Sunday, May 23, 2021

God prays through us – Rom 8:22-27, John 7:37-39 (Pentecost Vigil)

 Pentecost Vigil; Basilica of the Sacred Heart.

I am the proud sponsor of a pipe. Not a pipe you smoke, or a pipe that carries water or oil, but a pipe of a pipe organ. A church I used to be a member of, long before I entered seminary, was installing a new pipe organ and, as part of the fundraising efforts, they offered the opportunity for people to pay to sponsor a pipe. Larger pipes were available for larger donations, and smaller ones for those with less resources. I was a student at the time, so I ended up sponsoring one of the higher-pitched E flute pipes. Now, when I paid my money, there was an attached promise that not only would I get a certificate (which I got), but that when the organ was ready to be played, there would be an evening reception for all pipe-sponsors, at which we would be allowed play our pipe. As far as I know, that happened, but I’d already moved a long distance away, and never got to go.

 

I really haven’t spent the last seventeen years of my life mourning this, don’t worry, but the memory came to me this week as I was praying with these readings, as I was thinking about how what air flows through makes such a difference to how it sounds, what it, in some sense, says. And this image, this kind of image that you can see and hear and even feel if you imagine putting your hand on a sounding pipe, has been something that’s been good to pray with because of how it makes concrete what Paul says about prayer in our reading from his letter to the Romans.

 


Paul says elsewhere that the Spirit is inside us, that the Spirit dwells in us, that we constitute a temple, indwelt by the Holy Spirit. And that’s so much of what we celebrate this Pentecost, that we have received the gift of the Holy Spirit, given in baptism, strengthened in confirmation. That this gift is not something frail and fallible like ourselves, but that this is God’s gift of self, that God, in the person of the Spirit, gives Himself to dwell in us. This indwelling is very different from God’s gift of self in the person of Christ, it reveals a very different face of God’s love for us, but it is no less profound, no less total, than the gift of Christ’s incarnation, cross and resurrection.

 

And the Spirit does not just hang out in us, inert. No, God is always active. The Spirit is always at work. And the activity of the Spirit that Paul highlights in our reading from Romans is that the Spirit prays. God, in the person of the Spirit, prays to God, in the person of the Father. The importance of that prayer is why modalism is so horrid a heresy. I’m straying a little bit into next week’s feast here—the Trinity—but modalism is the heresy that states that God isn’t really three distinct persons; rather God operates in three different modes, sometimes in a fatherly way, sometimes filially, sometimes spiritually. But what the Church teaches is that God, while one, is three persons, and that those three persons are in relationship with one another. When Christ prays, when the Spirit prays, they are really praying to another person, it’s not just God talking to Himself.

 

Now, if the Spirit prays to God the Father with these “inexpressible groanings,” and the Spirit dwells within us, then the Spirit’s prayer passes through us. Recall that Spirit, pneuma in Greek, just like ru’ach in Hebrew, means breath or wind as well. Just like that E flute pipe I sponsor, the Spirit blows through us in prayer and that helps determine the sound those murmurs make, what, in a sense, they say. God places as a medium through which the Spirit’s prayer to the Father blows. And the Spirit’s prayer starts to sound like us.

 

And we need that, because, as Paul says, we don’t even know what to pray for. Faced with this awesome ability we have to address our Creator, left to our own devices, we would stumble about searching for something worth saying to the God who already knows everything in our hearts. And Jesus certainly taught us how to pray beautifully. Jesus modeled perfect prayer for us, but imitating a model can be really hard. Unaided by grace, we are dead in our sins, and the lungs of the dead don’t start breathing just because you show them perfect respiration. But when another starts filling us with breath, breathing through us, that’s when life becomes possible.

 

On Pentecost, we’re not just celebrating another gift, we’re celebrating that God, who eternally is perfect loving relationship, takes us, puts us in the middle of that relationship, and prays through us. That move God makes enlivens us, awakens in us a capacity to join in that prayer, to harmonize our voice with the Spirit’s, and should also move us to conform all of our relationships to that Spirit-Father relationship in whose midst we now stand. In John’s Gospel, we heard that rivers of living water flow from within whoever believes in him, and John tells us that that means the Spirit. We live in a thirsty world, and the gift we have been given in the Spirit is a gift that has been given us to share. That Spirit-breath, of prayer, of love, of divine intimacy, that flows through us, overflows. May all the world hear how good it sounds.

 


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