Babel?

The Feast of Pentecost; 28 May 2023; Day of Pentecost A (RCL); Acts 2:1-21; Psalm 104:25-35, 37; 1 Corinthians 12:3b-13; John 7:37-39.

I know I have heard sermons, and have probably preached one or two myself, claiming that Pentecost undoes Babel. In the story of the Tower of Babel, all the people had one language, and set out to build a ziggurat, so they could stay in one place. So, God came down and confused their languages, and scattered them over the face of the earth. It’s a wonderful etiology for the existence of the multiplicity of languages.

Only recently did I read an article that forced me to reconsider what I thought I know about Babel and Pentecost. I can’t remember where I read it, but the gist was that what God considered inappropriate about Babel was not the ziggurat, but the fact that the people had intended to stay at Babel. When God had kicked our primal parents out of the garden, God had sent them to populate the earth, to spread out on its face, and “be fruitful and multiply.” Humanity was to have husbandry over the whole earth.

Babel threatened God’s intention by stopping the spread of humanity. So, God confused their language. That makes the story of Babel not just an etiology of the multiplicity of languages, but also of the spread of humanity across the face of the earth.

Luke’s account of Pentecost does not “undo” Babel, but continues the process. People from all over the inhabited world had gathered in Jerusalem for the Feast of Shavuot (Weeks), and they hear in their own languages the disciples recounting the mighty acts of God. So, now, not only are humans scattered over the face of the earth, but as these pilgrims return home, so will the accounts of God’s mighty acts be disseminated across the earth as well.

I think this understanding can help us undo some of the supersessionism implicit in Luke’s story. Shavuot celebrates the gift of Torah on Sinai, and Luke chose Pentecost to contrast the gift of the Spirit to the gift of the Law (recall the prophecies of both Ezekiel and Jeremiah that in the coming day, God would replace the law written on stone with a law written on hearts of flesh). The tongues of fire recall the pillar of fire leading the people through the wilderness. Here the fire rests on each individual, rather than over the whole people. In these ways, we have often read Luke as implying that the Church is recapitulating or fulfilling the history of God’s people related in the scripture of his day.

Instead, perhaps, we could read the story of Pentecost as continuing God’s desire for the spread of accounts of God’s might acts across the earth. The fact that the disciples speak in the languages of the people gathered, rather than all the people again speaking one language would fit with Luke’s story of Paul spreading the word of God’s deeds to all people, without undoing the diversity of languages and cultures.

Greater works

Pentecost; 5 June 2022; Day of Pentecost C (RCL); Acts 2:1-21; Psalm 104:25-35, 37; Romans 8:14-17; John 14:8-17, 25-27.

Luke has loaded these verses in Acts with a wealth of intertextual references. There is the reference to the creation story (God’s breath blowing over the primal chaos), the pillar of fire in the wilderness, and of course the quasi-reversal of Babel (the story of Babel is one of the optional readings on this day).

Continue reading “Greater works”

Spirit in the material world

The Feast of Pentecost; 31 May 2020; Pentecost A (RCL); Acts 2:1-21; Psalm 104:25-35, 37; 1 Corinthians 12:3b-13; John 20:19-23.

When this shelter-in-place all started back in March (March 22, the Fourth Sunday in Lent, was our first virtual service), I though that perhaps my Pentecost, we might be gathering for in-person worship again. That was optimistic. We are still weeks, if not months, away from in-person worship. It has been an event-filled eight weeks so far.

Continue reading “Spirit in the material world”

Each in our own dialect

9 June 2019
The Feast of Pentecost
Pentecost C (RCL)

Genesis 11:1-9
Psalm 104:25-35, 37
Acts 2:1-21
John 14:8-17, 25-27

I have often heard it preached (and probably preached it myself), that Pentecost undoes Babel. But I don’t think that’s true. The point of Babel seems to me that God desire diversity, and wants the human race scattered over the face of the earth. God desire a variety of languages and experiences, so that we may learn from each other how others see God. Continue reading “Each in our own dialect”