Renew the face of the
earth
Psalm
104 is a moving description of the wonders and beauty of our planet.
Generations have reflected on the gifts the earth provides for our life and
prosperity. St Francis saw the sun and the moon and all creation as brothers
and sisters. As the psalm runs its
course it concludes, “All of these look to you to give them their food in due
season.” But this is not enough; “You
hide your face and they are dismayed; you take back your spirit and they die.” Then
comes the verse the church never ceases to utter; “You send forth your spirit,
they are created, and you renew the face of the earth.”
What
is this spirit? We speak of ‘Pentecostals’, ‘born again Christians’ and even
‘Spirit churches.’ Sometimes the underlying message is that there are
fast-track churches and slow track, or perhaps off the track, churches! Today
is Pentecost and it is moment when we can reflect what really do we mean when
we talk of the Spirit.
St
Irenaeus, in the second century, likened it to the moisture a woman mixes with
the dough and the flour to make bread. Or, he says, it is like the rain from
heaven that falls on the dry wood to make it bear fruit. In other words, it is
the Spirit that gives life, and here we get into well-worn phrases if we are
not careful, phrases that we are so used to that we do not pause to consider
them.
What
is this life that makes all the difference between a dead body at our feet and
a person standing and chatting with us? We call it life and get used to
presuming that is a sufficient answer. Jesus spent more than thirty years
building on the beauties of psalm 104 to bring out their full meaning. “Life to
the full”, another phrase of Irenaeus though he probably got it from St John,
does not mean ‘quick fixes.’ We often pray that God will ‘fix’ this or that for
us; an illness, a drought, a strained relationship, a violent situation. But God does not engineer short cuts. We want
God to solve our problems but we don’t want the patient daily struggle we have
to engage in to do our part in solving those same problems.
To
be fully alive, as Raphael Nadal, would no doubt tell us is to struggle against
an opponent. To be fully alive is not to be free of tears but to experience joy
in the tears. To be fully alive is not to be free of darkness but to experience
the light in the darkness. The be fully alive is not to avoid all the little
deaths we have to die every day – and the big one that will eventually come –
but to find life in death. That is the message of Jesus. The giving of the
Spirit was the final act of his mission on earth. The disciples, together with
Mary, longed for it in the upper room. We too in our weakness and darkness are
to pray for this gift. It is not something we can merit or presume. It is a
gift and we have no right to it. It comes from the overflowing kindness of our
God who wants to share his life with us.
8 June 2014 Pentecost
Acts2;1-11 I
Cor 12:3-7, 12-13 John
20:19-23