When we think of Pentecost, what immediately comes to mind?
Hopefully we think of the event recalled in this Sunday’s first reading.
The Apostles, along with Mary, the mother of Jesus, are gathered in the Upper
Room. The Scriptures tell us that “suddenly there came from the sky a noise
like a strong driving wind. … Then there appeared to them tongues as of
fire, which parted and came to rest on them. And they were filled with the Holy
Spirit, and began to speak in different tongues.” We are also told that
folks from different nations heard the Apostles speaking in their own language,
proclaiming the “mighty acts of God.”
This is obviously a significant moment. The Holy Spirit, the promised gift of
the Father and Son, is seen as the one who will gather together and unite men
and women of every race and tongue in one body and one faith. The Apostles, empowered
by the Spirit, are beginning their work as fishers of men. In short, Pentecost
is the celebration of the universal Church’s birth.
It is no mere coincidence that these things happened during the Jewish feast
of Pentecost, also called the Feast of Weeks. It was a time for offering to God
the first fruits of the harvest (see Ex 34:22 and Dt 16:10). With the coming
of the Holy Spirit and the gathering of the nations in one faith, we have the
fulfillment of an ancient type from the Old Testament. God does not do things
by accident.
Still, as significant as the celebration of Pentecost is, this week’s Gospel
recalls another moment when Christ conferred the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles.
John speaks of the first Easter, when the risen Jesus made His first appearance
to the Apostles. We are told, “He breathed on them and said, ‘Receive
the Holy Spirit. Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them, and whose sins you
retain are retained.”
The Greek word used to describe Jesus’ “breathing” on the Apostles
is the same word used in the book of Genesis, when God breathed His life into
Adam, formed from the clay of the earth. Here we have Jesus, anointed by the
Spirit at the beginning of His public ministry, conferring that same Spirit upon
the Apostles. He is breathing a new, spiritual life into them.
Our Lord’s words indicate that what He Himself could do, the Apostles,
empowered by the Spirit, will also be able to do: forgive sins. The same Jesus
who forgave the woman caught in the act of adultery and the sins of the paralyzed
man now tells the Apostles, ‘Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them.”
Like the birth of the universal Church on the day of Pentecost, this, too, is
a moment of great significance. In the words of Fulton Sheen, “The same
law of the Incarnation would now hold; God would continue to forgive sins through
man. … To be humble on one’s knees confessing to one whom Christ
gave the power to forgive — that was one of the greatest joys given to
the burdened soul of man.”
Fr. Grankauskas is parochial vicar at St. Ann Parish in Arlington.
