Monday, September 28, 2009

A Need for the Spirit

This morning I was brought to tears while reading the passage below from Fundamentals of the Faith: Essays in Christian Apologetics by Peter Kreeft.

When Paul visits the church in Ephesus (Acts 19), he notices something missing -- I think he would notice exactly the same thing in most of our churches and preach the same sermon -- and he asks them, "Did you receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?" (Acts 19:2). Why would he ask that unless he saw a power shortage? Why did twelve fishermen convert the world, and why are half a billion Christians unable to repeat the feat? The Spirit makes the difference ...

We have received the Spirit by faith and baptism. "Anyone who does not have the Spirit of Christ does not belong to him" (Rom 8:9). But we need the release, the empowering, the anointing of the Spirit. Such empowerment is probably what the New Testament means by baptism in (or of or with) the Holy Spirit. It is supposed to happen at confirmation. Apparently, it usually does not. Millions of confirmed Catholics receive it afterward, usually in charismatic prayer meetings or seminars. The charismatic movement is obviously God's answer to Pope John XXIII's prayer for a new Pentecost. Popes Paul VI and John Paul II both blessed it but said that it will fulfill its purpose only when, like the early liturgical movement, it ceases to have a separate identity of its own and is absorbed into the whole Church. In other words, every Catholic should be a charismatic, baptized in the Spirit, empowered like the apostles.

The difference this baptism in the Spirit makes is not primarily in any particular charismatic gift, such as tongues. Paul clearly says not to get hung up on tongues (1 Cor 12-14). The difference is far greater: like the difference between a picture and a live person, between dead orthodoxy and living truth, between words and power. If we are not certain that Jesus Christ is present in us, working, acting, making a difference, rather than just being a teacher, an example, a lovely but remote historical figure, then we need Pentecost. And when that happens, the world will be won again.

1 comment:

njccclark said...

Phil I have been thinking about you're earlier experiences and wondering about where you are walking today. this article answers that unspoken question. You know I have encouraged others for 34 years to be filled and walk in the Spirit. Jesus felt it was important enough that He instructed the disciples "to wait for the promise of the Father". I revisit this message often and with passion - when i think about the command to the priests "don't let the fire go out" it motivates me to personally seek the Lord for 'fresh fire'. I'm going to send this link to my older sister whom I consider to be 'the Catholics - Catholic'. She will read it with interest and then....... Phil I'm very thankful to re-connect to you. Hopefully we will have many more years of mutual encouragement. God Bless - love, Tom Clark