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Sunday, June 01, 2025

foretold

 

Next Sunday the Church celebrates Pentecost, the outpouring of the Holy Spirit of God on all humankind fifty days after Jesus’ return from the dead.

Luke records for us that the disciples were sitting/enthroned in an inner chamber when the Spirit came upon them with the sound of a violent wind and what looked like flames dividing and sitting on them. This Spirit caused them to declare the great things of God such that visitors to Jerusalem — come to attend the pilgrim festival — from all around the Greco-Roman world, including Crete, heard them in their own birth-languages. The crowd are amazed and ask, ‘What does this desire to be?’ but others believed the disciples to be drunk.

Peter challenges this conclusion, claiming, instead, that what they were witnessing was the fulfilment of prophetic utterances by the Jewish prophet Joel, who foretold a time when God would pour out his Spirit upon all flesh, such that ‘your sons and daughters shall prophesy,’ the young receive prophetic visions and the elders dream prophetic dreams. Peter underlines the inclusion of both men and women in this eruption, which would be validated by portents in the heavens and signs on the earth, blood and fire and smoke. And all who called upon the Lord’s name would be rescued and preserved.

Luke writes for a primarily gentile audience, shaped by Greek mythology. And in the retelling of the Church calendar, Acts 2 (the Day of Pentecost) follows Acts 16 (Paul in Philippi). Both are linked in the Greek imagination to Delphi.

The Temple of Apollo at Delphi played a central role in their world. Indeed, many believed it to be situated at the centre of the world. But the centrality had more to do with the prophetic utterances of the Oracle, whose insight was sought by anyone about to undertake any civil, political venture.

The young god Apollo (a son of Zeus, so of the younger generation of Olympians), who was already associated with prophecy, took control of Delphi from older gods. Seeking priests to serve him, he chose Cretan sailors (or possibly pirates). They joined the established priestesses, who had long served at the temple complex. Once upon a time, they had sought prophecy in dreams, but at some point Dionysus, the god of wine, another son of Zeus and half-brother of Apollo — and a death-and-resurrection god — had also come to Delphi, and now the priestesses sought prophecy through a form of intoxication. As supplicants came in hope of a prophetic word to guide them, the priestess would enter the inner chamber, where she would sit on a throne, and inhale a mind-altering smoke, the spirit of divination.

But the Titan Gaia was angry with Apollo for killing the giant serpent Python (in an act of self defence) and sought to have him thrown into Tartarus, the jail deep within the underworld. Gaia also gave mortals in general the ability to receive dreams and visions, so that they would no longer come to Delphi to seek the utterances of the Pythia, the priestess who took her ceremonial name from Python. Zeus, however, ensured the safety of his son, and revoked Gaia’s gift to mortals, guaranteeing Delphi’s central place in the world.

From Cretans to smoke, from pilgrims from every corner of the world to what might be perceived as drunken prophetic utterances, from an alleged centre of the world to inner chambers and thrones, from dreams and visions released released or withheld, there are so many parallels between Pentecost and Delphi. While the details might be unfamiliar, it is hard to imagine Luke’s audience finding the account unrecognisable.

But by placing this story at the outset of his Acts of the Apostles, Luke is making a foretelling of his own: that the Spirit that empowers mortals to participate in the life of God — specifically in the risen life of Jesus — will come to usurp the spirit that gave prophetic utterances to the Oracle at Delphi.

That the stories of the gods of Olympus, the stories they had known since birth, the stories of their native tongue, would find their fulfilment in the story of the Jewish people whose own story was fulfilled in Jesus the anointed Lord, through whom all might be saved from the perils of this uncertain age.

The thing about the utterances of the Pythia was that they were ambiguous, prone to be interpreted in line with the desires of the enquirer. So, for example, Croesus, the rich-beyond-your-wildest-dreams king of Lydia (where the first woman to become a follower in Jesus in Europe originally came from) sought the Oracle before going to war. He was told that if he crossed a certain river, he would destroy a great kingdom. Taking this to refer to his enemy, he advanced, to the destruction of his own kingdom.

When the Spirit empowered a group of Galileans to declare the great things of God in such a way that the speakers of many local languages heard and understood in their native tongue, they asked, ‘What does this [utterance] desire to be?’ What, indeed? Luke will answer that question in the story he has just begun to tell. But what will that story become in the lives of his audience? And what does it desire to be in your life, and mine, today?

 

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