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Pentecost: Feast of Reconciliation

Fr. Timothy Barkley
St. James Orthodox Church

(6/8) Today the Orthodox Christian Church celebrates the Feast of Pentecost. We make present to the world, including (but not limited to) our own faithful, the once-for-all-time historical event of the descent of the Holy Spirit on the disciples of Christ, now called the "apostles," those sent with the message of God’s love and salvation from sin and death. We do not just remember; we participate, in the never-ending now-ness of the Kingdom of God. The Holy Spirit IS COME.

The Feast of Pentecost is many things, but I want to focus on this Feast as the feast of reconciliation for humankind. As we sing in one of the hymns of the Feast: "When the High One descended, confusing tongues, He divided the nations. And when He distributed the fiery tongues He called all to one unity. Wherefore, in unison we glorify the most Holy Spirit."

When God created the human race as an expression of the love shared within the persons of the Holy Trinity – for love shared creates life – there was resident within that life the image of its creator, which should not surprise us at all, because that is the nature of life-generation. God, as love, as three persons in one nature, reciprocates desire for communion, which should not surprise us, since that is the nature of love. That desire was implanted in us – the desire for communion with the source of life and love. Or love and life, to be more precise, putting first things first.

In that communion we receive the divine nature, by joining our desire and hope to His self-revelation and self-giving. Because God is the creator and we are the creatures, because we as the created are not the first reality, but God is, our union with God and our reception of the divine nature must be on His terms, not on ours. We receive life and love from the source; we do not dictate, but receive with gratitude.

Evidently, that rankled with our forebears, because we know they were open to the suggestion of the enemy of life and love, the first rebel who was not satisfied with the fulness of communion with the very source of meaning and existence … they "bought" His insinuation that God was denying them their birthright, that He was a selfish tyrant and was really lying to them, that they did not have to come to life and love on His terms, that they were by nature gods and all they had to do was reach out and grasp their divinity. They bit.

In so doing – because they bought the lie – they severed themselves from the source of love and life, and entered – created – a broken and twisted world of domination, darkness and death. In his love and mercy, God made sure that we did not attain unending life, because he knew that living forever without love, severed from the source of life, but unable to end the misery, would be … well, in the colloquial, that’s what we call Hell.

Living on borrowed notions of what love means, using and allowing ourselves to be used to fulfill our gnawing emptiness, in the end embracing nihilism and emptiness, with nowhere to go and no way to escape. That’s Hell. So God lovingly banished them from paradise, so that they would have time to consider the lostness and emptiness they had created, and turn back toward the love and life that created them.

Some, indeed, turned back and sought the communion with the God their forebears had surrendered. But many did not.

Still in the thrall of the lie of the seducer, they endeavored to build a tower to heaven at a place now known as Babel, and supplant God. They were trying to finish what the liar had begun in his rebellion against God. And God was not bothered, or offended, and he knew that they could not succeed … but he was concerned that if they continued, they would only accelerate their flight from the fount of all that makes life possible. They would fling themselves into utter darkness and death.

So he partially withdrew his hand of mercy and allowed them to experience what it means to be in rebellion against the source of meaning and coherence in the universe. If God is the creator, all truth and comprehensibility proceed from union with him; rebellion against him is by definition insane, a throwing off of the very possibility of truth and reason. And that’s what these folks found. When he no longer extended his grace of comprehensibility and meaning to those who hated him and wanted to destroy him, they simply could not communicate. They could not coordinate their rebellion against God once he no longer sustained them. And so they fled one another. They could not stand being together.

In God’s mercy and love, he did not abandon us; he sent his messengers to show how to regain union with him, and, when the time was right, he himself – not a messenger, nor an angel, but God himself, the second person of the three-personed Godhead – came to restore our communion with life and love. He brought the divine nature of God and united it to a human nature, becoming the god-man, with a divine and human nature existing by nature in one person, his human nature full and untrammeled, but willingly subject to his divine nature. He both taught and showed us how to become by grace what he was by nature, to receive the divine life into our human person. We learned how to become gods by grace.

And then he returned whence he had come, taking our human nature and eternally uniting it to the divine nature, reconciling us to God. Our human nature stands before the throne of heaven.

And in order to reconcile us humans to one another, he came again, this time in the divine person of the Holy Spirit, to fill the apostles, the messengers of salvation, with divine life. And as evidence of this divine life, people from all over the known world who spoke every imaginable language understood the apostles, who spoke only Aramaic, proclaiming the good news of reconciliation with God and communion with the divine life. Thousands, from every known ethnos, joined themselves to this new community of Christians on that day. That day is called "Pentecost."

At the tower of Babel, people speaking the same language found themselves unable to communicate; at Pentecost, people speaking different languages understood each other perfectly. At Babel, rebellion produced the world’s first race riot; at Pentecost, faith in Jesus produced harmony and voluntary union in the Body of Christ, between members of ethnic groups (Jews, Romans, Greeks) who were traditional enemies and who historically disdained one another.

In the Church, there is neither black nor white, Democrat nor Republican, foreigner nor "one of us." We are all one in Christ. We can celebrate our diversity – gimme some blackeyed peas and collard greens with ham, and some souvlaki and spanakopita, and more of those perogies, please, and I’ll top it off with kringla – but the differences don’t divide. They bring joy to our unity, they give us reasons to love one another, to want to know one another better, and to take delight in each other.

As we are reconciled to God and each other in his holy church, may we be beacons of unity to our world. And when we see someone different than we, may we embrace him or her as bearing the same image of the same God we bear. If the image of God in them needs polishing and cleaning … well, so does ours, so let’s embrace our brothers and sisters, whatever they look like and wherever they are found, and bring them to the household of faith. In the Church, there is hope for the world.

Read other homilies by Father Barkley


About St. James the Apostle Orthodox Church of Taneytown

The Holy Orthodox Church is the Church founded by Jesus Christ and described throughout the New Testament. All other Christian Churches and sects can be traced back historically to it. The word Orthodox literally means "straight teaching" or "straight worship," being derived from two Greek words: orthos, "straight," and doxa, "teaching" or "worship." As the encroachments of false teaching and division multiplied in early Christian times, threatening to obscure the identity and purity of the Church, the term "Orthodox" quite logically came to be applied to it. The Orthodox Church carefully guards the truth against all error and schism, both to protect its flock and to glorify Christ, whose Body the Church is.

St. James the Apostle Orthodox Church of Taneytown is a congregation of the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America. We are the jurisdiction of the Orthodox Christian Church whose roots trace directly back to first century Antioch, the city in which the disciples of Jesus Christ were first called "Christians" (Acts 11:26). The Orthodox Church is the oldest and second largest Christian group in the world. We are called by God our creator to worship and follow Him, and to proclaim to the world His message of love, peace, and salvation.

God loves all mankind and desires that all human beings should believe in Him, know Him, abide in Him, and receive eternal life from Him. To accomplish this, God Himself came into the world as a man, Jesus Christ, becoming man that we might become like God.

The Antiochian Archdiocese, under the leadership of His Eminence Metropolitan Joseph, sees itself on a mission to bring America to the ancient Orthodox Christian Faith. We join our brothers and sisters in the various Orthodox Christian jurisdictions — Greek, Orthodox Church in America, Romanian, Ukrainian, and more — in this endeavor. In less than 20 years the Archdiocese has doubled in size to well over 200 churches and missions throughout the United States and Canada.