WHAT NEXT? WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?

‘Where do we go from here?’ is a serious question which is usually asked when problems occur as much as when we are on a road journey. When relationships change or a loved one dies, retirement looms or redundancy threatens, or when serious illness or an accident impairs health and mobility, we arrive at a crossroads in life where there is uncertainty and dilemma. ‘What next? Where do we go from here?’ is often our immediate question.
That was probably the question being asked by the disciples as they waited in Jerusalem after the Ascension of Jesus. On the day of Pentecost, the Jews all around were celebrating. For them, it was the Feast of Shavuot, the celebration of the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses on Mount Sinai. It was also a celebration of the beginning of the wheat harvest, variously called the Feast of Harvest, of Weeks, and of First Fruits. And it was the end of the Passover season. It was a very positive time for them.
But, for the disciples, the positives that had come from Christ’s Ascension were beginning to evaporate. They had been busy deciding who was to replace Judas to bring their number back to twelve (Acts 1.12-26) but how long was the ‘few days’ (Acts 1.5) which Jesus had said they had to wait before something special happened? It was now ten days since Jesus had left them and that seemed a long time. They must have been asking themselves ‘What next? Where do we go from here?’ Did their minds go back to the uncertainties of the time between the Crucifixion and the Resurrection?
And then it happened. The Authorised Version of the Bible has the lovely phrase ‘And when the day of Pentecost was fully come’ (Acts 2.1). That seems to suggest it was well on in the day, time enough for all the believers to have come together, but it also suggests that it was the right moment in God’s good time for things to happen. And happen it did, an almost indescribable event judging from the language needed to put it into words (v.2-3). But most significantly, it came ‘from heaven’ (v.2) and they were ‘filled with the Holy Spirit’ (v.4).
Then they had no doubt about what to do next and where to go. There was an overwhelming feeling that they must do what Jesus had said (Acts 1.8), to be His witnesses, starting in Jerusalem. So began the work of the Church, to reach out to others with the Good News of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
The positives of the Jewish celebration of Pentecost were overtaken by the positives of the Christian day of Pentecost. The Jewish feast of First Fruits and Harvest, when the first sheaves of harvested wheat were offered to God, became the day when the first Christian sermon, delivered by Peter (Acts 2.14-40), brought three thousand people into the Christian faith, offering their thanks to God for Jesus Christ. The Jewish feast of Shavuot, celebrating Moses’ ascent of Mount Sinai and his return with the Ten Commandments, became the day when, as the theologian Tom Wright comments, the Lord returned from His Ascension, ‘not with a written law carved on tablets of stone, but with the dynamic energy of the law, designed to be written on human hearts.’
‘Where do we go from here?’ Following the first Pentecost, the Church should have no doubt and, if we know Jesus and the power of the Holy Spirit, then we can know His positive direction and guidance.








