The Spirit Who Creates Faith: Pentecost and the External Word
Acts 2:1-21 • Joel 2:28-32
The Spirit who creates faith through the Word, the gift of the Spirit in baptism, and the Spirit's work as the "Lord and giver of life"
Lutheran
Law and Gospel, justification by faith alone
The Spirit Creates Faith Through the Word
Luther's Explanation of the Third Article
Luther's explanation of the Third Article of the Creed is one of the most concise statements of pneumatology ever written: "I cannot by my own reason or strength believe in Jesus Christ... but the Holy Spirit has called me by the Gospel." In one sentence, Luther demolishes human pride (you cannot believe on your own) and establishes the Spirit's agency (He calls through the Gospel). Pentecost is the Third Article in action: the Spirit calling through the proclaimed Word, creating the faith that saves.
Source: Martin Luther, Small Catechism (1529)
The Spirit in the Water: Baptism and Pentecost
The Lord and Giver of Life
Applications
- 1Hear the Word this week with the expectation that the Spirit is creating faith through it. Read Scripture aloud. Let the external Word do its work.
- 2Remember your baptism. The Spirit who fell at Pentecost is as close as the water that was poured on you. You are a baptized person — live like it.
- 3Trust the means of grace. The Spirit works through Word, water, bread, and wine. You do not need to climb to heaven. The Spirit has come down.
- 4Pray Veni Creator Spiritus — "Come, Creator Spirit." It is one of the oldest prayers of the church and one of the most powerful.
Prayer Suggestions
- Holy Spirit, Lord and giver of life — You have called us by the Gospel, enlightened us with Your gifts, sanctified us and kept us in the true faith. Continue Your work.
- Work through the means of grace. Be present in the Word preached, in the water poured, in the bread broken, in the wine shared. We cannot produce faith. You create it.
- For those who struggle to believe — work through the external Word. Let the hearing create the believing. Do what You did at Pentecost: drive the Word into hearts.
- Veni, Creator Spiritus. Come, Creator Spirit. Fill the hearts of Your faithful. Kindle in us the fire of Your love. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Babette's Feast (1987)
In Babette's Feast, an extraordinary meal transforms a community. The food is the means — ordinary ingredients (bread, wine, meat, cream) arranged with extraordinary love. The villagers are changed not by a sermon or a vision, but by a meal. The Spirit works the same way: through ordinary means (Word, water, bread, wine) arranged by extraordinary grace. Pentecost inaugurated the meal. The Spirit is still serving.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
You cannot produce faith from within yourself. The Spirit creates faith through the external Word. That is Pentecost — and that is every Sunday when the Word is preached.
The Spirit is as close as your baptism. You do not need a dramatic experience. You need the water, the Word, and the bread. The Spirit is already there.
Luther said he could not believe by his own reason or strength. If Luther couldn't do it, neither can you. Stop trying. Let the Spirit create what you cannot produce.
More Titles
Frequently Asked Questions
How does Lutheran theology view the Spirit's work at Pentecost?
Lutheran theology views Pentecost as the inauguration of the Spirit's ongoing work through the means of grace: the Word, baptism, and the Lord's Supper. The Spirit creates faith through the proclaimed Word (not through human effort or decision), seals believers in baptism, and sustains them through the sacraments. The Spirit is "the Lord, the giver of life" who works through ordinary means.
What are the "means of grace" in Lutheran theology?
The means of grace are the channels through which the Spirit works: the Word of God (preached and read), Baptism (water combined with God's Word), and the Lord's Supper (the body and blood of Christ). The Spirit does not bypass these means; He works through them to create and sustain faith.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the pentecost sunday sermon.