Pentecost
Being “born again”
seems to be within the exclusive domain of evangelical or Pentecostal
Protestants. You may be surprised to know that being “born again” is not the
sole monopoly of Protestants. But when Catholics use it, they typically mean
something quite different. When a Catholic says that he has been “born again,”
he refers to the transformation that God’s grace accomplished in him during
baptism. Yes, if we have been baptised, we have been “born again.”
Pope Emeritus
Benedict XVI described the Feast of the Pentecost as the feast of “the Baptism
of the Church.” It is the day the Church is “born again.” The Holy Spirit, “who
is the Lord and the Giver of Life ... has the power to sanctify, to remove
divisions, to dissolve the confusion caused by sin. ... The Spirit distributes
divine goodness and supports living beings that they may act in accordance with
that goodness. As intelligible Light, it gives meaning to prayer, invigorates
the mission of evangelisation, sets aflame the hearts of those who hear the
happy message, and inspires Christian art and liturgical music. ... It creates
faith within us at the moment of our Baptism and allows us to live as conscious
and responsible children of God, in keeping with the image of the Only-begotten
Son.”
One very helpful
and beautiful way to ponder the Spirit’s transforming work of regeneration and
rebirth is found in today’s Sequence, the theological depth of which grows on
me year by year. In the Veni, Sancte
Spiritus that we sang before the Gospel, we turned to the Holy Spirit under
the merciful titles of “father of the poor,” “giver of gifts,” the “greatest
consoler,” and invoked Him as the one who brings us to rest in God in the midst
of work, refreshment when feverish, solace when we’re mourning. We begged Him
to fill our hearts with His most blessed light. And then we asked Him to do six
things for us, six different actions of bringing to new birth, six different
ways of how each of us and the whole Church can be “born again.”
“Heal our wounds,
our strength renew”
“On our dryness
pour thy dew”
“Wash the stains
of guilt away”
“Bend the stubborn
heart and will”
“Melt the frozen,
warm the chill”
“Guide the steps
that go astray.”
Such eloquent
beauty in these ancient words of prayer. Wounded, dry, stained, stubborn,
frozen, straying: This is our natural condition. This is why we need to be
reborn, remade, re-created. But then the Sequence affirms our belief that the
Holy Spirit wants to work in us — to heal, to drench, to wash, to bend, to melt
and to guide — and then wants to send and accompany us outward, so that through
us, He may carry out His mission of sanctification in the world. In baptism,
the Spirit performs a new Pentecost, and we are reborn, where once wounded, we now
bring healing; where once dry, we now can quench the thirst of others; where
once stained, we now purify and wash; where once stubborn, we now hope to bend
others to the will of God; where once frozen, we now melt the hearts of others
and warm their chill; where once lost, we now offer guidance leading others to
Christ. And all of this is only possible with the help of the Holy Spirit, as
all our works will come to naught in His absence. Without the Holy Spirit, we
are lost.
O the wonder of
the work of the Spirit. As St Basil the Great tells us “through the Holy Spirit
comes our restoration to paradise, our ascension into the kingdom of heaven,
our return to the status of adopted sons, our liberty to call God our Father,
our being made partakers of the grace of Christ, our being called children of
light, our sharing in eternal glory – in a word, our being brought into a state
of all fullness of blessing, both in this world and in the world to come, of
all the good gifts that are in store for us.”
And the Holy
Spirit continues to work today in our Church and that work takes place most of
all at every Mass. At every mass, the Holy Spirit comes to fill the hearts of
the faithful and enkindle in us the fire of His love. The Eucharist, as Pope
Emeritus Benedict XVI, “is a ‘perpetual Pentecost’ since every time we
celebrate Mass, we receive the Holy Spirit who unites us more deeply with
Christ and transforms us into Him.” During the epiclesis, when the priest calls
down the Holy Spirit — “Veni, Sanctificator!” — He comes and carries out that
work of sanctification, transforming mere bread and wine into the Body and
Blood of Christ.
The Spirit of the
Lord not only brings new birth to the Church, He also seeks to heal and renew
the Church. And that is why we constantly need a new Pentecost. Whereas God
brings harmony and peace to everything everywhere, sin causes chaos, conflict
and division to everything everywhere — in our families, in our neighborhoods,
in our workplace, and in our church. At Pentecost, the Holy Spirit begins to
reverse all this. But, our fallen human nature is still with us, even in the
post-Pentecost Church. In the early Church as attested to in the New Testament,
we see Christians divided by division, prejudice, rivalry, hostility, and
heresy. And as church history unfolds, the Church is afflicted by ongoing
divisions and schisms. The ultimate cause of these divisions is not just
doctrinal disagreements — any more than the ultimate cause of the breakdown of
a marriage that ends in divorce, are irreconcilable differences that are
nobody’s fault. Division and conflict are the result of sin, of pride, of lack
of love or disordered love separating us from God, the source of harmony and
unity. We choose to follow our own human spirit or the spirit of the world,
rather than listen and heed the promptings of the Spirit of God. That is why
more than ever, our parish, in fact all parishes, require a new Pentecost.
And so we must
continue to be “born again.” We had experienced new birth at our baptism and we
must continue to experience a regeneration at every Eucharist and whenever we
celebrate the sacrament of Penance. The Sacraments, the work of the Holy
Spirit, continue to make present the reality of Pentecost in our lives. We must
be born again and we cannot allow anything to thwart our continual rebirth into
Christ. Christianity is a life of beginnings, of continual renewal. Each
Christian participates in his own cycle of failure and repentance, insecurity
and confidence, clarity and error, passions that threaten to swamp reason, and
so many other apparent opposites which do battle in our souls for the upper
hand. We must constantly allow the Spirit to heal, drench, wash, bend, melt and
guide us. The moment we cease to do so, not only will inertia and atrophy set
in, but our spiritual death is assured.
Perhaps, we doubt
whether we or others in our parish are capable of change or capable of
experiencing a new Pentecost. Doubt no longer. Today, we are all given a chance
to be “born again.” As St. John Chrysostom once preached on Pentecost:
"Today for us, earth is made heaven, not with stars descending to the
earth, but with apostles ascending to heaven, because a copious grace of the
Holy Spirit is poured out, and the orb of the earth has been turned into
heaven, not changing nature, but fixing the will. The Holy Spirit found a
publican and turned him into an evangelist; he found a persecutor, and rendered
him an apostle; he found a thief, and he guided him into Paradise; He found a
prostitute and made her chaste like a virgin; he found wise men and turned them
into evangelists; he chased out evil and led in goodness; he ended slavery, and
he introduced liberty; he pardoned debt and offered the grace of God.” If the
Holy Spirit can do all this, then it is not impossible for Him to change you or
renew this parish.
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