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“In one Spirit we were all baptised and one Spirit was given to us all to drink.” That was St Paul’s life-changing experience and he wrote about it in many different ways. In the Acts of the Apostles, we are simply told that, “they were all filled with the Holy Spirit,” whilst in John’s Gospel, it is Jesus himself who breathes on the apostles, saying, “Receive the Holy Spirit.” Whether they are baptised and filled with living water or receive the Spirit as breath and life, one thing is clear: the Holy Spirit is a gift of God given through and by the Risen Christ. It is a gift that brings about a radical change in our lives, unites us to God and enables us to live in Christ and do his redeeming work. We preach the Gospel by proclaiming the wonders of God, not just in word but in all we do. We forgive those who sin against us and, through the gifts of the Spirit, we are able to carry out every ministry needed in the Church, complementing one another as the Spirit sees fit. We proclaim a Gospel of salvation in Jesus Christ to all those who are searching for God.
In the Gospels, Jesus, incarnate Son of God, moved by the Spirit, makes known the Father’s love and reveals the face of God to us, while in Acts and the Epistles, it is the Holy Spirit who inspires every thought, word and deed of the early Church and enables the first Christians to understand and acknowledge the revelation of Jesus Christ, in whose Name alone can we be saved and reconciled with God. Early Church fathers, such as Irenaeus, spoke of the Son and the Spirit as being the right and left hands of God. At Pentecost, we focus on the Person and work of the Holy Spirit, while recognising that the Holy Trinity, three Persons in one God, is truly one undivided God, whose threefold Being is shared with us, his creatures, created, as we are, in his image and likeness.
What strikes us about the coming of the Holy Spirit in the New Testament is the joy and excitement his presence brings to individuals, families and to the whole Church. Then there is the element of surprise. Who more surprised than Our Lady when the Angel Gabriel informed her of the Holy Spirit’s work and her role in the Mystery of the Incarnation? Where the Spirit is, there is Jesus. Think of the Sacraments: it is the Spirit who sanctifies the water, but Jesus who baptises; the Spirit who is received, but Jesus who confirms; the Spirit who consecrates, but Jesus who is present in the Blessed Sacrament; it is through the power of the Spirit that Jesus absolves us of our sins; it is the Spirit who brings a man and a woman together, yet Christ who blesses their union, the Spirit making it fruitful; the Spirit who consecrates a priest to become alter Christus , another Christ; the Spirit who anoints, yet Christ who heals. We can see where the idea of the right and left hands of God comes from and we live entirely in his embrace. There is no aspect of our lives that God does not touch and make whole through the indwelling of the Spirit. In fact, it is the Holy Spirit who gives us the mind and heart of Christ and so makes us pleasing to the Father. It is the Spirit who enables us to pray and cry out. “Abba, Father.” Today, not only do we give thanks for the gift of the Paraclete, but we also ask to become more conscious of his presence within us, that we might live each day guided only by the Holy Spirit.
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