To Retain or not retain . . .(Pentecost Sunday Year C)
Scripture gives us two different accounts of the coming of the Holy Spirit to read from today. One is from the author Luke in the Acts of the Apostles, which we hear in the first reading. The second is from John’s Gospel. How the apostles historically received the gift of the Spirit (tongues of fire or Jesus’ breath) is less important than what resulted when the Spirit filled them.
The coming of the Holy Spirit sparked a tremendous change in the lives of the disciples. Whether they received the Spirit when Jesus breathed on them (just as the first human came to life when God breathed into him) or when a great wind brought tongues of fire to them, they became the best versions of themselves. Before the coming of the Spirit, they were a fearful, closed group, hiding out, paralyzed to continue Jesus’ ministry of healing and teaching. Once Jesus came to them and offered them his peace and the gift of the Holy Spirit, they immediately transformed. Rejoicing replaced fear, and the willingness to move outward to minister to others replaced their desire for safety.
The beauty of the Spirit’s working in the disciples’ lives is that God didn’t need them to become different people. They were still a motley crew of illiterate fisherman from an area of the country not known for any thing of significance. What they learned is that regardless of their lack of education, wealth, or social status, God could do incredible things with and through them. Jesus didn’t ask them to continue his work of building the Kingdom of God by themselves. From the day of Pentecost on, they had an Advocate to teach them, strengthen them, and embolden them.
Questions of the week
Have you ever had the experience of moving from fear or timidity into a courageous actor in a particular situation in your life? To what do you attribute the change?
Have you ever known or heard about others whose lives dramatically changed because the Spirit moved them in some way? Please share.






