When
on Pentecost Sunday the Apostles first proclaimed the Christian message, they
presented the Gospel to people from all over the world yet were heard speaking
in their own languages. The Greeks heard the message in Greek, the Persians in
Farsi, the Romans in Latin, the Jews in Hebrew or Aramaic, etc. Although the
people who heard the message were from all over, the message itself united them
into one people. This was and is the work of the Holy Spirit, forming us into
One Person, the Body of Christ. Thus St.
Paul tells the Corinthians, We are all
different, we have different gifts, we do different things, but we are untied
in the Holy Spirit into One Body[1].
Pluralism is not an exception in the Church, it is the
norm. As an example of pluralism I offer
the type of experiences that we had right here in the United States. There are
Hispanic Catholics, Black Catholics, and White Catholics, Asian Catholics,
African Catholics, etc. Issues affecting women as women, men as men, youth,
children, the sick, and the elderly are all discussed regularly. The very word
Catholic means universal.
All of us together are formed by the Holy Spirit in
the one Body of Christ. We have to get away from the thought that someone or
some group is rather an exception than a norm in the Church. There is no one normal group in the Body of
Christ. We are all united by the Holy
Spirit to make up this Body. All partake
of the heart of the Body's existence. As Catholics we don't just put up with
each other's differences, we value each other's differences as a unique
manifestation of the Holy Spirit without which our faith body would be
incomplete.
Now I have always been tempted to think that people
who don't see things as I do are probably wrong. The big trouble with that is
that everyone, thank God, is not like me. Everyone has not had the same
experiences that I have had. Nor have I had their experiences. Yet the Holy
Spirit unites all different viewpoints to make the Body of Christ complete.
Therefore, it would be as wrong for me to impose my individual perceptions on
others, as it would be for others to demand that I see things through their
eyes. The message that comes clear to us at Pentecost is that we must respect each other's differences.
We have all been gifted with unique manifestations of the Spirit. The Church is stronger for our letting the
Spirit live in our lives. Without the Holy Spirit we would be a disorganized
mob. With the Holy Spirit we are the
Body of Christ. On Pentecost Sunday, the Church was born. The Holy Spirit united different people
into the one Body of Christ. We, the members of the Body of Christ, benefit
from our differences one from the other.
May we allow the Holy Spirit to flow through our lives so that our
respect for each other's uniqueness might itself draw more people to become
members of His Body ■
[1] Pentecost Sunday (A), June 8, 2014: Readings: Acts 2:1-11; Responsorial
Psalm 104:1, 24, 29-30, 31, 34; 1 Corinthians 12:3b-7, 12-13; John 20:19-23.
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