Pentecost originated as a final celebration of the ingathering of
            the grain harvest, which had begun at Passover. Later Judaism
            transformed it into a feast of salvation history celebrating the
            giving of the Law at Sinai and the establishment of Israel as
            God’s people.
            
            All these associations were carried over into the Christian feast
            that marked the conclusion of the great fifty days. The grain
            harvest and the Law are replaced by the gift of the Spirit, and the
            constitution of the old Israelis replaced by the constitution of the
            new. The feast of the Law becomes the feast of the Spirit.
          
            There is no unanimity in the New Testament about a single outpouring
            of the Spirit. The gospel of the day, as we shall see, places the
            gift of the Spirit on Easter Sunday evening, while
            Acts 2
            puts it on Pentecost.
            
            Originally, perhaps, the gift of the Spirit was associated with each
            of the resurrection appearances, and perhaps the Pentecost story
            corresponds to the otherwise unknown appearance to the five hundred
            (1 Cor 15:6).
            
            Historically, this appearance marks the foundation of the Church as
            a wider community than the original Twelve and the beginning of the
            kerygma. Perhaps, as a later part of this story suggests (the
            crowd’s suspicion that the apostles were full of new wine),
            the beginning of the kerygma was marked by an outburst of
            glossolalia such as Paul describes as taking place at Corinth (1 Cor 12 through 14).
            
            This earlier concept of glossolalia has been overlaid with a new
            symbolism (whether due to Luke or to his tradition, we cannot say)
            in which Pentecost reverses the effect of Babel.
          
            Responsorial Psalm: 104:1, 24, 29-30, 31, 34
            
            This is a hymn of praise to God for his works in creation. The
            dominant theology of the Spirit in the wisdom literature (“the
            Spirit of God fills the world”) stresses the work of the
            Spirit in the created order.
            
            By contrast, the New Testament concentrates almost exclusively on
            the eschatological work of the Spirit. The pneumatology of the New
            Testament is conditioned by its Christology.
            
            When the psalmist speaks of the “renewal” of creation
            through the Spirit, he is probably thinking of no more than the
            renewal of nature at springtime.
            
            But in Christian use it can be reinterpreted to mean the
            eschatological renewal of creation, a renewal of which the Church is
            the first fruits.
          
            Reading II: 1 Corinthians 12:3b-7, 12-13
                
 
          
            Paul’s Corinthians were very keen on glossolalia, but
            its effect on the community was questionable. It led to
            divisiveness—those who spoke in tongues treated those who did not
            have this particular gift as second-class citizens.
            
            In reply, Paul insists on several things here. First, to have the
            Spirit means to confess that Jesus is Lord.
            
            Here Paul’s use of the name Jesus is especially nuanced.
            “Jesus” means the earthly Jesus, Christ crucified.
            
            The Corinthians regarded the death of Christ as a mere episode of
            the past and put all their money on the purely spiritual, ethereal
            Christ. Paul recalls them to the centrality of the cross, pricking
            the bubble of their enthusiasm.
            
            Second, the gifts of the Spirit take different forms, not just the
            one form of speaking in tongues. Each gift, however unspectacular,
            has to be used for the common good.
            
            Third, the gift of the Spirit must not lead to individualism but to
            the building up of the corporate body of the community. The Church
            is one body through a common baptism and a common “drinking of
            one Spirit.”
            
            The latter is probably a reference to the baptismal Eucharist rather
            than to a rite analogous to the later rite of confirmation (see
            “supernatural drink” in
            1 Cor 10:4). Here is a further suggestion that 1 Corinthians was written for
            the paschal feast.
          
            This passage comes from the parenetic section of Galatians. Since
            Paul is drawing upon traditional catechetical teaching, we must not
            suppose that he has formulated the teaching with the situation in
            the Galatian churches specifically in view.
            
            We should not, for instance, infer, as some commentators have done,
            that there were two parties in Galatia, one Judaizing and the other
            libertinist, the former being addressed in the doctrinal section of
            the letter, and the latter in the parenesis.
            
            At the same time, however, the Apostle seems to have selected items
            from his catechetical tradition that have special bearing on the
            situation in the Galatian churches. These churches were seriously
            divided over the question of whether or not Gentile Christians
            should be circumcised.
            
            It is not clear whether they were Judaizers who wanted to impose
            Jewish law in its totality upon the Gentile converts or whether they
            were syncretists who included circumcision among other extraneous
            elements. Probably the latter, since Paul has to remind his
            addressees that circumcision implies the obligation to observe the
            whole law.
            
            Hence the Apostle emphasizes those works of the flesh that cause
            divisiveness, and those virtues that promote unity.
            
            It is most important to note that the “flesh” is not our
            lower nature (so, erroneously, the NEB [ed:
            New English Bible, Gal 5:16]), but our unredeemed, self-centered ego. “Flesh”
            includes the mind as well as the body; and the sins of the mind,
            such as pride, are as serious as sensuality.
            
            Equally, “Spirit” should be capitalized, for it means,
            not some innate “higher” nature than humanity, but the
            Holy Spirit of God, released through the Christ-event and made over
            to the believers in baptism.
            
            Paul next introduces a second contrast, between the law and Spirit.
            In Galatians, law generally means law misunderstood as the way to
            salvation. Human beings in their autonomy mistakenly think that they
            can achieve salvation by their own efforts, whereas this is possible
            only through the Christ-event and the consequent bestowal of the
            Spirit.
            
            In later Judaism the feast of Pentecost celebrated the giving of the
            law. It may have been this fact that led the author of Luke-Acts to
            introduce typology from the Sinai event into his story of the giving
            of the Spirit (the wind and the tongues of fire), and led Paul to
            draw the theological contrast between law and Spirit.
            
            A third contrast drawn by Paul is between “works” and
            “fruit.” Works are, as already suggested, achievements
            of the self-seeking natural human being, whereas fruit is that which
            grows through the outside influence of grace or of the Holy
            Spirit.
            
            What we have to do is to open ourselves to that influence and trust
            the possibility of this growth. Again, “works” is
            plural, whereas “fruit” is singular. It is a mistake
            frequently made to speak of the “fruits” of the Spirit,
            a mistake that enjoys the exalted precedent of Archbishop Cranmer in
            the Litany of the Book of Common Prayer. “Works” pull us
            this way and that; “fruit” expresses inner unity of
            character.
            
            Finally, there is the implied contrast between the fruit of
            the Spirit and the gifts of the Spirit listed by Paul in 1
            Corinthians. Is there a real difference between the two? Not too
            much, for love appears in
            1 Cor 13
            as a gift (charism), while here in Galatians it is a fruit.
            
            Yet there is a difference. A gift is granted as an initial endowment
            at baptism or ordination, whereas fruit is what eventually grows
            within the believers through the subsequent influence of the Holy
            Spirit.
          
            We have already seen that John places the giving of the Spirit on
            Easter day, and we have discussed the historical and theological
            grounds for this.
            
            Here, as in Acts, the Spirit empowers the Church for its mission
            (“even so I send you”). The mission is defined here,
            however, not as kerygma but as the forgiving and retaining of
            sins.
            
            The traditional Catholic and High Anglican interpretation of this
            has seen it as a reference to the sacrament of penance, but this is
            probably an anachronism as far as the evangelist is concerned.
            
            In the New Testament, forgiveness of sins is baptismal language (see
            Lk 24:47), and what we have here is the Johannine version of the tradition,
            which includes in the appearance stories the command to baptize.
            
            Our text speaks of the giving or withholding of baptism consequent
            upon faith or unbelief at hearing the gospel message. Only
            derivatively and insofar as the sacrament of absolution is a renewal
            of the baptismal status can this text be stretched to cover the
            traditional interpretation.
            
            If our new interpretation be sustained, it is significant that both
            the Second Reading and the Gospel speak of baptism, for in patristic
            times Pentecost was the day when those who for some reason had
            missed their baptism at Easter were baptized.
            
            Baptism was not continually administered at any time of the year
            because its corporate significance was paramount.
          
Gospel: John 15:26-27; 16:12-15
            Today’s (optional) gospel reading combines the third and fifth
            of the five Johannine Paraclete sayings. They are closely related,
            for both speak of the teaching function of the Holy Spirit, of the
            way in which the content of the Spirit’s teaching is derived
            from Jesus, and therefore, since Jesus is the truth, of the Spirit
            as the Spirit of truth.
            
            The first of our Paraclete sayings (the third in the Gospel of John)
            is closely paralleled in the synoptic tradition (Mk 13:11;
            Mt 10:19-20;
            Lk 12:12; cf.
            Lk 21:15) and is perhaps the original saying out of which the other ones in
            John developed.
            
            As in the Synoptists, this saying is set in the context of
            persecution predicted for the disciples. This promise is attested so
            widely and in such a variety of contexts (see above) that it has a
            high claim to authenticity.
            
            Jesus promised his disciples that they would have the divine
            assistance of the Holy Spirit as they bore witness in a situation of
            rejection and persecution. Perhaps this promise originally applied
            to their missions while Jesus was still on earth.
            
            Since Jesus’ preaching of the kingdom of God was itself
            empowered by the Spirit, may we not at least suppose that the
            apostles’ preaching during Jesus’ earthly life was
            similarly empowered, although, of course, they did not receive the
            Spirit as a permanent endowment until Pentecost?
            
            In the light of the Pentecost experience, the Gospel tradition both
            synoptic and Johannine, will then have transferred this promise to
            Jesus’ farewell discourse
            (Mk 13,
            Lk 21, and
            Jn 14-16).
            
            The coming of the Spirit is closely tied to the person of Christ. In
            this passage it is “I” (=Jesus) who will send the
            Spirit. That is why some of us believe that the present movement
            underway in the Anglican communion to remove the
            Filioque from the Nicene Creed as a gesture to the Orthodox
            is misguided, despite the wording of verse 26b (“proceeds from
            the Father”). At least it should be asserted that the Western
            Church showed a sound theological instinct in adding “and the
            Son,” and that that addition was true to this verse
            (“I will send you”).
            
            If it be objected that the Nicene Creed is talking about the
            immanent as opposed to the economic Trinity (the external relations
            of the three Persons rather than their function in salvation
            history), we reply that that is not what the Fourth Gospel is
            talking about here (see Raymond Brown, ad loc.). Perhaps
            the best formula would be “who proceeds from the Father
            through the Son,” which is what the
            Filioque probably intended to assert.
            
            The most important feature of this text, though, may be its
            insistence on the concurrent witness of the apostles and the Spirit.
            The apostles and the apostolic Church after their deaths are
            witnesses of the Word, but the Word without Spirit may be dead,
            while the Spirit without Word may run wild. Word and Spirit,
            apostolic witness and witness of the Spirit—these must be held
            together, though they have often been separated in the history of
            the Christian Church.
            
            The second part of our reading, as already noted, comprises the
            fifth Paraclete saying. Its point is very similar to our last remark
            on the third saying. If the apostles are to bear witness, they must
            constantly be guided back to the Jesus tradition.
            
            The Spirit brings no new revelation but does bring a constantly
            renewed and ever deeper understanding of the original revelation. To
            suppose that there can be any additional revelations over and above
            that which was revealed in Christ is to deny the eschatological
            character of that revelation.
            
            It is puzzling, however, to read further that the Spirit “will
            declare to you the things that are to come” (Jn 16:13). This has suggested to some commentators new apocalyptic
            revelations like those of the Johannine Apocalypse.
            
            Can this be the intention of the fourth evangelist (who, despite
            other affinities, is so different in his eschatological outlook from
            the Seer who wrote Revelation)?
            
            It is more likely that our passage means “interpreting to each
            generation the contemporary significance of what Jesus has said and
            done” (R. Brown, thus reinforcing the general import of these
            two Paraclete sayings.)
          
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                  Preaching the Lectionary: The Word of God for the Church Today Reginald H. Fuller and Daniel Westberg. Liturgical Press. 1984. (Revised Edition).  | 
                
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from Religious Clip Art for the Liturgical Year (A, B, and C).
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