10/1/15

The Holy Spirit, is "God reminding us


05/13/2013

VATICAN

Pope: the Holy Spirit, the "unknown of our faith," is "God reminding us" of our salvation.

 Francis reflects on the remarks of a group of Christians from Ephesus: "we have not even heard that there is a Holy Spirit." Even today, "many Christians do not know who the Holy Spirit is, what the Holy Spirit is." The Spirit is "God active in us," a "God who helps us remember" who "awakens our memory." Jesus himself says to the Apostles before Pentecost: the Spirit that God will send in my name, "will remind you of everything I have said."
http://www.asianews.it/files/img/F___S._Marta_4.jpgVatican City (AsiaNews) - The Holy Spirit is "God who helps us remember," who invokes in us the "memory" of salvation history and the gifts we have received and without which Christians risk slipping into idolatry. This was the lesson that Pope Francis drew from the Acts of the Apostles during the Mass celebrated this morning at the Casa Santa Marta. The Pope was reflecting on the episode which recounts the remarks of a group of Christians of Ephesus: "we have never even heard that there is a Holy Spirit.

This, said the Pope - according to Vatican Radio - is not just "something from the early community",  "the Holy Spirit has always been somewhat the 'unknown' of our faith." "Even now, many Christians do not know who the Holy Spirit is, what the Holy Spirit is. And you sometimes hear: 'But I get on well enough with the Father and with Son, because I pray the Our Father to the Father, I have communion with the Son, but I do not know what to do with the Holy Spirit. . .' Or people say, 'The Holy Spirit is the dove, the one that gives us the seven gifts.' But in this way the poor Holy Spirit always comes last and finds no place in our lives"

Instead, the Holy Spirit is a "God active in us", "God who helps us remember," who "awakens our memory." Jesus himself explains this to the Apostles before Pentecost: the Spirit that God will send in my name, "will remind you of everything I have said." The opposite, he said, would lead the Christian down a dangerous path. "A Christian without memory is not a true Christian: he or she is a prisoner of circumstance, of the moment, a man or woman who has no history. He or she does have a history, but does not how to enter into history. It is the Spirit that teaches us how to enter into history. Historical memory ... When in the Letter to the Hebrews, the author says: 'Remember your fathers in the faith' - memory; 'remember the early days of your faith, how you were courageous' - memory. A memory of our life, of our history, a memory of the moment when we had the grace of meeting Jesus, the memory of all that Jesus has told us."

"That memory that comes from the heart, that is a grace of the Holy Spirit," Pope Francis vigorously repeated. He said remembering, "also means remembering one's own misery, that which makes us slaves, and together with them, the grace of God that redeems us from our miseries".

 " And when a little vanity creeps in, when someone believes themselves to be a winner of the 'Nobel Prize for Holiness," then memory is also good for us: 'But ... remember where I took you from, the very least of the flock. You were behind, in the flock.' Memory is a great grace, and when a Christian has no memory - this is a hard thing, but it's true - he is not a Christian, he is an idolater. Because he is before a God that has no road, that does not know how to move forward on the road. Our God is moving forward on the road with us, He is among us, He walks with us. He saves us. He makes history with us. Be mindful of all that, and life becomes more fruitful, with the grace of memory.". "

Pope Francis then concluded with an invitation to Christians to ask the grace of memory, so that they will never be a people that forgets the paths that have been taken, "that they will not forget the graces of their lives; that they will not forget the forgiveness of their sins; that they will not forget that they were slaves and the Lord has saved them. "

1 comment:

Ed Sousa said...

“Medjugorje is the spiritual center of the world!”
Blessed Pope John Paul II