These
ten days between our celebration of the Ascension of Jesus to heaven and of
Pentecost, the day when the Holy Spirit came down upon the apostles and Mary,
are days of expectant prayer. We ask God to send his Holy Spirit anew upon his
people so that we may be re-energized in our faith and given new power to
spread the good news of Jesus' death and resurrection to all the world.
The
Holy Spirit is the life-breath of the Church. Through the Holy Spirit we are
given the power to follow Jesus' example and live the good news.
Sometimes
the Holy Spirit is called the forgotten member of the Trinity. We are very
comfortable bringing our prayers and worship to God the Father and to Jesus.
But the Holy Spirit is often overlooked although it is through him that we are
even able to pray at all.
And
so as we spend these days asking God to pour out his Spirit upon us anew, let
us look at the readings which the Church offers us this day and ask the
question, "Who is the Holy Spirit?" As we reflect on the Scriptures
set before us, we see that the Holy Spirit is a Spirit of truth, of unity and
of love.
First
of all, the Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Truth. He reveals to us the truth
about God and his love. The Holy Spirit is given to us to speak to our minds
and hearts about what God requires of us.
Today's
gospel reading from Saint John shows us Jesus in prayer for his disciples and
for those who would believe because of their testimony. At the end of the
prayer, he asks that they be consecrated in the truth and says that God's word
is truth. The truth about who God is and what his plan of salvation is can be
found in his Word, the Bible. We believe that the Bible was written by men, but
that they were inspired by the Holy Spirit to such a degree that God can truly
be considered its author. Therefore, we find in the Bible a sure pathway to
understanding who God is and how much he loves us. Furthermore, the Holy Spirit
who dwells in our hearts guides us so that as we read the Bible we are able to
grow in our understanding of it and in our ability to apply it to our lives.
Spending time in prayer reading the Bible is indispensable to the life of every
follower of Jesus if we are to be consecrated in the truth by the Holy
Spirit.
Secondly,
the Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Unity. He gathers together people of different
languages, ethnic backgrounds and abilities into one Church which extends
itself throughout every century into every nation.
Again,
in the gospel reading, Jesus begins his prayer for his disciples by asking that
they be one as he is one with the Father and the Holy Spirit. The followers of
Jesus are not meant to be a bunch of individuals scattered about the world
doing their own thing. Rather we are meant to work together and to worship
together. The closer we get to Jesus and the more his Spirit takes up residence
in our souls, the closer we become to one another. Nowhere else is this more
evident than when the Church gathers to worship on Sunday. All of us here are
very different people. We would have no other reason to be gathered here
together except for the faith we share in Jesus and in his presence in the Holy
Eucharist. What's more, we are not alone. Throughout our country and throughout
the world, people are gathering to worship with the same words and reflecting
on the same readings we have pondered today. The Holy Spirit, the Spirit of
Unity, makes this possible.
Finally,
the Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Love. Because he is God, the Holy Spirit is
love itself. When the Holy Spirit dwells within us, we come to experience the
unconditional love the Father has for us and are empowered to show that love to
others.
Today's
second reading from the first letter of Saint John teaches us that, when we
love, God dwells within us. When we show love, the invisible God who is love
itself is then made visible to the world. As Saint John tells us, "No one
has ever seen God. Yet, if we love one another, God remains in us, and his love
is brought to perfection in us." This love is not merely having warm feelings
for others. It is a love that shows itself in action by forgiving those who
wrong us, by visiting the sick, by instructing those in error, by witnessing to
the power and presence of God in our lives to those who are lost and by putting
aside our own comforts to wash the feet of others. It is the love that Jesus
showed by offering himself to us on the cross. It is not a love which we can
show by our own human power. It is only possible by the Spirit of love who
dwells within us.
The
Holy Spirit we worship is a Spirit of truth, of unity and of love. We know that
we are drawing closer to God when those three characteristics of his Spirit are
growing in our lives. So as we approach the feast of Pentecost, let us focus
our prayers more on the third person of the Blessed Trinity. Let us bring him
our worship and adoration. Let us ask him to make his home within us and reveal
to us the truth of God's burning love for us. Let us ask him to set our hearts
aflame with love for God and for one another so that we may be renewed as his
People and bring the good news to all the world.
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