The Descent of the Holy Ghost, Titian c.1545, Church of Santa Maria della Salute, Venice, Italy.
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“When the time for Pentecost was fulfilled, they were all in one place together. And suddenly there came from the sky a noise like a strong driving wind, and it filled the entire house in which they were. Then there appeared to them tongues as of fire, which parted and came to rest on each one of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit….” Acts of the Apostles, 2:1-4a.
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Consider the following: 1. The followers of Jesus were terrified that they might suffer the same hideous fate as their master, and end up crucified. 2. The gospel of St. John mentions twice that they cowered behind locked doors for fear of the Jews. 3. There were crowds of Jewish pilgrims crammed into Jerusalem at that time for the feast of Pentecost (the original Jewish-Greek name for the feast, 50 days after Passover. (The Jewish name became so confused with the Christian name that today it is called Shavuot or Weeks). In other words, the entire Christian church was cowering in a single room, traditionally the “Upper Room” or the “Cenacle”. So if the Holy Spirit had not descended upon them that day, all would have been lost. We would not live within a Christian ethos, our laws would be radically different, and almost certainly more brutal and unforgiving. Our world would be unrecognizable (see this recent thinking on what the world owes to Christianity). Jesus had promised some kind of gift, but no-one had a clue what he meant. They just waited for the fateful banging on the door and being marched away to torture and death. Then it happened.
But first, one strange thing about this feast day is that it has more names than any other in the entire Christian and Jewish year:
Pentecost Sunday (50 days after Passover: Greek: 50th πεντηκοστός pentēkostós) – The Birthday of the Church – The Descent of the Holy Spirit – Shavuot (“Weeks”) – The Feast of the Law – The Feast of Weeks – The First Fruits of the Harvest.
And in the old days, all the Christian Sundays following this feast were “Sundays After Pentecost” (which is perhaps a little bit more poetic than “Sundays in Ordinary Time”). Our Jewish friends by tradition say that 49 days or seven weeks after the original Passover, the Hebrew people arrived at Mount Sinai where God gave them the 10 Commandments (hence the Feast of the Law). They also count the “Omer”, the first barley crop, a handful each day from Passover to Shavuot and present that to God in the Temple in Jerusalem, the First Fruits of the Harvest.
And so, in that crowded Upper Room, suddenly “there was a noise from the sky which sounded like a strong wind blowing and it filled the whole house where they were sitting. Then they saw what looked like tongues of fire which spread out and touched each person there. They were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to talk in other languages, as the Spirit enabled them to speak”. At which moment they all became highly animated, went flying out into the crowded, Shavuot-celebrating crowds and began to proclaim the arrival of the Messiah in every language to be heard in that crowd of pilgrims from all over the Roman world (and thereby symbolically annulling the curse of Babylon with all the mixed languages. Genesis 11:1-9). The paralyzing fear of crucifixion was, it seems, banished forever. The Age of God’s Holy Spirit had begun!
And please recall my words from a few weeks ago. In Hebrew, the words Spirit, wind, tongue, fire, are all grammatically feminine, as is dove (Jesus’ baptism). Although theologians argue over the significance, or not, of that, it is my opinion that it is not accidental. I maintain that our Trinitarian God, through which we were all conceived, has indeed a feminine principle contained within the spiritual heart of the Trinity. Each one of us can therefore identify with the Holy Trinity completely and without question. We can all be totally at home within its life-giving strength. Even in the opening of the Book of Genesis, the verb used to describe the Spirit “hovering” (merachefet) is in the feminine form, which can be interpreted as “the Spirit of God… she was hovering” (Genesis 1:2). And of course there is also the Book of Wisdom, that word also being feminine in gender, and throughout that book, “she” is used to refer to Wisdom and her works. So there is a strong case to be made that in name the Holy Trinity encompasses the feminine strongly and is at its heart. And today we celebrate that most mysterious and challenging heart of Christian belief, the Holy Trinity. The Trinity created each one of us in the profoundest love and hope, offering to every one of us the hope of eternal joy and happiness, as is found in the heart of the Trinity. It is communal (the Three Persons), open as we are all invited in, and is life-giving, the heart of love itself. So we cry out “Alleluia” (remembering that the “a” at the end of the word stands for “Yahweh”, hence Allelui-Yahweh” – “Praise God”), and we enter the living heart of life itself and are invited to remain there now and forever: Praise God!

Pentecost: The Descent Of The Holy Spirit, Emperor Nicholas 1 Illustrations, Paris 1841, France.
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