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The words “Holy Spirit” appear throughout the New Testament, but they find a particular home in the writings of Saint Luke – especially in Acts of the Apostles. There, the Spirit is not simply described; the Spirit is encountered: moving, stirring, shaping the life of the Church from within.
“When the time for Pentecost was fulfilled…”
Pentecost did not begin as a Christian feast. It was a Jewish celebration, rooted in the memory of Sinai, when God revealed himself in wind and fire and entrusted the Law to Moses. That moment defined Israel as a people set apart.
Now, in Jerusalem, that same divine energy returns – but something has changed. The fire no longer rests on a mountain. It rests upon people.
“They were all in one place together. And suddenly there came from the sky a noise like a strong driving wind…”
The Spirit arrives not as an idea, but as an experience. A sound. A movement. A presence that cannot be contained. Like breath filling the lungs, like music swelling into sound, the Spirit presses outward, insisting on being heard.
“Then there appeared to them tongues as of fire… and they came to rest on each one of them.”
What was once given to one is now given to all. The fire is not diminished by being shared; it is multiplied. Each person becomes a bearer of that same divine life. The Church is born not in uniformity, but in communion.
“Now there were devout Jews from every nation under heaven…”
Jerusalem is filled with voices – different languages, different rhythms of speech, different ways of seeing the world. And yet, in this moment, all understand.
It is as though the Spirit conducts a great symphony of human voices, not erasing their differences, but drawing them into harmony. Each voice remains distinct, yet all proclaim the same Good News.
In the Gospel, Jesus promises the Advocate, the Spirit of truth, who will testify to him – and who will strengthen the disciples to do the same. The Spirit is not a replacement for Christ. The Spirit is the very breath of the risen Lord, alive and active, moving through his people.
And so we ask, in a world marked by war, unrest, and uncertainty: Where is the Holy Spirit?
The answer is not distant or abstract. The Spirit has been here all along!
Perhaps we have simply lost the rhythm of listening. Perhaps the noise around us has drowned out the quieter, deeper movement of grace. And yet the wind still blows. The fire still burns. The breath of God is still being given.
This Pentecost, we are invited to pause – to listen again, to breathe again, to trust again. To allow the Spirit not only to comfort us, but to move us.
And in our liturgy, even the simplest song – sung with faith, shaped with care – can become a vessel for that Spirit: a breath shared, a fire passed from voice to voice, a quiet unity formed in sound.
The Spirit still breathes, waiting for us to listen . . . and to sing.
Liturgy.com
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