Pentecost
Sunday
Since Easter the first readings have
been taken from the Acts of the Apostles. Those responsible for the arrangement
and the content of our lectionary must have been truly inspired. We have been
recalling the early days of the Church, its staggering growth, juxtaposed
against a multitude of sufferings. All this was seen by St. Luke, the author of
this remarkable book, as a direct result of that memorable day of Pentecost. The
secret of their resilience was not found in the noble human spirit, it sprang
from the power of the Holy Spirit. Thus, the Acts of the Apostles makes great
reading, but it is not meant to be nostalgic and sentimental. Rather the
stories of conversions, preachings, missionary journeys and rapid church growth
are there to inspire us — for we too
have received the same Holy Spirit.
In 1968 Patriarch Ignatius, the
Orthodox Metropolitan of Latakia, gave an amazing address at the Assembly of
the World Council of Churches. In it he spoke of the role of the Holy Spirit in
the Church in a striking and memorable way:
Without the Holy Spirit God is far
away.
Christ stays in the past,
The Gospel is simply an organisation,
Authority is a matter of propaganda,
The Liturgy is no more than an
evolution,
Christian loving a slave mentality.
But in the Holy Spirit
The cosmos is resurrected and grows
with the birth pangs of the kingdom.
The Risen Christ is there,
The Gospel is the power of life,
The Church shows forth the life of
the Trinity,
Authority is a liberating science,
Mission is a Pentecost,
The Liturgy is both renewal and
anticipation,
Human action is deified.
Therefore, the Church without the
Holy Spirit is not the Church. In the Holy Spirit the Church “lives and moves
and has its being”. It is sad that so many individual believers live as if the
Holy Spirit had never come, to treat the Church as a purely human institution
that either needs to be reinvented to bring it into the twenty first century or
has to be safeguarded as if it has fallen into unredeemable heresy. There is
also a great temptation to be in the grips of two extremes that confuses the
relationship between the Spirit and the Church. On the one hand, we have a
humanism that excludes the activity of the Spirit from the Church, and on the
other hand, we have a pietism that reduces the activity of the Spirit to some
form of emotionalism.
In a world that has grown accustomed
to defining every issue according the human categories, the members of the
Church are tempted to follow suit with little discernment between being
"in the Holy Spirit" and being "without the Holy Spirit". What
we often do as a Church is often governed by principles of utility, expediency,
efficiency, suitability, and marketability, rather than just being faithful to
the voice of the Holy Spirit who continues to communicate the will of the
Father through the revelation of the Son. In fact, anyone caught discussing the
role of the Holy Spirit in the decision-making process risk being accused of
over-simplification. On the other end of the spectrum, with the rise of
Pentecostalism and its influence on Catholic Culture and ecclesial communities,
the presence of Spirit is often mistaken for emotional hype. Here, reason is
subjected to suspicion and those who caution prudence often find themselves
accused of being faithless. We fail to remember and recognise that there is no
opposition between faith and reason and that the presence of the Holy Spirit is
discerned from the power of love, the strength of faith, and the experience of
joy in the midst of hardship and persecution.
Many have often accused the Catholic
Church of being indifferent or at least pays little attention to the Third
Person of the Trinity. They would be surprised to learn that the Catechism of
the Catholic Church provides a central place for the Holy Spirit in relation to
the Church. The Catechism, unequivocally teaches that: “The Church, a communion
living in the faith of the apostles which she transmits, is the place where we
know the Holy Spirit (CCC 668):
- in the Scriptures He inspired;
- in the Tradition, to which the
Church Fathers are always timely witnesses;
- in the Church's Magisterium, which
He assists;
- in the sacramental liturgy,
through its words and symbols, in which the Holy Spirit puts us into communion
with Christ;
- in prayer, wherein He intercedes
for us;
- in the charisms and ministries by
which the Church is built up;
- in the signs of apostolic and
missionary life;
- in the witness of saints through
whom He manifests his holiness and continues the work of salvation.
Since he assumed his office, Pope
Francis has preached - by word and deed - a dynamic Catholic faith and a Church
that must be passionate with the mission of evangelisation. This is a Pope who believes that the Church is driven by the Holy
Spirit and God's love, not by bureaucrats or militants. He calls us to remember
this simple truth, a truth that is often forgotten when we place so much trust
in our own cleverness and devices, that the power of the Holy Spirit
is available today for all believers just as it was in the early Church. It
is the same Holy Spirit
who always calls the Church to authentic renewal. The Pope adds, that at times, “the Holy Spirit upsets us because it moves us, it makes us
walk, it pushes the Church forward.” But the problem is, according to him, we
want to “calm down the Holy Spirit, we want to tame it and this is wrong,
because the Holy Spirit is the strength of God, it's what gives us the strength
to go forward.” Our first reaction is
never to resist the pull of the Holy Spirit but to submit.
Like the apostles who were gathered
in continuous prayer together with Mary the Mother of the Lord and with the
other disciples, we confidently hope and pray that we too will experience a new
Pentecost, a new outpouring of the Holy Spirit, and then we, like Peter and the
first apostles, will be able to go out and share the gift of our faith and our
hope with a world that needs to be reminded that God has not abandoned them,
that he continues guide them, protect them, and strengthen them through the
power of the Spirit.
Come Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful and kindle in them
the fire of your love.
Send forth your Spirit, and they shall be created.
And You shall renew the face of the earth.
O, God, who by the light of
the Holy Spirit, did instruct the hearts of the faithful, grant that by the
same Holy Spirit we may be truly wise and ever enjoy His consolations, Through
Christ Our Lord, Amen.
Thank You Father. May our faith co-exist with reason and may the Holy Spirit direct each of us to always do His will. Thank you for this Pentecostal homily.
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