Vol 8 Issue 1SectionsPriorities This IssuePrioritiesAfter Easter: Hope, and Happy Birthday!>> Extended Interview with Rev. Dr. Michael Kinnamon>> The Text, Webster, and Intuition>> TransitionsAnother Really Big Fish Story>> TraditionsEaster, Hope, and “Happy Birthday!”>> “Children, Have You Any Fish?”>> Wisdom & WonderingI am going out to fish>>
|
ArchivePondering About Pentecost and Spiritual EnergyBy Janine C. Hagan, Editor Being a passionate person myself, I can identify with the excitement of Pentecost more than any other time in the church year. By just reading the words in the second chapter of Acts, I can feel the atmosphere in that upper room. I can sense the "wow" factor of the apostles as they were filled with a force that was totally foreign to their understanding and their experience. And, I can understand their confusion. What does all this strange behavior mean? Where would it take them? These are questions that I ask about myself, my ministry, my life, and my relationship with God. I have had enough encounters with The Spirit for me to seek some answers from tradition and the authority of scripture from the Bible. Pentecost. Where did it come from? Harper's Bible Dictionary tells us about the meaning of the word "Pentecost." It comes from the Greek language and means "fiftieth." Pentecost originally referred to the Festival of Weeks (now Shavuot) a Hebrew/Jewish agricultural celebration of the first gleanings of the harvest. Later, after the destruction of the Temple in 70 A.D. Shavuot came to be connected with the Torah (or God's teachings/laws) and reminded the Jewish people of the fifty days between the Passover and coming to Mt.Sinai and receiving those laws. Pentecost/Shavuot continued to be celebrated in the New Testament times (40's -90's AD). But by that time, the meaning began to be changed for those first century Christians.
Today, for Christians, Pentecost stands for fifty but it refers to the fifty days including and between Easter and Pentecost Sunday. It refers to the coming of the Holy Spirit into the lives of the apostles. In the tradition, life and practice of Christian faith, we claim Pentecost as the beginning of the passion and mission of sharing a new faith, a new way of understanding God; through the life, ministry, death, resurrection, healing and unconditional love of Jesus Christ. Some name Pentecost as the "birthday of the church" that we remember and celebrate every year at this time. (This year, Pentecost is celebrated on Sunday, June 8.) This issue of EcuMiniNet™ Online! focuses on thoughts about spiritual energy, where it takes us, and what happens when God-flow becomes part of our life-flow. We are now beyond Easter. The season is Pentecost. We proclaim it when we use red cloth in our churches. Red symbolizes passion and the Holy Spirit. Energy. Life. Love. "All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit…" I pray for God's blessings for all of us as we struggle to pay attention to the flow of the Spirit and for the energy and "fruits" that come from that flow. It is my belief that it is where God wishes us to be. Janine C. Hagan, Editor-in-Chief © 2003 Janine C. Hagan | View
for Printing
|
All Content Copyright © 2008 ecumininet online!, Spiritual Systems Inc. - Site Design & Maintenance By Atomic Pixels |