Yesterday was Pentecost Sunday in our church year. This is the event when a great sound and light show came upon the early followers of Jesus Christ who had gathered from the known corners of the world. The Holy Spirit invaded the gathering of those people in Jerusalem and there was a great wind, tongues of fire over their heads, and the local people were speaking in the languages of everyone who had gathered there
When I was trying to discern my call to be ordained, I was
in some ways hoping for something as distinct from the Holy Spirit as all the
action on the Day of Pentecost. I was
hoping to get a Road to Damascus experience – like the original one in which
Paul was knocked off his horse when he received a voice from Jesus asking him
why he was persecuting Jesus? A voice
that would have given me a clear message that the road to ordination I was
embarking on was the correct one. Well
on reflection, and considering what happened to Paul, I decided that I would
prefer a more subtle message after all.
I received that some time later. I was in the process of deciding to begin the
path to ordination with the diocese and went for an interview with the Dean of
Theology, at Huron College, John Chapman as part of that process.
Well, I had a very positive interview with the Dean, and the
indication seemed to be that I was beginning the journey that God intended for
me.
After the interview, I got in my car to drive home and
turned on the radio. A CBC program was
on air in which three people were being interviewed about their becoming clergy
later in life – second or third careers like me. I took that as the work of the Holy Spirit -
my road to Damascus or road to ordination experience. Now this could be dismissed as a mere
coincidence. However, Carl Jung has
called these experiences of meaningful coincidences, synchronicity. It certainly was a meaningful coincidence for
me I was certain that this was a sign for me as the work of the Holy Spirit and
one that has helped sustain on my road to ordination and as a priest since.
So, can we conclude that the Holy Spirit does not always
work in such dramatic ways as it did on the Day of Pentecost which we celebrate
today? Let’s look at some other accounts
of the Holy Spirit in the bible. Jesus
promises his disciples in John 16:13 that the Spirit will be a guide and “the
Spirit would guide them into all the truth.”
In Acts 8: 29, the Holy Spirit instructed Philip to go to the chariot of
the Ethiopian eunuch, leading to the eunuch's conversion. The Holy Spirit is a
teacher - Jesus referred to the Holy Spirit as the Advocate who will teach His
followers all things and bring to their remembrance all that He had said to
them. The Holy Spirit also has the role of sanctifier. Paul writes in 2 Thessalonians that God chose
the believers to be saved, through sanctification by the Spirit and belief in
the truth.
The Holy Spirit was there in the beginning when God created
the world – a wind from God – the Holy Spirit swept over the face of the water
before God said, “Let there be light.”
The Holy Spirit the creative power of God – the empowerer, guide,
teacher, and sanctifier.
As I discovered in my road to ordination experience, the
Holy Spirit is not always as easy to discern as on that Day of Pentecost. However, be assured that it is still at work
in us and in the world. We must play our
part in working with God by identifying how the Holy Spirit is at work and
responding to that knowledge. It can be
in the still small voice we hear; it can be in our dreams if we pay attention
to them; it can be in meaningful coincidences; it can be in the inspiration
that gives you the answer that you have been struggling to find for a long
time. It can be in the inspiration we
receive from an unexpected encounter in reading the bible as you come to gather
in bible study or on our own. It can be
when we come together in the name of Jesus Christ to worship and partake in the
body and blood of our Saviour. Be
assured that it is there at work in and for each of us.
May we be blessed to recognize the Holy Spirit guiding us on
our journeys.