for Sunday, May 11, 2008
the feast of Pentecost, Year A
Acts 2:1-11; John 20:19-23
Pentecost Sunday is often called the birthday of the Church.
For the ancient Israelites, Pentecost (meaning 'fiftieth') was a harvest festival celebrated fifty days after the opening of the harvest. When the Jerusalem Temple was built, this harvest festival was transformed into a pilgrimage feast to celebrate the covenant that Israel had made with God on Mt Sinai.
Several decades after the death of Jesus, the early Christians reflected on their origins and chose this feast to mark the birth of God's new covenant with God's people.
In today's first reading (Acts 2:1-11), Luke tells the new Pentecost story in symbolic language that evokes the story of Moses and the people of Israel receiving God's Law on Mt. Sinai. Just as God's presence to Israel was marked by earthquake and thunder and fire, so God's Spirit enveloping the people of the new covenant appears in a mighty rush of wind and tongues of fire.
Luke's account also evokes early rabbinic teaching that the voice of God on Sinai divided into seventy tongues and all the nations received the Law in their own tongue.
For the teaching at the heart of the new covenant, we turn to the gospel reading from John 20:19-23.
The risen Christ appears to the disciples who are huddled behind locked doors. He offers the simple greeting: "Peace be with you," the greeting we offer each other at every Eucharistic celebration.
He sends them on a mission of peace in continuity with his own God-inspired mission.
He breathes on them the gift of the Holy Spirit and tells them that God will forgive those whom they forgive, and will 'retain' or 'seize hold of' the transgressions of those whose sins or transgressions they 'retain'. To seize hold of wrong-doing is to expose it and deal with it.
Sometimes it is best to forgive and simply allow everyone to move on. In other situations, an easy amnesty only exacerbates the problem. Much of the enduring conflict in our world derives from the inability of ordinary people and of leaders to know how to deal with transgression.
The Holy Spirit is the unique source of our power to forgive, of our power to refrain from vengeance, and of our capacity to deal with the perpetrators of violence.
by Veronica Lawson RSM
(East Ballarat)
archived reflections ...
Easter
Pentecost Sunday. May 11
EASTER
Lent
LENT
Ordinary Time
ORDINARY TIME
Christmas
CHRISTMAS season
Advent
ADVENT
The above reflections are based on the Sunday readings for Year A
...................................................................................................
These reflections are based on readings from Year C of the three-year cycle ...
reflection for the
33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time, November 18
reflection for the
32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time, November 11
reflection for the
31st Sunday in Ordinary Time, November 4
reflection for the
30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, October 28
reflection for the
29th Sunday in Ordinary Time, October 21
reflection for the
28th Sunday in Ordinary Time, October 14
reflection for the
27th Sunday in Ordinary Time, October 7
reflection for the
26th Sunday in Ordinary Time, September 30
reflection for the
25th Sunday in Ordinary Time, September 23
reflection for the
24th Sunday in Ordinary Time, September 16
reflection for the
23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time, September 9
reflection for the
22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time, September 2
reflection for the
21st Sunday in Ordinary Time, August 26
reflection for the
20th Sunday in Ordinary Time, August 19
reflection for the
19th Sunday in Ordinary Time, August 12
reflection for the
18th Sunday in Ordinary Time, August 5
reflection for the
17th Sunday in Ordinary Time, July 29
reflection for the
16th Sunday in Ordinary Time, July 22
reflection for the
15th Sunday in Ordinary Time, July 15
reflection for the
14th Sunday in Ordinary Time, July 8
reflection for the
13th Sunday in Ordinary Time, July 1
reflection for the
11th Sunday in Ordinary Time, June 17
Top of page