Christ
has no hands but yours; no feet but yours; no voice but yours. Saint
Teresa of Avila
Jesus said to the disciples, “I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate, to be with you forever.” He then promises them, “I will not leave you orphaned; I am coming to you…I will love those who love me and will reveal myself to them.” That promise of Jesus is fulfilled with the coming of the Holy Spirit. The Advocate, the Holy Spirit has been breathed into them, into us. Jesus has not left us orphaned. In Scripture orphans and widows are those alone, abandoned, defenseless and vulnerable.
Jesus said to the disciples, “I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate, to be with you forever.” He then promises them, “I will not leave you orphaned; I am coming to you…I will love those who love me and will reveal myself to them.” That promise of Jesus is fulfilled with the coming of the Holy Spirit. The Advocate, the Holy Spirit has been breathed into them, into us. Jesus has not left us orphaned. In Scripture orphans and widows are those alone, abandoned, defenseless and vulnerable.
We all
fear being orphaned - alone, vulnerable, powerless. It is a fear that points to
a deeper reality that by ourselves, we are not enough, we were not created to
be alone. We were created to love and to be loved; to live in relationship; to
dwell, abide, remain within one another as the Father is in Jesus and Jesus is
in the Father. This is the reality that Jesus offers us in breathing his Spirit
into us.
Regardless
of the circumstances of our lives, the ups and downs, the deaths and
separations, we have never been and will never be orphaned by God. But is our
love growing and expanding to all, far and near, no matter how different they
are; no matter what language they speak? If so, then Jesus’ Spirit is for us a
present reality, closer to us than we are to ourselves. This is what it means
to know, to taste the fulfillment of his promise not to leave us orphaned. If
we set limits on our love; if we remain self-enclosed and locked in the
isolation of our upper rooms, then we relegate ourselves and each other to the
orphanages of the world. Jesus’ promise is still real, and he remains faithful.
Every time we expand our lungs with the in-flowing breath of Jesus, we expand
the limits of our love and create space where the Father and Jesus make their
home.
Photograph by Father Emmanuel. Excerpts from Abbot Damian's Pentecost homily.