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What does the Spirit say? (Sermon)

Image: Shower of Rose Petals at the Pantheon in Rome, Liturgical Arts Journal

Readings for the Feast of Pentecost, Yr. A – Acts 2:1-21Psalm 104:24-34, 35b1 Corinthians 12:3b-13; 5:6-11John 20:19-23. This sermon was preached at Grace & Glory Lutheran Church in Palmyra, VA on May 24, 2026.

Some of you might recall a catchy, “so bad that it is good” song called What Does the Fox Say? from several years ago. The songwriters intentionally tried to make the most absurd song possible for a Norwegian talk show as a joke, and it turned out to be a hit. Last week, I happened to hear it as I was commuting to the church, and it struck me…The singers almost sound like they are speaking in tongues. Well, as a pastor’s brain can do, it was only a short “ring-ding-ding-ding-dingeringeding” in the song later that a few important questions came to my mind…In all seriousness, it is a question not just for Pentecost but for each day of a Christian’s life, “What does the Spirit say?” And closely related to that, “How do we know and understand the Holy Spirit as it speaks and operates in our lives?”

The stories and letters that we hear on Pentecost reveal the supernatural, divine inbreaking of the Spirit into the world in a new way. The Holy Spirit as part of the Trinity always was, is, and always will be. At Creation, the Holy Spirit is encountered as a divine wind parting seas and breathing life into clay. Many ancients considered Holy Wisdom as a manifestation of God, personified in scripture as a woman I should point out. (So, the Holy Spirit can sometimes be called she, but God as a spiritual divine being is not truly of any sex.) We meet the Spirit in Psalms and in the lives of the Patriarchs, Matriarchs, and Prophets. (Both male and female prophets are in scripture). Even as Jesus is baptized by John, it is the Spirit that drives Jesus into the wilderness.

Yet until Jesus rose from the dead, there was a chasm between us and our Triune God…a brokenness since the Fall requiring more than just our efforts and repentance to fix. This suffering needed God’s activity to heal us – the death, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus in particular. With that, the Kingdom of God has been ushered into our world, but God’s not yet done with us or the world. There’s work left to do. The Kingdom is here but not in its fullness until Jesus comes again. As Jesus promised, he would not leave us orphaned in this in between time but would give us an advocate, the Holy Spirit, to help us and be with us forever (John 14:16). This was for the fulfillment of even more ancient promises to Abraham and the Jewish believers who followed pointing toward a new reality where God would someday ultimately dwell in our hearts instead of any temple.

As Paul clearly explains to the church in Corinth, faith is a gift of the Spirit, “no one can say ‘Jesus is Lord’ except by the Holy Spirit.” This was Jesus’ teaching with Peter’s confession of faith as well. The Holy Spirit enters our life in a different way through our faith and baptism. It claims us as God’s own. It promises us abundant, eternal life. It has the power to free us from all that holds us back…our doubts, darkness, and sin…when we surrender to it and radically trust it. (It never forces itself upon us.) It is always at work for our welfare in order to sanctify us (make us holy), guide us, and it even prays for us. When our groaning can find no words (Romans 8:26), the Spirit lifts our concerns to the heart of the Trinity with groaning of its own. Even for those of us that have faith, it is always trying to draw us into new beginnings – “from one beginning to another” Br. Roger of Taizé used to say.

Yes, this is the Spirit that also guided Martin Luther as he was used to help reorient the Church more clearly toward the gift of grace. As much as with the Christians on the road to Emaus, the scriptures were opened to Martin Luther, and his heart was set afire. Or on this Aldersgate Day, an annual celebration of our Methodist siblings on May 24th, we might recall John Wesley’s heart being “strangely warmed” as he overheard Moravians reading Martin Luther’s preface to Paul’s letter to the Roman church. This finally gave John Wesley the assurance and peace that Christ had truly taken away his sins. Thus, the Spirit changed the direction of their lives, and in effect the Church’s direction, forever – setting one heart to another on fire.

Yet, we should remember with the growth of the Church that they and others touched by the Spirit that came before and after them often faced misunderstanding or hostility. Sometimes, they might face death because of this fire of faith burning in their hearts. And this reminds me, as Jesus shared, the Holy Spirit will teach us at every hour of challenge what we ought to say (Luke 12:12). And further as St. Francis urged his fellow friars, our actions and choices can proclaim Jesus, too. Our actions can prove a kind of sermon.

No, Pentecost with its ancient roots is not to be relegated to the past, for it is still unfolding in our presence. The very same Holy Spirit that touched the great saints and Apostles of the early Church is seeking similarly to heal and transform our lives in the present. It calls us to do miracles, not always supernatural mind you, but most often small things done in great love. Every effort and relationship becomes sanctified as we do so.

As we heard today, crowds had gathered for a great Jewish festival called Shavuot (or Pentecost by the Greek influenced, Hellenistic Jews) held fifty days after Passover. The Jewish celebration recalled the giving of the Law to Moses on Mount Sinai, and it served to give thanks for the summer harvest. During the festival, people would offer their first fruits to God. Yet despite the excitement, hidden away in an upper room, waited the disciples of Jesus.

Just ten days previously at the Ascension, Jesus had promised the Holy Spirit would come to them. Much as with the crucifixion or Easter, the disciples were likely pensive and unsure of what was to happen next…what it all meant. They might have even feared the vast crowds…Crowds had called for the death of Jesus after all. Little did they suspect that on a day marking God’s provision of daily bread and the Law, God’s gift of grace would overflow. A new life in the Spirit would begin.

Rightly, we imagine this momentous event with powerful wind and earthquake. We are told the Spirit descended as if tongues of fire, hence all the red that we wear and that surrounds us. Yet, the Spirit can be like the still, small voice Elijah heard as well or a subtle urging. We can be led to new opportunities as doors open or as we are redirected through our losses. The Spirit is not limited by our expectations or previous experience but is filled with surprises.

And so, although Peter and some others expected the Spirit to learn toward the Jewish people and their religious practices, forcing Gentiles to submit to ritual laws, the Spirit had other ideas. Immediately after the Spirit came upon the disciples, Gentiles would join them as Church through the Spirit’s intervention – nothing they did. Yet, Peter’s bias and hesitation could only be corrected through a vision and a Centurion’s request to know the Lord, itself inspired by the Spirit. Through this circumstance in Acts 10, Peter says, “I now realize how true it is that God does not show favoritism but accepts from every nation the one who fears him and does what is right.” So should Christian Nationalism be a thing in any country? No, that’s not the Spirit’s work. It must be rejected. We are called to be a catholic (meaning universal) Church rooted in faith instead of politics.

And in our own time when the Southern Baptist Convention and others are trying to keep women away from the pulpit, or anywhere near the altar, or from teaching about Jesus, or in some cases voting or working outside the home (this teaching is back in style among some extremes), scripture indicates the Apostles were continually gathered in prayer alongside the women followers of Jesus (Acts 1:14). Joel foretold, despite common cultural practices and expectations, that the Spirit was to be poured on all flesh. Among the 120 believers (Acts 1:15) gathered in that upper room praying with one accord, women were present.

And today, we find a Spirit still reaching out to us from that first Christian Pentecost long ago…Rooted in the past, the Spirit further manifests itself in our lives. The fruits of the Spirit are at our disposal: love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. We might struggle or fail at living them out at times, but they remain available to us. We have access to the Spirit’s guidance, diverse spiritual gifts, protection and power as much as those first disciples…earthquake, wind, fire or no. Each of us as individuals and all of us as Christ’s body, are being called by the Spirit to use our gifts as given us by God…to offer our spiritual first fruits…not just once a year but throughout our lives…each day.

Thus, we, too, might have visions, dreams and prophetic moments, but the majority of the Church understands that the time of the Apostles and Prophets as offices in the Church has ended. And as Paul argues, the greatest gift of all is love, not tongues or teaching. So, how might we modern folk listen to the Holy Spirit?

  1. Test what you think you hear. God doesn’t contradict scripture. Evaluate the fruits from what is being said and done.
  • Seek peace – God’s voice is not one of anxiety, unsettledness and exhaustion: Trust God at all times, for God cares for you. Repent of errors, try to make peace with others and amends. Seek a quiet place when possible, to listen for God’s voice.
  • Look and listen; watch and wait for God might be in the booming as well as the still small voices of your day. Even a little child might lead us. Yet know that God’s voice is not the voice of obscurity requiring decoder rings and mental and scriptural gymnastics. Yes, we might need prayer and scripture study or even to consult friends or spiritual leaders to better understand things, but God will – when the time is right – make himself known to us. Be suspicious of those who speak of secret messages or claim new revelations, as some are doing. Just because someone says they are Christian, they may not be. 
  • Live in hope – Even if we are in need of correction, God’s voice is not one of threat, condemnation or abandonment. One spiritual seeker explained it this way. “Condemnation is vague and abstract. It says: ‘You are not OK. Something is very wrong with you.’ Conviction is specific. It says: ‘What you said to your wife just now on the phone was insensitive.’ Condemnation discourages and breeds hopelessness. It gives you the feeling that nothing can ever fix your problem. But conviction encourages us. It gives us solutions to our problems. Condemnation pushes us away from God. Conviction draws us to God. The goal of condemnation is to make us give up. The goal of conviction is to help us reach our maximum potential, to be all we can be in Christ” (Charisma Magazine. Learn to discern the voice of God).

Now as the Spirit begins to work in our lives, some people might indeed suspect we are drunk. They might look at us as fools as they did of St. Francis of Assisi and his followers. My own parents, never knowingly having met Lutherans in Massachusetts, at first asked if I had joined a cult. For as a young adult, I had a synthesizing of my own faith and decided to try to live a more concretely scriptural life. And as the Spirit works within us, we might prove more brave, generous, or wiser than we ever thought possible. We might be called to live differently or risk everything.

Some people will notice these changes made by the Spirit…even when they (or we) may not understand them. Some will be inspired to follow Jesus because of this, and some will still deny him or oppose us because of it. Yet, never stop trying to cooperate with the grace offered. For through the power of the Holy Spirit, we are being grafted into God’s eternal story, not just some dusty history. With Augustine of Hippo, we might wish to pray each day:

Breathe in me, O Holy Spirit;
That my thoughts may all be holy.
Act in me, O Holy Spirit;
That my work, too, may be holy.
Draw my heart, O Holy Spirit;
That I love but what is holy.
Strengthen me, O Holy Spirit;
To defend all that is holy.
Guard me, then, O Holy Spirit;
That I always may be holy.

Amen.

Below, please find a video of our worship service. The sermon starts at about the 24:30 minute mark.(There was a medical emergency, so you will notice a break in the service. Also, someone accidentally picked up my manuscript during the emergency, hence the reference to my iPhone. It was quite the Sunday!

© 2026 The Rev. Louis Florio. All content not held under another’s copyright may not be used without permission of the author unless under terms of fair use and properly attributed. Scripture passages when used are from the NRSVue translation unless otherwise indicated.

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The Spirit is on the Move

Photo by Oliver Hihn on Unsplash

This sermon was preached on the Sixth Sunday in Easter (May 22, 2022) at Christ Lutheran Church in Fredericksburg, VA. You can listen to the sermon on my companion podcast: S1, Ep17, or watch it on our congregational YouTube channel.

         Grace and peace to you from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

        Through our Gospel lesson this morning, we have just heard part of Jesus’ farewell discourse from the night before his death. As he speaks of his departure, his death, resurrection, and ascension as well, the Apostles suspect that there are many dangers which lie in wait for them. There’s both anxiety and questions in their life. There’s also misunderstanding. As Prof. Elisabeth Johnson points out, “First Peter (John 13:36), then Thomas (14:5), then Phillip (14:8), and then Judas (not Iscariot)[i] (14:22) ask for clarification about what Jesus is telling them,”[ii] as they gather for the last time.

        Not included in today’s assigned reading, the Apostle Judas (not Iscariot), sometimes identified as Jude, has just asked, “Lord, how is it that you will reveal yourself to us and not to the world?” The answer is not found in some secret spiritual knowledge. It is not a matter of extensive study or any kind of perfection. Jesus seeks to make clear that the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, will come in a new, intimate way as a gift. Those of the world will not recognize the Spirit any more than the world has recognized Jesus. Yet that won’t stop the Spirit’s purposeful movement or power. Jesus’ children will hear that voice, and as a result, those children will share the love of God with the world.

        Yes, Jesus reveals himself through the Holy Spirit, just one part of our one Triune (Trinitarian) God…a Spirit which was, is, and always will be one with Jesus. Through that Holy Spirit on the move through circumstances and individual hearts, Jesus continues to work in the world. As noted in many Bible commentaries, Jesus’ promise stands out “that the Father will send the Holy Spirit to be alongside his disciples, to teach them and remind them of all that Jesus has said to them (John 14:26).”[iii] As Advocate, the Spirit acts like our ambassador or attorney, conveying our needs to God and guiding us -advising us, counseling us. It empowers us through grace and forgiveness and thus makes us holy. The Spirit is also called the Paraclete, meaning “called along beside.” For as predicted through the prophets, the Spirit will finally come to reside in our hearts through the experience of Pentecost. The Spirit goes with us into the world, binding us with God and in communion with one another as one holy catholic (or universal) Church.

        Just as the earth was first shaped with the God’s breathing of commands (“Let their be light!”), life came into the first human beings through God’s breath, “the breath of life.” And as the Church comes into being, the risen Jesus will breathe upon his disciples to gift them peace and guide them. Finally with the event called Pentecost, the Spirit will come to the disciples in a locked room amidst a sound like the rush of a violent wind and appearing as if tongues of fire. The Spirit, often portrayed as wind or breath, comes to breathe life into our lives, comes to protect us in our life, and call us into deeper trust of God. It is through the Spirit that the disciples finally, truly became Church, and we ourselves have come to believe. For no one can come to acknowledge Jesus as Lord without the Spirit’s help (see 1 Cor. 12:3). No one can truly live or experience an abundant life without that “breath of life”…the gift of the ever active, always present, Holy Spirit.

          Now, we don’t have time to do this right now, but if we were to break into small groups and consider how God brought us to this place, as we are on this day, we would likely identify miraculous and expansive connections – an intermingling of events and people – that have guided us, shaped us, and perhaps even thrust us into this time and place as the people we have become. Without even knowing the details of your history, I know that nothing that you’ve experienced (good or bad), none of your weaknesses or strengths, nor even any of your relationships (no matter how deep, hurtful, or blessed) has been wasted by God. God has the will and the knack for using everything for our good (see Romans 8:28) because God loves us.

        However, this love means that God is not done with us. We certainly aren’t keeping Jesus’ word perfectly even as we try to do so…that’s impossible for any human, imperfect sinner-saints that we are…so God through the Holy Spirit acts for us, and in us, and upon us. In a fallen world…a fallen life…God has not given up on you. God never gives up on us. The Spirit blows where it will, and in being part of our lives…in bringing us faith and peace…we are shaped and sanctified (made holy) over time through the Sacraments, the Word of God that we hear and read, and even through our experiences encountered through faith. We are blown forward toward God’s goal despite what choices we might make. God’s will will be done.

        Yes, with complete confidence, I can proclaim that all of us have been led here for a singular, shared – yet at the same time unique to each one of us – purpose. God is doing something in our lives whether we see it or not, feel it or not, or understand it or not. Indeed, not one of us came up with the idea of God or understanding of Jesus on our own. The Good News of Jesus was heard and received through others. It is exactly as Luther identified long ago, “[One] would find Christ must first find the Church.”[iv] You have to hear the Good News of Jesus Christ from somebody. When all is said and done, the Spirit spreads faith and increases the Church through imperfect, unfinished people like you and me.

        And is not that what we see today in Lydia’s life back in Philippi? Throughout all the Book of Acts? God’s love spreads (as an old French proverb suggests) similar to a disease…from person to person…but in a good way. Paul had a vision of someone calling for his aid, “Come over to Macedonia and help us.” As Lydia happened to hear Paul, Silas, and Timothy preach and teach, “The Lord opened her heart to respond to Paul’s message.” She already believed in God, but something changed. She grew in faith and understanding. She came to know Jesus. And that experience led her to welcome Paul into her home…welcome Jesus into her heart. That small home Church would eventually become the famous church of Philippi, and in her hospitality, we discover that relationship and community matter. Human relationship, community, is used by Spirit to make the Church and individual believers grow.   

        Throughout time, we see this repeatedly. For example, Martin Luther’s faith and understanding did not grow in isolation. He treasured the transcendent, heart-centered faith of the mystics before him (in the period of the 1000s to 1200s) – voices shared with him through both books and teaching. He learned from them of a loving God offering grace. He benefitted from the grace-filled, loving faith and guidance of his confessor, Johann von Staupitz. He learned from the witness of reformers like Jan Huss who came before him, even as he grew in the present from what became known as his Table Talks. These gatherings were simply where questions, doubts and faith were shared over food and beer among friends…perhaps as you might share about life and faith at your own table. Martin Luther and others grew in faith and found strength through such communal meals.  

        Later, Moravians, formally the United Brethren (followers of Huss’ teachings), came to better understand Martin Luther’s theology through a Lutheran named Zinzendorf who offered the Moravians protection from persecution in the early 18th century. Luther’s Catechism is still studied by the Moravians today. And as some Moravians read Luther’s Preface to the Epistle to Romans, sang and prayed, John Wesley overheard them and felt his heart “strangely warmed.” Wesley came to a deeper, more personal, enlivened faith;a witness that lives on in the faith tradition we know as Methodism. What we see here is an example of how the Holy Spirit works. Zigging and zagging through time and individuals, the Spirit draws us together, moves us apart, and drives us forward as much as Jesus was driven into the wilderness.

        So, how did you come to know Jesus? What parent, grandparent or friend spoke in such a way that opened your heart to Jesus? Was it an instantaneous change or did their faith plants seeds to grow yours over time? Perhaps you aren’t that far on your journey, and you come with deep questions…more questions than answers perhaps. Those are gift of the Spirit too. The Spirit was at work in all such moments. That’s worth thinking about, giving thanks for, and talking about perhaps as you go home today. Your story is connected directly from person to person all the way back to Paul and Lydia’s story and the story of all in the early Church. And you might not feel like it right now or recognize it, but listen closely….Your story is as sacred as what we find in any piece of scripture…your story, your experience, your struggles, your hopes are as sacred as what is recorded in the scriptures for God’s Spirit is there alongside you…in you.  

        For those here who already believe, your faith is not an accident. For those here who struggle to believe, don’t think for a moment that God is not reaching out to you. We are told that the Holy Spirit is always active, reaching out to one and all through the imperfect lives of those around us as well as through direct whispers, dreams and visions received through our hearts. We aren’t alone. The Holy Spirit is always with us even when we are not aware of it.[v] Just wait and watch. Seek and eventually, thanks to the Spirit, we will discover our sacred purpose within God’s own story and plan. Amen.


[i] “Judas (not Iscariot)” is used by the evangelist to differentiate this Apostle from Judas who betrayed Jesus. Outside of scripture, there arose a tradition to call him Saint Jude to help avoid this confusion.

[ii] Johnson, E. (May 1, 2016). Commentary on John 14:23-29. Downloaded from workingpreacher.org on May 14, 2022.

[iii] Ibid.

[iv] Martin Luther, “Sermon for the Early Christmas Service; Luke 2:15-20” (1521-1522). Luther’s Works, Sermons II. Ed. Hans J. Hillerbrand, Helmut T. Lehmann (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1974),  vol. 52: 39-40.

[v] “God of love, by the Holy Spirit you are always present. Your presence is invisible, but you live at the center of our soul, even when we are unaware of it.” – Br. Roger of Taizé

Unless otherwise indicated, all scripture quotations for this post are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) translation.

© 2022 The Rev. Louis Florio. All content not held under another’s copyright may not be used without permission of the author.

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