B, Pentecost Sunday - Romans 8:22-27 "Eager Expectation"
Text – Romans
8:22-27
We
know that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth
right up to the present time. Not only
so, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as
we wait eagerly for our adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies. For in this hope we were saved. But hope that
is seen is no hope at all. Who hopes for
what he already has? But if we hope for
what we do not yet have, we wait for it patiently. In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our
weakness. We do not know what we ought
to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groans that words
cannot express. And he who searches our
hearts knows the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for the
saints in accordance with God’s will.
Decay,
degradation, decomposition, dilapidation, deprivation, deficiency,
dispossession, disrepair, and disorder – these are some of the things that
cause suffering, pain, despair, despondency, depression, and dejection.
There
is something in everyone and everything which causes a continual breaking down.
It might be the chilling cold of the
winter onset affecting your bones, and your bodies; the lack of rain falling
from the skies; the financial crisis taking a toll on your security for the
future; or the ever-spreading threat of diseases and sicknesses, covid, or some
other disaster that seems to pursue you.
Everything in creation has something working against it, causing it to
lament, to sigh, to cry out — causing it to groan.
But
why do these things cause us to respond in such a way? Scripture tells us that it’s not just us but
the whole creation groans as it waits to be delivered from bondage, decay, and
frustration just as a one who struggles with the pains of childbirth. (Romans
8:19-22) If we take a look at our
creation we see its pain too — more and more weeds, saltier soils, erosion, deforestation,
and climate changing through humanity’s climate changing from following, to
rejecting God. There are many ecological
disasters troubling our creation today!
In
Romans we’re told creation is waiting in eager expectation. Sometimes it’s hard for us to wait with the
same eager expectation when we experience the same old thing over and over
again. The same weaknesses causing
creation to suffer and us to suffer too!
Be that as it may, what are you
waiting for? What’s your eager
expectation?
Creation’s
eager expectation is not waiting for humanity to change the climate, but for
the sons of God to be revealed! Are you
waiting for that too? Perhaps in your
weakness there’s the temptation to turn and be burdened by the seen reality of
a world going crazy, a creation in chaos?
Then
again, you might think life’s good, it’s all going well. All this groaning and moaning stuff is just
negative nonsense. People are good, there’s
no climate change! You might be eagerly
expecting many good things in life, not concerned by anything too much. But in your daily happiness are you eagerly
expecting Christ’s return? Or are there
a few things you’d like to do and see before God returns to reveal his
children?
It
is okay to have expectations and concerns in this life. However, when they become desperate or demand
top billing and push our hopes in God’s heavenly place aside, to second place, these
earthly expectations and concerns are sin.
And regardless of these earthly expectations being pleasant or bitter,
once they’re revealed in us as sin, our sin makes each of us groan!
Creation
groans too, but it waits for our redemption.
Why does it do so? Creation has
been God’s witness as humanity has plucked its eager expectation from the tree
of knowledge of good and evil time and time again. Creation was again God’s witness when it
opened its mouth to receive the blood of Abel.
And today creation is God’s witness every time we breathe contempt of
others or eagerly spray spirited gossip into the air.
But
that’s not all! Creation knows it’s
Creator who made it from nothing except his word spoken in love. Creation also knows its Creator whose blood
trickled down the wood of the cross and soaked the soil with redemption, and now
creation waits for the Creator’s return to finalise the faith of those who
believe.
Creation
also bears the Spirit of God who hovers over the water and comes through the
word of God revealing the hidden Triune God of creation. When God is revealed God will return creation’s
climate from sinful heat and coldness, to a perfect creation that glorifies the
Father, Son and Holy Spirit who made it!
We
celebrate Pentecost today! At the first
Pentecost after Jesus’ ascension, God sent the Spirit to walk beside us and
counsel us in faith and hope. Although
we so often eagerly expect everything in creation other than the Creator, God
has eager expectations of you and me! He
is faithful to all his baptised children willing us to come into Jesus’
presence to receive and believe the redemption we have been given, as we
continually have our sin forgiven.
The
Holy Spirit’s job is to bring us to Jesus.
His job is not to enable us to fix God’s creation, but to work a climate
change within us so he can bring us as one under Jesus! God will then fix the climate when humanity
allows the climate within to be changed from turning away from God to returning
to him in repentance.
The
Holy Spirit’s work is to make the invisible visible through faith given when we
hear the word of God (Romans 10:17). It
is the Holy Spirit’s task to put flesh on the Word of God, so the Son of God —
the Word made flesh, is revealed in us, to us.
He also gives us real hope in the day when Jesus returns, and we see him
as he is. Not only this! But he gives us eager expectation of what we
will be, as we groan in the frustrations, bondage, decay, and deadly weakness
of our human suffering and sin.
When
our weakness gets the better of us and we begin to eagerly expect creation more
than the Creator himself, it’s the Holy Spirit’s mission to bring us back to
Jesus. We might expect the Holy Spirit
as one who makes us happy but he who counsels us in God’s will sometimes needs
to give us a short swift kick refocusing us back on Christ.
Jesus says… When he (the Holy Spirit) comes, he will convict the world of guilt in regard to sin and righteousness and judgment: in regard to sin, because men do not believe in me; in regard to righteousness, because I am going to the Father, where you can see me no longer; and in regard to judgment, because the prince of this world now stands condemned. (John 16:8-11)
But the Holy Spirit will also comfort us in Christ too. If he didn’t do this his conviction would surely drive us away from Jesus in remorse or lead us away as pharisees justifying our sin. King David knew he needed the Holy Spirit’s help when his sin was exposed.
He prayed… Create in me a pure heart, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me. Do not cast me from your presence or take your Holy Spirit from me. Restore to me the joy of your salvation and grant me a willing spirit, to sustain me. (Psalm 51:10-12)
The Holy Spirit gives us a willing spirit, and this spirit bears the Spirit of Christ. With Jesus Christ en-fleshed in us we also bear the eager expectation of redemption and resurrection. Redemption, because Christ saved you at the cross by taking your place in death; and resurrection, because he was raised in all power over your sin and your death, so you too might eagerly await your resurrection into heaven.
Because the Holy Spirit comes from the Father and the Son he speaks only what he hears from the Father and the Son. Therefore, he bears the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, the truth of God that names what needs to be named in us.
Jesus says, "I tell you the truth, everyone who sins is a slave to sin. Now a slave has no permanent place in the family, but a son belongs to it forever. So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed." (John 8:34-36)
So, the Holy Spirit, names you a sinner, but a sinner whose sin has had its power removed by the Son who sets you free. Right now, you are being released from bondage, weakness, and frustration, even in the midst of decay and death. God has freed you so you can allow the light of Christ to dispel the darkness of sin within. God has freed you and now continually and faithfully sends the Holy Spirit to guide you and keep you in Christ. And you can wait in hope when on the last day the Holy Spirit will raise you and give you an eternal life of peace and joy.
And as we wait for Christ’s return God’s promise to you is this: “I will pour out my Spirit on all people. And everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.’ (Acts 2:17a & 21) Amen.