ALL-ROUND RENEWAL: BEING
SPIRIT-FILLED CHRISTIANS
Call
of the Gospel: to be born again
Our Lord began his ministry by
asking for ‘repentance’ which in its original meaning of metanoia stands
for complete transformation or a round about turn. In the New Testament conversion
of heart and entry into God’s kingdom is described in terms of ‘newness’ which
is also ’rebirth’ in the Holy Spirit. Ultimately it marks the entry into
Christ’s economy of salvation and the eternal life in him which is God’s
greatest gift to humanity. In his
conversation with Nicodemus, our Lord clearly tells him that he has to be ‘born
again’ of the Spirit in order to see the kingdom of God (cf. John 3: 1-8). In
fact, to be born again is the essence of discipleship and the fundamental call
and challenge of the Gospel. The poor and the simple people who found in Jesus their
Messiah and Liberator gladly accepted the call of the Gospel and followed Jesus
spontaneously, for he gave them affirmation of their human dignity as children
of God and the confirmation of their hope in God’s kingdom. They saw in him the
fulfilment of the messianic prophecies. On the other hand, the rich and the
powerful rejected him and opposed him at every step of the way. They questioned
his works of healing, forgiving, of giving meaning and hope to people in
distress, of breaking the chains of oppression, of proclaiming the justice of
God, in short his entire ‘new’ teaching which, in reality, was not a
destruction of the Law but is fulfilment in love. They staunchly refused to be
renewed in the Spirit, to be touched by grace, to open their eyes to the truth
of the Covenant, to accept God’s invitation to be transformed in their minds
and hearts.
But the call of the Gospel is
unchangeable:
“unless your righteousness
exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of
heaven” (Mathew 5: 20)
“if anyone would come after me,
let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me” (Mathew 16:24)
“unless you turn and become like
children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven” (Mathew 18:3)
“it is easier for a camel to go
through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to enter the kingdom of God”
(Mathew 19:24)
“So therefore, any one of you who
does not renounce all that he has cannot be my disciple” (Luke 14: 33)
“Truly, truly, I say to you,
unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if
it dies, it bears much fruit” (John 12:24)
“Whoever loves his life loses it,
and whoever hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life” (John 12:25).
“A new commandment I give to you,
that you love one another just as I have loved you, you also are to love one
another. By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have
love for one another” (John 13: 34-35).
Not ‘good’ people but ‘better’ people
The Gospel therefore is not
asking of us to be ‘good’ people or ‘better’ people, but NEW people. This is
what St. Paul is referring to when he mentions ‘renewal of the mind’: “Do not be conformed to this world, but be
transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what
is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect” (Romans 12:2). In another
letter he speaks of the Christian identity as the ‘new creation’: “ Therefore,
if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed; behold the
new has come” (2 Corinthians 5:17). In fact, our surrender to Christ is to put
on the ‘new self’: “you have put off the old self with its practices and have
put on the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge after the image of its
creator” (Colossians 3:9-10).
In the Book of Revelation we read:
“Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first
earth had passed away, and the sea was no more. And I saw the holy city, new
Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for
her husband” (Revelation 21: 1-2). And the final words that bring to a
culmination the whole of salvation history: “Behold, I am making all things
new” (Revelation 21: 5).
To be ‘new person’ means to be empowered by the Holy
Spirit
In truth, to be a new person in
Christ is to be filled and empowered by the Holy Spirit who leads us into a
radical conversion of life, and this happens through prayer. Prayer is
primarily contemplation, a journey within whereby we are enabled to look at
ourselves from the light of the Holy Spirit and be both confronted as well refreshed,
comforted and healed by the Paraclete, our Advocate and our Comforter. The Holy
Spirit gives us the wisdom to solve all our problems and the strength to take
up our cross daily and follow Jesus joyfully. What is important is to surrender
to the control of the Holy Spirit and pray to him to help us to make Jesus the
centre of our life.
The Holy Spirit bestows on us
gifts or charisms (cf. 1 Corinthians 12: 4ff) and enables us to bear fruits of
the Spirit in our daily life (cf. Galatians 5:22ff). These gifts and fruits are
meant for the building up of the Body of Christ through living holy lives of
communion in the Holy Trinity and proclaiming the Gospel of salvation in
Christ.
Through the fruits of the Holy
Spirit, we become mature Christians who live already here and now the life of
the world to come. Christian maturity and holiness depend directly on the
growth of the fruits, especially love or charity. In fact, without the practice
of charity, the gifts of the Spirit would be no avail (cf. 1 Corinthians 13:1-3).
This is what we learn from St. Teresa of the Child Jesus (Little Flower) when testifies
in her autobiography: “
To be ‘love’ in the heart of the Church: testimony of St.
Teresa of the Child Jesus
I was still being tormented by
this question of unfulfilled longings for martyrdom and it was a distraction in
my prayer, when I decided to consult Saint Paul’s epistles in the hope of
getting an answer. It was the twelfth and thirteenth chapters of First
Corinthians that claimed my attention. The first of these told me that we can’t
all of us be apostles, all of us be prophets, all of us doctors, and so on; the
Church is composed of members which differ in their use; the eye is one thing
and the hand is another. It was clear enough answer, but it didn’t satisfy my
aspirations, didn’t set my heart at rest. Reading on to the end of the chapter,
I met this comforting phrase: ‘Prize the best gifts of heaven. Meanwhile, I can
show you a way which is better than any other.’
What was it? The apostle goes
on to explain that all the gifts of heaven, even the most perfect of them;
without love, are absolutely nothing; charity is the best way of all, because
it leads straight to God. Now I was at peace; when Saint Paul was talking about
the different members of the mystical body I couldn’t recognize myself in any
of them; or rather I could recognize myself in all of them. But charity – that
was the key to my vocation. If the Church was a body composed of different
members, it couldn’t lack the noblest of all; it must have a heart, and a heart
burning with love. And I realized that this love was the true motive force
which enabled the other members to act; if it ceased to function the apostles
would forget to preach the gospel, the martyrs would refuse to shed their
blood. Love, in fact, is the vocation which includes all others; it’s a
universe of its own, comprising all time and space – it’s eternal. Beside
myself with joy, I cried out: ‘Jesus, my love! I’ve found my vocation, and my
vocation is love.’ I had discovered where it is that I belong in the Church,
the niche God has appointed for me. To be nothing else than love, deep down in
the heart of Mother Church; that’s to be everything at once – my dream wasn’t a
dream after all. [cf. Office of Readings, October 1, Feast of Teresa of the
Child Jesus].
One can be advanced in age,
highly charismatic, abundantly gifted, but quite immature as far as the fruits
of the Spirit are concerned because one has not cultivated them and not
earnestly asked for them from the Holy Spirit. This we notice in the
charismatic movement and many other movements in the Church; also, among the
clergy and those in consecrated life.
The Holy Spirit transforms our activities and
relationships
The evidence of being filled with
the Holy Spirit has to be written all over our life. Our life is made up of
activities and relationships and the Holy Spirit comes to transform both. We
will grow and mature by developing the right relationships and by doing the
right things under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
Our relations with God
have to be renewed so that we will think, feel, speak and act as true children of God (cf. Galatians 4:6), and this the Holy
Spirit teaches us – but we have to ask the Holy Spirit for that gift. The two
precious gifts of the Holy Spirit are: wisdom i.e., to have a real taste
for the things of God and for eternal realities, and discernment which
shows the way we are to follow moment by moment according to God’s plan.
Attitude to self is also a
gift of the Holy Spirit, i.e., to see, to accept and to love ourselves as God
sees, accepts and loves us; also, to forgive ourselves when God forgives us, so
as to live at peace with ourselves and with others.
We have to pray to the Holy
Spirit for the gift of loyalty to our state in life. Whether as a child
or youth at home, as a married person, or single for the Lord, as a religious
or a priest, we have to ask for the grace to be ever loyal and joyful in our
family or community and a source of joy to the other members; for the grace to
be understanding, patient, helpful and ever ready to cooperate towards the
common good.
Another important attitude is our
role in the Church. Spirit-filled Christians cannot rest satisfied with
Sunday Mass, and remaining at the margin of parish life; they need to work like
leaven (cf. Mathew 13:33), and bring new life into old structures.
Equally important is our role
in society. When we pray for the infilling of the Holy Spirit we to ask for
the special gifts we need to be more effective and useful in our present life
situation: in school, college, office, place of work, neighbourhood. The Spirit
will give us a new sense of responsibility to work selflessly for the society
and for our country with courage and hope.
Thus, the Holy Spirit will enable
us to set our scale of values and priorities right.
[For the above thoughts I am indebted to the book Here
Comes Jesus by Marcelino Iragui, OCD, chapter 9, ‘Seek All-Round Renewal’].