Pentecost Sunday in Ordinary Time. Year A - Sunday, May 28, 2023 (EPISODE- 422)
Readings for Sunday, May 28,  2023 - Pentecost Sunday in Ordinary Time. Year A
  FIRST READING: Acts 2:1-11
  Ps 104:1+24,  29-30, 31+34. "Lord, send out your Spirit and renew the face of the  earth."
  SECOND READING: 1 Cor 12:3b-7, 12-13
  GOSPEL ACCLAMATION ((no bibl. ref.)). Alleluia, alleluia! Come Holy Spirit, fill the hearts  of your faithful. And kindle in them the fire of your love.
  GOSPEL: John 20:19-23
  
  Image Credit: Shutterstock Licensed. Image Credit- Shutterstock Licensed. Stock Photo ID:  1881688891 - St. Louis, Missouri USA - April 15, 2019. Close Up of the  Pentecost Mosaic in the Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis with the apostles and  Mary of Nazareth engulfed by the flames of the Holy Spirit. Important  information. Editorial Use Only. Photo Contributor: Teresa Otto
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  Please listen to the audio recordings  of the Mass – (Readings, prayers, and homily), for Pentecost Sunday in Ordinary Time. Year  A - Sunday, May 28, 2023, by clicking this link here: https://soundcloud.com/user-633212303/faith-hope-and-love-solemnity-of-pentecost-a-ep-422-2023/s-ZIelkbX71cb  (EPISODE- 422)
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  The Easter Season comes to an end this weekend with the Great  Feast of Pentecost. The-descent-of-the-Holy-Spirit upon Christ's disciples.  Jesus is now very much present and powerfully active, through the abiding  presence of the Holy Spirit in the church and in his followers of every time  and place.  
  
  We, the followers of Christ, continue the wonderful work of the Kingdom. We do  this work in tangible ways - putting into action the "warming breath"  of God's Spirit of justice, love and practical care...  "God breathed into the first Human being  the day of our creation. The book of Genesis tells us that the Lord put his  lips to ours and breathed in us and gave us his spirit of life. And so we  became human beings. And John tells us that on the day of Pentecost, the risen  Lord breathed on us a second time and gave us new life. After receiving the  Holy Spirit, courage replaced caution, and a "fire" was lit in our  hearts that scatters the darkness of fear forever. We, like those first  disciples, are now a new creation. We have been called to live an "heroic  life" and to be instruments of God's peace and mercy in this beautiful  and broken world." 
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  The Holy Spirit makes us disciples, able to be the "Warm breath of human  kindness at a time of terrible coldness and need".....
  
  The Gospel today, from Saint John, tells us about the coming of the Holy  Spirit.  It is clear that these early  disciples were hiding behind closed doors, very afraid.  The coming of the Holy Spirit takes their  fears away!  These original followers of  Christ seem to need peace because that is the first greeting that the Lord  gives to them:  "Peace be with  you!" -  May we (too) know the peace  of Christ in our own lives!  With peace  comes the capacity to forgive the sins of others.  This forgiveness is clearly a gift of the  Lord, who loves us.  This gift is given  to each of us individually and also to the Church through its ministry of  service.
   
  At the heart of our Christian life, fear is taken away; peace and forgiveness  are given to us.  May we dispel the fears  of others and proclaim the peace and forgiveness given to us in Christ. 
   
  In the first reading, too, the disciples were (again) described as being  fearful……  They were still afraid to  speak publicly and to proclaim Jesus to others. Even though they knew by now  that he had Risen from the dead and had Ascended to the Heavenly Father, they had to wait for the Holy Spirit to take  hold of them and give them courage in the face of doubt, persecution, ridicule  and rejection.  Perhaps at times, we,  too, may be shy about proclaiming our faith in the Lord.  Perhaps today, we can pray for this Spirit to  descend upon us and to give us renewed courage so that our faith becomes so  much a part of ourselves that it comes naturally to us and makes it easier to  speak of our faith in an unforced manner.
   
  Our gifts are different. Each person has different gifts.  We need all the gifts that each person has so  that we can continue the work of Christ in our world.  How different our world looks when we begin  to recognise that each person brings his or her own gifts and that we need  those gifts to live in the fullness of Jesus Christ. 
   
  I have my favourite quotes about the Holy Spirit…  there is something about this text that I do  believe captures the truth about the power and action of the Holy Spirit in our  lives…..   it is written by the brilliant Jesuit writer Karl Rahner. He writes: 
  "Did we ever do a kindness to a person from whom we could not expect as  much of a shadow of gratitude or appreciation, while at the same time, we had  not even the compensation of feeling that we had acted unselfishly or decently  in doing so?  Let us look into our lives,  then, and see if we can discover whether any such experience ever came our way.  If we find that it did, we may be sure that the spirit was at work within us  then, and eternity and ourselves had a brief encounter, that the spirit means  more than an ingredient in the make-up of a transient world. That explains the  remarkable lives of the saints… They know well that God's grace can also bless  the dull round of daily tasks well done and bring the doers a step nearer to  God…. When we Christians… experience the action of the spirit, it means that we  are, in point of fact, having contact with the supernatural, although that  contact may be scarcely perceptible." (Karl Rahner SJ, 1904-1984, In  Belief Today, 40-41).
   
  I love that quote! Because, to me, it says very powerfully (and in an example  that is very 'everyday' and unexceptional) that we KNOW the Spirit is at work  in our lives, especially when the love and sacrifice we show is clearly coming  from a loving hand bigger than our own lives and our own limited motives and  actions. 
   
  When we do actions that are loving and unselfish, we are deeply aware that  there is a power and a loving presence at work in us that is outside of just  ourselves.  ….Transcending our  limitations … and not explainable by our own actions… but bigger, ……. And  "of which are just a cooperating part…."
It is God, …. It is God's Spirit at work in and through us.  At work in the world.   A power of unselfish, sacrificing, love and  service. Unconditional love. That is at the heart of creation.
   
  Finally, we often read this text about how (after the Spirit descended) people  of different languages and cultures could all hear and understand….. but what  is interesting is…   the people were not  speaking the same language… they were still speaking in the language of those  different cultures…..  but even so… they  could understand….  This is a reminder  that the Spirit brings not uniformity but diversity and variety…. But we are  all ONE in that diversity because the common language we speak is the language  of God… and that is LOVE….. 
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  References:
  
  Fr Paul W. Kelly
  
  St Mary's College daily diary entry on the Holy Spirit;      
  MISSION 2000  – PRAYING SCRIPTURE IN A  CONTEMPORARY WAY. YEAR B. BY MARK LINK S.J; 
  
  "SHARING THE WORD THROUGH THE LITURGICAL YEAR." GUSTAVO GUTIERREZ;  MONASTERY OF CHRIST IN THE DESERT. ABBOT'S  HOMILY.
  
  Image Credit- Shutterstock Licensed. Stock Photo ID: 1881688891 - St. Louis,  Missouri USA - April 15, 2019. Close Up of the Pentecost Mosaic in the  Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis with the apostles and Mary of Nazareth engulfed  by the flames of the Holy Spirit. Important information. Editorial Use Only. Photo  Contributor: Teresa Otto
  
  Pentecost Sunday in Ordinary  Time. Year A (Sunday, May 28, 2023) (EPISODE- 422)
  
  The grace of our  Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit be  with you all.
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  {{Happy Pentecost to you all.  This is such a wonderful feast day,  celebrating the birthday of the Church...   when, as promised, Our  Lord Sent the Holy Spirit from his Heavenly Father... to fall upon the apostles  and ensure Christ's presence is in and among his followers of every  generation...  giving fruitfulness to all we do and say in the name of  Christ.. and carrying on Christ's work in us all...    Peace  and Goodness to you all}}
  my brothers and sisters, to prepare ourselves to celebrate the  sacred mysteries, let us call to mind our sins.
  Lord Jesus, you have revealed  yourself as the way to the Father: Lord, have mercy.
  You have poured out on your people  the Spirit of truth: Christ, have mercy
  You are the Good Shepherd, leading  us to eternal life: Lord, have mercy.
  
  May almighty God have mercy on us,  forgive us our sins, and bring us to everlasting life.  Amen.
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  Memorial Acclamation
  2. When we eat this Bread and drink this Cup, we  proclaim your Death, O Lord, until you come again.
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  PREFACE: Pentecost
  Eucharistic Prayer III
  Communion side.   pwk:  LH
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  {Thanks, everyone -    With today's feast of Pentecost.. this brings our easter season to a  close... and ordinary time resumes from this Monday......   with the  very fitting new Feastday of Mary the Mother of the  Church....      , and have a grace-filled and  compassion-filled week. And may God continue to bless and protect us all.
  
  Go forth. The Mass is  ended. Alleluia alleluia.
   
   
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  Archive of homilies and  reflections:  http://homilycatholic.blogspot.com.au
  To contact Fr. Paul, please  email:  paulwkelly68@gmail.com
  
  To listen to the weekly homily audio  podcast, please click this link here.
  NB - It is often a week or so Ahead:   https://soundcloud.com/user-633212303/tracks
  
  
  Further  information relating to the audio productions linked to this Blog:
  "Faith, Hope and Love - Christian worship and  reflection"  - Led by Rev Paul Kelly
  
  Prayers and chants  — Roman Missal, 3rd edition, © 2010, The International  Commission on English in the liturgy. (ICEL)
  
  Scriptures - New Revised Standard Version: © 1989, and 2009 by  the NCC-USA. (National Council of Churches of Christ - USA)
  
  "The Psalms" ©1963, 2009, The Grail - Collins publishers. 
The Pentecost Sequence.  Australian Lectionary for the Mass,  1969, 1981
  
  Prayers of the Faithful -   " Together we pray" by Robert Borg'.    E.J. Dwyer, Publishers, (1993) . (Sydney Australia).
  
  Sung "Mass In Honour of St. Ralph Sherwin" -  By Jeffrey M.  Ostrowski. The ….Gloria, copyright 2011 ccwatershed.org.  
  
  -Come Holy Spirit Hymn: inspired by the Hymn  by  Rabanus Maurus (9th century). Music by Paul W. Kelly. Arranged and  sung, with additional lyrics by Stefan Kelk. 2020. Sound effects by Mark  DiAngelo,
  
  May God bless and keep you.