Sunday, May 27, 2012

Pentecost: the gift of the Spirit


Receive the gift
This weekend in our parish, nineteen children will receive the gift of the Eucharist for the very first time.  Over the past few weeks, the children (you) have learned that when we receive this gift, it is Jesus himself that is given to us.  There will be (is) great excitement on these children’s faces.  Their parents and families will all be (are all) here to witness this great day of rejoicing.  After the Mass is complete, there will be celebrations of various kinds to mark this occasion.  Yet, I can’t help thinking that each time we receive the Eucharist, even though we may understand what it is, there’s still a part of us that, like the disciples, doesn’t quite grasp the full depth of this gift.


The gospel today tells of another such moment, when Jesus greeted his friends with the familiar words: Peace be with you.  They didn’t respond as we might respond today: And with your spirit.  In fact, perhaps they had no verbal response at all to such a greeting on that day.  Even today, if we’re really thinking about what happens at the Mass, we too have no words to respond adequately to the great gift of love that God gives in the Eucharist.

Perhaps because the disciples said nothing in response to his greeting, it was Jesus who continued the conversation that day of Pentecost in the Upper Room.  Receive the Holy Spirit he said, and those who were present and who wrote about the experience later said that they didn’t quite understand what happened next.  To their human eyes, there were strange sounds like the rush of a violent wind … Divided tongues as of fire, appeared among them, and a tongue rested on each of them.  Even though they had been told ahead of time that the Spirit would come to them, I think that they were surprised when that moment arrived.

Afterwards, they went out into the community and told others about their experience.  Perhaps they were speaking in their native tongues, but it appears that others who were there also heard their words in other languages.  The readings for Pentecost are often used for the Sacrament of Confirmation, but we’re not going to witness that sacrament here today.  Instead, we celebrate with children who receive the gift of the Eucharist, food for our journey.  This is their (your) FIRST communion, but there will be countless other opportunities to receive this gift again.  Each time, Jesus gives us special food to strengthen us in faith so that we can share the variety of gifts and talents that are ours with Him, with this community of believers, and with others who need us to be living witnesses of compassion, mercy and forgiveness today.

Congratulations to all our children.  Celebrate this day the special gift of God’s love that you receive.  Cherish it, for it Is a gift of great value.  Ponder its significance in your life, for in the Eucharist, God gives us his very self so that he can live in us, strengthen us and enliven us.  Dare to use the gift of love that is given to you today so that you too can tell others about how God is present in your life.  That’s what the disciples have done for generations: In the one Spirit we were all baptisedand we all drink of the one Spirit who was given to the disciples on that first day of Pentecost when Jesus breathed a breath of life into them and said: Receive the Holy Spirit.

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