Pentecost is the final big celebration in the Church calendar before we plunge into working out the details of the life of Christ as it is lived.
There is a sense of anticipation during the season of Pentecost, a sense of a journey beginning that can mirror the excitement of leaving home for college, starting a new job, getting married, holding your first-born for the first time, or learning how to drive. In one moment there is a rush of excitement and then in the next you realize this is just the beginning.
At the end of the fifty days of Pentecost, we begin the longest season of our year — Ordinary Time, the space we have been given to work out the Gospel in our own communities. The gift in this season is that we have been given a majority the calendar to work out our salvation with fear and trembling as St. Paul once encouraged us to do.
Ordinary Time is our chance to go into all the world armed with the knowledge of the Gospels and the words of Christ. Pentecost empowered the Church to carry forward the earthly ministry of Christ until his ultimate return, just like he promised. That being the case, it is now time for us to find a way to put Christ’s words in motion and to incorporate a practice within our lives that shapes us as we navigate through the intersections of life.
Pentecost is a bridge between the life of Christ and the responsibility of our faith. The more we search after the Holy in the midst of the Ordinary, the more it becomes a part of who we are and who we are becoming. And when we cannot find the Holy, we are aware of its absence. Pentecost is just the beginning.
Let us go forth in the name of Christ.
Thanks be to God.
Thursday, June 4, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
3 comments:
Ben,
I love thinking about these next weeks as a time of preparation to then go out into the world in ordinary life, in ordinary time, into the ordinary with an extraordinary word of hope.
Joanne
JOANNE —
Thanks for including us in your reading time while you are on vacation. And thanks for the comment. Speaking of vacation, that is where Ben is just now, and so you must accept my thanks on his behalf.
I am with you, the notion of Pentecost as a season of preparation — like Advent and Lent — is a powerful one, one that does not come to you if you only see Pentecost as a single day.
Namaste —
R. Benson
Joanne,
Thank you so much for reading and for taking the time to leave your thoughts.
I agree.
I hope we can take the faith we consumed at the altar this Pentecost and use it to sustain us as we balance the Holy and the Ordinary for this next season.
Many blessings, Ben.
Post a Comment