23th May, 2010 Pentecost Sunday - C
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The Gospel today, from Saint John, tells us about the coming of the Holy Spirit. It is clear again that these early followers were hiding behind closed doors, feeling very, very fearful. The coming of the Holy Spirit takes their fears away. These first followers seem to need peace, because that is the first greeting of the Lord to them: Peace be with you! May we (too) know the peace of Jesus 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.
At the heart of our Christian life, fear is taken away, peace and forgiveness are given. May we dispel the fears of others and proclaim the peace and forgiveness given to us in Jesus.
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 now knew he was Risen and 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 Jesus. Perhaps today we can pray for this Spirit to come on us and to give us courage so that our faith becomes so much a part of ourselves that its so natural and easy to speak of our faith, in an unforced manner.
Our gifts are different, each person having 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 recognize that each person brings his or her own gifts and that we need those gifts to live in the fullness of Jesus Christ.
In the front of the newsletter.. I have placed one of 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 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… just an interesting insight that I hadn’t thought of before… 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
· 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.