Numbers 11:24-30
The spirit rests on Israel's leaders
11:24 So Moses went out and told the people the words of the LORD, and he gathered seventy of the elders of the people and placed them all around the tent.
11:25 Then the LORD came down in the cloud and spoke to him and took some of the spirit that was on him and put it on the seventy elders, and when the spirit rested upon them, they prophesied. But they did not do so again.
11:26 Two men remained in the camp, one named Eldad and the other named Medad, and the spirit rested on them; they were among those registered, but they had not gone out to the tent, so they prophesied in the camp.
11:27 And a young man ran and told Moses, "Eldad and Medad are prophesying in the camp."
11:28 And Joshua son of Nun, the assistant of Moses, one of his chosen men, said, "My lord Moses, stop them!"
11:29 But Moses said to him, "Are you jealous for my sake? Would that all the Lord's people were prophets and that the LORD would put his spirit on them!"
11:30 And Moses and the elders of Israel returned to the camp.
Yeah, we ALL know “Who Dey,” don’t we, Yinzers? “Dey” are the Cincinnati Bengals, one of the division rivals of the favored Towel People. Full disclosure: I happen to like the Bengals, when I’m not rooting for the Steelers against them, for a couple of reasons. First, my son-in-law is a Bengals fan, and I really like my son-in-law. And second, I am a fan of Bengals’ quarterback, Joe Burrow, the closest thing to “Broadway Joe” in the NFL today, in case you haven’t seen his getups he wears enroute to games. (Too bad a man with such fashion class has to play for a city whose bridges look like they came out of an Erector Set.) But for the purpose of today’s sermon, let’s forget about the Bengals, the Steelers, and the skyline horror that is Cincinnati. The text is far more interesting.
Yes, sports fans, it is Pentecost Sunday, the ugly stepchild of Christian “holidays.” Christmas and Easter are the “Joe Burrow” of high holy days, while Pentecost is a beer-belied scruff bucket in a MAGA hat. And it shouldn’t be so. The birth of Jesus is truly a magical, fantastic story that grabs at the heart of human babyhood. The Holy Week narratives remind us not only of human frailty and something British author Francis Spufford called HPtFtU, which stands for the “Human Propensity to [foul] things Up.” We killed the Son of God because we “differed” from his rhetoric about what we most needed to do. Easter fixes everything. EVERYTHING, or at least launches that rocket. No wonder we dress up, decorate, and eat ourselves into oblivion over these two Christian celebrations! Then there’s Maude, er, Pentecost.
I suppose the first problem with Pentecost is that we don’t understand much about “God’s Spirit.” We get the baby in the manger and the Savior triumphant over death and the grave. These we can picture. But a “Holy Ghost”? Who is she? (Oh, I’ve gotten in a lot of trouble over the years referring to the Holy Spirit as a “she,” but she really CAN be seen in this light.) The Hebrew and Greek words we translate “Spirit” are feminine, AND, if we are made in the image of God, then God certainly embodies the whole spectrum of gender and gender expression. I have often told my congregations to think of the woman or women who most embodied the love and grace of God in their lives, and then think of this person when imagining the Holy Spirit. It makes a lot more sense than “Holy Ghost,” which conjures up images of either Casper or “The Amityville Horror,” neither of which is particularly “holy” in nature. (I guess there is that wispy apparition of the rehabilitated Anakin Skywalker who shows up in the final frames of the third Star Wars film, but his “deathbed” heroism isn’t the stuff the Spirit’s made of, is it?)
The importance of the Holy Spirit to the birth, history, and continuation of the Christian church cannot be overemphasized. In marching band, we used to say, “Without the band, football is just a game.” Without the Holy Spirit, there IS no music, no “game,” nor is there a score for either (like what I did there?). From the Holy Spirit we get the language of invitation and grace, the institution of the Lord’s Supper, and the “after dinner gifts” to send everybody home happy, and with a job to do. Need wisdom? Ask God, and the Holy Spirit will DoorDash it your way. Feeling like you have nothing to contribute to the Unfolding Kingdom of God? Trust the Holy Spirit for your giftedness, and gifted you will be. Not all of us get the dais, but the most essential spiritual gifts work in the backrooms and kitchens of the Kingdom, anyway. The Holy Spirit uses the entire human spectrum from “cradle to grave” to lead people to a relationship with the Divine, and can work through walls, be they physical, spiritual, or mental. And like “Rocky” in “Project Hail Mary,” the Spirit has superhuman hearing, so don’t be afraid to ask for what you need.
I was thrilled to see this Numbers text come up in the lectionary for Pentecost this year, bored as I am with the Acts text and its winds, tongues, and flames. Honestly, they aren’t bad metaphors for the “powerful” stuff of which the Spirit of God is capable, but there seems to be a lot of “Hollywood” going on here. While the pyrotechnics are impressive, most of the work of the Holy Spirit goes on in private, and at the depths of the human heart. I once heard the Holy Spirit described as the “Hound of Heaven,” meaning that the Spirit just keeps touching the heart, sometimes bringing a wayward soul to a moment of conviction wherein they finally say “YES” to God’s great “YES” to the world, Jesus Christ. Jesus, through the agency of the Holy Spirit, can uniquely mend the broken heart and make a person whole AND holy, when before they were just “full of holes.” I was a box-seat witness to the miracle the Holy Spirit did at St. Paul’s United Methodist Church to guide it through the COVID pandemic. Not only did the Spirit give wisdom to the St. Paul’s leadership team to get us through, but she brought the best gifts of our weekday ministry directors and staff to the fore, keeping our important childcare, preschool, and afterschool programs operating, sparing innumerable families even more COVID hardship. This is what brings us to Eldad and Medad—the miraculous, essential, and sometimes “pesky” work of the Holy Spirit.
In the Numbers text, these two fellows stayed in the Israeli camp, after the 70 elders Moses had appointed had stopped prophesying. Eldad and Medad felt the call of the Spirit of God to prophesy, but they did so all around the camp, so the “common folk” could hear the Word of the Lord. They were not part of the “in-crowd,” or the “chosen elite,” but just two guys whom the Spirit touched and sent to give a good word. A young man tattled on them to Joshua, who petitioned Moses to make them stop. This story has a parallel in the New Testament, when Jesus’ disciples—who were obviously part of the “chosen,” at least in their minds—tattled to Jesus that they had heard of a guy casting out demons and “doing good” in the name of Jesus, but he was not part of their group. They admonished Jesus to stop the man, much like Joshua wants Moses to do to Eldad and Medad. Jesus gave a timeless response: “The one who is not against us is for us.” Leave them alone, for the Spirit of God is afoot.
There are two important lessons here: The Holy Spirit will do what the Holy Spirit will do, and is no “respecter” of persons, meaning the Holy Spirit may choose to work with and through anybody who is a willing vessel. There is a randomness, at least seemingly, to the Spirit’s “methodology,” and often a kind of playfulness as well. Maybe this is another reason she gets that “Hound of Heaven” moniker? The second lesson is that we are not the gatekeepers on the work of the Holy Spirit. I’m not saying that we Christian leaders shouldn’t be on the lookout trouble stirred up by errant doctrinal teachings or persons being sucked in to harmful religious practices by bad or self-serving theology. What I AM saying is that we should be tolerant of faith expressions we may not either understand or feel completely comfortable with, ourselves. While I struggle with more “fundamental” or “evangelical” Christian philosophies and practices, I acknowledge that the Holy Spirit CAN and DOES work through these manifestations of our faith to lead some into a relationship with Jesus. I don’t abide the judgmental attitude I often see in these groups, but if persons are finding faith through them, I should acknowledge this and be thankful. I can also pray that these “new” Christians find growth through the Holy Spirit that may lead them to a more inclusive, mature understanding of what Jesus was trying to build in the Kingdom of God.
While we in the United Methodist Church do not frequently practice the “sign gifts” of the Holy Spirit such as prophecy or speaking in tongues, we do believe the Holy Spirit may still use them for good in the Body of Christ. The Pentecostal and Charismatic churches do manifest these gifts, and many have come to faith through these expressions, too. We Christian believers are admonished several times in scripture to “not attribute the work of the Holy Spirit to the devil,” meaning that, while WE may not cotton to these “showier” or outwardly demonstrative spiritual gifts, we should not declare them either “wrong” or null and void in our time, as some have. Doing so may rob the Holy Spirit of valuable avenues to lead the broader realm of humanity to faith in God. I often said in my sermons that my theology and mode of ministry might reach persons that the Black church or the Pentecostal church down the street could not reach, and vice versa. We are all part of the Body of Christ, after all. Besides, Hadad and Medad are here to remind us that the Holy Spirit may choose to use someone we have never even heard of to touch persons with the love and redemption of God! Who Dey? Dey be channels of the Spirit!
Moses’ response to this “outrage” of Hadad and Medad’s peripatetic prophesying ministry is also a lesson for us: Would that all the Lord's people were prophets and that the LORD would put his spirit on them! Moses gets it! Good leaders don’t look to RESTRICT, they recognize the wisdom of turning the Spirit loose, and encouraging “those who are not against us.” Moses did. Jesus did. And those are the Bible’s two most influential figures! May we persons of faith “borrow” the Cincinnati Bengal’s rallying cry, in this regard: “WHO Dey? WE Dey!” Amen.





