(Homily for Pentecost Sunday Year A)
Without the Holy Spirit, God is
distant, Christ is merely a historical figure, the Gospel is a dead letter, the
Church is just an organization, authority is domination, mission is propaganda,
liturgy is only nostalgia, and the work of Christians is a slave morality. But
with the Holy Spirit, Christ is risen and present, the Gospel is a living
force, the Church is a communion in the life of the Trinity, authority is a service
that sets the people free, mission is Pentecost, the liturgy is commemoration
and anticipation, and the work of Christians is divinized (Ignatius of
Laodecea).
The aforementioned assertion
of Ignatius of Laodicea sets in motion the vitality and the profundity of
today’s Solemnity. Today as we are celebrating the outpouring of the Holy
Spirit, the word of God gives account of this Event, in four different ways, to demonstrate that the Holy Spirit, the
breath of God, cannot be locked up in human schemes. The Gospel and the
first reading complement each other, as they both talk about the descent of the
Holy Spirit; although while in the first the Holy Spirit is a Gift of the Risen
Christ to the Church for her mission, in the latter the Holy Spirit descended
on the apostles as the life propelling force and opens new horizons for the
mission. In the second reading He is the Giver of God’s gifts and the source of
unity of the believers. And the fourth account is in today’s responsorial
Psalm: “Send forth your Spirit, and renew the face of
the earth” (Ps.104:30). All
the earth, nothing and nobody is excluded. Indeed,
what we are celebrating today is the fulfilment of the promise of the Risen
Christ. Several
times in his farewell speech, Jesus promised to send the Holy Spirit to the
apostles: “I will not leave you orphans… I will send you the Paraclete, the
Spirit of truth… and you will receive the Holy Spirit” (Jn. 14). And 50 days after His Resurrection, Jesus maintains his
promise, as St. Luke recounts in the Acts of the Apostles. St. John instead, in
his Gospel collocates the coming of the Holy Spirit in the evening of the same
day of Resurrection (cf. Jn. 20:19-23),
as such, he intends to make us understand that the Holy Spirit is the most
important Gift of the Risen Christ, the
most precious fruit of his gesture of love and obedience to the Father. He is the Gift of God and the
Giver of God’s gift to us. The Holy Spirit is a Person,
the third Person of the Most Holy Trinity. In the Scripture he is presented
with several symbols and images like: cloud (cf. Ex. 16:10); water (cf.
Ez. 17:1-6; Jn. 7:37-39); wind or breath (cf. Gn.1:2; Acts. 2:2); fire (cf.
Ex. 3:2; 13:21; Is. 4:4; Acts. 2:3); anointing oil (cf. Acts. 10:38); dove (cf.
Mk. 1:10; Lk. 3:22); still small voice (cf.
1Kgs. 19:11-13) etc…
The word Pentecost
is from a Greek word “PentÄ“kostÄ“”, which means fiftieth.
The Pentecost was an old Jewish traditional feast that was celebrated 50 days
after the Passover, namely the in-gathering of grains. Later on, Judaism
transformed it into a feast of salvation history, for it commemorated the arrival
of the people of Israel at Mount Sinai, and the giving of the law to Moses on
Mount Sinai (cf. Ex. 34:28). This
was later introduced into the Christian feast that marked the conclusion of the
great fifty days after Christ’s Resurrection. It also refers to the descent of
the Holy Spirit on the apostles and others who were present at the Upper room. The grain harvest and the law are now
replaced by the gift of the Spirit, from the constitution of the old Israel to
the constitution of the new Israel. A gaze
into the Old Testament reveals the power and activity of God’s Spirit at work.
For instance, God allowed His Spirit to rest on the seventy elders who were
appointed to assist Moses (Num.
11:16-17; 25). After his anointing as King, Saul received the Spirit of God
and prophesied (1 Sam. 10:10); and
when he lost his connection with God the Spirit of God left him (1 Sam. 16:14). Therefore,
obedience to God attracts the presence of the Holy Spirit in our life, for it
can be seen that when Saul disobeyed God, the Spirit of God that was upon him
departed from him (cf. 1Sam. 15:26;
16:14). The indwelling of the Holy Spirit is a mark of God’s presence in us. David was a man filled with God’s Spirit and when he
sinned he begged God not to take the Holy Spirit away from him (Psalm 51:11). In the New Testament, the Holy Spirit is our great teacher and
reminder (Jn. 14:26); He is the
guarantor and witness of our divine filiation as sons and daughters (Rm. 8:16); he is the great intercessor
(Rm. 8:26); He is the great
explorer: “for the Spirit explores the depth of everything, even the depths of
God” (1Cor. 2:10). He dwells in us, “Do you not realise that your body
is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you and whom you have received from
God? (1Cor. 6:19). Particularly, in
the book of Revelation the Holy Spirit is portrayed as capable of taking
control of a person: “On the Lord’s day the Spirit took control of me” (Rev. 1:10) and again “At once the
Spirit took control of me” (Rev. 4:2),
The Holy Spirit can possess a person, and his is indeed is a dynamic presence,
for whoever he possesses witnesses all round transformation. The Holy Spirit is
a great teacher and proclaimer of the divine message. In the book of Revelation
“who has ears listen, what the Spirit says to the Church” (Rev. 2:29; 3:6; 3:16; 3:22). His message to the Churches was a
message of rediscovering their identity before God and the renewal of their
rapport with God. Even for us today, his
is a message of repentance, unity, liberation and a rediscovery of who we are
before God.
The Gospel passage (John 20:19-23) instead presents the eleven apostles in the cenacle
in the evening of Easter, they were still hiding for fear of the Jews. Jesus on
the Easter day, entered even though the doors were shut, he greeted them with
peace, for he knows that they were troubled and as such in
need of peace, peace that comes from Him. Let us take into
consideration the two great gifts that the Risen Christ brought to the first
Christian community of the apostles reunited in the cenacle: Jesus gave them the gift of peace:
“Peace be with you”. Peace biblically embraces all the divine promises: grace,
divine benevolence, interior serenity and salvation. And in order to calm their fear and to console them with his presence, He
then: “showed them his hands and his side”, that is, to tell them that he is
the Crucified-Risen Lord. And there he inaugurates the mission of the apostles:
“as the Father sent me, even so I send you” and immediately after that he gave
them the second gift. Secondly, he gave them the gift of the Holy Spirit: “He breathed on them and said:
receive the Holy Spirit”. Behold, the Holy Spirit is the most important and
precious Gift that the Risen Lord gives to his apostles and to his people.
In this Gospel narrative the
eleven apostles locked themselves up in the cenacle out of fear. Probably, they
were thinking that all that was expected of them is to preserve the memory of
their Master within themselves, living secluded from the world. But behold, there
in the cenacle they experienced the irruption of the Holy Spirit through the
presence of the risen Lord. He gave them the Gift of the Holy Spirit and sent
them on mission, because the Holy Spirit
will not allow the Church to remain only like a warehouse, closed in
herself, but it wants her to be an “out-going Church”. The Holy Spirit was sent
to the apostles and the Church so that they will continue the mission of
Christ: “As the Father sent me, so I send you” (v.21), a mission without
limits, neither of space nor of time. The mission is not only a mission of
announcing the word, but also of liberating men from the slavery of sin and for
the renewal of humanity. Upon this, he equally gave them a mandate: “to those you forgive their sins
they are forgiven” (v.23). Through
the Holy Spirit, the Church through her ministers receives the mandate of
forgiving sins.
In the first reading (Acts 2:1-11)
St. Luke narrates the event of the descent of the Holy
Spirit on the apostles, unlike in the Gospel, but fifty days after Easter. Therein,
we see that the Holy Spirit is the
principle of expansion of the Church and the life force. This account of
the Pentecost permits us to discover another great thing that the Holy Spirit
represents for the Church, the life force
that nourishes her in her Mission. There are some vital elements to ponder
upon in the passage, ●first, “they were all together”, this entails that the Holy Spirit comes where there is unity.
●Second, “A sound came from heaven like a mighty wind”, this lays credence that it is truly Ruah
Adonai, for the Holy Spirit manifests Himself so many times through the
wind. In the book of Genesis (1:2)
we are told that at the first moment of creation, “The Spirit of God moved upon
the face of the waters.” ●Third, “It rested on each one of them and they were
filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages.” This is
suggestive that the Holy Spirit came on
them individually; likewise his
gifts are individually given but for the common purpose. The Spirit
empowered them to speak different languages, however, other languages here might be considered
symbolic. They symbolize a language of love that all understand. ●Fourth,
“at this sound the multitude came together”, this gesture of gathering together is the beginning of the Church’s
mission to evangelize, because they are gathered in order to be sent. ●Fifth,
“we hear them telling in our tongues the mighty works of God”, indeed, the Holy Spirit urges us to proclaim the
wonderful works God has wrought for us, and as such, it was the major
content of the preaching of the apostles that very day. On the other hand, in
the book of Genesis (11:1-9), we see
a direct opposite of what happened today in the Acts of the Apostles, the tower
of Babel, where people because of pride, presumption and distance from God,
were divided and thrown into confusion and incomprehension, language became a
source of confusion instead of unity and understanding. That indicates simply the
absence of the Holy Spirit. The gift of the Spirit is the reversal of
babel. Meanwhile, the responsorial
psalm talks about the natural and cosmic dimensions of the Spirit’s work (Ps. 104:30). The presence and power of
the Spirit creates, recreates and renews.
In the
second reading (1Cor 12:3b-7.12-13) St.
Paul tells us that it is through an indwelling experience of the Holy Spirit that
we are able to recognize and call Jesus Lord, “nobody is able to say ‘Jesus is Lord’ except in the Holy Spirit” (v.3b). More
so, the Holy Spirit brings unity to the
Church, unity and continuity of the Church with Christ. The Holy Spirit is
the principle of unity amongst Christians. The Holy Spirit makes the multitude
of Christians into “one body”. The Spirit unites and makes us brothers
and sisters because it is the Holy
Spirit who awakens the consciousness of our filial dignity, and He puts on our
lips the language of God’s children: “Abba Father” (Rm. 8:15). St. Paul brings the discourse
of the Holy Spirit to an intimate and personal level. The coming of the Holy
Spirit concerns not only the Church but every single Christian. The Holy Spirit
enriches the single members with charisms, gifts (gratia gratis data). The
Holy Spirit is the source of the multitude and inexhaustible riches of charisms
in the Church. And these gifts even though individually given are for the
benefit and edification of the community. We can as well, talk of the “democracy” of the Spirit, because
it is not a gift for only leaders or outstanding persons in the community,
neither is He confined to a particular privileged set of people, is for all sons
and daughters of God.
Dear beloved in Christ, the
Pentecost experience still continues, like the first Christian community today
we are gathered, but unlike the first Christian community we are not waiting
for the absent Spirit to come, rather we
have to reawaken ourselves to the Spirit who is already present and working in,
for and through us since we received Him during our Baptism. We only need
to wake up to His presence. We need the Holy Spirit in all that we do. The life of Jesus from conception, birth,
public ministry, passion, death and resurrection was marked by the presence of
the Holy Spirit. Little wonder, at the beginning of his mission Jesus
declared: ‘The Spirit of God is upon me” (Lk.
4:18; cf. Is. 61:1). At the Incarnation,
Mary conceived through the power of the Holy Spirit, and at the Eucharist,
Bread and Wine become the Body and Blood of Christ, by the power of the same
Spirit (epiclesis). The Holy Spirit
guarantees and realizes his continuous Incarnation. The Holy Spirit realizes
the consecration of Bread and Wine into the Body and Blood of Christ.
During consecration in Eucharistic Prayer II the Priest says: “Let your Spirit
come upon these gifts to make them holy, so that they may become for us the
Body and Blood of our Lord, Jesus Christ.” Above all, the Holy Spirit is at
work in and through the Sacraments of the Church.
We too need Him in our
existential sojourn and weaknesses, for this St. Paul said that “the Spirit
comes to help in our weakness, for when we do not know how to pray properly, he
intercedes for us with sighs too deep for words” (Rm. 8:26). It is the same
Spirit that bears witness to our divine identity, as God’s children, “The
Spirit himself joins our spirit to bear witness that we are children of God” (Rm. 8:16), He confirms our filial identity. Above all, St. Paul captured the
essence of the Pentecost experience when he affirms that “our Hope does not
disappoint us, for God has poured out His Love into our hearts by means of the
Holy Spirit, who is God’s gift to us” (Rm.
5:5). Today as we receive this outpouring,
we join our voices together with that of the Psalmist in saying “Send forth
your Spirit Lord and renew the face of the earth” (Ps. 104:30). May He renew us and renew our world battered and
engulfed in so many ills and evils. May He heal a world torn by bloodshed, war,
and violence. We hereby declare freedom and liberty for all God’s children,
because “where there is the Spirit of God there is freedom” (2Cor. 3:17). Come o Holy Spirit and fill our hearts with
Love and with a hope that does not disappoint! Be renewed as we receive the
outpouring! As we welcome Him today may the same Spirit liberate us from all
that do not allow us to be free sons and daughters of God! May He chase away
the powers of darkness in our hearts and in our world with His fire! Amen!!!
(Fr.
Vitus Chigozie, SC)