Sermon on the Holy Spirit
It
is said that a certain guide lived in the desert of Arabia who never lost his
way. He carried with him a homing pigeon with a very fine cord attached to one
of its legs. When in doubt as to which path to take, he flushed the bird into
the air. The pigeon quickly strained at the cord to fly in the direction of
home and thus led the guide accurately to his destination. Because of this
unique practice, he was known as the “dove man.” So, too, the Holy Spirit, the
heavenly dove, is willing and able to direct us in the strait and narrow way
that leads us to the more abundant life, if in humble self-denial we submit to
his unerring supervision. Then we shall be men and women of the Pentecost.
Let
us focus on our Lord Jesus. When Jesus was baptised in the Jordan and the
Spirit descended on him in the visible form a dove, it wasn’t a piece of
advertisement or comic routine; but serious business. Because immediately after
the baptism, Jesus submitted to the Spirit who drove him into the desert as a
prelude to his mission. The body of Jesus was instinct with the Spirit, such
that whenever he exhaled he breathed out the Spirit. You will recall how after
his Resurrection he breathed on his disciples, saying, “Receive the Holy
Spirit; those whose sins you forgive, they are forgiven.” That was the Spirit
of pardon and reconcilement. Jesus
clearly told his disciples, “The Spirit blows where he wills. There’s no
telling where he will blow you.” After
Pentecost day the Apostles were dispersed on the wings of the Spirit to the
fours corners of the earth on the mission evangelisation.
We
believe in the Holy Spirit, who animates the Holy Catholic Church and Communion
of Saints. We believe in the Holy Spirit who brings about the forgiveness of
sins, and accomplishes the resurrection of the body and life everlasting.
If
any outsider declares that the Catholic Church is packed with fools and
charlatans, we can assure him that there’s room for one more. How the Church
has survived despite its fractious factions when the Roman and British empires
have collapsed; how the Church has survived, what with all its troubles within
and problems without can only be answered by the last paragraph of the
Apostles’ Creed which we recite every Sunday: “I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the Holy Catholic Church,” or, more correctly, “I believe in the Holy Spirit
who animates the Church, who builds and sustains the Catholic Church, who
preserves the communion of saints, who operates the forgiveness of sins, who
brings about the resurrection of the dead and honours the pledge of life
everlasting.” St. Paul states openly that the divine Spirit dwells in the human
body. He is like blood that pervades every millimetre of the body. The Church
is the Body of Christ, and the Spirit is its soul. And since the soul has not
left the body, how can the body fall apart and corrupt? Today’s feast tells us
that the Holy Spirit continues to be present in the church. And, let me add,
that presence is a loving presence. Presence without love is as destructive as
love without presence.
Apart
from baptism, the sacrament of confirmation signals the abandonment and
submission to the power of the Spirit; it signals the empowerment that results
from the Spirit’s presence. The person who abandons herself to the sway and
power of the Holy Spirit is led to live according to the Spirit, not according
to the flesh. The people who are empowered by life in the Spirit are known by
the fruits they bear. Their lives are fragrant with peace, patience, kindness,
long-suffering, gentleness, truthfulness, single-hearted love of God and
neighbour. The absence of the Spirit is evident by sentiments of hatred,
jealousy, envy, greed, lust and despair. With the Holy Spirit in our heart we
are sure where our preferences lie.
Take
the case of St. Peter. The Spirit would push Peter to Rome to preach the Word
and to die for it. That was the best thing that happened to him since it came
from deeper and more mature spontaneity, the type of spontaneity that makes you
rush to the rescue of children screaming in a burning building or a train crash
or bomb blast, the mature spontaneity that makes you speak in defence of
someone unjustly treated, to open your heart to a poor person.
That’s
the Spirit (with a capital “S”). When we let the Spirit take over our lives,
the best is yet to happen.
The
famous Protestant charismatic preacher, Rev. Moody, once said, “You might as
well try to hear without ears or breathe without lungs, as try to live a
Christian life without the Spirit of God.”
A
little girl was visiting her grandmother in a small country town in southern
United States. Grandmother took the girl to a highly charged Pentecostal
function. The people got all worked up and expressed their feelings by jumping
about and shouting. It was another of those “Holy Roller” services. The little
girl asked her grandmother if all that leaping meant that the Holy Spirit was
really present. Her grandmother said, “Honey, it doesn’t matter how high they
jump; it’s what they do when they come down that will tell you if it is the
real thing.” My comment is that it would be good if we were a little more
enthusiastic about our faith, but what matters is what we do in everyday life.
Does the Holy Spirit have a practical effect on our daily life, and in what
way? As someone put it, “We do not need more of the Spirit. Rather, the Spirit
needs more of us.”
“Receive
the Holy Spirit; those whose sins you forgive, they are forgiven” (John 20,
22). That was the Spirit of pardon and reconcilement. After Jesus assigns to
the disciples (and to all of us) the ministry of making his love present in the
world, he offers the strength to carry out such a difficult task: “He breathed
on them and said to them, ‘Receive the Holy Spirit’ (John 20, 22). This is like
a new creation scene in which Jesus enlivens and empowers his followers much as
the creator breathed life into the first human being (Gen 2, 7). Then Jesus
singles out what is clearly the very first duty of his followers: “If you
forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any,
they are retained” (20,23). This can only mean that one of the primary effects
of true Christian love is the willingness to forgive others who may have hurt
us in any way. This is an awesome responsibility and it cannot be restricted simply
to the sacrament of reconciliation. Every one of us is offered the help of the
Holy Spirit so that we may have the courage to forgive and if we do not do so,
in some very real and tragic sense the healing will be thwarted.
Sometimes
I think that the only question that will be asked at the last judgement will
be, quite simply, Did you let my people go? In other words, was the overall
effect of your presence in the world to liberate or to hold in bondage? Were
you a Moses, friend of God, or a pharaoh, holding others in slavery?
Forgiveness can be very difficult, but that is precisely why Jesus sends his
powerful Spirit to assist us.
Jesus
clearly told his disciples, “The Spirit blows where it wills. There’s no
telling where it will blow you.” Jesus told
Peter, “When you were young, you clad your belt and went where you pleased. But
when you are old (i.e. matured in the Spirit) somebody else will clad you and
take you where you do not wish to go.” You might also remember that decisive
turning point in the life of Peter. He was in Rome in the year 52, but the
antichristian persecution was getting too hot for him there. So he struck out
for home and country back in Palestine, accompanied by a little servant boy.
But on the way, on the Appian Way, to be exact, he was intercepted by Jesus who
appeared to him. Peter was shocked to see the Lord and asked him that famous
question: “Quo vadis, Domine?” (“Where are you headed, Lord?) And suddenly the
little boy began speaking, “My brethren in Rome need me.” The vision was over,
the Spirit had spoken, and Peter made an about turn, double-timing it back to
Rome where he was crucified upside-down.
Living
a spiritual life is living a life in which our spirits and Spirit of God bear a
joint witness that we belong to God as his beloved children. This witness
involves every aspect of our lives: “Whatever you eat, then, or drink, and
whatever else you do, do it all for the glory of God”, says St. Paul (Rom 10,
31). Wherever we go and whomever we meet, God’s Spirit will manifest himself
through us. We may occasionally need to speak up in defence of God, even
enlighten someone about Jesus Christ, as long as it doesn’t create divisions.
But the way that the Holy Spirit manifests himself most convincingly is through
the fruit: “love, joy, peace, endurance, kindness, goodness, trustfulness,
gentleness and self-control” (Gal 5, 22). These fruits speak for themselves.
Circle the odd one out. Joy is the odd one out. Why? The other items, like
love, peace, goodness, are virtues requiring strength and application, to have
and to develop, especially self-control. But joy seems to come and go by
itself. I feel it or I don’t. I feel good when I do and sad when I do not. It’s
like the difference between good cool weather and physical fitness. I can’t
produce cool weather but I can work towards physical fitness by proper dieting
and exercise. “Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we diet !” Patience and
self control fall into the gymnasium variety; joy is like the weather. We
cannot earn it or acquire it, though we can pray for it since we know that God
and the saints are in the fullness of joy. And we can prepare ourselves to work
together with God’s generosity in the power of the Holy Spirit precisely by
making other people happy.
Happiness
is the result of spiritual health, not material wealth. Material wealth
certainly can be a positive factor of security for our children and ourselves.
But by working for our spiritual health we can acquire a deeper foundation for
inner security. A happy person is not a person in a given set of circumstances,
but rather a person with a certain set of attitudes. You can get out of bed
ready to make the day an adventure. Or you can drag yourself out of bed
dreading the hours ahead. You can get up early enough to have the time to relax
with a healthful breakfast. Or you can stay in bed as long as possible and rush
to work, mind and body all tense, and thoughts all scrambled from hurrying.
Your attitudes help create your circumstances; they make you either a happy or
unhappy person, to overcome problems or go under them. You can rise from sleep
and declare, “Good Lord, another day!” or you can say: “Good day, Lord”, or
“Another good day, Lord.”
Among
the saints who are identified with joy or mirth is St. Thomas More of England.
Thomas More was condemned to death by a perverse and petulant King Henry VIII.
But the death sentence did not dampen his gaiety. During his last days, while
in prison and suffering from his old disease in the chest - gravel, stone and the
cramps - he habitually joked with his family and friends, whenever they were
permitted to see him, as merrily as in the old days of Chelsea when he was Lord
Chancellor. When it came time for him to ascend the executioner’s scaffold, it
was discovered that the structure was so weak that it appeared ready to
collapse. Turning to the man assisting him, Thomas More remarked, “I pray you,
I pray you, Mr. Lieutenant, see me safe up, and as for coming down, let me
shift for myself.” After kneeling and saying prayers, he turned to the
executioner and, with a cheerful countenance spoke to him: “Pluck up thy
spirits, man, and be not afraid to do thine office. My neck is very short. Take
heed, therefore, thou strike not awry for saving thine honour.” As he placed his
head on the block, he shifted his prison grown beard aside saying, “This has
committed no crime.” May I remind you, dear friends, that under his finery as
Lord Chancellor, St. Thomas More always wore a hair shirt and prayed five hours
a day.
Focusing
on the coming great feast, we recall that our dear Lord Jesus has poured into
our hearts the Spirit of the promise. May we be open to his joy, strength and
consolation.
We
believe in the Holy Spirit who animates the Holy Catholic Church, who brings
about the forgiveness of sins,
and
accomplishes the resurrection and life everlasting.
PRAYER:
(Hildegaard of Bingen, 1098 – 1179)
Holy
Spirit, the life that gives life,
You
are the cause of all movement,
You
are the breath of all creatures,
You
are the salve that purifies all souls,
You
are the ointment that heals all wounds,
You
are the fire that warms our hearts,
You
are the light that guides our feet.
Let
the world praise you.
No comments:
Post a Comment