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During the season of Advent, we welcome the return of
Jesus as king of the eternal, peaceable kingdom. At Christmas, we wonder at him
as the newborn Savior into the world--Emmanuel, God-With-Us. In the Lenten season,
we are initiated into the passion, death on the cross, and burial of Jesus, the
man of sorrows. At the Pasch, we are reborn with the Risen Lord at the empty tomb,
and we go with Him in spirit in His ascension to heaven. Now, at Pentecost, we yearn
for the descent of the Holy Spirit on the church. The church, in its multitude of
expressions, still looks back to it's birth on the day of Pentecost. We also look
forward to a renewal of the Holy Spirit in our lives so that our mission of living
the Gospel will be empowered.
The Jewish Feast of Pentecost (Greek, for "50")
took place 50 days after the Feast of First Fruits. Israel celebrated this feast
(Hebrew, "Shavuot") in commemoration
of Moses receiving the Law on Mount Sinai. It also marked the wheat harvest. It
was on this day when the Holy Spirit fell on the disciples making them apostles
("sent ones") to the nations for a great harvest age of souls in all the
nations until the return of Jesus as King of Kings. The Holy Spirit continues to
fill and empower believers in every generation so that the great harvest may be
completed.
In this season,
we contemplate the Holy Spirit's invitation to make us His disciples. It is
He who not only fills us with power for the
sake of proclaiming and demonstrating the Gospel of the Kingdom, but it is also
He who engages us with the divine and intimate
conversation between the Father and the Son. Let's make ourselves "open to
receive the Spirit's flame so that it will come to rest in our hearts" (Opening
Prayer).

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