The Pilgrimage of Truth
Introduction
The liturgical now
The liturgical cycle begins
with the Son’s descent to earth in the Advent-Christmas season. It continues
with the Son’s ascent back to the Father in the Easter-Ascension season. It
peaks now with the descent of the Holy Spirit on Pentecost. The Easter candle (symbol of Christ’s
presence among us) is now blown out. Its prominence is downgraded to a less
conspicuous spot near the baptismal font. There we will light it to witness the
baptism of our little ones into Christ. Tomorrow we will return to Ordinary
Time with its color green. We will coast along in Ordinary Time through the
warm summer months until the 4th of December this year, when we will
enter into the Extraordinary Time of Advent in preparation for Christmas 2006.
After his resurrection,
Jesus appeared here and there to his disciples for forty days. Then, promising
them a fullness from on high, he ascended into heaven (Acts 1: 3; Lk 24:
50-52). So Ascension happens forty
days after Easter, and that’s how we get Ascension Thursday. Pentecost (a Greek word meaning fifty)
happens fifty days after Easter. Originally Pentecost was simply a Jewish feast
which took place fifty days after Passover, when a devout Jew was expected to make
a pilgrimage to the temple in
The first Christian Pentecost
In Acts we read that when the harvest feast had
come, Jews from all parts of the world descended upon
The mission of the Holy Spirit?
Last Sunday we said that Christianity is a
missionary religion. Christ chose twelve apostles and seventy two disciples and
sent them forth on mission. Our baptism, we said, sends us also on mission. But
what, we asked, is the mission on which we are sent? Are we sent to do
something to people (make them Christian and baptize them), or are we
sent to do something for them. Jesus sends his disciples forth
saying, “Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers and cast out the
demons” (Lk
Christianity is missionary from the very
depths of its Trinitarian theology. The Father sends the Son on mission to
earth. After finishing his mission the Son ascends back to the right hand of
the Father, and from there both the Father and the Son send the Holy Spirit on
mission. Today on the feast of Pentecost we ask what’s the mission on which the
Holy Spirit is sent?
The sequence of Pentecost
A liturgical sequence is an ancient
liturgical song. The present liturgy of the church has four of them: one for
Easter, one for the feast of
The gospel of Pentecost
The gospel for Pentecost singles out truth as the mission of the Holy Spirit.
John, writing for the Greeks who were great philosophers and lovers of the
truth, sprinkles his gospel generously with the word truth. He uses it 25 times in his gospel, while Mark and Luke
use it only 3 times and Matthew only once. John calls the One whom the Father and Son will send “the Spirit of truth.”
“When the Advocate comes whom I will
send you from the Father, the Spirit of truth who proceeds from the Father …he
will guide you into the full truth” (Jn
Christian truth: you do it
Toward the end of John’s gospel Pilate asks
Jesus, “What is truth?” That’s a question which has exercised me for a good
half century, and it often gets me into trouble. Jesus never gave Pilate an answer. If Pilate would ask me what is truth, I’d tell
him that there’s philosophical truth on
the one hand and Christian truth on
the other and the two aren’t identical. Philosophical truth is in your head. You
discuss and debate it. You write it down in a book or in a creed like the
Nicene Creed which proclaims that Jesus is “true God of true God, begotten not
made, consubstantial with the Father.” At the end of the day, most of us don’t
know what that philosophical expression means. The danger with the philosophical
approach to truth is that you might put too much stock in the orthodox statement
of religious truths and in the recitation of orthodox creeds.
On
the other hand, I’d tell Pilate, there is Christian
truth, and it is not in your head but in your heart. You don’t discuss and
debate it. You don’t write it down in a book or a creed. That truth you do! St. John writes, “The one who does the truth comes
into the light…” (Jn 3:21). That’s the
truth which was in the heart, not the head, of Mother Theresa of
Christian truth: a journey
Another thing I’d tell Pilate is that truth
is not a possession but a pilgrimage. It’s always an on-going journey, and it’s
never a final point of arrival. You can
never cry out,”
Weakland’s pilgrimage of truth
Some years ago Archbishop Rembert Weakland
held hearings
with the women of the Archdiocese to hear out their stand on abortion. He was
wondering whether there was something he wasn’t seeing. In his report after the sessions, he
unequivocally upheld the Catholic teaching that abortion is immoral. He warned,
however, that the anti-abortion movement is counterproductive when its focus is
narrow, its tactics aggressive, and its rhetoric ugly and demeaning. Weakland also
remarked that his hearings revealed how far apart the church's teaching
prohibiting the use of birth control is from the views of some very conscientious
women.
His session
with pro choice people caused some displeasure from people here in town and
from officials in the
With a bit of humor the Archbishop later remarked to another prelate how amusing it was that he should get his name in the New York Times twice in one year, both times for doing nothing! First for not talking but just listening and then for not receiving an honorary degree.
A padre’s
pilgrimage of truth
Years
ago a Brazilian priest who was studying sociology at
I marveled at this pilgrim of truth. Despite who he is, he didn’t have it all down pat; he wondered whether perhaps there was something he wasn’t seeing. He, too, was praying the Pentecostal prayer: “Father of light, send your Spirit into my life to open the horizons of my mind because maybe there’s something I don’t see.” That honest man didn’t merely ask the question and then drop it. He pursued it and found his answer.
In
order to escape the rigors of a
Presbyterians’
pilgrimage of truth
I did not know
Mrs. Margaret Butter, though I do know her husband. He periodically attends
weekday Mass here at Old St. Mary’s. Margaret was a pioneer CEO in
Rev.
Sarah did the first reading from the Book of Proverbs which sings the praises
of a woman who is a good mother, wife, and manager of her household. She read
with great clarity and much feeling. At the final commendation the Rev. Sarah
invited the crowd in the cemetery to draw near to the casket which was kissed
by a consoling sun on a day filled with the feel of fall. She pulled everyone
into a heartfelt final good-bye. I observed her attentively (and I also observed how everyone else was observing
her attentively). And I wondered whether there is something we Catholic don’t
see which Presbyterians do see in ordaining the Rev. Sarah? Somewhere along the
way those Presbyterians prayed “Father of light, send your Spirit into our
lives to open the horizons of our minds because maybe there’s something we
don’t see.” (Footnote: Last Sunday the
Rev. Sarah was here at mass with her husband, daughter and father-in-law, and
it was heart-warming to break bread with them.)
Conclusion
Go forth as people
of Pentecost
This isn’t a
commercial for the ordination of women or for any of the other great issues which
wrangle the church, like homosexuality, birth control, divorce, open communion
and married clergy. This is a commercial for the Holy Spirit of Pentecost. When
we, like
People like
Archbishop Weakland and the macho padre from