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Letters 1st Part
The
supreme pontiff JohnPaul II

LORD AND GIVER OF LIFE DOMINUM ET
VIVIFICANTEM
VENERABLE BROTHERS, BELOVED SONS AND DAUGHTERS, HEALTH AND THE
APOSTOLIC BLESSING!
1. The Church professes her faith in the Holy Spirit as "the Lord, the
giver of life". She professes this in the Creed which is called
Nicene-Constantinopolitan from the name of the two Councils--of Nicaea
(A.D. 325) and Constantinople (A.D. 381)---at which it was formulated
or promulgated. It also contains the statement that the Holy Spirit
"has spoken through the Prophets".
These are words which the Church receives from the very source of her
faith, Jesus Christ. In fact, according to the Gospel of John, the
Holy Spirit is given to us with the new life, as Jesus foretells and
promises on the great day of the Feast of Tabernacles: "If any one
thirst, let him come to me and drink. He who believes in me, as the
scripture has said, 'Out of his heart shall flow rivers of living
water'".
[1] And the Evangelist explains: "This he said about the Spirit, which
those who believed in him were to receive".[2] It is the same simile
of water which Jesus uses in his conversation with the Samaritan
woman, when he speaks of "a spring of water welling up to eternal
life",[3] and in his conversation with Nicodemus when he speaks of the
need for a new birth "of water and the Spirit" in order to "enter the
kingdom of God.".[4]
The Church, therefore, instructed by the words of Christ, and drawing
on the experience of Pentecost and her own apostolic history, has
proclaimed since the earliest centuries her faith in the Holy Spirit,
as the giver of life, the one in whom the inscrutable Triune God
communicates himself to human beings, constituting in them the source
of eternal life.
2. This faith, uninterruptedly professed by the Church, needs to be
constantly reawakened and deepened in the consciousness of the People
of God. In the course of the last hundred years this has been done
several times: by Leo XIII, who published the Encyclical Epistle
Divinum Illud Munus (1897) entirely devoted to the Holy Spirit; by
Pius XII, who in the Encyclical Letter Mystici Corporis (1943) spoke
of the Holy Spirit as the vital principle of the Church, in which he
works in union with the Head of the Mystical Body, Christ;[5] at the
Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, which brought out the need for a
new study of the doctrine on the Holy Spirit, as Paul IV emphasized:
"The Christology and particularly the ecclesiology of the Council must
be succeeded by a new study of and devotion to the Holy Spirit,
precisely as the indispensable complement to the teaching of the
Council."[6]
In our own age, then, we are called anew by the ever ancient and ever
new faith of the Church, to draw near to the Holy Spirit as the giver
of life. In this we are helped and stimulated also by the heritage we
share with the Oriental Churches, which have jealously guarded the
extraordinary riches of the teachings of the Fathers on the Holy
Spirit. For this reason too we can say that one of the most important
ecclesial events of recent years has been the Sixteenth Centenary of
the First Council of Constantinople, celebrated simultaneously in
Constantinople and Rome on the Solemnity of Pentecost in 1981. The
Holy Spirit was then better seen, through a meditation on the mystery
of the Church, as the one who points out the ways leading to the union
of Christians, indeed as the supreme source of this unity, which comes
from God himself and to which Saint Paul gave a particular expression
in the words which are frequently used to begin the Eucharistic
liturgy: "The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and
the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all".[7]
In a certain sense, my previous Encyclicals Redemptor Hominis and
Dives in Misericordia took their origin and inspiration from this
exhortation, cerebrating as they do the event of our salvation
accomplished in the Son, sent by the Father into the world "that the
world might be saved through him"[8] and "every tongue confess that
Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father".[9] From this
exhortation now comes the present Encyclical on the Holy Spirit, who
proceeds from the Father and the Son; with the Father and the Son he
is adored and glorified: a divine Person, he is at the centre of the
Christian faith and is the source and dynamic power of the Church's
renewal.[10] The Encyclical has been drawn from the heart of the
heritage of the Council. For the Conciliar texts, thanks to their
teaching on the Church in herself and the Church in the world, move us
to penetrate ever deeper into the Trinitarian mystery of God himself,
through the Gospels, the Fathers and the Iiturgy: to the Father,
through Christ, in the Holy Spirit.
In this way the Church is also responding to certain deep desires
which she believes she can discern in people's hearts today: a fresh
discovery of God in his transcendent reality as the infinite Spirit,
just as Jesus presents him to the Samaritan woman; the need to adore
him "in spirit and truth"[11] the hope of finding in him the secret of
love and the power of a "new creation":[12] yes, precisely the giver
of life.
The Church feels herself called to this mission of proclaiming the
Spirit, while together with the human family she approaches the end ot
the second Millennium after Christ. Against the background of a heaven
and earth which will "pass away", she knows well that "the words which
will not pass away"[13] acquire a particular eloquence. They are the
words of Christ about the Holy Spirit, the inexhaustible source of the
"water welling up to eternal life",[14] as truth and saving grace.
Upon these words she wishes to reflect, to these words she wishes to
call the attention of believers and of all people, as she prepares to
celebrate--as will be said later on--the great Jubilee which will mark
the passage from the second to the third Christian Millennium.
Naturally, the considerations that follow do not aim to explore
exhaustively the extremely rich doctrine on the Holy Spirit, nor to
favor any particular solution of questions which are still open. Their
main purpose is to develop in the Church the awareness that She is
compelled by the Holy Spirit to do her part towards the full
realization of the will of God, who has estab lished Christ as the
source of salvation for the whole world."[15]
1. Jesus' promise and revelation at the Last Supper
3. When the time for Jesus to leave this world had almost come, he
told the Apostles of "another Counsellor".[16]
The evangelist John, who was present, writes that, during the Last
Supper before the day of his Passion and Death, Jesus addressed the
Apostles with these words: "Whatever you ask in my name, I will do it,
that the Father may be glorified in the Son... I will pray the Father,
and he will give you another Counsellor, to be with you for ever, even
the Spirit of truth".[17]
It is precisely this Spirit of truth whom Jesus calls the Paraclete--and
parakletos means "counselor ", and also " intercessor ", or "
advocate" . And he says that the Paraclete is "another" Counselor, the
second one, since he, Jesus himself, is the first Counsellor,[18]
being the first bearer and giver of the Good News. The Holy Spirit
comes after him and because of him, in order to continue in the world,
through the Church, the work of the Good News of salvation. Concerning
this continuation of his own work by the Holy Spirit Jesus speaks more
than once during the same farewell discourse, preparing the Apostles
gathered in the Upper Room for his departure, namely for his Passion
and Death on the Cross.
The words to which we will make reference here are found in the Gospel
of John. Each one adds a new element to that prediction and promise.
And at the same time they are intimately interwoven, not only from the
viewpoint of the events themselves but also from the viewpoint of the
mystery of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, which perhaps in no
passage of Sacred Scripture finds so emphatic an expression as here.
4. A little while after the prediction just mentioned, Jesus adds:
"But the Counsellor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my
name, he will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all
that I have said to you".[19] The Holy Spirit will be the Counsellor
of the Apostles and the Church, always present in their midst even
though invisible as the teacher of the same Good News that Christ
proclaimed.
The words "he will teach" and "bring to remembrance" mean not only
that he, in his own particular way, will continue to inspire the
spreading of the Gospel of salvation but also that he will help people
to understand the correct meaning of the content of Christ's message;
they mean that he will ensure continuity and identity of understanding
in the midst of changing conditions and circumstances. The Holy
Spirit, then, will ensure that in the Church there will always
continue the same truth which the Apostles heard from their Master.
5. In transmitting the Good News, the Apostles will be in a special
way associated with the Holy Spirit. This is how Jesus goes on: When
the Counselor comes, whom I shall send to you from the Father, even
the Spirit of truth, who proceeds from the Father, he will bear
witness to me; and you also are witnesses, because you have been with
me from the beginning".[20]
The Apostles were the direct eyewitnesses. They a have heard n and a
have seen with their own eyes ", " have looked upon " and even touched
with their hands" Christ, as the evangelist John says in another
passage.[21] This human, first-hand and "historical" witness to Christ
is linked to the witness of the Holy Spirit: "He will bear witness to
me". In the witness of the Spirit of truth, the human testimony of the
Apostles will find its strongest support. And subsequently it will
also find therein the hidden foundation of its continuation among the
generations of Christ's disciples and believers who succeed one
another down through the ages.
The supreme and most complete revelation of God to humanity is Jesus
Christ himself, and the witness of the Spirit inspires, guarantees and
con validates the faithful transmission of this revelation in the
preaching and writing of the Apostles,"[22] while the witness of the
Apostles ensures its human expression in the Church and in the history
of humanity.
6. This is also seen from the strict correlation of content and
intention with the just mentioned prediction and promise, a
correlation found in the next words of the text of John: "I have yet
many things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now. When the
Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth; for he
will not speak on his own authority, but whatever he hears he will
speak, and he will declare to you the things that are to come"[23]
In his previous words Jesus presents the Counsellor, the Spirit of
truth, as the one who "will teach" and "bring to remembrance, as the
one who "will bear witness" to him. Now he says: "He will guide you
into all the truth". This "guiding into all the truth, referring to
what the Apostles "cannot bear now", is necessarily connected with
Christ's self-emptying through his Passion and Death on the Cross,
which, when he spoke these words, was just about to happen.
Later however it becomes clear that this "guiding into all the truth"
is connected not only with the scandal of the Cross, but also with
everything that Christ "did and taught".[24] For the mystery of Christ
taken as a whole demands faith, since it is faith that adequately
introduces man into the reality of the revealed mystery The "guiding
into all the truth" is therefore achieved in faith and through faith:
and this is the work of the Spirit of truth and the result of his
action in man.
Here the Holy Spirit is to be man's supreme guide and the light of the
human spirit. This holds true for the Apostles, the eyewitnesses, who
must now bring to all people the proclamation of what Christ did and
taught, and especially the proclamation of his Cross and Resurrection.
Taking a longer view this also holds true for all the generations of
disciples and confessors of the Master, since they will have to accept
with faith and confess with candour the mystery of God at work in
human history, the revealed mystery which explains the definitive
meaning of that history.
7. Between the Holy Spirit and Christ there thus subsists, in the
economy of salvation, an intimate bond, whereby the Spirit works in
human history as "another Counsellor", permanently ensuring the
transmission and spreading of the Good News revealed by Jesus of
Nazareth. Thus, in the Holy Spirit-Paraclete, who in the mystery and
action of the Church unceasingly continues the historical presence on
earth of the Redeemer and his saving work, the glory of Christ shines
forth, as the following words of John attest: "He (the Spirit of
truth) will glorify me, for he will take what is mine and declare it
to you".[25]
By these words all the preceding statements are once again confirmed:
"He will teach ..., will bring to your remembrance..., will bear
witness. The supreme and complete seIf-revelation of God, accomplished
in Christ and witnessed to by the preaching of the Apostles, continues
to be manifested in the Church through the mission of the invisible
Counsellor, the Spirit of truth. How intimately this mission is linked
with the mission of Christ, how fully it draws from this mission of
Christ, consolidating and developing in history its salvific results,
is expressed by the verb "take": "he will take what is mine and
declare it to you". As if to explain the words "he will take" by
clearly expressing the divine and Trinitarian unity of the source,
Jesus adds: "All that the Father has is mine; therefore I said that he
will take what is mine and declare it to you".[26] By the very fact of
taking what is "mine", he will draw from "what is the Father's".
In the light of these words "he will take", one can therefore also
explain the other significant words about the Holy Spirit spoken by
Jesus in the Upper Room before the Passover: "It is to your advantage
that I go away, for if I do not go away, the Counsellor will not come
to you; but if I go, I will send him to you. And when he comes? he
will convince the world concerning sin and righteousness and
judgment".[27] It will be necessary to return to these words in a
separate reflection.
8. It is a characteristic of the text of John that the Father, the Son
and the Holy Spirit are clearly called Persons, the first distinct
from the second and the third, and each of them from one another.
Jesus speaks of the SpiritCounsellor, using several times the personal
pronoun "he"; and at the same time, throughout the farewell discourse,
he reveals the bonds which unite the Father, the Son and the Paraclete
to one another.
Thus " the Holy Spirit... proceeds from the Father"[28] and the Father
"gives" the Spirit.[29] The Father "sends" the Spirit in the name of
the Son,[30] the Spirit "bears witness" to the Son.[31] The Son asks
the Father to send the Spirit-Counsellor,[32] but likewise affirms and
promises, in relation to his own "departure" through the Cross: "If I
go, I will send him to you".[33] Thus, the Father sends the Holy
Spirit in the power of his Fatherhood, as he has sent the Son;[34] but
at the same time he sends him in the power of the Redemption
accomplished by Christ--and in this sense the Holy Spirit is sent also
by the Son: "I will send him to you".
Here it should be noted that, while all the other promises made in the
Upper Room foretold the coming of the Holy Spirit after Christ's
departure, the one contained in the text of John 16:7 f also includes
and clearly emphasizes the relationship of interdependence which could
be called causal between the manifestation of each: "If I go, I will
send him to you". The Holy Spirit will come insofar as Christ will
depart through the Cross: he will come not only afterwards, but
because of the Redemption accomplished by Christ, through the will and
action of the Father.
9. Thus in the farewell discourse at the Last Supper, we can say that
the highest point of the revelation of the Trinity is reached. At the
same time, we are on the threshold of definitive events and final
words which in the end will be translated into the great missionary
mandate addressed to the Apostles and through them to the Church: "Go
therefore and make disciples of all nations, a mandate which contains,
in a certain sense, the Trinitarian formula of baptism: "baptizing
them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit".[35]
The formula reflects the intimate mystery of God, of the divine life,
which is the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, the divine unity of
the Trinity. The farewell discourse can be read as a special
preparation for this Trinitarian formula, in which is expressed the
life-giving power of the Sacrament which brings about sharing in the
life of the Triune God, for it gives sanctifying grace as a
supernatural gift to man. Through grace, man is called and made
"capable" of sharing in the inscrutable life of God.
10. In his intimate life, God "is love,[36] the essential love shared
by the three divine Persons: personal love is the Holy Spirit as the
Spirit of the Father and the Son. Therefore he " searches even the
depths of God ",[37] as uncreated Love-Gift. It can be said that in
the Holy Spirit the intimate life of the Triune God becomes totally
gift, an exchange of mutual love between the divine Persons, and that
through the Holy Spirit God exists in the mode of gift. It is the Holy
Spirit who is the personal expression of this self-giving, of this
being-love.[38]
He is Person-Love. He is Person-Gift. Here we have an inexhaustible
treasure of the reality and an inexpressible deepening of the concept
of person in God, which only divine Revelation makes known to us.
At the same time, the Holy Spirit, being consubstantial with the
Father and the Son in divinity, is love and uncreated gift from which
derives as from its source (Fons vivus) all giving of gifts vis-a-vis
creatures (created gift): the gift of existence to all things through
creation; the gift of grace to human beings through the whole economy
of salvation. As the Apostle Paul writes: "God's love has been poured
into our hearts through the Holy Spirit which has been given to
us".[39] The salvific self-fiving of God in the Holy Spirit
11. Christ's farewell discourse at the Last Supper stands in
particular reference to this "giving" and "self-giving" of the Holy
Spirit. In John's Gospel we have as it were the revelation of the most
profound " logic " of the saving mystery contained in God's eternal
plan, as an extension of the ineffable communion of the Father, Son
and Holy Spirit. This is the divine "logic" which from the mystery of
the Trinity leads to the mystery of the Redemption of the world in
Jesus Christ.
The Redemption accomplished by the Son in the dimensions of the
earthly history of humanity--accomplished in his "departure" through
the Cross and Resurrection--is at the same time, in its entire
salvific power, transmitted to the Holy Spirit: the one who "will take
what is mine".[40] The words of the text of John indicate that,
according to the divine plan, Christ's "departure" is an indispensable
condition for the "sending" and the coming of the Holy Spirit, but
these words also say that what begins now is the new salvific
self-giving of God, in the Holy Spirit.
12. It is a new beginning in relation to the first, original beginning
of God's salvific self-giving, which is identified with the mystery of
creation itself. Here is what we read in the very first words of the
Book of Genesis: "In the beginning God created the heavens and the
earth..., and the Spirit of God (ruah Elohim) was moving over the face
of the waters".[41]
This biblical concept of creation includes not only the call to
existence of the very being of the cosmos, that is to say the giving
of existence, but also the presence of the Spirit of God in creation,
that is to say the beginning of God's salvific self-communication to
the things he creates. This is true first of all concerning man, who
has been created in the image and likeness of God: "Let us make man in
our image, after our likeness".[42]
"Let us make": can one hold that the plural which the Creator uses
here in speaking of himself already in some way suggests the
Trinitarian mystery, the presence of the Trinity in the work of the
creation of man? The Christian reader, who already knows the
revelation of this mystery, can discern a reflection of it also in
these words. At any rate, the context of the Book of Genesis enables
us to see in the creation of man the first beginning of God's salvific
self-giving commensurate with the "image and likeness" of himself
which he has granted to man.
13. It seems then that even the words spoken by Jesus in the farewell
discourse should be read again in the light of that "beginning", so
long ago yet fundamental, which we know from Genesis. "If I do not go
away, the Counsellor will not come to you; but if I go, I will send
him to you". Describing his "departure" as a condition for the
"coming" of the Counsellor, Christ links the new beginning of God's
salvific self-communication in the Holy Spirit with the mystery of the
Redemption.
It is a new beginning, first of all because between the first
beginning and the whole of human history--from the original fall
onwards--sin has intervened, sin which is in contradiction to the
presence of the Spirit of God in creation, and which is above all in
contradiction to God's salvific self-communication to man. Saint Paul
writes that, precisely because of sin, "creation... was subjected to
futility ..., has been groaning in travail together until now" and
"waits with eager longing for the revealing of the sons of God".[43]
14. Therefore Jesus Christ says in the Upper Room: "It is to your
advantage I go away; ... if I go, I will send him to you".[44] The
"departure" of Christ through the Cross has the power of the
Redemption--and this also means a new presence of the Spirit of God in
creation: the new beginning of God's self-communication to man in the
Holy Spirit. "And that you are children is proven by the fact that God
has sent into our hearts the Spirit of his Son who cries: Abba,
Father!"_ as the Apostle Paul writes in the Letter to the
Galatians.[45]
The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of the Father, as the words of the
farewell discourse in the Upper Room bear witness. At the same time he
is the Spirit of the Son: he is the Spirit of Jesus Christ, as the
Apostles and particularly Paul of Tarsus will testify.[46] With the
sending of this Spirit "into our hearts", there begins the fulfillment
of that for which "creation waits with eager longing", as we read in
the Letter to the Romans.
The Holy Spirit comes at the price of Christ's " departure " . While
this " departure" caused the Apostles to be sorrowful,[47] and this
sorrow was to reach its culmination in the Passion and Death on Good
Friday, "this sorrow will turn into joy,"[48] For Christ will add to
this redemptive "departure" the glory of his Resurrection and
Ascension to the Father. Thus the sorrow with its underlying joy is,
for the ApostIes in the context of their Master's "departuren, an
"advantageous" departure, for thanks to it another "Counsellor" will
come.[49]
At the price of the Cross which brings about the Redemption, in the
power of the whole Paschal mystery of Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit
comes in order to remain from the day of Pentecost onwards with the
Apostles, to remain with the Church and in the Church, and through her
in the world.
In this way there is definitively brought about that new beginning of
the self-communication of the Triune God in the Holy Spirit through
the work of Jesus Christ, the Redeemer of man and of the world.
15. There is also accomplished in its entirety the mission of the
Messiah, that is to say of the One who has received the fullness of
the Holy Spirit for the Chosen People of God and for the whole of
humanity. "Messiah" literally means "Christ", that is, "Anointed One",
and in the history of salvation it means "the one anointed with the
Holy Spirit".
This was the prophetic tradition of the Old Testament. Following this
tradition, Simon Peter will say in the house of Cornelius: "You must
have heard about the recent happenings in Judaea... after the baptism
which John preached: how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy
Spirit and with power"[50].
From these words of Peter and from many similar ones,[51] one must
first go back to the prophecy of Isaiah, sometimes called "the Fifth
Gospel" or "the Gospel of the Old Testament".
Alluding to the coming of a mysterious personage which the New
Testament revelation will identify with Jesus, Isaiah connects his
person and mission with a particular action of the Spirit of God--the
Spirit of the Lord. - These are the words of the Prophet: "There shall
come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow
out of his roots.
And the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom
and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of
knowledge and the fear of the Lord. And his delight shall be tke fear
of the Lord".[52]
This text is important for the whole pneumatology of the Old
Testament, because it constitutes a kind of bridge between the ancient
biblical concept of " spirit", understood primarily as a " charismatic
breath of wind ", and the "Spirit" as a person and as a gift, a gift
for the person. The Messiah of the lineage of David ( " from the stump
of Jesse " ) is precisely that person upon whom the Spirit of the Lord
"shall rest" It is obvious that in this case one cannot yet speak of a
revelation of the Paraclete.
However, with this veiled reference to the figure of the future
Messiah there begins, so to speak, the path towards the full
revelation of the Holy Spirit in the unity of the Trinitarian mystery,
a mystery which will finally be manifested in the New Covenant.
16. It is precisely the Messiah himself who is this path. In the Old
Covenant, anointing had become the external symbol of the gift of the
Spirit. The Messiah (more than any other anointed personage in the Old
Covenant) is that single great personage anointed by God himselt. He
is the Anointed One in the sense that he possesses the fullness of the
Spirit of God.
He himself will also be the mediator in granting this Spirit to the
whole People. Here in fact are other words of the Prophet: "The Spirit
of the Lord God is upon me, because the Lord has anoinfed me to bring
good tidings to the afflicted; he has sent me to bind up the
brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of
the prison to those who are bound; to proclaim the year of the Lord's
favour".[53]
The Anointed One is also sent "with the Spirit of the Lord": "Now the
Lord God has sent me and his Spiritn.[54]
According to the Book of Isaiah, the Anointed One and the One sent
together with the Spirit of the Lord is also the chosen Servant ot the
Lord upon whom the Spirit of God comes down: "Behold my servant, whom
I uphold, my chosen, in whom my soul delights; I have put my Spirit
upon him".[55]
We know that the Servant of the Lord is revealed in the Book of Isaiah
as the true Man of Sorrows: the Messiah who suffers for the sins of
the world.[56] And at the same time it is precisely he whose mission
will bear f or all humanity the true fruits of salvation: " He will
bring forth justice to the nations ...";[57]
and he will become "a covenant to the people, a light to the nations
...";[58]
"that my salvation may reach to the end of the earth "[59]
For: "My spirit which is upon you, and my words which I have put in
your mouth, shall not depart out of your mouth, or out of the mouth of
your children's children, says the Lord, from this time forth and for
evermore."[60]
The prophetic texts quoted here are to be read in the light of the
Gospel--just as, in its turn, the New Testament draws a particular
clarification from the marvellous light contained in these Old
Testament texts. The Prophet presents the Messiah as the one who comes
in the Holy Spirit, the one who possesses the fullness of this Spirit
in himself and at the same time for others, for Israel, for all the
nations, for all humanity.
The fullness of the Spirit of God is accompanied by many different
gifts, the treasures of salvation, destined in a particular way for
the poor and suffering, for all those who open their hearts to these
gifts sometimes through the painful experience of their own existence
--but first of all through that interior availability which comes from
faith. The aged Simeon, the "righteous and devout man" upon whom
"rested the Holy Spirit", sensed this at the moment of Jesus'
presentation in the Temple, when he perceived in him the "salvation...
prepared in the presence of all peoples" at the price of the great
suffering--the Cross--which he would have to embrace together with his
Mother.[61]
The Virgin Mary, who "had conceived by the Holy Spirit",[62] sensed
this even more clearly, when she pondered in her heart the "mysteries"
of the Messiah, with whom she was associated.[63]
17. Here it must be emphasized that clearly the "spirit of the Lord"
who rests upon the future Messiah is above all a gift of God tor the
person of that Servant of the Lord. But the latter is not an isolated
and independent person, because he acts in accordance with the will of
the Lord, by virtue of the Lord's decision or choice.
Even though in the light of the texts of Isaiah the salvific work of
the Messiah, the Servant of the Lord, incIudes the action of the
Spirit which is carried out through himself, nevertheless in the Old
Testament context there is no suggestion of a distinction of subjects,
or of the Divine Persons as they subsist in the mystery of the
Trinity, and as they are later reveaIed in the New Testament. Both in
Isaiah and in the whole of the Old Testament the personality of the
Holy Spirit is completely hidden: in the revelation of the one God, as
also in the foretelling of the future Messiah.
18. Jesus Christ will make reference to this prediction contained in
the words of Isaiah at the beginning of his messianic activity. This
will happen in the same Nazareth where he had lived for thirty years
in the house of Joseph the carpenter, with Mary, his Virgin Mother.
When he had occasion to speak in the Synagogue, he opened the Book of
Isaiah and found the passage where it was written: "The Spirit of the
Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me"; and having read this
passage he said to those present: "Today this scripture has been
fulfilled in your hearing".[64]
In this way he confessed and proclaimed that he was the Messiah, the
one in whom the Holy Spirit dwells as the gift of God himself, the one
who possesses the fullness of this Spirit, the one who marks the "new
beginning" of the gift which God makes to humanity in the Spirit.
19. Even though in his home-town of Nazareth Jesus is not accepted as
the Messiah, nonetheless, at the beginning of his public activity, his
messianic mission in the Holy Spirit is revealed to the people by John
the Baptist.
The latter, the son of Zechariah and Elizabeth, foretells at the
Jordan the coming of the Messiah and administers the baptism of
repentance. He says: "I baptize you with water; he who is mightier
than I is coming, the thong of whose sandals I am not worthy to untie;
he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire".[65]
John the Baptist foretells the Messiah-Christ not only as the one who
"is coming" in the Holy Spirit but also as the one who "brings" the
Holy Spirit, as Jesus will reveal more clearly in the Upper Room. Here
John faithfully echoes the words of Isaiah, words which in the ancient
Prophet concerned the future, while in John's teaching on the banks of
the Jordan they are the immediate introduction to the new messianic
reality. John is not only a prophet but also a messenger: he is the
precursor of Christ.
What he foretells is accomplished before the eyes of all. Jesus of
Nazareth too comes to the Jordan to receive the baptism of repentance.
At the sight of him arriving, John proclaims: "Behold, the Lamb of
God, who takes away the sin of the world".[66] He says this through
the inspiration of the Holy Spirit,[67] bearing witness to the
fulfilment of the prophecy of Isaiah. At the same time he confesses
his faith in the redeeming mission of Jesus of Nazareth. On the lips
of John the Baptist, "Lamb of God" is an expression of truth about the
Redeemer no less significant than the one used by Isaiah: "Servant of
the Lord".
Thus, by the testimony of John at the Jordan, Jesus of Nazareth,
rejected by his own fellowcitizens, is exalted before the eyes of
Israel as the Messiah, that is to say the "One Anointed" with the Holy
Spirit. And this testimony is corroborated by another testimony of a
higher order, mentioned by the three Synoptics.
For when all the people were baptized and as Jesus, having received
baptism, was praying, "the heaven was opened, and the Holy Spirit
decended upon him in bodily form, as a dove"[68] and at the same time
"a voice from heaven said 'This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well
pleased'".[69]
This is a Trinitarian theophany which bears witness to the exaltation
of Christ on the occasion of his baptism in the Jordan. It not only
confirms the testimony of John the Baptist but also reveals another
more profound dimension of the truth about Jesus of Nazareth as
Messiah. It is this: the Messiah is the beloved Son of the Father. His
solemn exaltation cannot be reduced to the messianic mission of the
"Servant of the Lord".
In the light of the theophany at the Jordan, this exaltation touches
the mystery of the very person of the Messiah. He has been raised up
because he is the beloved Son in whom God is well pleased. The voice
from on high says: "my Son".
20. The theophany at the Jordan clarifies only in a fleeting way the
mystery of Jesus of Nazareth, whose entire activity will be carried
out in the active presence of the Holy Spirit.[70]
This mystery would be gradually revealed and confirmed by Jesus
himself by means of everything that he "did and taught".[71]
In the course of this teaching and of the messianic signs which Jesus
performed before he came to the farewell discourse in the Upper Room,
we find events and words which constitute particularly irnportant
stages of this progressive revelation. Thus the evangelist Luke, who
has already presented Jesus as "full of the Holy Spirit" and "led by
the Spirit... in the wilderness",[72] tells us that, after the return
of the seventy-two disciples from the mission entrusted to them by the
Master,[73] while they were joyfully recounting the fruits of their
labours, "in that same hour (Jesus) rejoiced in the Holy Spirit and
said: 'I thank you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that you have
hidden these things from the wise and understanding and revealed them
to babes; yea, Father for such was your gracious will".[74]
Jesus rejoices at the fatherhood of God: he rejoices because it has
been given to him to reveal this fatherhood; he rejoices, finally, as
at a particular outpouring of this divine fatherhood on the "little
ones". And the evangelist describes all this as "rejoicing in the Holy
Spirit".
This "rejoicing" in a certain sense prompts Jesus to say still more.
We hear: "All things have been delivered to me by my Father; and no
one knows who the Son is except the Father, or who the Father is
except the Son and any one to whom the Son chooses to reveal him".[75]
21. That which during the theophany at the Jordan came so to speak
"from outside", from on high, here comes "from within", that is to say
from the depths of who Jesus is. It is another revelation of the
Father and the Son, united in the Holy Spirit. Jesus speaks only of
the fatherhood of God and of his own sonship he does not speak
directly of the Spirit who is Love and thereby the union of the Father
and the Son.
Nonetheless what he says of the Father and of himself-the Son flows
from that fullness of the Spirit which is in him, which fills his
heart, pervades his own "I ", inspires and enlivens his action from
the depths. Hence that "rejoicing in the Holy Spirit". The union of
Christ with the Holy Spirit, a union of which he is perfectly aware,
is expressed in that "rejoicing", which in a certain way renders
"perceptible" its hidden source.
Thus there is a particular manifestation and rejoicing which is proper
to the Son of Man, the Christ-Messiah, whose humanity belongs to the
person of the Son of God, substantially one with the Holy Spirit in
divinity.
In the magnificent confession of the fatherhood of God, Jesus of
Nazareth also manifests himself, his divine "I": for he is the Son "of
the same substance", and therefore "no one knows who the Son is except
the Father, or who the Father is except the Son", that Son who "for us
and for our salvation" became man by the power of the Holy Spirit and
was born of a virgin whose name was Mary.
22. It is thanks to Luke's narrative that we are brought closest to
the truth contained in the discourse in the Upper Room. Jesus of
Nazareth, "raised up" in the Holy Spirit, during this discourse and
conversation presents himself as the one who "brings" the Spirit, as
the one who is to bring him and "give" him to the Apostles and to the
Church at the price of this own "departure" through the Cross.
The verb "bring" is here used to mean first of all "reveal". In the
Old Testament, from the Book of Genesis onwards, the Spirit of God was
in some way made known, in the first place as a "breath" of God which
gives life, as a supernatural "living breath". In the Book of Isaiah,
he is presented as a "gift" for the person of the Messiah, as the one
who comes down and rests upon him, in order to guide from within all
the salvific activity of the "Anointed One".
At the Jordan, Isaiah's proclamation is given a concrete form: Jesus
of Nazareth is the one who comes in the Holy Spirit and who brings the
Spirit as the gift proper to his own Person, in order to distribute
that gift by means of this humanity "He will baptize you with the Holy
Spirit".[76]
In the Gospel of Luke, this revelation of the Holy Spirit is confirmed
and added to, as the intimate source of the life and messianic
activity of Jesus Christ.
In the light of what Jesus says in the farewell discourse in the Upper
Room, the Holy Spirit is revealed in a new and fuller way. He is not
only the gift to the person (the person of the Messiah), but is a
Person-gift. Jesus foretells his coming as that of " another
Counsellor" who, being the Spirit of truth, will lead the Apostles and
the Church " into all the truth".[77] This will be accomplished by
reason of the particular communion between the Holy Spirit and Christ:
"He will take what is mine and declare it to you".[78]
This communion has its original source in the Father: "All that the
Father has is mine; therefore I said that he will take what is mine
and declare it to you".[79]
Coming from the Father the Holy Spirit is sent by the Father.[80]
The Holy Spirit is first sent as a gift for the Son who was made man,
in order to fulfill the messianic prophecies. After the "departure" of
Christ the Son, the Johannine text says that the Holy Spirit "will
come" directly (it is his new mission), to complete the work of the
Son. Thus it will be he who brings to fulfilment the new era of the
history of salvation.
23. We find ourselves on the threshold of the Paschal events. The new,
definitive revelation of the Holy Spirit as a Person Who is the gift
is accomplished at this precise moment. The Paschal events--the
Passion, Death and Resurrection of Christ--are also the time of the
new coming of the Holy Spirit, as the Paraclete and the Spirit of
truth. They are the time of the "new beginning" of the
self-communication of the Triune God to humanity in the Holy Spirit
through the work of Christ the Redeemer.
This new beginning is the Redemption of the world: "God so loved the
world that he gave his only Son".[81]
Already the "giving" of the Son, the gift of the Son, expresses the
most profound essence of God who, as Love, is the inexhaustible source
of the giving of gifts. The gift made by the Son completes the
revelation and giving of the eternal love: the Holy Spirit, who in the
inscrutable depths of the divinity is a Person-gift, through the work
of the Son, that is to say by means of the Paschal mystery, is given
to the Apostles and to the Church in a new way, and through them is
given to humanity and the whole world.
24. The definitive expression of this mystery is had on the day of the
Resurrection. On this day Jesus of Nazareth, "descended from David
according to the flesh", as the Apostle Paul writes, is "designated
Son of God in power according to the Spirit of holiness by his
Resurrection from the dead".[82] It can be said therefore that the
messianic "raising up" of Christ in the Holy Spirit reaches its zenith
in the Resurrection, in which he reveals himself also as the Son of
God, "full of power".
And this power, the sources Of which gush forth in the inscrutable
Trinitarian communion, is manifested, first of all, in the fact that
the Risen Christ does two things: on the one hand he fulfills God's
promise already expressed through the Prophet's words "A new heart I
will give you, and a new spirit I will put within you, ... my
spirit";[83] and on the other hand he fulfills his own promise made to
the Apostles with the words "If I go, I will send him to you".[84]
It is he: the Spirit of truth, the Paraclete sent by the Risen Christ
to transform us into his own risen image.[85]
"On the evening of that day, the first day of the week, the doors
being shut where the disciples were, for fear of the Jews, Jesus came
and stood among them and said to them, 'Peace be with you'.
When he had said this, he showed them his hands and his side. Then the
disciples were glad when they saw the Lord. Jesus said to them again,
'Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, even so I send you'.
And when he had said this, he breathed on them, and said to them,
'Receive the Holy Spirit'".[86]
All the details of this key-text of John's Gospel have their own
eloquence, especially if we read them in reference to the words spoken
in the same Upper Room at the beginning of the Paschal events. And now
these events--the Triduum Sacrum of Jesus whom the Father consecrated
with the anointing and sent into the world--reach their fulfilment.
Christ, who "gave up his spirit" on the Cross[87] as the Son of Man
and the Lamb of God, once risen goes to the Apostles "to breathe on
them" with that power spoken of in the Letter to the Romans.[88]
The Lord's coming fills those present with joy: "Your sorrow will turn
into joy",[89] as he had already promised them before his Passion. And
above all there is fulfilled the principal prediction of the farewell
discourse: the Risen Christ, as it were beginning a new creation,
"brings" to the Apostles the Holy Spirit. He brings him at the price
of his own "departure": he gives them this Spirit as it were through
the wounds of his crucifixion: "He showed them his hands and his
side". It is in the power of this crucifixion that he says to them:
"Receive the Holy Spirit".
Thus there is established a close link between the sending of the Son
and the sending of Holy Spirit. There is no sending of the Holy Spirit
(after original sin) without the Cross and the Resurrection: "If I do
not go away, the Counsellor will not come to you".[90]
There is also established a close link between the mission of the Holy
Spirit and that of the Son in the Redemption. The mission of the Son,
in a certain sense, finds its " fulfilment" in the Redemption. The
mission of the Holy Spirit " draws from" the Redemption: "He will take
what is mine and declare it to you".[91]
The Redemption is totally carried out by the Son as the Anointed One,
who came and acted in the power of the Holy Spirit, offering himself
finally in sacrifice on the wood of the Cross. And this Redemption is,
at the same time, constantly carried out in human hearts and minds
--in the history of the world--by the Holy Spirit, who is the "other
Counsellor".
25. "Having accomplished the work that the Father had entrusted to the
Son on earth (cf. Jn 17:4), on the day of Pentecost the Holy Spirit
was sent to sanctify the Cburch for ever, so that believers might have
access to the Father through Christ in one Spirit (cf. Eph 2:18).
He is the Spirit of life, the fountain of water springing up to
eternal life (cf. Jn 4:14; 7:38ff), the One through whom the Father
restores life to those who are dead through sin, until one day he will
raise in Christ their mortal bodies (cf. Rom 8: 10 f)".[92]
In this way the Second Vatican Council speaks of the Church's birth on
the day of Pentecost. This event constitutes the definitive
manifestation of what had already been accomplished in the same Upper
Room on Easter Sunday. The Risen Christ came and "brought" to the
Apostles the Holy Spirit. He gave him to them, saying "Receive the
Holy Spirit". What had then taken place inside the Upper Room, "the
doors being shut", later, on the day of Pentecost is manifested also
outside, in public.
The doors of the Upper Room are opened and the Apostles go to the
inhabitants and the piIgrims who had gathered in Jerusalem on the
occasion of the feast, in order to bear witness to Christ in the power
of the Holy Spirit. In this way the prediction is fulfilled: "He will
bear witness to me: and you also are witnesses, because you have been
with me from the beginning".[93]
We read in another document of the Second Vatican Council: "Doubtless,
the Holy Spirit was already at work in the world before Christ was
glorified. Yet on the day of Pentecost, he carne down upon the
disciples to remain with them for ever. On that day the Church was
publicly revealed to the multitude, and the Gospel began to spread
among the nations by means of preaching ".[94]
The era of the Church began with the "coming", that is to say with the
descent of the Holy Spirit on the Apostles gathered in the Upper Room
in Jerusalem, together with Mary, the Lord's Mother.[95]
The time of the Church began at the moment when the promises and
predictions that so explicitly referred to the Counsellor, the Spirit
of truth, began to be fulfilled in complete power and clarity upon the
Apostles, thus deterrnining the birth of the Church. The Acts of the
Apostles speak of this at length and in many passages, which state
that in the rnind of the first community, whose convictions Luke
expresses, the Holy Spirit assumed the invisible --but in a certain
way "perceptible"--guidance of those who after the departure of the
Lord Jesus felt profoundly that they had been left orphans. With the
coming of the Spirit they felt capable of fulfilling the mission
entrusted to them.
They felt full of strength. It is precisely this that the Holy Spirit
worked in them, and this is continuaIly at work in the Church, through
their successors. For the grace of the Holy Spirit which the Apostles
gave to their collaborators through the imposition of hands continues
to be transmitted in Episcopal Ordination. The bishops in turn by the
Sacrament of Orders render the sacred ministers sharers in this
spiritual gift and, through the Sacrament of Confirmation, ensure that
all who are reborn of water and the Holy Spirit are strengthened by
this gift.
And thus, in a certain way, the grace of Pentecost is perpetuated in
the Church.
As the Council writes, "the Spirit dwells in the Church and in the
hearts of the faithful as in a temple (cf. 1 Cor 3:16; 6:19).
In them he prays and bears witness to the fact that they are adopted
sons (cf. Gal 4:6, Rom 8:15-16.26) The Spirit guides the Church into
the fullness of truth (cf. Jn 16:13) and gives her a unity of
fellowship and service. He furnishes and directs her with various
gifts, both hierarchical and charismatic, and adorns her with the
fruits ol his grace (cf. Eph 4:11-12; 1 Cor 12:4; Gal 5: 22). By the
power of the Gospel he makes the Church grow, perpetually renews her,
and leads her to perfect union with her Spouse".[96]
26. These passages quoted from the Conciliar Constitution Lumen
Gentium tell us that the era of the Church began with the coming of
the Holy Spirit. They also tell us that this era, the era of tbe
Church, continues. It continues down the centuries and generations.
In our own century, when humanity is already close to the end of the
second Millennium after Christ, this era of the Church expressed
itself in a special way through the Second Vatican Council, as the
Council of our century. For we know that it was in a special way an
"ecclesiological" Council: a Council on the theme of the Church. At
the same time, the teaching of this Council is essentially "
pneumatological": it is permeated by the truth about the Holy Spirit,
as the soul of the Church. We can say that in its rich variety of
teaching the Second Vatican Council contains precisely all that "the
Spirit says to the Churches"[97] with regard to the present phase of
the history of salvation.
Following the guidance of the Spirit of truth and bearing witness
together with hirn, the Council has given a special confirmation of
the presence of the Holy Spirit--the Counsellor. In a certain sense,
the Council has made the Spirit newly "present" in our difficult age.
In the light of this conviction one grasps more clearly the great
importance of all the initiatives aimed at implementing the Second
Vatican Council, its teaching and its pastoral and ecumenical thrust.
In this sense also the subsequent Assemblies of the Synod of Bishops
are to be carefully studied and evaluated, aiming as they do to ensure
that the fruits of truth and love--the authentic fruits of the Holy
Spirit--become a lasting treasure for the People of God in its earthly
pilgrimage down the centuries. This work being done by the Church for
the testing and bringing together of the salvific fruits of the Spirit
bestowed in the Council is something indispensable. For this purpose
one must learn how to "discern" them carefully from everything that
may instead come originally from the " prince of this world".[98]
This discernment in implementing the Council's work is especially
necessary in view of the fact that the Council opened itself widely to
the contemporary world, as is clearly seen from the important
Conciliar Constitutions Gaudium et Spes and Lumen Gentium.
We read in the Pastoral Constitution: "For theirs (i.e. of the
disciples of Christ) is a community composed of men. United in Christ,
they are led by the Holy Spirit in their journey to the kingdom of
their Father and they have welcomed the news of salvation which is
meant for every man. That is why this community realizes that is is
truly and intimately linked with mankind and its history".[99]
"The Church truly knows that only God, whom she serves, meets the
deepest longings of the human heart, which is never fully satisfied by
what the world has to offer".[100]
"God's Spirit ... with a marvellous providence directs the unfolding
of time and renews the face of the earth".[101]
27. When Jesus during the discourse in the Upper Room foretells the
coming of the Holy Spirit "at the price of" his own departure, and
promises "I will send him to you", in the very same context he adds
"And when he comes, he will convince the world concerning sin and
righteousness and judgment".[102]
The same Counselor and Spirit of truth who has been promised as the
one who "will teach" and "bring to remembrance", who " will bear
witness, and "guide into all the truth", in the words just quoted is
foretold as the one who "will convince the world concerning sin and
righteousness and judgment."
The context too seems significant. Jesus links this foretelling of the
Holy Spirit to the words indicating his "departure" through the Cross,
and indeed emphasizes the need for this departure: "It is to your
advantage that I go away, for if I do not go away, the Counsellor will
not come to you".[103]
But what counts more is the explanation that Jesus himself adds to
these three words: sin, righteousness, judgment. For he says this: "
He will convince the world concerning sin and righteousness and
judgment: concerning sin, because they do not believe in me;
concerning righteousness, because I go to the Father, and you will see
me no more; concerning judgment, because the ruler of this world is
judged".[104]
In the mind of Jesus, sin righteousness and judgment have e very
precise meaning, different from the meaning that one might be inclined
to attribute to these words independently of the speaker's
explanation. This explanation also indicates how one is to understand
the "convincing the world" which is proper to the action of the Holy
Spirit. Both the meaning of the individual words and the fact that
Jesus linked them together in the same phrase are important here.
"Sin", in this passage, means the incredulity that Jesus encountered
among "his own", beginning with the people of his own town of
Nazareth. Sin means the rejection of his mission, a rejection that
will cause people to condemn him to death. When he speaks next of
"righteousness", Jesus seems to have in mind that definitive justice,
which the Father will restore to him when he grants him the glory of
the Resurrection and Ascension into heaven: "I go to the Father". In
its turn, and in the context of "sin" and a righteousness" thus
understood, "judgment" means that the Spirit of truth will show the
guilt of the "world" in condemning Jesus to death on the Cross.
Nevertheless, Christ did not come into the world only to judge it and
condemn it: he came to save it.[105]
Convincing about sin and righteousness has as its purpose the
salvation of the world, the salvation of men. Precisely this truth
seems to be emphasized by the assertion that "judgment" concerns only
the "prince of this world", Satan, the one who from the beginning has
been exploiting the work of creation against salvation, against the
covenant and the union of man with God: he is "already judged" from
the start. If the Spirit-Counsellor is to convince the world precisely
concerning judgment, it is in order to continue in the world the
salvific work of Christ.
28. Here we wish to concentrate our attention principally on this
mission of the Holy Spirit, which is "to convince the world concerning
sin", but at the same time respecting the general context of Jesus'
words in the Upper Room. The Holy Spirit, who takes from the Son the
work of the Redemption of the world, by this very fact takes the task
of the salvific "convincing of Sin".
This convincing is in permanent reference to "righteousness": that is
to say to definitive salvation in God, to the fulfillment of the
economy that has as its centre the crucified and glorified Christ.
And this salvific economy of God in a certain sense removes man from "
judgment", that is from the damnation which has been inflicted on the
sin of Satan, "the prince of this world", the one who because of his
sin has become "the ruler of this world of darkness".[106]
And here we see that, through this reference to "judgment", vast
horizons open up for understanding "sin" and also "righteousness". The
Holy Spirit, by showing sin against the background of Christ's Cross
in the economy of salvation (one could say "sin saved"), enables us to
understand how his mission is also "to convince" of the sin that has
already been definitively judged ("sin condemned").
29. All the words uttered by the Redeemer in the Upper Room on the eve
of his Passion become part of the era of the Church: first of all, the
words about the Holy Spirit as the Paraclete and Spirit of truth.
These words become part of it in an ever new way, in every generation,
in every age.
This is confirmed, as far as our own age is concerned, by the teaching
of the Second Vatican Council as a whole, and especially in the
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes. Many passages of this document
indicate clearly that the Council, by opening itself to the light of
the Spirit of truth, is seen to be the authentic depositary of the
predictions and promises made by Christ to the Apostles and to the
Church in the farewell discourse: in a particular way as the
depositary of the predictions that the Holy Spirit would "convince the
world concerning sin and righteousness and judgment".
This is already indicated by the text in which the Council explains
bow it understands the "world": "The Council focuses its attention on
the world of men, the whole human family along with the sum of those
realities in the midst of which that family lives.
It gazes upon the world which is the theatre of man's history, and
carries the marks of his energies, his tragedies, and his triumphs;
that world which the Christian sees as created and sustained by its
Maker's love, fallen indeed into the bondage of sin, yet emancipated
now by Christ. He was crucified and rose again to break the
stranglehold of personified Evil, so that this world might be
fashioned anew according to God's design and reach its
fulfillment".[107]
This very rich text needs to be read in conjunction with the other
passages in the Constitution that seek to show with all the realism of
faith the situation of sin in the contemporary world and that also
seek to explain its essence, beginning from different points of
view.[108]
When on the eve of the Passover Jesus speaks of the Holy Spirit as the
one who "will convince the world concerning sin", on the one hand this
statement must be given the widest possible meaning, insofar as it
includes all the sin in the history of humanity. But on the other
hand, when Jesus explains that this sin consists in the fact that a
they do not believe in him ", this meaning seems to apply only to
those who rejected the messianic mission of the Son of Man and
condemned him to death on the Cross. But one can hardly fail to notice
that this more " limited" and historically specified meaning of sin
expands, until it assumes a universal dimension by reason of the
universality of the Redemption, accomplished through the Cross.
The revelation of the mystery of the Redemption opens the way to an
understanding in which every sin wherever and whenever committed has a
reference to the Cross of Christ--and therefore indirectly also to the
sin of those who "have not believed in him", and who condemned Jesus
Christ to death on the Cross.
From this point of view we must return to the event of Pentecost.
30. Christ's prophecies in the farewell discourse found their most
exact and direct confirmation on the day of Pentecost, in particular
the prediction which we are dealing with: "The Counsellor... will
convince the world oncerning Sin.
On that day, the promised Holy Spirit came down upon the Apostles
gathered in prayer together with Mary the Mother of Jesus, in the same
Upper Room, as we read in the Acts of the Apostles: "And they were all
filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues, as
the Spirit gave them utterance",[109] "thus bringing back to unity the
scattered races and offering to the Father the first-fruits of all the
nations".[110]
The connection between Christ's prediction and this event is clear. We
perceive here the first and fundamental fulfillment of the promise of
the Paraclete. He comes, sent by the Father, "after" the departure of
Christ,at the price of" that departure.
This is first a departure through the Cross, and later, forty days
after the Resurrection, through his Ascension into heaven. Once more,
at the moment of the Ascension, Jesus orders the Apostles "not to
depart from Jerusalem, but to wait for the promise of the Fathers;
"but before many days you shall be baptized with the Holy Spirit";
"but you shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you;
and you shall be witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judaea and Samaria
and to the end of the earth".[111]
These last words contain an echo or reminder of the prediction made in
the Upper Room. And on the day of Pentecost this prediction is
fulfilled with total accuracy. Acting under the influence of the Holy
Spirit, who had been received by the Apostles while they were praying
in the Upper Room, Peter comes forwards and speaks before a multitude
of people of different languages, gathered for the feast.
He proclaims what he certainly would not have had the courage to say
before: "Men of Israel, ... Jesus of Nazareth, a man attested to you
by God with mighty works and wonders and signs which God did through
him in your midst... this Jesus, delivered up according to the
definite plan and foreknowledge of God, you crucified and killed by
the hands of lawless men. But God raised him up, having loosed the
pangs of death, because it was not possible for him to be held by
it".[112]
Jesus had foretold and promised: "He will bear witness to me, ... and
you also are my witnesses". In the first discourse of Peter in
Jerusalem this "witness" finds its clear beginning: it is the witness
to Christ crucified and risen. The witness of the Spirit-Paraclete and
of the Apostles.
And in the very content of that first witness, the Spirit of truth,
through the lips of Peter, "convinces the world concerning sin": first
of all, concerning the sin which is the rejection of Christ even to
his condemnation to death, to death on the Cross on Golgotha. Similar
prodamations will be repeated, according to the text of the Acts of
the Apostles, on other occasions and in various places.[113]
31. Beginning from this initial witness at Pentecost and for all
future time, the action of the Spirit of truth who "convinces the
world concerning the sin" of the rejection of Christ is linked
inseparably with the witness to be borne to the Paschal Mystery: the
mystery ot the Crucified and Risen One. And in this link the same
"convincing concerning sin" reveals its own saIvific dimension.
For it is a "convincing" that has its purpose not merely the
accusation of the world and still less its condemnation. Jesus Christ
did not come into the world to judge it and condemn it but to save
it.[114]
This is emphasized in this first discourse, when Peter exclaims: "Let
all the house of Israel therefore know assuredly that God has made him
both Lord and Christ, this Jesus whom you crucified".[115]
And then, when those present ask Peter and the Apostles: "Brethren,
what shall we do?", this is Peter's answer: "Repent, and be baptized
every of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your
sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit".[116]
In this way "convincing concerning sin" becomes at the same time a
convincing concerning the remission of sins, in the power of the Holy
Spirit. Peter in his discourse in Jerusalem calls people to
conversion, as Jesus called his listeners to conversion at the
beginning of his messianic activity.[117]
Conversion requires convincing of sin; it includes the interior
judgment of the conscience, and this, being a proof of the action of
the Spirit of truth in man's inmost being, becomes at the same time a
new beginning of the bestowal of grace and love: "Receive the Holy
Spirit".[118]
Thus in this "convincing concerning sin" we discover a double gift:
the gift of the truth of conscience and the gift of the certainty of
redemption. The Spirit of truth is the Counsellor.
The convincing concerning sin, through the ministry of the apostolic
kerygma in the early Church, is referred--under the impulse of the
Spirit poured out at Pentecost--to the redemptive power of Christ
crucified and risen. Thus the promise concerning the Holy Spirit made
before Easter is fulfilled: "He will take what is mine and declare it
to you".
When therefore, during the Pentecost event, Peter speaks of the sin of
those who "have not believed"[119] and have sent Jesus of Nazareth to
an ignominious death, he bears witness to victory over sin: a victory
achieved, in a certain sense, through the greatest sin that man could
commit: the killing of Jesus, the Son of God, consubstantial with the
Father! Similarly, the death of the Son of God conquers human death:
"I will be your death, O death,"[120] as the sin of having crucified
the Son of God "conquers" human sin! That sin which was committed in
Jerusalem on Good Friday--and also every human sin.
For the greatest sin on man's part is matched, in the heart of the
Redeemer, by the oblation of supreme love that conquers the evil of
all the sins of man. On the basis of this certainty the Church in the
Roman liturgy does not hesitate to repeat every year, at the Easter
Vigil, "O happy fault!", in the deacon's proclamation of the
Resurrection when he sings the "Exsultet".
32. However, no one but he himself, the Spirit of truth, can "convince
the world", man or the human conscience of this ineffable truth. He is
the Spirit who a searches even the depths of God".[121]
Faced with the mystery of sin we have to search "the depths of God" to
their very depth. It is not enough to search the human conscience, the
intimate mystery of man, but we have to penetrate the inner mystery of
God, those "depths of God" that are summarized thus: to the Father--in
the Son--through the Holy Spirit.
It is precisely the Holy Spirit who: "searches" the "depths of God,
and from them draws God's response to man's sin. With this response
there closes the process of "convincing concerning sin", as the event
of Pentecost shows.
By convincing the "world" concerning the sin of Golgotha, concerning
the death of the innocent Lamb, as happens on the day of Pentecost,
the Holy Spirit also convinces of every sin, committed in any place
and at any moment in human history: for he demonstrates its
relationship with the Cross of Christ.
The "convincing" is the demonstration of the evil of sin, of every
sin, in relation to the Cross of Christ. Sin, shown in this
relationship, is recognized in the entire dimension of evil proper to
it, through the "mysterium iniquitatis"[122] which is hidden within
it.
Man does not know this dimension--he is absolutely ignorant of it
apart from the Cross of Christ. So he cannot be "convinced" of it
except by the Holy Spirit: the Spirit of truth, but who is also the
Counsellor.
For sin, shown in relation to the Cross of Christ, is at the same time
identified in the full dimension of the "mysterium pietatis",[123] as
indicated by the Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Reconciliatio et
Paenitentia.[124]
Man is also absolutely ignorant of this dimension of sin apart from
the Cross of Christ. And he cannot be "convinced" of this dimension
either except by the Holy Spirit: the one who "searches the depths of
God".
33. This is the dimension of sin that we find in the witness
concerning the beginning, commented on in the Book of Genesis.[125]
It is the sin that according to the revealed Word of God constitutes
the principle and root ot all the others. We find ourselves faced with
the original reality of sin in human history and at the same time in
the whole of the economy of salvation. It can be said that in this sin
the "mysterium iniquitatis" has its beginning, but it can also be said
that this is the sin concerning which the redemptive power of the "mysterium
pietatis" becomes particularly clear and efficacious.
This is expressed by Saint Paul, when he contrasts the " disobedience"
of the first Adam with the "obedience" of Christ, the second Adam:
"Obedience unto death".[126]
According to the witness concerning the beginning, sin in its original
reality takes place in man's will--and conscience--first of all as
"disobedience", that is, as opposition of the will of man to the will
of God. This original disobedience presupposes a rejection, or at
least a turning away from the truth contained in the Word of God, who
creates the world. This Word is the same Word who was "in the
beginning with God", who "was God", and without whom "nothing has been
made of all that is", since "the world was made through him".[127]
He is the Word who is also the eternal law, the source of every law
which regulates the world and especially human acts. When therefore on
the eve of his Passion Jesus Christ speaks of the sin of those who "do
not believe in him", in these words of his, full of sorrow, there is
as it were a distant echo of that sin which in its original form is
obscurely inscribed in the mystery of creation. For the one who is
speaking is not only the Son of Man but the one who is also "the
first-born of all creation", "for in him all things were created...
through him and for him".[128]
In the light of this truth we can understand that the "disobedience"
in the mystery of the beginning presupposes in a certain sense the
same "nonfaith", that same "they have not believed", which will be
repeated in the Paschal Mystery. As we have said, it is a matter of a
rejection or at least a turning away from the truth contained in the
Word of the Father. The rejection expresses itself in practice as
adisobediencer, in an act committed as an effect of the temptation
which comes from the "father of lies".[129]
Therefore, at the root of human sin is the lie which is a radical
rejection ot the truth contained in the Word of the Father, through
whom is expressed the Ioving omnipotence of the Creator: the
omnipotence and also the love "of God the Father, Creator of heaven
and earth".
34. "The Spirit of God", who according to the biblical description of
creation "was moving over the face of the water",[130] signifies the
same " Spirit who searches the depths of God": "searches the depths of
the Father and of the Word-Son in the mystery of creation.
Not only is he the direct witness of their mutual love from which
creation derives, but he himself is this love. He himself, as love, is
the eternal uncreated gift. In him is the source and the beginning of
every giving of gifts to creatures. The witness concerning the
beginning, which we find in the whole of Revelation, beginning with
the Book of Genesis, is unanimous on this point To create means to
call into existence from nothing: therefore, to create means to give
existence.
And if the visible world is created for man, therefore the world is
given to man.[131]
And at the same time that same man in his own humanity receives as a
gift a special "image and likeness" to God. This means not only
rationality and freedom as constitutive properties of human nature,
but also, from the very beginning, the capacity of having a personal
relationship with God, as " I " and " you ", and therefore the
capacity of having a covenant, which will take place in God's salvific
communication with man.
Against the background of the "image and likeness" of God, "the gift
of the Spirit" ultimately means a call to friendship, in which the
transcendent "depths of God" become in some way opened to
participation on the part of man. The Second Vatican Council teaches:
"The invisible God out of the abundance of his love speaks to men as
friends and lives among them, so that he may invite and take them into
fellowship with himself".[132]
35. The Spirit, therefore, who "searches everything, even the depths
of God", knows from the beginning "the secrets of man".[133] For this
reason he alone can fully "convince concerning the sin" that happened
at the beginning, that sin which is the root of all other sins and the
sources of man's sinfulness on earth, a source which never ceases to
be active.
The Spirit of truth knows the original reality of the sin caused in
the will of man by the "father of lies", he who already "has been
judged".[134]
The Holy Spirit therefore convinces the world of sin in connection
with this "judgment", but by constantly guiding toward the
"righteousness" that has been revealed to man together with the Cross
of Christ: through " obedience unto death".[135] Only the Holy Spirit
can convince concerning the sin of the human beginning, precisely he
who is the love of the Father and of the Son, he who is gift, whereas
the sin of the human beginning consists in untruthfulness and in the
rejection of the gift and the love which determine the beginning of
the world and of man.
36. According to the witness concerning the beginning which we find in
the Scriptures and in Tradition, after the first (and also more
complete) description in the Book of Genesis, sin in its original form
is understood as " disobedience n and this means simply and directly
transgression of a prohibition laid down by God.[136]
But in the light of the whole context it is also obvious that the
ultimate roots of this disobedience are to be sought in the whole real
situation of man. Having been called into existence, the human
being--man and woman--is a creature.
The "image of God", consisting in rationality and freedom, expresses
the greatness and dignity of the human subject, who is a person. But
this personal subject is also always a creature: in his existence and
essence he depends on the Creator. According to the Book of Genesis,
"the tree of the knowledge of good and evil" was to express and
constantly remind man of the "limit" impassable for a created being.
God's prohibition is to be understood in this sense: the Creator
forbids man and woman to eat of the fruit of the tree of the knowledge
of good and evil.
The words of the enticement, that is to say the temptation, as
formulated in the sacred text, are an inducement to transgress this
prohibition--that is to say to go beyond that "limit": "When you eat
of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God ("like gods
"), knowing good and evil".[137]
"Disobedience" means precisely going beyond that limit, which remains
impassable to the will and the freedom of man as a created being. For
God the Creator is the one definitive source of the moral order in the
world created by him. Man cannot decide by himself what is good and
what is evil--cannot "know good and evil, like God".
In the created world God indeed remains the first and sovereign source
for deciding about good and evil, through the intimate truth of being,
which is the reflection of the Word, the eternal Son, consubstantial
with the Father. To man, created to the image of God, the Holy Spirit
gives the gift of conscience, so that in this conscience the image may
faithfully reflect its model, which is both Wisdom and eternal Law,
the source of the moral order in man and in the world. "Disobedience",
as the original dimension of sin, means the rejection of this source,
through man's claim to become an independent and exclusive source for
deciding about good and evil.
The Spirit who "searches the depths of God", and who at the same time
is for man the light of conscience and the source of the moral order,
knows in all its fullness this dimension of the sin inscribed in the
mystery of man's beginning. And the Spirit does not cease "convincing
the world of it" in connection with the Cross of Christ on Golgotha.
37. According to the witness of the beginning, God in creation has
revealed himself as omnipotence, which is love. At the same time he
has revealed to man that, as the "image and likeness" of his Creator,
he is called to participate in truth and love. This participation
means a life in union with God, who is "eternal life".[138]
But man, under the influence of the "father of lies", has separated
himself from this participation. To what degree? Certainly not to the
degree of the sin of a pure spirit, to the degree of the sin of Satan.
The human spirit is incapable of reaching such a degree.[139]
In the very description given in Genesis it is easy to see the
difference of degree between the "breath of evil" on the part of the
one who "has sinned (or remains in sin) from the beginning"[140] and
already "has been judged",[141] and the evil of disobedience on the
part of man.
Man's disobedience, nevertheless, always means a turning away from
God, and in a certain sense the closing up of human freedom in his
regard.
It also means a certain opening of this freedom--of the human mind and
will--to the one who is the "father of lies". This act of conscious
choice is not only "disobedience" but also involves a certain consent
to the motivation which was contained in the first temptation to sin
and which is unceasingly renewed during the whole history of man on
earth: "For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be
opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil".
Here we find ourselves at the very centre of what could be called the
"anti-Word", that is to say "the anti-truth". For the truth about man
becomes falsified: who man is and what are the impassable limits of
his being and freedom. This "anti-truth" is possible because at the
same time there is a complete falsification of the truth about who God
is. God the Creator is placed in a state of suspicion, indeed of
accusation, in the mind of the creature.
For the first time in human history there appears the perverse "genius
of suspicion". He seeks to "falsify" Good itself, the absolute Good,
which precisely in the work of creation has manifested itself as the
Good which gives in an inexpressible way: as bonum diffsivum sui, as
creative love. Who can completely "convince concerning sin", or
concerning this motivation of man's original disobedience, except the
one who alone is the gift and the source of all giving of gifts,
except the Spirit, who "searches the depths of God" and is the love of
the Father and the Son".
38. For in spite of all the witness of creation and of the salvific
economy inherent in it, the spirit of darkness[142] is capable of
showing God as an enemy of his own creature, and in the first place as
an enemy of man, as a source of danger and threat to man. In this way
Satan manages to sow in man's soul the seed of opposition to the one
who "from the beginning" would be considered as man's enemy--and not
as Father. Man is challenged to become the adversary of God!
The analysis of sin in its original dimension indicates that, through
the influence of the "father of lies", throughout the history of
humanity there will be a constant pressure on man to reject God, even
to the point of hating him: "Love of self to the point of contempt for
God", as Saint Augustine puts it.[143]
Man will be inclined to see in God primarily a limitation of himself,
and not the source of his own freedom and the fullness of good. We see
this confirmed in the modern age, when the atheistic ideologies seek
to root out religion on the grounds that religion causes the radical
"alienation" of man, as if man were dispossessed of his own humanity
when, accepting the idea of God, he attributes to God what belongs to
man, and exclusively to man! Hence a process of thought and historico-sociological
practice in which the rejection of God has reached the point of
declaring his "death". An absurdity, both in concept and expression!
But the ideology of the "death of God" is more a threat to man, as the
Second Vatican Council indicates when it analyzes the question of the
"independence of earthly affairs" and writes:a For without the Creator
the creature would disappear... when God is forgotten the creature
itself grows unintelligible".[144] The ideology of the "death of God"
easily demonstrates in its effects that on the "theoretical and
practical" levels it is the ideology of the "death of man".
39. The Spirit who searches the depths of God was called by Jesus in
his discourse in the Upper Room the Paraclete. For from the beginning
the Spirit "is invoked"[145] in order to "convince the world
concerning sin". He is invoked in a definitive way through the Cross
of Christ.
Convincing concerning sin means showing the evil that sin contains,
and this is equivalent to revealing the mystery of iniquity. It is not
possible to grasp the evil of sin in all its sad reality without
"searching the depths of God". From the very beginning, the obscure
mystery of sin has appeared in the world against the background of a
reference to the Creator of human freedom.
Sin has appeared as an act of the will of the creature-man contrary to
the will of God, to the salvific will of God; indeed, sin has appeared
in opposition to the truth, on the basis of the lie which has now been
definitively "judged": the lie that has placed in a state of
accusation, a state of permanent suspicion, creative and salvific love
itself. Man has followed the "father of lies", setting himself up in
opposition to the Father of life and the Spirit of truth.
Therefore, will not "convincing concerning sin" also have to mean
revealing suffering? Revealing the pain, unimaginable and
inexpressible, which on account of sin the Book of Genesis in its
anthropomorphic vision seems to glimpse in the "depths of God" and in
a certain sense in the very heart of the ineffable Trinity? The
Church, taking her inspiration from Revelation, believes and professes
that sin is an offence against God. What corresponds, in the
inscrutable intimacy of the Father, the Word and the Holy Spirit, to
this aoffencen, this rejection of the Spirit who is love and gift? The
concept of God as the necessarily most perfect being certainly
excludes from God any pain deriving from deficiencies or wounds; but
in the a depths of God" there is a Father's love that, faced with
man's sin, in the language of the Bible reacts so deeply as to say: "I
am sorry that I have made him".[146]
"The Lord saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth... And
the Lord was sorry that he bad made man on the earth ... The Lord
said: 'I am sorry that I have made them' ".[147] But more often the
Sacred Book speaks to us of a Father who feels compassion for man, as
though sharing his pain. In a word, this inscrutable and indescribable
fatherly "pain" will bring about above all the wonderful economy of
redemptive love in Jesus Christ, so that through the mysterium
pietatis love can reveal itself in the history of man as stronger than
sin. So that the "gift" may prevail!
The Holy Spirit who in the words of Jesus "convinces concerning sin is
the love of the Father and the Son, and as such is the Trinitarian
gift, and at the same time the eternal source of every divine giving
of gifts to creatures. Precisely in him we can picture as personified
and actualized in a transcendent way that mercy which the Patristic
and theological tradition, following the line of the Old and New
Testaments, attributes to God.
In man, mercy includes sorrow and compassion for the misfortunes of
one's neighbor. In God, the Spirit-love expresses the consideration of
human sin in a fresh outpouring of salvific love. From God, in the
unity of the Father with the Son, the economy of salvation is born,
the economy which fills the history of man with the gifts of the
Redemption.
Whereas sin, by rejecting love, has caused the "suffering" of man
which in some way has affected the whole of creation,[148] the Holy
Spirit will enter into human and cosmic suffering with a new
outpouring of love, which will redeem the world. And on the lips of
Jesus the Redeemer, in whose humanity the "suffering" of God is
concretized, there will be heard a word which manifests the eternal
love full of mercy: "Misereor".[149]
Thus on the part of the Holy Spirit "convincing of sin" becomes a
manifestation before creation, which is "subjected to futility", and
above all in the depth of human consciences, that sin is conquered
through the sacrihce of the Lamb of God who has become even " unto
death" the obedient servant who, by making up for man's disobedience,
accomplishes the redemption of the world. In this way the Spirit of
truth, the Paraclete, "convinces concerning sin".
40. The redemptive value of Christ's sacrifice is expressed in very
significant words by the author of the Letter to the Hebrews, who
after recalling the sacrifices of the Old Covenant in which "the blood
of goats and bulls ..." purifies in "the flesh", adds: "How much more
shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal spirit offered
himself without blemish to God, purify your conscience from dead works
to serve the living God?".[150]
Though we are aware of other possible interpretations, our
considerations on the presence of the Holy Spirit in the whole of
Christ's life lead us to see this text as an invitation to reflect on
the presence of the same Spirit also in the redemptive sacrifice of
the Incarnate Word.
To begin with we reflect on the first words dealing with this
sacrifice, and then separately on the "purification of conscience"
which it accomplishes. For it is a sacrifice offered "through the
eternal Spirit", that "derives" from it the power to "convince
concerning sin". It is the same Holy Spirit, whom, according to the
promise made in the Upper Room, Jesus Christ "will bring" to the
Apostles on the day of his Resurrection, when he presents himself to
them with the wounds of the crucifixion, and whom "he will give" them
"for the remission ot sins " "Receive the Holy Spirit; if you forgive
the sins of any, they are forgiven".[151]
We know that "God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and
with power", as Simon Peter said in the house of the centurion
Cornelius.[152]
We know of the Paschal Mystery of his "departure", from the Gospel of
John. The words of the Letter to the Hebrews now explain to us how
Christ "offered himself without blemish to God", and how he did this
"with an eternal Spirit". In the sacrifice of the Son of Man the Holy
Spirit is present and active just as he acted in Jesus' conception, in
his coming into the world, in his hidden life and in his public
ministry. According to the Letter to the Hebrews, on the way to his
"departure" through Gethsemani and Golgotha, the same Christ Jesus in
his own humanity opened himself totally to this action ot the Spirit-Paraclete,who
from suffering enables eternal salvific love to spring forth.
Therefore he "was heard for his godly fear. Although he was a Son, he
learned obedience through what he suffered".[153]
In this way this Letter shows how humanity, subjected to sin in the
descendants of the first Adam, in Jesus Christ became perfectly
subjected to God and united to him, and at the same time full of
compassion towards men. Thus there is a new humanity, which in Jesus
Christ through the suffering of the Cross has returned to the love
which was betrayed by Adam through sin. This new humanity is
discovered precisely in the divine source of the original outpouring
of gifts: in the Spirit, who "searches ... the depths of God" and is
himself love and gift.
The Son of God Jesus Christ, as man, in the ardent prayer of his
Passion, enabled the Holy Spirit, who had already penetrated the
inmost depths of his humanity, to transform that humanity into a
perfect sacrifice through the act of his death as the victim of love
on the Cross. He made this offering by himself. As the one priest, "he
offered himself without blemish to God".[154]
In his humanity he was worthy to become this sacrifice, for he alone
was "without blemish" But he offered it "through the eternal Spirit",
which means that the Holy Spirit acted in a special way in this
absolute self-giving of the Son of Man, in order to transform this
suffering into redemptive love.
Second part
41. The Old Testament on several occasions speaks of "fire from heaven"
which burnt the oblations presented by men.[155]
By analogy one can say that the Holy Spirit is the "fire from heaven"
which works in the depth of the mystery of the Cross. Proceeding from
the Father, he directs towards the Father the sacrifice of the Son,
bringing it into the divine reality of the Trinitarian communion.
If sin caused suffering, now the pain of God in Christ crucified
acquires through the Holy Spirit its full human expression. Thus there
is a paradoxical mystery of love: in Christ there suffers a God who has
been rejected by his own creature: "They do not believe in me!"; but at
the same time, from the depth of this suffering--and indirectly from the
depth of the very sin "of not having believed"--the Spirit draws a new
measure of the gift made to man and to creation from the beginning. In
the depth of the mystery of the Cross love is at work, that love which
brings man back again to share in the life that is in God himself.
The Holy Spirit as Love and Gift comes down, in a certain sense, into
the very heart of the sacrifice which is offered on the Cross. Referring
here to the biblical tradition we can say: he consumes this sacrifice
with the fire of the love which unites the Son with the Father in the
Trinitarian communion. And since the sacrifice of the Cross is an act
proper to Christ, also in this sacrifice he "receives" the Holy Spirit.
He receives the Holy Spirit in such a way that afterwards and he alone
with God the Father--can "give him" to the Apostles, to the Church, to
humanity. He alone "sends" the Spirit from the Father.[156]
He alone presents himself before the Apostles in the Upper Room,
"breathes upon them" and says: "Receive the Holy Spirit; if you forgive
the sins of any, they are forgiven",[157] as John the Baptist had
foretold: "He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire".[158]
With those words of Jesus the Holy Spirit is revealed and at the same
time made present as the Love that works in the depths of the Paschal
Mystery, as the source of the salvific power of the Cross of Christ, and
as the gift of new and eternal life.
This truth about the Holy Spirit finds daily expression in the Roman
liturgy, when before Communion the priest pronounces those significant
words: "Lord Jesus Christ, Son of the living God, by the will of the
Father and the work of the Holy Spirit your death brought life to the
world...".
And in the Third Eucharistic Prayer, referring to the same salvific
plan, the priest asks God that the Holy Spirit may "make us an
everlasting gift to you".
42. We have said that, at the climax of the Paschal Mystery, the Holy
Spirit is definitively revealed and made present in a new way. The Risen
Christ says to the Apostles: "Receive the Holy Spirit".
Thus the Holy Spirit is revealed, for the words of Christ constitute the
confirmation of what he had promised and foretold during the discourse
in the Upper Room. And with this the Paraclete is also made present in a
new way. In fact, he was already at work from the beginning in the
mystery of creation and throughout the history of the Old Covenant of
God with man. His action was fully confirmed by the sending of the Son
of Man as the Messiah, who came in the power of the Holy Spirit.
At the climax of Jesus' messianic mission, the Holy Spirit becomes
present in the Paschal Mystery in all his divine subjectivity: as the
one who is now to continue the salvific work rooted in the sacrifice of
the Cross. Of course Jesus entNsts this work to humanity: to the
Apostles, to the Church. Nevertheless, in these men and through them the
Holy Spirit remains the transcendent principal agent of the
accomplishment of this work in the human spirit and in the history of
the world: the invisible and at the same time omnipresent Paraclete! The
Spirit who "blows where he wills".[159]
The words of the Risen Christ on the a"first day of the week give
particular emphasis to the presence of the Paraclete-Counsellor as the
one who "convinces the world concerning sin, righteousness and
judgment".
For it is only in this relationship that it is possible to explain the
words which Jesus directly relates to the "gift" of the Holy Spirit to
the Apostles. He says: " Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the
sins of any, they are forgiven; if you retain the sins of any, they are
retained".[160]
Jesus confers on the Apostles the power to forgive sins, so that they
may pass it on to their successors in the Church. But this power granted
to men presupposes and includes the saving action of the Holy Spirit. By
becoming "the light of hearts",[161] that is to say the light of
consciences, the Holy Spirit "convinces concerning sin", which is to
say, he makes man realize his own evil and at the same time directs him
towards what is good. Thanks to the multiplicity of the Spirit's gifts,
by reason of which he is invoked as the "sevenfold one", every kind of
human sin can be reached by God's saving power. In reality --as Saint
Bonaventure says--"by virtue of the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit all
evils are destroyed and all good things are produced.[162]
Thus the conversion of the human heart, which is an indispensable
condition for the forgiveness of sins, is brought about by the influence
of the Counsellor. Without a true conversion, which implies inner
contrition, and without a sincere and firm purpose of amendment, sins
remain "unforgiven", in the words of Jesus, and with him the Tradition
of the Old and New Covenants. For the first words uttered by Jesus at
the beginning of his ministry, according to the Gospel of Mark, are
these: "Repent, and believe in the Gospel".[163]
A confirmation of this exhortation is the "convincing concerning sin"
that the Holy Spirit undertakes in a new way by virtue of the Redemption
accomplished by the Blood of the Son of Man. Hence the Letter to the
Hebrews says that this "blood purifies the conscience".[164]
It therefore, so to speak, opens to the Holy Spirit the door into man's
inmost being, namely into the sanctuary of human consciences.
43. The Second Vatican Council mentioned the Catholic teaching on
conscience when it spoke about man's vocation and in particular about
the dignity of the human person. It is precisely the conscience in
particular which determines this dignity. For the conscience is "the
most secret core and sanctuary of a man, where he is alone with God,
whose voice echoes in his depths".
It "can... speak to his heart more specifically: do this, shun that".
This capacity to command what is good and to forbid evil, placed in man
by the Creator, is the main characteristic of the personal subject. But
at the same time, "in the depths of his conscience, man detects a law
which he does not impose upon himself, but which holds him to
obedience".[165]
The conscience therefore is not an independent and exclusive capacity to
decide what is good and what is evil. Rather there is profoundly
imprinted upon it a principle of obedience visa-vis the objective norm
which establishes and conditions the correspondence of its decisions
with the commands and prohibitions which are at the basis of human
behavior, as from the passage of the Book of Genesis which we have
already considered.[166]
Precisely in this sense the conscience is the "secret sanctuary" in
which "God's voice echoes". The conscience is "the voice of God" even
when man recognizes in it nothing more than the principle of the moral
order which it is not humanly possible to doubt, even without any direct
reference to the Creator. It is precisely in reference to this that the
conscience always finds its foundation and justification.
The Gospel's " convincing concerning sin n under the influence of the
Spirit of truth can be accomplished in man in no other way except
through the conscience.
If the conscience is upright, it serves "to resolve according to truth
the moral problems which arise both in the life of individuals and from
social relationships "; then "persons and groups turn aside from blind
choice and try to be guided by the objective standards of moral
conduct"[167]
A result of an upright conscience is, first of all, to call good and
evil by their proper name, as we read in the same Pastoral Constitution:
"Whatever is opposed to life itself, such as any type of murder,
genocide, abortion, euthanasia, or willful self-destruction, whatever
violates the integrity of the human person, such as mutilation, torments
inflicted on body or mind, attempts to coerce the will itself; whatever
insults human dignity, such as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary
imprisonment, deportation, slavery, prostitution, the selling of women
and children; as well as disgraceful working conditions, where people
are treated as mere tools for profit, rather than as free and
responsible persons"; and having called by name the many different sins
that are so frequent and widespread in our time, the Constitution adds
"All these things and others of their kind are infamies indeed.
They poison human society, but they do more harm to those who practice
them than those who suffer from the injury. Moreover, they are a supreme
dishonor to the Creator"[168]
By calling by their proper name the sins that most dishonor man, and by
showing that they are a moral evil that weighs negatively on any
balance-sheet of human progress, the Council also describes all this as
a stage in "a dramatic struggle between good and evil, between light and
darkness", which characterizes "all of human life, whether individual or
collective".[169]
The 1983 Assembly of the Synod of Bishops on reconciliation and penance
specified even more clearly the personal and social significance of
human sin."[170]
44. In the Upper Room, on the eve of his Passion and again on the
evening of Easter Day, Jesus Christ spoke of the Holy Spirit as the one
who bears witness that in human history sin continues to exist. Yet sin
has been subjected to the saving power of the Redemption.
"Convincing the world concerning sin" does not end with the fact that
sin is called by its right name and identified for what it is throughout
its entire range. In convincing the world concerning sin the Spirit of
truth comes into contact with the voice of human consciences.
By following this path we come to a demonstration of the roots of sin,
which are to be found in man's inmost being, as described by the same
Pastoral Constitution: "The truth is that the imbalances under which the
modern world labours are linked with that more basic imbalance rooted in
the heart of man. For in man himself many elements wrestle with one
another. Thus, on the one hand, as a creature he experiences his
limitations in a multitude of ways.
On the other, he feels himself tO be boundless in his desires and
summoned to a higher life. Pulled by manifold attractions, he is
constantly forced to choose among them and to renounce some. Indeed, as
a weak and sinful being, he often does what he would not, and fails to
do what he woulds".[171]
The Conciliar text is here referring to the well-known words of Saint
Paul.[172]
The "convincing concerning sin" which accompanies the human conscience
in every careful reflection upon itself thus leads to the discovery of
sin's roots in man, as also to the discovery of the way in which the
conscience has been conditioned in the course of history.
In this way we discover that original reality of sin of which we have
already spoken. The Holy Spirit "convinces concerning sin" in relation
to the mystery of man's origins, showing the fact that man is a created
being, and therefore in complete ontological and ethical dependence upon
the Creator. The Holy Spirit reminds us, at the same time, of the
hereditary sinfulness of human nature. But the Holy Spirit the
Counsellor "convinces concerning sin" always in relation to the Cross of
Christ. In the context of this relationship Christianity rejects any
"fatalism" regarding sin. As the Council teaches: "A monumental struggle
against the powers of darkness pervades the whole history of man. The
battle was joined from the very origins of the world and will continue
until the last day, as the Lord has attested".[173]
"But the Lord himself came to free and strengthen man".[174] Man,
therefore, far from allowing himself to be "ensnared" in his sinful
condition, by relying upon the voice of his own conscience "is obliged
to wrestle constantly if he is to cling to what is good. Nor can he
achieve his own interior integrity without valiant efforts and the help
of God's grave".[175]
The Council rightly sees sin as a factor of alienation which weighs
heavily on man's personal and social life. But at the same time it never
tires of reminding us of the possibility of victory.
45. The Spirit of truth, who "convinces the world concerning sin", comes
into contact with that laborious effort on the part of the human
conscience which the Conciliar texts speak of so graphically. This
laborious effort of conscience also determines the paths of human
conversion: turning one's back on sin, in order to restore truth and
love in man's very heart.
We know that recognizing evil in ourselves sometimes demands a great
effort. We know that conscience not only commands and forbids but also
judges in the light of interior dictates and prohibitions. It is also
the source of remorse: man suffers interiorly because of the evil he has
committed. Is not this suffering as it were a distant echo of that
"repentance at having created man" which in anthropomorphic language the
Sacred Book attributes to God?
Is it not an echo of that "reprobation" which is interiorized in the
"heart" of the Trinity and by virtue of the eternal love is translated
into the suffering of the Cross, into Christ's obedience unto death?
When the Spirit of truth permits the human conscience to share in that
suffering the suffering of the conscience becomes particularly profound,
but also particularly salvific. Then, by means of an act of perfect
contrition, the authentic conversion of the heart is accomplished: this
is the evangelical "metanoia".
The laborious effort of the human heart, the laborious effort of the
conscience in which this "metanoia" or conversion takes place, is a
reflection of that process whereby reprobation is transformed into
salvific love, a love which is capable of suffering.
The hidden giver of this saving power is the Holy Spirit: he whom the
Church calls "the light of consciences" penetrates and fills a the
depths of the human heart",[176] Through just such a conversion in the
Holy Spirit a person becomes open to forgiveness, to the remission of
sins. And in all this wonderfuldynamism of conversion-forgiveness there
is confirmed the truth of what Saint Augustine writes concerning the
mystery of man, when he comments on the words of the Psalm: "The abyss
calls to the abyss".[177]
Precisely with regard to these "unfathomable depths" of man, of the
human conscience, the mission of the Son and the Holy Spirit is
accomplished. The Holy Spirit "comes" by virtue of Christ's "departure"
in the Paschal Mystery: he comes in each concrete case of
conversion-forgiveness, by virtue of the sacrifice of the Cross. For in
this sacrifice "the blood of Christ... purifies your conscience from
dead works to serve the living God".[178]
Thus there are continuously fulfilled the words about the Holy Spirit as
"another Counsellor", the words spoken in the Upper Room to the Apostles
and indirectly spoken to everyone:"You know him, for he dwells with you
and will be in you".[179]
46. Against the background of what has been said so far, certain other
words of Jesus, shocking and disturbing ones, become easier to
understand. We might call them the words of "unforgiveness".
They are reported for us by the Synoptic in connection with a particular
sin which is called "blasphemy against the Holy Spirit". This is how
they are reported in their three versions: Matthew: "Whoever says a word
against the Son of Man will be forgiven; but whoever speaks against the
Holy Spirit will not be forgiven, either in this age or in the age to
come".[180]
Mark: "All sins will be forgiven the sons of men, and whatever
blasphemies they utter; but whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit
never has forgiveness, but is guilty of an eternal sin".[181] Luke:
"Every one who speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven;
but he who blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will not be
forgiven".[182]
Why is blasphemy against the Holy Spirit unforgivable? How should this
blasphemy be understood? Saint Thomas Aquinas replies that it is a
question of a sin that is "unforgivable by its very nature, insofar as
it excludes the elements through which the forgiveness of sin takes
place.[183]
According to such an exegesis, "blasphemy" does not properly consist in
offending against the Holy Spirit in words; it consists rather in the
refusal to accept the salvation which God offers to man through the Holy
Spirit, working through the power of the Cross.
If man rejects the " convincing concerning sin" which comes from the
Holy Spirit and which has the power to save, he also rejects the
"coming" of the Counsellor --that "coming" which was accomplished in the
Paschal Mystery, in union with the redemptive power of Christ's Blood:
the Blood which "purifies the conscience from dead works".
We know that the result of such a purification is the forgiveness of
sins. Therefore, whoever rejects the Spirit and the Blood remains in
"dead works", in sin. And the blasphemy against the Holy Spirit consists
precisely in the radical refusal to accept this forgiveness of which he
is the intimate giver and which presupposes the genuine conversion which
he brings about in the conscience.
If Jesus says that blasphemy against the Holy Spirit cannot be forgiven
either in this life or in the next, it is because this "non-forgiveness"
is linked, as to its cause, to "non-repentance", in other words to the
radical refusal to be converted. This means the refusal to come to the
sources of Redemption, which nevertheless remain " always " open in the
economy of salvation in which the mission of the Holy Spirit is
accomplished. The Spirit has infinite power to draw from these sources:
"he will take what is mine", Jesus said. In this way he brings to
completion in human souls the work of the Redemption accomplished by
Christ, and distributes its fruits. Blasphemy against the Holy Spirit,
then, is the sin committed by the person who claims to have a "right" to
persist in evil--in any sin at all--and who thus rejects Redemption. One
closes oneself up in sin, thus making impossible one's conversion, and
consequently the remission of sins, which one considers not essential or
not important for one's life.
This is a state of spiritual ruin, because blasphemy against the Holy
Spirit does not allow one to escape from one's self-imposed imprisonment
and open oneself to the divine sources of the purification of
consciences and of the remission of sins.
47. The action of the Spirit of truth, which works towards the salvific
"convincing concerning sin", encounters in a person in this condition.
an interior resistance, as it were an impenetrability of conscience, a
state of mind which could be described as fixed by reason of a free
choice. This is what Sacred Scripture usually calls "hardness of
heart".[184]
In our own time this attitude of mind and heart is perhaps reflected in
the loss of the sense of sin, to which the Apostolic Exhortation
Reconciliatio et Paenitentia devotes many pages.[185] Pope Pius XII had
already dedared that "the sin of the century is the loss of the sense of
sin",[186] and this loss goes hand in hand with the "loss of the sense
of God".
In the Exhortation just mentioned we read: " In fact, God is the origin
and the supreme end of man, and man carries in himself a divine seed.
Hence it is the reality of God that reveals and illustrates the mystery
of man. It is therefore vain to hope that there will take root a sense
of sin against man and against human values, if there is no sense of
offence against God, namely the true sense of sin".[187]
Hence the Church constantly implores from God the grace that integrity
of human consciences will not be lost, that their healthy sensitivity
with regard to good and evil will not be blunted. This integrity and
sensitivity are profoundly linked to the intimate action of the Spirit
of truth.
In this light the exhortations of Saint Paul assume particular
eloquence: "Do not quench the Spirit"; "Do not grieve the Holy
Spirit".[188] But above all the Church constantly implores with the
greatest fervor that there will be no increase in the world of the sin
that the Gospel calls "blasphemy against the Holy Spirit".
Rather, she prays that it will decrease in human souls --and
consequently in the forms and structures of society itself--and that it
will make room for that openness of conscience necessary for the saving
action of the Holy Spirit. The Church prays that the dangerous sin
against the Spirit will give way to a holy readiness to accept his
mission as the Counsellor, when he comes to " convince the world
concerning sin, and righteousness and judgment".
48. In his farewell discourse Jesus linked these three areas of
"convincing" as elements of the mission of the Paraclete: sin,
righteousness and judgment. They mark out the area of that mysterium
pietatis that in human history is opposed to sin, to the mystery of
iniquity.[189]
On the one hand, as Saint Augustine says, there is "love of self to the
point of contempt of God"; on the other, "love of God to the point of
contempt of self".[190]
The Church constantly lifts up her prayer and renders her service in
order that the history of consciences and the history of societies in
the great human family will now descend towards the pole of sin, by the
rejection of God's commandments "to the point of contempt of God", but
rather will rise towards the love in which the Spirit that gives life is
revealed.
Those who let themselves be "convinced concerning sin" by the Holy
Spirit, also allow themselves to be convinced "concerning righteousness
and judgment".
The Spirit of truth who helps human beings, human consciences, to know
the truth concerning sin, at the same time enables them to know the
truth about that righteousness which entered human history in Jesus
Christ. In this way, those who are "convinced concerning sin " and who
are converted through the action of the Counsellor are, in a sense, led
out of the range of the a judgment": that " judgment" by which "the
ruler of this world is judged".[191]
In the depths of its divine-human mystery, conversion means the breaking
of every fetter by which sin binds man to the whole of the mystery of
iniquity. Those who are converted, therefore, are led by the Holy Spirit
out of the range of the "judgment", and introduced into that
righteousness which is in Christ Jesus, and is in him precisely because
he receives it from the Father,[192] as a reflection of the holiness of
the Trinity. This is the righteousness of the Gospel and of the
Redemption, the righteousness of the Sermon on the Mount and of the
Cross, which effects the purifying of the conscience through the Blood
of the Lamb.
It is the righteousness which the Father gives to the Son and to all
those united with him in truth and in love.
In this righteousness the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of the Father and the
Son, who "convinces the world concerning sin", reveals himself and makes
himself present in man as the Spirit of eternal life.
49. The Church's mind and heart turn to the Holy Spirit as this
twentieth century draws to a close and the third Millennium since the
coming of Jesus Christ into the world approaches, and as we look towards
the great Jubilee with which the Church will celebrate the event.
For according to the computation of time this coming is measured as an
event belonging to the history of man on earth. The measurement of time
in common use defines years, centuries and millennia according to
whether they come before or after the birth of Christ.
But it must also be remembered that for us Christians this event
indicates, as Saint Paul says, the "fullness of time"[193] because in it
human history has been wholly permeated by the "measurement" of God
himself: a transcendent presence of the "eternal now". He who is, who
was, and who is to come"; he who is "the Alpha and the Omega, the first
and the last, the beginning and the end".[194]
"For God so Loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever
believes in him should not perish but have eternal life".[195]
"When the time had fully come, God sent forth his Son, born of a
woman... so that we might receive adoption as sons".[196]
And this Incarnation of the Son-Word came about "by the power of the
Holy Spirit".
The two Evangelists to whom we owe the narrative of the birth and
infancy of Jesus of Nazareth express themselves on this matter in an
identical way. According to Luke, at the Annunciation of the birth of
Jesus, Mary asks: "How shall this be, since I have no husband?", and she
receives this answer: "The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power
of the Most High will overshadow you: therefore the child to be born
will be called holy, the Son of God.[197]
Matthew narrates directly: "Now the birth of Jesus Christ took place in
this way. When his mother Mary had been betrothed to Joseph, before they
came together she was found to be with child of the Holy Spirit"[198]
Disturbed by this turn of events, Joseph receives the following
explanation in a dream: "Do not fear to take Mary your wife, for that
which is conceived in her is of the Holy Spirit; she will bear a son,
and you shall call his name Jesus, for he will save his people from
their sins."[199]
Thus from the beginning the Church confesses the mystery of the
Incarnation, this key mystery of the faith, by making reference to the
Holy Spirit.
The Apostles' Creed says: " He was conceived by the power of the Holy
Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary". Similarly, the
Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed professes: " By the power of the Holy
Spirit he became incarnate from the Virgin Mary, and was made man".
"By the power of the Holy Spirit" there became man he whom the Church,
in the words of the same Creed, professes to be the Son, of the same
substance as the Father: "God from God, Light from Light, true God from
true God, begotten, not made".
He was made man by becoming "incarnate from the Virgin Mary". This is
what happened when " the fullness of time had come"..
50. The great Jubilee at the close of the second Millennium, for which
the Church is already preparing, has a directly Christological aspect:
for it is a celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ.
At the same time it has a pneumatological aspect, since the mystery of
the Incarnation was accomplished "by the power of the Holy Spirit".
It was "brought about" by that Spirit--consubstantial with the Father
and the Son--who, in the absolute mystery of the Triune God, is the
Person-love, the uncreated gift, who is the eternal source of every gift
that comes from God in the order of creation, the direct principle and,
in a certain sense, the subject of God's self-communication in the order
of grace. The mystery of the Incarnation constitutes the climax of this
giving, this divine self communication.
The conception and birth of Jesus Christ are in fact the greatest work
accomplished by the Holy Spirit in the history of creation and
salvation: the supreme grace "the grace of union", source of every other
grace, as Saint Thomas explains.[200]
The great Jubilee refers to this work and also--if we penetrate its
depths to the author of this work, to the person of the Holy Spirit.
For the "fullness of time" is matched by a particular fullness of the
self-communication of the Triune God in the Holy Spirit. "By the power
of the Holy Spirit" the mystery of the "hypostatic union" is brought
about--that is, the union of the divine nature and the human nature, of
the divinity and the humanity in the one Person of the Word-Son. When at
the moment of the Annunciation Mary utters her fiat": "Be it done unto
me according to your word",[201] she conceives in a virginal way a man,
the Son of Man, who is the Son of God.
By means of this "humanization" of the Word-Son the self-communication
of God reaches its defnitive fullness in the history of creation and
salvation. This fullness acquires a special wealth and expressiveness in
the text of John's Gospel: "The Word became flesh".[202]
The Incarnation of God the Son signifies the taking up into unity with
God not only of human nature, but in this human nature, in a sense, of
everything that is "flesh": the whole of humanity, the entire visible
and material world.
The Incarnation, then, also has a cosmic significance, a cosmic
dimension. The "first-born of all creation,[203] becoming incarnate in
the individual humanity of Christ, unites himself in someway with the
entire reality of man, which is also "flesh"[204] --and in this reality
with all "flesh", with the whole of creation.
All this is accomplished by the power of the Holy Spirit, and so is part
of the great Jubilee to come. The Church cannot prepare for the Jubilee
in any other way than in the Holy Spirit. What was accomplished by the
power of the Holy Spirit "in the fullness of time" can only through the
Spirit's power now emerge from the memory of the Church.
By his power it can be made present in the new phase of man's history on
earth: the year 2000 from the birth of Christ.
The Holy Spirit, who with his power overshadowed the virginal body of
Mary, bringing about in her the beginning of her divine Motherhood, at
the same time made her heart perfectly obedient to that
self-communication of God which surpassed every human idea and faculty.
"Blessed is she who believed!":[205] thus Mary is greeted by her cousin
Elizabeth, herself "full of the Holy Spirit".[206]
In the words of greeting addressed to her "who believed" we seem to
detect a distant (but in fact very close) contrast with all those about
whom Christ will say that "they do not believe ".[207] Mary entered the
history of the salvation of the world through the obedience of faith.
And faith, in its deepest essence, is the openness of the human heart to
the gift: to God's self-communication in the Holy Spirit. Saint Paul
writes: "The Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is,
there is freedom".[208]
When the Triune God opens himself to man in the Holy Spirit, this
opening of God reveals and also gives to the human creature the fullness
of freedom. This fullness was manifested in a sublime way precisely
through the faith of Mary, through the " obedience of faith":[209]
truly, "Blessed is she who believed"!
52. In the mystery of the Incarnation the work of the Spirit "who gives
life" reaches its highest point.
It is not possible to give life, which in its fullest form is in God,
except by making it the life of a Man, as Christ is in his humanity
endowed with personhood by the Word in the hypostatic union. And at the
same time, with the mystery of the Incarnation there opens in a new way
the source of this divine life in the history of mankind: the Holy
Spirit. The Word, "the first-born of all creation, becomes "the
first-born of many brethren".[210]
And thus he also becomes the head of the Body which is the Church, which
will be born on the Cross and revealed on the day of Pentecost--and in
the Church, he becomes the head of humanity: of the people of every
nation, every race, every country and culture, every language and
continent, all called to salvation. "The Word became flesh, (that Word
in whom) was life and the life was the light of men... to all who
received him he gave the power to become the children of God".[211]
But all this was accomplished and is unceasingly accomplished "by the
power of the Holy Spirit".
For as Saint Paul teaches, "all who are led by the Spirit of God" are
"children of God".[212]
The filiation of divine adoption is born in man on the basis of the
mystery of the Incarnation, therefore through Christ the eternal Son.
But the birth, or rebirth) happens when God the Father "sends the Spirit
of his Son into our hearts"[213].
Then "we receive a spirit of adopted sons by which we cry 'Abba,
Father!'".[214]
Hence the divine filiation planted in the human soul through sanctifying
grace is the work of the Holy Spirit. "It is the Spirit himself bearing
witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children,
then heirs, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ".[215]
Sanctifying grace is the principle and source of man's new life: divine,
supernatural life.
The giving of this new life is as it were God's definitive answer to the
Psalmist's words which in a way echo the voice of all creatures: "When
you send forth your Spirit, they shall be created; and you shall renew
the face of the earth".[216]
He who in the mystery of creation gives life to man and the cosmos in
its many different forms, visible and invisible, again renews this life
through the mystery of the Incarnation. Creation is thus completed by
the Incarnation and since that moment is permeated by the powers of the
Redemption, powers which fill humanity and all creation. This is what we
are told by Saint Paul, whose cosmic and theological vision seems to
repeat the words of the ancient Psalm: creation awaits with eager
longing for the revealing of the sons of God ",[217] that is, those whom
God has "foreknown" and whom he "has predestined to be conformed to the
image of his Son".[218]
Thus there is a supernatural "adoption", of which the source is the Holy
Spirit, love and gift. As such he is given to man.
And in the superabundance of the untreated gift there begins in the
heart of all human beings that particular created gift whereby they
"become partakers of the divine nature."[219]
Thus human life becomes permeated, through participation, by the divine
life, and itself acquires a divine, supernatural dimension. There is
granted the new life, in which as a sharer in the mystery of Incarnation
a man has access to the Father in the Holy Spirit".[220] Thus there is a
close relationship between the Spirit who gives life and sanctifying
grace and the manifold supernatural vitality which derives from it in
man: between the uncreated Spirit and the created human spirit.
53. All this may be said to fall within the scope of the great Jubilee
mentioned above.
For we must go beyond the historical dimension of the event considered
in its surface value. Through the Christological content of the event we
have to reach the pneumatological dimension, seeing with the eyes of
faith the two thousand years of the action ot the Spirit of truth, who
down the centuries has drawn from the treasures of the Redemption
achieved by Christ and given new life to human beings, bringing about in
them adoption in the only begotten Son, sanctifying them, so that they
can repeat with Saint Paul: "We have received... the Spirit which is
from God".[221]
But as we follow this reason for the Jubilee, we cannot limit ourselves
to the two thousand years which have passed since the birth of Christ.
We need to go further back, to embrace the whole of the action of the
Holy Spirit even before Christ--from the beginning, throughout the
world, and especially in the economy of the Old Covenant.
For this action has been exercised, in every place and at every time,
indeed in every individual, according to the eternal plan of salvation,
whereby this action was to be closely linked with the mystery of the
Incarnation and Redemption, which in its turn exercised its influence on
those who believed in the future coming of Christ. This is attested to
especially in the Letter to the Ephesians.[222]
Grace, therefore, bears within itself both a Christological aspect and a
pneumatological one, which becomes evident above all in those who
expressly accept Christ: "In him (in Christ) you... were sealed with the
promised Holy Spirit, which is the guarantee of our inheritance, until
we acquire possession of it".[223]
But, still within the perspective of the great Jubilee, we need to look
further and go further afield, knowing that "the wind blows where it
wills", according to the image used by Jesus in his conversation with
Nicodemus.[224]
The Second Vatican Council, centered primarily on the theme of the
Church, reminds us of the Holy Spirit's activity also "outside the
visible body of the Church".
The Council speaks precisely of "all people of good will in whose hearts
grace works in an unseen way. For, since Christ died for all, and since
the ultimate vocation of man is in fact one, and divine, we ought to
believe that the Holy Spirit in a manner known only to God offers to
every man the possibility of being associated with this Pascal
mystery".[225]
54. "God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and
truth".[226]
These words were spoken by Jesus in another conversation, the one with
the Samaritan woman. The great Jubilee to be celebrated at the end of
this Millennium and at the beginning of the next ought to constitute a
powerful call to all those who "worship God in spirit and truth". It
should be for everyone a special occasion for meditating on the mystery
of the Triune God, who in himself is wholly transcendent with regard to
the world, especially the visible world.
For he is absolute Spirit, "God is spirit";[227] and also, in such a
marvelous way, he is not only close to this world but present in it, and
in a sense immanent, penetrating it and giving it life from within. This
is especially true in relation to man: God is present in the intimacy of
man's being, in his mind, conscience and heart: an ontological and
psychological reality, in considering which Saint Augustine said of God
that he was "closer than my inmost being".[228]
These words help us to understand better the words of Jesus to the
Samaritan woman: " God is spirit". Only the Spirit can be "closer than
my inmost being", both in my existence and in my spiritual experience.
Only the Spirit can be so immanent in man and in the world, while
remaining inviolable and immutable in his absolute transcendence.
But in Jesus Christ the divine presence in the world and in man has been
made manifest in a new way and in visible form. In him " the grace of
God has appeared indeed".[229]
The love of God the Father, as a gift, infinite grace, source of life,
has been made visible in Christ, and in his humanity that love has
become "part" of the universe, the human family and history This
appearing of grace in human history, through Jesus Christ, has been
accomplished through the power of the Holy Spirit, who is the source of
all God's salvific activity in the world: he, the "hidden God",[230] who
as love and gift "fills the universe".[231]
The Church's entire life, as will appear in the great Jubilee, means
going to meet the invisible God, the hidden God: a meeting with the
Spirit "who gives life".
55. Unfortunately, the history of salvation shows that God's coming
close and making himself present to man and the world, that marvelous
"condescension" of the Spirit, meets with resistance and opposition in
our human reality. How eloquent from this point of view are the
prophetic words of the old man Simeon who inspired by the Spirit, came
to the Temple in Jerusalem, in order to foretell in the presence of the
new-born Babe of Bethlehem that he "is set for the fall and rising of
many in Israel, for a sign of contradiction".[232]
Opposition to God, who is an invisible Spirit, to a certain degree
originates in the very fact of the radical difference of the world from
God, that is to say in the world's "visibility" and "materiality" in
contrast to him who is "invisible" and "absolute Spirit"; from the
world's essential and inevitable imperfection in contrast to him, the
perfect being. But this opposition becomes conflict and rebellion on the
ethical plane by reason of that sin which takes possession of the human
heart, wherein "the desires of the flesh are against the Spirit and the
desires of the Spirit are against the flesh".[233]
Concerning this sin, the Holy Spirit must "convince the world" as we
have already said.
It is Saint Paul who describes in a particularly eloquent way the
tension and struggle that trouble the human heart. We read in the Letter
to the Galatians: "But I say, walk by the Spirit, and do not gratify the
desires of the flesh. For the desires of the flesh are against the
Spirit, and the desires of the Spirit are against the flesh; for these
are opposed to each other, to prevent you from doing what you
would".[234]
There already exists in man, as a being made up of body and spirit, a
certain tension, a certain struggle of tendencies between the "spirit"
and the "flesh". But this struggle in fact belongs to the heritage of
sin, is a consequence of sin and at the same time a confirmation of it.
This is part of everyday experience. As the Apostle writes: "Now the
works of the flesh are plain: fornication, impurity, licentiousness...
drunkenness, carousing and the like". These are the sins that could be
called "carnal". But he also adds others: "Enmity, strife, jealousy,
anger, selfishness, dissension, party spirit, envy".[235]
All of this constitutes the "works of the flesh".
But with these works, which are undoubtedly evil, Paul contrasts "the
fruit of the Spirit ", such as "love, joy, peace, patience, kindness,
goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control".[236]
From the context it is clear that for the Apostle it is not a question
of discriminating against and condemning the body, which with the
spiritual soul constitutes man's nature and personal subjectivity.
Rather, he is concerned with the morally good or bad works, or better
the permanent dispositions--virtues and vices--which are the fruit of
submission to (in the first case) or of resistance to (in the second
case) the saving action of the Holy Spirit. Consequently the Apostle
writes: "If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit".[237]
And in other passages: "For those who live according to the flesh set
their minds on the things of the flesh, but those who live according to
the Spirit set their minds on the things of the Spirit"; "You are in the
Spirit, if in fact the Spirit of God dwells in you".[238]
The contrast that Saint Paul makes between life "according to the Spirit
and life "according to the flesh" gives rise to a further contrast: that
between "life" and "death". "To set the mind on the flesh is death, but
to set the mind on the Spirit is life and peace"; hence the warning:
"For if you live according to the flesh you will die, but if by the
Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body you will live".[239]
Properly understood, this is an exhortation to live in the truth, that
is, according to the dictates of an upright conscience, and at the same
time it is a profession of faith in the Spirit of truth as the one who
gives life.
For the body is "dead because of sin, but your spirits are alive because
of righteousness". "So then, brethren, we are debtors, not to the flesh,
to live according to the flesh".[240]
Rather we are debtors to Christ, who in the Paschal Mystery has effected
our justification, obtaining for us the Holy Spirit: "Indeed, we have
been bought at a great price".[241]
In the texts of Saint Paul there is a superimposing--and a mutual
compenetration--ofthe ontological dimension (the flesh and the spirit)
the ethical (moral good and evil), and the pneumatological (the action
of the Holy Spirit in the order of grace).
His words (especially in the Letters to the Romans and Galatians) enable
us to know and feel vividly the strength of the tension and struggle
going on in man between openness to the action of the Holy Spirit and
resistance and opposition to him, to his saving gift.
The terms or poles of contrast are, on man's part, his limitation and
sinfulness, which are essential elements of his psychological and
ethical reality; and on God's part, the mystery of the gift, that
unceasing self-giving of divine life in the Holy Spirit. Who will win?
The one who welcomes the gift.
56. Unfortunately, the resistance to the Holy Spirit which Saint Paul
emphasizes in the interior and subjective dimension as tension, struggle
and rebellion taking place in the human heart finds in every period of
history and especially in the modern era its external dimension, which
takes concrete form as the content of culture and civilization, as a
philosophical system, an ideology, a programme for action and for the
shaping of human behavior.
It reaches its clearest expression in materialism, both in its
theoretical form: as a system of thought, and in its practical form: as
a method of interpreting and evaluating facts, and likewise as a
programme of corresponding conduct. The system which has developed most
and carried to its extreme practical consequences this form of thought,
ideology and praxis is dialectical and historical materialism, which is
still recognized as the essential core of Marxism.
In principle and in fact, materialism radically excludes the presence
and action of God, who is spirit, in the world and above all in man.
Fundamentally this is because it does not accept God's existence, being
a system that is essentially and systematically atheistic. This is the
striking phenomenon of our time: atheism, to which the Second Vatican
Council devoted some significant pages.[242]
Even though it is not possible to speak of atheism in a univocal way or
to limit it exclusively to the philosophy of materialism, since there
exist numerous forms of atheism and the word is perhaps often used in a
wrong sense, nevertheless it is certain that a true and proper
materialism, understood as a theory which explains reality and accepted
as the key-principle of personal and social action, is
characteristically atheistic. The order of values and the aims of action
which it describes are strictly bound to a reading of the whole of
reality as "matter".
Though it sometimes also speaks of the "spirit" and of "questions of the
spirit", as for example in the fields of culture or morality, it does so
only insofar as it considers certain facts as derived from matter
(epiphenomena), since according to this system matter is the one and
only form of being. It follows, according to this interpretation, that
religion can only be understood as a kind of "idealistic illusion", to
be fought with the most suitable means and methods according to
circumstances of time and place, in order to eliminate it from society
and from man's very heart.
It can be said therefore that materialism is the systematic and logical
development of that "resistance" and opposition condemned by Saint Paul
with the words: "The desires of the flesh are against the Spirit".
But, as Saint Paul emphasizes in the second part of his aphorism, this
antagonism is mutual: "the desires of the Spirit are against the flesh".
Those who wish to live by the Spirit, accepting and corresponding to his
salvific activity, cannot but reject the internal and external
tendencies and claims of the "flesh", also in its ideological and
historical expression as anti-religious "materialism".
Against this background so characteristic of our time, in preparing for
the great Jubilee we must emphasize the "desires of the spirit", as
exhortations echoing in the night of a new time of advent, at the end of
which, like two thousand years ago, "every man will see the salvation of
God".[243]
This is a possibility and a hope that the Church entrusts to the men and
women of today. She knows that the meeting or collision between the
"desires against the spirit" which mark so many aspects of contemporary
civilization, especially in some of its spheres, and " the desires
against the flesh", with God's approach to us, his Incarnation, his
constantly renewed communication of the Holy Spirit--this meeting or
collision may in many cases be of a tragic nature and may perhaps lead
to fresh defeats for humanity.
But the Church firmly believes that on God's part there is always a
salvific self-giving, a salvific coming and, in some way or other, a
salvific "convincing concerning sin" by the power of the Spirit.
57. The Pauline contrast between the "Spirit" and the " flesh " also
includes the contrast between "life" and "death". This is a serious
problem, and concerning it one must say at once that materialism, as a
system of thought, in all its forms, means the acceptance of death as
the definitive end of human existence.
Everything that is material is corruptible, and therefore the human body
(insofar as it is "animal") is mortal. If man in his essence is only
"flesh", death remains for him an impassable frontier and limit. Hence
one can understand how it can be said that human life is nothing but an
"existence in order to die".
It must be added that on the horizon of contemporary
civilization--especially in the form that is most developed in the
technical and scientific sense--the signs and symptoms of death have
become particularly present and frequent. One has only to think of the
arms race and of its inherent danger of nuclear self-destruction.
Moreover, everyone has become more and more aware of the grave situation
of vast areas of our planet, marked by death-dealing poverty and famine.
It is a question of problems that are not only economic but also and
above all ethical. But on the horizon of our era there are gathering
ever darker "signs of death": a custom has become widely established--in
some places it threatens to become almost an institution--of taking the
lives of human beings even before they are born, or before they reach
the natural point of death.
Furthermore, despite many noble efforts for peace, new wars have broken
out and are taking place, wars which destroy the lives or the health of
hundreds of thousands of people. And how can one fail to mention the
attacks against human life by terrorism, organized even on an
international scale?
Unfortunately, this is only a partial and incomplete sketch of the
picture ot death being composed in our age, as we come ever closer to
the end of the second Millennium of the Christian era.
Does there not rise up a new and more or less conscious plea to the
life-giving Spirit from the dark shades of materialistic civilization,
and especially from those increasing signs of death in the sociological
and historical picture in which that civilization has been constructed?
At any rate, even independently of the measure of human hopes or
despairs, and of the illusions or deceptions deriving from the
development of materialistic systems of thought and life, there remains
the Christian certainty that the Spirit blows where he wills and that we
possess "the first fruits of the Spirit", and that therefore even though
we may be subjected to the sufferings of time that passes away, "we
groan inwardly as we wait for... the redemption of our bodies",[244] or
of all our human essence, which is bodily and spiritual.
Yes, we groan, but in an expectation filled with unflagging hope,
because it is precisely this human being that God has drawn near to, God
who is Spirit. God the Father, a sending his own Son in the likeness of
sinful flesh and for sin, he condemned sin in the flesh".[245]
At the culmination of the Paschal Mystery, the Son of God, made man and
crucified for the sins of the world, appeared in the midst of his
Apostles after the Resurrection, breathed on them and said "Receive the
Holy Spirit". This "breath" continues for ever, for "the Spirit helps us
in our weakness".[246]
58. The mystery of the Resurrection and of Pentecost is proclaimed and
lived by the Church, which has inherited and which carries on the
witness of the Apostles about the Resurrection of Jesus Christ.
She is the perennial witness to this victory over death which revealed
the power of the Holy Spirit and determined his new coming, his new
presence in people and in the world. For in Christ's Resurrection the
Holy Spirit-Paraclete revealed himself especially as he who gives life:
"He who raised Christ from the dead will give life to your mortal bodies
also through his Spirit which dwells in you".[247]
In the name of the Resurrection of Christ the Church proclaims life,
which manifested itself beyond the limits of death, the life which is
stronger than death. At the same time, she proclaims him who gives this
life: the Spirit, the Giver of Life; she proclaims him and cooperates
with him in giving life.
For "although your bodies are dead because of sin, your spirits are
alive because of righteousness",[248] the righteousness accomplished by
the Crucified and Risen Christ. And in the name of Christ's Resurrection
the Church serves the life that comes from God himself, in close union
with and humble service to the Spirit.
Precisely through this service man becomes in an ever new manner the
"way of the Church", as I said in the Encyclical on Christ the
Redeemer[249] and as I now repeat in this present one on the Holy
Spirit.
United with the Spirit, the Church is supremely aware of the reality of
the inner man, of what is deepest and most essential in man, because it
is spiritual and incorruptible. At this level the Spirit grafts the
"root of immortality",[250] from which the new life springs.
This is man's life in God, which, as a fruit of God's salvific
self-communication in the Holy Spirit, can develop and flourish only by
the Spirit's action. Therefore Saint Paul speaks to God on behalf of
believers, to whom he declares "I bow my knees before the Father...,
that he may grant you... to be strengthened with might through his
Spirit in the inner man".[251]
Under the infuence of the Holy Spirit this inner, "spiritual", man
matures and grows strong. Thanks to the divine self-communication, the
human spirit which "knows the secrets of man" meets the "Spirit who
searches everything, even the depths of God".[252]
In this Spirit, who is the eternal gift, the Triune God opens himself to
man, to the human spirit. The hidden breath of the divine Spirit enables
the human spirit to open in its turn before the saving and sanctifying
self-opening of God. Through the gift of grace, which comes from the
Holy Spirit, man enters a "new life", is brought into the supernatural
reality of the divine life itself and becomes a "dwelling-place of the
Holy Spirit", a living temple of God.[253]
For through the Holy Spirit, the Father and the Son come to him and take
up their abode with him.[254]
In the communion of grace with the Trinity, man's "living area" is
broadened and raised up to the supernatural level of divine life. Man
lives in God and by God: he lives According to the Spirit", and "sets
his mind on the things of the Spirit".
59. Man's intimate relationship with God in the Holy Spirit also enables
him to understand himself, his own humanity, in a new way. Thus that
image and likeness of God which man is from his very beginning is fully
realized.[255]
This intimate truth of the human being has to be continually
rediscovered in the light of Christ, who is the prototype of the
relationship with God. There also has to be rediscovered in Christ the
reason for "full self-discovery through a sincere gift of himself" to
others, as the Second Vatican Council writes: precisely by reason of
this divine likeness which "shows that on earth man... is the only
creature that God wishes for himself" in his dignity as a person, but as
one open to integration and social communion.[256]
The effective knowledge and full implementation of this truth of his
being come about only by the power of the Holy Spirit. Man learns this
truth from Jesus Christ and puts it into practice in his own life by the
power of the Spirit, whom Jesus himself has given to us.
Along this path--the path of such an inner maturity, which includes the
full discovery of the meaning of humanity--God comes close to man, and
permeates more and more completely the whole human world.
The Triune God, who "exists" in himself as a transcendent reality of
interpersonal gift, giving himself in the Holy Spirit as gift to man,
transforms the human world from within, from inside hearts and minds.
Along this path the world, made to share in the divine gift, becomes--as
the Council teaches--"ever more human, ever more profoundly human",[257]
while within the world, through people's hearts and minds, the Kingdom
develops in which God will be defnitively " all in all":[258] as gift
and love. Gift and love: this is the eternal power of the opening of the
Triune God to man and the world, in the Holy Spirit.
As the year 2000 since the birth of Christ draws near, it is a question
of ensuring that an ever greater number of people "may fully find
themselves... through a sincere gift of self", according to the
expression of the Council already quoted.
Through the action of the Spirit-Paraclete, may there be accomplished in
our world a process of true growth in humanity, in both individual and
community life. In this regard Jesus himself "when he prayed to the
Father, 'that all may be one... as we are one' (Jn 17: 21-22) ...
implied a certain likeness between the union of the divine persons and
the union of the children of God in truth and charity".[259]
The Council repeats this truth about man, and the Church sees in it a
particularly strong and conclusive indication of her own apostolic
tasks.
For if man is the way of the Church, this way passes through the whole
mystery of Christ, as man's divine model. Along this way the Holy
Spirit, strengthening in each of us "the inner man", enables man ever
more "fully to find himself through a sincere gift of self". These words
of the Pastoral Constitution of the Council can be said to sum up the
whole of Christian anthropology: that theory and practice, based on the
Gospel, in which man discovers himself as belonging to Christ and
discovers that in Christ he is raised to the status of a child of God,
and so understands better his own dignity as man, precisely because he
is the subject of God's approach and presence, the subject of the divine
condescension, which contains the prospect and the very root of
definitive glorification. Thus it can truly be said that " the glory of
God is the living man, yet man's life is the vision of God":[260] man,
living a divine life, is the glory of God, and the Holy Spirit is the
hidden dispenser of this life and this glory.
The Holy Spirit--says the great Basil--"while simple in essence and
manifold in his virtues ... extends himself without undergoing any
diminishing, is present in each subject capable of receiving him as if
he were the only one, and gives grace which is sufficient for all".[261]
60. When, under the influence of the Paraclete, people discover this
divine dimension of their being and life, both as individuals and as a
community, they are able to free themselves from the various
determinisms which derive mainly from the materialistic bases of
thought, practice and related modes of action.
In our age these factors have succeeded in penetrating into man's inmost
being, into that sanctuary of the conscience where the Holy Spirit
continuously radiates the light and strength of new life in the "freedom
of the children of God".
Man's growth in this life is hindered by the conditionings and pressures
exerted upon him by dominating structures and mechanisms in the various
spheres of society. It can be said that in many cases social factors,
instead of fostering the development and expansion of the human spirit,
ultimately deprive the human spirit of the genuine truth of its being
and life--over which the Holy Spirit keeps vigil--in order to subject it
to the "prince of this world".
The great Jubilee of the year 2000 thus contains a message of liberation
by the power of the Spirit, who alone can help individuals and
communities to free themselves from the old and new determinisms, by
guiding them with the "law of the Spirit, which gives life in Christ
Jesus",[262] and thereby discovering and accomplishing the full measure
of man's true freedom. For, as Samt Paul writes, "where the Spirit of
the Lord is, there is freedom".[263]
This revelation of freedom and hence of man's true dignity acquires a
particular eloquence for Christians and for the Church in a state of
persecution--both in ancient times and in the present--because the
witnesses to divine Truth then become a living proof of the action of
the Spirit of truth present in the hearts and minds of the faithful, and
they often mark with their own death by martyrdom the supreme
glorification of human dignity.
Also in the ordinary conditions of society, Christians, as witnesses to
man's authentic dignity, by their obedience to the Holy Spirit
contribute to the manifold "renewal of the face of the earth", working
together with their brothers and sisters in order to achieve and put to
good use everything that is good, noble and beautiful in the modern
progress of civilization, culture, science, technology and the other
areas of thought and human activity.[264]
They do this as disciples of Christ who--as the Council
writes--"appointed Lord by his Resurrection, ... is now at work in the
hearts of men through the power of his Spirit. He arouses not only a
desire for the age to come but by that very fact, he animates, purifies
and strengthens those noble longings too by which the human family
strives to make its life more humane and to render the earth submissive
to this goal".[265]
Thus they affirm still more strongly the greatness of man, made in the
image and likeness of God, a greatness shown by the mystery of the
Incarnation of the Son of God, who " in the fullness of time", by the
power of the Holy Spirit, entered into history and manifested himself as
true man, he who was begotten before every creature, "through whom are
all things and through whom we exist".[266]
61. As the end of the second Millennium approaches, an event which
should recall to everyone and as it were make present anew the coming of
the Word in the fullness of time, the Church once more means to ponder
the very essence of her divine-human constitution and of that mission
which enables her to share in the Messianic mission of Christ, according
to the teaching and the ever valid plan of the Second Vatican Council.
Following this line, we can go back to the Upper Room, where Jesus
Christ reveals the Holy Spirit as the Paraclete, the Spirit of truth,
and where he speaks of his own "departure" through the Cross as the
necessary condition for the Spirit's "coming": "It is to your advantage
that I go away, for if I do not go away, the Counsellor will not come to
you; but if I go, I will send him to you".[267]
We have seen that this prediction first came true the evening of Easter
day and then during the celebration of Pentecost in Jerusalem, and we
have seen that ever since then it is being fulfilled in human history
through the Church.
In the light of that prediction, we also grasp the full meaning of what
Jesus says, also at the Last Supper, about his new "coming". For it is
significant that in the same farewell discourse Jesus foretells not only
his "departure" but also his new "coming". His exact words are: "I will
not leave you desolate; I will come to you".[268]
And at the moment of his final farewell before he ascends into heaven,
he will repeat even more explicitly: "Lo, I am with you", and this
"always, to the close of the age".[269]
This new "coming" of Christ, this continuous coming of his, in order to
be with his Apostles, with the Church, this "I am with you always, to
the close of the age", does not of course change the fact of his
"departure".
It follows that departure, after the close of Christ's messianic
activity on earth, and it occurs in the context of the predicted sending
of the Holy Spirit and in a certain sense forms part of his own mission.
And yet it occurs by the power ot the Holy Spirit, who makes it possible
for Christ, who has gone away, to come now and for ever in a new way.
This new coming of Christ by the power of the Holy Spirit, and his
constant presence and action in the spiritual life, are accomplished in
the sacramental reality.
In this reality, Christ, who has gone away in his visible humanity,
comes, is present and acts in the Church in such an intimate way as to
make it his own Body. As such, the Church lives, works and grows "to the
close of the age". All this happens through the power of the Holy
Spirit.
62. The most complete sacramental expression of the "departure" of
Christ through the mystery of the Cross and Resurrection is the
Eucharist. In every celebration of the Eucharist his coming, his
salvific presence, is sacramentally realized: in the Sacrifice and in
Communion. It is accomplished by the power of the Holy Spirit, as part
of his own mission.[270]
Through the Eucharist the Holy Spirit accomplishes that "strengthening
of the inner man" spoken of in the Letter to the Ephesians.[271]
Through the Eucharist, individuals and communities, by the action of the
Paraclete-Counsellor, learn to discover the divine sense of human life,
as spoken of by the Council: that sense whereby Jesus Christ "fully
reveals man to man himself", suggesting "a certain likeness between the
union of the divine persons, and the union of God's children in truth
and charity".[272]
This union is expressed and made real especially through the Eucharist,
in which man shares in the sacrifice of Christ which this celebration
actualizes, and he also learns to "find himself... through a... gift of
himself"[273] through communion with God and with others, his brothers
and sisters.
For this reason the early Christians, right from the days immediately
following the coming down of the Holy Spirit, "devoted themselves to the
breaking of bread and the prayers", and in this way they formed a
community united by the teaching of the Apostles.[274]
Thus "they recognized " that their Risen Lord, who had ascended into
heaven, came into their midst anew in that Eucharistic community of the
Church and by means of it. Guided by the Holy Spirit, the Church from
the beginning expressed and confirmed her identity through the
Eucharist. And so it has always been, in every Christian generation,
down to our own time, down to this present period when we await the end
of the second Christian Millennium.
Of course, we unfortunately have to acknowledge the fact that the
Millennium which is about to end is the one in which there have occurred
the great separations between Christians.
All believers in Christ, therefore, following the example of the
Apostles, must fervently strive to conform their thinking and action to
the will of the Holy Spirit, "the principle of the Church's unity",[275]
so that all who have been baptized in the one Spirit in order to make up
one body may be brethren joined in the celebration of the same
Eucharist, "a sacrament of love, a sign of unity, a bond of
charity!"[276]
63. Christ's Eucharistic presence, his sacramental "I am with you",
enables the Church to discover ever more deeply her own mystery, as is
shown by the whole ecclesiology of the Second Vatican Council, whereby
"the Church is in Christ as a sacrament or sign and instrument of the
intimate union with God and of the unity of the whole human race".[277]
As a sacrament, the Church is a development from the Paschal Mystery of
Christ's "departure", living by his ever new "coming" by the power of
the Holy Spirit, within the same mission of the ParacleteSpirit of
truth. Precisely this is the essential mystery of the Church, as the
Council professes.
While it is through creation that God is he in whom we all alive and
move and have our being",[278] in its turn the power of the Redemption
endures and develops in the history of man and the world in a double
"rhythm" as it were, the source of which is found in the Eternal Father.
On the one hand there is the rhythm of the mission of the Son, who came
into the world and was born of the Virgin Mary by the power of the Holy
Spirit; and on the other hand there is also the rhythm of the mission of
the Holy Spirit, as he was revealed definitively by Christ.
Through the "departure" of the Son, the Holy Spirit came and continues
to come as Counsellor and Spirit of truth. And in the context of his
mission, as it were within the indivisible presence of the Holy Spirit,
the Son, who "had gone away" in the Paschal Mystery, " comes " and is
continuously present in the mystery of the Church, at times concealing
himself and at times revealing himself in her history, and always
directing her steps.
All of this happens in a sacramental way, through the power of the Holy
Spirit, who, "drawing from the wealth of Christ's Redemption",
constantly gives life. As the Church becomes ever more aware of this
mystery, she sees herself more clearly, above all as a sacrament.
This also happens because, by the will of her Lord, through the
individual sacraments the Church fulfils her salvific ministry to man.
This sacramental ministry, every time it is accomplished, brings with it
the mystery of the "departure" of Christ through the Cross and the
Resurrection, by virtue of which the Holy Spirit comes. He comes and
works: "he gives life".
For the sacraments signify grace and confer grace: They signify life and
give life.
The Church is the visible dispenser of the sacred signs, while the Holy
Spirit acts in them as the invisible dispenser of the life which they
signify. Together with the Spirit, Christ Jesus is present and acting.
64. If the Church is the sacrament of intimate union with God, she is
such in Jesus Ghrist, in whom this same union is accomplished as a
salvific reality. She is such in Jesus Christ, through the power of the
Holy Spirit.
The fullness of the salvific reality, which is Christ in history,
extends in a sacramental way in the power of the Spirit-Paraclete. In
this way the Holy Spirit is "another Counsellor", or new Counsellor,
because through his action the Good News takes shape in human minds and
hearts and extends through history. In all of this it is the Holy Spirit
who gives life.
When we use the word "sacrament" in reference to the Church, we must
bear in mind that in the texts of the Council the sacramentality of the
Church appears as distinct from the sacramentality that is proper, in
the strict sense, to the Sacraments. Thus we read: "The Church is ... in
the nature of a sacrament--a sign and instrument of communion with God".
But what matters and what emerges from the analogical sense in which the
word is used in the two cases is the relationship which the Church has
with the power of the Holy Spirit, who alone gives life: the Church is
the sign and instrument of the presence and action of the life-giving
Spirit.
Vatican II adds that the Church is "a sacrament... of the unity of all
mankind".
Obviously it is a question of the unity which the human race --which in
itself is differentiated in various ways--has from God and in God. This
unity has its roots in the mystery of creation and acquires a new
dimension in the mystery of the Redemption, which is ordered to
universal salvation. Since God "wishes all men to be saved and to come
to the knowledge of the truth",[279] the Redemption includes all
humanity and in a certain way all of creation.
In the same universal dimension of Redemption the Holy Spirit is acting,
by virtue of the "departure of Christ". Therefore the Church, rooted
through her own mystery in the Trinitarian plan of salvation, with good
reason regards herself as the "sacrament of the unity of the whole human
race ".
She knows that she is such through the power of the Holy Spirit, of
which power she is a sign and instrument in the fulfillment of God's
salvific plan.
In this way the "condescension" of the infinite Trinitarian Love is
brought about: God, who is infinite spirit, comes close to the visible
world. The Triune God communicates himself to man in the Holy Spirit
from the beginning through his "image and likeness".
Under the action of the same Spirit, man, and through him the created
world, which has been redeemed by Christ, draw near to their ultimate
destinies in God. The Church is "a sacrament, that is sign and
instrument" of this coming together of the two poles of creation and
redemption, God and man.
She strives to restore and strengthen the unity at the very roots of the
human race: in the relationship of communion that man has with God as
his Creator, Lord and Redeemer. This is a truth which on the basis of
the Council's teaching we can meditate on, explain and apply in all the
fullness of its meaning in this phase of transition from the second to
the third Christian Millennium.
And we rejoice to realize ever more clearly that within the work carried
out by the Church in the history of salvation, which is part of the
history of humanity, the Holy Spirit is present and at work--he who with
the breath of divine life permeates man's earthly pilgrimage and causes
all creation, all history, to flow together to its ultimate end, in the
infinite ocean of God.
65. The breath of the divine life, the Holy Spirit, in its simplest and
most common manner, expresses itself and makes itself felt in prayer. It
is a beautiful and salutary thought that, wherever people are praying in
the world, there the Holy Spirit is, the living breath of prayer.
It is a beautiful and salutary thought to recognize that, if prayer is
offered throughout the world, in the past, in the present and in the
future, equally widespread is the presence and action of the Holy
Spirit, who "breathes" prayer in the heart of man in all the endless
range of the most varied situations and conditions, sometimes favorable
and sometimes unfavorable to the spiritual and religious life.
Many times, through the influence of the Spirit, prayer rises from the
human heart in spite of prohibitions and persecutions and even official
proclamations regarding the non-religious or even atheistic character of
public life. Prayer always remains the voice of all those who apparently
have no voice--and in this voice there always echoes that "loud cry"
attributed to Christ by the Letter to the Hebrews.[280]
Prayer is also the revelation of that abyss which is the heart of man: a
depth which comes from God and which only God can fill,precisely with
the Holy Spirit. We read in Luke: "If you then, who are evil, know how
to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly
Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!".[281]
The Holy Spirit is the gift that comes into man's heart together with
prayer. In prayer he manifests himself first of all and above all as the
gift that "helps us in our weakness". This is the magnificent thought
developed by Saint Paul in the Letter to the Romans, when he writes:
"For we do not know how to pray as we ought, but the Spirit himself
intercedes for us with sighs too deep for words n .[282]
Therefore, the Holy Spirit not only enables us to pray, but guides us
"from within" in prayer: he is present in our prayer and gives it a
divine dimension.[283]
Thus "he who searches the hearts of men knows what is the mind of the
Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the
will of God".[284]
Prayer through the power of the Holy Spirit becomes the ever more mature
expression of the new man, who by means of this prayer participates in
the divine life.
Our diffcult age has a special need of prayer.
In the course of history--both in the past and in the present--many men
and women have borne witness to the importance of prayer by consecrating
themselves to the praise of God and to the life of prayer, especially in
monasteries and convents; so too recent years have been seeing a growth
in the number of people who, in evermore widespread movements and
groups, are giving first place to prayer and seeking in prayer a renewal
of their spiritual life.
This is a significant and comforting sign, for from this experience
there is coming a real contribution to the revival of prayer among the
faithful, who have been helped to gain a clearer idea of the Holy Spirit
as he who inspires in hearts a profound yearning for holiness.
In many individuals and many communities there is a growing awareness
that, even with all the rapid progress of technological and scientific
civilization, and despite the real conquests and goals attained, man is
threatened, humanity is threatened.
In the face of this danger, and indeed already experiencing the
frightful reality of man's spiritual decadence, individuals and whole
communities, guided as it were by an inner sense of faith, are seeking
the strength to raise man up again, to save him from himself, from his
own errors and mistakes that often make harmful his very conquests.
And thus they are discovering prayer, in which the a Spirit who helps us
in our weakness" manifests himself. In this way the times in which we
are living are bringing the Holy Spirit closer to the many who are
returning to prayer. And I trust that all will find in the teaching of
this Encyclical nourishment for their interior life, and that they will
succeed in strengthening, under the action of the Spirit, their
commitment to prayer in harmony with the Church and her Magisterium.
66. In the midst of the problems, disappointments and hopes, desertions
and returns of these times of ours, the Church remains faithful to the
mystery of her birth. While it is an historical fact that the Church
came forth from the Upper Room on the day of Pentecost, in a certain
sense one can say that she has never left it.
Spiritually the event of Pentecost does not belong only to the past: the
Church is always in the Upper Room that she bears in her heart.
The Church perseveres in prayer, like the Apostles together with Mary,
the Mother of Christ, and with those who in Jerusalem were the first
seed of the Christian community and who awaited in prayer the coming of
the Holy Spirit.
The Church perseveres in prayer with Mary. This union of the praying
Church with the Mother of Christ has been part of the mystery of the
Church from the beginning: we see her present in this mystery as she is
present in the mystery of her Son.
It is the Council that says to us "The Blessed Virgin ..., overshadowed
by the Holy Spirit, ..brought forth ..the Son.... he whom God placed as
the first-born among many brethren (cf. Rom 8: 29), namely the faith ful.
In their birth and development she cooperates with a maternal love"; she
is through "his singular graces and offices... intimately united with
the Church... (she) is a model of the Church".[285]
"The Church, moreover, contemplating Mary's mysterious sanctity,
imitating her charity, ..becomes herself a mother" and "herself is a
virgin, who keeps... the fidelity she has pledged to her Spouse.
Imitating the Mother of the Lord, and by the power of the Holy Spirit,
she preserves with virginal purity an integral faith, a firm hope, and a
sincere charity".[286]
Thus one can understand the profound reason why the Church, united with
the Virgin Mother, prays unceasingly as the Bride to her divine Spouse,
as the words of the Book of Revelation, quoted by the Council, attest:
"The Spirit and the bride say to the Lord Jesus Christ: Come!".[287]
The Church's prayer is this unceasing invocation, in which "the Spirit
himself intercedes for us": in a certain sense, the Spirit himself
utters it with the Church and in the Church. For the Spirit is given to
the Church in order that through his power the whole community of the
People of God, however widely scattered and diverse, may persevere in
hope: that hope in which "we have been saved".[288]
It is the eschatological hope, the hope of definitive fulfilment in God,
the hope of the eternal Kingdom, that is brought about by participation
in the life of the Trinity. The Holy Spirit, given to the Apostles as
the Counsellor, is the guardian and animator of this hope in the heart
of the Church.
In the time leading up to the third Millennium after Christ, while "the
Spirit and the bride say to the Lord Jesus: Come!", this prayer of
theirs is filled, as always, with an eschatological significance, which
is also destined to give fulness of meaning to the celebration of the
great Jubilee.
It is a prayer concerned with the salvific destinies towards which the
Holy Spirit by his action opens hearts throughout the history of man on
earth. But at the same time this prayer is directed towards a precise
moment of history which highlights the "fullness of time" marked by the
year 2000. The Church wishes to prepare for this Jubilee in the Holy
Spirit, just as the Virgin of Nazareth in whom the Word was made flesh
was prepared by the Holy Spirit.
67. We wish to bring to a close these consideration in the heart of the
Church and in the heart of man. The way of the Church passes through the
heart of man, because here is the hidden place of the salvific encounter
with the
Holy Spirit, with the hidden God, and precisely here the Holy Spirit
becomes "a spring of water welling up to eternal life".[289] He comes
here as the Spirit of truth and as the Paraclete, as he was promised by
Christ. From here he acts as Counsellor, Intercessor, Advocate,
especially when man, when humanity find themselves before the judgment
of condemnation by that "accuser" about whom the Book of Revelation says
that "he accuses them day and night before our God".[290]
The Holy Spirit does not cease to be the guardian of hope in the human
heart: the hope of all human creatures, and especially of those who
"have the first fruits of the Spirit" and "wait for the redemption of
their bodies".[291]
The Holy Spirit, in his mysterious bond of divine communion with the
Redeemer of man, is the one who brings about the continuity of his work:
he takes from Christ and transmits to all, unceasingly entering into the
history of the world through the heart of man.
Here he becomes as the liturgical Sequence of the Solemnity of Pentecost
proclaims the true " father of the poor, giver of gifts, light of
hearts"; he becomes the "sweet guest of the soul", whom the Church
unceasingly greets on the threshold of the inmost sanctuary of every
human being. For he brings "rest and relief" in the midst of toil, in
the midst of the work of human hands and minds; he brings " rest " and "
ease " in the midst of the heat of the day, in the midst of the
anxieties, struggles and perils of every age; he brings " consolation ",
when the human heart grieves and is tempted to despair.
And therefore the same Sequence exclaims: "Without your aid nothing is
in man, nothing is without fault". For only the Holy Spirit "convinces
concerning sin", concerning evil, in order to restore what is good in
man and in the world: in order to " renew the face of the earth ".
Therefore, he purifies from everything that "disfigures" man, from "what
is unclean"; he heals even the deepest wounds of human existence; he
changes the interior dryness of souls, transforming them into fertile
fields of grace and holiness. What is "hard he softens", what is "frozen
he warms", what is "wayward he sets anew" on the paths of
salvation.[292]
Praying thus, the Church unceasingly professes her faith that there
exists in our created world a Spirit who is an uncreated gift. He is the
Spirit of the Father and of the Son: like the Father and the Son he is
uncreated, without limit, eternal, omnipotent, God, Lord.[293]
This Spirit of God " fills the universe ", and all that is created
recognizes in him the source of its own identity, finds in him its own
transcendent expression, turns to him and awaits him, invokes him with
its own being. Man turns to him, as to the Paraclete, the Spirit of
truth and of love, man who lives by truth and by love, and who without
the source of truth and of love cannot live. To him curs the Church,
which is the heart of humanity, to implore for all and dispense to all
those gifts of the love Which through him "has been poured into our
hearts.[294]
To him turns the Church, along the intricate paths of man's pilgrimage
on earth: she implores, she unceasingly implores uprightness of human
acts, as the Spirit's work; she implores the joy and consolation that
only he, the true Counsellor, can bring by coming down into people's
inmost hearts; [295] the Church implores the grace of the virtues that
merit heavenly glory, implores eternal salvation, in the full
communication of the divine life, to which the Father has eternally a
predestined" human beings, created through love in the image and
likeness of the Most Holy Trinity.
The Church with her heart which embraces all human hearts implores from
the Holy Spirit that happiness which only in God has its complete
realization: the joy "that no one will be able to take away",[296] the
joy which is the fruit of love, and therefore of God who is love; she
implores "the righteousness, the peace and the joy of the Holy Spirit"
in which, in the words of Saint Paul, consists the Kingdom of God.[297]
Third part
Peace too is the fruit of love: that interior peace, which weary man
seeks in his inmost being; that peace besought by humanity, the human
family, peoples, nations, continents, anxiously hoping to obtain it in
the prospect of the transition from the second to the third Christian
Millennium.
Since the way of peace passes in the last analysis throughh loveand
seeks to create the civilization of love, the Church fixes her eyes on
him who is the love of the Father and the Son, and in spite of
increasing dangers she does not cease to trust, she does not cease to
invoke and to serve the peace of man on earth.
Her trust is based on him who, being the Spirit-love, is also the Spirit
of peace and does not cease to be present in our human world, on the
horizon of minds and hearts, in order to "fill the universe" with love
and peace.
Before him I kneel at the end of these considerations, and implore him,
as the Spirit of the Father and the Son, to grant to all of us the
blessing and grace which I desire to pass on, in the name of the Most
Holy Trinity, to the sons and daughters of the Church and to the whole
human family.
Given in Rome, at Saint Peter's, on 18 May, the Solemnnity of Pentecost,
in the year 1986, the eighth of my Pontificate.
ENDNOTES
1. Jn 7:37f.
2. Jn 7:39.
3. Jn 4:14, cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church Lumen Gentium, 4.
4. Cf. Jn 3:5.
5. Cf. Leo XIII, Encyclical Divinum Illud Munus (9 May 1897): Acta
Leonis, 17 (1898), pp. 125-148; Pius XII, Encyclical Mystici Corporis
(29 June 1943): AAS 35 (1943), pp. 193-248.
6. General Audience of 6 June 1973: Insegnamenti di Paolo VI, XI (1973),
477.
7. Roman Missal; cf. 2 Cor 12:13
8. Jn 3:17
9. Phil 2:11
10. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constituition on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 4; John Paul II, Address to those taking part in the
International Congress on Pneumatology (26 March 1982), I: Insegnamenti
V/1 (1982), p. 1004.
11. Cf. Jn 4:24.
12 Cf. Rom 8:22; GAl 6:15.
13. Cf. Mt 24:35.
14. Jn 4:14.
15. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen
Gentium, 17.
16. Jn 14:16.
17. Jn 14:13.16f.
18. Cf. 1 Jn 2:1.
19. Jn 14:26.
20. Jn 15:26f.
21. Cf. 1 Jn 1:1-3; 4:14.
22. "The divinely revealed truths, which are contained and expressed in
the books of the Sacred Scripture, were writeen through the inspiration
of the Holy Spirit", and thus the same Sacred Scripture must be "read
and interpreted with the help of the same spirit by means of whomit was
written": Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on Divine
Revelation Dei Verbum, 11, 12.
23. Jn 16:12f.
24. Acts 1:1.
25. Jn 16:14.
26. Jn 16:15.
27. Jn 16:7f.
28. Jn 15:26.
29. Jn 14:16.
30. Jn 14:26.
31. Jn 15:26.
32. Jn 14:16.
33. Jn 16:7.
34. Cf. Jn 3:16f, 34; 6:57; 17:3. 18. 23.
35. Mt 28:19.
36. Cf. 1 Jn 4:8. 16.
37. Cf. 1 Cor 2:10.
38. Cf. St Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theol. Ia, qq. 37-38.
39. Rom 5:5.
40. Jn 16:14.
41. Gen 1:1f.
42. Gen 1:26.
43. Rom 8:19-22.
44. Jn 16:7.
45. Gal 4:6; cf. Rom 8:15.
46. Cf. Gal 4:6; Phil 1:19; Rom 8:11.
47. Cf. Jn 16:6.
48. Cf. Jn 16:20.
49. Cf. Jn 16:7.
50. Acts 10:37f
51. Cf. Lk 4:16-21; 3:16; 4:14; Mk 1:10.
52. Is 11:1-3.
53. Is 61:1f.
54. Is 48:16.
55. Is 42:1.
56. Cf. Is 53:5-6. 8.
57. Is 42:1
58. Is 42:6.
59. Is 49:6
60. Is 59:21.
61. Cf. Lk 2:25-35.
62. Cf. Lk 1:35.
63. Cf. Lk 2:19. 51.
64. Cf. Lk 4:16-21; Is 61:1f.
65. Lk 3:16; cf. Mt 3:11; Mk 1:7f.; Jn 1:33.
66. Jn 1:29.
67. Cf. Jn 1:33f.
68. Lk 3:21 f.; cf. Mt 3:16; Mk 1:10.
69. Mt 3:17.
70. Cf. St. Basil, De Spiritu Sancto, XVI, 39: PG 32, 139.
71. Acts 1:1.
72. Cf. Lk 4:1.
73. Cf. Lk 10:17-20.
74. Lk 10:21; cf. Mt 11:25 f.
75. Lk 10:22; cf. Mt 11:27.
76. Mt 3:11; Lk 3:16.
77. Jn 16:13.
78. Jn 16:14.
79. Jn 16:15.
80. Cf. Jn 14:26; 15:26.
81. Jn 3:16.
82. Rom 1:3 f.
83 Ez 36:26 f.; cf. Jn 7:37-39; 19:34.
84. Jn 16:7.
85. St. Cyril of Alexandria, In Ioannis Evangelium, Bk V, Ch. II: PG 73,
755.
86. Jn 20:19-22.
87. Cf. Jn 19:30.
88. Cf. Rom 1:4.
89. Cf. Jn 16:20.
90. Jn 16:7.
91. Jn 16:15.
92. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen
Gentiun, 4.
93. Jn 15:26f.
94. Decree on the Church's Missionary Activity Ad Gentes, 4.
95. Cf. Acts 1:14.
96. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 4. There is a
whole Patristic and theological tradition concerning the intimate union
between the Holy Spirit and the Church, a union presented sometimes as
analogous to the relation between the soul and the body in man: cf. St
Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, III, 24, 1:SC 211, pp. 470-474; St.
Augustine, Sermo 267, 4, 4: PL 38, 1231; Sermo 268, 2: PL 38, 1232; In
Iohannis Evangelium Tractatus, XXV, 13; XXVII, 6: CCL 36, 266, 272f.;
St. Gregory the Great, In Septem Psalmos Poenitentiales Expositio, Psal.
V, 1: PL 79, 602; Didymus the Blind, De Trinitate, II 1: PG 39, 449 f.;
St. Athanasius, Oratio III contra Arianos, 22, 23, 24: PG 26, 368 f.,
372 f.; St. John Chrysostom, In Epistolam ad Ephesios, Homily IX, 3: PG
62, 72 f. St. Thomas Aquinas has synthesized the preceding Patristic and
theological tradition, presenting the Holy Spirit as the "heart" and the
"soul" of the Church; cf. Summa Theol., III, q. 8, a. 1, ad 3; In
Symbolum Apostolorum Expositio, a. IX; In Tertium Librum Sententiarum,
Dist. XIII, q. 2, a. 2, Quaeastiuncula 3.
97. Cf. Rev 2:29; 3:6. 13. 22.
98. Cf. Jn 12:31; 14:30; 16:11.
99. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium et
Spes, 1.
100. Ibid., 41.
101. Ibid., 26.
102. Jn 16:7f.
103. Jn 16:7.
104. Jn 16:8-11.
105. Cf. Jn 3:17; 12:47.
106. Cf. Eph 6:12.
107. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium et
Spes, 2.
108. Cf. ibid., 10, 13, 27, 37, 63, 73, 79, 80.
109. Acts 2:4.
110. Cf. St. Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, III, 17, 2: SC 211, p.
330-332.
111. Acts 1:4. 5. 8.
112. Acts 2:22-24.
113. Cf. Acts 3:14f.; 4:10.27f.; 7:52; 10:39; 13:28f.; etc.
114. Cf. Jn 3:17; 12:47.
115. Acts 2:36.
116. Acts 2:37 f.
117. Cf. Mk 1:15.
118. Jn 20:22.
119. Cf. Jn 16:9.
120. Hos 14:14 Vulgate; cf. 1 Cor 15:55.
121. Cf. 1 Cor 2:10. 122 Cf. 2 Thes 2:7.
123. Cf. 1 tim 3:16.
124. Cf. Reconciliatio et Paenitentia (2 December 1984), 1922: AAS 77
(1985), pp. 229-233.
125. Cf. Gen 1-3.
126. Cf. Rom 5:19; Phil 2:8.
127. Cf. Jn 1:1. 2. 3. 10.
128. Cf. Col 1:15-18.
129. Cf. Jn 8:44.
130. Cf. Gen 1:2.
131. Cf. Gen 1:26. 28. 29.
132. Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation Dei Verbum, 2.
133. Cf. 1 Cor 2:10 f.
134. Cf. Jn 16:11.
135. Cf. Phil 2:8.
136. Cf. Gen 2:16f.
137 Gen 3:5.
138. Cf. Gen 3:22 concerning the "tree of life"; cf. also Jn 3:36; 4:14;
5:24; 6:40. 47; 10:28; 12:50; 14:6; Acts 13:48; Rom 6:23; Gal 6:8; 1 Tim
1:16; Tit 1:2; 3:7; 1 Pet 3:22; 1 Jn 1:2; 2:25; 5:11.13; Rev 2:7. 139.
Cf. St Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theol., Ia-IIae, q. 80, a. 4, ad 3.
140. 1 Jn 3:8.
141. Jn 16:11.
142. Cf. Eph 6:12; lk 22:53.
143. De Civitate Dei, XIV, 28: CCL 48, p. 541.
144. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium et
Spes, 36.
145.In the greek the verb is ( ), which means to invoke to call to
oneself.
146. Cf. Gen 6:7.
147. Gen 6: 5-7.
148. Cf. Rom 8: 20-22.
149. Cf. Mt 15:32; Mk 8:2.
150. Heb 9:13f.
151 Jn 20:22f.
152. Acts 10:38.
153. Heb 5:7f.
154. Heb 9:14. 155. Cf. Lev 9:24; 1 Kings 18:38; 2 Chron 7:1.
156. Cf. Jn 15:26.
157. Jn 20:22f.
158. Mt 3:11.
159. Cf. Jn 3:8.
160. Jn 20:22f.
161. Cf. Sequence Veni, Sancte Spiritus.
162. St. Bonaventure, De Septem Donis Spiritus Sancti, Collatio II, 3:
Ad Claras Aquas, V, 463.
163. Mk 1:15.
164. Cf. Heb 9:14.
165. Cf. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium
et Spes, 16.
166. Cf. Gen 2:9. 17.
167. Second Vatican Council, Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the
Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 16.
168. Ibid., 27.
169. Cf. Ibid., 13.
170. Cf. Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Reconciliatio et Paenitentia
(2 December 1984), 16: AAS 77 (1985), pp. 213-217.
171. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium et
Spes, 10.
172. Cf. Rom 7:14-15. 19.
173. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium et
Spes, 37.
174. Ibid., 13.
175. Ibid., 37.
176. Cf. Sequence of Pentecost: Reple cordis intima.
177. Cf. St. Augustine, Enarr. in Ps. XLI, 13: CCL, 38, 470: "What is
the abyss, and what does the abyss invoke ? If Abyss means depth, do we
not consider that perhaps the heart of man is an abyss? What indeed is
more deep than this abyss? Men can speak, can be seen through the
working of their members, can be heard in conversation; but whose
thought can be penetrated, whose heart can be read?"
178. Cf. Heb 9:14.
179. Jn 14:17.
180. Mt 12:31 f.
181. Mk 3:28 f.
182. Lk 12:10. 183. St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theol. IIa-IIai, q. 14, a.
3: cf. kSt. Augustine, Epist. 185, 11, 48-49: PL 33, 814f.; St.
Bonavanture, Comment. in Evang. S. Lucae, Chp. XIV, 15-16: Ad Claras
Aquas, VII, 314f.
184. Cf. Ps 81/80:13; Jer 7:24; Mk 3:5.
185. Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Reconciliatio et Paenitentia (2
December 1984), n. 18: AAS 77 (1985), pp. 224-228.
186. Pius XII, Radio Message to the National Catechetical Congress of
the United States of America in Boston (26 October 1946): Discorsi e
Radiomessaggi, VIII (1946), 228.
187. Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Reconciliatio et FPaenitentia (2
December 1984), n. 18: AAS 77 (1985), pp. 225f.
188. 1 Thess 5:19; Eph 4:30.
189. Cf. Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation, Reconciliatio et
Paenitentia (2 December 1984), 14-22: AAS 77 (1985), pp. 211-233.
190. Cf. St. Augustine, De Civitate Dei, XIV, 28: CCL 48, 451.
191. Cf. Jn 16:11.
192. Cf. Jn 16:15.
193. Cf. Gal 4:4.
194. Rev 1:8; 22:13.
195. Jn 3:16.
196. Gal 4:4f.
197. Lk 1:34f.
198. Mt 1:18.
199. Mt. 1:20f.
200. Cf. St. Thomas Aquinas, Summas Theol. IIIa, q. 2, aa. 10-12; q. 6;
q. 7, a. 13.
201. Lk 1:38.
202. Jn 1:14.
203. Col 1:15.
204. Cf. for example, Gen 9:11; Deut 5:26; Job 34:25; Is 40:6; 42:10; Ps
145/144:21; Lk 3:6, 1 Pet 1:24.
205. Lk 1:45.
206. Cf. Lk 1:41.
207. Cf. Jn 16:9.
208. 2 Cor 3:17.
209. Cf. Rom 1:5.
210. Rom 8:29.
211. Cf. Jn 1:154. 4. 12f.
212. Cf. Rom 8:14.
213. Cf. Gal 4:6; Rom 5:5; 2 Cor 1:22.
214. Rom 8:15.
215. Rom 8:16f.
216. Cf. Ps 104/103:30.
217. Rom 8:19.
218. Rom 8:29.
219. Cf. 2 Pet 1:4.
220. Cf. Eph 2:18; Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation Dei
Verbum, 2.
221. Cf. 1 Cor 2:12.
222. Cf. Eph 1:3-14.
223. Eph 1:13f.
224. Cf. Jn 3:8.
225. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium et
Spes, 22; cf. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 16.
226. Jn 4:24.
227. Ibid.
228. Cf. St. Augustine, Confess. III, 6, II: CCL 27, 33. 229. Cf. Tit
2:11.
230. Cf. Is 45:15.
231. Cf. Wis 1:7.
232. Lk 2:27. 34.
233. Gal 5:17.
234. Gal 5:16f.
235. Cf. Gal 5:19-21.
236. Gal 5:22f.
237. Gal 5:25.
238. Cf. Rom 8:5. 9.
239. Rom 8:6. 13.
240. Rom 8:10. 12.
241. Cf. 1 Cor 6:20.
242. Cf. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium
et Spes, 19, 20, 21.
243. Lk 3:6; cf. Is 40:5.
244. Cf. Rom 8:23.
245. Rom 8:3.
246. Rom 8:26.
247. Rom 8:11.
248. Rom 8:10.
249. Cf. Encyclical Redemptor Hominis (4 March 1979), 14: AAS 71 (1979),
pp. 284f.
250. Cf. Wis 15:3.
251. Cf. Eph 3:14-16.
252. Cf. 1 Cor 2:10f.
253. Cf. Rom 8:9; 1 Cor 6:19.
254. Cf. Jn 14:23; St. Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, V, 6, 1: SC 153, pp.
72-80; St. Hilary, De Trinitate, VIII, 19. 21: PL 10, 250. 252; St.
Ambrose, De Spiritu Sancto, I, 6, 8: PL 16, 752f.; St. Augustine, Enarr.
in Ps. XLIX, 2: CCL 38, pp. 575f.; St. Cyril of Alexandria, In Ioannis
Evangelium, Bk I; II: PG 73, 154-158; 246; Bk IX: PG 74, 262; St.
Athanasius, Oratio III contra Arianos, 24: PG 26, 374f.; Epist. I ad
Serapionem, 24: PG 26, 586f.; Didymus the Blind, De Trinitate, II, 6-7:
PG 39, 523-530; St. John Chrysostom, In Epist. ad Romanos Homilia XIII,
8: PG 60, 519; St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theol. Ia, q. 43, aa. 1, 3-6.
255. Cf. Gen 1:26f.; St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theol. Ia, q. 93, aa. 4.
5. 8.
256. Cf. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium
et Spes, 24; cf. also No. 25.
257. Cf. Ibid. 38, 40.
258. Cf. 1 Cor 15:28.
259. Cf. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium
et Spes, 24.
260. Cf. St. Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, IV, 20, 7: SC 100/2, p. 648.
261. St. Basil, De Spiritu Sancto, IX, 22: PG 32, 110.
262. Rom 8:2.
263. 2 Cor 3:17.
264. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Pastoral Constitution on the Church in
thge Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 53-59.
265. Ibid., 38.
266. 1 Cor 8:6.
267. Jn 16:7.
268. Jn 14. 18.
269. Mt 28:20.
270. This is what the "Epiclesis" before the Consecration expresses:
"Let your Spirit come upon these gifts to make them holy, so that they
may become for us the body and blood of our Lord, Jesus Christ"
(Eucharistic Prayer II).
271. Cf. Eph 3:16.
272. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium et
Spes, 24.
273. Ibid.
274.Cf. Acts 2:42.
275. Second Vatican Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio,
2.
276. St. Augustine, In Ioannis Evangelium Tractatus XXVI, 13: CCL 36, p.
266; cf. Second Vatican Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy
Sacrosanctum Concilium, 47.
277. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 1.
278. Acts 17:28.
279. 1 Tim 2:4.
280. Cf. Heb 5:7.
281. Lk 11:13.
282. Rom 8:26.
283. Cf. Origen, De Oratione, 2: PG 11, 419-423.
284. Rom 8:27.
285. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 63.
286. Ibid., 64.
287. Ibid., 4; cf. Rev 22:17.
288. Cf. Rom 8:24.
289. Cf. Jn 4:14; Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 4.
290. Cf. Rev. 12:10.
291. Cf. Rom 8:23.
292. Cf. Sequence Veni, Sancte Spiritus.
293. Cf. Creed Quicumque: DS 75.
294. Cf.Rom 5:5.
295. One should mention here the important Apostolic Exhortation Gaudete
in Domino, published by Pope Paul VI on 9 May in the Holy Year 1975;
ever relevant is the invitation expressed there "to implore the gift of
joy from the Holy Spirit" and likewise "to appreciate the properly
spiritual joy, that is a fruit of the Holy Spirit": AAS 67 (1975),
PP.289; 302.
296. Cf. Jn 16:22.
297. Cf. Rom 14:17; Gal 5:22.
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