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Homily
Archive
Life
in the Spirit
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Readings for Pentecost
Reading 1: Acts 2: 1–11 |
Responsorial Psalm: Ps. 104:1, 24, 29–30, 31,
34 |
Reading 2: 1 Cor. 12:3–7, 12–13 |
Gospel: Jn. 20:19–23 |
Link
to Readings |
By Father Thomas Acklin, O.S.B.
On this Pentecost Sunday, let us reflect
on the Church, which has been founded by Jesus Christ and
which lives and breathes through the gifts of the Holy Spirit.
In the aftermath of the pastoral visit of Pope Benedict XVI
to the United States, we find a powerful witness to exactly
the way in which the Holy Spirit works in the life of the
Church.
In the Acts of the Apostles, we hear of how the Holy Spirit
descended upon the Apostles and the Blessed Mother in the
Upper Room. Isn’t it striking that the fire of the Holy
Spirit parted into individual tongues that came upon each
person? No two persons receive the One Holy Spirit in exactly
the same way, but according to the particular needs and particular
mission of that individual!
The way this works is explained by St. Paul in his First
Letter to the Corinthians when he points out that there are
many gifts but the same Spirit, and how all these gifts work
together to build up the Church. Actually, there are also
many spirits. But only in the Holy Spirit can one cry out,
“Abba, Father,” or proclaim Jesus to be Lord!
Any other spirit, which does not claim Jesus Christ as its
authority and God the Father as its source, is not the Holy
Spirit that founds, leads, and guides the Church.
Breaking through the Babble
The Spirit is One, therefore, and leads all to be One. The
Church lives in the One Spirit. All the different personalities
and gifts, interests and abilities of persons of all ages
come together only in the One Spirit of Jesus Christ. This
is a message that goes out to the ends of the earth. Already
on Pentecost Sunday, the many foreigners each understood what
he heard each apostle speaking, as if each apostle was speaking
in that foreigner’s own tongue.
This is another important thing to notice. We often think
of the gift of tongues as meaning that someone filled with
the Spirit prays in a foreign tongue, which is often not understood
by any of the listeners unless someone is given the gift of
prophecy to interpret it. This gift was given on Pentecost
Sunday! But even more marvelously, each heard each other in
his own tongue, a complete reversal of the babble which was
created when the people where thrown into confusion while
building the Tower of Babble! Here everyone understood everyone
else. One thinks of so many meetings or discussions in Church
life where, even when everyone is actually speaking the same
language, no one seems to understand the other one!
Reconciled
In the gospel account of Jesus appearing on the first day
of the week to His disciples, He breathes on them and says,
“Receive the Holy Spirit.” This could not yet
be the fullness of the Spirit they would receive on Pentecost,
because He had not yet ascended to His Father so that the
Spirit would come in His fullness.
Nevertheless, these words of Jesus are amplified by the next
words Jesus spoke on that Easter evening. As if to show what
receiving the Holy Spirit means, Jesus goes on to say, “Whose
sins you shall forgive they are forgiven.” It is reconciliation
that brings together all the diversity into one in the life
of the Church and within any community or parish in the Church.
Reconciliation is needed again and again—to reconcile
not only divisions within the Church, but also those divisions
that cause separation and can place one outside the Church
and outside the Body of Christ.
Here too, Pope Benedict brought to the United States a renewal
of the Spirit precisely in the way in which he stressed reconciliation
and dialogue, at the same time that he showed how Jesus Christ
is the Way by which all come to the Father and to the fulfillment
of all our human hopes and dreams. His humble demeanor, his
gentle words and firm teaching, his tender smile and prayerful
countenance all stirred within Catholics as well as others
a desire that there indeed be one flock and one shepherd!
The same Lord who promised, “I AM with you always”
has kept His promise that the Holy Spirit would come! That
same Spirit continues to move, breathe, give gifts, and unite
all of us who are open to Him.
Fr. Thomas Acklin, O.S.B., S.T.D.,
Ph.D., resides at St. Vincent Archabbey in Latrobe, Pennsylvania.
He presently serves as a professor of theology and psychology
at St. Vincent College and St. Vincent Seminary, and is a
faculty member of the Pittsburgh Psychoanalytic Institute
and Foundation. Fr. Acklin has written a number of articles
and recently published two books:The
Unchanging Heart of the Priesthood and The
Passion of the Lamb.
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