On earth as it is in heaven?

Pentecost 2026

On the day of Pentecost, something extraordinary happened. The Holy Spirit fell on a room full of frightened, uncertain people, and suddenly they found themselves speaking in languages they had never learned. And the crowds outside were astonished, not because everyone was saying the same thing in the same way, but because each person heard the good news in their own language, the voice and cadence of home.

The Holy Spirit honoured every language, every people, every place of origin. Parthians and Medes, people from Mesopotamia and Cappadocia, visitors from Rome and from North Africa, all hearing the same message, each voiced in a way which was familiar to them. Difference and diversity was not the problem. Diversity was inherent in how the Spirit chose to speak.

So this is where the Church begins: not with uniformity, but with a Spirit-filled community that holds together people of every nation and background.  And then, watch what happens next: as the weeks and months unfold in the early chapters of Acts, we see what that Pentecost community becomes in practice.  St Luke gives us two pictures of this, in chapters two and four of Acts.  All the believers were together and held everything in common. They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need. They broke bread in each other’s homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts. There were no needy people among them, because those who owned land or houses sold them and brought the proceeds to the apostles, to be distributed to anyone who had need.

This is a community defined by how it loves and shares, not by who it excludes.  It crossed every social boundary of the ancient world. Wealthy landowners and day labourers; Jewish believers and Greek converts; men and women; the respectable and the marginalised, all held together by a common life rooted in the love of Christ.  And everyone notices!  Luke tells us they enjoyed the favour of all the people.  There was something visible, something distinctive about this community: you could see, from the outside, that something different was going on here. People were being cared for and nobody was being left behind.  The vulnerable, the widow, the orphan, the stranger, they all had a place at the table.  This is what the Holy Spirit produces.  Not just a warm feeling when they gather in worship or prayer, but a whole new way of living together.

Now, I want to make a connection that might surprise you, and I want to make it carefully lest I be misunderstood.  It involves a loaded and often divisive word: nationalism.  The Christian community we see emerging from Pentecost in the Book of Acts is a picture of what human society, at its best, is meant to look like.  And when we talk about nations, about what a nation is for and what holds it together and defines it, the Acts vision has something urgent and important to say in answer to the growing tide of nationalism around the world, including in our own country.

We have watched versions of nationalism grow, versions that are built on fear, on grievance, on the idea that our nation can only thrive if we define ourselves against someone else, the immigrant, the outsider, the other.  We have seen nationalism weaponised by politicians and influencers who wrap themselves in religious imagery while pursuing agendas of exclusion and division.  That version of nationalism is rightly challenged by followers of Christ as it is entirely at odds with the ministry of Jesus and the Holy Spirit-inspired Pentecost community of inclusion, empowerment and love which we celebrate today.

But this is not the only vision of nationhood and nationalism available.  If by nationalism we mean a way of defining what makes us cohesive as a nation, what our shared values and vision are, what both the breadth and the limits of our sense of nationhood are, Christians have, in the post-Pentecost community of believers, a wonderful model to draw upon.  And we, the Church, as people inspired by that same Spirit, absolutely must stand up for that vision in times like these.

Earlier this year, the former Bishop of Leeds, Nick Baines, published a substantial and thoughtful report called Reimagining Europe.  It is a serious piece of work, and I commend it to you.  In it, Bishop Nick makes a careful argument that nationalism, properly understood, is not inherently destructive. He points out that civic nationalism, a shared sense of belonging rooted in common values, mutual obligation, and the rule of law, has provided the foundation for democracy, for the welfare state, for public education, for all the institutions that exist to serve the common good rather than the powerful few. This is a nationalism which gives a sense of belonging, interdependence and shared values; a national identity which makes for a stable, safe society in which all may flourish within a clear legal and constitutional framework.  The problem, he argues, is not nationalism itself, but the ethnic, exclusionary version of nationalism which hijacks the language of national identity for its own narrow purposes.

Bishop Nick goes further.  He says that Christians are particularly well placed to offer a different vision because the Church, at its best, is already a community that holds together people of every background in a common life shaped by shared values.  Church communities practise, however imperfectly, what a genuinely inclusive community looks like.  And we have something transformative to say about how nations could similarly thrive if we draw upon the vision of the early Church in Acts as a model of communal living and interdependence.

That argument feels urgent right now. We are living in a time when the settlement that has kept Europe largely at peace for eighty years is under serious strain. The war in Ukraine is not just a distant tragedy. It is a stark reminder of what happens when one nation decides that another has no right to exist, no right to its own identity, its own language, its own place in the world. Thousands of people are dying because a neighbouring power refuses to honour the particular dignity of a particular nation. And across Europe more broadly, we are watching the slow erosion of the values that have underpinned our common life since 1945. The rule of law, the rights of minorities, the independence of courts and press, the right to trial by jury, the willingness to pool some sovereignty for the common good of all, the concept that telling the truth in public life matters.  These things are being quietly dismantled in some places, and loudly trashed in others, with no commitment to finding positive new structures, safeguards and shared moral vision to take the place of that hard-won scaffolding which sought peace, stability, mutual respect and flourishing.

This is the moment for Christians to speak, not with anger or with partisan political noise, but with the clear and grounded voice of people who know, from their own Scriptures and their own communal life, what genuine mutual flourishing looks like.

A nationalism worth the name is not about who we keep out. It is about what we hold in common. It is about the kind of society we are building together: whether the vulnerable are cared for, whether the stranger is welcomed, whether the rule of law applies equally to everyone, whether truth matters, whether the next generation inherits something worth having, whether our shared planet, its natural environment, climate and resources remain sustainable and liveable.

That is the Acts vision, scaled up. God’s people are called to be a holy nation, a model of what an earthly nation might also strive to become: a community of people, rooted in a particular place, shaped by particular values, committed to the common good of all who live among them. Not because they are all the same, but because they are all held within the same generous, costly, inclusive love. We know this as the love of Jesus. And we should seek to spread that love, not by conquest, but by being the pervasive and irresistible aroma of Christ in the world. We should love as lavishly as those first-generation Christians did so that everyone notices how we love one another, and how we model holy nationhood in our church communities. The fragrance of Jesus must fill the world around us as we live his risen life together in the power of the Holy Spirit.

Pentecost did not erase the nationhood of all those diverse people. The Holy Spirit redeemed their nationhood by revealing a new way of living communally. They received the Gospel in their own tongue and the Holy Spirit revealed to them what belonging to a people could look like when it is animated by something larger than fear or pride or grievance.

That is the vision we are called to embody in the common life of our church community, and in the way we speak into the public conversation of our times. May the Holy Spirit fall upon us, and equip us with the courage, and the clarity, to do so. Amen.

The Holy Spirit raised people’s eyes above their earthly nationhood to give them a fresh vision of society. (Sculpture on Holy Island, Northumbria – photo by Nick Morgan 2024)

Just as we are called to abide in the love of Jesus, just as Jesus abides in the love of God the Father, so must the world abide in our love.

A sermon given on Remembrance Sunday, 2019 – St Mary’s Church, Boston Spa


Readings: Revelation 21:1-7 John 15:12-17

A wall-mounted War Memorial in a a Church.

Today we pause for two minutes’ silence marking the Armistice, the end of the Great War, and gather all around the country and the commonwealth in remembrance of those who in two world wars (and in subsequent wars and conflicts) have paid the ultimate price for peace, as well as those whose lives, bodies and minds have been dramatically changed through their service in our armed forces. It is right and proper to look back with gratitude to those who lost their lives in conflicts. Some of you here today may have very personal reasons for doing so, and it is our honour to stand alongside you as you remember friends, comrades, and perhaps family members. You are not alone: we will remember, with you.


That is one aspect of Remembrance Sunday which will be focused upon later in this service, and again at the village war memorial, and it is a crucial aspect. But there is another, and that is to reflect on the sins of the world (that is to say, the many reasons for war and violent conflict), and to commit ourselves to peace. We cannot ever become so comfortable or complacent that we take peace for granted, either internationally, or even within our own nation. It is part and parcel of the human condition that nations “furiously rage together” as the Psalmist puts it.

Stained glass window featuring a BBC microphone, doves of peace and the caption Nation Shall Speak Peace Unto Nation
Nation shall speak peace unto nation (window detail in All Saints’ Church, Thorp Arch)

Often this is the result of worldviews being in conflict: of opposing visions of the future. Visions in which national boundaries are defined in different ways; or how political settlements between regions, or nations are envisaged. Differing visions of access to resources; visions of different religions dominating politically – though this is statistically much rarer as a cause of war than one is often led to believe. The way we see the world, our vision of what the future ought to hold, is important. It is the job not only of politicians, but of all of us, to keep our eye on the ball: to look not only at the international situation, but also to look at our own nation with a self-critical eye and question where our future lies – to question our vision of ourselves and our own country.

An election campaign is an opportunity to ask ourselves: what is our vision?.

The current General Election campaign brings this into sharp focus, and we should be questioning those who would have us vote for them, and indeed question ourselves: what is our vision for the future of our country? And we need to question ourselves honestly, because the vision which emerges in a society comes from within us: it comes from the human heart. George Orwell, in his essay “Freedom of the Park” (in 1945) wrote this: “…the relative freedom which we enjoy depends on public opinion. The law is no protection. Governments make laws, but whether they are carried out, and how the police behave, depends on the general temper of the country. If large numbers of people are interested in freedom of speech, there will be freedom of speech, even if the law forbids it; if public opinion is sluggish, inconvenient minorities will be persecuted, even if laws exist to protect them.” These remain, sadly, prophetic words. Where are our hearts leading us? What is our vision?

Sculpture: God's hand holding the universe.
“My Kingdom is not of this world.”


This is about the values which inform and underpin our communal life as human beings who have to share the world and its resources. If those are not God’s values, not God’s vision, then true peace will not reign on earth. As Jesus said to Pilate at his trial “My kingdom is not of this world.” So, when we look to visions of God’s Kingdom in the Bible, we are not reading a political manifesto, but we are getting a glimpse of what the eternal Kingdom of God will eventually look like. John the Divine, who wrote the Book of Revelation which we heard from in our first reading, tells us about the world being recreated as its maker intended. It’s a vision of God’s rule: a new creation in which the nations of the earth are no more and are replaced with God’s holy city: a new Jerusalem coming down from heaven. God’s holy city is something we are called to look towards: a far bigger vision than any national vision. And if our churches, our village, our nation and our world is to gain that vision, the hearts of people need to be turned towards God. Seeing ourselves in our proper perspective, with humility before the authority of God – that is what is needed.

We are called to love one another as Christ has loved us.

Often, conflict is the result of human vanity and arrogance. The Bible’s vision is of humanity knowing that God is the only true authority and placing itself under God’s rule. If all humanity had God’s heart and saw the world through God’s eyes, there would be no wars.

We are called to abide in the love of Jesus, just as Jesus abides in the Father’s love. We are called to love one another as Jesus has loved us – even to the point of laying down his life for us. That is the vision we aspire to.

Every nation is led by the vision its people allow to flourish.

Every nation is led by the vision its people allow to flourish. Where a nation has a flawed or evil vision, God’s people are called to challenge it. We are all led by what lies in our hearts, and if we are serious about wanting peace in the world, we should start by asking God to change our own hearts by inviting Jesus into our lives to transform us by the power of the Holy Spirit. You, me, us. Abiding in the love of Jesus.

Our vision needs to be big. Massive. A world vision to match God’s. A vision which unfolds locally, here in Boston Spa. A vision which starts in each of our hearts, but which looks outward, and spreads generously, lavishly, just like God’s love. Just as we are called to abide in the love of Jesus, just as Jesus abides in the love of God the Father, so must the world abide in our love. That is the legacy we should seek for those who have given their lives in the service of our nation in the hope of peace: that we become people, and are part of a nation and international community which walks in God’s ways and abides in God’s love. God’s generous, lavish love. May peace and love flourish among us. Amen.

Just as we are called to abide in the love of Jesus, just as Jesus abides in the love of God the Father, so must the world abide in our love. (Photo: the gates of St Mary’s Church, Masham, Nov. 2018)