the most obscure details from decades ago.  For most people being a sports fan is part of their lives, but for superfans it is their life.  Their team is what they have built their lives around.  They are primarily known by their team affiliation above all else.  Being a fan of their team is who they are. 

This morning’s scripture is when the Jesus’ original disciples make the final step in being superfans for Christ.  From this point on sharing the good news of Jesus Christ was their whole life, it became the singular passion they built their lives around, it is what they became known for above all else, and ultimately it is what they would die for.  Sports super fans are fired up for their team, they are loud about it, and they don’t care who knows it.  In the same way, it was in this morning’s scripture that the disciples got literally fired up for Jesus as the Holy Spirit descended.  They were loud about the good news, they wanted everyone to know it, and their passion for the gospel changed the world.  The Holy Spirit came down on Pentecost, but it never left.  Today the Spirit can still empower, it can still get the followers of Jesus fired up, and if we allow it the Spirit can enable us to transform the world still. 

This morning’s scripture really is a great story.   As they were instructed, the disciples are waiting.  Jesus promised the Holy Spirit and they were waiting for what was going to come next.  It came in a way that was unmistakable and as dramatically as possible.  I think it is easy for us to overlook some of the drama of this scripture.  Verse 2 states the disciples were in a house when the Spirit suddenly descended upon them.  Jerusalem was full of Jews from all over the known world for the festival, but it is not like they were just milling around outside the house.  No, the blowing of wind, the coming of tongue of fire, the speaking in all of the different languages created a scene, it drew a curious crowd to see what the commotion was about.   I imagine that what they found is more than what they bargained for, because they found miracles at work.   They heard the various disciples proclaiming the good news in a variety of languages.  This means everyone there heard the language they understood as well as several they did not.  When I imagine this scene, I also see the tones the disciples are talking in as excitable and enthusiastic.  It was incredible, which is why some people tried to rationalize away what they were seeing as the result of too much day drinking. 

However, speaking in tongues was not the only empowerment of the Holy Spirit they observed.  Peter stood up to address the crowd and delivered a sermon, connecting to the words of the prophet Joel.  Now, up to this point there had been zero indication that Peter had any skill at rhetoric or public speaking.  In fact, in the gospels it is the opposite.  In the gospels he excels at sticking his foot in his mouth.  Yet, Acts 2:41 claims that after Peter finished talking 3,000 people accepted the message that day.  Just like the other disciples miraculously spoke in languages they did not know, Peter’s words changed the hearts of thousands because of the empowerment of the Holy Spirit.   While some of this empowerment, like speaking in tongues, was supernatural in nature, part of the way that the Holy Spirit empowered was more commonplace but still extraordinary.   It is a way that all of us can and perhaps should experience the Spirit’s empowerment today. 

In the gospel of John, during the last supper, Jesus promises his disciples that after he is gone, the Holy Spirit will come.  In John Chapter 14, verse 25 we find Jesus saying these words: “But the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will sed in my name, will teach you all thing and will remind you of everything I have said to you.”  So yes, the disciples spoke in languages they did not know, but what the spoke was the good new of Jesus Christ.  Yes, Peter was empowered by the Holy Spirit so that his words changed hearts, but what he said was the truth that had already changed his own heart.   Part of the way that the Holy Spirit empowered on that Pentecost, is that it fired the disciples up.  It reminded them of everything Jesus had said, it pumped them up, and they could not be silent.  

The Holy Spirit still works this way in our lives.  The Holy Spirit is the still small voice that reminds us of who Jesus is, and who we are because of who Jesus is.  It is the Holy Spirit that there is to remind us of the good news that changed our lives.  In our hardest times, in our darkest times, when we are at our most tired, or even our most apathetic, when we are exhausted, numb, and can’t feel a thing it is the Holy Spirit that reminds us that we are loved and that God has proven this love through Jesus Christ.   When we feel alone, like we don’t quite have a place, that we don’t belong- it is the holy Spirit that reminds us that because of Jesus Christ sacrifice on our behalf, we belong to the family of God, our names are in the book of life, and there is a place for us.   When we feel lost it is the Holy Spirit that reminds us that because of the amazing grace of our lord and savior Jesus Christ, we are found.   The Holy Spirit reminds us that we have a reason for hope that can not be crushed, we have a reason for joy that can not be extinguished, because Jesus has conquered sin and death, the grave has lost its sting, and because of Christ there will be dwell in God’s heavenly kingdom- a world without end- forever, and ever, and ever.  

 If we have ears to hear and take the time to listen, then the Holy Spirit will remind us of what Jesus taught, it will remind us of the gospel, and it will remind us the good news. Friends, that should get us fired up.   Sports fans, especially sports super fans, are known for how enthusiastic they are for their team. Why do we tend not to have the same level of excitement and enthusiasm about living out our faith and worshipping our savior as we do with sports teams?    Sports fans get swept up in the joy of cheering for and hoping their team wins.   As followers of Christ, we should be swept up in the infinitely exciting, never-ending love of God.   Given all of that, our worship services should be as enthusiastic as the pre-game tailgate parties.  Why aren’t they?

 Sports fans, especially super fans, make the big game their highest priority.  It is the highlight of the week, that everything else is built around.  Why do we tend not to have the same level of excitement and enthusiasm about living out our faith and worshipping our savior as we do with sports teams?    I remember back in the mid 2000’s when the Colts were at the height of popularity and success.  If the colts played a 1PM game, then it was a given that 11AM church services were going to be lightly attended.  In the same way during those years, if the Colts played at 4PM, then I knew youth group would only have a handful of non-football watching students.  Skipping church for the big game was just expected.   Why do we not skip the big game for church?    Why is the idea of even doing that laughable? 

The Holy Spirit works in our lives to remind us about the good news of Jesus, and just like sports fans are enthusiastic about their teams, we should be enthusiastic about the gospel.   In this morning’s scripture the disciples get the Holy Spirit and they are full of enthusiasm, they go wild sharing about Jesus and create a huge scene.  Because of the Holy Spirit the disciples were known for the enthusiasm for Jesus, and long that that was true for Methodists as well.  Years ago, someone pointed out to me a fascinating aspect in American Sign Language.   In ASL, this is the sign for Methodist.  The fascinating piece is that there is another word in sign language that uses the same sign.    The sign for enthusiasm is the same thing.   When the etymology of sign language was developing throughout the 19th and early 20th century, there was a clear connection between being a Methodist and being enthusiastic.  For all the reasons already stated, we should be enthusiastic about our faith. We should listen to the Holy Spirit and be fired up!

The disciples fired up on Pentecost, and by the end of the day there were 3,000 more believers.   The early church experienced explosive growth and a large part of this is because being filled with the Holy Spirit the disciples were enthusiastic about sharing Jesus.  There is a quote that often gets misattributed to John Wesley.  He did not say it, but it very much emerged out of the Methodist tradition that states, “set yourself on fire with enthusiasm and people will come from miles to watch you burn.”  Like the original disciples, we should not be shy about the passion and enthusiasm we have for Jesus Christ.  Because Jesus is good news, and this world is desperate for good news.   Through the empowerment of the Holy Spirit, this good news changed hearts and minds, and it can still do the exact same thing today.  Through the empowerment of the Holy Spirit the original disciples shared their passion and enthusiasm so that they were disciples who make disciples.  We can rely on the Holy Spirit to do the same thing today. 

Today we celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit.  We celebrate that the promises Jesus made were fulfilled when the Spirit descended like tongues of fire, but we also celebrate that the Holy Spirit never left.  We celebrate that just like it did for the original disciples, the Holy Spirit can work in our lives to remind us about Jesus, to remind us the good news.  We celebrate that the Holy Spirit can rekindle our passion for following Christ.   Once for the people called Methodists it was our enthusiasm for loving Jesus that defined who we are, and by the empowerment of the Holy Spirit may that be so again.  May we listen to the Spirit, and may we get fired up.
 
 

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Rensselaer, Indiana 47978
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