2018, May 20 ~ Acts 2:1-21 and Romans 8:22-27
Acts 2:1-21
The book called “The Acts of the Apostles” was written around 85 to 90 CE by the anonymous author of the Gospel According to Luke. The first 15 chapters of Acts are a didactic “history” of the early Jesus Follower Movement starting with the Ascension. The last 13 chapters describe Paul’s Missionary Journeys – not always consistently with Paul’s letters.
The Gospel According to Luke and Acts of the Apostles see the Holy Spirit as the driving force for all that happens. The events of today’s reading exemplify this.
Pentecost (also known in Judaism as Shavuot and the Feast of Weeks) celebrated the Spring Harvest 50 days after Passover. It was observed in Ancient Israel from at least the Fifth Century BCE and was one of three feasts in which Jews came to the Temple in Jerusalem to make offerings. It is therefore not surprising that Acts reports that there were large numbers of devout Jews in Jerusalem (v.5) for Pentecost.
After the Destruction of the Temple in 70 CE, offerings could no longer be made there. The feast then became a celebration of the giving of the Torah 50 days after (according to the Book of Exodus) the Israelites celebrated the First Passover and left Egypt.
Today’s Pentecost Story contains images of fire and wind – common “descriptions” of the Spirit that knows no boundaries.
Many Bible scholars note that persons’ hearing the disciples speaking their own languages (v.11) is seen as the Spirit’s reversal of the Tower of Babel Story in which YHWH confused the languages of the earth (Gen.11:9). The Babel Story is generally considered an “etiology” (a myth-story of origins) rather than a literal account about the multiplicity of languages on earth.
Romans 8:22-27
Paul’s letter to the Romans was his longest, last and most complex letter. It was written in the late 50s or early 60s (CE) to a Jesus Follower community that Paul did not establish. Among other messages in the letter, Paul sought to encourage respectful and supportive relationships between the Gentile Jesus Followers and the Jewish Jesus Followers in Rome.
Paul died in 62 or 63 CE. Accordingly, the Temple in Jerusalem (which was destroyed in 70) was in full operation all during Paul’s life. As a Jew who was also a Jesus Follower, Paul continued to have expectations about the fullness of the Coming of the Messiah. This is the “glory about to be revealed to us” (v.18).
Paul’s views were “apocalyptic” (anticipating a breakthrough from the current time to a new and better age). In today’s reading, he used the image of “freedom of the glory of God” to represent the new age, and metaphors of labor pains (v.22) and waiting for adoption and redemption (v.23) as characteristics of the transitional time to this fullness.
Like most apocalyptic writers, Paul sees God as the moving force for this change (v.27) by God’s willing that the Spirit help us to pray (v. 26).