Sunday, June 08, 2025

From the Lectionary for 8 June 2025 (Pentecost - Year C)

John 20:19-23 (NRSV Updated Edition)

When it was evening on that day, the first day of the week, and the doors were locked where the disciples were, for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood among them and said, “Peace be with you.” After he said this, he showed them his hands and his side. Then the disciples rejoiced when they saw the Lord. Jesus said to them again, “Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you.” When he had said this, he breathed on them and said to them, “Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained.”

Romans 8:14-17 (NRSV Updated Edition)

For all who are led by the Spirit of God are children of God. For you did not receive a spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you received a spirit of adoption. When we cry, “Abba! Father!” it is that very Spirit bearing witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then heirs: heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ, if we in fact suffer with him so that we may also be glorified with him.

~

"What I'd like to do is to take a step back before looking at the texts and just comment something about the coming of the Holy Spirit. Very often in our basic understanding of Christianity, we have something like the Holy Spirit coming as a ... consolation prize given that Jesus isn't here. Which is exactly not how Jesus saw it. Jesus saw that what he was doing was setting something up so that we could have something much much more than him being here, at least being here in the flesh, in the form of which he was historically. That what he had done was to make possible the giving to us the Holy Spirit. The gift of the Holy Spirit is how God is now able to get through to us, inside us, between us completely. The gift is more than the giver, that's something which Jesus keeps trying to say: because I have gone to [the Father] you will be able to do more than me.

"Once we begin to understand Jesus's purpose if you like, his project as having been not so much to “pay for our sins” quote-unquote, as though that were you know a 'bill settlement' issue, but as making available to us the source of life, living fountains of a desire vastly greater and richer than that of which we are capable, that opens us up into the possibility of becoming new creatures together, that gives us a new way of being human. Once you understand that that's what he was about, all that he says and does makes more sense, his anxiety to get it done makes more sense. What Jesus was trying to do was make it possible for us to be given the Holy Spirit. He instantiating it, and the Father giving it; he breathing it out, the Father pouring it upon us.

"So what we celebrate today, if you like, is that enormous gift having become possible for humans. And I want to stress that because sometimes Pentecost is celebrated as if it's the birthday of the Church, ... though actually probably the Church's birthday was better considered to be Good Friday, but there we are - that's just my little opinion. But the real problem with thinking about it as the birthday of the Church is that it tends to make the Holy Spirit a 'churchy' thing, whereas the whole point of the Holy Spirit is that it's how God's act of communication goes worldwide. God begins to be able to spread out, the Holy One comes out of the Temple and goes worldwide.

"So this is now a universal and a cosmic difference that is made. If you like, we who have the privilege of being baptized Christians and having received the Holy Spirit, have the privilege of being on the inside of something that is for humans. If, and it's always an if, the Church manages to be a sign of the reconciled humanity, of God's children coming together as one in answer to Jesus prayer, that sign is a wonderful thing, that sign is the presence of the Holy Spirit ushering in the Kingdom. But it's doing it constantly all over the place and not necessarily where we're looking for it! That's another thing which we get from John: no one knows where the Spirit comes from, where the wind blows, where the Spirit flows. It's constantly going ahead of us, it's constantly surprising us.

"And I think that that's a very very important part of understanding: this gift is something not that we can think of as something which we possess and can give to other people but which is something which with luck possesses us and is impelling us to new places, new positions, new openings-up, new freshenings of life and belonging. All of these things are what the Holy Spirit is about.

"Having said that, let's look quickly at the texts because you'll see something I hope about what I'm trying to stress there. John's text is the text we had at the very beginning of Easter. It's the text where Jesus appears in the upper room on the evening of the first day of the week, and the doors are locked. So remember, I told you before, this, if you like, ironizes the holy place in the Temple into which Jewish people quite rightly were feared to go because only the high priest could go. But here we have an ordinary house, people in it locked for fear of the Jews. It's a bit of irony there because this is in fact now a secular place in which the Holy One of God is appearing.

"And the first thing he comes and says is: “Peace be with you.” He gives peace twice thus fulfilling what Jesus had talked about earlier in John's Gospel. “After he said this he showed them his hand and his side.” So he indicates how the peace comes: it is the greeting of peace, then he's showing them what he's done to bring them peace. He's identified who he is - the one who was cast out. And it's from the cast out one that peace comes - not vengeance, not anger, [but] peace. All the great requital for passages in Isaiah have been fulfilled, but not as vengeance, as the gift of peace. And then the disciples rejoiced when they saw the Lord. In other words, peace and joy. Joy is the realization of something that has been done for us beyond our imagination and is coming upon us. Peace and joy - these are going to be the absolute keynotes of the Holy Spirit.

"Then Jesus says to them ... “As the Father has sent me, so I send you.” In other words, up till now, his Father has sent him - all that he has been done has been, if you like, the iconic reflection of his Father, he has been the image, the only image. What God looks like is determined by what Jesus has done. In other words, it's become entirely a horizontal form of belonging, a form of recognition. We recognize the Father in what the Son does. The Son is equal to the Father. It's not a question of looking up, it's a question of looking sideways. And now that same package he is giving to them.

"[... Then he] breathes into them and, as I've said time and time again, it's the same verb as in Genesis 'breathing' into Adam's nostrils - this is the beginning of a new creation, starting new humanity. This is not only to do with the particular people there, it's to do with a new Adam, the possibility of becoming a new human and of creation being opened up again. And, this is the amazing thing: this power which has come from on high through him, by his breath, through that which he has achieved, this power is now ours. And that that's not simply... a 'canonical' thing, it's an actual thing.

"And he says: if you forgive the sins of any, they have forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained. Let's try and de-moralize that for a bit. That's not merely a question of setting up people who can give up absolution and confession. That's one way of organizing the reception of that, but it's certainly not limiting it. No, it's saying: in as far as you forgive other people creation will be opened up, and as far as you don't, it will remain closed down. There will be no more 'deus ex machina', no more God from outside. God is now at your level, you are within God, and God is within you. It's going to work at your level. It's up to you to take this forward. Where are you going to go?

"And its power comes through forgiveness, through letting go. It's a power that seems weak. But is the strongest thing, because it's as you let go that you will come to discover what is, rather than remaining locked in confirmation bias, in violent patterns of identification and projection. It's as you're able to forgive and let go, that you will discover who others really are, who you really are, and will be able to open up the universe.

[...]

"So this is the power that we've been given. Let's think about this over the next few weeks because this notion of God having become alive sideways amongst us, at the horizontal level, enabling us to discover from within where this peace, where this joy comes from, and how it empowers us to go forth, not just in little ecclesial huddles but as people who speak and witness to something greater than us in the whole world, so that creation can start to begin to bear witness to the glory of its Creator."

- James Alison, from video "Homily for Pentecost Sunday 2022 C" (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8DVVuJBasQ)


[Note that John 20:19-23 is the Roman Catholic lectionary Gospel text for Pentecost C - the "Revised Common Lectionary" text is John 14:8-17. For analysis and discussion on this and the other lectionary texts for this Sunday, see: https://girardianlectionary.net/reflections/year-c/pentecostc/]

No comments: