Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh
In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost
We have heard in the Acts of the Apostles how, as the Feast of Pentecost was
approaching, Paul the Apostle had started on his journey to Jerusalem to be
there together with all those who on that very day received the Holy Spirit. Of
all of them he was the only one who had not been present in the High Room where
the event took place. And yet, God had given him a true, a perfect conversion of
heart, and of mind and of life, and had given him freely the gift of the Holy
Spirit in response to his total, ultimate gift of self to Him, the God Whom he
did not know but Whom he worshipped.
We also are on our way to the day of Pentecost, next week we will keep this
event. When Paul was on his way, he thought of what had happened to himself in
the solitude of his journey from Jerusalem to Damascus and in the gift of the
Spirit mediated to him by Ananias. And we also, each of us singly and all of us
together should reflect on all that God has given us. He has given us existence
and breathed life into us, - not only the life of the body, but a life that
makes us akin to Him, His life. He has given us to know Him, the Living God, and
He has given us to meet, in the Gospel and in life, His Only Begotten Son, our
Lord Jesus Christ. In Baptism, in the Anointment with Holy Chrism, in Communion
to the Body and Blood of Christ, in the mysterious, silent communion of prayer,
in the moments when God Himself came near, although we were not thinking of Him,
He has given us so much.
Let us reflect on all that is given us, asking ourselves whether we are truly
disciples of Christ. We know from Saint Paul what it means to be a disciple: he
said that for him, to live is Christ, to die will be a gain, because as long as
he is in the flesh he is separated from Christ, Christ Whom he loves, Christ Who
has become everything to his life, not only in time but for all eternity. And
yet, says he, he is prepared to live, not to die, because his presence on earth
is necessary to others. This is the measure of communion he had with Christ. And
this is shown so movingly in a parallel between a small phrase in the Acts of
the Apostles and in the Gospel: both the Lord Jesus Christ and His disciple say
that they are now going back to the Father, that the time of their departure has
come. His life in Christ had culminated in such identification with what Christ
stood for, and beyond that with what Christ was, that whatever was applicable to
Christ became applicable to him. Indeed, for him to live was Christ, and he
longed for his death, but he had learned from God something more than this
longing for freedom, for communion with the God Whom he adored and served so
faithfully, - he had learned that to give is a greater joy than to receive.
The saints had heard Christ say, 'No one has greater love that he who gives his
life for his friends'. Paul, the other apostles, and innumerable saints after
them gave their lives, shed their lives day after day forgetting themselves,
rejecting every thought, every concern about themselves, having thought only for
those who needed God, who needed the word of truth, who needed love divine. They
lived for others, they gave as generously as they had received.
We also are called to learn the joy, the exhilarating, the wonderful joy of
giving, of turning away from ourselves to be free to give, and of giving on all
levels, the smallest things and the greatest things. And this can be taught us
only by the power of the Holy Spirit that unites us to Christ, makes us into one
body with Him, a body of people, bound with each other in their total
togetherness, one with the God who is our unity.
Let us think of all we have received from God and ask ourselves: what can we
give first to Him so that He can rejoice in us, so that He can know that He has
not lived and died in vain. And what can we give to all those who surround us,
beginning with the smallest, the humblest gifts to those closest to us and
ending with giving all we can to those who need more. And then truly Pentecost
will come as a gift of life, a gift that unites us, welds us into one body
capable of being to others a vision on earth of the Kingdom, but also a source
of life and of joy, so that truly our joy, and the joy of all those whom we meet
should be fulfilled. Amen. |