"Peace be with you." When he had said this, he
showed them his hands and his side. The disciples rejoiced when they saw the
Lord. Jesus said to them again, "Peace be with you. As the Father has sent
me, so I send you." And when he had said this, he breathed on them and
said to them, "Receive the Holy Spirit. Whose sins you forgive are
forgiven them, and whose sins you retain are retained." (Jn 20:19-23)
The first Pentecost brought excitement, passion, and courage
to the Christian community. It completed their sense of identity and clarified
their mission. Most importantly, it filled them with power, assured them of the
strength they would need to witness to the Gospel, to overcome the spirit of
the world, to drive away the darkness of sin and evil.
In the experience of this indwelling Spirit, the first
Christians discovered joy and peace. The Spirit provided for all of their
needs. It satisfied their deepest hungers and longings. It gave them a reason
to live and a reason to die. It filled them with abiding hope, and assured them
of final victory and fullness of life with the Risen Lord. But the passionate
enthusiasm brought about by the Spirit did not remove human frailty or
prejudice. Discerning where the Spirit leads us has always been a difficult
task - from our Church's earliest beginnings right up to the present time -
especially for a pilgrim people in a pilgrim Church. For so long we have been
content with viewing our faith as a kind of spectator sport; it has now become
a contact sport, and we find ourselves right in the middle of things.
The Christian community has always been seen as the
Spirit-guided bearer of the Word of Salvation. We must know that for us as a
people of faith, Easter/Pentecost is now. It is the continuing invitation from
our God for an ongoing, ever new encounter with Him and with others. Like the
first disciples, we have seen the marks of the nails in the hands and feet of
Jesus - in the suffering of those who live their lives in oppression, through
the trial and pain of those around us, and through the insult and prejudice
that we sometimes feel in our own lives because of our faith. And like the
first disciples, we hear the voice of Jesus offering us peace. We, too, are
sent by the Spirit to bring forgiveness, to bring comfort and joy, and to
proclaim that peace, which we, ourselves, have so graciously been given.
So Pentecost is not just a feast - it is the
"soul" of Christianity. It is the unending miracle of God's love
poured out in the hearts of believers. It is the abiding power source of Gospel
living. In the face of a Church in transition we might be tempted to sit back
passively and let this feast go unnoticed. But we cannot and must not be
passive. We cannot resist change, but welcome it, foster it. Above all, we must
not fear the movements of the Spirit, but embrace them with trust, with
generosity and with courage. It is only by becoming fully a part of the
Easter/Pentecost miracle that we will overcome our own personal prejudices and
become instruments of the Spirit, to create a new community and a new world of
unity and peace, and happiness and holiness.
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