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About Pentecost
Archbishop Dmitri of Dallas and the South
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"And there appeared to them cloven tongues as it were of fire, and it
sat upon every one of them: and they began to speak with divers tongues,
according as the Holy Spirit gave them utterance." (Acts 2:3-4)
Following His Ascension, when the Savior fulfilled
His promise and sent the Holy Spirit, the Comforter appeared to Christ’s
followers as tongues of fire. As a result of the Spirit’s operation the
disciples spoke in languages foreign to them and were guided as to what
to say.
It is extremely significant that on the day of
Pentecost the manifestation of the Holy Spirit should take the form of
tongues, and that the first results of the disciples’ baptism of the
Holy Spirit should be the ability to speak in languages other than their
own.
First, it affirms the universal character of
Christ’s mission, one which was wrought for all nations, resulting in
the outpouring of the Holy Spirit.
Furthermore, the Divine Services sing of Pentecost
in terms of being a reversal of that which took place at the Tower of
Babel (Genesis, chapter 11). "Of old the tongues were confounded because
of the audacity in the building of the tower, but now the tongues are
made wise because of the glory of Divine knowledge. There God condemned
the impious because of their offence, and here Christ hath enlightened
the fishermen by the Spirit. At that time the confusion of tongues was
wrought for punishment, but now the concord of tongues hath been
inaugurated for the salvation of our souls." ("Glory...now and ever,"
verse for the Aposticha at Pentecost Vigil) "Once, when He descended and
confounded the tongues, the Most High divided the nations; and when He
divided the tongues of fire, He called all men into unity; and with one
accord we glorify the All-holy Spirit." (Kontakion for the Feast).
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At Babel a false unity established out of pride
led to a scattering of all men, confusion among the citizens of the
earth. Diverse "tongues," in this case, became indicative of divisions,
man’s inability to understand God, his fellow man and environment. On
Pentecost, however, the many "tongues" of the Divine Spirit became a
sign and source for unity, a profound unity established through love for
Christ that can only be granted by God Himself.
Of great significance as well is the fact that the
fruits of the disciples’ labors on Pentecost was the addition to the
Church of about three thousand souls. (Acts 2:41) Here we begin to
understand what our Lord meant when He told His chosen ones that they
would henceforth be fishers of men. Hearing about such a large number of
individuals brought into the Church by Peter and the eleven, we recall
that during Christ’s earthly ministry it was only when the disciples
obeyed His will that they caught such an enormous catch of fish that
their "net brake." (Luke 5:4) "Blessed art Thou, O Christ our God, Who
hast shown forth the fishermen as supremely wise by sending down upon
them the Holy Spirit, and through them didst draw the world into Thy
net. O Befriender of man, glory be to Thee." (Troparion for the Feast).
What happened on that fiftieth day after our
Lord’s resurrection was the filling of the disciples with the Holy
Spirit, their transformation into the Church. Pentecost is the day of
the Church’s founding. From this point in time the disciples were
empowered to do what our Lord told them: "As my Father hath sent me,
even so send I you." (John 20:21)
The record of what the disciples did from the day
of their "empowerment" is clearly a matter of history. We know that even
in St. Paul’s time the Gospel had gone as far as Spain in the West and
we are told as far as India in the East. By the beginning of the fourth
century the Emperor Constantine not only stopped the persecution of
Christians but gave the Church an official status. Christians to some
measure, by this time, occupied every city and town. And there were
still those who were willing, if necessary, to give their lives for
Christ. From that time as well, the Church never lost its conviction
that Jesus had given it the strict mandate to "catch" the entire world,
to bring all men into His net. The disciples – and those who came after
them – were convinced that their message, committed to them by Christ,
was vital, a matter of life or death. This is why they were able to
convince so many, because they themselves were convinced.
Speaking of our contemporary situation, it can be
said that somewhere along the line, many Church members have lost this
sense of urgency with regard to the Faith. Orthodox Christianity has
become, for not a few of its adherents, simply the national religion of
certain people, part of their culture, their ethos. The very thought of
Orthodoxy being of vital importance because the world’s salvation
depends on it, is utterly alien to numerous individuals.
But, thanks to the inspiration of the Holy Spirit,
many in the Church have come to understand the profound implications of
Christ’s words to His disciples on a particular occasion, when they
could do nothing for a man who needed healing: "Bring him to me."
The Church in our own time is regaining its deep
commitment to this command relative to the entire world: "Bring him to
me." We must bring those in need of healing – and who is not in need of
the healing that Christ brings? – to our Lord, the only true Physician
of souls and bodies.
Let us take time then and analyze to what extent
we have been able to comply with Jesus’ command. If the truth be told,
given the number of Orthodox in this country and the resources now
available, we have not lived up to our potential in terms of making new
disciples. At least one reason for any apparent failures lies in our own
lack of conviction. We must ask ourselves, therefore, are we convinced,
each of us individually, that our Orthodox Christian Faith is the most
precious thing that we possess, that it is absolutely essential for
those with whom we come in contact to know about it? By and large,
according to how we live day to day, many of us would have to answer
"no" to the above questions. And yet for the Body of Christ to grow the
answer must be "yes." We cannot impart to others what we ourselves do
not have. Christianity is so maximalistic in terms of what is expected
of man – we speak of being crucified with Christ and losing our lives
for His sake and the Gospel’s – that for anyone to believe the claims of
its adherents, the Faith must be seen lived out by those who preach it.
Thus, relative to the Feast of Pentecost, our own mission in the United
States begins with an appreciation for what has already been given: "the
seal of the gift of the Holy Spirit." At our Chrismation, which is our
personal Pentecost, the same Spirit was bestowed for our enlightenment
and transformation, so as to empower us to be "invincible warriors" and
witnesses for the Faith as were Christ’s disciples 2000 years ago.
(Festal hymns taken from The Pentecostarion published by Holy
Transfiguration Monastery, Boston, MA.)
From The Dawn
Publication of the Diocese of the South, Orthodox Church in America
May 1999
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