We call Pentecost the “birthday of the
Church” because on that day the apostles are transformed from men who were too
afraid to leave the upper room to bold proclaimers of the resurrection of
Jesus. They went from men still confused about the meaning of Jesus’ death and
resurrection to preachers of His divinity and Lordship. Rather than being
paralyzed by fear and doubt, they are driven by conviction and faith to
proclaim the good news to all the world. There is no other explanation for this
than the power of the Holy Spirit working in and through them.
The feast of Pentecost was celebrated by
the Jewish people as the commemoration of the giving of the Ten Commandments
through Moses. It was because of this festival that Jews from all over the
world had gathered in Jerusalem as we hear in today’s first reading from the
Acts of the Apostles. We all know the story of how Moses received the Ten
Commandments on Mount Sinai. When he brought the stone tablets written by God
down the mountain, he discovered that the people had made a golden calf to
worship. Filled with rage, Moses shatters the stone tablets on the ground and
commands that all those who participated in the idolatry be rounded up and put
to death. It turns out that three thousand people were killed on that day.
Though the gift of the Law from the hand of God was a day of celebration, it
was also a time to remember how often the people disobeyed the Ten Commandments
and broke their covenant with God.
It is no accident that God sent His Holy
Spirit upon the apostles on the feast of Pentecost. Rather than write the law
on tablets of stone, He would now write them on our hearts. Rather than give us
a law we could not obey, He gave us His Spirit which is the power not only to
understand what Jesus teaches but to live it out.
I would encourage all of you when you get
home after Mass to open your Bibles and read the second chapter of the Acts of
the Apostles from which today’s first reading is taken. After the account of
the descent of the Holy Spirit, we read that Peter addresses the crowd that had
gathered on the street below. They are struck to the depths of their soul by
his message and ask what they should do. Peter tells them that they must repent
of their sins and be baptized so that they also may receive the gift of the
Holy Spirit. In verse 41 we read, “Those who accepted his message were
baptized, and about three thousand were added to their number that day.” Whereas three thousand people were
slaughtered by Moses on that first Pentecost because they rejected the law,
three thousand people were saved by the apostles because of the power of the
Holy Spirit. The law of the Old Covenant did not offer those who received it
the power to live it out. But to those who receive the New Covenant of love,
the Holy Spirit is given empowering us to accept and live out the teachings of
Jesus.
It has been said that the Christian life
is not just difficult, it is impossible. It is impossible to love and forgive
our enemies. It is impossible to bless those who curse us and rejoice when
others make fun of us for being followers of Jesus. In today’s world, many
think it is impossible to live a chaste single life or a faithful married
life. For human beings with our weak
wills, all these things are impossible. That is why no other religion besides
Christianity proclaims such a radical, all-embracing message of love.
The reason we as baptized members of the
Body of Christ do say that it not just possible but mandatory that we live and
love as Jesus did is that we have the Spirit of Jesus living within us. We have
received the same Spirit by which Jesus cured the sick and raised the dead. We
have received the same Spirit that compelled the apostles to preach the good
news of Jesus resurrection to all the world even to the point of giving their
lives for Christ. We have received the same Spirit that empowered the saints to
feed the hungry, care for the sick and teach the gospel message even under the
threat of persecution. It is that Spirit that makes it possible for us to love
our enemies, to live simpler lives so that we will have more to give to the needy
and to love God more than life itself. We can now live the Christian life with
joy, not as a burden, because the Spirit of God lives in us.
Very often we fail to live the gospel
message because we are trying to live it by our own power or on our own terms.
When we sin, we too often just tell ourselves and God that we will try harder
next time. Or we pick and choose which teachings we will follow and which
teachings we ignore. Both attitudes are a recipe for failure. If we are to live
the Christian message in all its fullness and experience the joy and peace it
brings, we must resolve to abandon our lives to the work of the Holy Spirit. We
must say to Him, “I am no longer in control, Lord. You are.” We must simply
tell God that we give up trying to follow Him by our own will power and give
Him permission to work in and through us. It is a scary thing to do because we
do not like to hand over control of our lives. But once we do, we will see
wonders take place just as the apostles did and just as generation after
generation of saints who have given up everything to follow Jesus.
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