Sermons

Summary: In 1967, she prayed this prayer, “Father, I give my life to You. Whatever you ask of me, I accept. Just teach me to follow Jesus and to love as He loves.” The fire quickly spread, even to other Christian denominations.

On Tesco's brand of Tiramisu dessert, printed on the bottom of the box, it says, “DO NOT TURN UPSIDE DOWN.”1—(too late!)

I want to consider how the Holy Spirit has a way of turning things upside down. Like in the Acts of the Apostles in our First Reading, the devout Jews from every nation “were confused ...astounded, and in amazement as the lives of the disciples got turned upside down – and by extension, how the world turned upside down by this new, Spirit-filled faith.

Although Jesus is our advocate in heaven, he promises another Advocate, the Holy Spirt; that is Who we get.

To illustrate, Jesus appeared in heaven just after his ascension and is giving a progress report on all that has happened while he was on earth. Moses is there and he asks him, "Well Jesus, did you leave things in capable hands?" Jesus responds, "I did. I have left behind Mary and Martha and Peter and the other disciples."

Moses said, "What if they fail?"

Jesus said, "Well, I have established the Church and filled it with the Holy Spirit and they will carry on." And Moses said, "What if they fail?" Came the reply, "I have no other plan."2

The Holy Spirt can’t be housebroken, or tamed by us, because the Spirit is sovereign, but He will not inspire laziness.

E.g. St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, as an educator and foundress, always emphasized preparing your material before you preach or teach. There is a type of speaker who begins public speaking with, “As I was driving down the road today, I was wondering what I would speak to you about.”

Yet, we can’t have an over-dependence on logic and reason alone.

In Acts 22:3, St. Paul says that he was educated by Gamaliel, one of the premier teachers of the Law, but Paul actually put more emphasis on the subjective realm of the Holy Spirit in his life than on scholarship. In 1 Cor. 2:4, he says “…my message and my preaching were not in persuasive words…but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power.

A character in John Updike's novel, A Month of Sundays, reflecting on his youthful experience of the church, says, "Churches bore for me the relation to God that billboards did to Coca-Cola; they promoted thirst but did nothing to quench it."

One way to receive the power of the Holy Spirit is to pray to the Holy Spirit using open-ended questions that don’t use yes or no.

E.g. Patty Gallagher Mansfield was a participant in the February 1967 “Duquesne Weekend which marked the beginning of the Charismatic Renewal as movement in the Catholic Church. Pope Benedict XVI had her serve on a Vatican council on the laity. In 1967, she prayed this prayer, “Father, I give my life to You. Whatever you ask of me, I accept. Just teach me to follow Jesus and to love as He loves.” The fire quickly spread, even to other Christian denominations.

As someone has said: "God doesn't ask if we're able. God asks if we're available." What new lay ministries is God calling you to?

2. On one particular day, two miners working deep in the mine, did lose their way out of the mine. Their lights finally went out, and they were in danger of losing their lives. After wandering around in the darkness for a long time, they sat down, and one of them said: “Let us sit perfectly still and see if we can feel the way in which the air is moving because it always moves toward the shaft.”

There they sat for a long time, when suddenly one of them felt a slight touch of air on his cheek. Up he sprang to his feet, exclaiming, “I felt it!” They went in the direction in which the air was moving and reached the central shaft and freedom from their dark captivity.

When we feel overwhelmed by the circumstances of life, we ask the Holy Spirit to show us what He’s doing. He will not allow us to be defeated by our enemies or our own wayward human impulses.

An application: Soon after St. Augustine's conversion, he was walking down the street in Milan, Italy. There he met a woman whom he had known most intimately.

She called but he would not answer. He kept right on walking.

"Augustine," she called again. "It is I!"

Without missing a beat and with the joy of the Holy Spirit in his heart, he replied, "Yes, but it is no longer I."3

Pentecost, from the Greek meaning “fiftieth day” after the Passover, has always been about the joy of the harvest that then began to be the joy of the Holy Spirit.

In our Gospel, in John 20:22, Jesus breathed on the disciples and said to them, “Receive the Holy Spirit.” Imagine the breath of Jesus filling and blessing your life with the Holy Spirit. A pleasant thought indeed.

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