Homily: June 5. 2022, Pentecost Sunday.
Can I ask all of you to repeat after me: “Jesus Christ is Lord!”
Once again, “Jesus Christ is Lord!”
That’s great, thank you!
That shows that we all have the Holy Spirit alive in us. Because we just heard in the second reading that ‘No one can say “Jesus is Lord” except by the Holy Spirit.’ If you didn’t have the Holy Spirit in you, you would not have repeated these words with me. I am happy. It seems like a simple thing, right?
But my dear friends, do not take this for granted.
A few years ago, I heard a testimony by Jesse Romero. He was working in federal prison. As part of his ministry, he used to get the prisoners to recite “Jesus is Lord”.
Once, he asked a group of prisoners to do the same. Among them was a satanic worshipper who was doing time for serial killing. And he could not utter those few simple words, no matter how hard he tried. He just could not say it.
Jesus is the Lord. Sounds simple but truly, it is spirit-led.
To say ‘Jesus is Lord’ implies that Jesus is my master, I am His servant, my life and everything belongs to Him, I live for Him.
People who have given themselves to satan would have given up and lost the Holy spirit in their lives. And without that, they can’t even say the words ‘Jesus is Lord’.
That is how much we need the Holy Spirit. We do not realize how important the Holy Spirit is to us. We take our faith for granted. We take the presence of the Holy Spirit for granted. We can’t even pray if we are not inspired by the Holy Spirit.
Yes, St. Paul says, “for we do not know how to pray; the Spirit Himself pleads with God for us in groans that words cannot express”.
From the cross, Jesus gave humanity the greatest gift of His dying: His blessed Mother to be our heavenly Mother.
From His ascension, Jesus gave believers the greatest gift of His leaving: His Holy Spirit to be our divine helper.
Two years ago on April 10, I was in my previous office working when one of the staff told me that a storm was near and we should hide, down in the basement. I have never experienced any storm before that time, so I was doubtful and wondered why the urgency but went along.
After an hour of hiding in the basement, we got out and wow, so much had changed. Trees were uprooted or had fallen, broken branches were everywhere, it looked a big mess. Later in the news that day, I saw how destructive the Derecho storm could be. It was powerful.
If a storm, which is within this world, can be so strong and its force so powerful, then the Holy Spirit would be much more powerful since His force take effect beyond this world’s time and space.
If the Holy Spirit is so powerful and He is our divine helper, how many of us actually invoke His intervention and ask for His inspiration?
We need healing, conversion and revival. We need His power to renew this world caught up in evil and sin. We need an outpouring of the Holy Spirit again. How?
I think the Derecho storm is so powerful because it is essentially a cluster of strong downburst winds racing ahead as one combined force at super high speed.
Similarly, if every one of us, all our families and communities, were to activate all the gifts of the Spirit already in us, put all these gifts together, unite ourselves with one heart and mind for the will of God, all fired up for the Lord, can you imagine what a great force we would be?
The outpouring of the Spirit happens when we all activate the spiritual gifts already in us.
If everyone at St. Ambrose does that, our parish would be on fire, empowered by the Holy Spirit, as on that first Pentecost day. Together, we can do great and wonderful things. This is my dream for St. Ambrose.
Will you let the Holy Spirit activate your spiritual gifts?
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