Sermons at St. John’s Presbyterian Church

Pregnant with the Holy Spirit, the Birth of the Church

Transcribed from the sermon preached May 11, 2008

The Reverend Max Lynn, Pastor

St. John’s Presbyterian Church

2727 College Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94705

Telephone 510-845-6830    Fax 510-845-6837

office@stjohns.presbychurch.net    http://www.stjohns.presbychurch.net

Scripture ReadingsActs 2: 1-24

As we discussed this Mother’s Day/ Pentecost worship in the WMA Commission I suggested that we might want to get mothers to preach or share the preaching of the Word.  But Martha said, “Wouldn’t that be like having mom cook her own Mother’s day dinner?”  So here I am.  Still I have at least to quote a mother.

Rachel Richardson Smith speaks of the theological event of pregnancy and childbirth:

“In pregnancy a woman’s body takes over. It does what it alone can do. During the sickness and fatigue of early pregnancy, and later as I watched my stomach balloon outward, I felt as though I had lost control of my body. It went ahead on its own and left me in shock somewhere behind. While my mind and my emotions were still trying to absorb the fact that I was going to have a baby, my body was doing exactly what it was equipped to do: growing that baby. It was as though my body were doing what it could do without any help from me.

“In the latter months I began to see how pregnancy put me in touch with the oneness of body and soul. The two were no longer separate. My body did things quite apart from my will or my mind, but all of this was me. Though my mind had no control, my body did. For nine months I lived not as a mind within a body, not as a being who can ask of or impose on its body, but as one who is aware of and awed by the growth and movement and miracle of body. In pregnancy I became one with my body as at no other time in my life. I experienced the Hebrew concept of wholeness, completeness, in which there is no separation of body and soul.

 “…I began to see that even with an unwanted pregnancy, even in the case of abortion, pregnant women are put in touch with their bodies. They must come to grips with the fact that who we are as women, as human beings, is directly related to the fact that we have and are bodies. And where else but in the agonized decision over abortion are women given a unique opportunity to face the frailty and finitude of human life? Where else but in the decision to give life or to quench life do women so painfully find themselves confronted by the finitude of their own lives and the lives within them?

“…In pregnancy a woman’s body is not her own. The primary occupation of that body is the housing and growing of a baby. The mother, as the residence for this other being, is filled with a sense of its value, which is apart from her own sense of value. Though intricately bound up with this being, she is distinct from it. The two are one, and herein lies the paradox. The pregnant woman is both herself and this other being. The two are distinct from each other, though they are not separate.

“This too is the paradox of incarnation. God and Christ are the two in one. God is both Christ and other than Christ. Though not separate from Christ, God is distinct from Christ. Christ does not contain God; Christ is not all of God, as the newborn baby is not all of the mother. But in Christ, God gives birth to God.

“There is yet another way in which the relationship between incarnation and pregnancy can be approached. Christ was in a real sense pregnant with God, heavy with God. (Richardson Smith, Rachel. Pregnancy and Childbirth: A Theological Event. Christian Century  December 19, 1079, p. 1262.)

Smith’s image of Christ pregnant with God fits well on this day of Pentecost, the day noted as the birth of the Church.  The Spirit of God in mother Israel gives birth to the Spirit of God in all cultures.  The Spirit of the crucified and risen Christ gives birth to the Spirit of divine love in all peoples and cultures.

The more common image drawn from at Pentecost is Christ as seed, which grows to birth a great harvest.

Wheat and Barley are planted around Passover. Pentecost is the fiftieth day after the first day of Passover.  You may remember that in the story of God’s liberation of the Israelite slaves from Egypt; Pharaoh sentenced the first born of the slaves to be put to death.  But God turned the sentence upon the judge, and the Egyptian oppressors lost their children, while the plague of death passed over those Israelite families who spread the blood of the lamb on the doorposts of their house. 

Jesus was crucified the day before Passover, and the Gospels tell us that he rose the day after Passover.  It is understandable then, that his followers in trying to make sense of his life and death would understand his death as a lamb like sacrifice, and his blood the sign that God’s judgment would pass over our sins.

The burial of Jesus, the placing of his body and blood in the Earth, is also connected with the planting of seed, his resurrection with the sprouting of seed.  Now at Pentecost, seven weeks later, the seed, which is Christ, has produced fruit.  Pentecost then, is a harvest party, celebrating the harvest of the Holy Spirit.

          The risen Christ, pregnant with Divinity, births the Holy Spirit in all peoples. We are children of God. Whether lamb, seed or birthing mother, each is a metaphor, an attempt to explain the depth and significance of the mysterious presence of God’s power and grace to a certain people in a certain time.

In sacrifice, burial, or the agony of birth, the Spirit of Christ is not extinguished; on the contrary, it grows beyond its apparent limitations and produces new life.  And God’s presence is not only found in a story from the past, but breaks forth in the present tense.

It often appears within those times of crisis, of suffering and grief that the Spirit of God appears absent, or as if the suffering were a sign that the Spirit of God was dying.  Perhaps we are depressed with the violence on the streets, our own streets and those in Baghdad.  Or maybe it is the poverty and poor health of so many mothers and their children all across the world.  Or maybe it is our own lives, our own health or financial situation, our own finite ability to be in relationship, to be a good mother or mother’s son or daughter, or perhaps we grieve the loss of our mother or someone else we love.

The Gospel tells us that despite all that, despite and even through our sin and frailty and suffering, the Spirit lives and seeks to be given birth, to pour out from you.  Here and now.

And so I want us to try something.  Stop for a moment.  Note what distractions you come in with this morning: the skepticism, the doubt, the fear, grief, the desire to watch the basketball game.  If you are a guy, maybe all this talk of birth and feeling is too feminine for you.  Maybe you are just here because you are doing your mom a favor, and all my talk about birth and Pentecost arrives to your brain sounding like Charlie Brown’s teacher: Wa, wa, wa wa wa wa. Maybe your issue it that you are too smart or maybe you come to Church to hear some nice music and a fairly educated and inspiring talk, and to meet a few people.  It's all good.

Don’t feel bad if I’m getting close to home for this speaker can match your cynicism.  Excuse me if at times I wonder if my words are about as significant as those of Charlie Brown’s teacher, or if at times I am more concerned with my own technique, intelligence or lack of it, or my own personal life than whether the Word of God is preached or the Spirit is really present.  It is not the worst job in the world. I get to be kind to people, and I get nice health benefits and live in a nice town.  Don’t judge it; just note it.

And now let it go.  Now, in this moment, together with every other brave person in this room, let us ask God to birth the Spirit in this place, in our hearts, to grant us grand dreams and magnificent visions.  If you would feel so moved, say these words silently and with intention.  Come Holy Spirit. May your seed of hope sprout from the hard shell of my doubt.  May your seed produce a harvest here and now.  Show yourself in this place.  Spirit, enter me.  Forgive me. Heal my grief and anxiety.  Grow in me. Give new life to me.  Give life through me.  Give birth to me.  Give birth from me.  Spirit of the living God, thank you for your presence.  Thank you for your power.  May your presence in us produce a harvest of creativity and love, joy and peace, now and forever.  Amen