Commentary
Sunday, 6/4/2017, Pentecost Sunday
The Third Glorious Mystery of the Rosary
The Holy Spirit Is Within Us
First Reading Commentary Acts 2:1-11
The Apostles together with Mary and other disciples were all together when suddenly there was a noise like a strong driving wind and there appeared upon them tongues of fire which rested on each one of them and they began to speak in different tongues. There were devout Jews from every nation in Jerusalem and a large crowd of them gathered and they were confused because they heard the Apostles speaking in their languages of the mighty acts of God. The people in the crowd wondered how this could be.
This was able to happen because all things are possible with God and He had filled the Apostles and those who were with them with His Holy Spirit. Speaking in tongues is one of the charismatic gifts of the Holy Spirit and there is more than one way to speak in tongues. What happened at Pentecost is the same thing that Pope Saint John Paul II was known for being able to do. That is, speaking a language which he did not know to people who understood that language.
What happened on Pentecost was the fulfillment of the promise made by Jesus of sending the Advocate. Jesus promised the Apostles that the Advocate would strengthen, teach and guide them. That is what the Holy Spirit does to all of us with His Seven Gifts which are; Wisdom, Understanding, Council, Fortitude, Knowledge, Piety and Fear of the Lord.
With these gifts, the Apostles no longer needed to stay together for fear of persecution by those who did not want the Word of God to be spread. The Apostles and the disciples who were with them had everything they needed to go out and grow the Church by proclaiming the Word and performing great works (miracles).
We receive the Holy Spirit at Baptism. The Spirit is strengthened within us at Confirmation. We need to do two things in order for the gifts to work within us. First, we must believe. We cannot hear God or know God or love Him or obey His commandments if we do not first believe in God.
Second, we must listen to God who speaks to us through the Spirit. In order to do this, it is sometimes necessary for us to be still and quiet. We need to take time to pray in silence and meditate and shut out the rest of the world. Sometimes, we can hear God through a little voice in the back of our minds. Sometimes, He will talk to us by allowing certain thoughts to come across our minds. But we won’t hear any of it if we do not listen and sometimes that means that we need to just be still.
Sometimes, God will communicate with us by way of things that happen in our lives. Sometimes, He will talk to us through other people. Therefore, we need to be open-minded and listen to what other people have to say. It is not uncommon for God to use such occasions to talk to us. But again, we won’t hear any of it if we do not listen. The person talking to you may not have a clue that God is using them but you will know if you are listening because what they say will strike your faith and may be the answer to a prayer.
There are many things which have been said and could be said about Pentecost. I think that the two most important things to remember are 1- all things are possible with God. 2- In the person of the Holy Spirit; God is with all of us always. We simply have to believe that and keep our eyes and ears open.
Consider this: When the Spirit came to Mary, the Apostles and the disciples who were with them, He did not come alone. We know that there was a strong driving wind that filled the room. This is one of the ways that the Father makes His presence known in both the Old and New Testaments of the Bible.
We also know that the Spirit could not be alone because the one true God is a Trinity. Therefore, we know Pentecost for being the day that Jesus’ promise was fulfilled with the Holy Spirit descending on the Apostles. In actuality, 1- God descended on Mary, the Apostles and the disciples who were in that room. 2- The Gifts of the Holy Spirit are God’s gifts to us and with those gifts, God is with us always (Emmanuel)—not just the Son.
One God and One Body
Second Reading Commentary 1 Corinthians 12:3b-7, 12-13
Though impossible for us to fully understand, today’s messages from Paul are simple. First, Paul is reminding us that there are three persons in one God. When we say that “Jesus is Lord”, we proclaim His divinity but we cannot do that without recognizing the Spirit and the Father together with the Son as one. So when we say that “Jesus Christ is Lord,” we should have the Trinity in our minds and in our hearts as Lord.
Paul points out that there are different kinds of spiritual gifts, different kinds of service and divine works but they all come from the same God. All grace comes from the same God no matter which person of the Trinity acted according to Scripture or our understanding. When one person acts in a work or in bestowing blessings on us in any way; all three persons act.
This is not because one person cannot function without the other. It is because all three persons are one God. So when the Holy Spirit descended upon Mary and the Apostles on this day that we call Pentecost; God descended upon them and blessed them with all of the Spirit’s charismatic gifts.
Paul’s second message is all about the Mystical Body of Christ. Paul points out that a body has many parts and each of us is an individual part of the Mystical Body. It does not matter who we are or where we come from or what we believe before baptism.
The Mystical Body of Christ is the Church and once we choose to become a part of the Church, by the Spirit which we receive in baptism, we become a functioning part of the Mystical Body. We are in total communion with Christ accepting Him as head of the Church remembering the words “…my church” when Christ said that Peter was the Rock upon which the Church would be built.
Accepting Christ as our leader means that it is Christ who we follow. Our faith is in Christ who is the Son, the second person of the Trinity, the one God that we believe in and give all praise and glory.
In essence, today Paul is telling us that in addition to making us in His image, God put His Spirit with all of His gifts in all of us. It is up to us to use those gifts by means of a deliberate choice—belong to the Church. When we do, we perform our designed function within the Mystical Body.
The Holy Spirit in Three Sacraments
Gospel Commentary John 20:19-23
After the Resurrection, the disciples were in a locked room and Jesus appeared to them and said, “Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you.” Then He breathed on them and said, “Receive the Holy Spirit. Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them, and whose sins you retain are retained.”
The first thing that Jesus did after He offered His peace to the disciples was to re-enforce their priesthood with the words, “As the Father has sent me, so I send you.” When a man is ordained as a deacon, priest or bishop in the Catholic Church, he receives the sacrament of Holy Orders and the disciples were the first priests and bishops. When Jesus told the disciples to receive the Holy Spirit, He was strengthening the Holy Spirit within them. This is what happens in the sacrament of Confirmation. Then Jesus gave the disciples the authority to absolve sins. This is the sacrament of Reconciliation or Confession. Therefore, with just a few short words from Christ, there are three sacraments.
Although this gospel exposes three of the seven sacraments, we must remember that the grace of any sacrament comes to us by way of the Spirit. It is the Holy Spirit who comes to a newly ordained priest and guides that priest through his ministry. The Holy Spirit is strengthened within us when we accept His seven gifts at Confirmation. God forgives us of our sins by way of the Holy Spirit speaking through the priest when the priest grants absolution at Confession.
We do not always think of God being with us at all times and in everything that we do. But Pentecost Sunday gives us an opportunity to reflect on the fact that God is with us. When we allow ourselves to be led into sin, we ignore God's presence and if we do enough of that without repenting, God will ignore our request to enter His Kingdom. In the end, heaven or hell is a choice that we all make. This is because, what lives in our hearts and the way that we live our lives, are what we will be judged on, and that is a direct result of the choices that we make.