Dear Sisters, throughout the liturgical year, when we celebrate Feasts of the Lord from His Incarnation and Birth to His Resurrection and Ascension, we call to mind those events which annually we commemorate so as to bring them alive once more within the Church, the living Body of Christ on earth which celebrates them. By ‘bringing them alive’, I do mean something far more than making them strike us through, and in, our powers of imagination.
When, for instance, we celebrate Christmas, our aim in doing so is more than merely to recall a beautiful moment in the distant past and a remote village in Palestine. It is to make present here and now the Christ child as the invisible God made visible among us, so that we may be seized, rapt, by love of the immensity who has made Himself one of us.
And when we celebrate the Mass of the Last Supper, it is not simply to commemorate the anniversary of that time of the year when, two thousand years ago, our Saviour hosted the Last Supper before He would depart from His apostles to go to the Father after His death, but it is to receive once more here and now His Body and Blood just as He gave it to His Disciples to offer to the Father, and to eat and drink for their bodily and spiritual nourishment.
And when we celebrate the Resurrection and Ascension, we do so not merely to call to mind the glorious event of the rising from the dead and the entry into heavenly glory of the Son of God and of Mary, but we do so in order to prepare ourselves, as members of His body here and now, for the vital truth that He has gone before us only in order to prepare a way for us to join Him in His risen glory in the eternal presence of the Trinity in heaven.
All this is made possible because of the event which we celebrate this day. For although we are commemorating an event that took place very shortly after those others we have just recounted, this one is different in a very important way. For in the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, as the Son had promised He would send from the Father, we do not consider only an event that took place on that day, but one which began that day and has never ceased to continue happening ever since.
Last night we listened to the account in Genesis of the confused ‘tower of babble’ which was the consequence and punishment of human rebellion against the Creator. As we did so, we recalled in that very account that the Holy Spirit Himself was preparing the ground for the antidote to babble and confusion: the restoration of the one language and the gift of understanding, poured out on those who profess their faith in God at their baptism. It is about this antidote that we have heard in the first reading from the Acts of the Apostles. Nor is it merely the wonder that men of so many diverse languages and tongues suddenly found that they were all equally able to understand what they heard, but that what was being proclaimed to them were what scripture calls the ‘mirabilia Dei’ - the ‘marvels of God’.
For all that God had done in the incarnation and paschal mystery of His Son, all that was now being proclaimed in a new way – these events in Christ’s life and death are all ‘marvellous deeds of God’, a way leading to faith and to new understanding of God and His designs for us. No longer was there to be the babble of human confusion and the competition of many voices in declaring what we are, and how we have no hope beyond our death. For all those different ‘ways’ of claiming to know God were not only in competition with each other, but ultimately gave no understanding that endured the test of the great problem that faced everyone who came into the world: death.
The central importance of the message of Pentecost is that we have been given - not only the gift of life by the one who hovered over chaos at the beginning of creation and brought it all into order and beauty, but that He, the Spirit of God, continues to make all good, and to give the gift of understanding to those who are confused and bewildered by our very existence, and who see no hope in the end beyond the horrid barrier of our death approaching sooner or later.
The Spirit not only shows us that Christ is alive and assists us in preaching this truth, but He gives even to us the reality of this same life, through the power of the sacraments, and above all through the central act of our faith: Holy Mass. Pentecost is the one moment of the work of our redemption that continues unabated throughout history. It is the same Holy Spirit who came down on our Lady and the Apostles at that first Pentecost that still comes down now upon us and upon the gifts we offer on the altar so that they may become the Body and Blood of Christ. This present Pentecost is not merely a recalling of the first Pentecost, but is in fact its continuation.
The Holy Spirit no longer comes down in tongues of fire and in the sound of a rushing wind, simply because on that first day of Pentecost those were signs of a new reality which the Apostles needed in order to begin to understand what was happening. For every subsequent generation of new Christians the signs are no longer necessary because we know from the Apostles what the meaning of those signs is. We know by faith that the Holy Spirit who came down on them on that first Christian Pentecost is the same Holy Spirit who is coming down today upon us and upon the bread and wine that they may become our Eucharistic offering and nourishment. It is this same Spirit who, as St Paul teaches us, comes into our hearts and makes us cry out ‘Abba! Father!’ Our Lord has taught us to call God ‘our Father’, but it is the Holy Spirit who actually enables us to do so, by making us children of God in baptism, and coheirs with Christ of His glory in heaven.
Whatever the world’s babble does to attempt to bring back chaos, whatever it does to try and strike fear in us and threaten us with all kinds of mockery and doubt, and even despite the suffering it imposes on believers on account of the name of Christ which we bear, it is the Holy Spirit who can, and does, drive out all fear from us. This He does in the same way in which He first did it for the Apostles. When we recollect that they were poor, confused and demoralised by the death of Christ, and still could not quite take in what had happened to Him so much that they went back to former ways of life as fishermen in Galilee even after seeing Him in Jerusalem; and though they remained in the Upper Room after the Ascension, still doubtless out of fear of what the authorities might do to them, this was not where they would stay for long.
For it was on this day that the great inward change was brought about in them. The tongues of fire separated in order to rest on each of them and make them one. He gave them the gift of tongues so that they might be the better able to preach the truth about Christ’s resurrection and about our redemption in Him through forgiveness of our sins.
For the Holy Spirit is our teacher, as our Lord promised, bringing us the gift of understanding all that our Lord made known. He is our sanctifier, making us holy through the gifts which He gives us in the Sacraments, and there is no gift more holy, nor more giving of strength, joy and communion with God than the Eucharist which we share. For we remember that this gift, given by the Son and Spirit to the Church, will not only remain with us throughout this life until the moment we leave it to enter His presence, but it will be at the heart of our future life with the Trinity, the communion in us of Father, Son and Spirit which will make us His home, and of our dwelling in the Trinity, to make Him our everlasting home. Amen.