: Wow! What a day!

Pentecost is regarded as the birthday of the Christian Church, and the start of its mission to the world, but the disciples of Jesus didn’t know that as, 50 days after the Passover, when Jesus was crucified and they had discovered His empty tomb, they met together for the celebration of the festival of Shavuot, the ‘Feast of Weeks’, as all faithful Jews were doing.
Shavuot marks the time when the Jews received the Torah on Mount Sinai, the books of the Law which were given to Moses. It is considered a highly important historical event and so is one of the three great festivals still celebrated by the Jews.
It was not just the disciples who were gathered together, it was ‘all the believers’ (Acts 2.1[GNB]) and none of them could have been aware that it was going to be ‘one of those days’. But suddenly, and all translations stress the suddenness, the unexpectedness of it, something happened.
And what did happen? Luke must be recording the words that the disciples used in describing it to him. There was a sound ‘like a strong wind blowing’ and the sight of ‘what looked like tongues of fire which … touched each person there’ (v.2-3[GNB]). Luke explains what it meant, ‘they were all filled with the Holy Spirit’ (v.4), God’s Spirit promised to the believers by Jesus (John 15.26).
That experience, amazing in itself, was not the only thing that made this day unforgettable. The believers found themselves speaking in what were, to them, strange languages, but languages which people from at least a dozen different places (Acts 2.9-10) could understand. The believers, particularly Peter (v.14), also found they had the courage to speak out boldly about Jesus and, by the end of the day, 3,000 people had joined the believers.
Wow! What a day! It had been one of those days they would never forget, and neither would the Church, for we celebrate it, joyfully, at Pentecost.








