Genesis 11:1-9, Acts 2:1-21
The story of the Tower of Babel in Genesis is an origin myth, the kind of myth that explains how something came to be. The Tower of Babel explained to the ancient Hebrews why there are many languages, but the story goes much deeper than a “how the tiger got its stripes” kind of story. The Tower of Babel deals with the consequences of human hubris. Hubris is more than pride in doing things well. Hubris is arrogance, an over-confidence usually due in part to a failure to recognize that we have limitations; that we don’t know and understand everything.
The hubris of the people who decide to build the tower includes the conviction that this tower is the right way to reach God – the right way for everyone. Usually, what we think is good we are likely to think is good for everybody. What we think is bad we are likely to think is bad for everybody. It’s hard to get outside our own perspective to see the way things look to others. The tower builders in Genesis are so sure of their perspective that their stairway to heaven becomes a monument to their conviction that they’re right, a colossal stone sign that says, “My way or the highway.” The problem is that “My way or the highway” always leads to violence; it leads to forcing something on someone else, against that person’s will. Three times in the Genesis passage the people say, “Let us” – let us make bricks, let us build, let us make a name. But the “us” doesn’t really include everyone because not everyone has a voice in this; I suspect the enslaved people carrying the bricks didn’t. “Us” also doesn’t include God. My way or the highway is not God’s way. In the story, mid-way through the tower’s construction, God confuses the people’s speech, bringing the entire project to a halt.
The Acts passage tells the story of Pentecost. It’s a story that doesn’t see different languages as a threat. The disciples were scattered in fear after Jesus’ crucifixion. On Easter, they were amazed when the risen Jesus appeared to them, but in the first chapter of Acts, Jesus abandons them again. He promises that they will receive the Holy Spirit, which will give them the power to be his witnesses to the ends of the earth. Until then, he says, they are to wait in Jerusalem. And then he’s gone.
They’re waiting in Jerusalem, gathered in one place, when suddenly there is the sound of the rush of a mighty wind. Flames appear above each of the disciples. Without warning, these Galilean fishermen begin speaking languages that every Jew gathered from the Diaspora can understand. The message they hear, each in their own native tongue, is the good news of God’s deeds of power. The skeptics in the crowd believe the disciples might just be drunk, but Peter stands before the crowd and quotes from the prophet Joel. Joel says God’s Spirit will be poured out on all flesh – all people – men and women, slave and free. All people will have the power to tell the truth, to reveal God’s truth on God’s behalf.
Marcus Borg writes, “The coming of the Spirit is the reversal of Babel, the beginning of the reunion of the human community.” We are in the middle of the ongoing Pentecost; the wind of Pentecost is pushing us even now to speak and listen to new languages. The different languages in Acts are a metaphor for being able to reach across the chasms of difference that can divide us, but our reaching across the divide has less to do with what we say and everything to do with the way we say it. In our increasingly polarized culture, our reach across the divide must begin with a rejection of hubris, a reclaiming of Christ-like humility, and time spent learning about each other, learning to understand each other.
Perhaps the Spirit is blowing us toward a deeper understanding and respect for what it means to be “spiritual but not religious,” or what it means to be suspicious of organized religion, or even what it means to believe nothing at all. The Church doesn’t own or control the Holy Spirit. As Jesus told Nicodemus, “The wind blows where it chooses, and you hear the sound of it, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes.” The world in which we live is a world of many languages and perspectives, many ways of being, but it is a world in which God is already at work, and not just through people who believe what we believe or who want what we want; not just in the Church but far beyond it.
Perhaps the Holy Spirit is blowing us towards reinventing the church, and I don’t just mean what kind of music we listen to on Sunday mornings. Pentecost is a never-ending story, and the Spirit surprises us all.
© Joanne Whitt 2024 all rights reserved.
Resources:
Chapter 2, “The Tower of Babel,” Reinhold Niebuhr’s Beyond Tragedy.
Robert Coote and Robert Ord, The Bible’s First History.