Today we celebrate Pentecost, the sending of the Holy Spirit, by our Lord Jesus, which is something to be joyful about. It’s a birthday celebration of the Church! Last week in the Lord’s Ascension he gave his disciples the commission to “go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing in the name of the Father, Son, and of the Holy Spirit” and then told them, “And behold, I am with you always, until the end of the age.” How would he always be with them? Through the Holy Spirit!Jesus had told his disciples, “You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, throughout Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” If Jesus remained with the disciples, they would be physically dependent on him to lead them. But for them to carry out the mission of the Church, they needed the power to enable them to proclaim the Gospel throughout the world, which is only possible through the Holy Spirit.
In the two accounts of the Holy Spirit being sent upon the disciples each has unique aspect of faith. In Acts the disciples are gathered and experienced a loud noise coming from the sky which filled the entire house they were in. The Holy Spirit appeared as tongues of fire resting upon them, enabling them to speak in many languages to proclaim the Gospel. There were Jews from many nations there that heard the sound and were able to understand the disciples preaching in their own language of all that Jesus accomplished through his life, passion, death and resurrection by following the will of the Father. Through the Holy Spirit it spoke to their hearts, to enable them to come to faith.
I’ve experienced a similar work of the Holy Spirit through my preaching. The words that I preached were heard by others, but they heard it in a way that spoke to their hearts. Whenever I prepare to preach, I pray to the following prayer: Lord our God, open my heart and my mind as I prepare to preach to your holy people. May the words I speak be your words, the insights I bring your insights, the spirit I call upon, your Spirit. Give me the words that will build up the Church and give glory to you, who live and reign forever and ever.
I’ve had people who thanked me for my homily telling me it was exactly what they needed to hear. I give thanks to the Holy Spirt and ask what it was that touched them. The response of the person many times was not anything that I preached on, but what the Holy Spirit provided for them to hear.
In the Gospel Jesus breathes on the disciples to give life to the Church through them. They were locked away for fear of the Jews as they thought what happened to
Jesus, could happen to them. Jesus appears in his resurrected glorified body and offers them consolation showing his wounds, so they knew it was really him and saying to them, “Peace be with you.”Their fear was turned into joy at seeing the risen Lord. Jesus not only turns their fear to joy, but he also gives them new life saying, “Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you”. He then breathes on them saying, “Receive the Holy Spirit. Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them, and whose sins you retain are retained.”As the Father gave life to man breathing into Adam, Jesus gives life breathing on the disciples sending them on a mission to establish his Church and bestowing his grace to make disciples through the power of the Sacraments.I’ve experienced the transforming power of the Holy Spirit in my own life. While I received the Holy Spirit in baptism and confirmation, in my early adult years I was not fully cooperating with the gift I had received. I had let other things have priority over my relationship with Jesus. When I finally took some time to go on a retreat, the Holy Spirit had a powerful effect that renewed my relationship with Jesus. I was overcome with God’s love by those who presented the retreat which opened me up to return to the Sacrament of reconciliation after many years. I was transformed in receiving the God’s grace of forgiveness through the Holy Spirit’s power given to the priest to forgive my sins. Without the Holy Spirit, I would not be the person I am today.
The Holy Spirit empowers each of us to make up the Body of Christ. We receive the Holy Spirit’s power through our baptism and confirmation providing us gifts and fruits, so we can uniquely benefit the life of the Church. There are seven gifts of the Holy Spirit wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude, knowledge, piety, and fear of the Lord, and twelve fruits, charity, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, generosity, gentleness, faithfulness, modesty, self-control, and chastity.
You’ll find these all listed in Catechism of the Catholic Church if you want to refer back to them. These help us to grow in virtue so we can live as Christ’s disciples to build up his Church.
Each of us may have gifts or fruits of the Holy Spirit that we live out quite well. But we may struggle with some of these. For me patience is the one fruit of the Spirit that I am constantly challenged to live out. When I experience this, it reminds me that I really need to rely on the Holy Spirit. A way to invoke the Holy Spirit’s power to help is to pray this simple prayer: Come Holy Spirit, Come. By doing so, it will help us to strengthen our relationship with the Holy Spirit, so together, we can build up the body of Christ to bring about unity, peace, and love.